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The Flower of Scotland

DigiTrad:
FLOWER OF SCOTLAND
THE FLOWER OF SCOTLAND


Related threads:
Lyr Req: Flower of Scotland (Roy Williamson) (27)
Review: Flower of Scotland - which rendition? (19)
(origins) Origin: Flower of Scotland (Roy Williamson) (104)
Lyr/Chords Req: The Flower of Scotland (17)
Flower of Scotland, official? (51)
flower of Scotland (42)
Contact for permission? Flower of Scot. (7)
Donald Dewar/Flower of Scotland (20)
Tune Req: Flower of Scotland (15)


BobKnight 02 Aug 10 - 08:01 PM
Jack Campin 02 Aug 10 - 02:16 PM
maple_leaf_boy 02 Aug 10 - 01:47 PM
GUEST,goatfell 14 Jan 09 - 07:44 AM
Bryn Pugh 14 Jan 09 - 04:47 AM
open mike 13 Jan 09 - 10:13 PM
masato sakurai 05 Dec 04 - 08:19 PM
GUEST 05 Dec 04 - 03:36 PM
GUEST,Boab 25 Sep 04 - 02:41 AM
Fliss 24 Sep 04 - 06:16 PM
kendall 24 Sep 04 - 02:59 PM
GUEST 24 Sep 04 - 10:55 AM
Georgiansilver 24 Sep 04 - 09:33 AM
GUEST,Mingulay 24 Sep 04 - 09:05 AM
Dita 24 Sep 04 - 07:39 AM
GUEST,Mingulay 24 Sep 04 - 06:35 AM
Rabbi-Sol 23 Sep 04 - 02:39 PM
kendall 23 Sep 04 - 12:54 PM
John MacKenzie 23 Sep 04 - 12:35 PM
GUEST,Mingulay 23 Sep 04 - 12:00 PM
Abby Sale 23 Sep 04 - 11:54 AM
John MacKenzie 23 Sep 04 - 11:54 AM
Georgiansilver 23 Sep 04 - 11:03 AM
John MacKenzie 23 Sep 04 - 11:00 AM
GUEST,Steve 23 Sep 04 - 10:31 AM
RonU 14 May 98 - 12:08 AM
John Nolan 13 May 98 - 10:05 PM
Art Thieme 13 May 98 - 04:15 PM
Sandro 12 May 98 - 05:20 PM
RonU 12 May 98 - 01:27 PM
RonU 11 May 98 - 11:51 PM
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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: BobKnight
Date: 02 Aug 10 - 08:01 PM

This song gets a bad name as being anti-English - it's NOT. It's pro-Scottish. It is most definitly about the battle of Bannockburn, which took place in 1314.

Edward the Second came across the border with a huge English army, and was met by Robert The Bruce and the Scottish army, just outside the town of Stirling. The ground was very boggy, which didn't suit the English with their heavy horses. The Scots were outnumbers 3-4 to one, but because of the ground being so well chosen, the English couldn't bring the entire mass of their army to bear against the Scots. The Scots won, and routed the English. The victory finally re-established Scots independence, although it was quite a few years before the English acknowleged the fact.

The meaning of the song is that these men were the flower of Scotland, and established Scottish independence, and as the lyrics say, "When will we see their like again?" It's disliked by the Unionist parties because of that message, so they try to piss on it, but the people of Scotland, generally speaking, love it.


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: Jack Campin
Date: 02 Aug 10 - 02:16 PM

You can find it on the web in Klingon, will that do?

It was so authentically rooted in Scots tradition that it could have sprung from no other folk culture in the world.

The tune is a variant of the Chorus of the Hebrew Slaves from Verdi's "Nabucco".

It's hard to credit W. Gordon Smith's arselicking over this one when he'd written a much better song himself, "Come by the Hills".


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: maple_leaf_boy
Date: 02 Aug 10 - 01:47 PM

I taught myself this tune on the pipes.
I know the Gaelic lyrics for it, but I've been searching for a
recording of someone singing it in Gaelic. Does anyone know who
sings it, on youtube? Thanks.


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: GUEST,goatfell
Date: 14 Jan 09 - 07:44 AM

I got this from a website
https://www.theballadeers.com/scots/cor_1990_flower.htm
(sleeve notes from the Flower of Scotland album:

    We were resting between shots of a film I was making with The Corries, when Roy Williamson asked if I'd like to hear his new song Needing no answer to his question he launched the words into the clear air. The song was 'Flower Of Scotland'. The short tune had a fine dirl to it with rising skirls and cadences but also a hint of lamentation and bray of defiance. It was so authentically rooted in Scots tradition that it could have sprung from no other folk culture in the world. We filmed him singing it there and then.

    Some strange alchemy makes songs popular. As least a dozen ballads, turfed out of one musical or another, went on to become international standards, hymns, pub songs, music hall ditties, sea shanties however unlikely their provenance, they're all part of our musical heritage. If we knew what the magic was we'd all make a million.

    Sadly, Roy Wiiliamson died in August 1990.

    Over the years, as The Corries sang 'Flower Of Scotland at folk clubs and on national concert tours, it became their rallying cry and by that powerful osmosis of folk culture, caught the fancy of a nation looking for an anthem.

    By the time Roy's song started echoing round the football terraces of the world, whose choristers found in it something that their hearts desired, who rejoiced in the lyric's fervent patriotism. 'Flower Of Scotland' had become a phenomenon.

    It's rendering at Murrayfield, led lustily by every member of the 1990 Grand Slam Squad, probably put the Scots into the game against the English with phantom points already on the scoreboard! I was involved with The Comes from their professional beginnings in many broadcasting and theatrical adventures. It has been too easy over the years to dismiss their stage and television performances as rabble-rousing singsong. They certainly knew how to please the punters, yet every concert and recording session plucked other strings. Familiar ballads set in unfamiliar time, strange tuning on even stranger instruments, new melodies and harmonies seemingly woven into the web of musical antiquity. It was this musicianship, this sensitivity to the folk idiom, Roy's disciplined invention and craft coupled with Ronnie Brownes sweet lyric tenor voice and ebullient personality that set The Corries apart.

    This celebration of The Conies' contribution to Scottish Folk music is founded on the fame and popularity of 'Flower Of Scotland' but represents the broad sweep of their repertoire and instrumentation. There is a Jacobite song, of course, there are traditionally romantic ballads, a heightened emphasis of contemporary comedy, several sea shanties, a whiff of Scottish nationalism, a sleepy lullaby and Ronnie's powerful rendering of Judy Small's modem anti-war song 'Mothers, Daughters, Wives'.
    You shall hear guitars, combolins (The Corries unique multi-fretted instruments designed and built by Roy), the concertina, harmonica, boran and even a kazoo.

    The moods swing from stirring march tempo to soulful pathos, from rousing polemic to social comment with a sting in its tail, from lovelorn longing to Flower Of Scotland's own compulsive mixture of lament and swagger. Throughout, as usual, the response of an audience is often there to remind you how much you should be enjoying yourself.

    W. Gordon Smith Edinburgh August 1990


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: Bryn Pugh
Date: 14 Jan 09 - 04:47 AM

Yes, but do you 'google' this or knit it ?


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: open mike
Date: 13 Jan 09 - 10:13 PM

try here http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://breizhpartitions.free.fr/tf.php/312_Flower_of_Scotland.gif&imgrefurl=http://breizhpartitions.free.fr/en/download_score.php/160_Flower_of_Scotland&usg=__C045tbpz5EaGECMomBXVFftdtik=&h=438&w=813&sz=11&hl=en&start=2&tbnid=htngsxbM7uKfRM:&tbnh=78&tbnw=144&prev=/images%3Fq%3D%2522flower%2Bof%2Bscotland%2522%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DG


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: masato sakurai
Date: 05 Dec 04 - 08:19 PM

Try Google (Images) Search: flower of scotland.


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: GUEST
Date: 05 Dec 04 - 03:36 PM

I need free sheet music...Can any1 suggest a link.


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: GUEST,Boab
Date: 25 Sep 04 - 02:41 AM

Just a wee remark--for the benefit of all "anti-nationalists" and those who see "anti-Englishness " in the Flower--try a check on the song which has been long accepted as the National anthem of Scotland---"Scots Wha Hae" by Robert Burns.Now THERE is anti-English sentiment!
Not often criticised for it though....


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: Fliss
Date: 24 Sep 04 - 06:16 PM

http://www.corries.com/

Corries site is run by Gavin Browne, son of Ronnie Browne

Site sells all their CDS and song books etc

fliss


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: kendall
Date: 24 Sep 04 - 02:59 PM

It's a bit militant, but I also like SHEHALLION by Gordon Menzies of the duo, GABERLUNZIE. While painting the walls today it kept going through my mind.


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: GUEST
Date: 24 Sep 04 - 10:55 AM

FoS is a great song. A mans A man isn't! This is of course why FoS wins hands down in the Scottish National Anthem stakes.
Plus, like any good anthem, most people would be hard pressed to sing more than the first verse of FoS.


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: Georgiansilver
Date: 24 Sep 04 - 09:33 AM

I have a Corries live LP which ends with one of them saying "It is traditional to sing the National Anthem when ending a performance.....but we'll sing you another song anyway" and they sing F of S...much to the pleasure of the Scottish audience.
Best wishes.


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: GUEST,Mingulay
Date: 24 Sep 04 - 09:05 AM

It seems to me no wonder that Flower of Scotland contains anti English sentiments. When you consider what we have done to the country and its citizens over the years just so that some Surrey stockbroker can shoot at deer, those sentiments are quite mild.

It also strikes me as rather odd that a bunch of German aristo's should latch so avidly on to things Scottish given the words of their recently adopted country's anthem snd the chronological closeness of the events referred to.

However, none of this detracts from the song for me and,in fact, I would much rather sing F of S than God Save the Queen.


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: Dita
Date: 24 Sep 04 - 07:39 AM

Not one of my favourites, probably due to the brest bashing, I'm one of the Freedom come all ye, or A man's a man brigade.

The Corries recorded this a number of times, (probably every time they changed record label). The very first recording, mid sixties on Fontana, was a lot slower, a lament like take, far different from it's later ranting style.

On that recording Roy played some kind of long necked mandolin style instrument, (?bazooki, ?spelling). The whole thing was Incredible String Band like. The Corries recorded a number of ISB member Robin Williamson's (no relation) songs at this time, including October Song.

Georgiansilver, while I also am uncomfortable with the anti sentiments of this song, I am even more upset when someone sings,
God save the King/Queen. This is an anti Scots song from the Jacobite Rebellion, and well into the 1960s was still printed and sung by some, with the verse urging God to lay the vile Scots low and confound their politics.

A number of the Corries albums have been rereleased on CD as twofers The Fonatna, EMI and their own Dara labels. They certainly turn up on ebay uk from time to time. Should be able to get them somewhere online.

Dita.


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: GUEST,Mingulay
Date: 24 Sep 04 - 06:35 AM

Sorry Giok, sometimes the urge overcomes me.


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: Rabbi-Sol
Date: 23 Sep 04 - 02:39 PM

I have this song by The WolfeTones. It is track #8 on their album "A Sense Of Freedom" SOL ZELLER


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: kendall
Date: 23 Sep 04 - 12:54 PM

When I did my tour of Scotland back in 1990, I led a room full of local singers at the Black Bitch in Linlithgow. It was to be my last song for that night and there wasn't a dry eye in the house.


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 23 Sep 04 - 12:35 PM

Please Mingulay, please resist this urge for rotten puns. We already have lorries from a Scottish flour company driving round with the legend 'The flour of Scotland' written on their cabs. I can't remember their name, but it isn't MacDougalls. Might be Chancelot Mills! Certainly incurs the cringe factor in me.
Giok


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: GUEST,Mingulay
Date: 23 Sep 04 - 12:00 PM

The Flour of Scotland is McDougalls.


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: Abby Sale
Date: 23 Sep 04 - 11:54 AM

Whoa, buck. Different Flower. The original thread & I assume GuestSteve's question is re "The Flower of Scotland," by Roy Williamson. See the two links above.

Yes, I'm fairly confident that it is re Wallace defeating Edward's I army (Ed wasn't there) a few years earlier on Sept. 11, 1297 at Stirling.   'Bout the only Ed this could be about except my friend Ed who invaded Scotland to sing some folk songs four years ago. He didn't exactly have an army, just a few friends.

The ansewers relate to "Floo'ers of the Forest" re Flodden. That was also a Fine Flower, though and I sang that one just this week to commemorate.


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 23 Sep 04 - 11:54 AM

The battle in Flower of Scotland must be Bannockburn, where the Scots were lead by Robert the Bruce, as it mentions 'proud Edward's army' This was one of the few we won, so we tend to celebrate it a bit.
McGonigle's Take
Giok


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: Georgiansilver
Date: 23 Sep 04 - 11:03 AM

Flower of Scotland is very much an anti-English song and there are people who use it to that effect unfortunately...I went to a friends daughters wedding to a Scot, where it almost provoked an incident. Ah well, all turned out well in the end and the couple are still happily married.
Best wishes.


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 23 Sep 04 - 11:00 AM

The Battle of Flodden Field was fought under James IV of Scotland on 9th September 1513. The words of the poem have been attributed to Lady Nairne, but were actually written by Jane {Jean} Elliot. I don't know who wrote the tune, but it certainly sends a shiver down my spine, when played on the pipes.
Giok


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: GUEST,Steve
Date: 23 Sep 04 - 10:31 AM

Can anyone conclusively clarify if The Flower of Scotland is about William Wallace or Robert the Bruce? Have been researching as I am writing a little about the subject but have read conflicting views.

Cheers


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: RonU
Date: 14 May 98 - 12:08 AM

I'm looking to purchase "The Corries In Concert" here in the colonies but, so far, no one has a copy in stock. I will be happy to find it in any format though would prefer tape cassette. I'm sure it will turn up if I keep searching.

Art, the tranquility of my small hometown is to be shattered by a Super Wal-Mart, and last week's newpaper said a ten-screen movie theatre will be built nearby. I guess we'll be needing a national flower soon to handle all the outlanders.


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: John Nolan
Date: 13 May 98 - 10:05 PM

The most moving renditions of this song, for me at least, have always been when it is sung by 50,000+ Scottish football supporters on the terraces of Hampden Park. The worst renditions are when it is played through the tinny loudspeaker systems of Scottish National Party organisers combing the streets in vans on election day. Some would like F.O.S. to be Scotland's national anthem - others, particularly socialists, would prefer Hamish Henderson's Freedom Come All Ye. Almost everyone is agreed that Scotland The Brave stinks as an anthem.


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: Art Thieme
Date: 13 May 98 - 04:15 PM

The national flower here in the US is now the concrete cloverleaf!


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: Sandro
Date: 12 May 98 - 05:20 PM

It is on the Corries in Concert Album. A ripping rendition.


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Subject: RE: The Flower of Scotland
From: RonU
Date: 12 May 98 - 01:27 PM

I hope someone can increase my knowledge about this tune, the writer, the lyrics.


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Subject: The Flower of Scotland
From: RonU
Date: 11 May 98 - 11:51 PM

The Flower of Scotland by Roy Williamson, such a beautiful tune. I'm sure there are interesting stories regarding the use of the song (such as by the Scotland MJ).


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