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A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties

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THE SEAMEN'S HYMN


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Subject: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: ChrisJBrady
Date: 30 Jun 12 - 07:19 PM

Sea Shanties in Moby Dick (1956) - A.L.Lloyd

From:

http://www.folkradio.co.uk/2011/07/a-l-lloyd-bramble-briars-and-beams-of-the-sun/

Probably one of the best depictions of sea chanties / shanties as working songs on a windjammer.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=hdiFYCUP9oU


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Charley Noble
Date: 30 Jun 12 - 09:11 PM

Jerry-

One of the very few mainstream films that featured sea shanties. The only other ones I'm aware of that were recorded were from retired sailors.

Cheerily,
Charley Noble


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: ChrisJBrady
Date: 05 Jul 12 - 11:28 AM

A note:

Paul Clayton released Whaling Songs & Ballads, Stinson Records around 1954. There was also the Whaling and Sailing Songs from the Days of Moby Dick in 1956.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PXxLg7a9_qk


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 05 Jul 12 - 12:11 PM

Don't forget that the Highpoint CD "Sailor's Songs and Sea Shanties" contains the entire contents of Lloyd & MacColl's mid-50's Stinson LPs, "Haul on the Bowline" and "Off to Sea Once More."

These are two of the finest shanty records ever release by folk-revival singers. They were ahead of their time in many ways.

There's also a CD of Lloyd & MacColl's "Blow Boys Blow," which is nearly as good as the first two.

Unfortunately the excellent "Thar She Blows!" and "A Sailor's Garland" have never been reissued.

Pedants will remember that Lloyd & MacColl have "improved" their material. They've done it so tastefully, though, that only pedants will care or notice.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 05 Jul 12 - 04:16 PM

"only pedants will care or notice"

...as indeed did that old pedant Stan Hugill (see Dave Arthur's biography, 'Bert', pp 279 - 80).


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 05 Jul 12 - 04:41 PM

Brian--

Would you care to quote or summarize what Arthur says about this (for those of us without _Bert_)?

Hugill wasn't rigorous enough, in my opinion, to be considered a true 'pedant' -- though I suppose he may have believed he was or said so with self-deprecating humor.

In his _Shanties from the Seven Seas_, Hugill was full of praise, if I remember, for Lloyd's recordings. His assessment was similar to Lighter's in that the recordings, while perhaps not totally authentic, were quite good, especially when compared to others.

As to whether or not Hugil cared/noticed that they "improved" the chanties, this has been in a way a recurring issue in discussions. Because it seems, at least to me, that Hugill accepted a portion of what Lloyd sang as authentic, rather than questioning it, and may have even gone on to spread it further.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 05 Jul 12 - 04:45 PM

BTW, the Moby-Dick clip linked in the OP is something I posted as part of a YouTube series (on-going) of clips, "Chanties in Film."

See it here.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 05 Jul 12 - 05:52 PM

Before we get carried away on the authentic thing, let's just remember the film was based on a piece of fiction and is nowhere presented as a documentary. You need to be comparing it with the likes of 'Pirates of the Caribbean'.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 05 Jul 12 - 06:49 PM

I may have said this some years ago, but I can't find the post quickly, so I'll repeat it.

I met Stan Hugill at Mystic Seaport in 1988 and 1989. In '88 I asked him straight out what he thought of MacColl and Lloyd's performances. He believed that they had caught the "spirit" of the shanties better than any revivalists who had yet recorded (he was especially scornful of "radio singers.")

He objected mildly to the occasional harmony singing, because sailors (except Welsh crews, many of whom came from a strong tradition of choir singing) didn't often sing in harmony.

What he objected to most was Lloyd & MacColl's combination of bowdlerizing on the one hand (which he realized was unavoidable) and then, on the other, fashioning mildly bawdy or double-entendre lines of their own.

The example he gave instantly and with unmistakable disdain was the line from Lloyd's "Farewell Nancy": "Your little behind, love, would freeze in the wind, love." Hugill said that sailors didn't use words like "behind": "They called a spade a spade." Furthermore, they wouldn't have sung about their girlfriends' derrieres in a sentimental song like that anyway. The shanties, of course, were different, and they wouldn't have said "derriere" either.

He told me the only sea songs he knew that relied partially on double entendres were "Ratcliffe Highway"/"Cruising 'Round Yarmouth," and "The Fireship," which has a similar theme.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 05 Jul 12 - 07:54 PM

I am not interested in authenticity, just in what Hugill thought, etc!

We have on one hand Hugill's "official" and probably most guarded statement of opinion in SfSS, where he recommends Lloyd's albums.

Then we have Lighter's data, which is a bit more balanced. The recommendation would still seem to hold, though he has specific criticisms.

I am curious as to what it says in Arthur's book -- especially whether it presents Hugill as significantly more negative. I also am curious what the source of that data would be.

Then we have my suggestion, which is that while Hugill may have criticized some things in Lloyd, there are other things that, if a true pedant, he would also have criticized. Hugill was able to criticize the delivery of Lloyd in some respects while still accepting some of Lloyd's material as authentic -- that is, of evidence of something that was "out there" in tradition.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 05 Jul 12 - 08:54 PM

Hugill wasn't a pedant, but he didn't like it when shanty singing was badly misrepresented by people who hadn't a clue.

He seemed to have been perfectly at home with anything that sounded   authentic "to my way of thinking," as he frankly put it. He was also fond of saying, "Different ships, different long splices."

In other words, "different strokes for different folks." Any variation was acceptable to him, I believe, as long as it resembled the verbal, melodic, and presentational style, and the cultural substance, of what he knew (or had every reason to believe) was real. His books show how strongly he wished to preserve the real in the face of the artificial and distorted.

To give a partly fanciful example, he may have included "blood-red" roses, whatever its actual origin, because it sounded perfectly plausible and was not clearly in conflict with shanty idiom. But something modern, like "long-stemmed roses," would have just sounded wrong, and I believe he'd have shaken his head in disbelief.

Of course, that's merely my impression of his views, which are, fortunately, mostly set out in his books.

I can only imagine what he'd think about current "pyrate music."


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 04:19 AM

Here's the passage I referred to:

"… the sea shanties, which Bert and MacColl pioneered on the British folk scene… and which the folk audiences assumed to be authoritative because of Bert's whaling trip (!) were, according to Britain's last genuine shantyman, and nautical authority, Stan Hugill, somewhat less so:

All the weird shanties they put over are good, perhaps, depending on which way you look at them. But for Bert they had to be modal, they had to be Mixolydian, they had to be Dorian. They never sang the songs the real sailors sang: 'The Rio Grande', 'Shenandoah', 'The Banks of the Sacramento'… Those were the songs the sailors sang but they never looked at them. Bert did 'Sally Brown' but not the normal version, not the way any sailor ever did it. He sang a Bahamian boatman's rowing song as a deepwater shanty, but it was never sung in deepwater. It was only collected once in the early '60s but Bert's version had extra verses that he must have written. 'Little Sally Racket' came from a collection of Jamaican folk songs and, again, was not the version sung by sailors."

In his endnotes Dave Arthur gives the source only as 'Stan Hugill interview'.

My description of Hugill as a 'pedant' was actually ironic. I was just a bit surprised to find 'Lighter' (whose posts I always enjoy and respect) suggesting that one has to be a pedant even to notice - never mind care about - Lloyd's editorial interventions. As it happened I'd been reading that passage in 'Bert' just a couple of days ago, and it popped into my head.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 04:58 AM

My grandfather worked under sail and picked up a few shanties which he used to sing around the house.
I played him a recording of Stan once, which he thought very odd - but I didn't have the nouse to take him up on it at the time - horses for courses I suppose.
I was very saddened to read Hugill's review of the Ben Bright monograph (I think in Dance and Song).
He remembered Bright and described Joe Hill's I.W.W. (Industrial Workers of the World) as the "I wont workers" - again, horses for courses.
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 05:32 AM

Authenticity aside, I feel there is a touch of pedantry about Stan Hugill's criticicism of shanty singing in the revival.
In a way, shanty singing resembles the modern approach to traditional Irish music, which was at one time almost exclusively for dancing, but has become something you now sit and listen to for its beauty and complexity.
The first albums of shanties I heard, the two 8" Topic LPs, were just for that, sitting and listening to. They got me hooked for life;
I'm not sure that, if I heard them screamed at the top of the voice so they could be heard over a howling wind, would have had the same effect.
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 08:30 AM

Brian, my use of the word "pedant" was also ironical because I noticed and cared.

I doubt that more than a small percentage of Mudcatters would be disturbed by L & M's "improvements." The song performed right now is the thing, not how it more or less sounded 150 years ago.

Thanks for posting that revealing passage. L & M did record "Blow the Man Down," possibly the most frequently sung shanty, but they had Harry Corbett helping them out.

(He *really* sounded authentic. How'd he do it?)

Lloyd's preference for the modal and exotic shows what a romantic he was. As does "Folk Song in England," despite the Marxism.

I don't believe he ever significantly altered a tune, however. And his textual changes were always in the spirit of the song.

Needless to say, the contrast between L & M singing a shanty and a polished "balladeer" like Burl Ives doing the same would get anyone's attention.

As for the modal "Sally Brown," memory suggests that Short, Bullen, and Harlow had similar tunes - presumably West Indian. Gibb should know.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 08:53 AM

"He *really* sounded authentic. How'd he do it?)"
Probably by collecting all those rags and bones!
Authenticity seems to be a movable feast.
For instance, the BBC recordings of shantyman Stanley Slade (without that awful BBC chorus), are in my opinion, far neared to that of MacColl and Lloyd's singing than they are to Hugill's. Different again are the recordings of R H Rassmussen and (?) Halliday
Authenticity is in the ear of the beholder maybe.
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 10:20 AM

Jim, by sounding "authentic" I mean sounding "perfectly believable stylistically."

Slade seems to have gotten his *texts* straight from Davis & Tozer, but his delivery is very vigorous and, IIRC, unornamented. Without the orchestra and drawing-room chorus he'd sound "authentic."

Rasmussen and Halliday may simply have been recalling the songs for posterity rather than trying to sing as if they had hold of a rope or windlass bar. Just a guess.

Possibly Hugill got his yips and yelps mostly from his West Indian shipmates. But he certainly seemed to think that they were more typical than not.

I believe that a few of Carpenter's shantymen used them too. Maybe more would have done so at sea than singing into a machine at the age of 80.

We can agree, however, that few shantymen sounded like Burl Ives, with or without guitar.

One of the other threads raises the question of how much direct influence Hugill mau have had on L & M as early as 1956. But where else could they have gotten that style, particularly M's very Hugillian "Stormalong" - to me probably the greatest revival shanty performance on record (though "Blow the Man Down" comes close).


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: RTim
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 10:28 AM

A question I have is about how the singing happened.

Did the Shantyman when on board working, sing both his line AND the response,
or only his line?

Tim Radford
(Who has just recorded some shanties with a chorus)


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: ChrisJBrady
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 11:08 AM

[i]"The song performed right now is the thing, not how it more or less sounded 150 years ago."[/i]

In which case what is claimed as shanty singing ain't that no more and never has been. What we hear today - even at sea shanty festivals - is something interpreted, imagined, fancied, by those who haven't a clue about what real tall ship sailing is about.

Surely 150 years ago shanties were for uniting the labour of sailors doing heavy manual work such as hauling up the topsail yards, lumbering around a capstan, bracing the yards, etc.

Now-a-days the chant "2, 6, heave" suffices - but having been lead on heavy rope pulling (bracing from say full port to full starboard) on a tall ship only a few weeks ago I know that the constant repetition of even that induces a trance state and that makes the work seem easier even if its not. At one point we even found "South Australia" worked as well for this.

Shanties performed on stage without the effort of manual work are but a shadow of what they used to be regardless of the intentions of the singers.

I think that it was Hugill's concern that shanties should be and sound as though they were songs to work to, not to sit back and be enjoyed as an entertainment.

It appears that A.L.Lloyd's imposition of a more musically academic approach irritated Hugill. I guess another irritation was calling a woman's backside a 'behind' or a 'derriere' instead of what it was to a sailor amongst liked minded men, all devoid of a woman's company for months at a time, namely an 'arse.' On board a working tall ship, especially a whaler, amongst a bunch of hard-working guys, there was no room for such Victorian sensibilities.

It is unfortunate that clips of sailors working to shanties are so rare. Even the film of the Peking rounding Cape Horn is devoid of such activity. But then the Peking had Jarvis winches for bracing the yards, and its not possible to sing a shanty when spinning the flywheel of those.

But there are films of other work songs. Not only the waulking songs of the women in the Scottish Highlands and Islands. But work songs such as:

Afro-American Work Songs in a Texas Prison
http://www.folkstreams.net/film,122      

Gandy Dancers
http://www.folkstreams.net/film,101

Gandy Dancers 1973
http://www.folkstreams.net/film,223

Singing Fishermen of Ghana
http://www.folkstreams.net/film,123

BTW there is a large collection of chanty material in the Alan Lomax Archives at:

http://www.culturalequity.org/

CJB.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: ChrisJBrady
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 11:31 AM

[i]Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: RTim - PM
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 10:28 AM

A question I have is about how the singing happened.

Did the Shantyman when on board working, sing both his line AND the response, or only his line?

Tim Radford
(Who has just recorded some shanties with a chorus)[i/]

The shantyman wouldn't have had a 'line' per se. The work was rhythmic and went across both the 'verses' and the 'choruses.' The actual words were immaterial except as distractions to the hard work at hand.

He was paid to get the most work out of the men for the job to be done in the quickest time possible. If he also sang the chorus to get that extra effort from the men that so be it.

But I guess it would depend upon the inclination of the shanty singer himself. And also of course the job to be done - there were different shanties with different rhythms for different jobs.

What I am sure about is that there were no idlers standing by to join in the chorus in harmony at appropriate moments!!

Incidentally when pulling ropes it is the rhythmic nature of that pulling that makes the work easier because everyone directs their effort into the work all at the same time. This would cut across the verses and choruses alike. If the words were bawdy and/or lent an air of humour into the work then all the better - this would have made the work seem easier. The men would have appreciated that.

As always I recommend that any shanty singer worth his/her salt books a passage on a real tall ship, even for a day sail, and sees what its all about. The rougher the sea the better.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 11:50 AM

Lighter
Both Rasmussen and Slade were at one time or another shantymen.
Little information on either but for anybody with the time, opportunity and inclination, the BBC index (copy at Vaughan Williams Memorial Library) has a few interesting notes to their shanties and how they were used.   
"Slade was the very last sailor, starting off in the days of sail, to have served before the mast as a recognised shantyman. It was his recordings that fired Peter Kennedy, and later the BBC, to begin a systematic programme of recording traditional singers and other performers in the UK."

"RASMUSSEN, A.H.        .        
Singer of sea-shanties. Recorded London. 11.4.55.
A Norwegian and a writer, aged: 74. Has functioned as a shantyman during the early part of his life. On 22348 he talks about himself and an adventure at sea; and on 22350, introducing 'Sacramento' he tells how he was elected shantyman."
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 01:57 PM

Brian --

I really appreciate you posting that passage. Thank you!

If I were to take what Hugill said at face value, it does ring pretty true. My sense is that Lloyd would have preferred the "modal" tunes in the same way that, I believe, Cecil Sharp did. They struck one as being more "original" and "ancient" and, by a certain logic, more authentic and even more English--with the assumption that English song was the original source of the genre. I don't think Lloyd had a particular agenda, but I do suspect he had an unconscious bias that shaped his vision of chanties and thus also shaped his preferences along these lines. By the same token, much like in the case of Sharp, typical chanties like "Sacramento" (too American and popular/vulgar) and "Shenandoah" (too American and Black) might have been passed over because they didnt fit the preferred vision as well. I am not saying that Lloyd was adamant that his chanties were "English," but that he probably preferred them to at least be "folk" -- this sense of an authentic music of a people. The disparity between what selection that vision turns up and what sailors actually commonly sang seems to be provoking the comment.

We can say that the example titles that Hugill gives were among the very most noted of the chanties during the Age of Sail and reasonably assume that they were among the most sung, too. Lloyd's percentages -- what he emphasized versus what was common in Hugill's experience -- were "off". This continues to be off in revival scenes (not that there's necessarily anything wrong with that). Lots of reasons for that. In certain years, certain songs will just seem too hackneyed, I suppose. Rarely would anyone sing 'Drunken Sailor" at a contemporary chanty sing, though the similar "Roll the Old Chariot" is done to death for some reason (kind of a "lazy" singer's song, that can easily generate a lot of sound). Interestingly, the chanties that Hugill mentions are still not sung a lot--relatively speaking. They are well known, but slightly avoided in actual practice; other songs -- all sorts of odd bits revived in the last couple decades -- seem to have more cache. Some of that is the product of year-by-year trends, but some of it may have also been established by what Lloyd's generation chose to emphasize.

The disproportionate (it seems) preference for minor keys and modal stuff seems to continue, and that may be simply the musical preferences of the Anglo-/Euro-American audiences, whose ears spend more time in the world of traditional British and Irish song than in the minstrel and Afro-American sounds that pervaded the chantyman's world.

Being more critical of Hugill's statement, I suspect we'd find he's exaggerating a bit, and due to speaking casually, wasn't quite accurate. I am guessing that "Bring 'em Down" is the chanty that was pulled from a book of Jamaican songs; that's what I've found, at least. I don't recall "Sally Racket" being that different from Hugill's (in SfSS). I'll take a closer look at this later on.

I'm not sure if I've heard Lloyd's "Sally Brown." The collected versions have melodies that are very consistent with each other, however. Not sure what he would have done differently.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 02:12 PM

Hey, Tim --

I think yours is a great question. I'd be interested to discuss it a bit, since I am not sure of the answer, either. I'd encourage you to re-post it in another thread -- perhaps the recent one titled "Shanties at Work" or something like that, which actually has a related (though appreciably different, I know) question in it. I'll meet you over there!
Gibb


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 02:27 PM

"My sense is that Lloyd would have preferred the "modal" tunes in the same way that, I believe, Cecil Sharp did."

I've been doing a bit of research on this very topic recently, and I think you're right. Both Sharp's '100 English Folksongs' and Lloyd and Vaughan Williams' original 'Penguin Book of English Folk Songs' favour modes other than the major (or 'Ionian'), to the extent that straightforward major tunes are in the minority in both collections. I strongly doubt that this represents accurately the range of tunes collected with English fok songs, and the 'New Penguin' collection seems to bear this out. Sharp, in his notes to '100 EFS' admits to picking interesting modal versions to represent certain songs that were overwhelmingly major in the examples that he'd found.

"Brian, my use of the word "pedant" was also ironical because I noticed and cared."

Good! Perhaps we should both start using smiley or winky faces to denote irony, Lighter? ;-)


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 02:54 PM

FWIW, I detected the irony in both of your uses of "pedant," guys! :) But I for one thought it would be interesting spur for discussion to take it at face (no face) value.

***

Here's a list of the shanties recorded by Lloyd and MacColl in collaboration. I may certainly have missed some; please add, if so. I have deliberately left out the the forebitter-ish, rarely-used-as-shanties songs like The Dreadnaught, Go to Sea Once More, etc., only because I don't think they have much relevance to the discussion.


A Hundred Years Ago
Billy Riley
Black Ball Line
Blood Red Roses
Blow Boys Blow
Blow the Man Down
Bowline
Bring 'em Down
Gal with the Blue Dress On
General Taylor
Hilo John Brown
Hilo Somebody
Jamboree
Paddy Doyle
Reuben Ranzo
Rise her Up (Whiskey O)
Sally Brown
Sally Racket
Santiana
Stormalong (way, hey, mister stormalong)
Wild Goose Shanty (?)

We could eventually look at each of these in detail and see where they may have learned them, how they arranged/adapted them, and how this shapes up with Hugill's assessment, etc.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Dead Horse
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 04:01 PM

Interestingly most of the titles in that list have many variations.
If you think that doesnt matter - that they are merely different words to the same tune or whatever, just listen to the three (count 'em. Three) versions of 'Paddy Doyles Boots' that are to be heard on the sound track to Moby Dick.
As hultonclint (we know who you are) points out in his foreward/more info to this shanty, it is not sung to the correct work at hand, but, the three versions are all entirely different - one version having twice the pulls of another. All three are Bunt shanties, but all three are not the same by any means.
And that is just ONE of the shanties taken from that list.
Now define which shanty was used for which job. I dare you.
(insert smiley face of the pedant here) :-)


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 04:03 PM

Hugill's "Shanties and Sailors' Songs" (1969) calls L & M's LP "The Singing Sailor" "magnificent...a more true-to-life performance than previous record performances....Following this, several other discs came on the market, some good, some too 'arty.'"

He goes on to mention a number of other shanty and sea-song records without commenting on their quality.

In a last-minute footnote he describes MacColl & Seeger's "Whaler out of New Bedford" as "excellent." The same goes for L & M's "Leviathan" (aka "Thar She Blows!")

He presumably didn't know that some of the texts on both albums
have been artificially Americanized.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Dead Horse
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 04:11 PM

I should have put the link to Moby Dick in above post.
Moby Dick shanties


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: MGM·Lion
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 04:37 PM

DH: Can't hear Paddy Doyle's Boots in that clip. There are only Blood Red Roses & Heave Away My Johnny.

~Michael~


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 07:08 PM

Taking the shanties in turn...

A Hundred Years Ago.

Lead by Lloyd.
Compares well with Terry's (1926) presentation.
The line "I promised her a golden ring/ she promised me that little thing" might be one of Lloyd's lines that Hugill didn't care for.

Billy Riley
Lead by Lloyd.
Seems based in C Fox Smith, lyrics-wise, but Lloyd's melody doesn't appear in print. (MacColl later did a rendition after Terry's collection of John Short.)
Caribbean-oriented.

...


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Mick Pearce (MCP)
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 07:39 PM

Brian - while 100EFS may favour modal tunes, in EFS Some Conclusions, Sharp does give his opinion that:

The majority of our English folk-tunes, say two thirds, are in the major or ionian mode. The remaining third is fairly evenly divided between the mixolydian, dorian and aeolian modes, with, perhaps, a preponderance in favour of the mixolydian. These figures have been compiled from an examination of my own collection ; but, I believe, they accord approximately with the experiences of other collectors.


In Karpeles' Cecil Sharp's Collection of EFS, she gives the numbers for her selection as:

Major 619 (53%), Mix 139(12%), Others with maj3 168 (14%)
With minor: 3rd Dor 105(9%), Ael 57(5%), Others 29(2%)
Others 58(5%)

(Total 1175, wrongly given as 1165 in intro. Percentages rounded).

So even she doesn't get a distribution according with the figures from Conclusions.


I don't know whether Sharp's figures in Conclusions were just what he felt, or if he did a rigorous count. Or even if anyone has done a rigourous count!

Mick


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 08:28 PM

Black Ball Line
Lead by MacColl.
After Colcord.

Blood Red Roses
Lead by Lloyd.
After Doerflinger, but seems to be with multiple changes by the singer.

Blow Boys Blow
Lead by MacColl.
Melody perhaps after Terry. The lyrics here are interesting: "Where fever makes the White man shiver." I don't see this idea anywhere accept in Hugill SfSS (1961). MacColl's recording seems to have been 1960 or earlier. I'd suspect one got it from the other. For reasons I won't elaborate here, I actually think Hugill may have took it from MacColl.

...

"Sailboat Malarkey" must be the Bahamian song Hugill was talking about.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 08:48 PM

Blow the Man Down
Lead by Corbet.
Compares well with Colcord and Terry.

Bowline
Lead by Lloyd.
After Colcord, etc.

Bring 'em Down
Lead by Lloyd.
Evidently adapted from Jekyl's collection of Jamaican songs. See here:
http://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=121396

...


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 09:03 PM

Gal with the Blue Dress On
Lead by Lloyd.
I don't have this one -- I'm guessing it follows Hugill (the album came out in 1962)

General Taylor
Lead by Lloyd.
I don't have this one -- I'm guessing it follows Hugill (the album came out in 1962)

Hilo John Brown
Lead by MacColl.
I don't have it. If it's anything like Killen's rendition, then it's straight outta Hugill.

...


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 09:24 PM

Hilo Somebody
Lead by Lloyd.
I don't have it. Must be after either Terry or Hugill.

Jamboree
Lead by Lloyd.
I don't know the source, and I suspect Lloyd fooled around with this one a bit.
The melody is similar to what's in Terry, but I suppose it might sound more "modal" because of the harmonization. Incidentally, the Spinners' version, in which I think the traditional melody was inadvertently changed, sounds more modal to me.

Paddy Doyle
Lead by both.
Harmonizing the lead is a weird choice.

...


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 10:32 PM

Rise her Up (Whiskey O)
Lead by MacColl.
Could only be from Doerflinger, though they messed with it and reshaped it a lot. Spliced it with "Whiskey Johnny."

Sally Brown
Lead by Lloyd.
Haven't heard it. Will update once I find a copy.

Sally Racket
Lead by Lloyd.
Melody as in Moby-Dick film's "Hill and Gully Rider". Lloyd may have spliced in words from Terry's "Cheerl'y Man" (as Hugill did also do). Overall, not too much different than what Hugill claims to have gotten from Harding.

Santiana
Lead by Lloyd.
Some inspiration from Doerflinger, but Lloyd's own tweaks.

Stormalong (way, hey, mister stormalong)
Lead by MacColl.
So close to Hugill's SfSS, and no other versions found. Yet this was recorded several years before Hugill's book. They must have been collaborating. Perhaps Hugill coached MacColl on the yelps.

Wild Goose Shanty (?)
Lead by Lloyd.
Unique to the collection of, or made up (e.g. from Terry's "The Bully Boat") by Lloyd.

...


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 06 Jul 12 - 10:45 PM

I forgot from the list:

South Australia
Lead by MacColl.
It's my opinion that he worked this up from Doerflinger...a careless reading... and that's what spawned the revival version.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 07 Jul 12 - 03:45 AM

Couple of quick comments:

""Sailboat Malarkey" must be the Bahamian song Hugill was talking about."
Included on an album of field recordings from the Bahamas (I think it is also on one of the Lomax series)
I have the Bahaman album somewhere - not got round to digitising it yet.
I think Roy Harris also recorded it - though he may have sung it at the Singers Club.

"Blow Boys Blow
Lead by MacColl.
Melody perhaps after Terry. The lyrics here are interesting: "Where fever makes the White man shiver.""

One of the few shanties I partially remember from my grandfather's singing

Was you ever on the Congo river,
Where fever makes the white man shiver.

A Yankee ship sailed up the river
Her masts and spars they shone like silver.

What do you think we had for dinner?
Blind scouse pie and donkey's liver.

What do you think we had for supper?
?????

Who do you think was the first mate of her?
Tommy Brown the n***** lover.

Who do you think was the captain of her
??????

Blow me boys and blow forever,
Blow her down the Congo River

Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 07 Jul 12 - 05:26 AM

Mick, thank you for those additonal stats on modal tunes. Very interesting. I probably need to do a more careful recount, but according to my initial count, 100 EFS contains 45 tunes with the minor 3rd - way ahead of either Sharp or Karpeles' estimates.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Mick Pearce (MCP)
Date: 07 Jul 12 - 07:48 AM

Brian - I just remembered that Green's intro to my 1970 reprint of Kidson TT also gives some stats for that:

Major 66(61%), Tetratonic 1(1%), Pentachordal/tonic 3(3%), Hexachordal/tonic 17(16%), Ael 3(3%), Dor 6(6%), Mix 4(4%),
Other 9(8%).

The major count is in line with Sharp's Conclusions' estimates. It's harder to say for the rest without looking more closely at the hex ones to see which sort they are.

If Sharp is right about the estimates from his complete collection, you, and others above, may be right about a bias towards non-major in the selections.

Mick


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 07 Jul 12 - 08:36 AM

Jim, thanks so much for posting your grandfather's lyrics. Roughly when did he learn them?

They are extremely similar to MacColl's, the biggest difference being the "blind scouse pie."

Correction: Topic's "Leviathan" album is not the same as Riverside's "There She Blows"/"Whaling Ballads," which Hugill seems to have overlooked.

MacColl and Seeger aren't on it, but Martin Carthy and other future stars are.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 07 Jul 12 - 09:10 AM

"Roughly when did he learn them?"
I think it would have have been around the beginning of the last century - I understand he was one of the founder members of the seaman's branch of The Workers Educational Association.
Interestingly, he and my grandmother were fanatical anti-racists (my grandmother was arrested for throwing a brick at Mosely), yet he had no compunction singing "n*****" - not a term I've ever been commfortable with.
He also sang 'Johnny come down from Hilo' which started:

"I've never seen the like since I was born,
As a big buck n***** with his sea-boots on."

The Bulgine was another one of his.
I wasn't interested enough at the time to memorise his songs, but unknown to me, my father's brother, my Uncle Gerry remembered most of them and sang them at the whitby Folk Festival - I didn't find this out until after he died.
I've alwys dreamed of finding that somebody recorded them from him - and regretted I didn't.
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 07 Jul 12 - 10:05 AM

Thanks, Jim.

I hate realizing years later that I should have done something simple and obvious long ago. But as a friend of mine used to say, "That's life in the swamp."


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 07 Jul 12 - 01:03 PM

Jim,
Until WWII the N word wasn't particularly seen as a racist word in Britain, hence the perfectly widely used saying 'N in a woodpile'. Dark-skinned people used this word to describe themselves and all sorts of innocent expressions included the word. I think the word started to be recognised as a derogatory word when the white American servicemen came over in WWII and used it in this way. Therefore there is no anomally over your anti-racist granparents using it.

BTW I have been going to Whitby since the second festival in the late 60s. It's a long shot but I just might know people who have old recordings of what went on in the early festivals, or have memories of your uncle. What was his name please and where was he from?


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 07 Jul 12 - 02:24 PM

Thanks Steve
His name was Gerry Carroll - it would have been some time in the early 90s he was there I think
I'm not sure whether he was a guest or not, but he did get a sizeable spot I believe
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 07 Jul 12 - 02:51 PM

"In Karpeles' Cecil Sharp's Collection of EFS, she gives the numbers for her selection as..."

Mick, can I double check (since I haven't got that collection): are those figures from Karpeles regarding modal tunes derived from the songs she included in the book, or from Sharp's collection as a whole?

Thanks again for those figures from Kidson.

Apologies for thread drift, but it's not entirely irrelevant!


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Mick Pearce (MCP)
Date: 07 Jul 12 - 03:29 PM

Brian - those are for the selection she made for the 2 vol published collection. In the introduction she says:

...he noted nearly 3,300 tunes [footnote: In addition he noted nearly 1700 tunes in the Southern Appalachian Mountains...making a total of nearly 5,000 tunes]. Of these about 480 are dance tunes, 180 singing-games, and 170 chanteys, leaving about 2,470 songs and ballad-tunes.

It is from this last that the present selection is taken. It consists of 1165 tunes (413 separate titles) and though it numbers somewhat less than half the tunes that were noted it may nevertheless be said to represent the corpus of the collection


She goes on to categorize the omitted as: 1) Versions with only slight differences from included, 2) tunes only partly remembered, 3) songs of doubtful traditional provenance 4) a few noted from Irish immigrants in Marylebone W/H considered alien 5) a number of songs with commonplace tunes accompanied by texts which are corrupt, fragmentary, or of little interest (..mostly of the Come all ye type).


The figures from Conclusions seem to be Sharp's estimates from his whole collection. But since Conclusions was published in 1907 I don't know what proportion of his songs had been collected by then. It's possible the distribution he gave there might be altered in the full set of songs he collected (Karpeles gives 1903-1923, the year he died, as the dates he collected).

Mick


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 07 Jul 12 - 06:17 PM

Jim
I've kept records like programmes and news letters of all the Whitby Festivals so I'll check these first.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 07 Jul 12 - 11:09 PM

I've have now heard Lloyd's "Sally Brown" (thanks to a friend) and it's as I was suspecting: the unusual melody that Lloyd was being called out on was simply the one prominent collected version that differs a good degree from others. This was a rendition sung by ex-sailor Charles Robbins, age 66, in 1908 to Cecil Sharp. Sharp first presented it in a journal article, then included it in his big chanty collection of 1914. Here is me singing it, so that one can hear the melody notated by Sharp:
"Sally Brown" of Robbins

My working hypothesis is that the unusual sound of this melody -- in which some degrees of the scale are sometimes major, sometimes minor -- reflected the phenomenon of blue notes. Sharp, as far as I know, did not have "blue notes" in his frame of reference. He merely made an effort to notated what he'd heard within the categories of his musical system. To his credit, he did try to notate the melodies rather precisely, whereas other collectors might "normalize" them. I think what happened in this and some other chanties that were collected is that neutrally-pitch or blue notes were sung, after which the collector, out of necessity, forced these notes into major or minor. When one (e.g. Lloyd) then goes to read the notation, one realizes the reified categories of the collector. Anyway...

Hugill is claimed to have said, in the above quoted passage,

Bert did 'Sally Brown' but not the normal version, not the way any sailor ever did it.

He was essentially incorrect; Bert sang it as the sailor Robbins, albeit rendered from notation, but a notation that was more accurate than Hugill's, FWIW. OK, so it sounded weird to Hugill, and we can understand why.

What irks me, however, is that Hugill reproduced, verbatim, the Robbins variation of "Sally Brown" in his book! He didn't even know it was there, I guess (since he seems not to have been able to read music, and just threw it in there with a vague idea of what it was like). And you know what? The album on which Lloyd sang this was one that was created after Hugill's book came out and which clearly utilized Hugill's book for some things. Lloyd may even have got this "Sally Brown" right out of Hugill's book.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 08 Jul 12 - 12:48 AM

My purpose in listing and providing short notes with the Lloyd/MacColl shanties was to consider them in concrete terms, rather than as a vague impression. Now, people who know me might know that I am not a huge fan of some of the stuff they did with/to chanties. But I think those are separate issues. The issue for me at the moment is Hugill's criticism of them, which I have come to the conclusion is largely bullshit.

All the weird shanties they put over are good, perhaps, depending on which way you look at them. But for Bert they had to be modal, they had to be Mixolydian, they had to be Dorian.

After looking at the individual songs, I don't see much that could be considered modal. More importantly, the songs -- the great majority, if not perhaps all -- seems as though they were probably worked up from one of a few common media sources. These sources contained reasonably common and acceptable melody forms, of which Hugill gives tacit approval by also putting them in his book. They are not funky variations from left field, or, at least, they were sung by someone in tradition.

That being said, some of Lloyd/MacColl's renditions differed melodically from their sources in one of two ways. The first was if they inadvertently mis-read the notation. If this was the case, they might subject the melody to their own preferred sort of melody. An example of this is "Hilo John Brown" (which I noted above I had not heard, but now I have). Lloyd changes the ending melodic figure into something (which I've noted in several revival interpretations of chanties now) that might be called sort of "modal".

The second was, I think, they approached the reading of notation very roughly. There will be those who argue that their melodies differ from print sources because they were learned differently, in oral tradition. But I think it is more likely that they used the book sources and yet felt it wasn't all that important to follow the melodies precisely. They just didnt make the effort, perhaps being of the opinion that it didnt matter much. (Does it?) A fairly extreme example of this is their "South Australia". Let's face it -- the hyper-detailed and -variable melody in Doerflinger isn't all that easy to render if your sight-reading skills aren't great. Yet Hugill also did this "make up any melody you want" thing, e.g. in his "Shiny O". Yet whatever L/M made up/fudged by way of melody, I still don't hear much "weird/modal" stuff.

An additional irony may be that numerous notations in Hugill's book are messed up. He has certain phrases of songs (.e.g. in "Hilo Johnny Brown") misplaced, on the wrong ledger lines. Anyone who would try to sing from those notations would come up with a weird or modal tune!

The one place where I can try to agree with this criticism of Hugill's in in the harmonizing done by L/M. I think the style of harmony they used may not have been characteristic of historic chanteying and, to my ears, gives it a weird sound.

They never sang the songs the real sailors sang: 'The Rio Grande', 'Shenandoah', 'The Banks of the Sacramento'… Those were the songs the sailors sang but they never looked at them.

This is a valid observation. L/M did ca.26/27 shanties. I have my own list of the ca. 27 most noted chanties. The overlap is 5 items. That does seem a bit low.

Bert did 'Sally Brown' but not the normal version, not the way any sailor ever did it.

I've explained in the post above why this was an incorrect and perhaps hypocritical statement.

He sang a Bahamian boatman's rowing song as a deepwater shanty, but it was never sung in deepwater. It was only collected once in the early '60s but Bert's version had extra verses that he must have written.

Lloyd didn't do this until the 70s. By this time, we had Harlow's book with stevedore songs, Abrahams' and Beck's books with Caribbean songs, Lomax's recordings from the 60s and more awareness of his 30s recordings, etc. Revival performers since then have many times performed non-deepwater worksongs that they discovered in various sources. Perhaps people became more willing to include these songs under the larger rubric of "shanty." Perhaps, too, they are excited and inspired by the availability of actual recordings -- a way to learn from authentic performances. If Lloyd wanted to sing some of these songs, why not? Didn't Hugill include someone of these *seeming* marginal songs in his collection? And why wouldn't they add they own lyrics? Isn't that what Hugill does all throughout his book?

'Little Sally Racket' came from a collection of Jamaican folk songs and, again, was not the version sung by sailors."

I've not yet found the collection he is referring to. Lloyd used the "Hilly and Gully" melody. But when Hugill presents the song, he also says it is similar to "Hill and Gully." Hugill indicates only that he got it from Harding, so to say "sung by sailors" seems disingenuous.

Leaving aside Hugill's criticism, I personally think the shanties most tinkered with or mis-interpreted, in a regrettable way (although all not equally so) by L/M are:

Wild Goose Shanty
South Australia
Rise Her Up (so-called Whiskey Johnny)
Bring 'em Down
Blood Red Roses
Hilo John Brown

Others may not be historically authentic, but they are quite acceptable (and good, IMO) as what they are: revival performances.

I'd be glad to elaborate on any of those.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 08 Jul 12 - 09:18 AM

Gibb,
'it didn't matter much. (did it?)
In accordance with my last post, it surely doesn't matter at all. In all of L&M's RECORDING output they were ENTERTAINERS. They were not pretending to be seamen. I doubt if MacColl had ever been aboard and Lloyd only went for a sample run on a modern whaler with NO SAILS.

FWIW I posted this a few years ago. Bert claimed to have collected a version of 'Heave away me Johnny' from a Hull seaman when he sailed out of Hull. The words of this pertaining to Hull are not what any person from Hull would ever have sung. I can go into detail if you like. The song IMHO was written by Bert.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 08 Jul 12 - 10:08 AM

"South Australia" may have been written by Lloyd as well.

I wouldn't be as charitable as Steve. L & M presentedthemselevs as much more than simple entertainers: their extensive sleeve notes, their learned references to scholarly sources, their (deserved) air of unusual knowledgability advertises them as being dedicated to documentary authenticity, particularly in the '50s, when nobody but a relatibe handful of academics and aficionados had the slightest idea of what English folksong, including shanties, was all about.

They were great singers. They hooked me on the subject. They could also be good scholars when they wanted to be.

Unfortunately that was not all the time, and they sometimes got very sloppy if not downright misleading - though by non-academic standards their transgressions were harmless, if occasionally tawdry (I'm thinking especially of Lloyd's blithe anglifying of American whaling songs he got from Colcord, though that was early in his career).

I doubt that Hugill was guilty of either "hypocrisy" or "bullshit." He was not a trained scholar, and like most people he often spoke off the cuff, basing his remarks on impressions and recollections that he may not have scrutinized. As he says frankly in the intro to SSS, he never wrote down the songs he learned at sea until he started writing his book in the 1950s. After thirty years of being away from sail, and without graduate training in textual criticism, it's no surprise that his texts are sometimes a hodgepodge of what he genuinely learned, what he made up at sea or in a German POW camp, and what he picked up as presumably genuine from shanty books. It would be easy to confuse these things, just as it would be easy for a busy amateur to edit some songs more rigorously than others. He may even have relied heavily on memory when writing down verses he got from print. Why not? Think of the time saved. And of course shantymen varied even established words somewhat when singing.

Hugill is outspokenly skeptical of many of Davis & Tozer's texts for being too drippily sentimental. Yet I believe he also mentions somewhere that his father owned a copy and thought it was a fine collection. (And we know that Stanley Slade, of the generation preceding Hugill's, recorded some of D&T's versions. His own preference? The BBC's requirement? It would be good to know.)


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 08 Jul 12 - 10:38 AM

""South Australia" may have been written by Lloyd as well."
Doubt it - though he may have been an infant prodigy - it was collected in the 1920s
As has been pointed out, as far as 'sloppy scholarship' and misinformation is concerned, these people were performers; it was only when they made unsubstantiated and inaccurate scholastic claims of the songs they introduced "this is typical of the 18th English repertoire" was one of Bert's favourite types of statement, when we now know he got many of his songs from Canadian or Irish collections, for instance.
MacColl's introductions tended to be leads in to the appreciation of the songs as performed pieces rather than the passing on of scholarly information - we have enough recorded live performances of his to know this to be a fact (not to say he couldn't bullshit with the best of them).
"I doubt that Hugill was guilty of either "hypocrisy" or "bullshit."
The half dozen times I saw Hugill perform I came away with the impression of somebody desperate to show he knew more than anybody else on the planet about sea songs - he straddled the revival and the tradition like the feller who used to stand outside Rhodes Harbour - a performer to a T.
Jim Carroll.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 08 Jul 12 - 11:58 AM

I meant the "Nancy Blair" words he sang and the especially lively tune he used.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 08 Jul 12 - 12:17 PM

> came away with the impression of somebody desperate to show he knew more than anybody else on the planet about sea songs

I wouldn't put it quite that way. Especially since he may *well* have known more than anybody else, at least about English-language shanties. That's not to say he was infallible, or that he thought he was. He certainly doesn't lay down inviolable rules in his books, nor did he in person.

Hugill was, after all, one of the very last active shantymen in the English-speaking world, and no matter how his style and repertoire may have been modified over the decades, I believe he did his best to give an accurate picture of shantying. Because he'd learned shantying as a teenager, I think it unlikely that his basic style or repertoire changed significantly.

Though I met him only twice, my impression of Hugill was of a natural but serious-minded extravert who was determined equally to put on a good show and to inform an interested audience as accurately as he could about genuine shanty singing.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 08 Jul 12 - 02:03 PM

I feel like you guys are drifting a bit towards overall or general assessments of Hugill and Lloyd. Both have positives and negatives -- and good reasons for any shortcomings. It gets muddled, in my opinion, when we judge them by different standards in order to give more or less emphasis to positives or negatives.

I am trying to stick to the specifics (though not always succeeding). My allegation of bullshit and hypocrisy doesn't apply to Hugill overall. It's just directed at his specific words in the 'Bert' biography.

I think these words need critique because they can easily be taken for granted. Hugill enjoyed the position of being able to cast doubt on the authenticity or quality of any Revival singer's performance. I think most people would read this passage at face value, as something that confirmed their understanding that Stan was The Man and that Lloyd, naturally, could not measure up fully. While we can't "blame" any one for speaking off the cuff, in this case Hugill's off the cuff statement (if that's what it was) creates a picture of Lloyd and MacColl that I think is unjustified and yet will be believed by most readers.

While Hugill and Lloyd were very different in important ways, in this case, Lloyd either didn't do some of what Hugill exaggeratingly claims or else what he did was no different than what Hugill himself had done. I object to the way that what amounts to a statement of Hugill's personal preferences or tastes as a performer seem to be made superior under the guise of authenticity. If there were circumstantial reasons for Hugill's shortcomings, then there were circumstantial shortcomings for Lloyd's, too. In all, I wish both these fellows had just said "I don't know", "I'm not sure", and "My opinion is" more often!


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 08 Jul 12 - 02:05 PM

Dare I also say that I think Hugill adopted some of Lloyd's refashioned "South Australia"?


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 08 Jul 12 - 03:03 PM

As a researcher, once reasonable doubt has been cast on a collector/authority I tend to avoid their works for serious research, with perhaps the exception of 'Traveller Songs from England and Scotland' which I have been unable to find fault with.

However, as a singer I do sing MacColl's songs, and Lloyd's reworked songs, because I like what they did with them. They were very talented people. I'm pretty certain also that some of the many chanties I sing, Hugill had a hand in. As I am a revival singer, none of this bothers me in the slightest.

From postings on the Ballad List, which Jonathan is a member of, I must admit to occasionally being amused when members take L&M's Child Ballads as serious versions.

If I wanted to know something really learned about chanties I'd come here first before going to Hugill.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 08 Jul 12 - 04:58 PM

> I wish both these fellows had just said "I don't know", "I'm not sure", and "My opinion is" more often!

Yeah, but how many do you know who actually say that?


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 09 Jul 12 - 03:50 AM

"amused when members take L&M's Child Ballads as serious versions."
As far as I understand it, both of them never hid the fact that they re-worked and collated ballad texts, as have most revival singers I have met (that's what they both were).
The problem with Bert is that he was regarded as a serious folk song scholar, (even though he was sometimes 'economical with the truth' regarding his scholarship), I was never aware that MacColl was regarded in the same way.
MacColl's major contribution was in evolving a system of voice production and applied it to the singing of folk songs, which, alas, has never been examined outside of the confines of the Critics Group.
As far as sea songs are concerned, did either of them make misleading pronouncements on the shanties they sang or did they do what all of the revivalists do way back then, and just sing them, wherever they got them and whatever they did to them?
I seem to remember (could check if I need to) that all the sea albums they did came with extremely sparse notes.
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 09 Jul 12 - 10:48 AM

> all the sea albums they did came with extremely sparse notes.

It depends what you mean by "sparse." Typically most of the back of the sleeve was covered in small print, with a general introduction and each song commented upon, generally by Lloyd.

They were "sparse" in terms of academic information, but appeared to the uninstructed (like me) to be the last word in scholarship.

Example, from "Off to Sea Once More" (1956):

"STORMALONG Romantic writers imagine the hero of this shanty as a legendary giant, a seafaring Paul Bunyan. He has become as much a figure of marine folklore as Davy Jones or Mother Carey. However, some old Cape Horners declare that Stormalong was a real man named John Willis, of Eyemouth, Berwickshire, who was one of the greatest of early nineteenth century West Indiaman skippers. There are two quite distinct versions of this shanty, one for halyards, the other, as here, for manning the capstan or the pumps."

Just the fact of the notes, and their detail, proclaims that this is the real thing, with factual commentary by genuine experts. Rarely did either MacColl or Lloyd say frankly that they'd changed anything. (An important exception are the collations in Riverside's multi-disk "The English and Scottish Popular Ballads," all of which are evidently acknowledged, possibly under the influence of PhD editor Ken Goldstein.)

Of course, maybe I was an exceptionally naive youth to trust anybody in show biz, regardless of how much history and folklore they could cite. However, neither the Clancy Bros., nor the Dubliners, enormously popular "folk" acts of the era, supplied comparable notes. And L & M's signature, unaccompanied singing, or singing with "folky" instruments like the concertina, appeared to be yet another stamp of authenticity.

I don't want to make too much of this, but many future scholars listened to L & M's albums with complete confidence that they were as close to 19th C. folk singing as a 20th C. human could get.

BTW, just how "prominent" *were* Stormy, Davy Jones, and Mother Carey in marine folklore? My impression is that they were, essentially, names or phrases only. (Though "Davy Jones" is said specifically to have been a name for the devil.)


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 09 Jul 12 - 12:57 PM

Lighter--

Can you please confirm that _Off to Sea Once More_ was 1956? I ask just for my own info. Someday I'd like to arrange the recorded chanties on a timeline. I'm particularly interested in the issue of interaction between Hugill and Lloyd/MacColl/others.


"Stormalong" seems intriguing in this regard. It is quite a distinct version of the song that MacColl is singing -- one which I don't recall seeing anywhere before Hugill. Some of the historical references to "Stormalong" by title alone might be referring to this version. And some of the song texts without tune could be, though I cannot really get them to scan. Hugill published it in 1961, saying he'd got it from Harding the Barbadian.

The question then would be, where did MacColl get it? His matches Hugill's quite well. The most likely answer is that MacColl learned it personally from Hugill by 1956. One supposes Hugill sang it for him, perhaps emphasizing the vocal "breaks" that characterize MacColl performance and which Hugill notes in SfSS directly before the song. This would be interesting though because I'm not sure Hugill was ever known to perform this song later on; indeed, he seemed to avoid chanties that required a "bluesy" expression.

The other possibility, that Hugill learned it from MacColl, seems too bizarre to consider. What isn't so far fetched though is if Hugill taught it to MacColl, MacColl put his own spin on it, and then that interpretation had some influence on Hugill's published version.

In any case, this seems to be evidence that Hugill and MacColl (and maybe Lloyd) had interacted in the '50s. Unless I am missing something.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 09 Jul 12 - 05:04 PM

I've always assumed the British revival started in the 60s which is when most of us got involved. I knew that L&M and a few others were involved in folk by then but I assumed more in isolation. Is there an authoritative book on the British folk scene in the 50s? I have Journeyman and the Joan Littlewood biography.

I too would be interested to know if Hugill interacted with the folk scene at an early stage in the 50s or even earlier. We used to have Stan and Bob Roberts doing workshops together at our Hull whaling festivals in the late 60s early 70s.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 09 Jul 12 - 05:52 PM

From the "Rare Caribbean shanties" thread, 2009:

Re Lloyd and Hugill before 1961:

Hugill writes that in the mid '50s he "contacted the Folk Song Department of the B.B.C." and "recorded several of the rarer shanties for their Permanent Records Library." He "also became known at Cecil Sharp House, the headquarters of the English Folk Dance and Song Society, where I was asked to give talks on the subject of shantying and shanties and where I met many well-known collectors ofsea-songs and shanties, with whom I exchanged notes on the subject."

Hugill even refers to "an excellent recording of sixteen sea-songs (forebitters) and shanties sung in fine imitation of the true style, and in particular the Liverpool seaman's style." This must be the Topic LP "The Singing Sailor," issued 1956/57, featuring Lloyd, MacColl, and the actor Harry Corbett

http://www.informatik.uni-hamburg.de/~zierke/lloyd/records/thesingingsailor.html

"Stormalong John" appeared on the 1957 Topic sequel, "The Black Ball Line," with MacColl as shantyman.   

It thus seems probable after all that Lloyd and MacColl got "Stormalong John" directly from Hugill rather than the other way around.

MacColl's "hitches" in the shanty (probably never heard before on a commercial shanty recording) are more likely to be from Hugill's influence than to be a component of an elaborate counterfeit.

The simplest explanation seems to be that "Stormalong John" came to MacColl from Harding via Hugill.

I don't believe Hugill would ever have claimed he'd learned "Stormalong John" from Harding if in fact he'd only heard it on a "revival" record (or even on a B.B.C. recording) just a few years earlier.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 09 Jul 12 - 06:54 PM

> I met many well-known collectors of sea-songs and shanties, with whom I exchanged notes on the subject.

Among these, presumably, were Lloyd & MacColl. How many other shanty "collectors" were there in the mid '50s? How many of them were "well-known" in the '60s?


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 10 Jul 12 - 12:24 PM

Who else was still collecting in Britain in the 50s, Lomax? Ennis? Kennedy? When I get time I'll have a look through the Journals for that period.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 10 Jul 12 - 12:54 PM

It makes me wonder who would be the market/audience for such productions in Britain c1956/7 as I always thought the revival in Britain didn't take off until the early 60s. There were no folk clubs, or festivals of the sort we know today. There were EFDSS festivals but these were mainly dance and very much a middle class affair.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Snuffy
Date: 10 Jul 12 - 01:31 PM

Steve,

Hugill's "many well-known collectors of sea-songs and shanties, with whom I exchanged notes on the subject" were not necessarily still collecting in the 50s and 60s.

He could well have met people like Percy Grainger at CSH in that period: although his shanty collecting was now many years in the past, Grainger certainly qualifies as "well-known"

What happened to Hugill's notes and correspondence?


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 10 Jul 12 - 03:18 PM

"It makes me wonder who would be the market/audience for such productions in Britain c1956/7 "
There seems to have been an on-going interest in shanties throughout the first half of the 20th century.
Remembering Hugill's pointing out the international nature of shanties, the Library of Congress was recording sea songs and shanties from New York, Wisconsin, Virginia and California as early as 1939.
Whall published in 1910 and again in 1920, Colcord in 1925 and Doerflinger in 1951.
Stanley Slade was first recorded in 1943 and it was thought there to be enough of an audience for HMV to issue his singing commercially.
Incidentally, the late Tom Munnelly wrote a fascinating long article on Irish sea songs which contains a very evocative description of on of the great blind storytellers, Henry Blake, hearing the crew of a sailing ship sailing out of the Shannon estuary singing shanties - I'm pretty sure Tom said that none were collected in Ireland.
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 10 Jul 12 - 06:15 PM

JIm
Yes and I suppose Sharp's/Terry's chanteys, or at least some of them, were constantly available through the community song books like The Daily Express one.

Is there a date on the Blake reminiscence? Of course the seamen could have been from anywhere. There are plenty of sea songs in the Healy books but I don't recall any chanteys.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 10 Jul 12 - 07:56 PM

> I'm pretty sure Tom said that none were collected in Ireland.

Certainly my impression. The current "revival" assumption, however, seems to be that most shanties are somehow Irish.

Maybe the Clancys contributed inadvertently to this idea.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 11 Jul 12 - 03:16 AM

"Is there a date on the Blake reminiscence?"
Not as far as I know - this is the extract.
Jim Carroll

"How relevant, then, is the shanty to the Irish tradition? One can only speculate at this stage, but shanties were certainly not unknown to the Irish. The late Henry Blake of Kilbaha, in Loop Head, County Clare, had this to say:

Henry Blake: Sea shanties ?

Tom Munnelly: Aye. Now where did you hear them?

HB: Oh I heard them singin' them alright, you know. Santiago an'... It is with sailors I heard that; Santiana . . . Sally Brown, Homeward Bound, Goodbye Fare Thee Well. I remember them alright... Of course we were young and [didn't] take much
notice. But I have a memory of them. I heard the sailors on board the ship. ... So young Brennan [a pilot] and I took the captain off the Shannon, and Michael Brennan put him on board the ship. And they started to weigh anchor. And when they started to weigh anchor they started to sing the shanty Homeward Bound for Limerick Town.

TM: That was the same one as Goodbye Fare Thee Well was it?

HB: Yes, yes . . . It was lovely to listen to them. Of course they'd all [be] lovely singers, and ten, fifteen or twenty of them together singin', you see, 'twas lovely to hear them. I. . . very often heard them on the Island [i.e. laying off Scattery Island] when the ship'd be weighin' anchor on Scattery Roads. I wasn't out at all on the ship, but you could hear them on the island. You'd love to listen to them.

This recalls O'Curry's account of listening to Anthony O'Brien who shared a boat with his father on the same stretch of the Shannon estuary. The young O'Curry would stand on the shore to hear O'Brien singing Fenian lays:

So powerful was the singer's voice that it often reached the shores at either side of the boat in Clare and Kerry and often called the labouring men from the neighbouring fields at both sides down to the water's edge to enjoy the strains of such music".


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 29 Jul 18 - 11:32 AM

Refresh.

Pretty interesting.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Martin Ryan
Date: 29 Jul 18 - 06:12 PM

Agreed, Lighter - I missed it, first time round.

Regards


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 01 Feb 23 - 01:43 AM

An example of Lloyd's process -- and an error in that process -- that some might find interesting. A few folks were chatting about this in a non-Mudcat space last year (RTim and the missus helped!).

So here's the example. I ran across a recorded performance led by Martyn Wyndham-Read of "Hoorah for the Black Ball Line."
https://youtu.be/T9Z6G8vt_WU
I think, Hmm--what is this melody? Not only is it different from any of the "Black Ball Line" melodies I have heard/sung/seen, but also it sounds just plain weird for any chanty to have a melody like this. What's up with the tonality?

To make the pitches sound starker, I played it on a keyboard, here:
https://youtu.be/sJeOolaUAME

The question was, where did Wyndham-Read get this odd melody from?

Here's my theory. But first, some context.

I've observed on other occasions what looks to be evidence that Bert Lloyd had trouble with reading music notation. This is a moot issue for most chanty singers, who learn songs aurally—directly from other singers' live performances or recordings. But it's relevant to Lloyd because he was at the early stage of chanty revival singing and he was taking songs that were then unknown or very little-known and trying to present them, as it were, for the first (revival) time.

Despite some Lloyd aficionados citing Lloyd's experience on some kind of latter-day whaling vessel, there isn't much evidence that he learned many chanties from a "purely" oral tradition connected with pre-revival working sailors.

So, Lloyd turned, not unlike many folk revivalists, to published chanty collections. It seems clear that for Lloyd's 1950s recordings he made good use of Colcord's and Doerflinger's volumes. By the time of this Wyndham-Read recording in which Lloyd was involved, 1974, he had made use of Hugill (1961), too.

On to the example at hand.

Lloyd, clearly, to my mind, used Hugill's book as the source for "Black Ball Line." One can see the lyrical correspondences in Hugill's text, images #2 and #3 here:
https://imgur.com/a/DfhuCSq

Now here's where it gets funny and interesting. The melody sung by Wyndham-Read, arranged by Lloyd, follows the exact *contour* of Hugill's notated melody. That is, if you write Wyndham-Read's sung melody on a music staff and you compare it to Hugill's, all the little black dots fall in the same lines and spaces.
So, again, why does it sound different from Hugill's melody, which I am singing from the book notation here?:
https://youtu.be/C2OuVe4sPm8

The answer is that Lloyd must have read the musical score without correctly interpreting the accidentals (sharps) in the key signature. Here's Hugill's melody, again, written out by me. I've marked above all of the notes where Lloyd incorrectly followed the key signature and lowered a pitch by a half-step. (See image #1)
https://imgur.com/a/DfhuCSq

All that remains is to transpose this melody up to the key a half-step higher to Wyndham-Read's singing pitch.

All this means that Lloyd not only invented his own stuff -- which might be considered in the spirit of folk musicking -- but also simply mediated material incorrectly. The product is not the result of a "folk process" of being part of a musical community then unconsciously (or consciously) effecting small changes to material through taste or imperfect memory. It's breaking from the folk process, using media, and making a mistake. What irks me about this is not that Lloyd would use a media source nor that he made a mistake but that Lloyd did not hear this was so wrong, so uncharacteristic of the genre.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Nick Dow
Date: 01 Feb 23 - 08:33 AM

Very well argued. I think Lloyd probably altered the modality of the tune for whatever reason. He did not have any difficulty sight reading, or he would not have been able to produce such varied musical comparisons as we see in 'Folk Song in England'. I have had to readjust my views of Lloyd over the years and have come to the conclusion that he believed that the end justifies the means.
Nothing has surpassed his rolling prose and stylish narrative for me, which can be seen repeatedly in my publications. However, this is not about me, and I feel we must pose the question that Roy Palmer voiced at the A.L.lloyd memorial conference; "Would you rather have that (song) or not?."


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 01 Feb 23 - 10:23 AM

Thanks for reviving this thread, Gibb. I'd forgotten all about it.

You've jogged my memory of hearing Wyndham-Reade's rendition as a callow youth fifty years ago. I'd heard most of the Lloyd-MacColl chanteys by then, including MacColl's more traditional "Black Ball Line."

I thought W-R's sounded so weird, so authentic, so English! Englishness didn't matter, but authenticity, especially authentic weirdness, did.

I think this is one reason that L & M preferred modal tunes. Like the chanties themselves, they were markedly unlike the music the average anglophone audience was used to. That suggested (erroneously) that they were (or ought to be) the oldest, most valuable, most authentic artifacts from the vague, romanticized era many of us naively associated with traditional music.

That emphasis on modality, concertinas, hearty double entendre, narrative songs, "exoticness," and a taken-for-granted anti-elite bias, etc., are values in the revival performances of Lloyd and a few others that appealed to me and, I suspect, a great many others. It was so appealing and unusual it had to be authentic! History coming alive, which was one point of the revival.

And it was all backed by those sometimes equivocating, always authoritative-sounding liner notes!

Not a chantey, but has anyone mentioned that Lloyd, with a little inspiration from broadsides of the 1840's and a trad tune, was the effective creator of "The Trim-Rigg'd Doxy"?

In response to Roy Palmer's and Nick's question, "would I rather have Lloyd's creation or not?" I'd rather have "Doxy" than otherwise, though possibly not by much.

But enough drift. The chantey texts (mayb not the tunes) are a rather different case, once we remember just how extensively (even wildly) improvisational the texts could be when used for labor. See the Ranzo thread, for example.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Nick Dow
Date: 01 Feb 23 - 01:51 PM

With reference to 'Doxies' could I refer you to my article in Living Tradition entitled 'Doxies buy-a-brooms and the Rigs of London Town.
If you can't find it P.M. Dave the Gnome and he will give you my Email so I will send it to you.
Getting back to Lloyd's rewrites, he has been censured for his Australian collection and his industrial songs. I am not the least surprised that he altered Chanties. I think you have put it rather well Lighter, and the false glow of an imagined historical past is very seductive. Certainly a fantasy, but then again so are the songs themselves. Maybe they leave you a little more able to wrestle your way through the reality of the day even if they were rewritten by a seven-dials pot poet or Mr Lloyd.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 01 Feb 23 - 04:35 PM

I may be wrong but I don't think there is anyone left who has any interest in the history and authenticity of the songs who takes anything Bert wrote with anything but a pinch of salt (apologies). So, the question is, do we need to keep bringing up the many examples of his creativity (I have plenty of my own)? In all of my research and writings I don't think I have even once had to quote anything Bert wrote. Why would I need to? Nick, please tell me if I'm wrong.

'Would you rather have that song or not?'

Like most of you I am a writer/researcher, but also a performer, and my own answer to that one is a resounding YES. I have sung many of his songs and loved those others have sung, and what is more I love them just as much now I know he made most of them up, as I did when I first heard them. Thanks, Bert!


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Lighter
Date: 01 Feb 23 - 04:48 PM

Thanks, Nick. The magazine looked so interesting that I've ordered the entire issue. I do look forward to reading your article.

As for "fantasies," that probably covers 99% of all lyrics, regardless of genre.

Anyone singing a trad song (or a reasonable facsimile) learned from print or a recording (which means just about everyone here, myself included) is at bottom playing a role: that of a genuine trad singer with some kind of social or cultural connection to the essence of song.

Honi soit, etc.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Nick Dow
Date: 01 Feb 23 - 07:55 PM

I keep discovering more and more Bert concoctions, and I'm still in a state of 'Well I never!'
In respect of Bert's written work, I am such a lover of his turn of phrase and style, and his vast vocabulary that it has been a lifelong influence on my writing as Steve knows well. A good dose of Bert's style IMHO would do some less inventive writers a great deal of good and would help to get the point across. I do think Bert had more than a layman's grasp of musical theory and described this in a refreshingly readable style. Bronson however demands so much prior understanding from the reader, that Google needs to be permanently activated. The other endearing quality Bert had was his ability to hear and decipher tune families and origins. The best example was the Dives and Lazarus 'Brigg Fair' connection and the most amusing was Harry Cox's Foggy Dew, which is the B part to 'Ye Banks and Braes of Bonny Doon'. This sent me on a journey which I may never finish as Steve knows again. However, with that in mind, I will echo Steve by saying once again 'Thank you Bert!'


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 02 Feb 23 - 11:04 AM

I'd like to qualify what I said about bringing up his creativity. Whilst none of us nowadays treat Bert's material as direct from oral tradition, posting individual examples as Gibb and Brian often do is still very interesting and welcome.

On a slightly different tack those producing tradsong anthologies on a regular basis like Nick and myself often collate several versions for performers. The big difference between us and Bert is we always go to great lengths to flag up where separate parts have come from in the tradition, and we keep any further interference to an absolute minimum, i.e., occasionally altering nonsense to make sense, or perhaps restoring an obvious rhyme.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: meself
Date: 02 Feb 23 - 11:28 AM

"Anyone singing a trad song (or a reasonable facsimile) learned from print or a recording (which means just about everyone here, myself included) is at bottom playing a role: that of a genuine trad singer with some kind of social or cultural connection to the essence of song."

That may well be true of many, but of "anyone"? I am sure there are many singers of the occasional trad song who have absolutely no concept of a 'genuine trad singer'.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Nick Dow
Date: 02 Feb 23 - 12:02 PM

Agreed. I needed someone to explain the importance. In my case, it was McColl and Bert Lloyd. The former through the 'Song Carriers' and the latter face to face.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 04 Mar 23 - 02:32 PM

Got the article and read it, Nick.

Great work!

Our discussion of Lloyd and MacColl's practice has two major aspects: aesthetic and historical.

As first-class performers, their aesthetics, within the trad-revival boundaries were impeccable. One way or another they came up with superior combinations of texts and tunes. Some of the liberties they took were, from a scholarly perspective, were inexcusable, but it's easy to believe that no trad singer of the 19th century, exposed to any of L & M's "trad" repertoire, would find the texts and tunes any stranger or phony-sounding than those they (the instrumental arrangements and, especially, MacColl's quirks of delivery would be a different story.) But the songs themselves, as performed, seem (to me) to be squarely within the blurry confines of "tradition." Renardine's shiny teeth might have elicited comment, but they would have led only an academic like Child down a lycanthropy rabbit-hole. (And he'd have enjoyed it too!)

Which is brings me to the historical aspect. As amateur song historians and culture commentators, they often gave the impression of more extensive knowledge of a song's origin or relationships or distribution than they had. Lloyd, I believe, did this especially. He often seems to have thought he did know, or could intuit, more than the available facts. Especially annoying to a pedant like myself were L & M's questionable attributions and sometimes intentionally fuzzy, if evocative, liner notes. (And the extensive, often knowledgeable, notes distinguished them further from other performers.) Their worst offense may have been passing off significant rewrites, adaptations, and the rare counterfeit or imitation as the real McCoy. "Wings of a Goney," "Talcahuana Girls," and "The Recruited Collier" are salient examples.)

Of course, Bishop Percy and scores of others have done the same, and their reputations have suffered. The harm here is is no more (or less) than the unacknowledged tinkering with the past and giving the impression that trad lyrics were generally of a much higher quality - by literary standards - than they usually were.

Few people are bothered by this. But for some of us who've looked behind the curtain, it's hard not to feel intentionally and unnecessarily misled.

But nobody's perfect.

As performers, though, I've never tired of listening to them.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,R J M
Date: 04 Mar 23 - 04:38 PM

A.L.Lloyd will be remembered long after Mudcat


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 05 Mar 23 - 04:30 PM

Unlikely, R.J.M., seeing as they're both all over the interweb! Not a competition anyway.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,R J M
Date: 05 Mar 23 - 05:59 PM

Competition?


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Nick Dow
Date: 05 Mar 23 - 08:07 PM

Yes, a competition. They are not in one. Nor should they be.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Joe Offer
Date: 05 Mar 23 - 11:15 PM

You're right, Nick. Mudcat is in the business of promoting the memory of songs, and the memory of people like Bert Lloyd. I hope we do him justice.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,R J M
Date: 06 Mar 23 - 04:04 AM

I did not say it was a competition.
Source.. Folk song a week
Lloyd printed the song in his 1952 collection Come All Ye Bold Miners. About which Roy Palmer wrote this:

    It is clear that Lloyd’s editorial approach was not merely to reproduce the material sent to him. Sometimes the changes made were small… but others were far-reaching. On ‘Jimmy’s Enlisted (or the Recruited Collier)’ Lloyd laconically notes: ‘Text from J.H. Huxtable, of Workington. A version of this ballad appears in R. Anderson’s Ballads in the Cumberland Dialect (1808).’ In fact, the original is entitled simply ‘Jenny’s Complaint’, and features not a miner who enlists but a ploughman.

Roy Palmer, A. L. Lloyd and Industrial Song, in Ian Russell, ed., Singer, Song and Scholar, Sheffield Academic Press, 1986, pp.135-7 (quoted by Malcolm Douglas on this Mudcat thread).


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 06 Mar 23 - 04:17 AM

I recently jokingly described one of Lloyd's recordings as sounding like Druids singing at Stonehenge.

Now, my own performances might sound like constipated dogs howling in the night. Lloyd sounds more beautiful. But that doesn't mean it *doesn't* sound like Druids at Stonehenge! It could sound beautiful without sounding like an ancient pagan rite of the British Isles. The point isn't "Ugh, Lloyd sounds bad!" It's: "Hmm, wow, OK, Lloyd sounds this way and there is something to note about it."

The context was "Sailboat Malarkey," sung by Lloyd and crew on the 1974 Sea Shanties album.

Unless someone knows differently, I presume this was based on Bahamian singer Frederick McQueen singing in 1965, released on the album The Real Bahamas (1966).
https://youtu.be/PObmXcB_Fr4

Lloyd's group sings this:
https://youtu.be/_a5Si_xFvEU

Is it not fair to say "Hmm" and ask what were they thinking? Like, what imagery was running through their heads to convert a blues from a sunny island into walking through catacombs?

Musical style communicates a lot of information. I don't think Lloyd's rendition communicates any indication of the culture of the "original." It has been re-cast as something else. In the context of that _Sea Shanties_ album, and the wider context in which that album resonates with a particular vision of "sea shanties", this re-casting really does something to the song, I think. We go down the road from Lloyd's decision and arrive at things like this:
https://youtu.be/6d2tUWwsHWw

Now, lecture me on how everything changes, how people can do whatever they want, yada yada.

I don't disagree. But I *am* going to notice the numbers game, of media, of people with historical/systematic spheres of greater influence, and how, intentionally or not, things/people can get erased. And how, if one gets their vision of chanties from the Druids at Stonehenge, reinforced over and over through confirmation bias, they're bound to get off course from an accurate vision. No one has to care about that "accurate vision," but it just so happens that I do, so I speak up.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,R J M
Date: 06 Mar 23 - 06:07 AM

Video unavailable,
People will always feck about with songs, murder them or sing them how we think is NOT correct, its beyond our control, let it go, chill out. Its a bit unfair to judge Lloyd on one or two clips, but fair enough to say you do not like it,for me it is unavailable
I do not like the last clip, either.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Nick Dow
Date: 06 Mar 23 - 08:01 AM

Please may we get this straight? Ignoring the post about competition, and I may add, quoting from the content of a conversation I had with Roy Palmer, very few people decry Bert for changing Folk songs. A considerable number of people are irritated by Bert's untruths about his sources and invented traditional singers. It makes the already difficult life of the Folklorist more arduous and interrupts the construction of correct archives and indexes. Greater men than I have been a deal more forthright in their condemnation.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,R J M
Date: 06 Mar 23 - 10:00 AM

It all depends on your perceived priorities
Was the life of the folklorist and his construction of correct archives and indexes, as Important to A L Lloyd as increasing the repertoire, encouraging young singers to sing , performing the songs recording the songs.
I am with Bert on this one, more important at that time and now to sing the songs and to increase the repertoire, the repertoire has to be alive that means the inclusion of newly composed songs.[ yes that includes rewrites]
if the songs are not sung, the repertoire becomes dead, nothing more than a museum piece, for scholars to study and argue about.
IMO his Scholarship failings are less important than all his other achievements


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 06 Mar 23 - 10:10 AM

I'm with Nick and Gibb.

The average consumer/performer of folk song (or "folk song") needn't care about these matters, but influential attempts to represent culture should be exceedingly careful about how they do it.

As for erasing or distorting the past, that's becoming something of a movement in the U.S. - on both the left and the right.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,R J M
Date: 06 Mar 23 - 10:10 AM

He was a kind man who was generous with his time and encouraged young singers to find songs.
I never heard him criticise other perfomers publicly in their presence or out of it, he was not a man who was jealous of others success,his priorities were to encourage others to explore AND SING the repertoire "of the people"
A man who is remembered fondly by many of his contemporaries, a man of the people, who loved people


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,R J M
Date: 06 Mar 23 - 10:20 AM

Distorting the past has happened in history books for centuries.History is written by the victors.
My nephew did his first ten years schooling in England then moved to France, he said to me it was intersting , quote
"I learned that the French in French history books won the same battles as the English in their history books"
The Establishment has always distorted history,it is nothing new, History is Propaganda, it is biased, it is written from the victors point of view
Bert was no more dishonest than our establishment masters


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 06 Mar 23 - 01:53 PM

Everything you say is absolutely right, RJM. Bert's contribution to and influence on our music is beyond reproach from a performance point of view, and generally on what we loosely call the folk scene.

However, there are also scholars who feel the need to state, myself among them, that a lot of what Bert wrote and said was fabricated to some degree.

As I've stated here many times I sing and love many of Bert's concoctions, but I wouldn't include any of them in my research unless verified from other sources, or if I was researching the fakelore tradition which in fact I have been known to do.

The study of folk music may not have such a high profile as the performance, but it is never-the-less important, and not to be decried or minimised here.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 06 Mar 23 - 02:23 PM

History is written by the victors.

“It became necessary to destroy the shanties to save them.”

TikTok and Wellerman are top o' the pops at the moment. Still nothing to do with naval science.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 06 Mar 23 - 11:24 PM

I cannot see any evidence of any posts decriein Folk Scholarship in this thread,
If I want information about Shanties. I don not use AL Lloyd but i contact Chris Roche or Jim Mageaan, who are very knowledgeable

"TikTok and Wellerman are top o' the pops at the moment. Still nothing to do with naval science." quote
However Wellerman has popularised Shanties and brought the songs to the attention of a lot of people that might not have otherwise heard them .

"that's the difference between a museum piece and a piece of live tradition. If it doesn't evolve in some way it's a museum piece.!
quote Steve Gardham .
Wellerman therEfore is helping to keep the tradition alive even though[ according to Phil d'Conch it has nothing to do with naval sciEnce
While not decrieng Naval Science, keeping the tradition alive is very important


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,R J M
Date: 06 Mar 23 - 11:26 PM

Above post was mine,
spelling correction Jim Mageean


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 07 Mar 23 - 10:10 AM

"History is written by the victors."

That proves that Jeff Davis and the Kaiser were both in the right.

History, in fact, is literally written by professionally trained historians who aren't afraid to modify or change their conclusions in the light of new evidence. Their work is scrutinized by others. They don't always agree, either.

Now that I've been told that the news is fake, science is fake, and history is fake, I guess the smart thing is to believe any goddamned thing I want.

Feels GOOOOD! :}


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: meself
Date: 07 Mar 23 - 10:34 AM

"keeping the tradition alive is very important" .... Why?


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 07 Mar 23 - 11:40 AM

Having made some excellent statements previously RJM you are now causing confusion. Calling 'Wellerman' a chanty is just completely daft. I have no objections, in fact I also applaud, the impetus it has recently given to real chanties, but that does not detract from the fact that it isn't, and never was, a chanty of any description. What has happened to chanties in the last 90 years is not continuing any sort of tradition and is nothing to do with evolution. It is a revival of interest and chanties have been given a NEW tradition, and I and others here are very much part of that new tradition, but we don't pretend we are part of anything continuing from the 19th century. Chanties are now used for a completely different purpose.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 07 Mar 23 - 12:13 PM

OK, Wellerman may not be a shsnty, but manY of the public [RIGHTLY OR WRONGLY ]perceive it as such and have become intereted in songs associated with the sea., due to its publicty
lighter the smart thing to do is to challenge all the news and all history and see who is writing it.It is not smart or clever to believe anything you goddamn want


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,R J M
Date: 07 Mar 23 - 12:43 PM

Post above was mine


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,R J M
Date: 07 Mar 23 - 01:18 PM

from wiki, which according to Jack Campin is unreliable
"Soon May the Wellerman Come", also known as "Wellerman" or "The Wellerman", is a sea ballad from New Zealand [2][3] first documented in the 1960s. The song refers to the "wellermen", pointing to supply ships owned by the Weller brothers, who were amongst the earliest European settlers of Otago


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 07 Mar 23 - 01:53 PM

Two traditions, art & science; fiction and nonfiction; fun and work; Martial and Polybius. Obviously, the two coexisted for thousands of years. One died out, the other did not.

Tiktok is keeping the tradition/legacy of Homer, Wallack, Wagner, Lloyd and the popular stage alive. Nothing wrong with that. Just call it for what it is and have your fun.

Back by popular demand; inspired by; based on; adapted, adopted, appropriated from the true tradition of shanties but... not the truth.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 07 Mar 23 - 02:08 PM

And not to be advertised as the truth by those who know.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 07 Mar 23 - 05:44 PM

I'd be interested to know the backstory to Lloyd's "Bring 'Em Down" (which has been mentioned earlier in the thread).

I know only of the comparable song in Jekyll's 1907 collection from Jamaica, Jamaican Song and Story. As "Bring dem come", it appears as a digging song (a kind of work song) on page 184.
https://books.google.com/books?id=mNwb65fmvqUC&printsec=frontcover&dq=jekyll+jam

I don't personally own a copy of the liner notes from Lloyd's recording, so I will rely on the quotation on the Mainly Norfolk website. They quote:

'Like Bold Riley O, this tune (a Dorian one) was brought to Liverpool from the West Indies where a variant of it had served as a challenging stick-fight song. Among the vessels that adopted the tune as a shanty for heavy hauling were those running up the coast of Chile. Oldtime sailors, who had a high regard for Valparaiso women, pronounced the name of the country to rhyme with “versatile”.'

I've cast my eyes on a lot of written material related to chanties, and I haven't yet encountered "Bring 'Em Down" as anything brought by Liverpool sailors. Would love to see it, if so. It seems we are left to take Lloyd's word and imagine he obtained it from an insider oral source? However, saying it is from "the West Indies" hints at Jekyll's book as the possible source. And maybe someone got digging songs (certainly a Jamaican thing, but not limited to Jamaica) mixed up with stick fighting songs (a fairly distinct Trinidad thing, as far as I know). (The distinction may be glossed over by saying "West Indies".)

"Bring Dem Come" in Jamaican dialect means "let them come," as in "if they want to challenge us, go ahead, let them come and challenge." (Maybe the call to challenge was how the "stick fighting" confusion got there.)
In Lloyd's deepwater sailor presentation, however, it's as if "Bring 'em down" is supposed to refer to someone hauling on a downhaul or some other line in a downward direction. We can imagine, again, that some hypothetical deepwater sailors were the ones to mis-translate the Jamaican dialect and give "bring" a new meaning and turn "come" into "down." But I see so reason, so far, to do that.

Irksomely, Lloyd's liner note begins by saying the tune is in Dorian mode, which it is not in either version. The folk song collectors of Cecil Sharp's generation put a lot of stock in noting modes, which has some rationale based on what they (and people like Bartok) were trying to do. But it serves no function here, rather seeming more like something Lloyd does to imitate the style of the Folk Song Society.

Here's Lloyd's recorded rendition:
https://youtu.be/N6AcXLnA8m8

Again, without other information, it seems like Lloyd wanted to insert what would be stereotypical sounding deepwater sailor verses—and thus the narrative of "brought to Liverpool" takes shape.

If it comes from Jekyll, then there are some interesting choices. Jekyll marks it as "Allegro," which this is not. More importantly, Jamaican digging songs are (at least in recordings) regular in meter/tempo rather than loose.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 07 Mar 23 - 07:58 PM

If "old-time sailors" were anything like the modern kind, they had a "high regard" for any available women, regardless of geography.

Lloyd presumably got the information about Valparaiso from singing "The Gallant Frigate Amphitrite" on "The Penguin Book of English Folksongs" (1961).


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 07 Mar 23 - 09:30 PM

From a book called _Legacies of Ewan MacColl: The Last Interview_ (MacColl in 1988):

"I only know one sea shanty that is based on a ballad... 'Lowlands'... All the rest, they're usually bawdy pieces or satiric pieces or complaining pieces, you know, like [singing] 'Liverpool I was born, bring 'em down / London is me 'one from 'one, bring 'em down...' That is very typical of the long drag shanties..."

So now it's become a yard halyard song!


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 08 Mar 23 - 03:22 AM

A source of abstracts says that No. 2 of the magazine _Folk Music_ (1966?) has "Bring 'Em Down," "collected by A.L. Lloyd in 1953."


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 09 Mar 23 - 09:11 PM

"Abstracts of Folklore Studies" cites the the same mag, crediting Lloyd and adding "Shanty used at tops'l halyards and other jobs."

The "New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians" (1980) informs us that "Some shanties are modal; among the modes used are the Myxolydian (e.g. Haul Away for Rosie) and Dorian (e.g. Bring ‘em Down)," implying that Lloyd's "Bring 'em Down" had some substantial existence.

Steeleye Span recorded it, which is substantial enough for me. ; ]


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 09 Mar 23 - 10:25 PM

In "Folk Song in England," Lloyd writes that "the air of Africa seems to blow through...so many one-pull shanties such as 'Bring 'em down.'"

Lloyd writes in his notes to "Sea Shanties" (Topic, 1974), "'Bring 'em Down' — A heavy-haul one-pull shanty with a triple-stamp refrain. Some of the words refer to ports of Chile and Peru and the memorable girls thereof but that doesn't mean that this shanty was limited to the West Coast run."

The lyrics were pretty bawdy for 1961, when Lloyd recorded it on "A Sailor's Garland":

Rotherhithe girls they look so fine,
Never a day behind their time.

Callao girls I do adore,
Take it all and ask for more.

Vallipo girls they put out a show,
Waggle their arse with a roll-and-go!

The double entendre of the first two stanzas sounds like Lloyd's doing to me (Cf. "Sally Brown" and "Hilo John Brown" on the same LP) but the unsubtle third one sounds more like Hugill's (and his shipmates') style.

If (medium-sized "if") Lloyd really collected the song in 1953, it may have been just the structure and a line or two - from Stan Hugill, which Lloyd then elaborated on his own. If Hugill only knew a bit if it, he might not have thought to include it SftSS.

All conjecture, of course. There's no evidence. But it does make a good work song, so one hopes it isn't a fake.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 10 Mar 23 - 12:40 AM

"a triple-stamp refrain"

What could that mean? Three syllables??

I don't get the use of "heavy haul" by these authors, either. A light haul is not an application for a chanty. As for "heavy" hauls, a topsail halyard haul is notably lighter than a fore sheet or "sweating." I could go on, but it just doesn't make sense and it sounds like someone making something up based on a vague imagination.

""New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians" (1980)"

Roy Palmer, maybe? Must have taken the "Dorian" from Lloyd's notes.

"But it does make a good work song"

Well, it IS a work song. It's just that the digging songs keep a steady beat. Nothing heavy about it, just constant energy, which is why the "bobbin" (chorus) is such a little thing, no big wind up (contrast Haul Away Joe).


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 10 Mar 23 - 08:53 AM

That should be "Vallipo girls put on a show."


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 14 Mar 23 - 04:07 PM

If I am often sceptical of the odd song sung by source singers I'm sure as hell not going to get excited about a singular piece sung by one revival singer. It doesn't occur in any of my indexes, but that's because it wasn't published in print in a reliable anthology.

Interesting discussion though, but surely not worth spending too much time on. Once I know someone is an inveterate fabricator all of their work becomes worthless in terms of authenticity, but like you I am fascinated by the fabricators, all of them. In particular their motives.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 15 Mar 23 - 03:16 AM

If a singer [who is also a fabricator] can perform the song well and get the interest of people who have never heard shanties before, is that perfomance minimised because they are a fabricating scholar?
   The performance of the song is what keeps songs alive and prevents them becoming museum exhibits, the fabricators scholarship work may be worthless, in your opinion from a scholarship perspective, but if they were also successful song carriers, then overall their contribution is not worthless Whilst scholarship is important, keeping the songs alive IMO is even more important,
Of paramount importance is the songs must be performed


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 15 Mar 23 - 03:17 AM

Post above was mine


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,R J M
Date: 15 Mar 23 - 04:47 AM

On the subject of authenticity, there are always grey areas.
Personally i like to hear them being performed as if they were work songs
I understand that often they were not sung in harmony, but if they are sung in harmony but still performed as work songs they may not be entirely authentic, but it might be a pleasing musical performance, that is better in my opinion than someone singing in a totally authentic manner but who cannot sing in tune.
I do not rate Stan Hugill as a TOTALLY WONDERFUL musical experience, but i acknowledge his importance as source of information
Steve, do you question any of his scholarship ever?HAS HE EVER BEEN A FABRICATOR?


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 15 Mar 23 - 07:11 AM

I don't like being fooled and misled.

When somebody tells me I'm hearing a historical artifact when, in actuality, they've invented most of it or the most interesting parts of it themselves, that taints the song for me, and the singer too.

Right. My loss.

When Steeleye Span sings Lloyd's "Bring 'em Down," I don't have that problem.

They don't claim to be anything but entertainers.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 15 Mar 23 - 10:38 AM

all perfomers should be entertainers
".When somebody tells me I'm hearing a historical artifact when, in actuality, they've invented most of it or the most interesting parts of it themselves, that taints the song for me, and the singer too" quote
OK "Rounding of the Horn" collected by Ann Gilchrist, in the small footnotes, which you have to read very carefully to notice it describes one of the verses as having been written by the source singer, [who sailed round the horn] in my opinion it is the best verse of a very good song, it is written from his own experience. However it was some years after i had learned the song [which one is given the impression is trad in its entirety] before i read the footnotes
did i alter my opinion of the song or the collector , because of the lack of clarity.
I did not, I was grateful to find such a powerful song, grateful to the collector. I feel the same way about the recruited collier.
my judgement of a song is based on its lyrics and tune not whether its trad or LLoyd or partly written by the source singer, you seem to regard honest scholarship as more important than anything else
Honest scholarship is of importance, but if nobody sing the songs, they become museum exhibits songs that have died, and the scholarship is thenof only interest to a few academics.
The scholarship is mbecomes more important when more people are singing the song. if it had not been forLloyd who would be singning the recruited collier
NOBODY AT ALL


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 15 Mar 23 - 10:39 AM

bAove was me


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,R J M
Date: 15 Mar 23 - 10:49 AM

The source singer was W Bolton of Southport lancs


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 15 Mar 23 - 01:08 PM

RJM: Honest scholarship is of importance, but if nobody sing the songs, they become museum exhibits songs that have died, and the scholarship is then of only interest to a few academics.

Say as you do -- do as you say.

"No bad publicity" is not scholarship of any kind. It's pop culture. There is no living shanty tradition. The work song went with the work. It is a museum piece. Singing pop songs on TikTok or at the club does not breath authentic maritime work song back to life.

What you did in this thread is the typical process... you say living history and do pop A&R. That is not exactly an uncommon or new thing in academia or pop culture. Wellerman is properly archived & studied in a popular entertainment museum.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 15 Mar 23 - 02:02 PM

According to Steve Gardham and i accept his point Wellerman is not singing a shanty, plenty of people are singing shanties however, partly due to A L Lloyd who was one of the first people in the uk folk revival to do so, we owe him a great debt,furthermore the song RecruitedCollier would not be sung either.
Plenty of singers singing shanties


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 15 Mar 23 - 04:34 PM

RJM
You are not reading our posts carefully.
We are all in awe of Bert's work and indeed we all sing songs fabricated by him and very happy to do so. Several of us here are performer-researchers. However, it is perfectly acceptable on this forum to mention and critique deception and/or bad scholarship.

Also, there is a world of difference between a revival/journalist silently fabricating songs, and a source singer writing new verses and altering songs.

You are obviously looking at the material through a performer's eyes. Being a researcher as well is a perfectly valid occupation, particularly on a forum like this. Don't be so precious!


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,R J M
Date: 15 Mar 23 - 06:44 PM

Also, there is a world of difference between a revival/journalist silently fabricating songs, and a source singer writing new verses and altering songs." QUOTE
I disagree, I return the compliment to you about being precious.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 15 Mar 23 - 06:49 PM

Plenty of singers singing shanties

In name only. They have no work or workers for their songs. It's the one thing that will usually set work song apart from the rest of pop folk... no stitch-counting, period correct reenactors to speak of.

Most every other genre would give modern A.L. Lloyd types the side-eye for everything from their nylon strings to the straight-off-the-rack wardrobe. Getting it as close to right as Health & Safety & Underwriters & Protected Species will allow is the fun... and the work.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,R J M
Date: 16 Mar 23 - 03:37 AM

I don't believe A.L.Lloyd ever significantly altered a tune, however. And his textual changes were always in the spirit of the song." qutoe lighter
Jim Mageean Chris Roche Tom Lewis all sing shanties in a way that they could be worked to


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 16 Mar 23 - 05:18 AM

... all sing shanties in a way that they could be worked to

*Forebitters in salty character; plain ol' music hall/minstrelsy if not. If granny had wheels...


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 16 Mar 23 - 01:10 PM

Have you heard the singers I mentioned?
Insulting remarks about Quality singers. I am sure you can do better


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 16 Mar 23 - 01:11 PM

But they were still glossed over and unacknowledged - which is the point - and sometimes significant or extensive.

All he (and others) needed to say was, "This my own version of," "This is based closely on," "I've taken a few liberties with," etc.

Making it serious was the fact that, sixty years ago, Lloyd's texts were often the most accessible to budding academics.

As folk-fakers go, however, he was at the lesser end of the spectrum. And he certainly helped popularize traditional song.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,R J M
Date: 16 Mar 23 - 02:30 PM

He died in 1982. 41 years ago.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 16 Mar 23 - 03:05 PM

Insulting remarks about Quality singers. I am sure you can do better

At which, naval science, singing or Scrabble? Forebitter is a tad older than shanty and is neither legal play nor insult. Ictus is six base points.

The 'qualities' of a shanty versus a forebitter are in the application, not the singer or the song or the likes. Liking A.L.Lloyd, or anyone else, does not not make it work song. Not liking A.L. Lloyd does not give different outcomes. Still not work song.

Presenting art as science is not good practice.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 20 Mar 23 - 06:27 AM

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZQNe4GJz1 listen to that


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 20 Mar 23 - 08:54 AM

Phil d'Conch is that *Forebitters in salty character; plain ol' music hall/minstrelsy if not. If granny had wheels...
That is a man who sang shanties as work songs and one of those younger ones, Jim Mageaan, who you dismiss, is present absorbing style from Stan Hugill.
you talk unqualified poppy cock.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 20 Mar 23 - 01:47 PM

“This video isn't available anymore”

No biggie. I think David Coffin is a good time, does not make it work song.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 20 Mar 23 - 02:02 PM

Thanks for that link, Phil.

A very enjoyable, splendidly inauthentic performance.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 20 Mar 23 - 03:24 PM

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZQNe4GJz1c stan hugill
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZQNe4GJz1c


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,rjm
Date: 20 Mar 23 - 03:26 PM

So you have stan there with jim mageaan, listening and absorbing style and you say it is music hall.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 20 Mar 23 - 04:07 PM

you are right ,   STAN HUGILL must be a music hall turn despite the fact he sang them to work to. and all those young singers that are trying to absorb the work style they must be misguided and you must be right


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 20 Mar 23 - 05:00 PM

*Lecture hall. Do we believe Hugill is making for more authentic folk club performers or more gainfully employed shantymen in the maritimes?

Hugill has the same complaint about folk club shanties in his lecture as you'll read in this thread about Lloyd. I have much the same complaints about Whall, Hugill, Lloyd &c re: world history in general and naval science in particular. Oh well.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 20 Mar 23 - 05:51 PM

k


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 20 Mar 23 - 05:52 PM

Keep Positive


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 05 Sep 23 - 09:59 AM

I've been very irregular on Mudcat recently (it never seems to be working!) so I'd missed the resurrection of this thread earlier in the year. There are people involved here who I don't meet in my other social media interactions, so I thought it might be of interest if I brought this thread up to date with my own research (aided along the way by one or two participants in this thread).

Over the last four years I've carried out a lot of research into the songs Bert Lloyd brought to the folk revival, both through his own singing and by passing on songs he'd reconstructed to young singers of the day, most notably Anne Briggs. I had been apparent for a while that he did a lot of 'tinkering', but that word doesn't begin to describe the scale or depth of his modifications. On some of the landmark LPs the majority of the songs have been modified, often quite drastically. North American texts were plundered on many occasions, with no hint that the results weren't authentic 'English folk songs'.

As has been suggested above, modal melodies were not only composed for texts lacking a tune (e.g. 'Weary Whaling Grounds'), but substituted into many songs known to tradition with exclusively major tunes. This was particularly true of the erotic songs LP 'The Bird in the Bush' (where they served to make the songs more sensual and mysterious), but also in the case of many sea songs, especially those on 'Leviathan', where they made the mood more exciting and edgy. I think Lighter's point above about the exoticism and apparent antiquity of these melodies was a part of the appeal too. However, the Wyndham-Read version of 'Black Ball Line' with which Gibb reopened this thread is so weird that I'm inclined to agree it might have been mis-transcribed.

I gave a couple of talks about all of this, which are online - I'm linking the maritime one below. There is actually one song I'd like to consult the hive mind about: in the talk I mention 'Off to Sea Once More' and contrast the major tune generally collected orally with the modal one Lloyd (and most who followed after him) used. My belief is that Lloyd made up that tune, and that its appearance in Hugill's book suggests that he got it from Lloyd (who had recorded it five years earlier). However, a friend who knew Stan H. has pushed back against this, saying that, if Stan had used a song from Lloyd, he'd have given it proper attribution.

So my question is, are there any example where you know that Hugill published a song he'd obtained from Lloyd? I know we've speculated about it in the past.

Anyway, here's the talk - it starts at 43 minutes, but you might be interested in the other contributions too.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MEccGdRD8Fk


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 05 Sep 23 - 10:00 AM

Clicky:

Bert's Nautical Numbers


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 05 Sep 23 - 12:02 PM

I cannot locate the Wyndham-Read version of 'Black Ball Line' with which Gibb reopened this thread is so weird that I'm inclined to agree it might have been mis-transcribed.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 05 Sep 23 - 12:07 PM

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G9vS36h8oxQ
WEIRD? I rather like it


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 05 Sep 23 - 08:25 PM

Brian --
Thanks for coming back! I recently stumbled on your published essay on this subject and it looks so good. Awaiting the opportunity to read it in full, but in the meantime, folks with some spare time (retired people??!?) should definitely check it out.

I feel inspired to look more closely and comparatively at all of the sailor songs that Lloyd said to have learned from Tom Howard of Barry, born circa 1888.

Howard, I recently discovered, played the role of the blacksmith in the 1950s film version of Moby Dick. He was the mate on the vessel used in the movie (captained by Alan Villiers) in the Irish Sea, in the summer of 1954 -- I think that's the same year Lloyd met Howard, and I wonder if the occasion for meeting was also the making of the film. I imagine Lloyd may have been employed to be the shantyman and, perhaps, Howard, also present, piped up to tell him a thing or two!

My curiosity was piqued when I noticed that the liner notes for "Bold Riley" on _A Sailor's Garland_ (1962) contain obvious bollocks and no mention of Howard. But in a 1970 magazine issue, Lloyd is pressed as to where he got the song from and he says it was from Howard. Suffice it to say, I hope to learn more about what "getting a song from Howard" really meant to Lloyd. On one hand, Howard's songs mediated by Lloyd could be really important sources to log. On the other hand, I fear it's possible that Lloyd might have invoked Howard tokenistically in some cases to give his arrangements/creations a pedigree.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 03:27 AM

Just caught the video, and happy to find (as I supposed you do) so answers to may recent questions about Ted Howard. Great!


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 05:06 AM

What positives are there in destroying Lloyds reputation as a scholar?,


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 05:39 AM

I consider it negative to continually find the negatives in Lloyds scholarship, to harp on about his tampering, Sharp and more so Baring Gould did a lot of tampering with texts. but without Sharp in particular we would not have such a big REPERTOIRE


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 08:35 AM

Sharp and Marson tampered with texts chiefly when their publishers thought them too 'coarse' to print and, unlike Lloyd, they never altered tunes. His rewrites were of a different order of magnitude.

I don't see why it's 'negative' to understand better the revival folk song canon, and Lloyd's reputation as a scholar had already been seriously compromised without any help from me. Picking it all apart is also fascinating as an exercise in detective work.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 08:43 AM

Consider what you like, Dick. There are plenty of people who would rather have the truth, and Bert's tamperings/creativity are already well-known. All we are doing is trying to find out which items are genuine and which items have been recreated without proper attribution.

We are all in awe of Bert's contributions in a very positive way, but that does not detract from a desire to know the truth, in every case.

Bert's reputation as a scholar was largely destroyed by Bert himself. Those realists who want to know the truth can join with us. Those who don't want to know are welcome to ignore us. That is absolutely irrelevant and separate to our admiration for his creativity. All of the people involved here are performers as well as scholars.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 10:50 AM

As lloyds reputation as a scholar is diminshed, so is his overall reputation.
Sharp altered manuscripts, at the time it was felt necessary to do so to get them published, the result was a positive, the songs became printed circulated in schools the repertoire was expanded and people sang the songs
Lloyd altered songs expanded the repertoire and got revival singers to sing songs that would not have otherwise been song.
ContinualLy harping on his weaknesses as a scholar is highlighting, his weaknesses not talking about his positives, that is FACT.

Steve says '''There are plenty of people who would rather have the truth.
is this a suggestion that i do not want the truth,
I am aware of Lloyds scholastic weakness, and as you suggest a lot of other people are too.
Brian, I have at no point mentioned Marson.
I believe criticisms of Sharp and Baring Gould and Lloyd should be seen in the context of their times, and in a holistic manner.
What I see on this forum and so far on Face book on this subject is mainly negative about Lloyd.
The pursuit of scholastic honesty,without holistic perspective is a negative force.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 12:27 PM

IMO llOYD did very little DAMAGE compared to folk song collector Peter kennedy, a man who pissed off some of his sources and who dubbed himself on to field recordings without permission, and who thought he owned the traditional songs.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 12:52 PM

In what reality would every reader equally value every author for all the same reasons?

You may mark me down as a negative. It is a fact of maths I place zero value on folk club revival chantey authenticity. For the student of naval science, it's a clunker. A Regency dance group would be time better spent, but not by much.

If one highly values folk club revival shanties, the results will be different of course.

And Whall has an authorship & original copyright claim in his foreword. He did in fact own the songs that followed as far as the publishing industry goes. Typical for the medium.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 01:47 PM

Baloney,Lloyd and Kennedy were very different ,i knew them both, Lloyd s tampering and not claiming authorships= is evidence.
Kennedy was in it for the money,AND THREATENED TO SUE PEOPLE FREQUENTLY


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 02:18 PM

Brian, I have at no point mentioned Marson.

No, but I mentioned him because it was his responsibility to rewrite the 'coarse' lyrics for songs that they published jointly, and I think that needs to be understood. I haven't looked into the songs Sharp published after the break with Marson (I probably should), so I'm not sure a this point whether Sharp changed any texts himself. I'm not aware of any amendments to his Appalachian material between field notes and publication.

I would agree that Lloyd was a more significant figure in the folk revival than Kennedy, though PK (for all his well-documented faults) did collect some wonderful material.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 02:21 PM

I hope to learn more about what "getting a song from Howard" really meant to Lloyd.

Tha could be a really useful exercise, Gibb. As I said in the talk, we have Carpenter's recordings and notations from the Barry sailors for comparison.

Any thoughts on he Hugill / Lloyd question, though?


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 02:32 PM

Great talk, Brian. (Great photo of the rustbucket Lloyd sailed on too!)

My enjoyment of "Leviathan" ca1970 was spoiled by the realization that some of the songs (like "Wings of a Gull") had obviously been rewritten in British style (without acknowledgment) from tuneless American material in Gale Huntington's "Songs the Whalemen Sang."

Lloyd's intentional fudging and faking, presented under cover of scholarly care and erudition, plus his supposedly rich fieldwork (whose very existence seems dubious) makes it hard for me to listen to him now with anything like my former enjoyment. As I've noted before, all he had to do was say (as Martin Carthy does), "my version of," "inspired by," "I've improved on the tune," or the like, and we wouldn't be having these discussions.

Lloyd's reputation as a popularizer, moreover, would then stand unsullied.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 05:39 PM

>Any thoughts on he Hugill / Lloyd question, though?

Brian,
I certainly do have thoughts, but not much coherent or well-baked enough to put down at the moment!

Off the cuff: Your discussion of "Go to Sea Once More," and Lloyd's tune, reminded me: Doesn't Hugill (SfSS) use that tune? Which brings us back to whether Hugill corroborates Lloyd (whereas Carpenter's Barry singers do not) or whether Hugill pinched it from Lloyd.

The question of Howard bears on my theory about Lloyd developing "South Australia" from the transcription in Doerflinger. Basically, my idea is that he saw the very "descriptive" transcription (which is not performance-ready, having irregular measures and all) and created a "normalized" version by making choices about how to synch up the melody rhythm with barlines. However, arguing that must contend with the possibility of receiving that form of song from Howard. Again we have a case where the tune doesn't match any of the others that are documented.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 09:28 PM

As a footnote, I appreciated the shout out to the Mothers of Invention in Brian's talk.

I'm sure I encountered that Mothers album before I encountered Lloyd's album, but not long before. At the same time as idolizing Zappa during college, I was starting to re-discover sea songs from my Connecticut childhood, the favorite being one of the Library of Congress's albums of field recordings. Which led me simultaneously to be engaged in performing (and composing) art music inspired by Zappa and doing little informal folkie groups singing chanties based on those recordings. A fellow Zappa-loving friend and I always remember the liner notes' acknowledgement of _Blow Boys Blow_. Lloyd's "Handsome Cabin Boy" was in my repertoire at parties.

In the same notes, Zappa also acknowledges his first composition teacher, Prof. Karl Kohn. I did not know I would end up at Pomona College, where Zappa took lessons from Kohn and where Kohn is now a friend (professor emeritus). My local area is studded with lore about the Mothers, like which of the clubs they had played in and which schools they had attended. When I first moved to the area, on the street I saw Ray Collins, the original leader of the band that invited Zappa to join. Collins was homeless (or living out of a van, I believe). He died less than a year later.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 07 Sep 23 - 07:48 AM

Without Lloyd and his contemporaries ther probably would not have been a UKfolk revival as we knew it.
lIGHTER AND HIS POST IS AN EXAMPLE OF HOW lLOYDS REPUTATION HAS BEEN DIMINSHED.
LIGHTER . does not take a holistic approach and is not seeing Lloyd in the context of his time, nor does he in his post acknowledge Lloyds other contributions to the folk revival.
BrianPeters and everyone, lighters post proves my point Lloyds overall reputation is being destroyed


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 07 Sep 23 - 12:21 PM

My enjoyment of "Leviathan" ca1970 was spoiled by the realization that some of the songs (like "Wings of a Gull") had obviously been rewritten in British style (without acknowledgment) from tuneless American material in Gale Huntington's "Songs the Whalemen Sang." quote lighter
quote Jim Carroll from facebook
Th song mentioned is one I have sung for a long time and have assumed it was from the oral tradition; Huntingdon assumed the same as he suggests it might be connected with 'The Prisoners Song'. Bert is pretty vague in his note on where it came from - he says it dates from somewhere between the 1820s and 1840s. which is more or less where Huntindon dates it. Why can't it be a version rather than samething Bert wrote. As popular as sea songs and shanties are, the published collections are somewhat sparse - Hugill's being the most comprehensive.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 07 Sep 23 - 03:13 PM

Dick, your last post is another example of the confusion created by Bert's creativity. Huntington was obviously convinced in this case by Bert's assertions.

You are arguing here with people who have done much research and are the leading exponents in these matters. Your posts are becoming embarrassing.

You have given your opinion IN CAPITALS; now, unless you have something fresh and illuminating to say I suggest you keep out of it.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 07 Sep 23 - 07:01 PM

>Without Lloyd and his contemporaries ther probably would not have been a UKfolk revival as we knew it.

Correct. That's what, in part, we are uncovering: Greater detail about the UK folk revival. What happened, between which individuals, at what times, with which materials for revival, in what forms, with what impact, etc.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 08 Sep 23 - 06:54 AM

Thanks Gibb and Lighter for those comments. I'm particularly glad that the Zappa clip rang a bell - the audience reaction to the reveal, when I've given the talk live, is one I cherish. I do remember the name Ray Collins - he was credited with 'Swell vocals' as against FZ's 'Low-grade vocals' on one of the Mothers' LPs, as I recall.

Off the cuff: Your discussion of "Go to Sea Once More," and Lloyd's tune, reminded me: Doesn't Hugill (SfSS) use that tune? Which brings us back to whether Hugill corroborates Lloyd (whereas Carpenter's Barry singers do not) or whether Hugill pinched it from Lloyd.

SfSS does indeed use that tune for Hugill's second version - the first uses what I consider the standard tune in oral tradition. The chicken-and-egg question is the crux of this, and I'm not sure anyone has an answer yet. I think it's possible that SH would have regarded Lloyd as an authentic source, given the whaling experience.

Without Lloyd and his contemporaries ther probably would not have been a UKfolk revival as we knew it.

I think that's what I just said on Facebook...


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 08 Sep 23 - 07:29 AM

Good point, Brian, about Hugill's possible belief in Lloyd as an "authentic source" - at least some of the time.

Hugill objected more than once to Lloyd's double entendres as phony, as well as to his selection of "exotic" modal tunes for recording.

But he also accepted "Blood-Red" Roses and recommended those same recordings as stylistically superior.

There seems to be little doubt that Hugill, Lloyd, and MacColl were in contact before the L&M LPs. MacColl's performance of "Stormalong" could hardly have been influenced by anybody else.

Could it?


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Keith Price
Date: 08 Sep 23 - 07:56 AM

I think it's interesting that Stan says "most of my old shipmates seem to think that it was used at both capstan and pumps" but refers to the tune used by Llyod as a forebitter only, because it lacks the all-hands-in chorus. Why if Bert was his source wouldn't he include the standard chorus Bert uses.
As I said on an other forum, Stan stated "Another tune very popular with Liverpool seamen" I think before implying that Stan could be lying, on public forums, it might be worth doing private research.I think trawling for information on public forums, is convenient,but not if it involves possibly impugning someone.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 08 Sep 23 - 07:59 AM

IMO Authenticity with Shanties is only achieved, if they are sung in a nmanner that they can be worked to, what prompted MacColl to perform stormalong surely is not as important as whether you can work to the shanty, it does sound like it is influenced by Hugill.
However people will sing them how they like Regardless of scholars, and it could be argued by some that a pleasant musical experience is preferable to an out of tune rendition that can be worked to.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 08 Sep 23 - 09:35 AM

For me at least, much of the enjoyment of trad song comes from knowing that what I'm hearing is a true artifact of a lost past.

If it turns out the purportedly "true artifact" has been significantly and *covertly* messed with and phonied up by a supposedly reliable editor, I have a right to be ticked.

As I say, if Steeleye Span and Peter Sellers do a totally untrad rendition of "New York Girls," I can enjoy it fully because, not only is it a fine performance, it isn't falsely advertised.

In a different genre, Lloyd's performances were also splendid. The musicality and accompaniment aren't the issue: musically I'd rather listen to Lloyd than to Hugill or (presumably) John Short.

But the issue is the frequent and blithe fakery. It could have been completely mitigated by a few words of explanation. ("I thought the original tune so unappealing that I created I new one which, I think, is still 'in the tradition'"; "In most cases I've tried to smoothe the words out a little, or added and subtracted." Etc.)



it's the blithe and frequent fakery.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 08 Sep 23 - 10:37 AM

IMO Authenticity with Shanties is only achieved, if they are sung in a nmanner that they can be worked to...

No. It's not "can," would, could or should. Authenticity, is actually leaving in the actual work that the verse is leading and the chorus is working. Grunts, groans and all the rest. Metrology, eg.: a tape measure, stop watch, strain gauge, data recorder &c shall also be considered sporting.

It's not why folk go to the club or buy song books.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 08 Sep 23 - 02:43 PM

We are now discussing personal preferences, in performance, which are not really part of the main thrust here. We are talking about material in the public domain, and anyone can legally and morally take a chanty and do what they like with it. We are talking about presenting recreated material within the revival and passing it off as wholly from oral tradition. Scholars/researchers/truth-seekers are also perfectly entitled to call this out when they come across it.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 08 Sep 23 - 07:33 PM

We are talking about presenting recreated material within the revival and passing it off as wholly from oral tradition. Scholars/researchers/truth-seekers are also perfectly entitled to call this out when they come across it.   quote
IMO The whole nature of this music is it gets changed, it evolves, tradtional singers have always altered tunes and words, sometimes through mishearing sometimes because they wanted to,sometimes they made up a tune to a set of words, because there was not a tune AND IN TIMES GONE BY THEY SAID NOTHING ABOUT IT just like Bert
without change traditional music becomes a museum fossil, set in stone.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 08 Sep 23 - 07:44 PM

imo the use communities make of songs, is of primary importance So, although the origin of material is of some interest, it is what the ' folk' do with it that is my PARAMOUNT concern. If people think about Bert's reasoning behind his treatment of song texts, it was to provide material suitable for performance in the folkclubs


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 12:33 AM

Recent example of Lloyd's products causing confusion:

Here's a clip of "Shanties and their Usage Workshop" from Glasgow Shanty Festival, 2 September 2023.

(links to a public post on Facebook)

The song is Lloyd's "Wild Goose Shanty." I guess it's a demonstration of how Lloyd's song "would be" used if it had existed? Or it's a discussion of how to operate a brake windlass whilst singing and Lloyd's song is offered as an example of such a song?

Strange that the song has no discernible pulse and it's asymmetrical. Hey, aren't shanties those *rhythmical* songs for giving time-coordination to sailors' work? At least that's what Webster's says. And it's what the folk performers remind audiences when they want to add a halo of interest around their material like, "This isn't *just* any old song, this is a SHANTY! Yes, you see, it's a *special* song... a song for sailors' work, ooooh!" Yet where is the rhythm? Where is the meter? How on earth is the person imitating the pumping of a brake windlass imagining those motions for a song that gives no sensible cues to motion?

(How is it that these people, who have made their own version, are actually singing more like a shanty? I want them in my crew.)

***
Here's some balderdash from Lloyd (1972) saying that this shanty goes slower "by nature"? He really means, by his choice to make the song like that and pretend that was how he found it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MQ8YC7iOsEg


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 04:41 AM

He really means, by his choice to make the song like that and pretend that was how he found it. quote gibb sahib
no, that is your interpretation, do you have any factual evidence to back that statement up?
your statement is an example of a negative perception. and is an example of lloyd bashing,do you have any proof that he was pretending that was how he found it.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 04:46 AM

Gibb, you go on about scholastic accuracy,BUT as a scholar you must learn not to make statements that you cannot back up with proof, BACK UP THE STATEMENT, if you cannot, you are not being a good scholar, yet you criticise Lloyd for scholastic weakness


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Hesk
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 06:21 AM

RJM,

I agree that statements should be backed by sources where possible, but there is such a thing as a matter of opinion. It is tedious to mention this every time, especially as Mudcat is just a bit of fun for like minded people who like a good argument or a bit of natter, (in my opinion!)


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 07:23 AM

So Lloyd got the song from some unknown chantey man who'd devised it for working defective windlasses that could only be pumped without a strong steady beat!

What a find!


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Hesk
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 07:30 AM

Lighter, sounds like a true fact to me!


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 08:24 AM

>no, that is your interpretation, do you have any factual evidence to back that statement up?

Yes, it is my interpretation. What's your interpretation?

I'll make you a deal. Give me your interpretation. After that, if you're still engaged, I will give you some of the evidence for my interpretation and then you can give me some of your evidence.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 08:45 AM

"Evidence?? We don' need no steenkin' evidence!!" - "The Treasure of the Sierra Madre" (1947).


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 08:49 AM

Steeleye Span:

"Honesty's all out of fashion.
Oh, the hard times of old England...."


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 09:23 AM

opinions can be informed or uniformed, if opinions are not backed up by evidence, they are scholastically weak and not to be taken seriously and so far there has been no factual evidence, as to what he meant, so we do not know what he meant, it is possible he meant capstan shanties were slower by nature, but we do not know.
since we do not know, and there is no evidence to illustrate what he meant, i keep an open mind.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 10:05 AM

Dick, you are arguing with someone who has done years of dedicated research into the subject AND has first-hand experience of delivering chanties at tasks on board sailing ships. What research have you done? Enlighten us, do!


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 10:25 AM

Steve, he has made a comment, quote

Here's some balderdash from Lloyd (1972) saying that this shanty goes slower "by nature"? He really means, by his choice to make the song like that and pretend that was how he found it."
it is not a competition about research, as you seem to be suggesting , it is a question of claiming to know what BERT meant when he was introducing a song at a gig.
the only person who would know is lloyd.
I am not arguing about Lloyds scholastic shortcomings I am pointing out that good scholarship involves not making wild statements that cannot be backed up , until gibb does so i think he is lloyd bashing.
   if he can prove that he knows what lloyd meant on that particular occasion, that chanGes the situation
    Steve i have spent years on the folkscene reading and absorbing articles etc, on all aspects of folk music , through that research i knew years ago that lloyd had scholastic weakness, but i do not make wild statements without evidence about somebody who has been dead many years and cannot answer,it is imo in bad taste


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 11:18 AM

RJM: "it is possible he meant capstan shanties were slower by nature"

Is that your interpretation, which you will support with evidence? This is quid pro quo, so please make sure we have the quid.

Gibb interpretation:

Lloyd spoke bullshit about how the speed and style of his "Wild Goose Shanty" was, as a representative of shanties as a class. It's bullshit because the song did not *exist* as such until Lloyd himself created it, at which time it was he would decided on what the speed and style would be. Lloyd thus postures as someone delivering some knowledge about shanties that is supported by evidence from the genre's documentation, which in this case is "Wild Goose Shanty." The evidence, however, has been planted, is manufactured. Lloyd does this so smoothly, hiding the dishonesty by misdirection toward a truth-y remark ("how funny it would be to sing shanties too fast!"), that it resembles a psychopath's behavior. (How's that taste?)

Dick interpretation:

???
[Capstan shanties were slower than what?] [He's making a reference to capstan shanties even though he does not single out Wild Goose Shanty as representative of capstan shanties?]


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 01:49 PM

i have not giben a ninterpretation , i said possibly , that is not an interpretation , i hace said quite clearly quote
it is possible he meant capstan shanties were slower by nature, but we do not know.
since we do not know, and there is no evidence to illustrate what he meant, i keep an open mind.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 03:03 PM

Maybe pop and folky renditions of "Shenandoah" at about half the required speed prove what Lloyd was saying about chanteys being slow.

:^}


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 04:37 PM

Steve: Dick, you are arguing with someone who has done years of dedicated research into the subject AND has first-hand experience of delivering chanties at tasks on board sailing ships.

The Anglo-American revival, art house, music/lecture hall, show-biz chanty has been around since at least the early 19th century and the Wallack brothers. It's all based on a true story and none of it should be taken as hard naval science or history.

Lloyd played fast and loose with song lyrics. And the Gazela's windlass never heard any English work song in all its working days. Both sources tell a better story that way... in the opinion of some.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,MikeofNorthumbria (sans cookie)
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 06:25 PM

"When 'Omer smote 'is bloomin' lyre,
   He'd 'eard men sing by land an' sea;
An' what he thought 'e might require,
   'E went an' took - the same as me!

The market-girls an' fishermen,
   The shepherds an' the sailors, too,
They 'eard old songs turn up again,
   But kep' it quiet - same as you!

They knew 'e stole; 'e knew they knowed.
   They didn't tell, nor make a fuss,
But winked at 'Omer down the road,
   An' 'e winked back - the same as us!"

Rudyard Kipling said that.


"I'll let you be in my dream if I can be in yours."

Dylan said that.


"Instead of brooding obsessively about Lloyd's occasional errors and misdeeds, why not spend a little time and energy celebrating the many things he got right?"

I say that.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 06:40 PM

Dick,

I don't think there is anything wrong with interpretations. That's what a discussion is. People look for evidence and then develop interpretations from the evidence. Then the conversation continues. More evidence is introduced, and interpretations are revised. People debate the quality of the evidence, and the strength or validity of how interpretations are using that evidence. That's what this thread (conversation) has been about.

Not all "evidence" that the discussants have ever seen in their entire lives is logged into this one thread. That would be tedious and unnecessary, since the discussants are aware of most of that already. For example, there is another Mudcat thread about Lloyd's "The Wild Goose Shanty" in which you participated. However, you did much the same there as I think you've been doing there: you didn't engage with the specifics.

I am glad to engage with you about the discussions of evidence and interpretation if you are willing. You have asked me to be more explicit about the evidence for my interpretation, which, it is true, I did not explicitly provide because the *engaged participants* in this thread are already aware of it or at least aware what I'm getting at.

However, I am reluctant to do the tedious work of rehashing all that exposition which has been discussed before because so far you have showed a disposition to ignore evidence. Frankly, I think it is rich that you ask for such an evidentiary process now when there is so much you have already ignored and when you have dismissed that process as not *worth* engaging in.

So, if I am to dance to your tune, you need to give something back. I will not outline the evidence and argumentation that forms my interpretation —which there is, and for you to blindly assert that there is none is not called for— unless you are willing to submit to the same process.

The question is why Lloyd would submit the example of a song in the way that *he created* it, not in the way he found it (and whereas what he found was very different than what he created) to make a claim about the shanty genre. The disturbing issue is that the workshop presenters at the recent Glasgow Shanty Festival also used Lloyd's creation to demonstrate some supposed fact about the genre. They did this, I believe, despite all common sense. That is, whereas Lloyd's manufacture of the song is not common knowledge, and I would therefore hesitate to criticism action without that knowledge, there is a factor of common sense that should prevail nevertheless: One cannot (or is very likely not to) do a rhythmic action to a non-rhythmic song. What inhibited the triumph of common sense? I suggest that it is an extraordinary faith-based belief in Lloyd, which is one of the greater problems that this conversation seeks to address.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Keith Price
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 08:01 PM

Hi Gibb Did the Keelers state that 'Wild Goose Shanty' was a windlass shanty ? The people who posted it, Szanty Szoguna-Showguns Sea Shanties did.
Bert in his notes for the 1957 'Blow Boys Blow'LP refers to it as a halyard shanty. Louisa Jo Killen (Louie) sang it on 'Blow the Man Down,' Lloyd's sleeve notes said "this one like many others was used for any job" He also said " This tune was collected by W Roy Mackenzie who got it from a seaman settled in Nova Scotia" I take it this has been disproved ?
I was there on the night in 1972 when Bert recorded what was later to become the LP 'An Evening with A L Lloyd' The Top Lock folk club was run by Willy Russell, Jim Pedan and John Kaneen. Bert remarked in his introduction to 'Wild Goose' that "shanties always get sung too fast" then goes on to laugh at the pace he did 'Yellar Girls' earlier in his set, indicating that the crew would be knackered.

I watched your entertaining presentation 'Sailor Chanties: History & Genre' for Maritime Folknet.
I must admit I had a smile, when you demonstrated 'Hauling Topsail Halyard' with a group of teenage boys and girls, who looked quite new to the process and completed the task in 10.5 verses and 42 pulls, which you considered to be the 'typical length' I'm not sure an experienced crew would agree with you.
I don't think any of the examples of working shanties given are too successful 'Let the Bulgine Run' for 'Heaving Brake Windlass' is a bit of a shambles.
You note how slow both Ree Baldwyn and Alex Henderson are singing, the same point Bert makes at the Top Lock folk club. I don't see a huge difference in pace between Baldwyns 'South Austria' and Lloyds 'Wild Goose' except that if Bert was right and it was used as a halyard, at that very slow pace, it would be possible to get four pulls on the chorus.
Of course you believe Lloyd made it up on the basis that it was never collected anywhere else.
I wonder what you make of Percy Grainger collecting Brigg Fair from Joseph Taylor. Taylor was the only source, and one of the best tunes in English folk music, at least Delius thought so.Mr Deene of Hibaldstow had the same text to a different tune. Who knows maybe Joseph Taylor did a Bert Lloyd.
My apologies I've gone on too long.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 10 Sep 23 - 05:35 AM

I have spent over 60 years in researching all aspects of folk music.
I said.. quote
since we do not know, and there is no evidence to illustrate what he meant, i keep an open mind.
I am not entering in to a silly competition, about who is the most knowledgeable
music is not about competition nor is music research, music research is about good scholarship, good scholarship involves not making statements which cannot be backed up factually
Gibb Sahibs comment about Lloyd, has not yet been backed up by fact, it is Lloyd bashing I am not arguing about Lloyds scholastic shortcomings I am pointing out that good scholarship involves not making wild statements that cannot be backed up , until gibb does so i think he is lloyd bashing


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 10 Sep 23 - 12:32 PM

When i want info on sea shanties, i do not go to Lloyd, i contact Chris Roche, who knew Stan Hugill well, and is imo an EXPERT on Shanties and sea songs


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,guestD
Date: 10 Sep 23 - 12:36 PM

After near twenty five years of chanteying-up topsails, topgallants, royals, staysails & headsails aboard the bark Charles W. Morgan & ship Joseph Conrad, plus windlass and anchor work aboard the schooner LA Dunton and hauling whale boats from water to crane on the Morgan, my conclusion is there exists no practical application for the Wild Goose Chantey. It's asymmetrical rhythm renders it a useless labor enigma. Better to be sung in beer halls with harmony & friends.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 10 Sep 23 - 12:42 PM

Chris Roche Shanty Crew Graphic
Maritime singer, historian, speaker, traveller.
Shanty Crew

Jun 1973 - Present50 years 4 months

Surrey, UK

Chris edits the Journal of the IACH the International Association of Cape Horner's for that group of people who have voyaged under sail alone to reach Cape Horn he gives a number of illustrated talks on his voyages in square rigged traditional sailing ships to the Southern Oceans, and other of his maritime explorations these, at times include shanties and sailor songs which Chris learnt from his mentor the late Stan Hugill the last British sailor-man to sing these old songs for the purpose of work at sea.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 10 Sep 23 - 01:58 PM

I see that "GUEST, Wm." pointed out on the "Wild Goose" thread last year that MacColl was singing Mackenzie's words to Lloyd's odd tune as early as 1953:

https://www.tobarandualchais.co.uk/track/61814?l=en


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 10 Sep 23 - 02:08 PM

Double-checking Mackenzie, 1919, his tune is clearly L&M's source, but it's written (surprise!) rhythmically.

Mackenzie suggests the tune might be called "wild and melancholy." Evidently not wild and melancholy enough.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Keith Price
Date: 10 Sep 23 - 08:11 PM

Forgive me Lighter, I'm old and slow. Are you saying the tune Lloyd uses was collected by W Roy Mackenzie, as Bert Lloyd stated in his sleeve notes on the 'Blow the Man Down' LP.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 10 Sep 23 - 09:55 PM

Keith, Mackenzie collected the tune and a single stanza from Ephraim Tattrie of Tatamagouche, N.S.

The stanza is the same as Lloyd's first stanza but with the minor differences of "floating" for "sailing" and "pretty girls" for L&M's "young girls." Nothing about trying to pick up a young woman with quivering topsails.

Mackenzie noted Tattrie's tune in regular 4/4 time. That necessary, regular rhythm is the chief difference between the two melodies.

According to Mackenzie, "This is to be regarded as a halliard shanty, although it apparently served at times for the men who were heaving at the capstan bars. Terry lists it as a windlass and capstan shanty."


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 11 Sep 23 - 02:56 AM

STAN HUGILL an illustrated talk by Chris Roche
My Friend Stan
Who was my friend Stan?
I first met Stan Hugill in November of 1972
when he and his boys Martin and Philip
sang at Teachers Folk in the New Kent
Road a whole day later I started looking for
his then out of print book Shanties from the
seven seas along the way I found his other
books and started to collect recordings of
the sea shanty as he had sung it.
Over the years I gained greater interest in
mercantile maritime history and the sea
shanty collected books recordings and took
aboard such an interest that I went to sea
myself in square rigged sailing ships.
Stan Hugill: came from a seafaring family he went to sea at an early age a young
man aged 16 he was wrecked on his first overseas voyage and while ashore in
New Zealand found he had a knack with languages he had a degree in oriental
languages Japanese and Mandarin sponsored by his shipping company Blue
Funnel, he could draw and paint, talk for hours and was something of a hypnotic
speaker. He hoboed across the Americas North and South and the Caribbean he
had to suddenly leave one port when the bombs fell he was there at several key
points in history wrecked in the last big square rigger the British had taken as a
POW WWII. Writer of 5 books including the seminal works `Shanties from the
Seven Seas` and `Sailor Town` while serving as Bosun at the Outward Bound
School Aberdovey. He trained boys at Gordonstoun school and sailed in the big
four Mast barque `Passat` rescued from a scrap yard, was discovered and
revered by British, American, French and Poles alike for his skill with song, history,
language, knowledge of the sea, he worked with National Geographic looking to
find Francis Drakes lead coffin and sea grave.
My friend Stan An illustrated talk and personal reminisce runs for one hour and a
half in story, song, sound clips and slides;
Contact: sailor@chrisroche.co.uk 020 8647 1396


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 11 Sep 23 - 04:29 AM

He is doing the talk at Tenterden folk Festival


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 11 Sep 23 - 06:44 AM

Good questions/comments, Keith, thanks

"Of course you believe Lloyd made it up on the basis that it was never collected anywhere else."

That's not *the* basis. That's one factor in the interpretation, yes, but not the definitive one. So, I don't propose the idea that simply because only one instance of a given song was documented that the song's existence in tradition should be doubted. However, speaking to that point, 1) We have a track record of examples (it's basically the topic of this thread!) of Lloyd creating songs, which doesn't prove anything about this song individually but contributes to reasonable skepticism of his methods; 2) more importantly, we have Lloyd mentioning MacKenzie, as you said**—while what he did was NOT MacKenzie; 3) We have quite a few documents of this song (the chanty with the "Ranzo, ranzo, way" chorus). They all compare well with one another, including MacKenzie's, whereas Lloyd's piece does not match the set; 4) Lloyd's piece does not match the musical style of chanties in general, either (refer to guestD's opinion above).

(**I must note, however, that the liner notes of _Blow Boys Blow_ (1957) do not say this, they say, “One of the great halyard shanties, seemingly better-known in English ships than American ones, though some versions of it have become crossed with the American song called Huckleberry Hunting. From the graceful movement of its melody it is possible that this is an older shanty than most. Perhaps it evolved out of some long-lost lyrical song.” The first sentence is bullshitting. What are “the great halyard shanties”? There is nothing in the literature to indicate its status as “great,” nor is it often attributed to halyards [though that in itself may be meaningless; see below], nor is there data to support “better-known in English ships.” Like many of the liner notes, Lloyd is making wild assertions that are neither possible to make from the documentation and nor is there any information to suggest that Lloyd did the sort of research anyway that would be required to make the claim if it was possible.) Anyway, mention of MacKenzie is on a later, 1964 album.)

I mentioned the Mudcat thread about this song (in which Dick also participated). That and Brian's recorded talk, above, spoke to the relationship between Lloyd's song and MacKenzie's book, now summarized again by Lighter. Which is all why I hoped to refer to the song without dragging this all out because I believed all the people actively engaged already knew what it’s about. They also know the standard concept that chanties are rhythmical. And with that they can put two and two together to know what I was expressing about Lloyd’s intellectual dishonesty and about the problem with the Glasgow shanty workshop.

So, here’s an image of MacKenzie’s transcription, “The Wild Goose”
https://imgur.com/a/WDJXuH5

It’s a completely coherent, rhythmic piece. It’s not that Lloyd, taking MacKenzie as the germ of an idea, made a “slow” song so much that he made a non-metered one. It simply does not make sense as a working chanty. I have theories on why he may have done that, but won’t digress. And I hate for us to have to keep saying that Lloyd can do whatever he wants, someone can adapt chanty material to sing whatever they want etc. That’s not the issue. The issue is when people interpret this creation, which is *not* characteristic of traditional chanty style, *as representative* of traditional chanty style—all because they have been led to believe it is a representative sample. After all, Lloyd tacitly implies that *what he sang on record* was that “great halyard shanty” “well-known in English ships” etc. Even when he later mentions MacKenzie, he only says it—we are led to believe “it” refers to what he is singing—is found there. This is not a confession of his adaptation of MacKenzie’s material to a new (uncharacteristic) form. It reads, rather, as a further validation of the pedigree of what he’s doing. Lloyd, I believe, bears responsibility for poisoning the well. I cannot blame most people for being misled by Lloyd; I don’t expect most people to have known not to trust Lloyd. If we do blame them, we must also blame Jim Mageean in the Glasgow Shanty Festival clip. Yet Dick says, “If I want information about Shanties. I don not use AL Lloyd but i contact Chris Roche or Jim Mageaan, who are very knowledgeable." Dick— Jim is using AL Lloyd. Do you not finally see what this is all about? Lloyd f*cked up the entire pool, and that probably goes for problems in Hugill’s work, too. You revised: “When i want info on sea shanties, i do not go to Lloyd, i contact Chris Roche, who knew Stan Hugill well, and is imo an EXPERT on Shanties and sea songs.” (Jim is omitted this time around, why?) What if Chris knew Stan Hugill well… and gets some of the same poison from the well that Hugill got? For example, why did Hugill start singing Lloyd’s form of “South Australia,” whereas this appears in none of his books (and no one sings the South Australia in Hugill’s books? I mean, hitching one’s hawser to Hugill isn’t exactly the authoritative flex you seem to think it is. This isn’t about Jim or Chris, who seem like fine gentlemen and maybe in the same boat of Lloyd’s victims. I don’t see why you seem to be dismissing the significance of Lloyd’s ideas’ effects as if they could be isolated from the business of how shanties are now presented in the UK?

In the 1972 recording, as I started to explain, Lloyd creates a half-truth situation. He says chanties were sung slower (than revival performers sing them). That’s true…some of the time. Some chanties were sung quite quickly, it depends. I think the tempo at which Lloyd sang “Yellow Gals,” which he called “ridiculous,” was absolutely perfect. This idea “we sing chanties too fast” is a truism. True some of the time, but ultimately not accurate. The familiar truism gets heads nodding, “ah yes, (in absence of all the facts) that makes sense; he knows of what he speaks!” and obscures the falsehood: “As proof of that, here’s an example of a ‘slow’ one.” Need I go on? He’s planted evidence. The funny thing is that MacKenzie’s “Wild Goose” could reasonably be sung, in a brake windlass working situation, at the same tempo that Lloyd sings “Yellow Gals”!

As far as whether a chanty belongs to a category of “windlass” or “capstan” or “halyard” or whatever goes, that is a long discussion that I won’t get into here. In brief: I think these categories are bunk. We have primary source accounts that describe people doing one or another job X and singing chanty Y, from which we get some limited data for certain purposes. But as for both the classificatory scheme that took hold in discourse that sifts chanties into these categories, that is a reduction that usually confuses and harms more than it helps to understand anything. More importantly, most of the statements by writers in the popular sources and by revival performance presenters are so unscientific that this supposed point of information (e.g. “Y was a halyard chanty”) is completely useless for understanding chanties historically. I think most people don’t even know what it means (in any significant way that would be worth noting) when they say that, but rather they just copy what they heard/read in an effort to give the impression that they’re providing something. Just about all these ascriptions to categories are good for are detective hunts like the one here about what source a revival performer like Lloyd might have read/heard.

In The Keelers’ workshop clip, because I was not there and I’m only seeing the clip, no, I cannot testify that they *said* Lloyd’s Wild Goose was a brake windlass chanty. What we can see, however (and the reason why I shared the clip) is that they are imitating the action of working a brake windlass. So, I see no reason to question Jerzy’s caption on the video: we see it in the video.

This is where the meta-conversation about categories does have some trivial application. I suspect that The Keelers, in a workshop intended to show the uses of chanties, went through an outline of various categories of work, one of which was brake windlass. I surmise that what we are seeing is the choice to employ Lloyd’s Wild Goose to illustrate that part of the workshop.

How they settled on the idea that LLOYD’S Wild Goose would make a good example for brake windlass work is the puzzling part. I can conjecture how they got the idea that “The Wild Goose Shanty,” *as an abstract idea*, would be categorized as brake windlass. It’s an issue of equivocation. Terry’s _The Shanty Book_ has “The Wild Goose Shanty”, to which he affixes the label “Windlass and Capstan.” The first, trivial matter of equivocation is that “windlass” gets mixed up. I’m not at all certain that Terry had the brake windlass in mind when he writes “windlass” in the book. As in Colcord’s similar usage, the book never speaks to brake windlass specifically, instead always grouping it in the phrase “windlass and capstan.” “Windlass” also referred to the capstan-driven windlass (the nature of which working was totally different), and that was the “windlass” that I believe would have been in Terry’s mind, due to the fact e.g. that the brake windlass had practically fallen to the wayside long before. Maybe not, but that’s what I think; I said it was trivial. In any case, both Terry’s book and MacKenzie have “Wild Goose” as the title of this item. Someone very fixated on that *arbitrary* title might overlook other documentation on this chanty. They might say, accepting Lloyd’s Wild Goose as the real McCoy (or MacColl—see Lighter’s recent link), “Let me go look for more info on ‘the Wild Goose Shanty’,” after which they would discover Terry’s score but not necessarily the other documents of “Ranzo way.” They would see “windlass” affixed to Terry’s score and say, “OK, this is appropriate to windlass… [then equivocating] *brake* windlass.” Maybe that’s what led The Keelers to their categorization. I don’t know, and I don’t think it’s very important what *led* to that.

It—“it” being “Ranzo Way,” disguised under the label of “Wild Goose” by Terry and MacKenzie—*is* appropriate to brake windlass work. Incidentally, it was one of the items I had considered when I was creating a recording to illustrate singing chanties with brake windlass work in mind. One of my criteria for all the items I was consideringwas that there must be a first-hand descriptive account of people working a brake windlass while singing the chanty.

The non-trivial equivocation comes in when Ranzo Way qua Wild Goose (Terry and MacKenzie) gets mixed up, by sharing the title, with Lloyd’s Wild Goose. Lloyd might have gotten the idea from MacKenzie but his composition is not the same species of thing. So, the mistake is to take “Wild Goose #1” (MacKenzie/Terry) and the ideas about its historical application and apply them to “Wild Goose #2” (Lloyd). That, in my opinion, should not have happened, not because The Keelers didn’t appraise the provenance of Lloyd’s Wild Goose. We could call that an innocent mistake. It should not have happened because it should have been obvious that Lloyd’s Wild Goose is not functional for brake windlass work. The puzzle is: What inhibited this common sense “check”? Perhaps it was such faith placed in the product of Lloyd and/or the writing of Terry etc that common sense was sublimated: “(Lloyd’s) Wild Goose is the traditional chanty, and books say ‘Wild Goose’ is a windlass chanty, and that must mean brake windlass, and we want to use a popular song to show brake windlass action. It *must* work (Jesus told me so), so we must figure out how it works (rather than question its utility).”

Briefly, Keith:

“You note how slow both Ree Baldwyn and Alex Henderson are singing, the same point Bert makes at the Top Lock folk club.”
No, not the same point. Merely calling attention to the slow tempo, and the correlation to brake windlass work (which was the slowest job, on average, though the tempo varies I’d say up to about 65 BPM).

“if Bert was right and it was used as a halyard, at that very slow pace, it would be possible to get four pulls on the chorus.”
Four pulls per chorus at a halyard does not exist.

“I don't think any of the examples of working shanties given are too successful 'Let the Bulgine Run' for 'Heaving Brake Windlass' is a bit of a shambles.”
Not sure what you found shambolic about it. As you may know, video examples of practical chanty singing are very rare. Most plentiful are videos from the squad at Mystic Seaport, which is where that came from. The dearth of such visual examples, and none with a “full size” brake windlass, is one reason I made Songs of the Windlass: Singing Chanties on Gazela.
The point of that second halyard clip was to talk about the creation of verses, improvisation, pertaining to the situation.

“completed the task in 10.5 verses and 42 pulls, which you considered to be the 'typical length' I'm not sure an experienced crew would agree with you.”
That was data collection. I counted what happened there, and count in other instances, to see the range. I’ve had quite a few chances to do this or observe it in different situations, collecting the data from all, and that instance was not an outlier. Do you know anyone doing this on the eastern side of the Atlantic (I’d love to get their examples). What would they say? 5 verses? 25 verses? We have no historical accounts that I know of of people saying how many verses. What we have is 1) noted texts, which vary quite a bit but suggest a range 2) Recent applications, all of which, however, are associated with Mystic Seaport folks or something I have set up—and all under circumstances we can certainly quibble about (Where there “too many” on the line? Was the weather too nice? Is synthetic line different than hemp? What material are the yards made from? Are the ships too big / too small?), but which don’t suggest that 10 verses is atypical. Imagine those kids as bigger people, and a ship bigger to scale, and accumulated fatigue. I did it on Bark Europa (great crew) crossing Azores – Brittany and 10 sounds about right to me as an average. Big difference between when you do it in isolation versus at the end of 2 weeks at sea doing things often and you’re tired and unenthusiastic.

By way of another example, here's an experienced crew on Charles W. Morgan eagerly showing off, with 34 pulls (= 8.5 “verses”)
https://youtu.be/1mot3MzhPpE?si=yObk0ydWEcS-qZJf


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Keith Price
Date: 11 Sep 23 - 07:15 AM

Thank you Lighter.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 11 Sep 23 - 01:22 PM

Many thanks for that detailed account, Gibb!


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,BlackAcornUK
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 04:25 AM

A really interesting thread, with amazing detail in that last post, Gibb.

FWIW, personally, I hugely appreciate Lloyd as a galvanising/creative figure within the revival; he brought countless amazing songs to attention (albeit with not-infrequent embroidery & alteration), and platformed/mentored some of the finest singers of the era.

However, his scholarship is plainly lax, and far beyond shanties his habit of taking liberties with songs to create particular atmospheres or aesthetics is well known... There's a great US Library of Congress blog that looks at the addition of the Shakespearean 'Take no scorn to wear the horn' verse to Hal an Tow... To my mind, it seems likely that Lloyd also encouraged Mike Waterson to add the 'Since man was first created' opening verse. They also clipped the verses and tweaked the chorus from the Helston source material.
https://blogs.loc.gov/folklife/2017/05/hal-an-tow-some-intriguing-evidence-on-a-may-song/

With a forensic eye over his work, some of his writings would even seem to see him stray into the terrain of the bulls***er or fantasist.

To re-emphasise - folk is a living medium, and it's normal to make small, and sometimes large adjustments - Nic Jones did this all the time (look at Annan Water) but crucially was open about it.

However, Lloyd making brazen false claims about provenance etc simply isn't on; and, where this faulty scholarship proliferates incorrect assumptions into wider historical (mis)understanding (as highlighted above) this is plainly something that needs to be identified, articulated and shared in order to strengthen/repair the foundations of future scholarship.

The comparisons with Peter Kennedy are interesting; I also see Lloyd as a much more benevolent figure - and someone who, as noted above, sought to lift up others, rather than to do them over.

Perhaps his over-reaching comes from a somewhat complacent/self-satisfied sense of his 'unique affinity' for, and insights into, the form... A more extreme example of that in a different field could be those like Gerald Gardiner and Dion Fortune, who I don't doubt believed that they'd unlocked secret wisdom, but really were just making stuff up much of the time.

When pondering Lloyd's motivations/mindset, I also think back to the quotes attributed to Robert Graves as he received criticism for the highly questionable historical detail of The White Goddess - he tetchily emphasised his 'poetic' interpretation of myth and ritual, beyond 'mere scholars'…


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Keith Price
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 04:41 AM

Gibb,

Thank you for your full and comprehensive reply.
I'd like to continue our conversation, there's still some points I want to make. But first, I think should read through the previous thread. If the points I want to make have not already been covered, I'll come back to this thread. My apologies if you've had to repeat yourself already.
You've been very generous with your time, thanks once again.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 04:48 AM

Thanks Gibb.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,BlackAcornUK
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 08:25 AM

Other quick thoughts -

Has anyone delved into Lloyd's archive (held at Goldsmiths, University of London - alongside the MacColl/Seeger and Alan Bush collections), in order to see if there are glimpses of his thought-process/motivations/modus operandi there?

Do Dave Harker or Georgina Boyes interrogate Lloyd in Fakesong or the Imagined Village, respectively?


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 08:54 AM

BAUK
This has recently been covered on a similar thread on Facebook on the Traditional Ballads blog. Those in the know stated there that there was nothing at Goldsmiths that would enlighten us further. No field notes etc.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 08:57 AM

There seems to be several scholars working on Lloyd's creativity at the moment. Most of them know about each other but someone perhaps needs to co-ordinate matters to avoid unnecessary duplication and time.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 09:07 AM

Great commentary from Gibb and BlackAcornUK. Thanks for the posts.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Georgina Boyes
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 10:06 AM

Yes, BOUK, I did write quite a bit about Lloyd in "The Imagined Village" - the book's still available via No Masters website if you want to judge the whole thing.

For ease of access, however, you might want to look at the Introduction to "The Singing Englishman" that I wrote at Rod Stradling's for the book's republication in Musical Tradition. http://www.mustrad.org.uk/articles/tse_int.htm

From memory too, I think Dave Harker devoted a chapter of "Fakesong" to Lloyd. I think he subtitled it "The One that Got Away".


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,guestD
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 01:15 PM

There has been a lot of emphasis concerning where Lloyd sourced such unique & different lyrics & melodies. I would point to the two very distinct and mostly unrelated versions Wm Dorerflinger collected from Dick Maitland and Patrick Tayluer at Sailor's Snug Harbor in Staten Island late in the 1930s and early 40s. I am speaking here of The Leaving of Liverpool. How is it that the two versions are so dramatically different?
Chantey categories are absolutely necessary in educating the general public least they should confuse heaving and hauling. Accurate generalizations certainly can be made for capstan work vs. halyards. Less so with windlass and capstan. This technique was already in place at Mystic when I started in June of 1980 and to my knowledge still exists today.
In the 1980s and 90s I had conversations with both Lou Killen and Martin Carthy (Mystic), likewise with Martin Wyndham-Read within the last ten years, concerning the influence of Bert Lloyd upon them. All said he was generous and passionate in sharing his knowledge and repertoire; not one commented on inaccurate sources or bibliographies.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 02:58 PM

Do Dave Harker or Georgina Boyes interrogate Lloyd in Fakesong or the Imagined Village, respectively?

Harker's chapter on Lloyd, 'the one that got away' takes him to task mostly for adopting the main tenets of the Sharpian folk song consensus (a fair comment), for inaccurate analysis of North-Eastern working class culture, for flaws in his 'industrial song' concept, and for being the wrong kind of Marxist (Harker was SWP, Lloyd CPGB). Ironically, considering the book's title, Harker doesn't level the accusation of fakery at Lloyd at all, except in the case of 'The Coal Owner and the Pitman's Wife', the broadside text of which Lloyd apparently tampered with. And, like everyone else who's looked at it, he finds implausible Lloyd's linking of 'The Cutty Wren' with the Peasants' Revolt.

Georgina's online commentary on 'The Singing Englishman' is very useful.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 03:02 PM

Can I also thank Gibb for that tour de force regarding 'Wild Goose', which married an impressive depth of detail with some telling application of logic.

There have been several other interesting comments lately in this thread. It's reminded me why Mudcat is always worth returning to - at its best you can find a level of informed discussion hard to find elsewhere.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,BlackAcornUK
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 02:34 AM

Thank you Georgina, I have The Imagined Village but haven't yet had a chance to read it; I *have* just read your brilliant essay on The Singing Englishman.

One of the things that strongly strikes me from that, is the contradiction between Lloyd's assertion that true folk song could only be produced in narrow social conditions, in a time already passed; and his own irrepressible, unaccountable practice of tinkering, revision and 'improvement'.

This reminds me a touch of MacColl's Critics Group insistence that singers should restrict their repertoires to their authentic geographies of origin - whilst himself being a Salfordian wrapped in ancestral Scottish heritage, singing songs from right across the realm, and a prolific writer of new material to boot.

As in so many fields, the high priests are above the covenants required of the flock...!


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 03:41 AM

This reminds me a touch of MacColl's Critics Group insistence that singers should restrict their repertoires to their authentic geographies of origin - whilst himself being a Salfordian wrapped in ancestral Scottish heritage, singing songs from right across the realm, and a prolific writer of new material to boot.

As in so many fields, the high priests are above the covenants required of the flock...! quote Black Acorn
According to Jim Carroll, who knew MacColl   well, that was not the case, it only applied to people singing at the singers club, neither did the rule apply to writing new songs.
MacColl was born in Salford, his mother was Scottish, According to wiki his parents were Scottish, WIKI IS NOT ALWAYS ACCURATE.
A TYPICAL BIT OF MACCOLL BASHING AND HAS NO CONNECTION WITH LLOYD AND SEA SHANTIES OR LLOYDS SCHOLARSHIP OR LACK OF SCHOLARSHIP


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 04:37 AM

Can we stick to lloyd and his scholarship, and lack of
.MacColl and the rules at the singers club are irrelevant


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,BlackAcornUK
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 04:50 AM

Hi RJM, as per my comments on Lloyd, I'm a big fan of MacColl and his contribution to the movement (I even have songs of his in my own formative repertoire), but as with Lloyd it's important not to overlook the problems and contradictions of their practice.

I'm happy to accept a correction that that approach was more to do with the Singers Club, but I've heard direct testimony from a few who took part about this requirement, and how onerous it was. It hardly seems better to me, that it 'only' happened in one setting but not the other - especially as the club would have reached (and probably affected the practice of) far more participants (performers and audiences) over the years than the smaller, tighter group.

As for the relevance - you don't need me to remind you of the closeness in relationship between MacColl and Lloyd. I'm attempting to reflect upon parallels between key figures of the revival, as part of a broader reflection upon the attitudes and tendencies of these luminaries. I'm not bashing either of them, nor - indeed - Robert Graves, in my earlier post.

Since you seem keen to return to the central point, and since you insisted upon evidence to underpin assertions, it would be great to hear your thoughts on Gibb's tremendously insightful contribution above.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 06:27 AM

it is not a question of better it is a question of being accurate
.I think you are right, a lot of us went and sought out material from the uk, but it was not exclusively down to MacColl,in fact it was the idea of Lomax
Cyril Tawney had a different approach he went to singers and said i have found this song which would really suit you, a more subtle approach and imo more successful.
A number of people including Bert encouraged younger singers to look up our own geographical british isles material [including Ireland]of songs, instead of singing american material.
I thanked Gibb and think his post was very good.
Black Acorn scoring points is negative and does not contribute to good overall discussion


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 06:47 AM

Black Acorn, I am well informed on the policy of the singers club, I have a good friend who was booked there twice and became a resident.Jim Carrolls posts also corroborate what i have been told


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 08:02 AM

Actually Bert and Ewan fell out with one anther for a while, and at one time you could not be friends with both of them, so much for closeness


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 09:46 AM

I'm happy to accept a correction that that approach was more to do with the Singers Club, but I've heard direct testimony from a few who took part about this requirement, and how onerous it was.

According to Peggy (who I definitely believe), it was indeed a Singers' Club policy. However, many other clubs followed and became 'Policy Clubs'. It might have seemed onerous to some, but it was the Policy that persuaded people like Sandra Kerr and Lou Killen to look for songs from their own localities, and fuelled an interest in English folk song more generally. But for that, perhaps we'd all be singing Leadbelly songs to this day...


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 09:49 AM

good post, Brian


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 10:48 AM

Thanks for the link to your essay, Georgina. I found it most interesting.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,BlackAcornUK
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 12:12 PM

Happy to believe that too, Brian. One of the people I know who complained about it has themself cultivated a predominantly authentic home-regional repertoire, but they were still conscious of the contradiction of being held to standards not always adhered to amongst those by which they were set.

As above, it's not an attack. I only raised it by analogy with the apparent divergence - highlighted in Georgina Boyd's excellent piece - between Lloyd's philosophical assertions and personal approach, and I'm happy to defend that comparison. It's about the curious exemptions that some influential figures allow themselves but don't extend to others.

RJM, I think most people would accept the general usage of the word 'close' to describe E.M. & A.L.L.'s working relationship over an extended period.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,BlackAcornUK
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 01:29 PM

[Georgina *BOYES*, accursed auto-correct!]


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 02:35 PM

...But for that, perhaps we'd all be singing Leadbelly songs to this day...

If, and only if, Leadbelly was "Policy." Meanwhile, American folkie Harry Belafonte (RIP) once claimed most American Jews learned Hava Nagila from him.

There is minor argument here about what LLoyd did. The big deal is in the opinions on same. A "Policy" of exclusion is about the only way to manufacture the false consensus nobody needs.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 14 Sep 23 - 04:50 AM

If, and only if, Leadbelly was "Policy."

... A "Policy" of exclusion is about the only way to manufacture the false consensus nobody needs.


The point is that the Policy was adopted at the Singers' Club in order to persuade recent recruits from the skiffle movement to look closer to home than America for material. This was successful, in that it spawned a second revival of English folk song and music in the 1950s and 60s, but for which a lot of us wouldn't be where we are now. It broadened, rather than narrowed, the available repertoire, so although superficially exclusionary it led to an expansion in people's horizons. I don't recognise a 'false consensus'.

Anyway, we were as you say discussing Lloyd in this thread. The big deal in his case is not really the matter of differing opinions. What we're dissecting here are individual cases, in order to learn just how far his interventions went. For those of us interested in traditional song, this is quite important.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 14 Sep 23 - 05:14 AM

This reminds me a touch of MacColl's Critics Group insistence that singers should restrict their repertoires to their authentic geographies of origin - whilst himself being a Salfordian wrapped in ancestral Scottish heritage, singing songs from right across the realm, and a prolific writer of new material to boot.

As in so many fields, the high priests are above the covenants required of the flock...!


There's much truth in this, but I also suspect that there was plenty of creative thinking going on in order to justify given song selections, in the same way that singers in 'theme nights' will dream up ingenious arguments to excuse a song of dubious relevance to the theme. MacColl could at least claim authenticity in respect of his Scots and Lancashire songs, and also anything he'd written himself that emanated from his own cultural experience. Lloyd could arguably have done the same for his maritime songs, although there is a very interesting comment in Peggy Seeger's memoir to the effect that Bert was most adept at constructing convincing fake traditional songs at the drop of a hat, to subvert the dictates of the Policy.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 14 Sep 23 - 08:26 AM

"Bert was most adept at constructing convincing fake traditional songs at the drop of a hat."

Uh-oh....


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 14 Sep 23 - 09:44 AM

The big deal in his case is not really the matter of differing opinions. What we're dissecting here are individual cases, in order to learn just how far his interventions went. For those of us interested in traditional song, this is quite important.

And I'm just not reading all that much disagreement here on that front. This most recent bump is a mutual admiration society v. Dick on ends justifying means and how disclaimers are a good thing.

As for Policy, believing local restrictions improved selection, variety and choice of maritime work song in folk clubs is not math or science based. Political Science... maybe. If any so-called tradition requires a formal, regulated performance environment to continue, it needs more academic disclaimers than a gen-u-wine LLoyd sailor song.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 14 Sep 23 - 01:33 PM

And I'm just not reading all that much disagreement here on that front.

Obviously not, because the main posters here are people who have independently researched different areas of Lloyd's repertoire and drawn similar conclusions. Calling it a 'mutual appreciation society' isn't very helpful.

If any so-called tradition requires a formal, regulated performance environment to continue...

Whoever said that the folk song revival is a continuance of tradition? Or that all performance environments were as regulated as the Singers' Club? I'm not sure what point you're trying to make.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 14 Sep 23 - 04:16 PM

For those of us interested in traditional song, this is quite important.
QUOTE
It would be better to say for those of us interested in the scholarship of traditional song
i am primarily intersted in singing songs including traditional songs Because the song appeals to me,likewise there are some traditional songs,eg little sir hugh, or drink old england dry, or fathom the bowl, that do not interest me
I agree that songs that appeal to me, i might subsequently wish to get more correct info so scholarship for me is of secondary importance however i agree that scholarship and comments about songs should be accurate, that is why for many years i have gone to other sources other than Bert lloyd for info on shanties and sea songs, sources such as Chris Roche


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 14 Sep 23 - 04:55 PM

Whoever said that the folk song revival is a continuance of tradition?

Dick, to open this most recent bump, and with a nod to TikTok and Wellerman on top.

I know folk clubs, lecture halls, video games, TikTok &c &c each have unique traditions of their very own. Some do more 'production value' than others than others but all of it is arts & entertainment. And I too do not find the mutual admiration bubbles, that so often comes with each, all that helpful neither.

In plain English, fiction is not fact and LLoyd, folk clubs, lecture halls &c &c are neither chanties as work song nor hard naval science. Not that there is anything wrong with either art or science being what they are. It's just the typical, one-label-fits-all, glossary that was never really in keeping with the many "traditions." Until that situation improves, (not holding my breath) asterisks are free, and that's a good thing.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 14 Sep 23 - 06:47 PM

Not much substance here, just a remark:

I've noticed "Doodle [sic] Let Me Go" has become (recently, I think) more popular on the eastern side of the Atlantic and in the cyberspace.

I suppose the circa 2019 film _The Lighthouse_ contributed a little bit to that. (Funny enough, I suspect the makers had a look at Hugill, or [even more likely] a performer who had, for that.)

But Lloyd's rendition popularized it, I guess. Lloyd appears to have used Cecil Sharp _English Folk-Chanteys_ (1914) as his source. After the first verse, the lyrics are Lloyd's. Lloyd also changes the form by creating solo couplets (whereas the versions in Sharp, Terry, and Hugill have just one-line solos).

You can roughly tell who might have gotten it from the Lloyd lineage if they sing couplets, and if they do a little snap rhythm (Lloyd's addition, not in the books) on the word "yellow" in the chorus.

Anyway, my remark is that it strikes me as funny hearing so many people sing about "yaller girls." It's such a trope in minstrel songs and 19th c African American songs (though I don't know the exact extent of cross-influence between those spheres on this particular matter), that it's just kind of odd to hear it belted with such passion.

The interpretation I would hazard is that Lloyd's text lays on the narrative of "whoring down in Peru" so thickly that singers, if they care to think what a yellow gal is, suppose it means some quaint name for a "Spanish" prostitute. Or something like that. The cultural distance of "creoles down in Peru," perhaps, makes it politically more palatable than the alternative, a colorist term of US Black people. Concurrently, they are not based in the American cultural environment enough to know it as a the dated but still used term among some Black Americans (usually within their community only) and the connotations it has and had.

Mind, I don't have a strong complaint about people singing it, per se, but I figure that if they knew it better they might be a little less enthusiastic!

And no, Texans and their state song are not the same ;)


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 15 Sep 23 - 03:15 AM

Whoever said that the folk song revival is a continuance of tradition?

Dick, to open this most recent bump, and with a nod to TikTok and Wellerman on top.quote
I never said it, that was somebody else


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 16 Sep 23 - 03:54 AM

'Farewell to Tawathie' did it originate as a poem ?and was it set to music by A. L. Lloyd?


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 16 Sep 23 - 04:29 AM

Attributed to George Scroggie near Aberdeen in or around 1850, this song was popularized by Ewan MacColl and A.L. Lloyd. Lloyd credits the song to Scroggie in the liner notes for his album Leviathan, saying of it:

    The stereotype of the oldtime whalemen is a hairychested ring-tailed roarer, hard worker, hard drinker, hard fighter. No doubt the description fitted many of them; nevertheless they often showed a strong liking for gentle meditative songs. Perhaps alone among all the songs on this record, Farewell to Tarwathie was made not by a whaleman, but by a miller, George Scroggie of Federate, near Aberdeen, around the middle of the 19th century. The tune is an old favourite, best known in connection with the song called "Green Bushes".


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 16 Sep 23 - 10:18 AM

There is a detailed treatment of this song, including Scroggie's full text, here:
https://mainlynorfolk.info/lloyd/songs/farewelltotarwathie.html


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,MichaelKM
Date: 16 Sep 23 - 10:19 AM

Sorry, I did not identify myself when making the last post.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Reinhard
Date: 16 Sep 23 - 10:32 AM

There is a detailed treatment of this song, including Scroggie's full text

... which I only added today, together with information about a bunch of recordings from my record collection that weren't listed yet.

And Scroggie's verses are already in the Digital Tradition, as TARWATH2.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 16 Sep 23 - 02:00 PM

RJM: I never said it, that was somebody else....

From: GUEST
Date: 06 Mar 23 - 11:24 PM
Wellerman therEfore is helping to keep the tradition alive even though[ according to Phil d'Conch it has nothing to do with naval sciEnce
While not decrieng Naval Science, keeping the tradition alive is very important


Dick, wellll... I sure thought I was replying to you at the time. I tend to do that with a mystery "guest" and you in the same thread. My bad, if the above post was not yours.

Whomever it be's, the authentic/traditional/working "sea chanty/shanty" label still fits English folk club and pop repitoire about as well as it fits Howe! Hissa! or The Complaynt of Scotland (the latter an iomramh, iorram, iram, iurram, joram, juram or jurram or... anything at all but English!) Neither did the sailors on the Gazela call them "shanties." Their 2400+ year histories and traditions are not about African-Americans, cotton screwers or the Gulf of Mexico.

Hard Naval Science is from an entirely different planet Earth than Hugill, Whall, Lloyd, Gibb, Reidler et al.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 16 Sep 23 - 02:02 PM

***Oh the irony. The above was me.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 16 Sep 23 - 03:32 PM

No worries, Phil, we all do it!


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 16 Sep 23 - 11:04 PM

>>Neither did the sailors on the Gazela call them "shanties." Their 2400+ year histories and traditions are not about African-Americans, cotton screwers or the Gulf of Mexico.<<

What do "them" and "their" refer to?

>>Reidler<< [sic]

Could you please explain to everyone why you have been pounding on this poor undergraduate thesis-writer (Riedler) for several years, ever since you got a bug in your bonnet about people not discussing Catholic Romance language-speaking flautists? The frequency with which you mention her name seems only slightly behind your mention of "TikTok," "Wellerman," and "Naval Science." Yet, I'm confident that most if not all people here have no idea whom you're referring to when you do so.

Was some secondary-sourced background write-up narrative of the history of chanties in the bachelor's thesis about "The Influence of Sea Shanties on Classical Music," by this young woman from Singapore who is a scholar of opera, the primary thing you chance-encountered when you started this journey, and you have been reacting to it ever since? Did you two have an exchange on Reddit or something where she said, "OK, Boomer"? Did you tell her she should change her major to a HARD STEM field?


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 18 Sep 23 - 06:08 AM

Gibb,
>>Reidler<< [sic] I'm always getting that backwards. All apologies and it will happen again. I promise.

Neither seen nor heard one bad word about the author as a person. Nothing at all to match the tone of your post. An all around sterling individual… or maybe the Antichrist, for all I know… or care.

I've heard parts of two shanty lectures. Standard issue, no opera, nothing special. I knew the Maritime Work Song thread would do Wagner when his time came. Little surprise then Piratical Debauchery, Homesick Sailors, and Nautical Rhythms: The Influence of Sea Shanties on Classical Music should turn up on its own merit. What else is there on that subject?

...people not discussing Catholic Romance language-speaking flautists?… you lost me completely there.

What do "them" and "their" refer to?
Too much thread drift for poor old Lloyd. See here: New Chanties Documentary


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 05 Sep 23 - 12:02 PM

I cannot locate the Wyndham-Read version of 'Black Ball Line' with which Gibb reopened this thread is so weird that I'm inclined to agree it might have been mis-transcribed.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 05 Sep 23 - 12:07 PM

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G9vS36h8oxQ
WEIRD? I rather like it


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 05:06 AM

What positives are there in destroying Lloyds reputation as a scholar?,


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 05:39 AM

I consider it negative to continually find the negatives in Lloyds scholarship, to harp on about his tampering, Sharp and more so Baring Gould did a lot of tampering with texts. but without Sharp in particular we would not have such a big REPERTOIRE


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 10:50 AM

As lloyds reputation as a scholar is diminshed, so is his overall reputation.
Sharp altered manuscripts, at the time it was felt necessary to do so to get them published, the result was a positive, the songs became printed circulated in schools the repertoire was expanded and people sang the songs
Lloyd altered songs expanded the repertoire and got revival singers to sing songs that would not have otherwise been song.
ContinualLy harping on his weaknesses as a scholar is highlighting, his weaknesses not talking about his positives, that is FACT.

Steve says '''There are plenty of people who would rather have the truth.
is this a suggestion that i do not want the truth,
I am aware of Lloyds scholastic weakness, and as you suggest a lot of other people are too.
Brian, I have at no point mentioned Marson.
I believe criticisms of Sharp and Baring Gould and Lloyd should be seen in the context of their times, and in a holistic manner.
What I see on this forum and so far on Face book on this subject is mainly negative about Lloyd.
The pursuit of scholastic honesty,without holistic perspective is a negative force.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 12:27 PM

IMO llOYD did very little DAMAGE compared to folk song collector Peter kennedy, a man who pissed off some of his sources and who dubbed himself on to field recordings without permission, and who thought he owned the traditional songs.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 12:52 PM

In what reality would every reader equally value every author for all the same reasons?

You may mark me down as a negative. It is a fact of maths I place zero value on folk club revival chantey authenticity. For the student of naval science, it's a clunker. A Regency dance group would be time better spent, but not by much.

If one highly values folk club revival shanties, the results will be different of course.

And Whall has an authorship & original copyright claim in his foreword. He did in fact own the songs that followed as far as the publishing industry goes. Typical for the medium.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 01:47 PM

Baloney,Lloyd and Kennedy were very different ,i knew them both, Lloyd s tampering and not claiming authorships= is evidence.
Kennedy was in it for the money,AND THREATENED TO SUE PEOPLE FREQUENTLY


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 07 Sep 23 - 07:48 AM

Without Lloyd and his contemporaries ther probably would not have been a UKfolk revival as we knew it.
lIGHTER AND HIS POST IS AN EXAMPLE OF HOW lLOYDS REPUTATION HAS BEEN DIMINSHED.
LIGHTER . does not take a holistic approach and is not seeing Lloyd in the context of his time, nor does he in his post acknowledge Lloyds other contributions to the folk revival.
BrianPeters and everyone, lighters post proves my point Lloyds overall reputation is being destroyed


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 07 Sep 23 - 12:21 PM

My enjoyment of "Leviathan" ca1970 was spoiled by the realization that some of the songs (like "Wings of a Gull") had obviously been rewritten in British style (without acknowledgment) from tuneless American material in Gale Huntington's "Songs the Whalemen Sang." quote lighter
quote Jim Carroll from facebook
Th song mentioned is one I have sung for a long time and have assumed it was from the oral tradition; Huntingdon assumed the same as he suggests it might be connected with 'The Prisoners Song'. Bert is pretty vague in his note on where it came from - he says it dates from somewhere between the 1820s and 1840s. which is more or less where Huntindon dates it. Why can't it be a version rather than samething Bert wrote. As popular as sea songs and shanties are, the published collections are somewhat sparse - Hugill's being the most comprehensive.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Keith Price
Date: 08 Sep 23 - 07:56 AM

I think it's interesting that Stan says "most of my old shipmates seem to think that it was used at both capstan and pumps" but refers to the tune used by Llyod as a forebitter only, because it lacks the all-hands-in chorus. Why if Bert was his source wouldn't he include the standard chorus Bert uses.
As I said on an other forum, Stan stated "Another tune very popular with Liverpool seamen" I think before implying that Stan could be lying, on public forums, it might be worth doing private research.I think trawling for information on public forums, is convenient,but not if it involves possibly impugning someone.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 08 Sep 23 - 07:59 AM

IMO Authenticity with Shanties is only achieved, if they are sung in a nmanner that they can be worked to, what prompted MacColl to perform stormalong surely is not as important as whether you can work to the shanty, it does sound like it is influenced by Hugill.
However people will sing them how they like Regardless of scholars, and it could be argued by some that a pleasant musical experience is preferable to an out of tune rendition that can be worked to.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 08 Sep 23 - 10:37 AM

IMO Authenticity with Shanties is only achieved, if they are sung in a nmanner that they can be worked to...

No. It's not "can," would, could or should. Authenticity, is actually leaving in the actual work that the verse is leading and the chorus is working. Grunts, groans and all the rest. Metrology, eg.: a tape measure, stop watch, strain gauge, data recorder &c shall also be considered sporting.

It's not why folk go to the club or buy song books.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 08 Sep 23 - 07:33 PM

We are talking about presenting recreated material within the revival and passing it off as wholly from oral tradition. Scholars/researchers/truth-seekers are also perfectly entitled to call this out when they come across it.   quote
IMO The whole nature of this music is it gets changed, it evolves, tradtional singers have always altered tunes and words, sometimes through mishearing sometimes because they wanted to,sometimes they made up a tune to a set of words, because there was not a tune AND IN TIMES GONE BY THEY SAID NOTHING ABOUT IT just like Bert
without change traditional music becomes a museum fossil, set in stone.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 08 Sep 23 - 07:44 PM

imo the use communities make of songs, is of primary importance So, although the origin of material is of some interest, it is what the ' folk' do with it that is my PARAMOUNT concern. If people think about Bert's reasoning behind his treatment of song texts, it was to provide material suitable for performance in the folkclubs


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 04:41 AM

He really means, by his choice to make the song like that and pretend that was how he found it. quote gibb sahib
no, that is your interpretation, do you have any factual evidence to back that statement up?
your statement is an example of a negative perception. and is an example of lloyd bashing,do you have any proof that he was pretending that was how he found it.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 04:46 AM

Gibb, you go on about scholastic accuracy,BUT as a scholar you must learn not to make statements that you cannot back up with proof, BACK UP THE STATEMENT, if you cannot, you are not being a good scholar, yet you criticise Lloyd for scholastic weakness


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 09:23 AM

opinions can be informed or uniformed, if opinions are not backed up by evidence, they are scholastically weak and not to be taken seriously and so far there has been no factual evidence, as to what he meant, so we do not know what he meant, it is possible he meant capstan shanties were slower by nature, but we do not know.
since we do not know, and there is no evidence to illustrate what he meant, i keep an open mind.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 10:25 AM

Steve, he has made a comment, quote

Here's some balderdash from Lloyd (1972) saying that this shanty goes slower "by nature"? He really means, by his choice to make the song like that and pretend that was how he found it."
it is not a competition about research, as you seem to be suggesting , it is a question of claiming to know what BERT meant when he was introducing a song at a gig.
the only person who would know is lloyd.
I am not arguing about Lloyds scholastic shortcomings I am pointing out that good scholarship involves not making wild statements that cannot be backed up , until gibb does so i think he is lloyd bashing.
   if he can prove that he knows what lloyd meant on that particular occasion, that chanGes the situation
    Steve i have spent years on the folkscene reading and absorbing articles etc, on all aspects of folk music , through that research i knew years ago that lloyd had scholastic weakness, but i do not make wild statements without evidence about somebody who has been dead many years and cannot answer,it is imo in bad taste


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 01:49 PM

i have not giben a ninterpretation , i said possibly , that is not an interpretation , i hace said quite clearly quote
it is possible he meant capstan shanties were slower by nature, but we do not know.
since we do not know, and there is no evidence to illustrate what he meant, i keep an open mind.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 04:37 PM

Steve: Dick, you are arguing with someone who has done years of dedicated research into the subject AND has first-hand experience of delivering chanties at tasks on board sailing ships.

The Anglo-American revival, art house, music/lecture hall, show-biz chanty has been around since at least the early 19th century and the Wallack brothers. It's all based on a true story and none of it should be taken as hard naval science or history.

Lloyd played fast and loose with song lyrics. And the Gazela's windlass never heard any English work song in all its working days. Both sources tell a better story that way... in the opinion of some.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,MikeofNorthumbria (sans cookie)
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 06:25 PM

"When 'Omer smote 'is bloomin' lyre,
   He'd 'eard men sing by land an' sea;
An' what he thought 'e might require,
   'E went an' took - the same as me!

The market-girls an' fishermen,
   The shepherds an' the sailors, too,
They 'eard old songs turn up again,
   But kep' it quiet - same as you!

They knew 'e stole; 'e knew they knowed.
   They didn't tell, nor make a fuss,
But winked at 'Omer down the road,
   An' 'e winked back - the same as us!"

Rudyard Kipling said that.


"I'll let you be in my dream if I can be in yours."

Dylan said that.


"Instead of brooding obsessively about Lloyd's occasional errors and misdeeds, why not spend a little time and energy celebrating the many things he got right?"

I say that.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Keith Price
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 08:01 PM

Hi Gibb Did the Keelers state that 'Wild Goose Shanty' was a windlass shanty ? The people who posted it, Szanty Szoguna-Showguns Sea Shanties did.
Bert in his notes for the 1957 'Blow Boys Blow'LP refers to it as a halyard shanty. Louisa Jo Killen (Louie) sang it on 'Blow the Man Down,' Lloyd's sleeve notes said "this one like many others was used for any job" He also said " This tune was collected by W Roy Mackenzie who got it from a seaman settled in Nova Scotia" I take it this has been disproved ?
I was there on the night in 1972 when Bert recorded what was later to become the LP 'An Evening with A L Lloyd' The Top Lock folk club was run by Willy Russell, Jim Pedan and John Kaneen. Bert remarked in his introduction to 'Wild Goose' that "shanties always get sung too fast" then goes on to laugh at the pace he did 'Yellar Girls' earlier in his set, indicating that the crew would be knackered.

I watched your entertaining presentation 'Sailor Chanties: History & Genre' for Maritime Folknet.
I must admit I had a smile, when you demonstrated 'Hauling Topsail Halyard' with a group of teenage boys and girls, who looked quite new to the process and completed the task in 10.5 verses and 42 pulls, which you considered to be the 'typical length' I'm not sure an experienced crew would agree with you.
I don't think any of the examples of working shanties given are too successful 'Let the Bulgine Run' for 'Heaving Brake Windlass' is a bit of a shambles.
You note how slow both Ree Baldwyn and Alex Henderson are singing, the same point Bert makes at the Top Lock folk club. I don't see a huge difference in pace between Baldwyns 'South Austria' and Lloyds 'Wild Goose' except that if Bert was right and it was used as a halyard, at that very slow pace, it would be possible to get four pulls on the chorus.
Of course you believe Lloyd made it up on the basis that it was never collected anywhere else.
I wonder what you make of Percy Grainger collecting Brigg Fair from Joseph Taylor. Taylor was the only source, and one of the best tunes in English folk music, at least Delius thought so.Mr Deene of Hibaldstow had the same text to a different tune. Who knows maybe Joseph Taylor did a Bert Lloyd.
My apologies I've gone on too long.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 10 Sep 23 - 05:35 AM

I have spent over 60 years in researching all aspects of folk music.
I said.. quote
since we do not know, and there is no evidence to illustrate what he meant, i keep an open mind.
I am not entering in to a silly competition, about who is the most knowledgeable
music is not about competition nor is music research, music research is about good scholarship, good scholarship involves not making statements which cannot be backed up factually
Gibb Sahibs comment about Lloyd, has not yet been backed up by fact, it is Lloyd bashing I am not arguing about Lloyds scholastic shortcomings I am pointing out that good scholarship involves not making wild statements that cannot be backed up , until gibb does so i think he is lloyd bashing


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 10 Sep 23 - 12:32 PM

When i want info on sea shanties, i do not go to Lloyd, i contact Chris Roche, who knew Stan Hugill well, and is imo an EXPERT on Shanties and sea songs


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,guestD
Date: 10 Sep 23 - 12:36 PM

After near twenty five years of chanteying-up topsails, topgallants, royals, staysails & headsails aboard the bark Charles W. Morgan & ship Joseph Conrad, plus windlass and anchor work aboard the schooner LA Dunton and hauling whale boats from water to crane on the Morgan, my conclusion is there exists no practical application for the Wild Goose Chantey. It's asymmetrical rhythm renders it a useless labor enigma. Better to be sung in beer halls with harmony & friends.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 10 Sep 23 - 12:42 PM

Chris Roche Shanty Crew Graphic
Maritime singer, historian, speaker, traveller.
Shanty Crew

Jun 1973 - Present50 years 4 months

Surrey, UK

Chris edits the Journal of the IACH the International Association of Cape Horner's for that group of people who have voyaged under sail alone to reach Cape Horn he gives a number of illustrated talks on his voyages in square rigged traditional sailing ships to the Southern Oceans, and other of his maritime explorations these, at times include shanties and sailor songs which Chris learnt from his mentor the late Stan Hugill the last British sailor-man to sing these old songs for the purpose of work at sea.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Keith Price
Date: 10 Sep 23 - 08:11 PM

Forgive me Lighter, I'm old and slow. Are you saying the tune Lloyd uses was collected by W Roy Mackenzie, as Bert Lloyd stated in his sleeve notes on the 'Blow the Man Down' LP.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 11 Sep 23 - 02:56 AM

STAN HUGILL an illustrated talk by Chris Roche
My Friend Stan
Who was my friend Stan?
I first met Stan Hugill in November of 1972
when he and his boys Martin and Philip
sang at Teachers Folk in the New Kent
Road a whole day later I started looking for
his then out of print book Shanties from the
seven seas along the way I found his other
books and started to collect recordings of
the sea shanty as he had sung it.
Over the years I gained greater interest in
mercantile maritime history and the sea
shanty collected books recordings and took
aboard such an interest that I went to sea
myself in square rigged sailing ships.
Stan Hugill: came from a seafaring family he went to sea at an early age a young
man aged 16 he was wrecked on his first overseas voyage and while ashore in
New Zealand found he had a knack with languages he had a degree in oriental
languages Japanese and Mandarin sponsored by his shipping company Blue
Funnel, he could draw and paint, talk for hours and was something of a hypnotic
speaker. He hoboed across the Americas North and South and the Caribbean he
had to suddenly leave one port when the bombs fell he was there at several key
points in history wrecked in the last big square rigger the British had taken as a
POW WWII. Writer of 5 books including the seminal works `Shanties from the
Seven Seas` and `Sailor Town` while serving as Bosun at the Outward Bound
School Aberdovey. He trained boys at Gordonstoun school and sailed in the big
four Mast barque `Passat` rescued from a scrap yard, was discovered and
revered by British, American, French and Poles alike for his skill with song, history,
language, knowledge of the sea, he worked with National Geographic looking to
find Francis Drakes lead coffin and sea grave.
My friend Stan An illustrated talk and personal reminisce runs for one hour and a
half in story, song, sound clips and slides;
Contact: sailor@chrisroche.co.uk 020 8647 1396


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 11 Sep 23 - 04:29 AM

He is doing the talk at Tenterden folk Festival


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Keith Price
Date: 11 Sep 23 - 07:15 AM

Thank you Lighter.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,BlackAcornUK
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 04:25 AM

A really interesting thread, with amazing detail in that last post, Gibb.

FWIW, personally, I hugely appreciate Lloyd as a galvanising/creative figure within the revival; he brought countless amazing songs to attention (albeit with not-infrequent embroidery & alteration), and platformed/mentored some of the finest singers of the era.

However, his scholarship is plainly lax, and far beyond shanties his habit of taking liberties with songs to create particular atmospheres or aesthetics is well known... There's a great US Library of Congress blog that looks at the addition of the Shakespearean 'Take no scorn to wear the horn' verse to Hal an Tow... To my mind, it seems likely that Lloyd also encouraged Mike Waterson to add the 'Since man was first created' opening verse. They also clipped the verses and tweaked the chorus from the Helston source material.
https://blogs.loc.gov/folklife/2017/05/hal-an-tow-some-intriguing-evidence-on-a-may-song/

With a forensic eye over his work, some of his writings would even seem to see him stray into the terrain of the bulls***er or fantasist.

To re-emphasise - folk is a living medium, and it's normal to make small, and sometimes large adjustments - Nic Jones did this all the time (look at Annan Water) but crucially was open about it.

However, Lloyd making brazen false claims about provenance etc simply isn't on; and, where this faulty scholarship proliferates incorrect assumptions into wider historical (mis)understanding (as highlighted above) this is plainly something that needs to be identified, articulated and shared in order to strengthen/repair the foundations of future scholarship.

The comparisons with Peter Kennedy are interesting; I also see Lloyd as a much more benevolent figure - and someone who, as noted above, sought to lift up others, rather than to do them over.

Perhaps his over-reaching comes from a somewhat complacent/self-satisfied sense of his 'unique affinity' for, and insights into, the form... A more extreme example of that in a different field could be those like Gerald Gardiner and Dion Fortune, who I don't doubt believed that they'd unlocked secret wisdom, but really were just making stuff up much of the time.

When pondering Lloyd's motivations/mindset, I also think back to the quotes attributed to Robert Graves as he received criticism for the highly questionable historical detail of The White Goddess - he tetchily emphasised his 'poetic' interpretation of myth and ritual, beyond 'mere scholars'…


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Keith Price
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 04:41 AM

Gibb,

Thank you for your full and comprehensive reply.
I'd like to continue our conversation, there's still some points I want to make. But first, I think should read through the previous thread. If the points I want to make have not already been covered, I'll come back to this thread. My apologies if you've had to repeat yourself already.
You've been very generous with your time, thanks once again.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 04:48 AM

Thanks Gibb.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,BlackAcornUK
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 08:25 AM

Other quick thoughts -

Has anyone delved into Lloyd's archive (held at Goldsmiths, University of London - alongside the MacColl/Seeger and Alan Bush collections), in order to see if there are glimpses of his thought-process/motivations/modus operandi there?

Do Dave Harker or Georgina Boyes interrogate Lloyd in Fakesong or the Imagined Village, respectively?


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Georgina Boyes
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 10:06 AM

Yes, BOUK, I did write quite a bit about Lloyd in "The Imagined Village" - the book's still available via No Masters website if you want to judge the whole thing.

For ease of access, however, you might want to look at the Introduction to "The Singing Englishman" that I wrote at Rod Stradling's for the book's republication in Musical Tradition. http://www.mustrad.org.uk/articles/tse_int.htm

From memory too, I think Dave Harker devoted a chapter of "Fakesong" to Lloyd. I think he subtitled it "The One that Got Away".


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,guestD
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 01:15 PM

There has been a lot of emphasis concerning where Lloyd sourced such unique & different lyrics & melodies. I would point to the two very distinct and mostly unrelated versions Wm Dorerflinger collected from Dick Maitland and Patrick Tayluer at Sailor's Snug Harbor in Staten Island late in the 1930s and early 40s. I am speaking here of The Leaving of Liverpool. How is it that the two versions are so dramatically different?
Chantey categories are absolutely necessary in educating the general public least they should confuse heaving and hauling. Accurate generalizations certainly can be made for capstan work vs. halyards. Less so with windlass and capstan. This technique was already in place at Mystic when I started in June of 1980 and to my knowledge still exists today.
In the 1980s and 90s I had conversations with both Lou Killen and Martin Carthy (Mystic), likewise with Martin Wyndham-Read within the last ten years, concerning the influence of Bert Lloyd upon them. All said he was generous and passionate in sharing his knowledge and repertoire; not one commented on inaccurate sources or bibliographies.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,BlackAcornUK
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 02:34 AM

Thank you Georgina, I have The Imagined Village but haven't yet had a chance to read it; I *have* just read your brilliant essay on The Singing Englishman.

One of the things that strongly strikes me from that, is the contradiction between Lloyd's assertion that true folk song could only be produced in narrow social conditions, in a time already passed; and his own irrepressible, unaccountable practice of tinkering, revision and 'improvement'.

This reminds me a touch of MacColl's Critics Group insistence that singers should restrict their repertoires to their authentic geographies of origin - whilst himself being a Salfordian wrapped in ancestral Scottish heritage, singing songs from right across the realm, and a prolific writer of new material to boot.

As in so many fields, the high priests are above the covenants required of the flock...!


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 03:41 AM

This reminds me a touch of MacColl's Critics Group insistence that singers should restrict their repertoires to their authentic geographies of origin - whilst himself being a Salfordian wrapped in ancestral Scottish heritage, singing songs from right across the realm, and a prolific writer of new material to boot.

As in so many fields, the high priests are above the covenants required of the flock...! quote Black Acorn
According to Jim Carroll, who knew MacColl   well, that was not the case, it only applied to people singing at the singers club, neither did the rule apply to writing new songs.
MacColl was born in Salford, his mother was Scottish, According to wiki his parents were Scottish, WIKI IS NOT ALWAYS ACCURATE.
A TYPICAL BIT OF MACCOLL BASHING AND HAS NO CONNECTION WITH LLOYD AND SEA SHANTIES OR LLOYDS SCHOLARSHIP OR LACK OF SCHOLARSHIP


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 04:37 AM

Can we stick to lloyd and his scholarship, and lack of
.MacColl and the rules at the singers club are irrelevant


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,BlackAcornUK
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 04:50 AM

Hi RJM, as per my comments on Lloyd, I'm a big fan of MacColl and his contribution to the movement (I even have songs of his in my own formative repertoire), but as with Lloyd it's important not to overlook the problems and contradictions of their practice.

I'm happy to accept a correction that that approach was more to do with the Singers Club, but I've heard direct testimony from a few who took part about this requirement, and how onerous it was. It hardly seems better to me, that it 'only' happened in one setting but not the other - especially as the club would have reached (and probably affected the practice of) far more participants (performers and audiences) over the years than the smaller, tighter group.

As for the relevance - you don't need me to remind you of the closeness in relationship between MacColl and Lloyd. I'm attempting to reflect upon parallels between key figures of the revival, as part of a broader reflection upon the attitudes and tendencies of these luminaries. I'm not bashing either of them, nor - indeed - Robert Graves, in my earlier post.

Since you seem keen to return to the central point, and since you insisted upon evidence to underpin assertions, it would be great to hear your thoughts on Gibb's tremendously insightful contribution above.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 06:27 AM

it is not a question of better it is a question of being accurate
.I think you are right, a lot of us went and sought out material from the uk, but it was not exclusively down to MacColl,in fact it was the idea of Lomax
Cyril Tawney had a different approach he went to singers and said i have found this song which would really suit you, a more subtle approach and imo more successful.
A number of people including Bert encouraged younger singers to look up our own geographical british isles material [including Ireland]of songs, instead of singing american material.
I thanked Gibb and think his post was very good.
Black Acorn scoring points is negative and does not contribute to good overall discussion


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 06:47 AM

Black Acorn, I am well informed on the policy of the singers club, I have a good friend who was booked there twice and became a resident.Jim Carrolls posts also corroborate what i have been told


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 08:02 AM

Actually Bert and Ewan fell out with one anther for a while, and at one time you could not be friends with both of them, so much for closeness


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 09:49 AM

good post, Brian


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,BlackAcornUK
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 12:12 PM

Happy to believe that too, Brian. One of the people I know who complained about it has themself cultivated a predominantly authentic home-regional repertoire, but they were still conscious of the contradiction of being held to standards not always adhered to amongst those by which they were set.

As above, it's not an attack. I only raised it by analogy with the apparent divergence - highlighted in Georgina Boyd's excellent piece - between Lloyd's philosophical assertions and personal approach, and I'm happy to defend that comparison. It's about the curious exemptions that some influential figures allow themselves but don't extend to others.

RJM, I think most people would accept the general usage of the word 'close' to describe E.M. & A.L.L.'s working relationship over an extended period.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,BlackAcornUK
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 01:29 PM

[Georgina *BOYES*, accursed auto-correct!]


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 02:35 PM

...But for that, perhaps we'd all be singing Leadbelly songs to this day...

If, and only if, Leadbelly was "Policy." Meanwhile, American folkie Harry Belafonte (RIP) once claimed most American Jews learned Hava Nagila from him.

There is minor argument here about what LLoyd did. The big deal is in the opinions on same. A "Policy" of exclusion is about the only way to manufacture the false consensus nobody needs.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 14 Sep 23 - 09:44 AM

The big deal in his case is not really the matter of differing opinions. What we're dissecting here are individual cases, in order to learn just how far his interventions went. For those of us interested in traditional song, this is quite important.

And I'm just not reading all that much disagreement here on that front. This most recent bump is a mutual admiration society v. Dick on ends justifying means and how disclaimers are a good thing.

As for Policy, believing local restrictions improved selection, variety and choice of maritime work song in folk clubs is not math or science based. Political Science... maybe. If any so-called tradition requires a formal, regulated performance environment to continue, it needs more academic disclaimers than a gen-u-wine LLoyd sailor song.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 14 Sep 23 - 04:16 PM

For those of us interested in traditional song, this is quite important.
QUOTE
It would be better to say for those of us interested in the scholarship of traditional song
i am primarily intersted in singing songs including traditional songs Because the song appeals to me,likewise there are some traditional songs,eg little sir hugh, or drink old england dry, or fathom the bowl, that do not interest me
I agree that songs that appeal to me, i might subsequently wish to get more correct info so scholarship for me is of secondary importance however i agree that scholarship and comments about songs should be accurate, that is why for many years i have gone to other sources other than Bert lloyd for info on shanties and sea songs, sources such as Chris Roche


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 14 Sep 23 - 04:55 PM

Whoever said that the folk song revival is a continuance of tradition?

Dick, to open this most recent bump, and with a nod to TikTok and Wellerman on top.

I know folk clubs, lecture halls, video games, TikTok &c &c each have unique traditions of their very own. Some do more 'production value' than others than others but all of it is arts & entertainment. And I too do not find the mutual admiration bubbles, that so often comes with each, all that helpful neither.

In plain English, fiction is not fact and LLoyd, folk clubs, lecture halls &c &c are neither chanties as work song nor hard naval science. Not that there is anything wrong with either art or science being what they are. It's just the typical, one-label-fits-all, glossary that was never really in keeping with the many "traditions." Until that situation improves, (not holding my breath) asterisks are free, and that's a good thing.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 15 Sep 23 - 03:15 AM

Whoever said that the folk song revival is a continuance of tradition?

Dick, to open this most recent bump, and with a nod to TikTok and Wellerman on top.quote
I never said it, that was somebody else


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 16 Sep 23 - 03:54 AM

'Farewell to Tawathie' did it originate as a poem ?and was it set to music by A. L. Lloyd?


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,RJM
Date: 16 Sep 23 - 04:29 AM

Attributed to George Scroggie near Aberdeen in or around 1850, this song was popularized by Ewan MacColl and A.L. Lloyd. Lloyd credits the song to Scroggie in the liner notes for his album Leviathan, saying of it:

    The stereotype of the oldtime whalemen is a hairychested ring-tailed roarer, hard worker, hard drinker, hard fighter. No doubt the description fitted many of them; nevertheless they often showed a strong liking for gentle meditative songs. Perhaps alone among all the songs on this record, Farewell to Tarwathie was made not by a whaleman, but by a miller, George Scroggie of Federate, near Aberdeen, around the middle of the 19th century. The tune is an old favourite, best known in connection with the song called "Green Bushes".


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 16 Sep 23 - 10:18 AM

There is a detailed treatment of this song, including Scroggie's full text, here:
https://mainlynorfolk.info/lloyd/songs/farewelltotarwathie.html


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,MichaelKM
Date: 16 Sep 23 - 10:19 AM

Sorry, I did not identify myself when making the last post.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST
Date: 16 Sep 23 - 02:00 PM

RJM: I never said it, that was somebody else....

From: GUEST
Date: 06 Mar 23 - 11:24 PM
Wellerman therEfore is helping to keep the tradition alive even though[ according to Phil d'Conch it has nothing to do with naval sciEnce
While not decrieng Naval Science, keeping the tradition alive is very important


Dick, wellll... I sure thought I was replying to you at the time. I tend to do that with a mystery "guest" and you in the same thread. My bad, if the above post was not yours.

Whomever it be's, the authentic/traditional/working "sea chanty/shanty" label still fits English folk club and pop repitoire about as well as it fits Howe! Hissa! or The Complaynt of Scotland (the latter an iomramh, iorram, iram, iurram, joram, juram or jurram or... anything at all but English!) Neither did the sailors on the Gazela call them "shanties." Their 2400+ year histories and traditions are not about African-Americans, cotton screwers or the Gulf of Mexico.

Hard Naval Science is from an entirely different planet Earth than Hugill, Whall, Lloyd, Gibb, Reidler et al.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 16 Sep 23 - 02:02 PM

***Oh the irony. The above was me.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch
Date: 18 Sep 23 - 06:08 AM

Gibb,
>>Reidler<< [sic] I'm always getting that backwards. All apologies and it will happen again. I promise.

Neither seen nor heard one bad word about the author as a person. Nothing at all to match the tone of your post. An all around sterling individual… or maybe the Antichrist, for all I know… or care.

I've heard parts of two shanty lectures. Standard issue, no opera, nothing special. I knew the Maritime Work Song thread would do Wagner when his time came. Little surprise then Piratical Debauchery, Homesick Sailors, and Nautical Rhythms: The Influence of Sea Shanties on Classical Music should turn up on its own merit. What else is there on that subject?

...people not discussing Catholic Romance language-speaking flautists?… you lost me completely there.

What do "them" and "their" refer to?
Too much thread drift for poor old Lloyd. See here: New Chanties Documentary


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 02:32 PM

Great talk, Brian. (Great photo of the rustbucket Lloyd sailed on too!)

My enjoyment of "Leviathan" ca1970 was spoiled by the realization that some of the songs (like "Wings of a Gull") had obviously been rewritten in British style (without acknowledgment) from tuneless American material in Gale Huntington's "Songs the Whalemen Sang."

Lloyd's intentional fudging and faking, presented under cover of scholarly care and erudition, plus his supposedly rich fieldwork (whose very existence seems dubious) makes it hard for me to listen to him now with anything like my former enjoyment. As I've noted before, all he had to do was say (as Martin Carthy does), "my version of," "inspired by," "I've improved on the tune," or the like, and we wouldn't be having these discussions.

Lloyd's reputation as a popularizer, moreover, would then stand unsullied.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 08 Sep 23 - 07:29 AM

Good point, Brian, about Hugill's possible belief in Lloyd as an "authentic source" - at least some of the time.

Hugill objected more than once to Lloyd's double entendres as phony, as well as to his selection of "exotic" modal tunes for recording.

But he also accepted "Blood-Red" Roses and recommended those same recordings as stylistically superior.

There seems to be little doubt that Hugill, Lloyd, and MacColl were in contact before the L&M LPs. MacColl's performance of "Stormalong" could hardly have been influenced by anybody else.

Could it?


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 08 Sep 23 - 09:35 AM

For me at least, much of the enjoyment of trad song comes from knowing that what I'm hearing is a true artifact of a lost past.

If it turns out the purportedly "true artifact" has been significantly and *covertly* messed with and phonied up by a supposedly reliable editor, I have a right to be ticked.

As I say, if Steeleye Span and Peter Sellers do a totally untrad rendition of "New York Girls," I can enjoy it fully because, not only is it a fine performance, it isn't falsely advertised.

In a different genre, Lloyd's performances were also splendid. The musicality and accompaniment aren't the issue: musically I'd rather listen to Lloyd than to Hugill or (presumably) John Short.

But the issue is the frequent and blithe fakery. It could have been completely mitigated by a few words of explanation. ("I thought the original tune so unappealing that I created I new one which, I think, is still 'in the tradition'"; "In most cases I've tried to smoothe the words out a little, or added and subtracted." Etc.)



it's the blithe and frequent fakery.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 07:23 AM

So Lloyd got the song from some unknown chantey man who'd devised it for working defective windlasses that could only be pumped without a strong steady beat!

What a find!


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 08:45 AM

"Evidence?? We don' need no steenkin' evidence!!" - "The Treasure of the Sierra Madre" (1947).


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 08:49 AM

Steeleye Span:

"Honesty's all out of fashion.
Oh, the hard times of old England...."


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 03:03 PM

Maybe pop and folky renditions of "Shenandoah" at about half the required speed prove what Lloyd was saying about chanteys being slow.

:^}


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 10 Sep 23 - 01:58 PM

I see that "GUEST, Wm." pointed out on the "Wild Goose" thread last year that MacColl was singing Mackenzie's words to Lloyd's odd tune as early as 1953:

https://www.tobarandualchais.co.uk/track/61814?l=en


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 10 Sep 23 - 02:08 PM

Double-checking Mackenzie, 1919, his tune is clearly L&M's source, but it's written (surprise!) rhythmically.

Mackenzie suggests the tune might be called "wild and melancholy." Evidently not wild and melancholy enough.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 10 Sep 23 - 09:55 PM

Keith, Mackenzie collected the tune and a single stanza from Ephraim Tattrie of Tatamagouche, N.S.

The stanza is the same as Lloyd's first stanza but with the minor differences of "floating" for "sailing" and "pretty girls" for L&M's "young girls." Nothing about trying to pick up a young woman with quivering topsails.

Mackenzie noted Tattrie's tune in regular 4/4 time. That necessary, regular rhythm is the chief difference between the two melodies.

According to Mackenzie, "This is to be regarded as a halliard shanty, although it apparently served at times for the men who were heaving at the capstan bars. Terry lists it as a windlass and capstan shanty."


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 09:07 AM

Great commentary from Gibb and BlackAcornUK. Thanks for the posts.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 10:48 AM

Thanks for the link to your essay, Georgina. I found it most interesting.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Lighter
Date: 14 Sep 23 - 08:26 AM

"Bert was most adept at constructing convincing fake traditional songs at the drop of a hat."

Uh-oh....


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Reinhard
Date: 16 Sep 23 - 10:32 AM

There is a detailed treatment of this song, including Scroggie's full text

... which I only added today, together with information about a bunch of recordings from my record collection that weren't listed yet.

And Scroggie's verses are already in the Digital Tradition, as TARWATH2.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 05 Sep 23 - 09:59 AM

I've been very irregular on Mudcat recently (it never seems to be working!) so I'd missed the resurrection of this thread earlier in the year. There are people involved here who I don't meet in my other social media interactions, so I thought it might be of interest if I brought this thread up to date with my own research (aided along the way by one or two participants in this thread).

Over the last four years I've carried out a lot of research into the songs Bert Lloyd brought to the folk revival, both through his own singing and by passing on songs he'd reconstructed to young singers of the day, most notably Anne Briggs. I had been apparent for a while that he did a lot of 'tinkering', but that word doesn't begin to describe the scale or depth of his modifications. On some of the landmark LPs the majority of the songs have been modified, often quite drastically. North American texts were plundered on many occasions, with no hint that the results weren't authentic 'English folk songs'.

As has been suggested above, modal melodies were not only composed for texts lacking a tune (e.g. 'Weary Whaling Grounds'), but substituted into many songs known to tradition with exclusively major tunes. This was particularly true of the erotic songs LP 'The Bird in the Bush' (where they served to make the songs more sensual and mysterious), but also in the case of many sea songs, especially those on 'Leviathan', where they made the mood more exciting and edgy. I think Lighter's point above about the exoticism and apparent antiquity of these melodies was a part of the appeal too. However, the Wyndham-Read version of 'Black Ball Line' with which Gibb reopened this thread is so weird that I'm inclined to agree it might have been mis-transcribed.

I gave a couple of talks about all of this, which are online - I'm linking the maritime one below. There is actually one song I'd like to consult the hive mind about: in the talk I mention 'Off to Sea Once More' and contrast the major tune generally collected orally with the modal one Lloyd (and most who followed after him) used. My belief is that Lloyd made up that tune, and that its appearance in Hugill's book suggests that he got it from Lloyd (who had recorded it five years earlier). However, a friend who knew Stan H. has pushed back against this, saying that, if Stan had used a song from Lloyd, he'd have given it proper attribution.

So my question is, are there any example where you know that Hugill published a song he'd obtained from Lloyd? I know we've speculated about it in the past.

Anyway, here's the talk - it starts at 43 minutes, but you might be interested in the other contributions too.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MEccGdRD8Fk


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 05 Sep 23 - 10:00 AM

Clicky:

Bert's Nautical Numbers


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 08:35 AM

Sharp and Marson tampered with texts chiefly when their publishers thought them too 'coarse' to print and, unlike Lloyd, they never altered tunes. His rewrites were of a different order of magnitude.

I don't see why it's 'negative' to understand better the revival folk song canon, and Lloyd's reputation as a scholar had already been seriously compromised without any help from me. Picking it all apart is also fascinating as an exercise in detective work.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 02:18 PM

Brian, I have at no point mentioned Marson.

No, but I mentioned him because it was his responsibility to rewrite the 'coarse' lyrics for songs that they published jointly, and I think that needs to be understood. I haven't looked into the songs Sharp published after the break with Marson (I probably should), so I'm not sure a this point whether Sharp changed any texts himself. I'm not aware of any amendments to his Appalachian material between field notes and publication.

I would agree that Lloyd was a more significant figure in the folk revival than Kennedy, though PK (for all his well-documented faults) did collect some wonderful material.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 02:21 PM

I hope to learn more about what "getting a song from Howard" really meant to Lloyd.

Tha could be a really useful exercise, Gibb. As I said in the talk, we have Carpenter's recordings and notations from the Barry sailors for comparison.

Any thoughts on he Hugill / Lloyd question, though?


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 08 Sep 23 - 06:54 AM

Thanks Gibb and Lighter for those comments. I'm particularly glad that the Zappa clip rang a bell - the audience reaction to the reveal, when I've given the talk live, is one I cherish. I do remember the name Ray Collins - he was credited with 'Swell vocals' as against FZ's 'Low-grade vocals' on one of the Mothers' LPs, as I recall.

Off the cuff: Your discussion of "Go to Sea Once More," and Lloyd's tune, reminded me: Doesn't Hugill (SfSS) use that tune? Which brings us back to whether Hugill corroborates Lloyd (whereas Carpenter's Barry singers do not) or whether Hugill pinched it from Lloyd.

SfSS does indeed use that tune for Hugill's second version - the first uses what I consider the standard tune in oral tradition. The chicken-and-egg question is the crux of this, and I'm not sure anyone has an answer yet. I think it's possible that SH would have regarded Lloyd as an authentic source, given the whaling experience.

Without Lloyd and his contemporaries ther probably would not have been a UKfolk revival as we knew it.

I think that's what I just said on Facebook...


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 02:58 PM

Do Dave Harker or Georgina Boyes interrogate Lloyd in Fakesong or the Imagined Village, respectively?

Harker's chapter on Lloyd, 'the one that got away' takes him to task mostly for adopting the main tenets of the Sharpian folk song consensus (a fair comment), for inaccurate analysis of North-Eastern working class culture, for flaws in his 'industrial song' concept, and for being the wrong kind of Marxist (Harker was SWP, Lloyd CPGB). Ironically, considering the book's title, Harker doesn't level the accusation of fakery at Lloyd at all, except in the case of 'The Coal Owner and the Pitman's Wife', the broadside text of which Lloyd apparently tampered with. And, like everyone else who's looked at it, he finds implausible Lloyd's linking of 'The Cutty Wren' with the Peasants' Revolt.

Georgina's online commentary on 'The Singing Englishman' is very useful.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 03:02 PM

Can I also thank Gibb for that tour de force regarding 'Wild Goose', which married an impressive depth of detail with some telling application of logic.

There have been several other interesting comments lately in this thread. It's reminded me why Mudcat is always worth returning to - at its best you can find a level of informed discussion hard to find elsewhere.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 13 Sep 23 - 09:46 AM

I'm happy to accept a correction that that approach was more to do with the Singers Club, but I've heard direct testimony from a few who took part about this requirement, and how onerous it was.

According to Peggy (who I definitely believe), it was indeed a Singers' Club policy. However, many other clubs followed and became 'Policy Clubs'. It might have seemed onerous to some, but it was the Policy that persuaded people like Sandra Kerr and Lou Killen to look for songs from their own localities, and fuelled an interest in English folk song more generally. But for that, perhaps we'd all be singing Leadbelly songs to this day...


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 14 Sep 23 - 04:50 AM

If, and only if, Leadbelly was "Policy."

... A "Policy" of exclusion is about the only way to manufacture the false consensus nobody needs.


The point is that the Policy was adopted at the Singers' Club in order to persuade recent recruits from the skiffle movement to look closer to home than America for material. This was successful, in that it spawned a second revival of English folk song and music in the 1950s and 60s, but for which a lot of us wouldn't be where we are now. It broadened, rather than narrowed, the available repertoire, so although superficially exclusionary it led to an expansion in people's horizons. I don't recognise a 'false consensus'.

Anyway, we were as you say discussing Lloyd in this thread. The big deal in his case is not really the matter of differing opinions. What we're dissecting here are individual cases, in order to learn just how far his interventions went. For those of us interested in traditional song, this is quite important.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 14 Sep 23 - 05:14 AM

This reminds me a touch of MacColl's Critics Group insistence that singers should restrict their repertoires to their authentic geographies of origin - whilst himself being a Salfordian wrapped in ancestral Scottish heritage, singing songs from right across the realm, and a prolific writer of new material to boot.

As in so many fields, the high priests are above the covenants required of the flock...!


There's much truth in this, but I also suspect that there was plenty of creative thinking going on in order to justify given song selections, in the same way that singers in 'theme nights' will dream up ingenious arguments to excuse a song of dubious relevance to the theme. MacColl could at least claim authenticity in respect of his Scots and Lancashire songs, and also anything he'd written himself that emanated from his own cultural experience. Lloyd could arguably have done the same for his maritime songs, although there is a very interesting comment in Peggy Seeger's memoir to the effect that Bert was most adept at constructing convincing fake traditional songs at the drop of a hat, to subvert the dictates of the Policy.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Brian Peters
Date: 14 Sep 23 - 01:33 PM

And I'm just not reading all that much disagreement here on that front.

Obviously not, because the main posters here are people who have independently researched different areas of Lloyd's repertoire and drawn similar conclusions. Calling it a 'mutual appreciation society' isn't very helpful.

If any so-called tradition requires a formal, regulated performance environment to continue...

Whoever said that the folk song revival is a continuance of tradition? Or that all performance environments were as regulated as the Singers' Club? I'm not sure what point you're trying to make.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 08:43 AM

Consider what you like, Dick. There are plenty of people who would rather have the truth, and Bert's tamperings/creativity are already well-known. All we are doing is trying to find out which items are genuine and which items have been recreated without proper attribution.

We are all in awe of Bert's contributions in a very positive way, but that does not detract from a desire to know the truth, in every case.

Bert's reputation as a scholar was largely destroyed by Bert himself. Those realists who want to know the truth can join with us. Those who don't want to know are welcome to ignore us. That is absolutely irrelevant and separate to our admiration for his creativity. All of the people involved here are performers as well as scholars.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 07 Sep 23 - 03:13 PM

Dick, your last post is another example of the confusion created by Bert's creativity. Huntington was obviously convinced in this case by Bert's assertions.

You are arguing here with people who have done much research and are the leading exponents in these matters. Your posts are becoming embarrassing.

You have given your opinion IN CAPITALS; now, unless you have something fresh and illuminating to say I suggest you keep out of it.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 08 Sep 23 - 02:43 PM

We are now discussing personal preferences, in performance, which are not really part of the main thrust here. We are talking about material in the public domain, and anyone can legally and morally take a chanty and do what they like with it. We are talking about presenting recreated material within the revival and passing it off as wholly from oral tradition. Scholars/researchers/truth-seekers are also perfectly entitled to call this out when they come across it.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 10:05 AM

Dick, you are arguing with someone who has done years of dedicated research into the subject AND has first-hand experience of delivering chanties at tasks on board sailing ships. What research have you done? Enlighten us, do!


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 11 Sep 23 - 01:22 PM

Many thanks for that detailed account, Gibb!


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 08:54 AM

BAUK
This has recently been covered on a similar thread on Facebook on the Traditional Ballads blog. Those in the know stated there that there was nothing at Goldsmiths that would enlighten us further. No field notes etc.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 12 Sep 23 - 08:57 AM

There seems to be several scholars working on Lloyd's creativity at the moment. Most of them know about each other but someone perhaps needs to co-ordinate matters to avoid unnecessary duplication and time.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 16 Sep 23 - 03:32 PM

No worries, Phil, we all do it!


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 05 Sep 23 - 08:25 PM

Brian --
Thanks for coming back! I recently stumbled on your published essay on this subject and it looks so good. Awaiting the opportunity to read it in full, but in the meantime, folks with some spare time (retired people??!?) should definitely check it out.

I feel inspired to look more closely and comparatively at all of the sailor songs that Lloyd said to have learned from Tom Howard of Barry, born circa 1888.

Howard, I recently discovered, played the role of the blacksmith in the 1950s film version of Moby Dick. He was the mate on the vessel used in the movie (captained by Alan Villiers) in the Irish Sea, in the summer of 1954 -- I think that's the same year Lloyd met Howard, and I wonder if the occasion for meeting was also the making of the film. I imagine Lloyd may have been employed to be the shantyman and, perhaps, Howard, also present, piped up to tell him a thing or two!

My curiosity was piqued when I noticed that the liner notes for "Bold Riley" on _A Sailor's Garland_ (1962) contain obvious bollocks and no mention of Howard. But in a 1970 magazine issue, Lloyd is pressed as to where he got the song from and he says it was from Howard. Suffice it to say, I hope to learn more about what "getting a song from Howard" really meant to Lloyd. On one hand, Howard's songs mediated by Lloyd could be really important sources to log. On the other hand, I fear it's possible that Lloyd might have invoked Howard tokenistically in some cases to give his arrangements/creations a pedigree.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 03:27 AM

Just caught the video, and happy to find (as I supposed you do) so answers to may recent questions about Ted Howard. Great!


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 05:39 PM

>Any thoughts on he Hugill / Lloyd question, though?

Brian,
I certainly do have thoughts, but not much coherent or well-baked enough to put down at the moment!

Off the cuff: Your discussion of "Go to Sea Once More," and Lloyd's tune, reminded me: Doesn't Hugill (SfSS) use that tune? Which brings us back to whether Hugill corroborates Lloyd (whereas Carpenter's Barry singers do not) or whether Hugill pinched it from Lloyd.

The question of Howard bears on my theory about Lloyd developing "South Australia" from the transcription in Doerflinger. Basically, my idea is that he saw the very "descriptive" transcription (which is not performance-ready, having irregular measures and all) and created a "normalized" version by making choices about how to synch up the melody rhythm with barlines. However, arguing that must contend with the possibility of receiving that form of song from Howard. Again we have a case where the tune doesn't match any of the others that are documented.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 06 Sep 23 - 09:28 PM

As a footnote, I appreciated the shout out to the Mothers of Invention in Brian's talk.

I'm sure I encountered that Mothers album before I encountered Lloyd's album, but not long before. At the same time as idolizing Zappa during college, I was starting to re-discover sea songs from my Connecticut childhood, the favorite being one of the Library of Congress's albums of field recordings. Which led me simultaneously to be engaged in performing (and composing) art music inspired by Zappa and doing little informal folkie groups singing chanties based on those recordings. A fellow Zappa-loving friend and I always remember the liner notes' acknowledgement of _Blow Boys Blow_. Lloyd's "Handsome Cabin Boy" was in my repertoire at parties.

In the same notes, Zappa also acknowledges his first composition teacher, Prof. Karl Kohn. I did not know I would end up at Pomona College, where Zappa took lessons from Kohn and where Kohn is now a friend (professor emeritus). My local area is studded with lore about the Mothers, like which of the clubs they had played in and which schools they had attended. When I first moved to the area, on the street I saw Ray Collins, the original leader of the band that invited Zappa to join. Collins was homeless (or living out of a van, I believe). He died less than a year later.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 07 Sep 23 - 07:01 PM

>Without Lloyd and his contemporaries ther probably would not have been a UKfolk revival as we knew it.

Correct. That's what, in part, we are uncovering: Greater detail about the UK folk revival. What happened, between which individuals, at what times, with which materials for revival, in what forms, with what impact, etc.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 12:33 AM

Recent example of Lloyd's products causing confusion:

Here's a clip of "Shanties and their Usage Workshop" from Glasgow Shanty Festival, 2 September 2023.

(links to a public post on Facebook)

The song is Lloyd's "Wild Goose Shanty." I guess it's a demonstration of how Lloyd's song "would be" used if it had existed? Or it's a discussion of how to operate a brake windlass whilst singing and Lloyd's song is offered as an example of such a song?

Strange that the song has no discernible pulse and it's asymmetrical. Hey, aren't shanties those *rhythmical* songs for giving time-coordination to sailors' work? At least that's what Webster's says. And it's what the folk performers remind audiences when they want to add a halo of interest around their material like, "This isn't *just* any old song, this is a SHANTY! Yes, you see, it's a *special* song... a song for sailors' work, ooooh!" Yet where is the rhythm? Where is the meter? How on earth is the person imitating the pumping of a brake windlass imagining those motions for a song that gives no sensible cues to motion?

(How is it that these people, who have made their own version, are actually singing more like a shanty? I want them in my crew.)

***
Here's some balderdash from Lloyd (1972) saying that this shanty goes slower "by nature"? He really means, by his choice to make the song like that and pretend that was how he found it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MQ8YC7iOsEg


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 08:24 AM

>no, that is your interpretation, do you have any factual evidence to back that statement up?

Yes, it is my interpretation. What's your interpretation?

I'll make you a deal. Give me your interpretation. After that, if you're still engaged, I will give you some of the evidence for my interpretation and then you can give me some of your evidence.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 11:18 AM

RJM: "it is possible he meant capstan shanties were slower by nature"

Is that your interpretation, which you will support with evidence? This is quid pro quo, so please make sure we have the quid.

Gibb interpretation:

Lloyd spoke bullshit about how the speed and style of his "Wild Goose Shanty" was, as a representative of shanties as a class. It's bullshit because the song did not *exist* as such until Lloyd himself created it, at which time it was he would decided on what the speed and style would be. Lloyd thus postures as someone delivering some knowledge about shanties that is supported by evidence from the genre's documentation, which in this case is "Wild Goose Shanty." The evidence, however, has been planted, is manufactured. Lloyd does this so smoothly, hiding the dishonesty by misdirection toward a truth-y remark ("how funny it would be to sing shanties too fast!"), that it resembles a psychopath's behavior. (How's that taste?)

Dick interpretation:

???
[Capstan shanties were slower than what?] [He's making a reference to capstan shanties even though he does not single out Wild Goose Shanty as representative of capstan shanties?]


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 06:40 PM

Dick,

I don't think there is anything wrong with interpretations. That's what a discussion is. People look for evidence and then develop interpretations from the evidence. Then the conversation continues. More evidence is introduced, and interpretations are revised. People debate the quality of the evidence, and the strength or validity of how interpretations are using that evidence. That's what this thread (conversation) has been about.

Not all "evidence" that the discussants have ever seen in their entire lives is logged into this one thread. That would be tedious and unnecessary, since the discussants are aware of most of that already. For example, there is another Mudcat thread about Lloyd's "The Wild Goose Shanty" in which you participated. However, you did much the same there as I think you've been doing there: you didn't engage with the specifics.

I am glad to engage with you about the discussions of evidence and interpretation if you are willing. You have asked me to be more explicit about the evidence for my interpretation, which, it is true, I did not explicitly provide because the *engaged participants* in this thread are already aware of it or at least aware what I'm getting at.

However, I am reluctant to do the tedious work of rehashing all that exposition which has been discussed before because so far you have showed a disposition to ignore evidence. Frankly, I think it is rich that you ask for such an evidentiary process now when there is so much you have already ignored and when you have dismissed that process as not *worth* engaging in.

So, if I am to dance to your tune, you need to give something back. I will not outline the evidence and argumentation that forms my interpretation —which there is, and for you to blindly assert that there is none is not called for— unless you are willing to submit to the same process.

The question is why Lloyd would submit the example of a song in the way that *he created* it, not in the way he found it (and whereas what he found was very different than what he created) to make a claim about the shanty genre. The disturbing issue is that the workshop presenters at the recent Glasgow Shanty Festival also used Lloyd's creation to demonstrate some supposed fact about the genre. They did this, I believe, despite all common sense. That is, whereas Lloyd's manufacture of the song is not common knowledge, and I would therefore hesitate to criticism action without that knowledge, there is a factor of common sense that should prevail nevertheless: One cannot (or is very likely not to) do a rhythmic action to a non-rhythmic song. What inhibited the triumph of common sense? I suggest that it is an extraordinary faith-based belief in Lloyd, which is one of the greater problems that this conversation seeks to address.


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 11 Sep 23 - 06:44 AM

Good questions/comments, Keith, thanks

"Of course you believe Lloyd made it up on the basis that it was never collected anywhere else."

That's not *the* basis. That's one factor in the interpretation, yes, but not the definitive one. So, I don't propose the idea that simply because only one instance of a given song was documented that the song's existence in tradition should be doubted. However, speaking to that point, 1) We have a track record of examples (it's basically the topic of this thread!) of Lloyd creating songs, which doesn't prove anything about this song individually but contributes to reasonable skepticism of his methods; 2) more importantly, we have Lloyd mentioning MacKenzie, as you said**—while what he did was NOT MacKenzie; 3) We have quite a few documents of this song (the chanty with the "Ranzo, ranzo, way" chorus). They all compare well with one another, including MacKenzie's, whereas Lloyd's piece does not match the set; 4) Lloyd's piece does not match the musical style of chanties in general, either (refer to guestD's opinion above).

(**I must note, however, that the liner notes of _Blow Boys Blow_ (1957) do not say this, they say, “One of the great halyard shanties, seemingly better-known in English ships than American ones, though some versions of it have become crossed with the American song called Huckleberry Hunting. From the graceful movement of its melody it is possible that this is an older shanty than most. Perhaps it evolved out of some long-lost lyrical song.” The first sentence is bullshitting. What are “the great halyard shanties”? There is nothing in the literature to indicate its status as “great,” nor is it often attributed to halyards [though that in itself may be meaningless; see below], nor is there data to support “better-known in English ships.” Like many of the liner notes, Lloyd is making wild assertions that are neither possible to make from the documentation and nor is there any information to suggest that Lloyd did the sort of research anyway that would be required to make the claim if it was possible.) Anyway, mention of MacKenzie is on a later, 1964 album.)

I mentioned the Mudcat thread about this song (in which Dick also participated). That and Brian's recorded talk, above, spoke to the relationship between Lloyd's song and MacKenzie's book, now summarized again by Lighter. Which is all why I hoped to refer to the song without dragging this all out because I believed all the people actively engaged already knew what it’s about. They also know the standard concept that chanties are rhythmical. And with that they can put two and two together to know what I was expressing about Lloyd’s intellectual dishonesty and about the problem with the Glasgow shanty workshop.

So, here’s an image of MacKenzie’s transcription, “The Wild Goose”
https://imgur.com/a/WDJXuH5

It’s a completely coherent, rhythmic piece. It’s not that Lloyd, taking MacKenzie as the germ of an idea, made a “slow” song so much that he made a non-metered one. It simply does not make sense as a working chanty. I have theories on why he may have done that, but won’t digress. And I hate for us to have to keep saying that Lloyd can do whatever he wants, someone can adapt chanty material to sing whatever they want etc. That’s not the issue. The issue is when people interpret this creation, which is *not* characteristic of traditional chanty style, *as representative* of traditional chanty style—all because they have been led to believe it is a representative sample. After all, Lloyd tacitly implies that *what he sang on record* was that “great halyard shanty” “well-known in English ships” etc. Even when he later mentions MacKenzie, he only says it—we are led to believe “it” refers to what he is singing—is found there. This is not a confession of his adaptation of MacKenzie’s material to a new (uncharacteristic) form. It reads, rather, as a further validation of the pedigree of what he’s doing. Lloyd, I believe, bears responsibility for poisoning the well. I cannot blame most people for being misled by Lloyd; I don’t expect most people to have known not to trust Lloyd. If we do blame them, we must also blame Jim Mageean in the Glasgow Shanty Festival clip. Yet Dick says, “If I want information about Shanties. I don not use AL Lloyd but i contact Chris Roche or Jim Mageaan, who are very knowledgeable." Dick— Jim is using AL Lloyd. Do you not finally see what this is all about? Lloyd f*cked up the entire pool, and that probably goes for problems in Hugill’s work, too. You revised: “When i want info on sea shanties, i do not go to Lloyd, i contact Chris Roche, who knew Stan Hugill well, and is imo an EXPERT on Shanties and sea songs.” (Jim is omitted this time around, why?) What if Chris knew Stan Hugill well… and gets some of the same poison from the well that Hugill got? For example, why did Hugill start singing Lloyd’s form of “South Australia,” whereas this appears in none of his books (and no one sings the South Australia in Hugill’s books? I mean, hitching one’s hawser to Hugill isn’t exactly the authoritative flex you seem to think it is. This isn’t about Jim or Chris, who seem like fine gentlemen and maybe in the same boat of Lloyd’s victims. I don’t see why you seem to be dismissing the significance of Lloyd’s ideas’ effects as if they could be isolated from the business of how shanties are now presented in the UK?

In the 1972 recording, as I started to explain, Lloyd creates a half-truth situation. He says chanties were sung slower (than revival performers sing them). That’s true…some of the time. Some chanties were sung quite quickly, it depends. I think the tempo at which Lloyd sang “Yellow Gals,” which he called “ridiculous,” was absolutely perfect. This idea “we sing chanties too fast” is a truism. True some of the time, but ultimately not accurate. The familiar truism gets heads nodding, “ah yes, (in absence of all the facts) that makes sense; he knows of what he speaks!” and obscures the falsehood: “As proof of that, here’s an example of a ‘slow’ one.” Need I go on? He’s planted evidence. The funny thing is that MacKenzie’s “Wild Goose” could reasonably be sung, in a brake windlass working situation, at the same tempo that Lloyd sings “Yellow Gals”!

As far as whether a chanty belongs to a category of “windlass” or “capstan” or “halyard” or whatever goes, that is a long discussion that I won’t get into here. In brief: I think these categories are bunk. We have primary source accounts that describe people doing one or another job X and singing chanty Y, from which we get some limited data for certain purposes. But as for both the classificatory scheme that took hold in discourse that sifts chanties into these categories, that is a reduction that usually confuses and harms more than it helps to understand anything. More importantly, most of the statements by writers in the popular sources and by revival performance presenters are so unscientific that this supposed point of information (e.g. “Y was a halyard chanty”) is completely useless for understanding chanties historically. I think most people don’t even know what it means (in any significant way that would be worth noting) when they say that, but rather they just copy what they heard/read in an effort to give the impression that they’re providing something. Just about all these ascriptions to categories are good for are detective hunts like the one here about what source a revival performer like Lloyd might have read/heard.

In The Keelers’ workshop clip, because I was not there and I’m only seeing the clip, no, I cannot testify that they *said* Lloyd’s Wild Goose was a brake windlass chanty. What we can see, however (and the reason why I shared the clip) is that they are imitating the action of working a brake windlass. So, I see no reason to question Jerzy’s caption on the video: we see it in the video.

This is where the meta-conversation about categories does have some trivial application. I suspect that The Keelers, in a workshop intended to show the uses of chanties, went through an outline of various categories of work, one of which was brake windlass. I surmise that what we are seeing is the choice to employ Lloyd’s Wild Goose to illustrate that part of the workshop.

How they settled on the idea that LLOYD’S Wild Goose would make a good example for brake windlass work is the puzzling part. I can conjecture how they got the idea that “The Wild Goose Shanty,” *as an abstract idea*, would be categorized as brake windlass. It’s an issue of equivocation. Terry’s _The Shanty Book_ has “The Wild Goose Shanty”, to which he affixes the label “Windlass and Capstan.” The first, trivial matter of equivocation is that “windlass” gets mixed up. I’m not at all certain that Terry had the brake windlass in mind when he writes “windlass” in the book. As in Colcord’s similar usage, the book never speaks to brake windlass specifically, instead always grouping it in the phrase “windlass and capstan.” “Windlass” also referred to the capstan-driven windlass (the nature of which working was totally different), and that was the “windlass” that I believe would have been in Terry’s mind, due to the fact e.g. that the brake windlass had practically fallen to the wayside long before. Maybe not, but that’s what I think; I said it was trivial. In any case, both Terry’s book and MacKenzie have “Wild Goose” as the title of this item. Someone very fixated on that *arbitrary* title might overlook other documentation on this chanty. They might say, accepting Lloyd’s Wild Goose as the real McCoy (or MacColl—see Lighter’s recent link), “Let me go look for more info on ‘the Wild Goose Shanty’,” after which they would discover Terry’s score but not necessarily the other documents of “Ranzo way.” They would see “windlass” affixed to Terry’s score and say, “OK, this is appropriate to windlass… [then equivocating] *brake* windlass.” Maybe that’s what led The Keelers to their categorization. I don’t know, and I don’t think it’s very important what *led* to that.

It—“it” being “Ranzo Way,” disguised under the label of “Wild Goose” by Terry and MacKenzie—*is* appropriate to brake windlass work. Incidentally, it was one of the items I had considered when I was creating a recording to illustrate singing chanties with brake windlass work in mind. One of my criteria for all the items I was consideringwas that there must be a first-hand descriptive account of people working a brake windlass while singing the chanty.

The non-trivial equivocation comes in when Ranzo Way qua Wild Goose (Terry and MacKenzie) gets mixed up, by sharing the title, with Lloyd’s Wild Goose. Lloyd might have gotten the idea from MacKenzie but his composition is not the same species of thing. So, the mistake is to take “Wild Goose #1” (MacKenzie/Terry) and the ideas about its historical application and apply them to “Wild Goose #2” (Lloyd). That, in my opinion, should not have happened, not because The Keelers didn’t appraise the provenance of Lloyd’s Wild Goose. We could call that an innocent mistake. It should not have happened because it should have been obvious that Lloyd’s Wild Goose is not functional for brake windlass work. The puzzle is: What inhibited this common sense “check”? Perhaps it was such faith placed in the product of Lloyd and/or the writing of Terry etc that common sense was sublimated: “(Lloyd’s) Wild Goose is the traditional chanty, and books say ‘Wild Goose’ is a windlass chanty, and that must mean brake windlass, and we want to use a popular song to show brake windlass action. It *must* work (Jesus told me so), so we must figure out how it works (rather than question its utility).”

Briefly, Keith:

“You note how slow both Ree Baldwyn and Alex Henderson are singing, the same point Bert makes at the Top Lock folk club.”
No, not the same point. Merely calling attention to the slow tempo, and the correlation to brake windlass work (which was the slowest job, on average, though the tempo varies I’d say up to about 65 BPM).

“if Bert was right and it was used as a halyard, at that very slow pace, it would be possible to get four pulls on the chorus.”
Four pulls per chorus at a halyard does not exist.

“I don't think any of the examples of working shanties given are too successful 'Let the Bulgine Run' for 'Heaving Brake Windlass' is a bit of a shambles.”
Not sure what you found shambolic about it. As you may know, video examples of practical chanty singing are very rare. Most plentiful are videos from the squad at Mystic Seaport, which is where that came from. The dearth of such visual examples, and none with a “full size” brake windlass, is one reason I made Songs of the Windlass: Singing Chanties on Gazela.
The point of that second halyard clip was to talk about the creation of verses, improvisation, pertaining to the situation.

“completed the task in 10.5 verses and 42 pulls, which you considered to be the 'typical length' I'm not sure an experienced crew would agree with you.”
That was data collection. I counted what happened there, and count in other instances, to see the range. I’ve had quite a few chances to do this or observe it in different situations, collecting the data from all, and that instance was not an outlier. Do you know anyone doing this on the eastern side of the Atlantic (I’d love to get their examples). What would they say? 5 verses? 25 verses? We have no historical accounts that I know of of people saying how many verses. What we have is 1) noted texts, which vary quite a bit but suggest a range 2) Recent applications, all of which, however, are associated with Mystic Seaport folks or something I have set up—and all under circumstances we can certainly quibble about (Where there “too many” on the line? Was the weather too nice? Is synthetic line different than hemp? What material are the yards made from? Are the ships too big / too small?), but which don’t suggest that 10 verses is atypical. Imagine those kids as bigger people, and a ship bigger to scale, and accumulated fatigue. I did it on Bark Europa (great crew) crossing Azores – Brittany and 10 sounds about right to me as an average. Big difference between when you do it in isolation versus at the end of 2 weeks at sea doing things often and you’re tired and unenthusiastic.

By way of another example, here's an experienced crew on Charles W. Morgan eagerly showing off, with 34 pulls (= 8.5 “verses”)
https://youtu.be/1mot3MzhPpE?si=yObk0ydWEcS-qZJf


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 14 Sep 23 - 06:47 PM

Not much substance here, just a remark:

I've noticed "Doodle [sic] Let Me Go" has become (recently, I think) more popular on the eastern side of the Atlantic and in the cyberspace.

I suppose the circa 2019 film _The Lighthouse_ contributed a little bit to that. (Funny enough, I suspect the makers had a look at Hugill, or [even more likely] a performer who had, for that.)

But Lloyd's rendition popularized it, I guess. Lloyd appears to have used Cecil Sharp _English Folk-Chanteys_ (1914) as his source. After the first verse, the lyrics are Lloyd's. Lloyd also changes the form by creating solo couplets (whereas the versions in Sharp, Terry, and Hugill have just one-line solos).

You can roughly tell who might have gotten it from the Lloyd lineage if they sing couplets, and if they do a little snap rhythm (Lloyd's addition, not in the books) on the word "yellow" in the chorus.

Anyway, my remark is that it strikes me as funny hearing so many people sing about "yaller girls." It's such a trope in minstrel songs and 19th c African American songs (though I don't know the exact extent of cross-influence between those spheres on this particular matter), that it's just kind of odd to hear it belted with such passion.

The interpretation I would hazard is that Lloyd's text lays on the narrative of "whoring down in Peru" so thickly that singers, if they care to think what a yellow gal is, suppose it means some quaint name for a "Spanish" prostitute. Or something like that. The cultural distance of "creoles down in Peru," perhaps, makes it politically more palatable than the alternative, a colorist term of US Black people. Concurrently, they are not based in the American cultural environment enough to know it as a the dated but still used term among some Black Americans (usually within their community only) and the connotations it has and had.

Mind, I don't have a strong complaint about people singing it, per se, but I figure that if they knew it better they might be a little less enthusiastic!

And no, Texans and their state song are not the same ;)


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Gibb Sahib
Date: 16 Sep 23 - 11:04 PM

>>Neither did the sailors on the Gazela call them "shanties." Their 2400+ year histories and traditions are not about African-Americans, cotton screwers or the Gulf of Mexico.<<

What do "them" and "their" refer to?

>>Reidler<< [sic]

Could you please explain to everyone why you have been pounding on this poor undergraduate thesis-writer (Riedler) for several years, ever since you got a bug in your bonnet about people not discussing Catholic Romance language-speaking flautists? The frequency with which you mention her name seems only slightly behind your mention of "TikTok," "Wellerman," and "Naval Science." Yet, I'm confident that most if not all people here have no idea whom you're referring to when you do so.

Was some secondary-sourced background write-up narrative of the history of chanties in the bachelor's thesis about "The Influence of Sea Shanties on Classical Music," by this young woman from Singapore who is a scholar of opera, the primary thing you chance-encountered when you started this journey, and you have been reacting to it ever since? Did you two have an exchange on Reddit or something where she said, "OK, Boomer"? Did you tell her she should change her major to a HARD STEM field?


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Hesk
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 06:21 AM

RJM,

I agree that statements should be backed by sources where possible, but there is such a thing as a matter of opinion. It is tedious to mention this every time, especially as Mudcat is just a bit of fun for like minded people who like a good argument or a bit of natter, (in my opinion!)


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Subject: RE: A.L.Lloyd & Sea Chanties
From: Hesk
Date: 09 Sep 23 - 07:30 AM

Lighter, sounds like a true fact to me!


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