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song of the shepherd, dick miles

GUEST,Banjman 23 Jul 12 - 01:30 PM
GUEST,Blandiver 23 Jul 12 - 01:56 PM
The Sandman 23 Jul 12 - 05:29 PM
GUEST,Spleen Cringe 23 Jul 12 - 05:37 PM
GUEST,Darlodave 24 Jul 12 - 02:35 AM
Will Fly 24 Jul 12 - 04:20 AM
GUEST,Blandiver 24 Jul 12 - 04:38 AM
johncharles 24 Jul 12 - 04:48 AM
The Sandman 24 Jul 12 - 05:49 AM
matt milton 24 Jul 12 - 06:12 AM
matt milton 24 Jul 12 - 06:22 AM
johncharles 24 Jul 12 - 06:23 AM
matt milton 24 Jul 12 - 06:41 AM
matt milton 24 Jul 12 - 06:52 AM
GUEST,Blandiver 24 Jul 12 - 06:58 AM
matt milton 24 Jul 12 - 07:12 AM
matt milton 24 Jul 12 - 07:24 AM
johncharles 24 Jul 12 - 08:08 AM
GUEST,Blandiver 24 Jul 12 - 08:24 AM
matt milton 24 Jul 12 - 08:28 AM
matt milton 24 Jul 12 - 08:38 AM
johncharles 24 Jul 12 - 09:04 AM
The Sandman 24 Jul 12 - 12:39 PM
johncharles 24 Jul 12 - 01:00 PM
GUEST,Banjiman 24 Jul 12 - 01:08 PM
GUEST,Blandiver 24 Jul 12 - 01:23 PM
Vic Smith 24 Jul 12 - 02:19 PM
The Sandman 24 Jul 12 - 06:35 PM
johncharles 24 Jul 12 - 06:55 PM
johncharles 24 Jul 12 - 06:57 PM
Bugsy 24 Jul 12 - 08:40 PM
GUEST,Blandiver 25 Jul 12 - 04:42 AM
Continuity Jones 25 Jul 12 - 04:59 AM
johncharles 25 Jul 12 - 05:35 AM
GUEST,Blandiver 25 Jul 12 - 06:08 AM
The Sandman 25 Jul 12 - 08:15 AM
GUEST,Blandiver 25 Jul 12 - 10:00 AM
Ron Cheevers 25 Jul 12 - 10:37 AM
The Sandman 25 Jul 12 - 10:55 AM
The Sandman 25 Jul 12 - 11:03 AM
johncharles 25 Jul 12 - 11:07 AM
GUEST,Blandiver 25 Jul 12 - 11:12 AM
johncharles 25 Jul 12 - 11:16 AM
johncharles 25 Jul 12 - 11:25 AM
The Sandman 25 Jul 12 - 11:28 AM
GUEST,Blandiver 25 Jul 12 - 11:29 AM
GUEST,Blandiver 25 Jul 12 - 11:43 AM
Vic Smith 25 Jul 12 - 12:04 PM
Spleen Cringe 25 Jul 12 - 12:05 PM
johncharles 25 Jul 12 - 01:00 PM
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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: GUEST,Banjman
Date: 23 Jul 12 - 01:30 PM

It would have to be a bloody big bed Dick!


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: GUEST,Blandiver
Date: 23 Jul 12 - 01:56 PM

Amazing pic, Vic!

Yeah, what we do as Rapunzel & Sedayne is normal folk, though we do have our moments when we darken things a bit. Have a brouse on our Soundcloud page:

http://soundcloud.com/rapunzel-and-sedayne

Maybe things like Bird, or Heffle Cuckoo Song, but Weirdlore isn't Weird in any sense of being deliberately outrageous; like Spleen says we're an average folk 'n' fun husband & wife duo with a great reverance for The Tradition. That's what I mean by the feral zeitgeist I suppose - and Music of Human Interest. I'm sorry for keep banging on about Lol Coxhill but there's a guy I used to watch freely improvising on his soprano saxophone for hours and it wasn't weird in the slightest, yet to many here they wouldn't even hear it as being music. 'Just a bloody noise!'

And heaven knows I'm not the Godfather of anything, just I've been doing it since 1975 (when we had The Secretmoon Band) and it's a proud continuity that's touched upon Folk, Experimental (you want weird? I was a member of both Metgumbnerbone and Masstishaddhu whose place in the weirdness stakes is assured for all time, but please note I wasn't involved in the graveyard scandall of 1984; 5LP Box set out soon!) as well as Medieval things and this continues today with what I with Rachel as Rapunzel & Sedayne whose Barley Temple CD got us some nice press. I must add Barley Temple was a sincere attempt at A Very Ordinary Folk Album - which is, I insist, exactly what it is.

*

I'm going to be deeply untrendy and say I don't "get" Jim Eldon. I guess that just makes me a bad person.

Paul - if you never listen to another word I say ever again, I beg you, book Jim & Lynette Eldon at KFFC; they will transform your life and give you a guaranteed perfect night for all. We are talking National Treasures here; cherish them. They are unique; they are quite simoply what Folk Music is all about. Don't just take my word for it - ask Vic - as Raymond Greenoaken - ask Paul Davenport...


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: The Sandman
Date: 23 Jul 12 - 05:29 PM

authenticity in folk music is elusive, its all folk music i never heard a horse sing it, louis armstrong said.
Blandiver, as you said you are not a god father of anything, neither am I, AND IVE BEEN DOING IT SINCE 1968,
can I ask you politely to stop trying to convert every one to your personal taste, if Banjiman does not like Jim Eldon, so what,do you like everything Banjiman likes in music, probably not?
you achieve nothing by going over the top by expecting everybody to like that which you like,live and let live


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: GUEST,Spleen Cringe
Date: 23 Jul 12 - 05:37 PM

I dunno, Dick. If I'm enthusiastic about something I tend to want to share...


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: GUEST,Darlodave
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 02:35 AM

Dick
Ignore all these nitpickers, I and others enjoy your songs and gigs.
You do what these others don't do, that is sit and write songs with tunes for enjoyment for yourself and others. Keep up the good work.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: Will Fly
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 04:20 AM

If we, as performers put our work in front of the public, either in live performance or as a recording, then being commented on - whether favourably or unfavourably - is par the course. We always hope for nice comments and applause, but we also have to deal with critical comments or queries. As it happens, there's not been a single adverse comment on Dick's song here, merely a query as to the attribution of one line in it. I wouldn't call that nitpicking, and the song as a whole has rightly had much praise.

However, given the fact that what we do is up for grabs as far as comment is concerned, then we occasionally have to deal with the questioning or the sheer uncomplimentary. You can, for example: ignore it completely; digest it and act/not act on it as you feel fit; fly into a rage; etc. I have a number of videos on YouTube and, happily, most of the comments are very positive and a pleasure to receive - but not all. My own strategy is to separate out the 'artistic/musical' comments from the 'personal' so, if someone writes, "Your beard sucks", then I delete it on the grounds of the writer's superficiality. However, I always read comments on the music carefully and, if I think the adverse comment has some reason in it, then I'll respond appropriately - but also in a reasoned way.

Some comments turn out to be a matter of personal taste, or annoyance that I've 'mucked about' with their pet and treasured version of a tune. My response to that is often, "I get you - so move on to something else." But now and then there's a valuable nugget of advice that's worth reading and assimilating. For example, I posted a version of "Sweet Lorraine" ages ago - done rather hurriedly and without much thought (in retrospect) - and someone commented along the lines of "Good try, but you should play the melody in the middle eight correctly." The comment, as it happens, was spot on - note to self to pull the video and re-do it - correctly.

That's the beauty and the horror of YouTube and of live performance in general - you never can tell. But, in the end, if you don't ever want, or can't ever deal with, any adverse comments, then the only answer is not to perform.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: GUEST,Blandiver
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 04:38 AM

you achieve nothing by going over the top by expecting everybody to like that which you like,live and let live

Sorry if it came across that way, Dick - I think I must have a missionary thing going on, either that a desire to see an artist of the calibre of Jim Eldon (not for nothing do I call him a National Treasure) given the credit he deserves, especially by those who are in the position to do so (like Paul at KFFC), even if they personally don't get him. There're a lot of things I don't get myself, but nevertheless recognise their vital importance in the wider cultural landscape of folk.

*

Ignore all these nitpickers, I and others enjoy your songs and gigs.

There was nothing by way of nitpicking in pointing out that Dick had used a line from a traditional song in one of his own. I'm a great believer in the neo-craft of Folk Song writing - I work regularly with Ron Baxter who has an especial skill in this respect and have occasionally been moved to do it myself (we recently did one on the subject of Werewolves simply because there was nothing in the tradition that answered our requirements) and feel there is much to be understood about the nature of Traditional Song by looking at the written Folk Songs of the revival, especially those by people such as Dick Miles and Ron Baxter whose relationship with Traditional Song is so deeply established as to be second nature. Both are keen & canny craftsmen.

I reckon (maybe) Dick used the line subsconsciously anyway, by way of some inner creative dreaming. Not being a songwriter I don't know how that works, but I do know the visionary realms I might enter into just by learning a Traditional Song, so maybe it's something similar?? As a writer, storyteller & creative musician, I do believe that Traditional Process is as much about the individual as the collective. We inherited the means by which we are creative - the nouns, the verbs, the adjectives, the phonetics, the syntax, the structures, the instruments, the modality, the technology etc. - all these things are already there for us to work with, as are the conventions which shape the work into its final form. Out of such raw materials we whittle our treen, fashion our pots, knot our macrame owls and weave our baskets.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: johncharles
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 04:48 AM

I do not particularly like the song and think that the best line in it is the disputed one. I doubt it will stand the test of time.
There I have said it, and now I fully expect to get criticised.
Posting any sort of criticism of a song on what is essentially a community of friends who support each other is always problematic.
Reviews from strangers on youtube or perhaps even better from experienced music reviewers is the best way to get realistic constructive feedback. Other measures are things such as other people singing/recording the song and audience feedback.
john


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: The Sandman
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 05:49 AM

john charles, that is ok, not everyone likes the same thing, whether it stands the test of time is not important either, it is an unanswered question anyway, if i like it i will sing it and see what is the audience response, in my ooinion it is an improvement on our sheepshearings done, and i intend to try it out.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: matt milton
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 06:12 AM

um, unless Dick has subsequently changed what was written beneath that youTube clip, I'm reading:

"song written by dick miles using a traditional tune"

So nothing about "every single word written by Dick Miles".

I think Dick is entitled to point out that this is nit-picking.

After all, Gillian Welch writes original songs that frequently feature lines from traditional folk songs. Used entirely deliberately and self-consciously. As does Alasdair Roberts. That doesn't stop them asserting authorship and indeed copyright claims.

God knows I disagree (vehemently!) with many the things our Mr Miles says, but in this case I can't help but think people are indeed picking nits.

again ,writing

"song written by dick miles using a traditional tune"

is a completely different thing to writing

"song in which every syllable is the sole and unique invention/property of Dick Miles". or indeed "all my own words".


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: matt milton
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 06:22 AM

Nobody else put those words, those lines, in that order. Nobody else set them to that tune. Dick Miles wrote that song.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: johncharles
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 06:23 AM

At the end of the video Dick says people can sing the song but "please credit me with the words"
I am sure someone with a deeper understanding of the law than I have will be able to pronounce on this.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: matt milton
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 06:41 AM

oh, OK, well, whatever - people either will or people won't. Just like they sometimes do and sometimes don't anounce what a song is called/who it is by when they perform other songs by other people (or by Trad/Anon) at the millions of open mics and folk clubs and busking spots all over the world, every night of the week.

Seems like splitting hairs nonetheless. From either a copyright or an artistic point of view, a mountain is being made of a molehill.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: matt milton
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 06:52 AM

"I am sure someone with a deeper understanding of the law than I have will be able to pronounce on this."

from a legal perspective, there's no issue whatsoever: a line that has three words in common with a traditional song is neither here nor there.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: GUEST,Blandiver
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 06:58 AM

I thought we'd done with this? Now the nitpicking begins in earnest! Still - anything that keeps this thread buoyant & gets people listening to Dick Miles can't be that bad, eh??

Anyhoo - I think it's important to acknowledge sources; even hip-hop artists do this (proudly) with their samples, though I'm sure a fair few Crimso heads were suitably outraged by Kanye West's Power, just as said Crimso heads would have outnumbered by the millions who loved Power who'd never even heard of King Crimson. Like my neighbour - I played him the original one day and it terrified the living daylights out of him (terrifies me too actually and I've grown up with it...).

So. Whilst such borrowing doesn't change the original, and says nothing about the quality of either, and may in fact (as Vic suggest) be more of an open tribute than plagiarism as such, I feel it pays respect to the canon. This is all the more essential in folk where someone hearing Dick's song might not even be aware of Willie Scott or the Shepherd's Song, in which case they might like to go out and enrich their lives by finding out. Like my neighbour kistening to KC for the first time, the original will blow their mind, The Traditional / Revival dichotomy makes such transparency even more important; and it's not a matter of nit-picking to point this out.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: matt milton
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 07:12 AM

I've written a song that features the line "meet me at the bottom/bring me my blue suede shoes". This is a mishearing of a line sung by Archie Edwards. (Which I know from his Blues'N Bones album; one of the best blues recordings ever made.)

Now, "meet me at the bottom" is a line that crops up in numerous country blues songs. It's a bit of a floater line. It's an instruction, I think, to meet at the bottom of a field (ie where black workers were working on a plantation) and is usually followed by "bring me my boots and shoes" (which is what Archie Edwards actually sings, though there are a few variants on this line in the various songs that feature it).

If I were to ever record this song and feature it on Bandcamp or on CD, I suppose I might conceivably have my name in brackets on the liner notes, or possibly assert copyright for the song, if there was any suggestion it might get played on the radio or anything. (Not very likely, but hypothetically speaking...)

It wouldn't occur to me to issue an instruction "please credit me with the words", for the simple reason that I am an amateur music-maker and I can't flatter myself that tons of people are going to be singing my song!

But there's an implicit "please credit me with the words" every time a musician sticks their name in brackets after a song title, or collects PRS from a song. Any criticisms anyone is making of Dick in this thread, they also need to be making of Gillian Welch and/or Alasdair Roberts, both of whom routinely drop traditional lines into their original songs.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: matt milton
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 07:24 AM

"This is all the more essential in folk where someone hearing Dick's song might not even be aware of Willie Scott or the Shepherd's Song, in which case they might like to go out and enrich their lives by finding out."

Well, you're assuming that that particular song by Willie Scott is the only way Dick could conceivably have heard those words. And that there aren't other singers singing those words that Dick (or anyone else) might have picked them up from. Now you might well be right, but we're talking principles here, so it's irrelevant.

I love Willie Scott's singing too, but I think there's some confusion going on here between the fan's enthusiasm for introducing people to his recorded legacy and some sort of prescriptive moral onus on telling people where the song comes from wherever there's time.

I rather like that folkie thing of "I got this song from..." but it's optional as far as I'm concerned. Actually, if I were forced to preface every song that way, I'd be obliged to say things like "I got this song from singer X, though I think their singing is awful, and I really can't recommend listening to their version: but the words are great".


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: johncharles
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 08:08 AM

borrowing ideas and lines is I am sure a constant headache for songwriters.
Only this morning, having made a promising start on my song: The Italian Shepherd I was to be frustrated when a friend pointed out that the first line
"Friends,Romans, Countrymen lend me your shears"
bore a passing resemblance to the words of some historic scribbler.
Ah me! back to the writing desk.
john


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: GUEST,Blandiver
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 08:24 AM

you're assuming that that particular song by Willie Scott is the only way Dick could conceivably have heard those words.

I am, because it is; that's the principle here which, I feel, is very relevant indeed.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: matt milton
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 08:28 AM

I went to an enjoyable singaround/open mic in an Edinburgh pub a few months ago. What if I had heard that song sung by a floorsinger whose name I didn't catch?

Or alternatively, what if I had heard that song sung by a floorsinger whose album I bought, who I then credited in a version I later sung, which was listened to online by someone who subsequently went and listened to that floorsinger's album, decided they hated it so much that they never wanted to listen to folk music again. Swings and roundabouts.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: matt milton
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 08:38 AM

I give a reductio ad absurdum example, because i think there is something a little absurd about placing too much of a moral burden on crediting one's sources.

Which, let's remind ourselves, are in this case, two or three re-contextualised words: an instance of "plagiarism" so minor even those bringing it up aren't quite sure whether it constitutes a quotation or not. Mountains aout of molehills.

Sticking to matters of animal husbandry, it's a bit like saying, were I to use the term "wethers" in a song, I should be morally obliged to point out that the word (referring to castrated male goats or sheep) is also used in the folksong "When I was a Little Boy". And then provide a list of recommended recordings.

I might feel like doing just that. Or I might prefer to learn a new song, change my guitar strings, or do the washing up instead.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: johncharles
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 09:04 AM

despite the apparent frivolousness of my previous comment it does contain a serious point
"Friends romans countrymen lend me your shears" has to be credited because it is so widely known
"I can parrock, I can twin, Aye, an can cheat them wi' a skin" is unlikely to be widely known and the temptation not to credit authorship rises.
Before the growth of the internet many similar examples of plagiarism went unnoticed. Nowadays a quick google search using the line in question produces the following
mudcat.org: Lyr Add: The Shepherd's Song (Willie Scott)
www.mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=143994&messages...Share

6 posts - 3 authors - 22 Mar
I can lamb the yowes wi ony o them a; I can parrock, I can twin, aye, an cheat them wi a skin, But I wish the cauld east winds would never blaw.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: The Sandman
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 12:39 PM

I would like to thank everyone for their comments


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: johncharles
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 01:00 PM

68 views in 4 days on youtube looks pretty good
john


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: GUEST,Banjiman
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 01:08 PM

See what a minor row on Mudcat can do for your viewing figures!


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: GUEST,Blandiver
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 01:23 PM

A row implies least some bad feeling, of which, I trust, there isn't any here. But then again making a row is having a jolly good time, usually musical...


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: Vic Smith
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 02:19 PM

See what a minor row on Mudcat can do....

Pretty civilised by Mudcat standards. Dick goes over the top too quickly and then calms down.
Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: The Sandman
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 06:35 PM

Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: johncharles
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 06:55 PM

Ni le mal tout ça m'est bien égal


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: johncharles
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 06:57 PM

I just love the way she sings the above line


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: Bugsy
Date: 24 Jul 12 - 08:40 PM

Having followed this thread from the beginning, I'm losing the will to live.

There's a saying that goes something like, "There's nothing new except what's been forgotten"

I wouldn't be surprised if every line of this or most other songs haven't been written before by someone at sometime.

Get a life.

Cheers

Bugsy


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: GUEST,Blandiver
Date: 25 Jul 12 - 04:42 AM

Hmmm. I think you're missing the spirit of this thread, Bugsy.

Seeing as Wille Scott's Shepherd's Song has been such an important feature of my life (especially these last few months) I couldn't not point out the source of the line. I never once said he shouldn't sing it, just that he should credit the source. This is integral to the Folk Gene by the way: it seeks, it sources, it delights, it celebrates, and breathes life from the muck, rust, stour & patina that is the minutiae of provenance by way of genuine spiritual renewal and enrichment. It's all very well saying There's nothing new except what's been forgotten, but surely Folk is all about the remembering, the cherishing, and making sure nothing is ever forgotten? Thus the Devil will always dwell in The Details...

Now, I think I'd like to hear Dick singing The Shepherd's Song as sung by Willie Scott - or the Amazing Bondel, or the Strawbs - I'm sure any one of these would do, or even all three...


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: Continuity Jones
Date: 25 Jul 12 - 04:59 AM

I think I'd like to hear Dick singing...

Now we're talking. I'd love to hear Dick singing A Pair Of Brown Eyes, or perhaps more adventurously, Back To Black.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: johncharles
Date: 25 Jul 12 - 05:35 AM

Blandiver,
Off topic but personal messaging to you is not available. Just been listening to fiddlesangs on sound cloud. Some amazing stuff. Your version of the Twa Corbies is great, makes my singing sound very pedestrian; still I will keep trying.
Do you sing anywhere on a regular basis I would like to catch you singing live,as that is what it is really about.
john


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: GUEST,Blandiver
Date: 25 Jul 12 - 06:08 AM

Cheers, John. Rachel & I are resident at The Moorbrook in Preston on Friday neets (open song & music session with Tom Walsh, Neil Brook, Hugh O'Donnell, Ross Campbell, Vicky Lewis with occasional visits from Martin Ellison & LesB). Otherwise as Rapunzel & Sedayne we've a few things coming up (Fylde, London, Mosely) but can't really do too much else on account of we've only got 9 days holiday left before April.

If you want to PM me, my old moniker of Suibhne O'Piobaireachd is still active until Joe Offer does me to good grace of changing it to Jack Blandiver as I requested several weeks ago. Signing in here is always a pain on my laptop which resists such conveniences as keeping me logged in, hence my Guest status here. Otherwise good old fashioned email does just fine : sean@sedayne.co.uk


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: The Sandman
Date: 25 Jul 12 - 08:15 AM

sorry to interrupt the mutual admiration society, but i do not think using shepherding terms, parrock cheat and twin constitutes plagiarism, they appear to be commonly used terms by scottish shepherds, however if anyone wishes to sing the song, and use different shepherding terms such as graft and switch[steal] and scent[pi a new skin, you have my permission to do so.
may i remind everyone of the old saying when principle comes in the door common sense goes out the window


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: GUEST,Blandiver
Date: 25 Jul 12 - 10:00 AM

Oh come on, Dick - own up already, eh? I know they're common terms* but that particular line is filched, albeit, I'm sure, for the best of creative reasons and by way of the most noble of artistic motives etc. etc. but filched nevertheless, you old rogue you. In the video you ask for credit; so I'm urging you to give credit where credit's most surely due. Apart from anything such part-provenance makes the song more interesting & demonstrates the erudition & authority of its author, if not on shepherding, then on Traditional Song.

* Actually I don't, I have precious little shepherding experience & know them only from the Willie Scott song, though I once was in a band called Yan Tan Tethera (actually a duo of myself & renowned Viking expert / author / storyteller / singer / historian Thor Ewing) though I don't recall any of our repertoir having anything to do with sheep - it was just a nice - er - folky name.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: Ron Cheevers
Date: 25 Jul 12 - 10:37 AM

Watched the video, and I can't understand what all the fuss is about


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: The Sandman
Date: 25 Jul 12 - 10:55 AM

Filched,you are overstepping the mark, and getting a trifle impertinent
if.. i had used the line,
I can parrock, I can twin, aye, an cheat them wi a skin,
however i do not, i use the words, we must parrock and cheat and twin with their skin, that is sufficiently different, i am using shepherding terms but it is worded differently,
i challenge you to take me to court, if you dont i must respectfully ask you to desist and in the words of a song, The piper and his bellows, go home and blow the fire, if you havent got the testicles to take it to court, i suggest like the piper you go home and blow the fire


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: The Sandman
Date: 25 Jul 12 - 11:03 AM

would you accuse me of filching a line if i had used a floating verse, "if, i had wings like noahs dove id go home to the one i love", this line occurs in Tawneys grey funnel line,The finest ship that sails the sea
Is still a prison for the likes of me
But give me wings like Noah's dove
I'll fly up harbor to the one I love
had previously occurred in a song called dinks song
did you ever call Cyril a plagiarist, i bet you didnt
here is dinks song(B.Gibson/B.Lomax/J.Lomax)
This is a blues traditional that has been performed also by Bob Dylan.
If i had wings like noah's dove
I'd fly up the river to the one i love


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: johncharles
Date: 25 Jul 12 - 11:07 AM

In the interest of accuracy what you actually sing is
"we must parrock and twin and cheat with their skin"
This preserves the internal rhyme giving the line its strength.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: GUEST,Blandiver
Date: 25 Jul 12 - 11:12 AM

and getting a trifle impertinent

Sorry - just entering into the irreverent spirit of the thread. Yesterday you called me both a pillock and an anorack.

Otherwise, like I say, I would only enter into something like this when in concerns something I have an especial interest in.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: johncharles
Date: 25 Jul 12 - 11:16 AM

p.s."we must parrock and cheat and twin with their skin"
this ordering of the words makes no sense


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: johncharles
Date: 25 Jul 12 - 11:25 AM

Crediting work is an important principle. however,an increasingly acrimonious discussion about a mediocre song seems pointless.
Perhaps we should call the thread a dead Parrock; deceased, shuffled off this mortal coil.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: The Sandman
Date: 25 Jul 12 - 11:28 AM

but you have not answerd the question,DID YOU CONFRONT CYRIL AND ACCUSE HIM OF BEING A PLAGIARIST?
oh and thankyou JC,You are excellent at picking out every tiny detail, in case i am accused of something else ,as JC says i sang, we must parrock and cheat and twin with their skin


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: GUEST,Blandiver
Date: 25 Jul 12 - 11:29 AM

an especial interest in

i.e. Dick Miles' youtube videos - which I always look at & delight in whenever he posts links here - and The Shepherd's Song from the singing of Willie Scott - which I've lived with for the last 30 years but only recently felt moved to learn it & sing it myself. Like I say, Dick - you've made a fine song - all I'm doing is pointing that there's no way that line isn't a direct borrowing from The Shepherd's Song. Nothing you (or anyone else) has said here has convinced me otherwise, nor, indeed, that this is a petty issue, for all the reasons I've stated thus far.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: GUEST,Blandiver
Date: 25 Jul 12 - 11:43 AM

I've got no interest in Cyril Tawney; I may join in the choruses with good cheer in singarounds (Ian McCulloch of Durham sings a splendid Oggie Man and I extemporised a fiddle accompaniment when of my Moorbrook Chums sang Sally F&E the other night) but otherwise they don't figure much in my paticular neck o' the Folk Woods (he says, thus summoning up Kiplingesque visions of night air cooling & badgers rolling at their ease etc. which is pretty much how I think of Folk to be honest; pure bucolia. If I want reality, there are far more exciting, and relevant, ways of getting it. I dare say this is why I find Dick's stuff so agreeable).


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: Vic Smith
Date: 25 Jul 12 - 12:04 PM

johncharles wrote:-
"Perhaps we should call the thread a dead Parrock"


Maybe we should.... after all, one of the songs at the centre of the centre of this thread does not seem like an example of Norwegian Blues to me.
Let's look at one of the lines that has already been quoted:-
"But I wish the cauld east winds would never blaw."
Does that sound like pining for the fjords to you?

EXPLANATION Anyone who has no idea what Mr. Charles and Mr. Smith are on about needs to watch this video


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: Spleen Cringe
Date: 25 Jul 12 - 12:05 PM

I can parrock, I can twin and cheat them with a skin,
I can write a lovely song with these words all used therein.
What would the answer be if we could ask old Willie Scott,
I think he'd say the whole affair's a storm in a teapot.
Or would he? Is a teapot in the average shepherd's kit?
(I'll check it out on Google and I'll tell you in a bit).
The answer is a gig where both Sedayne and Dick appear
Where they can work the whole thing out over crisps and beer.


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Subject: RE: song of the shepherd, dick miles
From: johncharles
Date: 25 Jul 12 - 01:00 PM

To be sung to the tune of Jock stewart

I can parrock, and twin and cheat with a skin,
I can write a great song with all these words in.
what would willie Scott say were he here today
Och noo wheer is the plagiarising

Oh they're easy and free wi ma words dee yi see
wi parrock and cheat and wi skin
its no the words that belong tae me
but the order that I put them in
With fulsome credit to Spleen Cringe for the original Idea and willie Scott for a good line
john


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