Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: Semofolkie Date: 09 Jan 13 - 12:07 AM What better to go with a good beer folk song, than a good irish chili folk song. "Something's cooking at the Kelly's and it's good good good." *laughs* http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yrIId2m9Rdw |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: Seamus Kennedy Date: 09 Jan 13 - 01:28 AM "If you've got the time, we've got the beer, (Beer after beer), Miller tastes too good to hurry through..." "Here's to good times, tonight is kinda special, The beer we pour must say something more somehow; So tonight, tonight, let it be Lowenbrau." |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: GUEST,Trevor Sheridan Date: 09 Jan 13 - 03:22 AM There was a lovely cartoon advert of the McEwans cavalier singing "McEwans is the best buy, the best buy, the best buy McEwans is the best buy, the best buy in beer Best buy McEwans, McEwans, McEwans (then he ran off in the distance) Best buy McEwans the best buy in beer" and as Jim B said earlier it was a smashing pint especially in South Shields !!! |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: Nigel Parsons Date: 09 Jan 13 - 04:28 AM Tune for the above? Could it be 'Ach Du Lieber Augustin' ? |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: Brian Peters Date: 09 Jan 13 - 05:56 AM "For instance the terrace cries fulfil all the criteria for folk song but have not necessarily been passed down through families." Yes of course, Steve - terrace chants represent my only participation in an authentic singing tradition, so I'm hanging on to them! A lot of what we call folk songs do seem to have been passed on primarily through families, but of course there were other places like pub sings and so forth, where they could be passed across generations. The beer ads, unlike terrace chants, never caught on as mass participation songs, so it's hard to imagine them getting passed on at all - it's hardly the kind of thing you'd sing your kids to sleep with. Or would you? |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: Mr Happy Date: 09 Jan 13 - 06:31 AM .........& then there's the Spoonerisms: 'A pint of Titbread Wankard & a half of shitter bandy' !! |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: Edthefolkie Date: 09 Jan 13 - 07:24 AM Blimey, must be about 35 years since I last heard Titbread Wankard. I think I first heard it from an oaring friend who drank in the Auriol Rowing Club (Leander's poor neighbour in Hammersmith). Maurice the barsteward used to sell us housemates a keg of the foul stuff complete with plastic tankard-fronted dispenser & pipes, for our parties in Norf Landon. However we kept the Fullers ESB in the garage so the cognoscenti could get the real stuff. No doubt the odd Mudcatter found their way in there - I know people used to trek from as far as Croydon, and we hosted a Detroitian, a Louisville Kentuckian, and a Guyanan at various times. |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: Charley Noble Date: 09 Jan 13 - 11:20 AM I don't think anyone has mentioned "When Jones'/Johnson's Ale was New" or my all time favorite "Dead Dog Scrumpy/Cider." I mind purchasing a bottle of Dead Dog Cider in Cornwall many years ago; since then my search for a better brew has been curtailed. Cheerily, Charley Noble |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: Mr Red Date: 09 Jan 13 - 12:14 PM Now apart from me mentioning it, I don't think anyone else did. So was it Jones', Joneses, Joan's, Joanses and now I have to consider Johnson's Ale? Methinks all of the above at some stage. I agree that football chants are far more likely to survive and reach public domain status than commercial fair. But don't forget the Coke ads that simultaneously aired when the group released the non-coke version. And there is always the modern technique of viral advertising, will it be a song or an ad? Or most likely both. |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: Gallus Moll Date: 09 Jan 13 - 05:05 PM Thanks Tattie Bogle for the clicky to Frankie Miller / Caledonia / Tennents advert! |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: Soldier boy Date: 10 Jan 13 - 10:53 AM Roll out the barrel........ |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: Rusty Dobro Date: 10 Jan 13 - 10:59 AM "....delicious, but not as good as Adnam's brewed in Suffolk. Is there a song about Adnam's?" Jonwithoutan'h', the legendary keyboard player with the Trembling Wheelbarrows, NE Suffolk's premier comedy-rock band, performs the old Kinks favourite 'Dedicated Swallower of Adnams'. Other songs by the faded four also include references to the amber ambrosia. |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: ripov Date: 10 Jan 13 - 04:10 PM alongside Nottingham and Jones's ales, Watkins ale seems still to be popular, though never advertised by name. |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: Nigel Parsons Date: 13 Jan 13 - 04:09 PM Having been put in mind of the old adverts I decided to try again for the Whitbread ones (Percy French parodies). Now the one I couldn't find in the past, and another, are on the net. From Here Now legend lampoons one old humpy galoon, Who loved Whitbread Best Bitter beer. But he got an eyeful of his canny rival One Abdul the Bulbul Ameer. Now that man with his can really shook poor Ivan Thinking drinking from tins irregular. If it's take home he needs let him take home this steed Reasoned Ivan Skavinsky Skavar Oh Abdul had this ploy of a female decoy Fooling Ivan who fools he rejects. Be it draught or in cans well we don't give a *** But the best best needs no etiquette. From Here From the old hist'ry books come two battling bazooks. Count Ivan and Abdul Ameer But on the dot of half five, they knock off feeling dry, And request Whitbread Best Bitter beer. Now Abdul likes his jug in the men only snug, Telling blue jokes not for ladies' ears. While Ivan's lip curls, "Whitbread's best with the girls." And I think the advantage is clear. So we now see Abdul break his 'men only' rule "But at Whitbread they say 'What the heck' Drink with ladies or gents" it makes no difference 'Cos the best best needs no etiquette. |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: GUEST,Chris Bealey Date: 25 Mar 14 - 01:59 PM I remember the John Smiths add: To the tune of jona lewie,stop the cavalry. Got my L.A shirt & my disco trousers all topped off with an Elvis quiff. The night is young & I smell like a surfer want some mates to go out with. Got a mate called brown & a mate called jones we're off to see a mate called smith. Could meet a bird by the name of lulu, moves like a zulu on a hot plate, she might seem keen & dance like a dream but nothing comes between me & my mate. For a great little mover that goes down smooth get yourself a mate called smith. Sad eh? |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: Big Al Whittle Date: 25 Mar 14 - 02:59 PM OBJ! OBJ! Finest drink in the world today! Lifts you up when you are down You will never wear a frown Oh Be Joyful! perhaps I imagined it. |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: GUEST Date: 26 Mar 14 - 03:41 PM Going back to the original posting my memory of the Watneys Red Barrel song, sung to the tune of Roll Out the Barrel was Roll out Red Barrel, let's have a barrel of beer Roll out Red Barrel (can't remember this bit) Roll out Red Barrel, making us full of good cheer What we want is Watneys Red Barrel It's our favourite beer The bit I can't remember should be 'our taste buds are clearly queer' if you ever tasted the abomination that was Red Barrel but it was clever of them to get the 'What we want is Watneys slogan in at the end. In fact they replaced the stuff with Watneys Red because sales were so bad (slogan Join the Red Revolution). One pint was enough to persuade me and most people that it was no improvement. |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: GUEST,jim bainbridge Date: 26 Mar 14 - 04:27 PM I used to play music regularly at the Jolly Roger pub on Sherkin Island, West Cork in the 90s- a dangerous job but someone had to do it. I recall Monica & Geoff, lovely English people who ran an excellent pub telling me that in the first few weeks of their arrival, the locals bemoaned the beer & said it was much better before they arrived. Monica & Geoff were polite about it but while searching around the stuff left by the previous owners, they found a photo of them standing proudly in front of the beer pumps - Watneys Red Barrel and the dreaded Ind Coope- they produced it and heard not a word more... |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: GUEST,henryp Date: 27 Mar 14 - 06:08 PM Ask for Younger, Ask for Younger, Get Younger every day |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: Old Grey Wolf Date: 28 Mar 14 - 09:55 AM There was a brilliant ad on German TV for bottled beer in the 70s. I can't remember the beer but tune was unforgetable, pity it wasn't in English as well. I remember a german team singing it on the Nijmegan 4 Days Marches Do any of our German members remember it? |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: Tug the Cox Date: 28 Mar 14 - 12:48 PM Big Al, OBJ was the stand out product from Beesleys of Plumstead, sadly bought out by Courage. |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: GUEST Date: 28 Mar 14 - 02:41 PM I used to play music regularly at the Jolly Roger pub on Sherkin Island, West Cork in the 90s- a dangerous job but someone had to do it." a Dangerous job? more like am exhausting job, I speak from experience. the Garda could be seen if they were coming from the mainland, so the hours of playing could be long,I SAW THE DAWN ON OCCASIONS. |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: GUEST,DickMiles Date: 28 Mar 14 - 02:43 PM BUT I NEVER SAW THE LIGHT |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: GUEST,henryp Date: 28 Mar 14 - 05:48 PM OBJ - Dutton's Brewery of Blackburn also brewed and bottled an old English ale OBJ: Oh Be Joyful. |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: GUEST,Inkys68Dad Date: 30 Dec 20 - 07:25 AM Re :- watneys I recall an advert for Watneys Keg red barrel which was sung by a male voice choir and went thus: What's the beer that beats the rest Watneys keg red Barrel The splendid beer that beats the test, Watneys keg red barrel Drink Red barrel near or far In pub or club or any bar It's just as good wherever you are Trust Watneys Keg Red Barrel |
Subject: RE: Will old beer adverts become folksongs? From: Long Firm Freddie Date: 30 Dec 20 - 08:52 AM The Music Hall song "Down At The Old Bull and Bush" made famous in the UK by Florrie Forde was an adaptation of "Under the Anheuser Bush", a song promoting the products of the Anheuser Busch brewery. LFF |
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