Subject: Mudcat online singaround? From: GUEST,Chris Lamb Date: 05 Jun 20 - 06:01 AM Link posted Mondays for the week's Mudcat Worldwide Song Circle
Topic: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround - open for cocktails and conversation half an hour earlier Time:Monday 12:00 PM Pacific Time (US and Canada) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat online singaround From: Waddon Pete Date: 05 Jun 20 - 11:28 AM Now there's an idea! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat online singaround From: GUEST,Martin Ryan Date: 06 Jun 20 - 02:06 PM Go for it! Regards |
Subject: RE: Mudcat online singaround From: Sarah the flute Date: 06 Jun 20 - 03:53 PM That sounds good to me Nothing much else on a Monday and 9pm start is good Sarah |
Subject: RE: Mudcat online singaround From: Noreen Date: 06 Jun 20 - 07:31 PM I’m up for it too, 9pm Mondays is good for me, and Zoom works well. Are you up for organising it Joe? ?? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat online singaround From: Joe Offer Date: 06 Jun 20 - 08:38 PM Okey-dokey. I think we have a minyan. Well, it's supposed to be 10 adult, circumcised males, but we'll make do with what we've got. Monday at 8 PM London time. That's Noon here in California, 3 PM at Mudcat Central in Pennsylvania, and 5 AM in Sydney.I'll host. I'll post the link to the Zoom session here in this thread just one hour before we begin, and I'll open hp half an hour early at 8:30 PM for cocktails and conversation. There will be a waiting room, and I reserve the right to reject people I don't recognize - so please use your Mudcat names. Sorry. This should be fun! -Joe- |
Subject: RE: Mudcat online singaround Monday 9 PM London time From: GUEST,SteveT Date: 07 Jun 20 - 03:42 AM Is this for signed up Mudcat members only or can 'Guests' (using usual Mudcat Guest sign-in names) also listen in? Steve, if you'd like to be on the email list, email me, joe@mudcat.org |
Subject: RE: Mudcat online singaround Monday 9 PM London time From: Joe Offer Date: 07 Jun 20 - 04:35 AM I don't expect to be particularly restrictive, Steve. Just use the name you usually use at Mudcat. -Joe- |
Subject: RE: Mudcat online singaround Monday 9 PM London time From: Joe Offer Date: 07 Jun 20 - 06:22 AM When you enter Zoom, you will usually be give the opportunity to give the name you want to be known by for the session. If you have not used Zoom since June 1, you may be asked to update to the new, encrypted Version 5 of Zoom. It seems to be quite stable, so just OK the download and there you go - good reason to show up early, though. I'm looking forward to this. -Joe- |
Subject: RE: Mudcat online singaround Monday 9 PM London time From: Mrrzy Date: 07 Jun 20 - 09:03 AM What time Mudcat time, just to be precise? Monday at 8 PM London time. That's Noon here in California, 3 PM at Mudcat Central in Pennsylvania, and 5 AM in Sydney. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround Mondays 8 PM London From: Joe Offer Date: 10 Jun 20 - 12:35 AM I will post the link in this thread Monday, an hour before the gathering. I will also send links by personal message Sunday, to members who post in this thread. If you've pasted anything above, you'll get a pm from me Sunday. Sorry, I can't send personal messages to Guests, so you'll have to look here Monday for the link. I will change the meeting ID every week for security purposes. I can't handle anything that comes in Monday, because I'm teaching a Class Mondays and have just half an hour free after the class. Looking forward to seeing you Monday. Joe |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround Mondays 8 PM London From: Joe Offer Date: 11 Jun 20 - 03:33 AM Just to clarify - I'm asking if somebody else might like to host a singaround on Thursday.... |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround Mondays 8 PM London From: Noreen Date: 21 Jun 20 - 02:45 PM Yes that’s right Amergin, for security reasons the new link is only put up about an hour before the start each week, so less likely to attract gatecrashers. I think it’s even better than the old HearMe (which I remember very fondly) because we can see each other too! Joe Offer has of course gone another step further and often searches for and adds info and words for the song being sung, in the chat box in real time... which sets this Mudcat Singaround apart from all others I’ve been involved with. Mudcat is once again in the vanguard of new ideas! (I wonder whether the wonderful Max might join us one week?!) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround Mondays 8 PM London From: Stilly River Sage Date: 22 Jun 20 - 11:45 AM The link people have posted here gives the first-time user the opportunity to download the software even if they load it before or during the event. |
Subject: ADD-Don’t Know the Words.(for My FavoUrite Things) From: YorkshireYankee Date: 30 Jun 20 - 01:49 AM And here are the words for my UK vs US English parody of "My Favorite Things", as a number of people seemed interested. (I've posted it in a Mudcat thread before now, but I've revised it since then, so might as well share the updated version.) Below the lyrics, I've added a glossary, for those who may not be familiar with all the terms. Don’t Know the Words... (for My FavoUrite Things) TTO: Rodger & Hammerstein’s My Favorite Things New words: Vikki Appleton Fielden Jelly is jam here, and jello is jelly The car has a boot and my foot wears a wellie Mention “sultanas”, I think "Eastern Kings" Don’t know the words for my favourite things Summat is not where you go when you’re climbing Jumper is not someone into sky diving Bob is Your uncle, the Beeb is your aunt Don’t know the words to explain what I want If my languish causes anguish; if you think me sad Oh, won’t you remember I’m just a poor Yank, and that’s why I talk... so bad Beer’s sold by landlords instead of bartenders Don’t tell the clerk that your man needs suspenders Braces are not always worn on your teeth Rubber is nothing to do with a sheath I stand in line; over here it’s called queueing Lines are engaged but they never need wooing You stop while five while I stay until four Knob isn’t always a thing on a door If I speak, luv, like a freak, luv; if you think me mad Oh, won’t you remember I’m just a poor Yank, and that’s why I talk... so bad Biscuits are sweet but a tart can be racy, a Nice bit o’ crumpet might wear something lacy Crackers are not always eaten with cheese Folks don’t wear flannels but you can wear fleece Chips come with haddock; and crisps in a packet Soccer is football and baseball’s not cricket Stockings have ladders and Cricket has runs Baps is the word for my favourite buns If you’re thinkin’ I’ve been drinkin’; if I seem a cad Oh, won’t you remember I’m just a poor Yank, and that’s why I talk... so bad Two pints of bitter was not a bad notion Held up two fingers and caused a commotion I didn’t quack but you called me a duck Muffler’s not something to quiet a truck You call me luv; I don’t know who you are, pet But when I say shag, ducks, I only mean carpet Met a cute bloke at the Anchor & Bull Kept my hands off him but he said I pulled I get confused but I can’t ask my granny My knickers are knackered and show off my f...reckles You can go barking though you’re not a dog, Everyone goes to the loo in a swamp... (um, bog!) If my diction causes friction; if I’m misconstrued Oh, won’t you remember I’m just a poor Yank, and that’s why I talk... so rude! =========== GLOSSARY UK/Yorkshire word – US word ------------------------------------ jelly – Jello jam – jelly preserves – jam boot – (car) trunk wellie (short for Wellington) – boot sultana – raisin (sort of: raisins and a sultanas are produced from the same grape but a raisin is dried naturally, and a sultana is dipped in veg oil and acid and then dried.) summat – something (I think it's a corruption of somewhat) jumper – sweater Bob's your uncle – you're all set/in good shape Auntie Beeb – the BBC landlord – pub owner suspenders – garter braces – suspenders rubber – condom queue – line line – telephone line engaged – busy stop – stay while – until knob – dick biscuit – cookie tart – loose woman nice bit of crumpet – very attractive woman (usually young) cracker – very attractive woman flannel – washcloth fleece – warm jacket (often woolen) chips – french fries crisps – potato chips football – soccer ladder – run (as in stocking) steps – ladder baps – bread rolls holding up two fingers is like flipping the bird to someone – rudest possible gesture (but it's ok if you do it like a peace sign). meduck/ducks – dearie muffler – scarf silencer – muffler luv – darlin' pet – dear shag – have sex with pulled – successfully picked up/scored knickers – undies pants – underpants knackered – worn out fanny – pussy (as in woman's "front bottom") barking – mad bog – bathroom (Brits think we're rather silly to call it a bathroom, especially if there's not even a bath in it) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround Mondays on Zoom From: Joe Offer Date: 05 Jul 20 - 03:24 AM I've sent out the email for Monday's singaround. If you didn't get one, contact me by email, joe@mudcat.org. JennieG, the email I sent you got returned. Hope to see you all Monday.. -Joe- |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround Mondays on Zoom From: SPB-Cooperator Date: 05 Jul 20 - 04:52 AM Hi Joe, hope to be there tomorrow nght, but I have to go to a zoom committee meeting before hand - because AGMs have been postponed/cancelled, I haven't found a way of getting out of this one. I will probably arrive about 10:00pm my time. Vikki, your multi-lingual lyrics reminds me of a version we collectively wrote in the Shanty Crew when we were kicking our heels in our hotel after we had fininshed our afternoon sets and waiting for the pub to open for the evening session at Lancaster Maritime Festrival. That one was a bit x-rated referring to 'Sheep in galoshes and nuns in black leather' and the instrumental bridge between the verses 'Nudge nudge nudge, wink wink wink' - referring to Monty Python. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround Mondays on Zoom From: Mrrzy Date: 05 Jul 20 - 08:12 AM If somebody could sing Power and Glory that'd be great. I can't, my throat closes. Emotional. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround Mondays on Zoom From: Joe Offer Date: 06 Jul 20 - 03:10 AM I hope everybody who wanted email notification of Monday's singaround, got it. If you didn't get an email from me and wanted one, please email me, joe@mudcat.org - but you probably won't get one tomorrow, because I won't have time to deal with email. I teach a class on Monday that ends at the exact time I open the doors for the singaround. I'll post the link a couple of hours before the singaround, but I don't want to post it too early because of the nuisance of Zoom bombing. See y'all tomorrow, -Joe- |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround Mondays on Zoom From: SPB-Cooperator Date: 10 Jul 20 - 09:10 AM Any plans to make this permanant after lockdowns have finished? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround Mondays on Zoom From: Tattie Bogle Date: 10 Jul 20 - 06:57 PM Leeneia: the phone numbers are auto-generated by the Zoom website when they produce the invitation, so the host only has to copy the invite! (Not to belittle anything that Joe has done in setting up these sessions as they are great!) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround Mondays on Zoom From: Mrrzy Date: 10 Jul 20 - 07:55 PM I am all for not stopping these! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround Mondays on Zoom From: Joe Offer Date: 10 Jul 20 - 08:10 PM Yeah, we used to do this in the 1990s with primitive technology. Now it's so easy. I think we need to keep this going forever. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround Mondays on Zoom From: YorkshireYankee Date: 12 Jul 20 - 11:09 PM Thanks to Mrrzy and Tattie Bogle for the kind words. SPB-Cooperator, your song sounds like fun! It's really been fabulous getting to see and hear the people behind the online names, and hear some gorgeous singing and wonderful songs. Echoing the thanks to Joe, Noreen and Casey for doing the nuts and bolts that make this possible! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround Mondays on Zoom From: Joe Offer Date: 13 Jul 20 - 03:19 AM This thread is getting pretty long, but I think I'd like to preserve it as the go-to place for the singaround. Feel free to post whatever you like here (especially lyrics to songs you have sung or will sing), but I'll probably move most messages over two weeks old to our overflow thread (click). I'm having the best time at this Monday singaround. My big black dog Madeleine loves it, too, and she often comes into my office to listen while we're singing. -Joe- |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround on Zoom - Mondays From: Richard Mellish Date: 14 Jul 20 - 06:04 AM Joe said > Feel free to post whatever you like here (especially lyrics to songs you have sung or will sing) Here's the one that I sang last night, North Sea Oil Down by the North Sea shore, a while before now, While seeking me fortune and rambling around, I met a little mermaid, very pretty as I recall And I asked this fond creature where I might find oil. "Well I know a little oil well not very far from here And I've been watching over it with the tenderest care And no-one's been near there since I was a child And I think you'd find profit to drill there a while." So I set up my rig and I made a fine stand, And this sweet little creature gave me a helping hand, Saying "Daddy, oh Daddy, it makes my blood boil When you set up your rig to go boring for oil." Well I kissed this little creature ten thousand times o'er As we toiled there together all on the sea shore, With a pillow under her fish-tail, for fear it should soil. I spat on me auger and went boring for oil. Well I hadn't been drilling three minutes or four. At a few inches depth, boys, the gusher did pour. And she wriggled and giggled, and she said with a smile "Oh bear down on that auger, for I think you've struck oil." But it was just a few days after, a thought came in me head, For the end of that auger was rusty and red. And I took it to the doctor, and he said with a smile "I think you struck shale when boring for oil." I got it from my own recording of Bert at Dingle's Folk Club in London on 4th April 1973. I have deliberately not checked the above words against the recording, so feel free to spot any folk-processing that I may have done over the years. In his introduction he refers to earlier versions, so maybe I was wrong in saying that this is one that was entirely his own work rather than his improved version of an existing song, but I suspect that in this form it is mostly his work. Then again, maybe someone would like to go looking for the earlier versions. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround on Zoom - Mondays From: YorkshireYankee Date: 14 Jul 20 - 08:26 PM Here's the link I mentioned last night: FOLK SONG AND MUSIC HALL The intersection of folk and music hall, the songs and social history http://folksongandmusichall.com/ It's the creation of John Baxter: "This site features a collection of Songs sung in the Music Halls, the stories of those songs and the people who sang them, and how these songs relate to traditional music of the British Isles. I hope it will encourage people to sing the songs, so where possible I include videos and links to sheet music . "It also has my blog about the social history of Music Hall. I hope to comment on various ways in which it relates to the social history of folksong. I am mostly bringing together information found by others – though I occasionally delve in Victorian newspapers..." Really been enjoying these sessions; great songs, great singing! Thanks again to Joe, Noreen and Casey. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround on Zoom - Mondays From: YorkshireYankee Date: 14 Jul 20 - 08:44 PM Oops, forgot to turn the link into a blue clicky... FOLK SONG AND MUSIC HALL: The intersection of folk and music hall... |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround on Zoom - Mondays From: Noreen Date: 15 Jul 20 - 05:17 AM Thanks Vikki! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround on Zoom - Mondays From: Mysha Date: 15 Jul 20 - 09:01 AM Folk Song And Music Hall |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround on Zoom - Mondays From: Monique Date: 16 Jul 20 - 02:54 AM Isn't that a great idea? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround on Zoom-Today!!! From: GUEST,Gerry Date: 20 Jul 20 - 08:22 PM Here are the lyrics I used for Do Youi Think That I Do Not Know. Do you think that I do not know Henry Lawson They say that I never have written of love, as a writer of songs should do They say that I never could touch the strings with a touch that is firm and true They say I know nothing of women and men in the fields where Love's roses grow I must write, they say, with a halting pen do you think that I do not know? My love-burst came, like an English Spring, in days when our hair was brown And the hem of her skirt was a sacred thing and her hair was an angel's crown The shock when another man touched her arm, where the dancers sat in a row The hope, the despair, and the false alarm do you think that I do not know By the arbour lights on the western farms, you remember the question put While you held her warm in your quivering arms and you trembled from head to foot The electric shock from her finger-tips, and the murmuring answer low The soft, shy yielding of warm red lips do you think that I do not know She was buried at Brighton, where Gordon sleeps, when I was a world away And the sad old garden its secret keeps, for nobody knows to-day She left a message for me to read, where the wild wide oceans flow Do you know how the heart of a man can bleed do you think that I do not know I stood by the grave where the dead girl lies, when the sunlit scenes were fair Neath white clouds high in the autumn skies, and I answered the message there But the haunting words of the dead to me shall go wherever I go She lives in the Marriage that Might Have Been do you think that I do not know I used a tune by Chris Kempster. Another well-known musical setting is by Slim Dusty. Best recording, for my money, was by Declan Affley. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround on Zoom-Today!!! From: GUEST,Gerry Date: 20 Jul 20 - 08:30 PM Here are the lyrics I sang for Tumba-bloody-rumba. TUMBA-BLOODY-RUMBA He looked for work at muster-time, we tried him as a rider, We tried him as the rouseabout and as the cook’s off-sider. He said he'd sailed the seven seas, he’d been up in Alaska, He’d been in every western state from Texas to Nebraska. Chorus (repeat after each stanza): He said he’d shorn a sheep or two and cut a bit of lumber, And waged war on the kangaroos at Tumba-bloody-rumba. We tried him as a shearer, we tried him as a stacker, We tried him digging rabbits out. He wasn’t worth a cracker. He had a shop in Singapore, he owned a pearling lugger, He was a champ at baccarat, Australian Rules and rugger. He never showed his aptitude at jobs he was allotted, But showed his skill upon the booze, and cigarettes he blotted. He said he’d climbed the Matterhorn, he’d been a union leader, And years ago in Adelaide he was a pigeon breeder. We tried him digging fencing posts, we tried to find his caper, Until that happy pay-day when he got his piece of paper. I wonder what he's up to now, perhaps back on the lumber, Or shooting kanga-bloody-roos at Tumba-bloody-rumba. Authorship in dispute, set to music by Warren Fahey. If you want the tune, there's a recording by Warren on Youtube. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround on Zoom-Today!!! From: SPB-Cooperator Date: 21 Jul 20 - 05:18 AM Is Lawson alluding to Adam Lindsay Gordon's romance with Jane Bridges throughout the poem? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround on Zoom-Today!!! From: SPB-Cooperator Date: 21 Jul 20 - 05:26 AM SOng/Parody lesson 101 - If you are going to perform what you have written, make sure that the tune is within your vocal range (as I learned out last night!!!!). |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround on Zoom-Today!!! From: GUEST,Gerry Date: 21 Jul 20 - 05:31 AM SPB, the reference to Gordon in the 4th stanza is, indeed, to the poet Adam Lindsay Gordon, but the interpretation I've heard is that the poem has more to do with Lawson's relationship with Hannah Thorburn. She died just six weeks before Lawson & his wife, Bertha, arrived back in Australia from two years in England. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround on Zoom-Today!!! From: Stilly River Sage Date: 21 Jul 20 - 07:49 AM Gerry and all who are just discovering Mudcat: You need to join (write to Joe@Mudcat.org). Guests are welcome to search and use the site, but membership does offer a few extra perks. And by all means, poke around and find the lyrics we already have here. It'll save you a little time reposting them. For example, Gerry, Lawson's poem Do You Think I Do Not Know is an example already in the DT. You are liable to find lyrics there you want to start using! Good to see all of the new names and faces yesterday. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround on Zoom-Today!!! From: Stilly River Sage Date: 21 Jul 20 - 07:59 AM Gerry, I also found the thread discussing Tumba-bloody-rumba and posted a link back to your post here, but putting the lyrics there would be helpful. For newcomers to Mudcat, we have the "Lyrics & Knowledge Search" for keywords and song titles. Use as few words as you think will bring up results and if it doesn't work the first time Max added a supersearch that hoovers up stuff all over Mudcat and the Internet. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround on Zoom-Monday!!! From: Joe Offer Date: 21 Jul 20 - 01:45 PM If there are songs posted here, they will eventually be moved to a thread for that particular song. So, free to post lyrics here, and I'll move them in good time. We don't currently have a way of correcting the Digital Tradition Folk Song Database (DT), and maybe it's a good idea to leave it as Dick Greenhaus left it when he died. I am gradually trying to ensure that there is a thread to cover every song or family of songs in the DT. The best place to look for correct lyrics is in the threads, not in the DT. If the lyrics in a thread have proper title, songwriter, and source information, you can be reasonably sure they're correct. If the title is allcaps and bold and large, that means it has been reviewed for correctness. -Joe- I will use this thread as the permanent notification thread for the singaround. As messages get out of date, I'll move them to the overflow thread or to song threads. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround on Zoom-Monday!!! From: Bearheart Date: 22 Jul 20 - 06:00 PM Still hoping someone else who feels motivated will figure out a Thursday Mudcat sing... I already host 2 other Zoom sessions on Monday and Wednesday nights and I am getting ready to start hosting a monthly ballad session for the local group that had been meeting in my living room prior to COVID. So I'm a bit maxxed out on putting something together. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround - Doors open NOW!!!! From: Joe Offer Date: 27 Jul 20 - 06:08 PM Sung by Chris Lamb today. Zoom Song By Ruairidh Greig Chorus Off we go it’s time for a Zoom, A poem, a song or even a tune. Off we go, it’s time for a Zoom, Meeting together but not in one room. Coronavirus has split us asunder But thanks to this program, it’s really a wonder We can all get together, though many miles apart And share our performances straight from the heart. Make sure you’ve selected “Original Sound” It’s quite beneficial, most people have found And try to sit with some light on your face Your grins and your grimaces might go to waste. Always remember be nice to your host If you forget, you will suffer the most And if you don’t mute when you know that you should You may well find you’ve been muted for good. Please don’t make your intro too long, It shouldn’t go on and on and on. There’s plenty of others still waiting to sing So don’t be a Zoom Hog, it isn’t the thing. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround - On Zoom Mondays From: Noreen Date: 28 Jul 20 - 05:45 AM Some feedback from the most recent sing on Monday 27th July. I made a note of 55 names who joined in, not all singing/performing as audience are welcome too. People started arriving at 7.30pm UK time for a chat and sound checks as necessary. Singing started at 8pm (or so) and carried on until well after midnight when I had to go get some sleep. People are numbered on arrival and get an opportunity to sing in order, though we can be flexible for those who have to leave early etc. Joe tries to allow everyone to have two songs throughout the night, and latecomers will always have a chance to sing at least once. It is amazing to see so many Mudcatters from around the world in all their different time zones, weather conditions and surroundings. I'm loving it! It's never going to be ideal timing for everyone worldwide. The sing does however continue for over 4 hours- 8pm to well after midnight UK time- so there is a chance for those from many time zones to take part. We have had regular participants from Australia, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Ireland, Israel, New Zealand, UK and USA which is quite an achievement! And a Pole in Scotland :) (OK, who have I forgotten this time?!) So, feel free to pop in next Monday (or Tuesday morning in the antipodes), you will be very welcome! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround - On Zoom Mondays From: Richard Mellish Date: 28 Jul 20 - 11:52 AM After last week's singaround I forgot to post the words of the song that I had sung, and I've now remembered. I had folk-processed it a little, but here it is as sung by Adam McNaughtan, whose song it is. Old Annie Brown Oh Glasgow is ruthless: our town can be cruel tae its own And Glasgow's indifference left an old woman alone. Six months she lay dead, before her body was found. Fa' the Calton she came And her name It was Old Annie Brown. She had stayed in the East End o' Glasgow for all of her days. Looked after her folks when her brothers were wed and away. And Annie was fifty when she saw her mother laid down. There was never the chance o' a man For Old Annie Brown So she thought she would stay in the Calton that she knew sae well. But the city was changing, faster than Annie could tell. And the people who could moved out as the district came down. There were few neighbours there To care About Old Annie Brown Now she bought all her food in a big London Road superstore. And the manager said "We get old folk in here by the score. So how should I notice if one of them isn't around? But record my regret For the death Of Old Annie Brown". Dae you know the old woman that stays five or six doors away. What would you do if you didn't see her today? If you missed her all week would you, maybe, take a look round? Don't wait till you miss her Her name might be Old Annie Brown. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround - On Zoom Mondays From: Rex Date: 28 Jul 20 - 12:49 PM Many thanks to Joe and the other hosts who set this up. Good to do something with my fellow 'Catters again. I sang the following popularly known as the Gol Darned Wheel. I present it here as written by James Barton Adams, The Cowboy and the Wheel in 1897. My version was truncated in deference to many more performers with songs to sing. The Cowboy and the Wheel - James Barton Adams From The Denver Evening Post: Thursday, April 29, 1897. I kin take the toughest broncho in the wild an' wooly West, An' kin back him an' kin ride him, let him do his level best; I kin handle any critter ever wore a coat o' hair, An' I've had a lively tussle with a 'tarnal grizzly bear. I kin rope an' throw a long-horn o' the wildest Texas brand, An' in Injun disagreements I kin play a leadin' hand; But at last I met my master, an' I shorely had to squeal, When the boys got me a-straddle of a Gol darned wheel. It was at the Eagle Rancho on the Brazos whar' I fust Run across the durn contrivance 'at upset me in the dust- Natrally up an' throwed me, stood me on my cussed head, "Trumped my ace in lightin' order," so old Ike, the foreman, said. 'Twas a tenderfoot 'at brought it; he was wheelin' all the way From the sunrise end o' freedom out to San Francisco Bay. An' he tied up at the rancho fur to git outside a meal, Never thinkin' we would monkey with his Gol darned wheel. Arizony Jim begun it, when he said to Jack McGill There was fellers fo'ced the limit braggin' o' their ridin' skill, An' he reckoned there's a puncher not a million miles away As imagined as a rider he was tolerable gay. Then he ventured the admission that same fellow as he meant Was a purty handy critter, fur as ridin' bronchos went, But he'd find he was a buckin' 'ginst a dif'rent sort o' deal Ef he'd throw his leather leggin's 'crost that Gol darned wheel. Sich a slur upon my talent made me hotter 'n a mink, An' I told him I could back it fur amusement or fur chink; That 'twas nothin' but a plaything fur the kids an' that he mout Have his idees sort o' shattered if he'd trot the critter out. Then they helt it till I mounted, an' I give the word to go, An' the shove they give to start me wa'n't unreasonably slow. But I never split a cuss-word, never made a bit o' squeal- I was buildin' repatation on that Gol darned wheel. The grade was mighty slopin' from the rancho to the creek, An' we went a galleyflutin', like a crazy lightnin streak, Went a whizzin' an' a dartin', fust to this side, then to that, The contrivance sort o' wobblin' like the flyin' of a bat. I kep' pullin' on the handles, but I couldn't check it up, Yanked an' sawed an' jerked an' hollered, but the durn thing wouldn't stop. An' a sort o' sneakin' idee through my brain begun to steal That the devil helt a mortgage on that Gol darned wheel. Holy Moses and the prophets, how we split the Texas air! The breezes made whip crackers o' my somewhat lengthy hair. An' I sort o' comprehended as, adown the hill we went, There was bound to be a smash-up 'at I couldn't circumvent. Them cow-punchers kep' a-yellin', "Stay right with her, Uncle Bill!" "Hit 'er with the spurs, you sucker!" "Turn her muzzle up the hill!" But I never made an answer; I jest let the cusses squeal- My attention was all focussed on that Gol darned wheel. I've a sort o' dim and hazy recollection o' the stop- O' the airth a spinnin' round me, an' the stars all tangled up, Then there come a intermission, which extended till I found I was lyin' at the rancho, with the boys all gethered 'round. An' a medico was sewin' on my skin whar' it was ripped, An' ol' Arizony whispered, "Wal, ol' boy, I guess yer whipped," An' I told him I war' busted from sombrero cl'ar to heel- Then he grinned an' said, "You'd orter 'see the Gol darned wheel." |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround - On Zoom Mondays From: GUEST,Rob Mad Jock Wright Date: 31 Jul 20 - 11:13 AM in a good attempt to keep musicians active their Sunday Social going and of course a bit of focus on the Twa Tams Bar in Perth Scotland, the owners Mad Ferret invite regulars to zap in a tune or two. They then select and stream on Sundays. It is a bit of fun and the quality of the music like that played at the Twa Tams is usually high. So if you want a listen catch it live Sundays around 5.00pm or 6 pm if things go awry. Or you can get it on Youtube somewhere by searching. They sometimes have a 'raffle' the first to message once they start gets a prize. One week it was a toilet roll! The next it was a toilet seat (new of course)! So you can tell that it is a bit of fun. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround - On Zoom Mondays From: GUEST,Rob Mad Jock Wright Date: 31 Jul 20 - 11:14 AM Oh that is UK time by the way. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround - On Zoom Mondays From: Joe Offer Date: 03 Aug 20 - 09:00 PM Another lovely gathering. Thank you all for coming. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround - On Zoom Mondays From: GUEST,Gerry Date: 04 Aug 20 - 03:51 AM Joe, the lyrics you posted in chat for The Swaggies Have All Waltzed Matilda Away are fine, with just two corrections. In the last verse, "Coolies" should be "Koori". Koori is the name the Aboriginal people of New South Wales use to describe themselves. And the fellow who wrote the song was Alistair Hulett, with a double t at the end. Thanks again for putting the show on. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround - On Zoom Mondays From: SPB-Cooperator Date: 10 Aug 20 - 11:29 AM found it in an email I don;t use that much any more |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Worldwide Singaround - On Zoom Mondays From: GUEST Date: 10 Aug 20 - 02:21 PM Where the hell is the link? elizabethblock@netzero.net |
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