Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 21 Oct 20 - 05:09 AM Henry Lawson - On The Night Train Have you seen the bush by moonlight, from the train, go running by? Blackened log and stump and sapling, ghostly trees all dead and dry; Here a patch of glassy water; there a glimpse of mystic sky? Have you heard the still voice calling — yet so warm, and yet so cold: “I’m the Mother-Bush that bore you! Come to me when you are old” Did you see the Bush below you sweeping darkly to the Range, All unchanged and all unchanging, yet so very old and strange! While you thought in softened anger of the things that did estrange? Did you hear the Bush a-calling, when your heart was young and bold: “I’m the Mother-Bush that nursed you; come to me when you are old" In the cutting or the tunnel, out of sight of stock or shed, Did you hear the grey Bush calling from the pine-ridge overhead: “You have seen the seas and cities — all is cold to you, or dead — All seems done and all seems told, but the grey-light turns to gold! I’m the Mother-Bush that loves you — come to me now you are old” Henry's last poem my favourite version On the night train, download here from Chloe & Jason's website support live music! Slim Dusty's version on youtube |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 21 Oct 20 - 05:22 AM Bluey Brink from Mark Gregory's Australian Folk Songs There once was a shearer by name Bluey Brink A devil for work and a terror for drink He could shear a full hundred each day without fear And drink without winking four gallons of beer Now Jimmy the barman who served out the drink He hated the sight of this here Bluey Brink Who stayed much too late and who came much too soon At morning, at evening, at night and at noon One day as Jimmy was cleaning the bar With sulphuric acid he kept in a jar Along comes this shearer a bawling with thirst Saying whatever you've got Jim just give me the first Now it aint in the history, you wont find it in print But that shearer drunk acid with never a wink Saying that's the stuff Jimmy why strike me stone dead This'll make me the ringer of Stephenson's shed All through that long day as he served up the beer Poor Jimmy was sick with his trouble and fear Too anxious to argue too worried to fight He saw that poor shearer a corpse in his fright But early next morning when he opened the door Well there was that shearer a yelling for more With his eyebrows all singed and his whiskers deranged And holes in hide hide like a dog with the mange. Says Jimmy and how did you find the new stuff? Says Bluey it's fine but I've not had enough It gives me great courage to shear and to fight But why does that stuff set me whiskers alight? I thought I knew grog, but I must have been wrong The stuff that you gave me was proper and strong It set me to coughing and you know I'm no liar But every damn cough set me whiskers on fire video by 4 Bush Music Club members led by Doug (who was born in America in case you noticed his accent!) |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 21 Oct 20 - 08:19 PM Sandra, R-J sent me a copy of your list. Many thanks. Here is a link to Schumann's rendition of 'Second class wait here'. John Schumann & Vagabonds --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 21 Oct 20 - 08:44 PM A PROUDER MAN THAN YOU (Henry Lawson) If you fancy that your people came of better stock than mine If you hint of higher breeding by a word or by a sign If you're proud because of fortune or the clever things you do Then I'll play no second fiddle: I'm a prouder man than you If you think that your profession has the more gentility And that you are condescending to be seen along with me If you notice that I'm shabby while your clothes are spruce and new You have only got to hint it: I'm a prouder man than you If you have a swell companion when you see me on the street And you think that I'm too common for your toney friend to meet So that I, in passing closely, fail to come within your view Then be blind to me for ever: I'm a prouder man than you If your character be blameless, if your outward past be clean While 'tis known my antecedents are not what they should have been Do not risk contamination, save your name whatever you do `Birds o' feather fly together': I'm a prouder bird than you Keep your patronage for others, gold and station cannot hide Friendship that can laugh at fortune, friendship that can conquer pride Offer this as to an equal -- let me see that you are true And my wall of pride is shattered: I am not so proud as you Youtube clip --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: GUEST Date: 21 Oct 20 - 09:48 PM CLAIR (W.Evans/Trad) The diggings are silent, the miners have gone Far away, far away, far away, who knows where But I cling to the silence where once the sun shone On my dear love, my true love, my own love, my Clair It’s wicked for women whose menfolk seek gold Far away, far away, far away in the wild In the scorch of the summer and winter’s sharp cold With my family, my dear wife, and my only child Our shanty was sacking on a mulga wood frame Far away, far away, far away city lights But my Clair made it homely and she never complained Of the hardships, discomfort and darkness and frights My little one faded, my Clair also died Far away, far away, far away without aid For my gold fever killed them, I sat and I cried For their pardon, with sorrow, for long I have paid Now the diggings are silent, I stay here alone Far away, far away, far away with my Clair And the gold that I glean gilds the roughly hewn stone For my whole life, my Clair, and my dear child lie there Recitation of poem by Wendy Evans with instrumental backing: Youtube clip --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 21 Oct 20 - 11:24 PM Bugger, I did it again today and yesterday - I cleared web data after banking and forgot to log in again. Most of the 'Guest' posts to this thread are from yours truly. I will attempt to do better. Another fine song from Bob McNeill with Kenny Rich, a Scot from Orkney who also made NZ home. The duo performed and recorded as Ben the Hoose. Their focus was mainly on Scottish traditional dance music. A note on the sleeve of their album 'a little cascade': The people here are Scots. They stopped here on their way to heaven, thinking they had arrived.Mark Twain in NZ 1895. NORWAY YAWL (Bob McNeill) There were men that my father knew Worked oars as well as a plough Strong men who came home like the waves on the shore But these old men are all gone now The Norway yawls lie tattered and broken On the earth where these old men now lie They have earned their sleep but I would keep hold Of the life that with them has died Chorus: And there are no men left in Derry None in Donegal There are no men left on Islay Build me a Norway yawl They fished the grounds off Ardara Took the herring from off Tory Isle But the old men have all gone now And we can't believe our time Chorus We have not the life of the fisherman And our hardships are nothing besides Our hands are not battered and frozen Upon oars opposing the tide Chorus Ran the yawls from St John's to Port Ellen Rathlin, Port Stewart and Glengad Tory and Derry and Moville between The lines that are part of our past Chorus Youtube clip Note by Ben the Hoose: The Norway yawls were open fishing boats built on the north coast of Ireland and inshore Scottish islands. The boats vanished from the water in the 1950s but are often seen on the coast, used as sheep shelters and the like. Donal MacPolin described the men who crewed them as 'the last waves on the seashore'. Additional info: In the case of the Norway yawl, these boats were entirely open and double-ended, that is sharp at both stem and stern. Dimensions for this type varied slightly, but they usually had a keel length of 18-20 feet with a beam of 5.5-6 feet. (McCaughan, 1982, 178) The yawls were primarily used for line fishing and rowed with four oars but often set a lug or sprit sail. (Joe McClean, oral evidence) Norway yawls were regarded as safe, service-able boats and could be easily hauled out of the water by two men. (Malcolm Collins, oral evidence) As the name suggests these boats were imported direct from Norway but were modified in Ireland by the addition of one or two 'strakes'. (McCaughan, 1982, 176) Commentators have suggested that by the 1840's these boats were in some areas coming to the end of their working lives. The explanation was believed to lie in the decline of the timber trade with Norway brought on by raising duties on Baltic timber. (Davis, 1979, 46) This effected the shipment of Norway yawls as they were brought in with the timber cargoes. From here --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 22 Oct 20 - 12:33 AM WILLIAM CONQUEST TURLAND another excellent song from John Warner (1995) William Turland was a magnificent character who made his place in the history of Lambing Flat by pick and shovel: the first to pave the streets in front of his business, to plant shade-trees on the street, a baker, blacksmith, farrier, horsecoper and hotel owner, with a subtle touch at the sly grog still. The impression we gained of Hannah was of an equal and powerful influence. This story, from early in their lives, was told to John by Pat Emmett who was particularly moved by it. The town of Lambing Flat is now known as Young. The tune is a version of the Scarborough Settler's Laments. I'm William Conquest Turland, and when I was young and bold, I left old Market Harborough to mine Australian gold. I saw the rebel banner hoist, the fight at Ballarat, And I loved and married Hannah in the town of Lambing Flat. I forged the picks, I shoed the hacks, I laboured in the heat, My Hannah bore two children, we thought our joy complete, Then gold was found at Grenfell, the Lachlan side nor'west, And so, like fools drawn to a snare, we followed with the rest. But fever took the children, their skins were clammy wet. It turned like iron in the heart to hear them moan and fret. We washed them, cooled them, prayed for them, and ached to hear their cries; At length a sullen silence fell and the bitter drone of flies. I dug two graves beside the creek where old Dick's bridge now stands, And I can still feel Hannah's grasp a-trembling in my hands, The road ahead holds children, home and labour, land and friend, But I held Hannah, sobbing hard, where one road found its end. So let the Lachlan keep its gold or others make their pile. We'll go no further down this track, but tend their graves the while, For earth can yield no fairer prize, however rich the lode Than the wealth we gave back to the soil along the Grenfell road. mudcatter Daniel Kelly singing William Conquest Turland |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 22 Oct 20 - 12:38 AM DRUNKS' EXPRESS © John Warner 6/04/93 I'll tell you all of the roaring day, In Korumburra town on a Friday. From Jeetho out to Jumbunna way Folks came in for to spend their pay In Korumburra town on a Friday. The lads knocked off at the mining site, To shop and gossip, drink and fight From four o'clock till around midnight, In Korumburra town on a Friday. And it's 'Oh my darlin' Clementine', As the Drunks' Express lurches up the line, Taking the lads back to Outtrim Mine From Korumburra town on a Friday. Now you could see it from the train ... The miner's friend, the council's bane, The sly grog shanty run by Kane ... Now Old Kane was a cunning coot, His whiskey source still in dispute, And girls were there of strange repute ... At one of the pubs where the miners meet ... Comes the sound of voices raised in heat, And a body hurled out onto the street ... The body lies there, out for ten, It looks like young Joe Kane again, You shouldn't argue with mining men ... Eleven o'clock and they close the bars ... The drunks are singing to the moon and stars As they pack them into the railway cars ... Tomorrow they'll wake up sore and sick, To work off with the shovel and pick, The aches they've earned and the wounds they lick ... The case is heard at ten o'clock ... Now hear the courtroom gavel knock, For young Joe Kane standing in the dock ... Says Judge, 'A ten bob fine I think, Or thirty days in the local clink, For the things you did when worse for drink ... |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 22 Oct 20 - 12:44 AM MINER'S WASHIN' © John Warner 10/08/92 I came from Durham in '99, Married a laddie from the Coal Creek mine, The finest lad that a girl could ever know, Till he brought me his washin' from the pit below. Scrubbing the miner's clothes, Scrubbing the miner's clothes, All piled up in a ghastly stack, Heavy as lead, and smelly and black, And oh the pain in my aching back, Scrubbing the miner's clothes. Now your Korumburra miner is a grimy sort of bloke, So I drop in his duds for an all night soak. I'll take me a soap and I'll grate it like a cheese, And chuck it in a bucket with his grubby dungarees. I get me up before the peep o' light My copper for to fill and my fire for to light, I'll serve Tom his crib while the copper's on the boil, Then gird up my muscles for a day's hard toil. It's drag 'em from the copper to the rinsing tub, Pound 'em with the dolly and scrub, scrub, scrub, Pour away the mucky water, do it all again, Heave 'em through the wringer and pray it doesn't rain. Beyond Kardella, the sky's looking fine, Basket up the washing to the old clothes line, I'll bet when it's hung out and I've heaved up the prop, The rain'll come a pourin' and the wind will drop. Now all you maidens who to marriage do incline, Never wed a laddie from the Coal Creek mine, A squatter might be surly, a merchant might be mean, A banker might be boring, but they're easier to clean. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: GUEST Date: 22 Oct 20 - 06:05 PM Sandra, you have doubled up on 'Miner's washing'. R-J posted it in September - No 110 on your list. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 22 Oct 20 - 06:59 PM STRINGYBARK CREEK (Anon) A sergeant and three constables set out from Mansfield town Near the end of last October for to hunt the Kellys down They started for the Wombat Hills and thought it quite a lark When they camped upon the borders of a creek called Stringybark They had grub and ammunition there to last them many a week, And next morning two of them rode out, all to explore the creek, Leaving Mclntyre behind them at the camp to cook the grub And Lonergan to sweep the floor and boss the washing-tub. It was shortly after breakfast Mac thought he heard a noise So gun in hand he sallied out to try and find the cause, But he never saw the Kellys planted safe behind a log So he sauntered back to smoke and yarn and wire into the prog. But Ned Kelly and his comrades thought they'd like a nearer look, For being short of grub they wished to interview the cook; And of firearms and cartridges they found they had too few, So they longed to grab the pistols and ammunition too. Both the troopers at a stump alone they were well pleased to see Watching as the billies boiled to make their pints of tea; There they joked and chatted gaily never thinking of alarms Till they Heard the fearful cry behind, "Bail up, throw up your arms!" The traps they started wildly and Mac then firmly stood While Lonergan made tracks to try and gain the wood, Reaching round for his revolver, but before he touched the stock Ned Kelly pulled the trigger, fired, and dropped him like a rock. Then after searching McIntyre all through the camp they went- And cleared the guns and cartridges and pistols from the tent, But brave Kelly muttered sadly as he loaded up his gun, "Oh, what a ... pity that the ... tried to run." 'Twas later in the afternoon the sergeant and his mate Came riding blithely through the bush to meet a cruel fate. "The Kellys have the drop on you!" cried McIntyre aloud, But the troopers took it as a joke and sat their horses proud. Then trooper Scanlan made a move his rifle to unsling, But to his heart a bullet sped and death was in the sting; Then Kennedy leapt from his mount and ran for cover near, And fought, a game man to the last, for all that life held dear. The sergeant's horse raced from the camp alike from friend and foe, And McIntyre, his life at stake, sprang to the saddle-bow And galloped far into the night, a haunted, harassed soul, Then like a hunted bandicoot hid in a wombat hole. At dawn of day he hastened forth and made for Mansfield town To break the news that made men vow to shoot the bandits down, So from that hour the Kelly gang was hunted far and wide, Like outlawed dingoes of the wild until the day they died. Above is the full ballad as printed at pp41-42 of Times House edition of Stewart & Keesing's 'Australian Bush Ballads'. Most renditions are shortened and amended. Here is one by Gary Shearston: Youtube clip Another song about Stringybark Creek from John Munro's 'The Kelly Collection': Click --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 22 Oct 20 - 07:31 PM POOR NED Chorus: Poor Ned, you're better off dead At least you'll get some peace of mind You're out on the track They're right on your back Boy, they're 'gonna hang you high Eighteen hundred and seventy eight Was the year I remember so well They put my father in an early grave Slung my mother in gaol Now I don't know what's right or wrong But they hung Christ on nails Six kids at home and two still on the breast They wouldn't even give her bail Chorua You know I wrote a letter 'Bout Stringybark Creek So they would understand That I might be a bushranger But I'm not a murdering man I didn't want to shoot Kennedy Or that copper Lonnigan He alone could have saved his life By throwing down his gun Chorus You know they took Ned Kelly And they hung him in the Melbourne gaol He fought so very bravely Dressed in iron mail And no man single-handed Can hope to break the bars It's a thousand like Ned Kelly Who'll hoist the flag of stars Chorus Those are the lyrics for Redgum's version which is probably the best-known one in Oz. Redgum For a full discussion of the provenance of this song check out this Mudcat thread, particularly the contributions by Bob Bolton: Click The Lucas/Fotheringay rendition: Fotheringay --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 22 Oct 20 - 07:53 PM LONG RUN (John Schumann) You look out your window at the cold grey dawn It's seven o'clock on a Monday morning Pour a cup of coffee, better make it a strong one Weather man on the radio says It's going to rain and it's going to blow But i'll be all right, it'll be all right, it'll be all right in the long run Australia marched out of Vietnam Out on the streets against Uncle Sam, We won the fight, it was a long one Uranium demo the other day One of my mates got dragged away As they slammed the door I heard her say It'll be all right in the long run Italian bloke who works with me We swap laughs and company And he slapped me on the back Said, ’You're wrong, son This isn't the land I was told it would be It's not so equal and not so free But i'll be all right, it'll be all right, it'll be all right in the long run’ From the shadow of history a convict screams The shearers curse, the people dream We've taken some right turns They've been the wrong ones Troop ships leave and the headlines blaze Australia remembers happier days And the faith lives on within the haze It'll be all right in the long run So you sit in your camp and you stare at the fire The doubts drop away as the hopes get higher And you sing to yourself It'll be all right, it'll be all right in the long run And the sun gives ground to a long cold night You screw your courage for another fight But you know in your heart That it’ll be all right, it'll be all right, it'll be all right in the long run And the sun streams in with power and might And you look at your kids in a different light And you know in your heart as you kiss them goodnight It'll be all right in the long run Youtube clip --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 22 Oct 20 - 10:20 PM BLACK SHEEP (W.Ogilvie/G.Jenkin) They shepherd the black sheep down to the ships Society's banned and cursed And the boys look back as the old land dips Some with a reckless laugh on their lips And some with a prayer reversed Chorus: And it's goodbye England, farewell love Maybe it's just as well When a man falls short of his heaven above That he drops to the uttermost hell Now the anchor lifts and the sails are set Now God to your help, black sheep For the gay world laughs, 'They will soon forget' But fired with the embers of old regret The brand of the world bites deep Chorus They turn the black sheep over the side To land on a stranger's shore To drift with the cities' human tide Or wander away where the rovers ride And the flagless legions war Chorus They bury the black sheep out in the bush And they bury them none too deep By the cattle camp or the last gold rush And the grass grows over them deep and lush And the bush winds sing them to sleep Final chorus: And it's goodbye sorrow, farewell strife Maybe it's just as well When a man goes down in the battle of life Then he shortens his road to hell Graham Jenkin put a tune to this Ogilvie poem - pp56-57 'Great Australian Balladists'. Note by Jenkin: Black sheep were young Britons who had disgraced themselves in one way or another, and who were sent as far away as possible in order that they may not bring further disgrace on the family. Australia, being at the opposite end of the world to Britain, was an ideal dumping ground, just as it had been for convicts before them. The black sheep, unlike most of the convicts, came from the wealthy classes and were referred to as 'remittance men' because many of them received a regular remittance from their families as payment for staying here. Although Ogilvie was a migrant, he was not a black sheep. Harry Morant was, and so was Adam Lindsay Gordon. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 23 Oct 20 - 02:22 AM oops, Stewie, I searched my list, but didn't screenshot the search (blush) Stringybakr Creek is now no.351 & Poor Ned is now followed by the attribution (Manifold, Redgum, Lucas ??????) speaking of John manifold, a recent article from the BMC blog From the Archives - Correspondence between West Sydney Singers & John Manifold |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 23 Oct 20 - 09:04 PM Thanks for the Manifold link. Together with a few other Darwin folkies, I spent a wonderful afternoon in a pub with the great man back when the world was young. Graham Jenkin also put a tune to this beaut ballad: THE WAYS ARE WIDE (E.J.Brady/G.Jenkin) Two women watched on a windy pier (Three turns and a line to pass) And one was the drunken skipper’s dear And one was a sailor’s lass The full o’ flood and the fall o’ tide There’s little to guide between But ways are wide where the seas divide Wi’ places to bide between Chorus: The sun rose red, but the night fell grey ?Cheer’ly men, her load-line’s low? Who drinks tomorrow may thirst today ? Cheer’ly men, still cheerily ho They trailed her out from the rowdy pier They turned her nose to the sea They lent their lungs to a burly cheer And speeded her merrily Her skipper rolled to his bunk dead-tight Her mate in the scuppers lay With a starboard red and a green port light To gladden them on their way Chorus They lit their lamps on the lonely pier As the twilight brought the rain And the skipper’s dear laughed long and clear But the other laughed in pain For woman is woman and man is man And the flesh it pricketh sore He carries his burden as best he can She carries her load and more Chorus Two women turned from the windy pier One hurried her home to weep But the skipper’s dear she was married next year To a bank account — and sheep The ship that sailed as the ship went down (Three turns and a rope to pass) Is posted ‘Lost’ and the grass goes brown On the grave o’ the sailor’s lass Final chorus: The dank ooze silts where the deep hulks lie ? Cheer’ly men, her load-line’s low ?For men may drown and women will die ?Cheer’ly men, still cheerily ho Tune: pp87-90 'The Great Australian Balladists'. Edwin James Brady --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 23 Oct 20 - 10:11 PM THE COACHMAN'S YARN (E.J.Brady/G.Jenkin) This is a tale that the coachman told. As he flicked the flies from Marigold And flattered and fondled Pharaoh. The sun swung low in the western skies: Out on a plain, just over a rise, Stood Nimitybell, on Monaro; Cold as charity, cold as hell. Bleak, bare, barren Nimmitybell - Nimitybell on Monaro. "Now this 'ere 'appended in' eighty-three, The coldest winter ever we see; Strewth, it was cold, as cold as could be, Out 'ere on Monaro; It froze the blankets, it froze the fleas, It froze the sap in the blinkin' trees, It made a grindstone out of cheese, Right 'ere in Monaro "Freezin' an' snowin'- ask the old hands; They seen, they knows, an' they understands, The ploughs was froze and the cattle brands, Down 'ere in Monaro. It froze our fingers and froze our toes I seen a passenger's breath so froze Icicles 'ung from 'is bloomin' nose Long as the tail on Pharaoh! I ketched a curlew down by the creek; His feet was froze to his blessed beak 'E stayed like that for over a week - That's cold on Monaro. Why, even the air got froze that tight You'd 'ear the awfullest sounds at night, When things was put to a fire or light, Out 'ere on Monaro. "For the sounds was froze. At Haydon's Bog A cove 'e cross-cut a big back-log, An' carted 'er 'ome ('e wants a jog - Stiddy, go stiddy there, Pharaoh!) As soon as his log begins to thaw They 'ears the sound of the cross-cut saw A-thawin'out. Yes, his name was Law. Old hands, them Laws, on Monaro. "The second week of this'ere cold snap I'm drivin' the coach. A Sydney chap, 'E strikes this part o' the bloomin' map, A new hand 'ere on Monaro. 'Is name or game I never heard tell, But' e gets off at Nimmitybell Blowin' like Bluey, freezin' like 'ell At Nimitybell on Monaro. "The drinks was froze, o' course, in the bar; They breaks a bottle of old Three Star, An' the barman sez, 'Now, there y'are, You can't beat that for Monaro!' The stranger bloke, 'e was tall an' thin, Sez,'strike me blue, but I think you win; We'll 'ave another an' I'll turn in - It's blitherin' cold on Monaro. 'E borrowed a book an' went to bed To read awhile, so the missus said, By the candle-light. 'E must ha' read (These nights is long on Monaro) Past closin' time, Then 'e starts an' blows The candle out but the wick 'ad froze! Leastways, thats what folks round 'ere suppose, Old hands as lived on Monaro. "So bein' tired, an' a stranger, new To these mountain ways. they think he threw 'Is coat on the wick, an' maybe too, Any old clothes 'e'd to spare. Oh, This ain't no fairy, an' don't you fret! Next day came warmer an' set in wet There's some out 'ere as can mind it yet, The real old 'ands on Monaro. "The wick must ha' thawed. The fire began At breakfast time. The neighbours all ran To save the pub ... an' forgot the man (Stiddy, go stiddy there, mare-oh). The pub was burned to the blanky ground-, 'Is buttons was all they ever found. The blinkin' cow 'e owed me a pound - From Cooma his blinkin' fare, oh! "That ain't no fairy, not what I've told; I'm gettin' shaky an' growin' old, An' I hope I never again see cold, Like that down 'ere on Monaro! " … He drives his horses, he drives them well, And this is the tale he loves to tell Nearing the town of Nimitybell, Nimitybell on Monaro. Above is the full text of this classic example of the 'tall tale' as printed in Stewart & Keesing 'Australian Bush Ballads' pp301-303. It was first published in 'The Bulletin' in April 1922. Jenkin's tune may be found at pp85-86 of 'Great Australian Balladists'. Jenkin shortens the ballad by omitting stanzas 3, 4 and 5. Nimmitybell is one of the ways the name of the town of Nimmitabel has been spelt. Nimmitabel NSW --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: GUEST Date: 23 Oct 20 - 10:56 PM THE SONG OF AUTUMN (A.L.Gordon/E.Elgar) Where shall we go for our garlands glad At the falling of the year When the burnt-up banks are yellow and sad When the boughs are yellow and sere? Where are the old ones that once we had And where are the new ones near? What shall we do for our garlands glad At the falling of the year? Child! can I tell where the garlands go? Can I say where the lost leaves veer On the brown-burnt banks, when the wild winds blow When they drift through the dead-wood drear? Girl! When the garlands of next year glow You may gather again, my dear— But I go where the last year’s lost leaves go At the falling of the year Elgar put music to this lovely poem by Adam Lindsay Gordon. The poem reminds me of one of my favourite poems by G.M Hopkins - 'Spring and Fall' to which Natalie Merchant has put a tune. Youtube clip Adam Lindsay Gordon --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 24 Oct 20 - 09:28 PM RACE FOR THE SUN (Bob McNeill) The western bays are all silent now The beaches we found Deserted now, the flowing tide Is the only sound Still I linger here and listen while These strange birds sing of oceans The nights are warm and the winters mild Not like on the island But I left my heart At a bend in the river Cold harbour behind us We took what we owned With the smell of the bark The spirit that lingers With what we could could carry In a race for the sun Sail on? You'll be safe now? Nothing lasts forever? Won't be the first time we've tried Between the heads we wrestle her In a mercy tide The run between the Cabot shores Was ever as wide But these island boys are all strangers here With their dreams of ocean The sea that pounds the eastern shore Not like on the island But I left my heart At a bend in the river We cut down the sumacs Turned them into boats With the smell of the bark On our clothes as we boarded Is all I remember Of our race for the sun Sail on? You'll be safe now? Nothing lasts forever? Won't be the first time we've tried Youtube clip --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 24 Oct 20 - 09:45 PM THE BUSHRANGERS (Edward Harrington) Four horseman rode out from the heart of the range Four horseman with aspects forbidding and strange They were booted and spurred, they were armed to the teeth And they frowned as they looked at the valley beneath As forward they rode through the rocks and the fern Ned Kelly, Dan Kelly, Steve Hart and Joe Byrne. Ned Kelly drew rein and he shaded his eyes 'The town's at our mercy! See yonder it lies! To hell with the troopers!' - he shook his clenched fist 'We will shoot them like dogs if they dare to resist!' And all of them nodded, grim-visaged and stern Ned Kelly, Dan Kelly, Steve Hart and Joe Byrne Through the gullies and creeks they rode silently down They stuck-up the station and raided the town They opened the safe and they looted the bank They laughed and were merry, they ate and they drank Then off to the ranges they went with their gold Oh! never were bandits more reckless and bold But time brings its punishment, time travels fast And the outlaws were trapped in Glenrowan at last Where three of them died in the smoke and the flame And Ned Kelly came back - to the last he was game But the Law shot him down (he was fated to hang) And that was the end of the bushranging gang Whatever their faults and whatever their crimes Their deeds lend romance to those faraway times They have gone from the gullies they haunted of old And nobody knows where they buried their gold To the ranges they loved they will never return Ned Kelly, Dan Kelly, Steve Hart and Joe Byrne But at times when I pass through that sleepy old town Where the far-distant peaks of Strathbogie look down I think of the days when those grim ranges rang To the galloping hooves of the bushranging gang. Though the years bring oblivion, time brings a change The ghosts of the Kellys still ride from the range Youtube clip Edward Harrington --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 24 Oct 20 - 10:00 PM THE FLASH STOCKMAN (Anon) I'm a stockman to me trade and they call me Ugly Dave I'm old and grey and only got one eye In the yard I'm good, of course, but just put me on a horse I'll go where lots of young 'uns daren't try I've led 'em through the gidgee over country rough and ridgy I'll loose them in the very worst of scrub I can ride both rough and easy, with a brumby I'm a daisy And a rightdown bobby-dazzler in a pub Just watch me use the whip, I can give the dawdlers gyp I can make the flamin' echoes roar and ring With a branding-iron, well, I'm a perfect flamin' swell In fact I'm duke of every blasted thing To watch me skin a sheep, it's so perfect you could weep I can act the silvertail as if my blood was blue You could strike me pink or dead, if I stood upon me head I'd be just as good as any other two I've a notion in me pate that it's luck, it isn't fate That I'm so far above the common run So, in everything I do, you could cut me square in two For I'm much two flamin' good to be in one Youtube clip --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 24 Oct 20 - 10:49 PM THE ROAD TO NULLAGINE (Grieg/Abbott) I am with a survey party in the place that God forgot And for White Australia it's the daddy of the lot There ain't a drop of water anywhere along the line There ain't no shady places on the road to Nullagine Chorus: I've tasted life in No Man's Land, I've fed the flies outback I've tramped with empty tucker bags on Lawson's lonely track I've toiled in northern Queensland where I thought the sun could shine But no mistake, this takes the cake, the road to Nullagine With a jigger on my shoulder and a waterbag in hand I'm tramping' through the spinifex and ploughing up the sand I'm sopping wet with honest sweat and salty as the brine I'm boiled and baked and roasted on the road to Nullagine When I wake up in the mornings, a swarm of hungry flies Are trying to bore out holes in the corners of my eyes I'm prickly heat from head to foot, this old frame of mine Has had the dengue fever on the road to Nullagine It's headaches, toothaches, bung eyes in a sling Barcoo rot and God knows what - I can't eat anything I'm all wrapped up in bandages, tied up with bits of twine I'm like a walking leper on the road to Nullagine One day I drank some water, 'twas from a scalding well And very shortly after I felt inclined to yell A burning hot sensation ran up and down my spine I thought I was a gonner on the road to Nullagine It's hermit crab and cock-eyed bobs, tinned dog and kangaroo A change of diet once a month, boiled mutton or a stew If we crave for pig or poultry when we're sitting down to dine We thank the Lord for all we've got on the road to Nullagine One night I went to Marble Bar, 'twas shortly after dark And all the mongs for miles around came at me with a bark I had a drop of amber, a shilling every time There ain't no pots for sixpence on the road to Nullagine It's public bars and fat cigars and let your sugar scoot And decorate your wardrobe with a white pearl-button shirt If you wear the good old dungarees and hobnails number nine They class you as a nigger on the road to Nullagine I've seen some queerish places I thought God had forgot Out in the never-never where we used to call it hot But this little bit o' country when old sol comes out to shine Is the nearest place to hell on earth, this road to Nullagine Another cracker from Roger Montgomery's 'Pilbara Connection'. The tune is given at pp140-141 of that collection. It was composed by Ted Grieg of Nullagine who could neither read nor write. He died about 1948. It was supplied to Montgomery by Tony Moriaty of Port Hedland. Evidently, it has also been published in Bill Scott's 'Penguin Book of Australian Humorous Verse'. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 25 Oct 20 - 08:08 PM THE GOOD OLD CONCERTINA (H.Lawson/M.Wyndham-Read) 'Twas merry when the hut was full Of jolly girls and fellows We danced and sang until we burst The concertina's bellows From distant Darling to the sea From the Downs to Riverina Has e'er a gum in all the west Not heard the concertina 'Twas peaceful round the campfire blaze The long white branches o'er us We'd play the tunes of bygone days To some good old bush chorus Old Erin's harp may sweeter be The Scottish pipes blow keener But sing an old bush song for me To the good old concertina 'Twas cosy by the hut-fire bright When the pint pot passed between us We drowned the voice of the stormy night With the good old concertina Though trouble drifts along the years, And the pangs of care grow keener My heart is gladdened when it hears That good old concertina Youtube clip The tune following the poem in the YT clip is ‘Echuca Waltz’ from the playing of Harry Schaefer of Forbes collected by Rob Willis. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 25 Oct 20 - 08:31 PM ONE LITTLE STAR (Eric Bogle) When I need to feel you near me I stand in this quiet place Where the silver light of countless stars Falling on my face Though they all shine so brightly Somehow it comforts me to know That some that burn the brightest Died an eternity ago But your light still shines It's one small star to guide me And it helps me to hold back the dark Your light's still shining in my heart I'm learning how to live without you And I never thought I could And even how to smile again I never thought I would And I cherish your heart's memories Cause they bring you back to life Some caress me gently And some cut me like a knife But your light still shines It's one small star to guide me And it helps me to hold back the dark Your light's still shining in my heart Can your soul be out there somewhere Beyond the infinity of time I guess you've found some answers now I'll have to wait for mine When my light joins with yours one day We'll shine through time and space And one day fall in a distant age Upon some stranger's face But your light still shines It's one small star to guide me And it helps me to hold back the dark Your light's still shining in my heart Your light's still shining in my heart Youtube clip --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 25 Oct 20 - 09:16 PM THE OLD BULLOCK DRAY (Traditional) Oh! the shearing is all over and the wool is coming down And I mean to get a wife, boys, when I go up to town Everything that has two legs represents itself to view From the little paddy-melon to the bucking kangaroo Chorus: So, it's roll up your blankets and let's make a push I'll take you up the country and I'll show you the bush I'll be bound you won't get such a chance another day So come on and take possession of my old bullock dray I've saved up a good cheque I mean to buy a team And when I get a missus, boys, I will be all serene For, in calling at the depot they say there's no delay To get an off-sider for the old bullock dray Oh, we'll live like fighting cocks, for good living I'm your man We'll have leather-jacks, johnny cakes and fritters in the pan And if you'd like some fish, I'll catch you some soon, For we'll bob for barramundies round the banks of a lagoon. Oh, yes, of beef and damper I'll take care we'll have enough, We'll boil in the bucket such a whopper of a duff And our friends will dance, in the honour of the day To the music of the bells of the old bullock dray Oh, we'll have plenty girls, yes, you must mind that There'll be flash little Maggie, and Buck-jumping Pat There'll be Stringy-Bark Joe, and Greenhide Mike Yes, my colonials, just as many as you like Now we'll stop all immigration, we won't need it any more We'll be having young colonials, twins by the score And I wonder what the devil Jack Robertson would say If he saw us promenading round the old bullock dray There are numerous versions of this song. This one was collected from Stan Wakefield and posted to Mudcat back in the day by Bob Bolton. Ron Edwards published a 10-stanza version in his massive tome. Edwards noted that the tune is basically ’Turkey in the straw’. I like this leisurely rendition by Mucky Duck albeit it omits the last 2 stanzas of the above version. It could well have accommodated an extra verse instead of the la-la-la stuff. Youtube clip --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 25 Oct 20 - 11:38 PM surely you must be coming to the end of yous songbook, Stewie, it must be bigger than an old fashioned Sydney Telephone book - inches thick! or is it all in a little phone or iPad? now we are 363! |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 25 Oct 20 - 11:52 PM That's a goodly number, Sandra. I don't have anything on phones or iPads. I have LPs, CDs and books. I must admit that my Oz and NZ collection is much smaller than my old-timey, blues, American folk, Americana etc collection but it's okay. --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 26 Oct 20 - 08:03 PM THE SANDY MARANOA (A.W.Davis/Trad) The night is dark and stormy and the sky is clouded o'er Our horses we will mount and ride away To watch the squatters' cattle through the darkness of the night And we'll keep them on the camp till break of day Chorus For we're going going going to Gunnedah so far And we'll soon be into sunny New South Wales We shall bid farewell to Queensland with its swampy coolibah Happy drovers from the sandy Maranoa When the fires are burning bright through the darkness of the night And the cattle camping quiet well I'm sure That I wish for two o'clock when I call the other watch This is droving from the sandy Maranoa Our beds made on the ground, we are sleeping all so sound When we're wakened by the distant thunder's roar And the lightning's vivid flash followed by an awful crash It's rough on drovers from the sandy Maranoa We are up at break of day and we're all soon on the way For we always have to go ten miles or more It don't do to loaf about or the squatter will come out He's strict on drovers from the sandy Maranoa We shall soon be on the Moonie and we'll cross the Barwon too Then we'll be out upon the rolling plains once more We'll shout hurrah for old Queensland with its swampy coolibah And the cattle that come off the Maranoa From p130 ‘Old Bush Songs’. Youtube clip --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 26 Oct 20 - 08:49 PM REMEMBER PORT MELBOURNE (Rob Fairbairn) Remember Port Melbourne on Saturday night At the pub that they call Molly Bloom's Remember the sailors, the drunks and the fights And the band at the end of the room And do you remember the first time we met You soon had me under your spell It was one of those moments I'll never forget Oh yes, I remember it well Chorus: They sang 'Waltzing Matilda', they played 'The Wild Rover' Pat Reilly and Molly Malone they were there The band kept singing it over and over Oh don't you remember, my dear Old Gentleman Jim had his place by the bar A silver-topped cane in his hand Big Eddie he borrowed the singer's guitar And he strummed out 'The Black Velvet Band' We were lost in the music, swept up by the sound We knew all the words to the songs When the man on the banjo sang 'Rain Tumbles Down' The whole of the bar sang along I met you at Molly's on Saturday night I was nervous and shy, you were young So I went to the bar and I bought us a pint And the alcohol loosened our tongues We spoke of the present, we honoured the past The words began flowing like wine We savoured each moment like it was the last While the band played along all the time Last Chorus: The sang 'Waltzing Matilda', the played 'The Wild Rover' Ned Kelly and Henry and Banjo were there The band kept on singing it over and over Oh don't you remember, my dear From Loaded Dog 'A Coastline Facing West'. I just found a web page where Loaded Dog songs can be heard. Listen here: Remember Port Melbourne --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 26 Oct 20 - 09:26 PM THE TEAMS (H.Lawson/C.O’Sullivan) A cloud of dust on the long white road And the teams go creeping on Inch by inch with the weary load And by the power of the green-hide goad The distant goal is won With eyes half-shut to the blinding dust And necks to the yoke bent low The beasts are pulling as bullocks must And the shining tyres might almost rust While the spokes are turning slow With face half-hid 'neath a broad-brimmed hat That shades from the heat's white waves And shouldered whip with its green-hide plait The driver plods with a gait like that Of his weary, patient slaves He wipes his brow, for the day is hot And spits to the left with spite He shouts at Bally and flicks at Scot And raises dust from the back of Spot And spits to the dusty right He'll sometimes pause as a thing of form In front of a settler's door And ask for a drink, and remark `It's warm’ Or say `There's signs of a thunderstorm' But he seldom utters more For rains are heavy on roads like these And fronting his lonely home For days together the settler sees The wagon bogged down to the axle trees Or ploughing the sodden loam And then when the roads are at their worst The bushman's children hear The cruel blows of the whips reversed While bullocks pull as their hearts would burst And bellow with pain and fear And thus with glimpses of home and rest Are the long, long journeys done And thus -- 'tis a thankless task at best — Is distance fought in the mighty west And the lonely battles won Cathie O'Sullivan put a tune to this Lawson poem. Youtube clip Loaded Dog also recorded it on 'Hair of the Dog': Listen --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 26 Oct 20 - 10:13 PM THE MINER (Anon) The miner he goes and changes his clothes And then makes his way to the shaft For each man well knows he's going below To put in his eight hours of graft Chorus With his calico cap and his old flannel shirt His pants with the strap 'round the knee His boots watertight and his candle alight His crib and his billy of tea The platman to the driver will knock four and one The ropes to the windlass will strain As one shift comes up, another goes down And mining commences again He works hard for his pay at six bob a day He toils for his missus and kids He gets what's left over and thinks he's in clover To cut off his 'baccy from quids And thus he goes on, week in and week out To toil for his life's daily bread He's off to the mine, hail, rain or shine That his dear ones at home may be fed Digging holes in the ground where there's gold to be found But most times where gold it is not A man's like a rabbit with this digging habit And, like one, he ought to be shot Youtube clip --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 26 Oct 20 - 11:26 PM I've just come across Ron Fairburn & am looking for the appropriate mondegreen thread to publish research by one of my friends. found it! & posted the story His lockdown projects include sorting thru 60+ years of songs, tunes, tapes, other media, & other stuff & he noted something odd in the lyrics of one of Slim Dusty's greatest hits, a song that EVERYONE says was written by Slim. Well, it was written by Ron Fairburn & the original words make sense. There are lots of lyric sites crediting Slim, probably more than those crediting Ron! |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 27 Oct 20 - 08:49 PM THERE IS ANGUISH IN KNOWING (D.Hewett/C.O’Sullivan) There is anguish in knowing that I cannot reach you This kiss can break no barrier of bone I know no ease of language that might teach you In that last place where we stand alone Only in bitter struggle do we grow wise Knowing no quarter, and no compromise There is anguish in knowing that I cannot break you Beyond this wall of flesh you stand intact Ah! with what fingernails of hate I’ll rake you Till love has ground its teeth on sour fact Eyes, mouth and hands made blind, compassionate Beyond the sting of love, the burr of hate There is anguish in knowing we can never meet In this small room where we are most alone And yet the grass against the root grows sweet And yet the flesh tastes sweeter at the bone Four walls of love and sunlight on the floor And the Judas kiss that closes the last door Cathie O'Sullivan put a tune to this dark little poem by Dorothy Hewett. Youtube clip --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: JennieG Date: 27 Oct 20 - 09:10 PM A thought has popped into my mind, as they do from time to time. Henry Kendall's poem "Bell-birds" has been sung - I think by Kate Delaney? - to the tune of 'The spinning wheel' ("Mary, the moonlight to shine is beginning....." That would make a nice addition to the list. Hands up if you remember having "Bell-birds" in your poetry list at school. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 27 Oct 20 - 10:26 PM BLOOD RED ROSES (Anon) Come all you sealers and listen to me A lovely song I'll sing to thee It was in eighteen hundred and three Come down you blood red roses, come down That we set sail for the southern sea Oh you pinks and posies Come down you blood red roses, come down Our captain has set us down And he has sailed for Sydney town And he has left us with some grub Come down you blood red roses, come down Just one split pea in a ten pound tub Oh you pinks and posies Come down you blood red roses, come down A bull seal he is bigger than a mouse But a sealer's lot is lower than a louse And now we're all covered over with fur Come down you blood red roses, come down We've grown us tails like Lucifer Oh you pinks and posies Come down you blood red roses, come down An when our captain he returns to hell Come down you blood red roses, come down Why we will treat him here for a spell Come down you blood red roses, come down 'Blood Red Roses' is a work song, a halyard chanty. When we string the different chanty-man cries together, they tell a story - a woeful one, but hardly exaggerated, for most sealing gangs that worked the southern bays and islands suffered from lack of food, exposure to wind and cold or to being completely forgotten. In 1813, one boat took five men off the Solanders. Two of them had been there since 1808. They had made their own clothing and shelters of sealskin and had eaten nothing but seal meat. The yankee whale ship, 'Enterprise', rescued three men from the Snares in 1817. These men had been set down in 1810 with but one quart of rice, a half-bushel of potatoes and an iron pot. 'Song of a Young Country' p12. Youtube clip --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 27 Oct 20 - 11:15 PM KEEPING SO THIN (J.S.Neilson/C.O'Sullivan & C.Pearce) The red cow will come, it is even With frost in the air The white blood she gives for the little one Keeping so fair The father will say at the sundown How white is her skin He looks for the smile of the little one Keeping so thin The red cow is out on the rushes The old swans near by They see all the turns in the weather The scowl in the sky The land is all buckshot and sorrow It cries like a prayer. The rubble it writes in the cutting grass Famine is there. The young lad has toppled the sheoak The red cow comes in She eats of the leaves for the little one Keeping so thin The lean year it is for the honey When half the trees fail But the red cow is good to the little one Keeping so pale The father has fears at the sundown What grave night can bear To the little one having no mother And seeming so fair The young girl who watches at nightfall Old dreams will obey Of dim time – the fairies – the moonlight The lifting away Another lovely Neilson poem to which Cathie O'Sullivan and Cleis Pearce put a tune. Youtube clip --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 28 Oct 20 - 02:55 AM no, Jennie I don't remember learning Bell-birds at school, but as I know the words (some of the words) I must have "learnt"/"studied" it there! My GreatAunt & Grandmother lived at West Gosford, close to Henry Kendall Cottage & we used to hear bellbirds in the area! sandra |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 28 Oct 20 - 08:12 PM THE BROKEN THINGS (Shane Nicholson) Just like that old toy train No longer bright shining red Just like that rusted chain Sitting on a tyre by the shed All these things can make me smile So I'd like to keep you around for a while 'Cos babe I love all the broken things And you're a broken thing Just like that busted chair That no one ever tried to mend Just like that creaking stair Wants to let you know it's hurting again Everything that falls apart Will find a home in my heart 'Cos babe I love all the broken things And you're a broken thing Just like that old toy train Just like that creaking stair Just like that rusted chain Just like that lonely busted chair All these things can make me smile So I'd like to keep you around for a while 'Cos babe I love all the broken things Everything that falls apart Will find a home in my heart 'Cos babe I love all the broken things And you're a broken thing Youtube clip --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 28 Oct 20 - 08:44 PM RATTLIN' BONES (K.Chambers/S.Nicholson) Smoke don't rise, fuel don't burn Sun don't shine no more Late one night, sorrow come round Scratching at my door But I cut my hands and break my back Dragging this bag of stones Till they bury me down beneath the ground With the dust and rattlin' bones Left my home and left my love Caught on a rusty nail Devil rose up heavy with gold My soul's not for sale Then a holy man in a house of God He offered me a book of prayer But when I left my home and I left my love Left my faith back there Smoke don't rise, fuel don't burn Sun don't shine no more Late one night, sorrow come round Scratching at my door But I cut my hands and break my back Dragging this bag of stones Till they bury me down beneath the ground With the dust and rattlin' bones Shut my eyes and hang my head Darkness makes no sound Climb it up, bottom there Earth's on the way back down When a sadness falls on the morning bird Wonder what the day will bring But I shut my eyes and hang my head At least that bird can sing Smoke don't rise, fuel don't burn Sun don't shine no more Late one night, sorrow come round Scratching at my door But I cut my hands and break my back Dragging this bag of stones Till they bury me down beneath the ground With the dust and rattlin' bones Till they bury me down beneath the ground With the dust and rattlin' bones The title track of their delightful and best album. Youtube clip --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: rich-joy Date: 28 Oct 20 - 09:20 PM The Armistice was signed at 11am on the 11th day of the 11th month in 1918, to end The Great War, 1914-18 (ostensibly, "the war to end all wars"). Despite this agreement, shelling continued from both sides until nightfall. In Australia, this commemorative day is now more commonly known as Remembrance Day : remembering all the fallen in all the conflicts in which Australia has taken part, and red poppies are worn by many as a personal symbol. Noel dedicates this song to an injured ex-soldier friend, from Australia's more recent conflicts, who was treated shabbily by the 'Powers that Be'. Armistice Day by Noel Gardner, 2006 Silence tolls an hour ‘fore midday on the second last month of the year Images flash on the eleventh day, as memories disappear Now medals hang proudly and tributes flow as politicians push their line Another year, less truth said, another war to justify. Defend your country the posters read, in the name of national pride But they don’t defend our soldiers of war, as disease eats them inside Lying on his back in his hospital bed, he recalls in tales of pain Denials, whitewash, cover-ups, protect the government’s shame. Ch. May we remember, lest we forget? But the killings go on in the name of religion In the hills and the deserts yet, May we remember, lest we forget? But the killings go on in the name of religion In the hills and the deserts yet. High in the sky, a target is selected from dots on the face of a screen But the pilot never sees or hears from his cockpit the blood soaked tears and screams Out in the field an innocent child, falls prey to clusters of time Inhumanity, ideology, combines with greed and science. Hide the coffins, distort statistics, don’t let anyone see Rape for profit, kill for oil, in the name of liberty Hollow words laced with fear fuel the government ‘guise And in the in the name of deceit, spin and business, another soldier dies. Ch. But the killings go on in the name of religion In the hills and the deserts yet. Silence tolls an hour ‘fore midday on the second last month of the year…… Here is a clip of Noel Gardner & Alex Bridge singing "Armistice Day" : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YpvMc5PPw3c R-J |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 28 Oct 20 - 09:59 PM OUT BACK (H.Lawson/P.Roeterdink) The old year went, and the new returned, in the withering weeks of drought The cheque was spent that the shearer earned, and the sheds were all cut out The publican's words were short and few, and the publican's looks were black And the time had come, as the shearer knew, to carry his swag out back. For time means tucker, and tramp you must where the scrubs and plains are wide With seldom a track that a man can trust, or a mountain peak to guide All day long in the dust and heat when summer is on the track With stinted stomachs and blistered feet, they carry their swags out back He tramped away from the shanty there when the days were long and hot With never a soul to know or care if he died on the track or not The poor of the city have friends in woe, no matter how much they lack But only God and the swagmen know how a poor man fares out back He begged his way on the parched Paroo and the Warrego tracks once more And lived like a dog, as the swagmen do, till the western stations shore But men were many, and sheds were full, for work in the town was slack The traveller never got hands in wool, though he tramped for a year out back. In stifling noons when his back was wrung by its load, and the air seemed dead And the water warmed in the bag that hung to his aching arm like lead Or in times of flood, when plains were seas, and the scrubs were cold and black He ploughed in mud to his trembling knees, and paid for his sins out back He blamed himself in the year ‘Too Late' -- in the heaviest hours of life -- 'Twas little he dreamed that a shearing mate had care of his home and wife There are times when wrongs from your kindred come and treacherous tongues attack When a man is better away from home, and dead to the world out back And dirty and careless and old he wore, as his lamp of hope grew dim He tramped for years till the swag he bore seemed part of himself to him As a bullock drags in the sandy ruts, he followed the dreary track With never a thought but to reach the huts when the sun went down out back It chanced one day, when the north wind blew in his face like a furnace breath He left the track for a tank he knew -- 'twas a shortcut to his death For the bed of the tank was hard and dry, and crossed with many a crack And, oh, it's a terrible thing to die of thirst in the scrub out back A drover came, but the fringe of law was eastward many a mile He never reported the thing he saw, for it was not worth his while The tanks are full and the grass is high in the mulga off the track Where the bleaching bones of a white man lie by his mouldering swag out back For time means tucker, and tramp they must where the plains and scrubs are wide With seldom a track that a man can trust, or a mountain peak to guide All day long in the flies and heat the men of the outside track With stinted stomachs and blistered feet must carry their swags out back Phil Roeterdink of Loaded Dog put a tune to this Lawson poem. Above is the complete poem. The Dog used the second stanza as a chorus and omitted several stanzas. Listen on this page: Click --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 29 Oct 20 - 08:29 PM SONG OF THE INLAND RAIN (J.Sorensen/R.Montgomery) There's a rain that falls when the sheep are dead Away on the wide nor’-western plains When storm clouds gather overhead, And the west is red e'er the daylight wanes Rain on the inland ranges Rain on the parching plains All day long the grey rain falls On a land where it seldom rains Over the wilting wilderness Where drought's grim curse has lain Long overdue, God's blessing falls In the swirl of the inland rain When the hills rise blue in the haze of noon And the heat waves dance o'er the stony plain When red at night hangs the nor'-west moon When men despair, comes inland rain Rain on the ironstone ridges Cool life-giving rain Day and night it patters down Till the rivers run again Sweet is the drowsy cadence To those whose hopes seemed vain That steady drone on the station roof The song of the inland rain Youtube clip --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Stewie Date: 29 Oct 20 - 09:03 PM This song by Slim Dusty (David Kirkpatrick) would have to be considered folk in Australia's north, particularly the Northern Territory where it was hammered on every juke box. Back in the day, Slim was king of the outback. Despite its condescending tone and the horrendous line 'His skin was black but his heart was white and that's what mattered most', the Aborigines loved 'Trumby'. I recall a concert at a Gold Rush Folk festival in Tennant Creek. It was held in the CWA hall which had windows opening on to the main street. Aborigines passing by were yelling into the windows, 'Sing Trumby!' TRUMBY (D.Kirkpatrick/J.Daly) Trumby was a ringer A good one too at that He could rake and ride a twister Throw a rope and fancy plait He could count a line of saddle Track a man lost in the night Trumby was a good boy but he couldn't read or write Trumby was dependable He never took to beer The boss admired him so much One day made him overseer It never went to Trumby's head He didn't boast or skite Trumby was a good boy but he couldn't read or write. The drought was on the country The grass in short supply The tanks were getting lower and the water holes near dry Cattle started dying And relief was not in sight To estimate the losses Trumby couldn't read or write. He rode around the station pulling cattle from the bogs To save them being torn apart by eagles,crows and dogs He saw a notice on a tree It wasn't there last night Trumby tried to understand but he couldn't read or write. On bended knee down in the mud Trumby had a drink Swung the reins and to his horse said, ‘We go home I think Tell 'im boss about the sign, 'im read 'im good alright One day boss's missus teach 'im Trumby read and write’ Well concern was felt for Trumby He hadn't used his bed Next day beside that muddy hole, they found the ringer dead And a piece of tin tied to a tree then caught the boss's eye He read the words of 'Poison Here' And signed by Dogger Fry Now the stock had never used that hole along that stony creek And Trumby's bag was empty It had frayed and sprung a leak The dogs were there in hundreds And the dogger in his plight Told the boss he never knew poor Trumby couldn't read or write Now Trumby was a ringer As solid as a post His skin was black but his heart was white and that's what mattered most Sometimes I think how sad it is in this world with all its might That a man like Trumby met his death because he couldn't read or write. Couldn't read or write Couldn't read or write Youtube clip --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: rich-joy Date: 29 Oct 20 - 09:16 PM This poem was a huge favourite in class of my Grade 6 – 7 in the early 60s. We wept buckets internally, whilst a few tears were allowed escape to run down sweaty cheeks (well, dry summer temps of 100* were not unusual in Perth in those days). A setting by renowned folkie, Martyn Wyndham-Read : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1DA1ysiidUk A setting by country legend, Slim Dusty : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eTFMynKlhH4 But, I’m afraid I find neither of those chunes very satisfying!! Does anyone know of alternatives?? The Ballad of the Drover Across the stoney ridges, Across the lonely plain, Young Harry Dale, the drover, Comes riding home again. And well his stock horse bears him; And light of heart is he ; And stoutly his old pack horse Is trotting by his knee. Up Queensland way with cattle He travell'd regions vast ; And many months have vanish'd Since home has known him. last. He hums a.song of some one He hopes to marry soon ; And hobble-chains and campware Keep jingling to the tune. Beyond the sunny dado Against the lower skies, And yon blue line of ranges The distant station lies. And thitherward the drover Jogs through the hazy noon, With hobble-chains and campware All jingling to a tune. An hour has fill'd the heavens With clouds all inky black ; At times the lightning trickles Around the drover's track ; But Harry pushes onward ; His horses' strength he tries, In hopes to reach the river Before the flood shall rise. The thunder from the heavens Goes rolling o'er the plains ; And down on thirsty pastures In torrents dash the rains. And ev'ry gorge and gully Sends forth its little flood; Till the river runs a "banker," All stain'd with yellow mud. Now Harry.speaks to "Rover," Who hardship little recks, And to his sturdy horses, And strokes their shaggy necks; "We've conquer'd greater rivers When floods were at their height ; Nor will this gutter stop us From reaching home to-night !" The thunder growls a warning ; The ghastly lightnings gleam; As the drover turns his horses, To swim the fatal stream. But, oh! the flood runs stronger Than e'er it ran before ; The saddle horse is failing, And only half-way o'er ! When flashes next the lightning, The flood's gray breast is blank ; And a cattle dog and pack horse Are struggling up the bank. But on the bank to northward, Or on the southern shore, The stock horse with his rider Will struggle out no more. The faithful dog a moment Sits panting on the bank, And then swims through the current To where his master sank. And round and round in circle, He fights with failing strength, Till borne down by the waters, The old dog sinks at length. Across the flooded lowlands And slopes of sodden loam The pack horse struggles onward, To take dumb tidings home. And mudstain'd, wet, and weary, Thro' ranges dark goes he, With hobble-chains and tinware, All sounding eerily. * * * * * * The floods are in the ocean ; The stream is clear again ; And now a verdant carpet Is etretch'd across the plain. But some one's eyes are sadden' d ; And some one's heart still bleeds In sorrow for the drover Who sleeps among the reeds. Henry Lawson. Sydney; 1889. Published Mon 7th Oct, 1889 in Sydney’s “The Evening News”: https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/117027640 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nmj9IHeVZ68&list=PLkynhFef6n07fEkek82LCbR4Epsyn7NJW&index=10&t=0s a narration (by person unknown), of Lawson’s “The Union Buries Its Dead” of the burial of an unknown drover who was drowned, but described elsewhere as evidence of Lawson’s Nihlism. Whatever. Just hope that the memory of young ‘Harry Dale, the Drover’ (and his faithful dog, Rover), received better treatment in his home district!! (that last verse rarely gets recited/sung). Another slight thread post creep, but Paul Hemphill’s “The Drover’s Dog and other stories” can be found here : https://howlinginfinite.files.wordpress.com/2015/07/3-the-drovers-dog.pdf ENJOY (but shed a tear or two!) R-J |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: rich-joy Date: 29 Oct 20 - 11:32 PM Now, I know this might not be quite “PC” these days, but as a good Aussie babyboomer sheila, I’ve always had a sneaky fondness for this song (reckon it having a good chune to sing and harmonise with, helps heaps!!) Written by Cairns cane farmer and local troubadour (and pig hunter), Jack Crossland, c.1953? and set to the US trad tune of “On Top of Old Smokey” (which song I have always hated – go figure ……) THE PIG-CATCHER’S LOVE SONG (aka CAIRNS BITTER BEER) Oh marry me, darling, I love you sincere, I love you the way I love Cairns Bitter Beer. Chorus: Oh Cairns Bitter Beer, love. Oh Cairns Bitter Beer, I love you the way I love Cairns Bitter Beer. I have an old humpy, a camp oven or two, A rifle and pig-dogs; now I only want you. You’ll never go hungry as long as you live, With sweet-bucks and mangoes and slabs of wild pig. I’ll always be faithful, and reasonably true, I may love other women but I’ll mostly love you. I’ll often get drunken, and sometimes tell lies, But I often will tell you how blue are your eyes. Oh, marry me, darling, I never will fail, There are worse blokes than me, love, but they’re mostly in gaol. I recall my late Beloved going pig hunting with a local catcher and his 2 big dogs in the littoral rainforest next to our home in Darwin. Unlike my bloke, the hunter and his dogs were barefoot, but they soon left him behind! So much for Paul’s regular training runs with the Hash House Harriers (or perhaps the ever-flowing after-run beer must share the blame?? :) Here is a clip of Jason & Chloe Roweth live at Humph Hall in Sydney : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3nP_nL-PBuw R-J |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: rich-joy Date: 30 Oct 20 - 02:51 AM Beneath the Southern Cross BUSHWACKERS from 30th Anniversary recording (c.2004) : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RB9gX309YPw Lyrics are here : https://www.musixmatch.com/lyrics/The-Bushwackers/Beneath-the-Southern-Cross When I was searching for a non-Bushwackers version to listen to, of the Louis McManus song “Beneath the Southern Cross” (anyone?), YT threw up this interesting Kiwi number of the same title. It incorporates Maori singing and bagpipes with contemporary Presbyterian songwriting and singing by Malcolm Gordon!! So in case you t’other siders think Down Under is populated completely by heathens and unbelievers, this is for you!! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y2A8MzzT8Qc Intrigued by his voice, I then found some other songs by Malcolm (who is based in Dunedin, Sth Island, NZ) : “Hey Stranger” spotlighting the scourge of Family Violence (“Hey Stranger, Hey Neighbour, you don’t need wings to be my angel”) : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tJjOjsiuY5U And the celtic sounds of “St Magnus, Earl of Orkney Isles” : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Acp2KYDTPj4&list=PLsF6D_aH3P9nBPYfRRO-mKODtNVDi1tG5&index=16 More here : https://malcolmgordon.bandcamp.com/album/the-cobblers-grandson Okay, that’s enuff of that for today! R-J |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: rich-joy Date: 30 Oct 20 - 03:09 AM BANKS OF THE CONDAMINE trad Hark, hark, the dogs are barking, I can no longer stay The boys have all gone shearing , I heard the publican say And I must be off in the morning love before the sun do shine To meet the Roma shearers on the banks of the Condamine. Oh Willie dearest Willie don't leave me here to mourn Dont make me curse and rue the day that ever I was born For parting with you Willie is like parting with my life So stay and be a selector love and I will be your wife. Oh Nancy dearest Nancy you know that I must go The squatters are expecting me their shearing for to do And when I'm on the board my love I'll think of you with pride And my shears they will go freely when I'm on the whipping side. Oh I'll cut off my yellow hair and go along with you I'll dress myself in men's attire and be a shearer too I'll cook and count your tally love whilst ringer-o you shine And I'll wash your greasy moleskins on the banks of the Condamine. Oh Nancy dearest Nancy you know you cannot go The boss has given his orders no woman may do so And your delicate constitution isn't equal unto mine To eat the ramstag mutton on the banks of the Condamine. But when the shearing's over I'll make of you my wife I'll get a boundary riding job and settle down for life And when the days' work's done my love and the evening it is fine I'll tell of them sandy cobblers on the banks of the Condamine. Lyric set taken from Mark Gregory’s EXcellent website : http://folkstream.com/005.html He notes : “First published as 'The Banks of the Riverine' in the Queenslander in 1894 This version from the singing of A.L.Lloyd. Folklorist Dr Edgar Waters writes (Australian Tradition Oct 1966) : "The Banks of the Condamine seems to have been one of the most widely distributed bush songs. In recent years it has been reported from singers in northern Victoria and the Northern Territory, and a number of different versions have been recorded in New South Wales and in Queensland. Sometimes the man is going off to a horse-breaking camp rather than a shearing shed. In Victoria, and at least in southern New South Wales, it seems to have been known as 'The Banks of the Riverine', and perhaps this was the original form. The words of 'The Banks of the Condamine' were made over from 'The Banks of the Nile', a British Ballad of the beginning of the nineteenth century." The version by early Oz folkie, Lionel Long, was a great favourite on Perth’s ABC radio in the 60s, but here are two others : James Fagan & Nancy Kerr : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z-_BrMmGIgM Rendition by the group, Southern Cross, about which I know nothing (anyone??): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=29flhN1MUfI&t=75s Cheers, R-J |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 30 Oct 20 - 03:31 AM speaking of Joe Daly as we were - he was an early contributor to the Bush Music Club's Singabout. His first appearance was in 1961, by which time he had written 40 songs. Singabout 4(3), Sept 1961 - page 6 Singabout 4(3), Sept 1961 - page 7 obit 2005 He met Slim Dusty in 1965 RareCollections: NAIDOC 2012 Another instalment of RareCollections, the podcast in which Jordie and David Kilby take a look at rare, collectible and unusual Australian music. This episode features the following tracks and the voices of Slim Dusty, Joe Daly, Ted Egan and Rim D.Paul. Slim Dusty - Trumby - Columbia - 1966 Trumby was not an actual person but rather a composite character. Joe Daly spent his life working outback. He was also a talented songwriter who penned more than 50 songs for Slim Dusty alone. The first one he passed on to Slim was this comment on literacy among the indigenous stockmen he knew and worked alongside. Joe Daly on discogs Joe Daly interviewed by Rob Willis |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: rich-joy Date: 30 Oct 20 - 04:22 AM WHEN THE RAIN TUMBLES DOWN IN JULY Slim Dusty (David Kirkpatrick) Let me wander north to the homestead, Way out further on there to roam, By a gully in flood, let me linger, When the summery sunshine has flown. Where the logs tangle up on the creek beds, And clouds fill the old northern sky, And the cattle move back from the lowlands, When the rain tumbles down in July. The settlers with sad hearts are watching, The rise of the stream from the dawn, Their best crops are always in flood reach, If it rises much more they'll be gone. The cattle string out along the fences, The wind from the south races by, And the limbs from the old gums are fallen, When the rain tumbles down in July. The sleeping gums on the hillside, Awaken to herds strayin' by, Here on the flats where the fences have vanished, As the storm clouds gather on high. The wheels of the wagons stop turning, The stock horse is turned out to stray, The old station dogs are a-dozin', On the husks in the barn through the day. The drover draws rein by the river, And it's years since he's seen it so high, Yes and that's just a story of homeward, When the rain tumbles down in July. Here is a clip of Slim’s daughter, Anne Kirkpatrick, singing his song at her father's Tribute Concert : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EICe11W5tos OK, Country AND Christian music posted all in one day!! Back to Folk :) R-J |
Subject: RE: Rise Up Mudcat Songbook - Australia From: rich-joy Date: 30 Oct 20 - 05:04 AM Garwan Dala (Words By Eve Fesl, Music By Tommy Leonard - July 2006) Garwan Dala, garwan Goong Garwan Dala, garwan Goong Garwan Dala, garwan Goong Ngam gardi Dala, ngam gardi Goong, Ngam gardi Dala, ngam gardi Goong, Garwan Dala, garwan Goong. Mama Bala, Dala, Goong, Mama Bala, Dala, Goong, Garwan Dala, garwan Goong. Garwan Dala, garwan Goong Ngam gardi Dala, ngam gardi Goong, Mama Bala, Dala, Goong, Garwan Dala, garwan Goong Garwan Dala, garwan Goong Garwan Dala, garwan Goong "Garwan Dala" means Respect for the lungfish, in Gubbi Gubbi language. "Garwan Goong" means Respect for fresh water. "Ngam gardi Dala" means Always been here, lungfish "Ngam gardi Goong" means Always been here, fresh water "Mama Bala" is the name of the Mary River. It means "Twice as Big", which is what happens to the river at flood time. This song can be heard here : https://www.tommyleonard.com/htmfiles/lyrics/dala.htm Tommy Leonard is a long-time local of Maleny, Qld (ex Liverpool, UK) and a well-known singer-songwriter and troubador. Eve Fesl is an indigenous woman who now lives in the Sunshine Coast Hinterland. R-J |
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