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Songs and poems about HMS Hood |
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Subject: Songs and poems about the HMS Hood From: Joe Offer Date: 25 Jan 21 - 04:02 PM http://www.hmshood.com/hoodtoday/poems.htm |
Subject: RE: Songs and poems about HMS Hood From: GUEST,# Date: 25 Jan 21 - 04:56 PM "Sink the Bismarck" sung by Johnny Horton (written by Johnny Horton and Tillman Franks) is another, but it's done to a marching beat. |
Subject: RE: Songs and poems about HMS Hood From: Steve Gardham Date: 26 Jan 21 - 07:29 AM Roll on the Rodney, the Nelson, Renown, We used to sing Hood but the b*****d went down! WWII |
Subject: RE: Songs and poems about HMS Hood From: GUEST,Ewan McVicar Date: 26 Jan 21 - 10:32 AM So, roll on the Rodney, Repulse and Renown You can't say the Hood cause the bastard's gone down Tune, last two lines of The Old Orange Flute I've a notion this was attached, maybe a chorus but maybe a tag at the end, to some song of the sea, but what I cannot recall at present. I cannot find the above in Grey Funnel Lines by Cyril Tawney, but he does have several more lines for The Sinking of HMS Hood than are on the webpage Joe gives us. Not in Shanties and |Sailors' Songs by Stan Hugill either. |
Subject: RE: Songs and poems about HMS Hood From: GUEST,# Date: 26 Jan 21 - 11:51 AM The following link provides some answers for common questions about HMS Hood. http://www.hmshood.com/admin/faq.htm |
Subject: RE: Songs and poems about HMS Hood From: robomatic Date: 28 Jan 21 - 07:57 PM A basic guide to: HMS Hood The German operation which led to the Bismarck going to sea and the Royal Navy pursuit of same: Operation Rheinübung - First and Last Voyage of the Bismarck A deep dive into the explosion itself: The Loss of HMS Hood - But why did it blow up? |
Subject: RE: Songs and poems about HMS Hood From: GUEST,Nick Dow Date: 29 Jan 21 - 04:45 PM Cyril Tawney sang the song 'HMS Hood' to the tune of silent night. |
Subject: RE: Songs and poems about HMS Hood From: Steve Gardham Date: 29 Jan 21 - 05:18 PM The snippet that I posted I seem to remember was more 'On top of Old Smokey' than Vilikins/Old Orange Flute, but they're probably related anyway. |
Subject: RE: Songs and poems about HMS Hood From: GUEST,Louise Burbidge Date: 31 Jan 21 - 10:11 AM My husband, Alan Burbidge [1945-2001] wrote the following song, published by Tom Brown at Daylight Press in 2003 - THE MIGHTY HOOD. While shells the Flanders trenches flayed, In John Brown's yard a keel was laid To arm the Royal Navy, so to gain the victory. But it was four years after Armistice Day When first the orders came to say "His Majesty's ship 'Hood' will proceed and put to sea". CHORUS: She's the queen of the Fleet, She's the pride of the Navy, She is the mighty 'Hood' Bound away for the sea. Now she steams through Frisco's Golden Gate To a welcome fit for a Head of State And her tower and her turrets stand like a castle on the sea. And in dry Western towns is seen Upon the flickering silver screen The battle cruiser 'Hood' now in harbour from the sea. And now she lies off Invergordon town, Her flags in sorrow hanging down, With her engines still and silent and her crew in mutiny - For the burning question of the day, The Treasury cites the Navy's pay, But the Fleet declared false contract and refused to put to sea. And now she's pounding for the Denmark Strait To hold the way and bar the gate, 'Prince of Wales' on her quarter as she hunts the enemy - And from above the lookouts cry As out the battle-ensigns fly, And 'Bismarck' and 'Prinz Eugen' open fire across the sea. And still her turrets seek and turn, Though on her decks a fire burns, And the guns recoil and thunder, hurling shells across the sea. From a mighty, fighting warship proud To a broken hull with a smoke-pall shroud, From a crew of fourteen hundred men, survivors only three. FINAL [ADDITIONAL] CHORUS] - She was queen of the Fleet, She was pride of the Navy, She was the mighty 'Hood' Gone forever in the sea. |
Subject: RE: Songs and poems about HMS Hood From: Joe Offer Date: 24 May 21 - 03:17 PM David Kidman sang a song I think is called "Ted Briggs Lament." Want to post lyrics, David? |
Subject: RE: Songs and poems about HMS Hood From: Gordon Jackson Date: 24 May 21 - 05:11 PM On a personal, and non-musical, note, my father served in the Royal Navy from 1931 to 1946. From May 1932 to August 1933 he was actually a member of the Hood’s crew. He then switched to destroyers, survived the war and was later able to sire me. |
Subject: RE: Songs and poems about HMS Hood From: Roughyed Date: 27 May 21 - 09:55 AM Brian Peters did a brilliant song about the Hood called 'The lost fourteen hundred' on one of his earlier albums. |
Subject: RE: Songs and poems about HMS Hood From: GUEST,# Date: 27 May 21 - 10:07 AM https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bJmKM4Xgb0A https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bJmKM4Xgb0A Brian Peters - The Lost 1400 (with thanks to Roughyed) |
Subject: RE: Songs and poems about HMS Hood From: Brian Peters Date: 27 May 21 - 12:16 PM Well, I'd no idea that song was on YouTube. In fact I was just about to mention 'The Lost Fourteen Hundred', and apologise for it not being online anywhere, but now you can hear it for yourselves. Unfortunately the YouTube uploader hasn't credited the writer, the late Dave Rawlinson, who was a good mate of mine and ran folk clubs in Chapel-en-le-Frith and later Salisbury. It is a fine song indeed. I recorded it in 1989. |
Subject: RE: Songs and poems about HMS Hood From: Roughyed Date: 28 May 21 - 03:04 AM As I find myself saying more and more frequently nowadays, good grief was it THAT long ago? Thank you to Guest for the YouTube link and to Brian for the songwriting info. The album went west some time ago but it is not surprising the song stayed with me so long, it's a great song and the arrangement and singing do it full justice. Lovely to hear it again. |
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