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Lyr Add: The Violin Farm (Richard Stilgoe) Related threads: Richard Stilgoe (9) Lyr Add: Hairdrier (Richard Stilgoe) (1) Poem Req: Who Pays The Piper (Richard Stilgoe) (5) ADD: Joyce the Librarian (Stilgoe & Skellern) (8) |
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Subject: RE: Lyr Add: The Violin Farm (Richard Stilgoe) From: GUEST,Peter Cripps Date: 31 Mar 23 - 09:38 AM Great! |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: The Violin Farm (Richard Stilgoe) From: Donuel Date: 24 Mar 23 - 06:10 PM Sycamore is actually the European Maple (Acer pseudoplatanus). This is a English tonewood example. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: The Violin Farm (Richard Stilgoe) From: GUEST,open mike Date: 18 Mar 23 - 04:33 PM so glad i happened across this thread... i am finding lots of Sir Richard Stilgoe material... and learning that he crafted the lyrics to several wonderful musicals... as well as many videos on odd jobs and many more... songs and poems including a comical look at christmas, angels, wise men and more. thankd for bringing him to my attention! here are but a few of mhy discoveries today https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WQLVbRi-gqM https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FKQArwnf4V4 https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=1541421502993021 |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: The Violin Farm (Richard Stilgoe) From: Newport Boy Date: 16 Mar 23 - 11:07 AM Nice - my violinist friend enjoyed it. What Richard Stilgoe probably didn't know when he wrote it was that the combination of sycamore trees and horses is unlikely. According to Blue Cross: "Atypical myopathy (in horses) is a highly fatal muscle disease, thought to be caused by caused by the ingestion of hypoglycin A, a toxin contained in seeds from the sycamore tree (Acer pseudoplatanus)." In America, the Box Elder also causes the same. Phil |
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: The Violin Farm (Richard Stilgoe) From: leeneia Date: 12 Mar 23 - 12:46 PM Thanks, John. I'm sending this to a friend who plays cello. Her husband plays violin. |
Subject: Lyr Add: The Violin Farm (Richard Stilgoe) From: Monologue John Date: 07 Mar 23 - 03:43 AM VIOLIN FARM (Richard Stilgoe) A sycamore tree cannot mimic the lark - A sycamore's tree's unaccompanied bark Is silent until the tree's finally felled, Seasoned and shaped and then lovingly held Beneath a Korean or Hungarian chin. For sycamore's what makes a great violin. A sheep cannot sing - the song of a sheep Would shatter a goblet or rouse you from sleep. But the guts of a sheep, when the sheep's passed away Can be twisted and tightened and tuned to an `A'. So what started off filling up a sheep's middle Ends up as strings on the sycamore fiddle. A horse cannot play you a musical scale But if you sneak up and you shorten his tail The hairs, when attached to a suitable rod, Can play the sheep's guts like the song of a God. The rest of the horse, if it's under the weather Is boiled up to glue the whole thing together. So if you should pass by a meadow or lea Where a sheep is grazes next to a sycamore tree, And yonder a horse canters, tail in the air - You'll know the true meaning beneath what lies there. You can say to the kids, with a wave of your arm, "What you see over there is a violin farm". © |
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