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Lyr Req: What do we leave the next generation
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Subject: What do we leave the next generation From: wildlone Date: 13 Feb 00 - 03:38 PM I was just playing my guitar and a fragment of a song came into my head. Part of the chorus is, What do we leave the next generation? *****Industrial slum? sorry I cannot think of more,I believe that Wally Whyton asked for people who were listeners of his Folk on 2 programme to write a protest song and this was sent in, he liked it and recorded it. Grateful for any help at all. dave. |
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Subject: Lyr Add: LEAVE THEM A FLOWER^^ From: Susanne (skw) Date: 13 Feb 00 - 06:24 PM This is your song: LEAVE THEM A FLOWER Leave them a flower, some grass and a hedgerow
I speak on behalf of the next generation
You plunder and pillage, you tear and you tunnel
Fish in the ocean polluted and poisoned
When the last flower has dropped its last petal
And a few notes: [1971:] As the song took shape, it became, in Wally's words, "a plea that we should leave some part of our world the way God made it - for our children. Otherwise, they will have nothing. They will have highways, they will have oil slicks - thirty or forty miles wide - with the dirt and filth that seems to be part of our industrial society. No one admits to being responsible for halting this pollution of our rivers or our countryside - the filth- making continues and all everybody does is pass the buck". (Frank Kofsky, notes Wally Whyton, 'Leave Them A Flower') [1975:] The song was triggered by a single line. A two hundred year old oak tree was cut down near me to build a house. As I walked past it, I mentally wrote, Trees lying toppled, roots finger the sky. The song was then built backwards and forwards. The verse was composed to the melody of The Streets of Laredo - so that the words might seem to be familiar, against a traditional tune. (Wally Whyton in a letter to his publishers, 27 Oct) Written for the European Conservation Year (1970?). See also the resurrected thread on the Exxon Valdez disaster. I once wrote to Wally, who was then doing his 'Folk Review' on the radio, and asked him about the song that I'd found in an English text book. I still have the tape with him and Colin Irwin, after playing the song, talking about it being 'issued by the Edison Label on a ??? cylinder, recorded by another ancient relic, Walter Whyton'. Great fun! That show was my earliest source for British folk music as a teenager. - Susanne |
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Subject: LYR ADD: Leave Them A Flower From: Susanne (skw) Date: 13 Feb 00 - 06:34 PM Sorry, the first verse above should have been headed 'Chorus'! Also, Dick and Susan, does a change of subject make it easier to find the song for the next update? - Susanne |
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