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Songs to sing with Children

Related threads:
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Joe Offer 11 Sep 97 - 03:27 PM
lli 12 Sep 97 - 03:38 AM
Susan L. 12 Sep 97 - 04:51 AM
rich r 13 Sep 97 - 10:05 AM
Akiba 14 Sep 97 - 02:31 AM
Frank in the swamps 14 Sep 97 - 06:37 AM
Shula 14 Sep 97 - 08:03 AM
Barry 14 Sep 97 - 04:00 PM
Squid 16 Sep 97 - 06:55 PM
rechal 22 Sep 97 - 09:46 PM
GaryD 22 Sep 97 - 10:49 PM
Joe Offer 23 Sep 97 - 04:57 AM
maureen 23 Sep 97 - 06:47 AM
Ron K 23 Sep 97 - 09:54 PM
BK 24 Sep 97 - 10:00 PM
Tim Jaques tjaques@netcom.ca 27 Sep 97 - 10:11 PM
Joe Offer 22 Jan 00 - 08:00 PM
Pixie 23 Jan 00 - 01:20 PM
GUEST,MAG 23 Jan 00 - 05:26 PM
GUEST,Victoria 23 Jan 00 - 07:39 PM
GeorgeH 24 Jan 00 - 08:58 AM
Pelrad 25 Jan 00 - 12:47 AM
GUEST,Polly 29 Mar 08 - 10:46 AM
AllisonA(Animaterra) 06 Jan 09 - 10:18 AM
Mark Ross 06 Jan 09 - 10:53 AM
Uncle_DaveO 06 Jan 09 - 11:23 AM
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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: Joe Offer
Date: 11 Sep 97 - 03:27 PM

Hmmmm. One might wonder whether Rechal spent her entire childhood at camp......


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: lli
Date: 12 Sep 97 - 03:38 AM

I'm looking for a children's song collection I had as a wee tot in 1969 or 70.Don't remember the album title but remember it included "Fish of the Sea (Song of the fishes)","Shule Aroon", "Pretty Little Reckless Boy"and some scary song where the female singer shrieked at the end.I think it was part of a series for different ages of children.Sound familiar?


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: Susan L.
Date: 12 Sep 97 - 04:51 AM

One of my favorite songs as a kid was "The Cat Came Back".Tried it on both my kids - they couldn't have been more indifferent. However, The Fox Went Out On A Chilly Night was a hit with both.

Susan L.


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: rich r
Date: 13 Sep 97 - 10:05 AM

This thread is rapidly approaching the point where the kids will be in college before you get to the bottom of the thread. Regardless I will re-cite a couple references that have popped up before, but nopt here.

1. Ruth Crawford Seeger's "American Folk Songs For Children" It's a great book that's been reprinted in paperback over the years, or check the children's section of your library. Some years ago Mike & Peggy Seeger recorded most of the song from the book on a 3 record vinyl set (Rounder Records). I think it has been reissued on CD but may be hard to find. Seeger's Animal Songs book was noted above.

2. Marcia & Jon Pankake's infamous "Joe's Got A Head Like A Ping Pong Ball" (see "naughty" thread) When I used to sing for Cub Scout meetings, I got lots of good stuff out of there (one of my kid's is in college now, I told you so).

3. Bill Staines "The Happy Wanderer" (cassette or CD) a relatively recent album for young & old kids.

re: Winken Blynken & Nod - It was once recorded on an album by the Simon Sisters. One member of the duo, Carly Simon, did go on to have a career of sorts.

rich r


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: Akiba
Date: 14 Sep 97 - 02:31 AM

This seems as likely a spot as any to offer a "homegrown" kids song. I believe we've made use of this song, with occasional modifications, at one time or another in the childhoods of several of our combined seven, (who now range in age from 36 to 16). We ressurected it recently for Speed-1's 9 and 7 year-olds, whom we borrowed as an excuse to revisit the zoo:

(Sung to the tune of " I Don't Want To Grow Up; I'm A Toys-R-Us Kid"):

I don't want to throw up, I just feel like I do;
I ate so much terrific stuff, today at the zoo.

I don't want to throw up, but my tum's kinda sick,
From carmel corn and peanut chews, and corn-dogs on a stick,...

And ice cream, soda, and chocolate bars,
And cotton candy, pink and blue;

I don't want to throw up, 'cause, "golly", if I do,
We won't be goin' back to the zoo!

Oh, drat! Oh! ... SPLAT! ... Oh, phoo!
I guess I over-ate at the zoo.

Akiba


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: Frank in the swamps
Date: 14 Sep 97 - 06:37 AM

This thread has grown so long that I finally had to check it out. Last time I saw a thread grow like this was "Fantasy song circle", I went up to the mountains for a month, and by the time I came back Max had so transfigured the Mudcat I could barely recognize it. Could it be all us ol' folk junkies got hooked when we were children?

Peter T. I designate myself as Frank "in the swamps" because I currently live in Florida, and most of my QUALITY TIME is spent prowling the wetlands ( what's left). So you ain't like to find me sticking up for Rat World & Co. very often, but I do love their version of The Jungle Book. It bothers the hell out of me if I compare it to the real Jungle Book, because that has always been one of my favourite tales. I still read myself a bedtime story from it now and then, no kidding! But if you just let it stand alone.... Who can argue with Ballou groovin' with the "King of the swingers?" But the songs are a real hit with the kids, my Lady Fair and I were playing a gig one time, and a little toddler came up to us, so Jenny sez' "How about Bippety Boppety Boo?" Kid went X-ta-C on us, and my niece always wants us to play "Cruella DeVille."

rechal, I wanna know the tune to piccolomini, it looks like great fun.

My first recollection of folksong takes place in primary school, some guy with a guitar played for us, and I was outraged at the ships' captain in "The Lowlands Low" for his shabby treatment of the cabin boy, then I was all taken up with the "Henry Martin". Maybe if we all jump on the psychoanalyists couch together we'll find we ain't crazy, just "touched" as children by one of these takenforgrantedcuztheyaintno'count old songs.

Frank.


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: Shula
Date: 14 Sep 97 - 08:03 AM

Dear Frank I.T.S.;

Your last response struck several chords. My husband, a retired civil engineer with a rare concern for the environment has often found himself a lonely voice in the ongoing struggle to preserve wetlands, though time continues to bring belated awareness to the powers that be.

As for Disney, though I confess to liking some of the songs from the older films, I cannot bear the recent butchering of so many classics. Peter T. has put my feelings on the matter emphatically into words. Childhood memories of The Jungle Books (and, though not a Disney casualty, The Just-So Stories), have left me unable to view Uncle Walt's version with anything approaching equanimity; do have some positive things to say about the non-cartoon movie versions, however, -- with reservation.

First memories of folk-songs: grandfathers, one, a homesick Scots/ English pianist, who shared his love of Bobby Burns and trad. folk songs with "th' wee bairns," and the other a French Huguenot descendant whose family settled the VA Blue Ridge long ago, who sang us the songs of the VA hill folk (lustily a cappella), and told us stories like "The Great Bear and The Hunter" (about the constellations), and "B'rer Rabbit and De Tar Baby," evenings after dinner, sitting on the long front porch of the house he built himself, keeping time with his rocking chair.

Will happily admit that The Mudcat has done more to put me in mind of the almost forgotten joys of childhood than any psychoanalytical wallowing could ever hope to do. Recall that the first song I tried to sing was about "Poor Robin," who would "nest in the barn, to keep himself warm, and hide his head under his wing, poor thing!" (Wish I remembered more, think I'll go rummage around in the DT.)

Mention of "Bibbiddy-bobbidy-boo" has reminded me of a little humourous essay I once wrote about a stubborn childhood determination to become a fairy godmother when I grew up. ( Yup, all in all, guess I should be a-tellin' ya to send me a bill long about now, 'ceptin I ain't got no green.) Thanks for the pleasant recollections, anyway.

Guess I've rambled quite enough, sorry.

Shula


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: Barry
Date: 14 Sep 97 - 04:00 PM

A few my kids always liked; The Carnivous Chivalrous Shark (in the DT), The Good Old Brig, I Once Was A Cook On A Bark, Erie Canal, Hell'va Wedding on the Congo River (Monkey's Wedding) also in the DT. The longest version I could come up with to Sam Bass for my son. Barry


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: Squid
Date: 16 Sep 97 - 06:55 PM

Shula,

The lyrics you quoted are a Mother Goose rhyme that go like this:

The north wind doth blow, And we shall have snow, And what will the robin do then? Poor thing!

He'll sit in the barn And keep himself warm, And hide his head under his wing. Poor thing!

I never knew the melody that goes with it, but I always enjoyed reading it to my children. I always read it with a British accent, kind of like an Allistair Cooke voice.


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Subject: Lyr Add: PICCOLOMINI
From: rechal
Date: 22 Sep 97 - 09:46 PM

And just what is wrong with spending one's entire childhood at camp? It beats reform school, or at least the one which Joe Offer attended, and it provides one with a marvelous background in singing songs of which most people have never heard. (This deficiency doesn't seem to bother most of the poor folks who are thus afflicted, but my generous heart aches for them nonetheless.)

Frank--

This HTMLedversion of Piccolomini might give you a better sense of its lyrical structure, although, alas, not its tune. Do I have to have a keyboard or something to make MIDI files? I'd gladly teach it to you if you were here -- we'd Piccolomini 'til the sun came up.

PICCOLOMINI

Piccolomini, piccolomini
Piccolomini, piccole!
Lomini piccolo
Mini piccolomini piccolomini pi!
Colomini piccolomini piccolo
Mini piccolomini.


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: GaryD
Date: 22 Sep 97 - 10:49 PM

Actually, in my family, any song is fair game..I am always amused that while most kids in my son's Kindergarten class were singing Old McDonald's Farm, mine was singing "What Shall we do with a Drunken Sailor!"..Actual verses like "shave his belly with a rusty razor, or homemade verses we made up like "Throw him to the sharks, and he'll walk on water!" make singing with your kids even better! Now that they are young adults, I see them singing to other kids the same way and they've told me that our times together were some of their fondest memories.


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: Joe Offer
Date: 23 Sep 97 - 04:57 AM

Now, Rechal, I did NOT spend my youth in a reform school - it was a seminary. Had a darn good time there, too, and I spent summers working at a camp. We sang constantly in both places.
Here's the URL for Noteworthy. You can download the Noteworthy Composer there and compose MIDIs at your computer keyboard.
http://www.ntworthy.com/composer/index.htm
It's an excellent program. It's just a little clumsy to convert to a MIDI file since they want you to save in their own format, but it ain't hard. Take a look.
-Joe Offer-


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Subject: Lyr Add: THE THINNEST MAN^^
From: maureen
Date: 23 Sep 97 - 06:47 AM

Hi. I am having a great time getting acquainted with all of you through your postings.

I wonder if anyone has heard of "The Thinnest Man"? When I was a child my father always made a ritual of singing a certain few songs on New Year's Eve with us, and this one I have never heard anywhere else. Here are the lyrics:

chorus: Oh me, oh my, he was the thinnest man.
He fell through a hole in the seat of his pants
And choked himself to death.

He was sitting in the boarding house,
the light was burning dimly.
A mosquito grabbed him by the neck,
and jerked him up the chimney.

(chorus)

They put him in the city jail,
for stealing auto cars.
They couldn't keep him in the jail,
cause he walked out through the bars.

(chorus)
^^
Of course, this is not what is conventionally known as children's music, although I recall that we loved it and sang it with glee while my mother scowled disapprovingly. I am very curious, though, to know if other people have heard of it.


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: Ron K
Date: 23 Sep 97 - 09:54 PM

I just wanted to add my favorites for singing with my kids. There was a song recorded by Raffi called MY WAY HOME written by either Ken or Keith Whitely. A very simple lyric and melody. Another one (by Woody Guthrie) is JIG ALONG HOME. My seven year old always corrects me on the verse of WALTZING WITH BEARS. I still don't know if its

...raggy bears, shaggy bears, baggy bears

OR

...Shaggy bears, baggy bears, or whatever.


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: BK
Date: 24 Sep 97 - 10:00 PM

Every time I sing waltzing with bears I can't predict in what order the shaggy, baggy and raggy will come out but I still think it's great anyway! I always add the extra last verse I got from Priscilla Herdman's CD of songs to sing with your kids. I forget who wrote it, but it's super;

"last night when the moon rose we crept down the stairs an he took me to dance where the bears have their lairs we danced in a bear hug with nary a care... 'an there is no denyin' it all feels like flyin' but now my pajamas are covered with hair!"

cheers, BK


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Subject: ADD: Stormy Weather (Children's Version) ^^
From: Tim Jaques tjaques@netcom.ca
Date: 27 Sep 97 - 10:11 PM

My niece has an amusing print of a Victorian painting called The Bear Dance, and I always think of this song when I see it. Some bears are dancing what appears to be some elaborate folk dance, some playing instruments, others drinking, others fighting.

Here's a traditional song suitable for kids. I suspect that it has more verses -- like an introductory verse, at least -- but this is how I know it.

STORMY WEATHER BOYS

Up jumps the eel with his slippery tail
Climbs up aloft and reefs the topsail
Up jumps the shark with his nine rows of teeth
Saying "You eat the dough, boys, and I'll eat the beef.


Chorus

And it's windy weather boys, stormy weather boys,
When the wind blows we're all together boys
Blow your winds westerly, blow your winds blow
Jolly sou'wester boys, steady she goes.


Up jumps the mackerel with his striped back
Saying "Watch your eyes captain, its time for to tack
Up jumps the lobster with his heavy claw
Bites the main boom right off by the jaws.

Chorus again.

Up jumps the halibut, lies flat on the deck
He says "Mr. Captain, don't walk on my neck
Up jumps the herring, the king of the sea
Saying "all other fishes now you follow me.


(Chorus again)

Up jumps the codfish with his chuckle head
He runs out to forward and throws out the lead
Up jumps the whale, the largest of all
He heaves on the windlass pawl after pawl.

(Chorus again)^^


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Subject: Lyr Add: THE THINNEST MAN^^
From: Joe Offer
Date: 22 Jan 00 - 08:00 PM

Rick Fielding mentioned this song in Sandy Paton's birthday thread. I wondered what in the world a song like that would have to do with Sandy Paton, but maybe it would be impertinent to ask a question like that (grin). I did a search and found most of the words in a message above, but I've added verses that I found in the terrific Anne Hills/Cindy Mangsen album called Never Grow Up, which is something I never intend to do.
So, Rick, what is the connection between this song and Sandy Paton? No, Sandy is not particularly portly...
-Joe Offer-

THE THINNEST MAN
(earliest known printed version, dated 1881, credited to Frank Dumont - found by Joe Hickerson)

Oh, the thinnest man I ever saw lived over in Hoboken
If I ever told you how thin he was you'd say that I was jokin'
He was as thin as a postage stamp or the skin of a new potater
For exercise, he'd take a ride through the holes of a nutmeg grater
Oh me, oh my, he was the thinnest man.
Thin as soup in a boarding house, or the skin of a soft-shelled clam.

Through a keyhole he'd go slipping, through a mousehole he'd go sliding
And when the landlord came for rent, in the gas pipe he'd be hiding
He was as thin, as thin as grass, as thin as porous plaster
He was as thin as thin can be, he couldn't grow thin any faster
Oh me, oh my, he was the thinnest man.
Thin as soup in a boarding house, or the skin of a soft-shelled clam.

He'd never go out on a stormy night, he'd never go out alone
For fear that some poor hungry dog would take him for a bone.
While sitting by the fire one night, the lamp was burning dimly
A bedbug grabbed him by the hair and yanked him up the chimney
Oh me, oh my, he almost lost his breath
Fell through a hole in the seat of his pants, and choked himself to death.


JRO
^^ Transcribed in honor of the birthday of Sandy Paton

....is there such a thing as a soft-shelled clam?????


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: Pixie
Date: 23 Jan 00 - 01:20 PM

Hey! Check out Raffi, another great Canadian entertainer for children.....great tunes that don't suffer from over-production, are fun and can have a "message"....he has lots of recordings....

Also "Stewball","Puff the Magic Dragon"? I work with children and to be honest, if they like music, they like to listen to a wide variety....we have Michael Martin Murphy tapes at work that get played frequently (cowboy songs)and the kids love it!


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: GUEST,MAG
Date: 23 Jan 00 - 05:26 PM

I'm planning to do selected verses from "Come and Listen to my Song" and "Down in the Arkansas" for upper elementary. Just the right level of participation and whimsy.


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: GUEST,Victoria
Date: 23 Jan 00 - 07:39 PM

In my classroom,all of John McCutcheon's kid's albums/songs are favorites - Especially "The Watermelon Song", "Kindergarten Wall" and "Rubber Blubber Whale". If you ever get a chance to catch one of his family shows with your kids, they are excellent! I have no children of my own, but I never never miss a kid's show of his, they are TOO much fun! :-)


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: GeorgeH
Date: 24 Jan 00 - 08:58 AM

The best album of kid's songs is Roy Bailey's "Why does it have to be me".

They're so good he even insists on his adult folk club audiences singing them.

G.


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: Pelrad
Date: 25 Jan 00 - 12:47 AM

I hear Hal Palmer does good kids' songs (Can Cockatoos Count By Twos? etc); I have not actually heard any of his stuff, but I think the song titles are interesting... Personally, I cannot stand Raffi; to me he does to folk music what Disney does to good stories. Bleah.

David Jones has a cassette out which has plenty of fun songs; unfortunately I don't think the tape is widely distributed. It includes When Father Papered the Parlor, Henry the Eighth, The Body In The Bag, Logdrivers' Waltz, All Right Said Fred, and other music-hall style songs. The chorus to When Father Papered the Parlor (just to give you an idea) goes:
When father papered the parlor you couldn't see Pa for paste
Dabbing it here, dabbing it there, paste and paper everywhere
Mother was stuck to the ceiling, the children were stuck to the floor
I never knew a bloomin' family so stuck up before!


Bill Harley has some real gems on his albums, and he seems to specialize in the 7-10 age group. You're In Trouble, Monsters In The Closet, There's a Pea On My Plate and dozens of other songs all from the kid's perspective and not the least condescending.

My brothers and I delighted in the song Our House around that age. I don't remember who wrote or recorded it; we learned it at a live performance from Bill Staines. It's the one where various people come to the house and the family disposes of them in creative ways. I think it's in the database here at Mudcat.

Malcolm Dalglish has some interesting stuff. His newer work is not really sing-along material, but some of his earlier pieces are fun to sing. Little Potato is really cool.

Woody Guthrie is a big hit around our house. My toddler has a vocabulary of 5 words, three of which are "hey pretty baby," thanks to that catchy Guthrie song (Hey hey pretty baby, who's gonna be my pretty little baby?)

Some of their material is very dated, but RosenShontz is also a great source of songs. My son loves the "Life is over and under and up and down" song...Sorry, it's very late at night and this is probably not coherent. If anyone wants particulars, let me know.


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: GUEST,Polly
Date: 29 Mar 08 - 10:46 AM

Kids songs from school yards,

HOP HOP HOP TO THE BUTCHERS SHOP
I DARE NOT STAY NO LONGER
FOR IF I DO MY MOTHER WILL SAY
I'VE BEEN PLAYING WITH GIRLS DOWN YONDER
CHORUS. EARLY IN THE MORNING
         EARLY IN THE MORNING
         BEFORE THE BREAK OF DAY
MY MOTHER SAID THAT I NEVER SHOULD PLAY WITH THE GYPSY'S IN THE WOOD
IF I DO MI MOTHER WILL SAY NAUGHTY GIRL TO DISOBEY
YOUR HAIR WONT CURL YOUR SHOES WONT SHINE YOU GYPSY GIRL YOU WONT BE MINE.
CHORUS. eary in the moning etc;

DIP FOR GOLD AND DIP FOR SILVER DIP FOR THE ONE THAT YOU LOVE BEST
I CAN REMEMBER HOW GLAD I USED TO BE WHEN DAD AND MOTHER
WOULD BUY NEW SHOES FOR ME THAT'S THE FEELING WE ALL HAD
HOW NEW SHOES WOULD MAKE YOU GLAD
BUT THE BEST TIMES THAT I RECALL
WAS WHEN WE HAD NO SHOES AT ALL

IN BAREFOOT DAYS WHEN WE WERE JUST A COUPLE A KIDS
IN BAREFOOT DAYS O BOY THE THINGS WE DID
WE'D GO DOWN TO DAISY NOOK
WITH A BENT PIN FOR AN HOOK
AND WE'D FISH ALL DAY
WE'D FISH ALL NIGHT
TILL THE BLOOMIN OLD FISH REFUSED TO BITE
THEN OFF WE'D GO DOWN SOME OLD CELLAR DOOR
WE'D SLIDE AND SLIDE TILL OUR PANTS GOT TORE A LITTLE MORE
THEN WE'D HAVE TO GO HOME AND LIE IN BED
TIL OUR MOTHERS GOT BUSY WITH A NEEDS AND THREAD
O BOY WHAT JOY WE HAD IN BARE FOOT DAYS.


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: AllisonA(Animaterra)
Date: 06 Jan 09 - 10:18 AM

Refresh, in the spirit of research!


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: Mark Ross
Date: 06 Jan 09 - 10:53 AM

The pre-school kids I play for(with) like;

GREAT GREEN GOBS OF GREASY GRIMY GOPHER GUTS
ACHIN DRUM
RIDIN' IN MY CAR, CAR
OLD MACDONALD
I'VE BEEN WORKING ON THE RAILROAD
I'M GONNA TELL
SING IN THE SPRING
THE CUCKOO
WENDIGO
and of course they like to get a chnace to try out my instruments(with me helping them and holding the axes).

Mark Ross


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Subject: RE: Songs to sing with Children
From: Uncle_DaveO
Date: 06 Jan 09 - 11:23 AM

I've scanned through this thread rapidly, and I don't see (hope I haven't missed) these songs referred to:

There's a Hole in the Bottom of the Sea
    and
The Green Grass Grew All Around

These are definitely, IMO, for singing WITH kids. There's not much point in them without the kids' participation, methinks.

Kids really love Froggie Went A-Courtin', too, coming in on the Uh-HUHs. That song doesn't absolutely require the audience participation, but it does better with it.

Dave Oesterreich


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