Subject: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Marylytel#seanet.com Date: 26 Apr 98 - 12:11 AM Hi ALL: A friend of mine is putting together a group of folk songs that could be sung by medical students while going through medical school. I thought this might be a great place to get some suggestions. I have already checked the database but it is hard to know what to search for because so many different songs could fall into this type of category. Any song titles, lyrics or URL's would be appreciated. My friend has just retired from being a doctor after many years and is now trying to put something together to teach to medical students. He said it was many a times that folk music got him through many years ago when he was studying to become a doctor and he wants to share this with students today. Thanks, Mary |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Art Thieme Date: 26 Apr 98 - 12:25 AM "Free And Equal Blues" --Josh White Any of the songs by that urologist who sings the blues---Urethra Franklin ! ;-) |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: murray@mpce.mq.edu.au Date: 26 Apr 98 - 06:46 AM Don't forget "Dr Freud". It is in the database. I was taught it while I was a mathematician for a biochemical research institute by somebody who was taught it..... It circulated through the medical and related schools and was recorded by (I think) the Kingston Trio. Murray |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: John Nolan Date: 26 Apr 98 - 08:51 AM And then comes the doctor, the worst of them all, Saying, "What's been the matter with you all the fall?" He'll tell you he'll cure you of all your disease, When the money he's got, you can die if you please, And it's hard, hard times. (Verse from Newfie song) |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Ralph Butts Date: 26 Apr 98 - 09:05 AM The Doctor's Lament (you'll find it in the database) is a good place to start. I have a wonderful version by Oscar Brand which he calls simply "The Portions of a Woman."....Tiger |
Subject: Lyr Add: SHORTNIN' BREAD From: Sheye Date: 26 Apr 98 - 10:35 AM SHORTNIN' BREAD
Mama's little babies love shortnin', shortnin'
Three little babies, lyin' in bed
Mam's little babies... |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Barbara Date: 26 Apr 98 - 11:51 AM Try searching Mark Cohen (click). He's an ex medical student (that is to say Doctor) and has a bunch of stuff in the data base (click). If he's on the mailing list, I haven't checked yet, he also has a song that is simply (!) the names of prescription medicines set to the tune of Modern Major General from Pirates of Penzance. Barbara |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Alice Date: 26 Apr 98 - 12:14 PM "St. James Infirmary"
"Locke Hospital"
"The Sailor Cut Down In His Prime"
"Streets of Laredo" "Bard of Armagh", "The Dying Cowboy"
"Unfortunate Lass"
"Barbara Allen"
"The Bad Girl"
"Put My Little Shoes Away"
"The Baggage Coach Ahead"
"Coo Coo U"
"The Unfortunate Miss Bailey" Alice, in Montana |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Bruce O. Date: 26 Apr 98 - 12:48 PM "The worms crawl in, the worms crawl out", Carl Sandburg |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Susan of DT Date: 26 Apr 98 - 02:00 PM Use the search box above. a search for @medicine got 17 hits and a search for doctor got over a hundred. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: dwditty Date: 26 Apr 98 - 03:02 PM Don't forget "Put the Lime in the Coconut" - Nilsson Dr. Robert - The Beatles Rock and Roll Doctor - Little Feat The Dentist's Wife - Fred Koller |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Barry Finn Date: 26 Apr 98 - 06:18 PM The Black Cook, Barry |
Subject: Lyr Add: CHEWING GUM (Carter family)^^^ From: murray@mpce.mq.edu.au Date: 27 Apr 98 - 08:25 AM Well if you want to get desperate there is the Carter Family's "Chewin Gum" I wouldn't marry a lawyer I wouldn't marry a doctor I wouldn't marry a farmer Murray |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Bert Date: 27 Apr 98 - 09:03 AM Found a Peanut |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: rosebrook Date: 27 Apr 98 - 10:56 AM Miss Lucy had a baby, she named him Tiny Tim. She put him in the bathtub, to see if he could swim.
He drank up all the water, he ate up all the soap.
Miss Lucy called the doctor, Miss Lucy called the nurse.
"Mumps!", said the doctor, "measles!" said the nurse. Maybe not the best to operate by, but awfully good for jumping rope! ; ) Rosebrook |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Bill D Date: 27 Apr 98 - 01:04 PM from "When Dalliance was in Flower and Maidens Lost Their Head"
"From fair London town, there have lately come down, more to follow, gotta go double check to be sure I remember all the verses...
|
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Tim Jaques tjaques@netcom.ca Date: 27 Apr 98 - 07:03 PM Didn't Oscar Brand have a few bawdy medical student songs on some of his bawdy LP's? |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: murray@mpce.mq.edu.au Date: 27 Apr 98 - 08:38 PM I wish I could remember more verses to this song:
Doctor and Doctor Jones (Cho) Murray |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: northfolk Date: 28 Apr 98 - 01:13 PM Joel Mabus, is one of the finest musicians, songwriters in Michigan, is currently doing a song in his act, I am not sure that it is recorded, he rhymes acetaminophen with..? the song is a challenge to keep up with...audience love it. it certainly fits this category...wish I could give more details. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Bruce O. Date: 28 Apr 98 - 01:46 PM Surgery was originally done by barber-surgeons and there are some barber ones noted in my broadside index. Do gelders' count, too? 'The Tunbridge Doctors' (Four Able Physicians) is in 'The New Academy of Compliments', 1669 (unique copy in Folger Shakespeare Library), and 'Wit and Drollery', 1682, and with music (Packington's Pound) in 'Pills to Purge Melancholy'. ABC's for 3 versions of "Packington's Pound" are B362-4 on my website. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: judy Date: 28 Apr 98 - 02:47 PM I think it was either Tom Lehrer (and possibly the Animaniacs) who I heard sing the periodic table elements to the tune of the Pirates of Penzance. I may have it somewhere. enjoy! judy |
Subject: Lyr Add: THE ELEMENTS (Tom Lehrer)^^ From: judy Date: 28 Apr 98 - 03:07 PM And here it is: To the tune of "I am a modern Major General" THE ELEMENTS There's antimony, arsenic, aluminum, selenium, And hydrogen and oxygen and nitrogen and rhenium, And nickel, neodymium, neptunium, germanium, And iron, americium, ruthenium, uranium, Europium, zirconium, lutetium, vanadium, And lanthanum and osmium and astatine and radium, And gold, protactinium and indium and gallium, And iodine and thorium and thulium and thallium. There's yttrium, ytterbium, actinium, rubidium, And boron, gadolinium, niobium, iridium, There's strontium and silicon and silver and samarium, And bismuth, bromine, lithium, beryllium, and barium. There's holmium and helium and hafnium and erbium, And phosphorus and francium and fluorine and terbium, And manganese and mercury, molybdenum, magnesium, Dysprosium and scandium and cerium and caesium. And lead, praseodymium and platinum, plutonium, Palladium, promethium, potassium, polonium, And tantalum, technetium, titanium, tellurium, And cadmium and calcium and chromium and curium. There's sulphur, californium and fermium, berkelium, And also mendelevium, einsteinium, nobelium, And argon, krypton, neon, radon, xenon, zinc and rhodium, And chlorine, carbon, cobalt, copper, tungsten, tin and sodium.
These are the only ones of which the news has come to Harvard,
Thank goodnes I didn't have to type all that in! There's a Tom Lehrer website out there. Sorry don't have the URL
enjoy! |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Bruce O. Date: 28 Apr 98 - 04:29 PM There's one missing, not counting 3 that the last I knew didn't have names yet (104, 105, and 106). Lr above is #102. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Bruce. O. Date: 28 Apr 98 - 04:31 PM Sorry, Lr is #103. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Paul Stamler Date: 28 Apr 98 - 04:39 PM Logan English recorded a song (by Oscar Brand?) called "The McBurney Square", which is an anatomically correct description of an appendectomy. The only release of which I'm aware is on a 2-LP set from Columbia Special Products in the '60s called "Medicine, Mind and Music". It's a real stitch. Peace. Paul |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Mary Date: 28 Apr 98 - 05:16 PM Thanks for all the replies so far...they are just perfect for what my friend, the newly retired doctor and soon to be folk song teacher, is looking for. As soon as I teach him how to post his own message, he jump in this discussion to! Thanks again and please keep posting the ideas. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: RS Date: 28 Apr 98 - 10:11 PM Then there's the old favourite anatomy review: Head and shoulders, knees and toes Knees and toes, knees and toes Head and shoulders, knees and toes Eyes, ears, mouth and nose! |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Pauline Lerner Date: 28 Apr 98 - 11:16 PM I was never a medical student, but I was a research biochemist for years. While spending hours dissecting rats, my colleagues and I amused ourselves by singing such songs as "Here I stand, heart in hand..." (Beatles), "I've got a lot of liver to do," "Dem bones gonna rise again," and "So lung, it's been good to know you." My apologies for grossing out all you non biomedical types. Pauline |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Catfeet Date: 29 Apr 98 - 12:06 AM How about the Monty Python Disease song? That ought to count for some good STD's. Catfeet |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: murray@mpce.mq.edu.au Date: 29 Apr 98 - 03:06 AM I listened to the Carter Family song again. Between each of the verses I gave there is a chorus:
Chewin' chawin' gum This makes it a more self-contained song without the other verses. Speaking of grossing out: There is an old parody on the popular song Jealousy called "Leprosy". I (happily) don't remember much of it--just one verse.
Leprosy, I suffer from leprosy but the rest isn't any better. Murray |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Bruce O. Date: 29 Apr 98 - 10:05 AM Pauline, above, is also a fiddler. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Carl Date: 29 Apr 98 - 11:22 AM "Cod Liver Oil", not really medical, but sort of that. "Self-curing", at least for me. It cured me from listening pop-stuff only, for it has been on my first Dubliners record which made me become a folk freak (from the view of my friends...). |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Bert Date: 30 Apr 98 - 05:00 PM Auntie Maggie's Remedy |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Clarke Date: 02 May 98 - 01:40 AM To Bill D, Thank you for the portion of the song you sent regarding songs appropriate for medical students. This is what I am looking for. Could you send me more verses and possibly a source that I could track down? Please send any other songs or ideas you may have. Thanks, Clarke |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Clarke Date: 02 May 98 - 01:50 AM Art Thieme, Thank you Art for your contribution to songs appropriate for medical students. Do you know where I can find any songs by Urethra Franklin? Clarke |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: alison Date: 02 May 98 - 09:35 PM Hi, My hubby reading over my shoulder just suggested "The first cut is the deepest." "Fever" "Mac the knife", "The foot bone's connected to the ankle bone.......etc." or what about the Peter Sellars & Sophia Loren one...... "My heart goes boom-biddy-boom-biddy,boom-biddy-boom-biddy,boom-biddy-boom-biddy,boom boom boom!!" Possibly called, "Well goodness gracious me." Slainte Alison |
Subject: Lyr Add: LIKE A SURGEON (Weird Al Yankovic/Madonna From: alison Date: 02 May 98 - 09:40 PM Hi, Here's another classic from Weird Al Yankovic. (Obviously sung to the tune of "Like a virgin."
LIKE A SURGEON
I finally made it through med school.
I was last in the class,
Hey, like a surgeon,
Better give me all your gauze, nurse,
Let me see that IV
Like a surgeon, hey!
It's a fact. I'm a quack.
Like a surgeon, hey!
Like a surgeon, ooh hoo, like a surgeon, Enjoy Slainte Alison |
Subject: RE: Folk songs sung by medical students and doctor From: Clarke Date: 07 May 98 - 06:06 PM From: cgdaniels@mindspring.com (Clarke Daniels) Subject: Medical Folk Music Hi, I am a cardiologist who has recently retired. I am very interested in collecting "medical folk songs" similar to those which I learned as a medical student in the 1950's. These were songs which were sung at parties or in the local bar on weekends.Examples which appear in the Digital Traditions are "Ballad of Lydia Pinkham,"Dr.Freud",and "Coming Down with Old VD.I am particularly interested in songs, known to medical students and doctors, which they remember from their student days. Information about when and where it was heard would be very helpful also. Even if you don't have direct information but could refer me to another source, I would greatly appreciate it. Clarke Daniels MD |
Subject: Lyr Add: The Four Able Physicans^^ From: Bill D Date: 07 May 98 - 11:08 PM The complete verses to the song above...sorry I lost track of finishing it...from a set of records of Elizabethan bawdy songs put out by Oscar Brand in the 60s..There was also a songbook published with most of the songs in it...I have the book and the condensed set of records.. THE FOUR ABLE PHYSICANS
You maidens and wives and young widows rejoice
"From fair London town, there have lately come down,
"They have a new drug that is called the close hug
In the morning you need not be robbed of your rest,
"On your back you must lie,with your belly raised high
On silver or gold they never lay hold |
Subject: Lyr Add: You're Gonna Need That Pure Religion^^ From: Nora Date: 08 May 98 - 12:36 AM I checked, and "You're gonna need that pure religion" has a verse about a doctor. ch: Yr gonna need that pure religion hallelu Yr gonna need that pure religion hallelu Yr gonna need that pure religion pure religion take you home to heaven Yr gonna need that pure religion hallelu Mother & father by the bed a cryin hallelu Mother & father by the bed a cryin hallelu Mother & father by the bed a cryin Said, Lord have mercy our child is dyin Yr gonna need that pure religion hallelu Doctor standing lookin sad hallelu Doctor standin lookin sad hallelu Doctor standin lookin sad Let the lord have mercy our child is dead Yr gonna need that pure religion hallelu chorus See that train comin round the curve hallelu See that train comin round the curve hallelu See that train comin round the curve Now she is strainin every nerve Yr gonna need that pure religion hallelu From Lucinda Williams "Ramblin" Smithsonian Folkways 1991 reissue Nora |
Subject: Lyr Add: My God How the Money Rolls In^^ From: John in Brisbane Date: 08 May 98 - 01:40 AM I may have missed it, but I haven't seen any mention of 'My God How The Money Rolls In' with: My brother's a medical student, With instrument's long, sharp and thin, He only knows one operation, My God how the money rolls in. Regards John |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Pauline Lerner Date: 08 May 98 - 02:28 AM Another verse to "Oh Lord How the Money Rolls In" My grandpa makes cheap prophylactics He punches their heads with a pin, My grandma does quickie abortions Oh Lord how the money rolls in. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Pauline Lerner Date: 08 May 98 - 02:36 AM This one probably doesn't fit the definition of a folk song (whatever that is), but it has been chanted by generations of med students to remember the names of the cranial nerves. Unfortunately, I only know the clean version. Maybe someone can help with the other, more popular version. On old Olympus's topmost top, a Finn and German valtz and hop. The first letter of each word is also the first letter of the name of a cranial nerve. Pauline |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Celtic-End Singer Date: 08 May 98 - 09:12 AM I was very interested to learn of your compiling of a medical folksong collection. As a medical student myself it would be really great if you could send me a copy when it's all done. I'm quite willing to pay for any (reasonable) expenses etc. Cheers! |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: dick greenhaus Date: 08 May 98 - 10:06 PM Medical Mnemonics- (CRanial nerves) On old Olympus' towering top A fast-assed German Viewed a hop. My favorite is the one for the bones in the foot: Never lower Tillie's pants; mother may come home. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Clarke Date: 09 May 98 - 10:50 PM To Bill D,Nora , John in Brisbane, Pauline Lerner, Celtic-EndSinger,and Dick Greenhaus: Thank you all for your contributions to "Songs Appropriate for Medical Students." The medical mnemonics was an excellent idea which had not occured to me. I became nostalgic as I recalled the names of the cranial nerves and the tarsal bones that I had so slavishly memorized long ago. Celtic-Endsinger, If you will send me your email address, I will let you know when a compilation of these songs is available. Please put me in touch with any of your classmates that you think may have knowledge of further songs. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: 'Berta' Date: 10 May 98 - 08:42 PM To be awfully graphic: a student of Radiology needed to know the principles of electricity as they were applied to ionizating radiation; that is, OHM'S LAW: The angle of the dangle is directly proportional to the heat of the meat! Appologies to all.... 'Berta |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Kyra Date: 10 May 98 - 09:13 PM Try "My Favorite Diseases" by Mike Agranoff, sung to the tune of "My Favorite Things". If you'd like the lyrics, send me an Email at kiwi@unagi.cybernothing.org and I'll send them to you. I warn you, though, my Email might be down. If it gets rejected, just send it again a day or so later and it should get through to me. Sla/n, Kyra |
Subject: Lyr Add: The Formulary Song^^ From: Mark Cohen Date: 23 Jan 00 - 09:31 PM I just discovered this thread when I put my name in the search box while looking for something else, and I'm happy to refresh it, as it's right up my artery--er, alley. Here is my piece called "The Formulary Song", which was published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 1977, when I was a senior medical student. I sent a copy to Tom Lehrer, and he replied, "As a lifelong apostle of plagiarism, I certainly have no objection." ^^^ T he Formulary Song by Mark Cohen (to the tune of "I Am The Very Model of a Modern Major-General" by Gilbert and Sullivan, with acknowledgement--but no apology--to Tom Lehrer) There's Aldomet and Atromid and Antivert and Atarax And Dexamyl and Donnagel and Demerol and Dulcolax There's Tylenol and Tegretol and Riopan and Regitine And Pertofrane and Pavabid and also Pyribenzamine Now if you're down there's Dexedrine and Benzedrine and Elavil And if you're up there's Librium and Valium and Vistaril There's Thorazine and Stelazine for calming schizophrenics with There's Seconal for sleeping and for mania there's Eskalith There's Benadryl and Gelusil and Placidyl and Peritrate And Decadron and Parafon and Sinequan and Sorbitrate And Miltown, Motrin, Medrol, Maalox, Myleran and Miradon And Mycostatin, Micronor, Mandelamine and Mylicon
There's Omnipen and Principen and Tegopen and Torecan |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Mark Cohen Date: 23 Jan 00 - 09:37 PM Oops! (I know doctors aren't supposed to say that, but what the hell...) I must have goofed and left out one line. Here's the corrected verse; maybe Joe can fix the original. Please? There's Benadryl and Gelusil and Placidyl and Peritrate And Decadron and Parafon and Sinequan and Sorbitrate And Miltown, Motrin, Medrol, Maalox, Myleran and Miradon And Mycostatin, Micronor, Mandelamine and Mylicon |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Mary in Kentucky Date: 23 Jan 00 - 10:07 PM Thanks Mark for the Formulary Song. I'm sending it to my two favorite pharmacists. BTW, one bawdy version of the cranial nerves starts with Oh, Oh, Oh. I can't remember the rest. Also, "Dry Bones" above (the shin bone connected to the knee bone) has some alternate lyrics. Mary |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Amos Date: 23 Jan 00 - 10:38 PM Now the doctah said, he said son you don't need no pills (2x) Just a handful of nickels and a jukebox will cure your ills. ========
And:
O feed him eggs, and marrow bone, feed them to him whole,
(Eggs and Marrow Bone, trad., recorded by Richard Dyer-Bennett) |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: reggie miles Date: 23 Jan 00 - 11:20 PM There's one that a friend Larry Heagle wrote called Vasectomy that seems to work well in medical settings. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Arkie Date: 23 Jan 00 - 11:24 PM How did Some Little Bug is Going to Get You Someday get left out of this? Cho: For some little bug is going to get you someday. Some little bug will creep behind you some day. Then he'll send for his bug friends And all your troubles they will end, For some little bug is gonna find you someday. It's in the database. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Marymac90 Date: 24 Jan 00 - 01:39 AM Cocaine's for horses, not for men Doctor said it'd kill me but he didn't say when Cocaine, messin' around my brain I was looking to see if I had a recording by some male member of People's Music Network of an extremely funny song describing a proctoscopic examination, but I don't think I do. Perhaps it wasn't so much the lyrics as the ASL interpretation, but it had us all ROTFL. Another song performed at People's Music Network that same year was one by Ruth Pelham about breast cancer, something about your body being fine and lovable with 2 breasts, 1 breast, or no breasts. What I did find when I was looking for the above were a couple of tapes I have by Mark Levy, featuring songs like "Every Sperm does not Deserve a Name" "Babies are Replacable" and "Waldeheimer's Disease". Another group I know from People's Music Network is The Disabled in Action Singers. Their tape features "National Healthcare Blues", "Housecalls", and other related songs. Ray Korona recorded a song called "Send me an Ambulance". He's also with People's Music Network, which, BTW, is meeting this coming weekend in Queens, NYC. Anyone who wants info about the PMN concert Friday, or workshops Sat and Sun, or these songs, please message me. Peter Alsop wrote a kids' song called "My Body's no bodies Body but Mine", and Marcie Boyd added more adult lyrics to the chorus. Hope this is helpful. Mary McCaffrey |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: GUEST,Roger the skiffler Date: 24 Jan 00 - 09:14 AM Wel they may not be folk but I can recycle some suggestions from a previous Hallowe'en thread: When you grow too old to scream (I'll have you to dismember) Hey there (You with the bolt through your neck) for plastic surgeons: I'd grown acustomed to that face and for cloners: I want a girl just like the girl that married dear old dad And one that would really suit most medical students: I want a blow-up doll that I can call my own, the one the other fellows cannot steal [when I get home at night I will inflate her...] If I ever have to go to hospital, I was only joking,guys! RtS |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Nogs Date: 24 Jan 00 - 03:23 PM And to remind the prospective doctors that they are not gods in everyone's eyes:
From Nottingham Ale: And you doctors who more execution have done with powder and potion and bolus and pill . .
From 'A pint of old peculiar':
Also from 'Delia's Gone': Nogs (MD)
|
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: lamarca Date: 24 Jan 00 - 03:54 PM There are a couple of songs about Burke and Hare, the infamous body-snatchers of Edinburgh - they stole bodies to sell to the medical school for dissection. When business picked up, they stopped waiting for already dead bodies, and started "helping" local bums become corpses... One version is in the DT here. There's a different song on the same topic performed by Ed Miller on his "Live at the Cactus Cafe" CD - the chorus goes:
Burke and Hare were a terrible pair, Then there's the old-time single entendre song, "Then It Won't Hurt No More", about a young lady who goes to the doctor/dentist to fix what ails her. It doesn't seem to be in the DT, but Double Decker Stringband does a fine rendition of it on one of their albums. If I get time later, I'll transcribe it. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Jeri Date: 24 Jan 00 - 05:13 PM From a former Public Health weenie - there's a song by Tom Lehrer called something like "I gave it to Agnes," but I can't find it in the DB, so I may have the wrong title. I seem to recall it's in a his book, and I seem to recall I have the book...somewhere. I can't believe nobody's mentioned this, to the tune of "Yesterday," but I can't find it in the DB either. I'm sure there are more verses:
Leprosy
And I used to sing this when I was learning how to do fecal exams in a school for vet technicians. To the tune of "Feelings" -
|
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: reggie miles Date: 24 Jan 00 - 05:21 PM Arkie, an excellent choice. Someone who works in a sterilization unit for a local hospital just asked me for a copy of my rendition of "Some Little Bug". So they could use it as part of a class to train newbies to the profession. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: dick greenhaus Date: 24 Jan 00 - 10:41 PM If you search for @doctor in DIgiTrad, you'll get 13 hits. If you search for songs that mention doctor or doctors. you'll get well over 100. Not to mention gems like Our Baby Died Last Night. And all of the variations of UInfortunate Rake that have our hero perishing of syphilis, or white mercury (a cure for syphilis0) or pila cotia (Ltin for white mercury. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Mbo Date: 24 Jan 00 - 10:47 PM Know all about that Proctofoam...if only Tom new how deadly serious "sore" can be. --Mbo |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: BillFisher Date: 24 Jan 00 - 11:02 PM By the Time I Get to Pharynx A song about STD's: Careless Love
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Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Amos Date: 24 Jan 00 - 11:10 PM Stereotypical student MD's should be required to learn "It's Only A Wee-Wee, So What's All the Fuss?". A. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: GUEST,sheila Date: 24 Jan 00 - 11:17 PM Edinburgh folkies and medical students used to sing Stuart McGregor's 'Sandy Bell's Man', about a young girl led astray by an Edinburgh medic. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: catspaw49 Date: 24 Jan 00 - 11:35 PM Probably a little more for undertaker's but also can work for the medico's, I posted this one awhile back...CLANK HERE...Kinda' the story of my life. Spaw |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: John Moulden Date: 25 Jan 00 - 08:26 AM Try the Poem - by Thomas Hood called "Mary's Ghost" singable to various Irish tunes - pick your own - It's about body snatching and anatomy. The last stanza is: The day does dawn, the cock does crow It's time for us to part, You'll always be my lover Though some doctor has my heart You need not go weep on my grave And think that there I be There ain't a single atom left Of my anatomy. Hood wrote another body snatching poem called "Jack Hall" and Robert Southey wrote the wonderful "Surgeon's Warning" - perhaps not singable but great stuff. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: GUEST,blind desert pete Date: 30 Jan 00 - 04:46 PM RE: Crainial nerves. Oh Oh Oh to touch and feel a girls vagina such heaven |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Liz the Squeak Date: 30 Jan 00 - 05:05 PM Touching on the surgeon/barber theme, try the DigiTrad and look up 'Sweeney Todd the Barber'..... guaranteed to keep you off the pork pies for a while.... and amusing to boot. LTS |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Dave (the ancient mariner) Date: 30 Jan 00 - 06:14 PM Melanie Safka's version of Psychotherapy. And the Id goes marching on. Yours,Aye.Dave |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Mark Cohen Date: 30 Jan 00 - 06:30 PM Mbo, I didn't mean to downplay the seriousness of the affliction, it just fit well that way. You raise a good point, though. Medically related humor is always tricky because you're dealing with people's pain and distress. Unfortunately, medical training is stressful and medical students often tend to attack others' weaknesses when they feel inadequate. I'm afraid it's part of the human condition--it's certainly not limited to medical students--and I confess to doing my share. (That's one reason I don't perform my VD song anymore.) Much of what is considered humorous by some people is offensive to some people in some contexts at some times. But we keep muddling through, hopefully with good humor, and can try not to offend but to amuse. Sorry for the sermon...it just broke out. Aloha, Mark |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Mary in Kentucky Date: 15 Feb 00 - 08:07 PM I found a wonderful book titled The Biochemists' Songbook which puts the words to 19 different biochemical processes (or syntheses or whatever) to the tunes of "well-known" songs. I am certainly not a biochemist, but this little book looks like a gem! Here's the book info and a table of contents. My source (college student) says it's available from BarnesandNoble.com but not Amazon.com. There are complex biochemical diagrams, music notation and an average of ten verses for each song.
The Biochemists' Songbook CONTENTS:
The Michaelis Anthem -- Tune: The Red Flag
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Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Mary in Kentucky Date: 15 Feb 00 - 08:12 PM Make that fourth one ß Oxidation |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Crowhugger Date: 15 Feb 00 - 08:39 PM Lovely loco locus! |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: GUEST,Jim Dixon Date: 16 Feb 00 - 01:57 PM Well, they call me the doctor (yeah, yeah!) In my neigborhood (yeah, yeah!) But my baby she calls me (yeah, yeah!) Doctor Feelgood (yeah, yeah!) Sorry, I can't remember any more. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: dick greenhaus Date: 16 Feb 00 - 08:11 PM Mary in Kentucky- Don't list 'em; post 'em! |
Subject: Lyr Add: SURGERY (Oscar Brand) From: Arkie Date: 16 Feb 00 - 09:02 PM How about this one?
SURGERY by Oscar Brand
Why not be an operator,
Chorus:
Why waste time in diagnosis, Chorus:
|
Subject: Lyr Add: APPENDECTOMY COUNTRY STYLE (Oscar Brand) From: Arkie Date: 17 Feb 00 - 12:41 AM Or how about this?
APPENDECTOMY - COUNTRY STYLE
Wash your hands and get them dry,
Now drape that patient neat and tight,
Swing that knife blade, with a toss,
When the cavity's been breached,
With a pertoneal cuff inside,
Tie the purse string very tight, |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: GUEST,Jim Dixon Date: 17 Feb 00 - 04:13 PM After posting the above excerpt of "Doctor Feel-Good" I spent a good deal of time searching the web for the lyrics. I never succeeded, but I was able to find out this much: It was written by Willie Lee "Piano Red" Perryman (1911-85), recorded by him in 1961, and published as a single on the Okeh label (#7144). It became a big hit, so that Perryman subsequently adopted "Doctor Feelgood" as his stage name, and when he brought out an album in 1962, it was called "Doctor Feelgood and the Interns." Fascinating, huh? Now perhaps someone with more skill or determination than I will continue the search. I'm giving up. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: GUEST,Mark Cohen Date: 17 Feb 00 - 06:30 PM Thanks, Arkie! I'll have to learn these and do them for my surgeon friends. Aloha (from Eugene Oregon today) Mark |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Crowhugger Date: 18 Feb 00 - 08:00 AM I always wondered how surgeons were trained. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Crowhugger Date: 06 Apr 00 - 08:38 AM KT, maybe something here... |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: GUEST,Philippa Date: 17 May 00 - 02:28 PM I once had a physics prof who taught us a song to the tune of Men of Harlech, which incorporated some formulas to memorise. Reviewing anatomy and physiology on-line today, I found a muscle song included in the outline notes at http://www.cs.ndsu.nodak.edu/~revie/notes/bio131/apch10.htm If you don't want to read all the notes do a search for the word "song" on the page. I expect you may find other songs if you go to the home page and look through the other biology notes at this site. I was at a waulking song workshop with Anna Martin recently. She showed us how the songs kept the rhythyms for fulling the tweed and I was wondering if I could work up a song sequence to do massage by. There's a challenge for someone, the rhythyms have to flow from effleurage through to hacking and cupping and back to effleurage. ... although I've always said I don't like to hear music while giving or receiving massage, that it's too distracting. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: GUEST,David Richoux (KFJC FM) Date: 26 Jun 02 - 12:17 AM Hi, I just happened to find this site & forum while researching a favorite song. Earlier in the thread someone mentions "SOME LITTLE BUG IS GOING TO FIND YOU" and the Mudcat database gives this reference to the lyric: Note: Surprisingly enough, this dates back to the 1890s. Brad Kincaid recorded it in the 30's, Phil Harris recorded it in the 1940s. Sally Rogers recorded it on Love Will Guide Us, Flying Fish. RG From what I know about this song, it was written in 1915 (maybe it was influenced by the influenza epidemic of that year) Music by: Silvio Hein Lyrics by: Benjamin Hapgood Burt and Roy Atwell for a Franz Lehar Operetta "Alone At Last" and made popular by Roy Atwell. You can see a image of the song sheet at http://www.parlorsongs.com/issues/2000-9/2000-9.asp BTW, There is a fine recording of this song by Eubie Blake and Ivan Harold Browning that was recorded in 1972. Standard disclamers apply - this info came off the internet, after all... |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: JohnInKansas Date: 26 Jun 02 - 06:20 AM I recently overheard an unknown member of the audience who seemed to have several verses that were "cute," although I only caught: To the tune of (Come to me my) Melancholy Baby - Never give Viagra to a lawyer, 'Cause it only makes them tall... Anyone recognize it? John |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: GUEST,Fossil at home Date: 27 Jun 02 - 05:51 AM Loudon Wainwright III: "I went to the Doctor". Must be on his website somewhere. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Genie Date: 27 Jun 02 - 10:51 AM "...and the doctor said, "Give 'em jug band music. It's bound to make 'em feel just fine!" §;- D |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Mrrzy Date: 27 Jun 02 - 11:53 AM I had Dr. Freud by the Gateway Singers at the Hungry I, but I wouldn't be surprised if the KTrio did it too. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: DonD Date: 27 Jun 02 - 12:37 PM Learned men that use the pen Have writ your praises high You sweet poteen from Ireland green That's made from corn and rye. So away all pills, it'll cure all ills Be you Christian, Pagan or Jew Take off your coat, open up your throat To the dear old mountan dew. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Susanne (skw) Date: 28 Jun 02 - 04:26 PM How about 'Pills' or 'Cholesterol', both by Glaswegian Adam McNaughtan? And 'Cod Liver Oil' (the one without the Orange Juice - the music hall song made popular by The Dubliners)? I'd love to know which songs Clarke chose and how the students reacted to them! BTW, the 'Burke and Hare' song Iamarca quoted far above was written by Robin Laing. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Cappuccino Date: 28 Jun 02 - 04:37 PM In Edinburgh once I saw a great band of medical students, playing under the name of The Peristalsis Five. It is, apparently, the movement of the bowel. - ian B |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Genie Date: 28 Jun 02 - 05:24 PM Isn't there a punk or grunge band called "Smegma?" |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: redcogs Date: 28 Jun 02 - 05:28 PM How about 'Digging graves is my delight a digging graves for you to lie in every morning every night I makes me living from the dying |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Genie Date: 28 Jun 02 - 10:13 PM I know it's not a folk song, but Miss Adelaide's Lament (from Guys and Dolls) is perfect for med students. Miss Adelaide (Sky Masterson's moll) keeps reading medical textbook descriptions of "post nasal drip" and other sinus cavity ailments and their relation to socio-emotional issues. Each verse of these descriptions ends with "in other words, ... Then there's another non-folk one that's relevant: |
Subject: Lyr Add: THE PHYSICIAN (Cole Porter) From: Jeanie Date: 29 Jun 02 - 06:36 PM As we've moved into "non-folk," here's "THE PHYSICIAN," music and lyrics by Cole Porter, recorded by Gertrude Lawrence 1933:
Once I loved such a shattering physician,
He said by bronchial tubes were entrancing,
He said my epidermis was darling,
And though, no doubt,
With my esophagus he was ravished,
He said my cerebellum was brilliant,
He said my maxillaries were marvels,
He seemed amused
I know he thought my pancreas perfect,
He said my vertebrae were "sehr schoene,"
He took a fleeting look at my thorax,
As it was dark,
He lingered on with me until morning,
Some of the cranial nerve mnemonics listed above would have been a lot easier to learn than the one were taught at school for 'O' Level Human Biology: - jeanie |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Donuel Date: 29 Jun 02 - 06:44 PM The TV show Scrubs has had lots of digusting medical school songs. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: GUEST,JTT Date: 29 Jun 02 - 08:16 PM In haste - I haven't read the whole thread, so sorry if this is a repeat:
Oh doctor, oh doctor, oh Dr De Jong and many other bawdy verses. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Genie Date: 29 Jun 02 - 11:17 PM For patients who've just been stabbed with a hypodermic: "I've got you under my skin..." Then there's the classic "Found a peanut." Among the umpteen kazillion verses, you find:
"It was rotten (x3) just now... Genie |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Genie Date: 29 Jun 02 - 11:25 PM For cardiologists: How Can You Mend A Broken Heart?
For Pharmacists:
For Dermatologists:
For Psychiatrists:
|
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Jim Dixon Date: 03 Jul 02 - 07:18 PM See DOCTOR BROWN. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: maire-aine Date: 03 Jul 02 - 09:00 PM Miss Fogarty's Christmas Cake, maybe. "It could kill a man twice after eatin' a slice...." |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: GUEST,another guest Date: 03 Jul 02 - 11:07 PM Paddy Kelly's brew---verse 2 It will cure the rheumatism it will cure a wheezy chest it will cure away the gout and gallstones too toothach headache backache losing hair and all the rest fallen arches corns and bunions and the flu. and it tastes as sweet as honey as it trickles down your throat its pure and clear its just like mountain dew it would make a fellow sing tho he didnt have a note wont you try a drop of Paddy Kelly's brew |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: GUEST,Martin Ryan Date: 04 Jul 02 - 09:01 AM Kevin Barry Regards |
Subject: Lyr add: Sir John and the Magic Castle From: Mark Cohen Date: 04 Jul 02 - 01:53 PM Here's one that I wrote when I was a medical student. I don't believe I've posted them before. It's a parody of "Fair Margaret and Sweet William", which I believe is a Child ballad; I'll leave it to Masato or one of the other scholars to figure out which! Warning: not for the faint-hearted. [A brief explanation: My medical school, Penn State U.'s Hershey Medical Center, was a gleaming white building that was built in the middle of a cornfield outside Hershey, Pennsylvania (Chocolate Town, USA), so from a distance it really does look a bit like a magic castle. Anyone who's been to a major medical center won't need any more explanation of the song. Oh...3rd and 4th year medical students in the hospital were called "clinical clerks".] SIR JOHN AND THE MAGIC CASTLE lyrics (c)1976 Mark Cohen, tune trad (Fair Margaret and Sweet William) Sir John awoke on a gray morning, he felt so terribly bad "I have a pain in my belly," he said, "the worst I've ever had" He dragged himself out of his bed and found his friend William Brown "Oh, take me to that white castle now, that stands in Hershey Town" "Oh have no fear, Sir John dear friend, oh have no fear" said he "I'll take you to that magic castle now, and better you'll soon be" "Oh take me there with haste, my friend, for I am terribly sore" He gave a cry that cracked the sky, and then he gave one more They rode so fast and they rode so far, the castle soon they spied But they had to go through a twisted maze, before they got inside The signs they misdirected them, the door was very well hid Sir John stopped once to bring up his lunch, and was quite glad he did At last they came upon the door, but when they stepped within A demon there was sitting in a chair, on its face an evil grin "Oh demon what want you of us?" said William bold and brave "My friend Sir John is so very ill, he's almost in his grave" "It is not much I want of you," the demon said with a smirk "Your name, your age, your next of kin, where you live, and where you work Then you must fill out all these forms, and press full hard with your pen Sign here, and here, and also here" -- Sir John threw up again They took Sir John into a room, and thirteen people came in And each one had a different idea of what was wrong with him Said one, "Let's have him swallow this tube, and then I'll look within" Said another, "No, the only way we'll know is by opening up his skin" Then up there spoke a third-year clerk: "Sir, when was your last stool?" "Why, four days ago," said good Sir John, "and I'm regular, as a rule" The clerk then donned his rubber glove, the rest you surely can guess Said a happy Sir John, "Of all you wise men here, this young one is the best" I'll end my story here and now, but please remember my friend The third-year clerk who saved the day, with a finger in...The End Aloha, Mark |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Mark Cohen Date: 04 Jul 02 - 02:07 PM Here's the original, and the tune: Fair Margaret and Sweet William, Child 74 (page includes MIDI). The tune is apparently one of two versions collected by Cecil Sharp. Aloha, Mark |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Deda Date: 04 Jul 02 - 03:53 PM A fun thread! The one just above it when I opened it was "falorum dingdorum" (from "Maids when you're young") which has some great lyrics for anatomy students. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: GUEST,Argenine Date: 05 Jul 02 - 03:48 PM Jeanie, thanks for that Cole Porter song! The man had a way with words, din't 'e? |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: GUEST,Erin Date: 05 Jul 02 - 07:30 PM I THINK I've read all the entries so far....and I didn't see the following parody of "Side By Side" (some people know it as "Oh, We Ain't Got a Barrel of Money")
Well, I got married last Friday
We really knew we were wed then
One tin leg to follow,
Well, here I stand broken hearted |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: kytrad (Jean Ritchie) Date: 06 Jul 02 - 06:03 PM I haven't time to read all above carefully, but I don't think this one was mentioned: "Pretty Sally," and old ballad often sung by Horton Barker, and a beauty. Sad, though.
Another which I used to sing for medical students- it always made them laugh: Leadbelly's, "Irene, Goodnight," which has the verse:
I love Irene, God knows I do, |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Nogs Date: 20 Jan 03 - 02:03 PM the wordsto the song that northfolk was referring to above 4/28/98 can be found at http://www.joelmabus.com/1097_lyrics.htm#druggist |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Rapparee Date: 20 Jan 03 - 04:54 PM Someone has probably set this to music, since it was popular eith the children of the time: Up the close and down the stair But and ben w' Burke and Hare Burke's the butcher Hare's the thief And Knox's the boy who buys the beef. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Susanne (skw) Date: 20 Jan 03 - 07:56 PM Rapaire, I've heard it sung by Nancy Nicolson, but have been looking for a recording for years without success. 'Burke and Hare' on Robin Laing's Edinburgh Skyline CD is a different song. |
Subject: Lyr Add: COCONUT (Harry Nilsson) From: Arkie Date: 21 Jan 03 - 12:31 AM COCONUT Harry Nilsson
Brother bought a coconut. He bought it for a dime.
She put the lime in the coconut. She drank them both up.
And said, "Doctor, ain't there nothin' I can take?"
"Put the lime in the coconut. You drank them both up.
And say, "Doctor, ain't there nothing I can take?"
Put the lime in the coconut. Drink them both together.
Wouh wouh wouh wouh wouh.
She put the lime in the coconut. She drank them both up.
Say, "Doctor, ain't there nothin' I can take?"
"You put the lime in the coconut, drink them both up.
Put the lime in the coconut. Drink them both together.
"Woo Woo, ain't there nothin' you can take?" I say,
You say, "yah yah, ain't there nothin' I can take?" I say,
"Put the lime in the coconut. Drink them both together.
"Yes, you call me in the morning, |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Santa Date: 21 Jan 03 - 02:58 PM Strawhead tend to end their act with a rousing rendition of "Here's to the Colo-Rectal Surgeon" complete with gestures that really cannot be repeated on a family forum. The chorus goes something like "Here's to the Colo-Rectal Surgeon, Misunderstood and much-maligned Slaving away in the heart of darkness Working where the sun don't shine." The verses are fortunately gone beyond recall.....but they certainly amused the medical member of this family (and the non-medical ones). |
Subject: Lyr Add: ANYBODY ILL? From: GUEST,Q Date: 21 Jan 03 - 05:09 PM Lyr. Add: ANYBODY ILL? I am a learned surgeon, and my name is Doctor Quack, My draughts and pills, to cure your ills, I carry on my back, My med'cines are the nastiest that ever cured a pain, If once you've tasted them I know you'd ne'er be ill again. Chorus: Then oh, my! Anybody ill, anybody ill, Anybody ill, oh my Hi! I'm Doctor Quack, quack, quack-a-ka-quack,I cure you of any attack, I've syrup of squills and I've camomile pills, And my name is Doctor Quack. I've lotions for the measles and I've powders for the croup. I cure the girls of whooping cough by taking off their hoop, My plaisters are so very strong, they draw out all your teeth, And last week drew a ton of coals from here to Hampstead Heath. I've pills for the complexion if you rub it in at night, If you've been red as beetroot, in the morning you'll be white, They'll cure a smoky fire and take away the kettle's boil, They're made of railway grease and soap, Dutch cheese and castor oil. I've got a syrup you can take for tooth ache in the nose, I've powders for a wooden arm, and pills for timber toes. I stop the mouths of scolding wives, their double teeth I draw, I clap a padlock on their tongues which makes them hold their jaw. I've ointment for a mother-in-law, she swallows half a pound, She'll never trouble you again for she will sleep so sound, Who'll have a gross of leeches? Shall I put them on your back? You won't- then he must go elsewhere to trade, must Doctor Quack. I've heard a doctor sing this to MacNamara's Band, and do the chorus with a little music hall-minstrel hop. Quite funny. Bodleian Library, printed by R. March, 1881-1884, Firth b.28(4a/b) |
Subject: Lyr Add: THE FUNNY FARM (Homer & Jethro) From: Jim Dixon Date: 12 Dec 03 - 12:40 AM Lyrics transcribed from the sound file at http://www.geocities.com/u2page6/ THE FUNNY FARM (tune: When Johnny Comes Marching Home) (As sung by Homer & Jethro) I took a short vacation on my doctor's good advice. Four men in white escorted me. They treated me so nice. They strapped me in a jacket till I couldn't move an arm, An' now I am patient out at the funny farm. CHORUS: The nurses drink. The doctors drink. The patients do the same. While we are psychoanalyzed, we sip our pink champagne. Before I'd sell my padded cell, I'd amputate my arm. I'd be a lunatic to ever leave the funny farm. I can't help feelin' sorry for the guy right next to me. He thinks that he's a refrigerator, strange as it may be. The doctors don't believe it an' I think that he's a fake, But when he opens up his mouth, the light keeps me awake. CHORUS A guy thinks he's a chicken, but I'm sure that he is wrong. He sits out in the chicken coop an' cackles all day long. The doctor never tries to cure him though he begs and begs, For they get sixty cents a dozen when they sell the eggs. CHORUS [Recorded by Homer & Jethro on "Fractured Folk Songs," 1964; and "The Playboy Song," 1968.] |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: GUEST,Sean Date: 12 Dec 03 - 05:11 AM The Humours of whiskey Tippin it up to Nancy |
Subject: Lyr Add: A NOTE OF THANKS TO DR. REES From: Howard Kaplan Date: 20 Nov 05 - 09:30 PM Five years and ten months ago (January 2000), Marymac90 posted this paragraph: I was looking to see if I had a recording by some male member of People's Music Network of an extremely funny song describing a proctoscopic examination, but I don't think I do. Perhaps it wasn't so much the lyrics as the ASL interpretation, but it had us all ROTFL.I found her posting today while following links from another thread ("Where can I buy leeches & medical songs"), and I am pleased to be able to provide more details. I wrote A Note of Thanks to Dr. Rees in 1994, and you can click on the link to find a lead sheet and a MIDI file of the melody. Here are just the lyrics: Doctor Rees (colon): I'm writing this letter To thank you for what I have recently learned. After our talk, I now understand better. That would not be so, had you not been concerned. Needing more facts, I perused the collection The library keeps; I found quite a good book. So now, I know much about rectal inspection, Though rectums are places I rarely need look. When we succeed with this change we've been trying, When few folk will smoke, through persuasion and laws, We'll see a change in statistics of dying, With lung cancer being a less prominent cause. Next behind lungs on the list as a locus Where tumours develop, in rich lands like these, Are rectum and colon, and so we must focus On them, in our work of preventing disease. Some say it helps to consume much more fibre And rarely eat Häagen-Dazs, lamb chops, or Brie; Those vegetarians I've met in cyber- Space out on the Internet tend to agree. But, for the millions who won't change their diet, Although that would also be good for the heart, There is a technique, if they're willing to try it, That often ensures no malignancies start. The flexible sigmoidoscope was invented To enter our guts through the holes in their ends Where feces well coloured and gases ill scented Both exit the body. It threads through the bends In the sigmoid, the part of the colon just over The rectum that's shaped like an "S", and can go Inside the left colon. It's used to discover Conditions for which, perhaps, no symptoms show. Polyps are growths that should not be occurring. The ones in the bowel, when young, are benign, But they can enlarge, and there's danger deferring Removal, because, when they're old, they malign. Most bowel polyps, statistics have shown us, Are found near the sigmoid. A primary care Physician can look for them, and, as a bonus, Remove them, by using a scope and a snare. Fibres bring outside light in to illumine; An image is focused on fibres of glass. Three millimetres wide, there's enough room in The biopsy channel for thin tools to pass. One has a loop on its end, which is tightened To snare polyps' bases, then current's applied, And heat cuts their stalks as the flesh becomes whitened. A biopsy's made from the parts that weren't fried. And so, Doctor Rees, thanks again for these verses That I'd not have written without your request. We, who must visit physicians and nurses, Should try to keep current with what they suggest. As it ascends, up that slippery slope in The base of my gut, every three years or two, When I feel the flexible sigmoidoscope in My rectum, I'll surely be thinking of you. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: breezy Date: 21 Nov 05 - 03:45 AM 'Transplant calypso' written awhile ago by Jeremy taylor doesnt appear to have been mentioned here Jeremy -who had a big hit with 'Ag Pleez deddy' - will be appearing at the Windward Folk club at the Comfort Hotel in St Albans UK on Sunday 27th Nov 2005 on Fri 25th it'll be george papavgeris |
Subject: Terrible Operation Blues,RE: for medical students From: robd Date: 05 Oct 09 - 06:52 PM So sad I missed this one, but since these threads may yet serve a useful purpose someday. And, a quick search of the site finds only a single mention of the song, but no words. I first heard Magpie sing it, and they credited Homer Clemons and his Texas Swing Billies. TERRIBLE OPERATION BLUES Thomas A. Dorsey aka. Georgia Tom - 1930 Bring in the next patient, nurse Get up on this table, pull off that gown Raise up that right leg, let that left one down Pull off them stockings, that silk underwear The doctor's got to cut you, mama, don't know where You got two or three tumors, shaped like a cube Two or three leaks in your inner tube Bring on that ether, bring on that gas The doctor's got to cut you, mama, yas, yas, yas The doctor knows to fix it, the doctor knows just what to do Oh doctor, can I have a glass of water? Oh, not now Oh doctor, I'm so sick! Sh, be quiet, doctor ain't gonna hurt you Oh, what you gonna do with that long knife? Oh, that's just the doctor's tools Oh doctor, what you gon' do with that saw? Oh, we take off legs with that, that's all Ooooh! Be quiet, now, just a moment There you are, the doctor's through! Oh doctor, what did you take out of me? Oh, just a minute, I'll tell you, dear Four monkey wrenches, two horse-shay Pair of old britches and a bale of hay Your ribs were kinda loosened, they moved about If I hadn't sewed you up, everything woulda fell out I put in new tubes, tightened up the exhaust Went into your hood and cleaned your spark plugs off Your body's kinda weak, don't be hard From now on you'll be careful with them there connection rods Alright, doctor! The doctor knows to fix it, the doctor knows just what to do Gee, doctor, but I feel better That so? Yes, I feel kinda like I wanna do a little messin' 'round Fine, go ahead! Ooooh, my my my my That's the way patients do that come to this hospital Your body's kinda weak, don't be hard From now on you'll be careful with them there connection rods Alright, doctor! The doctor knows to fix it, the doctor knows just what to do |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Jack Campin Date: 05 Oct 09 - 07:46 PM Tom Lehrer's song about the epidemiology of STDs: I Got It From Agnes. |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Gweltas Date: 05 Oct 09 - 08:14 PM How about "Lily The Pink" and her wonderful "Medicinal Compound " ?? |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: GUEST,fantum Date: 06 Oct 09 - 08:13 AM PILLS OF WHITE MERCURY straight out of the database |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: sing4peace Date: 06 Oct 09 - 08:30 PM Here's one my Dad wrote to the tune of "The Rickets Hornpipe" Rickets, berri-berri and pellagra too Can be caused by not enough of vitamins in you Lousy vision after dark And even colds and flu These symptoms can be caused they say By lack of vitamins in you. You may think you're having fun But without the vitamin [pronounced vita-mun] Your bones get soft they start to itch Your ankles weigh a ton So if you have to go to sea for any length of time Be sure that once a week You get to eat a carrot and a lime. Forget about psychiatry and don't go on a binge Eat a navel or a temple or valencia orange. ---- (Yes! that does rhyme the word orange. Anybody who knew Jody Gibson knew that you just couldn't tell him a thing couldn't be done without him setting about to prove you wrong.) -- Joyce |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: GUEST,Edthefolkie Date: 07 Oct 09 - 06:19 PM Hey thanks Robd, it 's great to see the words of "Terrible Operation Blues". That takes me back a bit, Georgia Tom's version (was there a lady on it too?) made me larf out loud when I first heard it. Got it on vinyl or tape somewhere but I can't remember what, when, where or how! MIGHT be on a Mike Raven compilation album (Mike used to do a blues programme on BBC radio 40 years ago) |
Subject: Nice to meet all of you From: GUEST,SoundJohn Date: 21 Nov 09 - 07:43 PM Hey! Thanx for this beautiful place of the Inet!! |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 21 Nov 09 - 10:31 PM a few songs here - Lyr Add: The Colorectal Surgeon's Song- see Haruo's initial post for the title song 'Working where the sun don't shine' aka The Colorectal Surgeon's Song Bob Bolton's post of 10 Mar 04 - 11:51 PM for 'Rectal Bleeding Calypso' Words & Music ©: John Dengate Clinton Hammond's post of 30 Jan 05 - 04:47 PM for chords I'll try to get copies of John Dengate's other medical masterpieces "Solar Melanoma Blues" (tune - Nobody loves you when you're down and out) & "Because I neglected dental hygiene" (sung thru his new dentures!) sandra |
Subject: RE: Folk songs appropriate for medical students From: beeliner Date: 21 Nov 09 - 11:19 PM It's kind of a long thread, so I might have missed it, but did anyone mention "Oh Doctor" by Malvina Reynolds, on the "Another County Heard From" album?
-Joe Offer- |
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