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Hugill/Dana's missing shanties

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greg stephens 11 Jul 02 - 06:07 AM
GUEST,Brian 11 Jul 02 - 10:20 AM
GUEST,greg stephens 11 Jul 02 - 10:29 AM
MMario 11 Jul 02 - 10:42 AM
GUEST,Brian 11 Jul 02 - 10:49 AM
EBarnacle1 11 Jul 02 - 10:52 AM
GUEST,greg stephens 11 Jul 02 - 11:00 AM
GUEST,Brian 11 Jul 02 - 11:12 AM
masato sakurai 11 Jul 02 - 11:23 AM
masato sakurai 11 Jul 02 - 11:54 AM
radriano 11 Jul 02 - 12:04 PM
greg stephens 11 Jul 02 - 12:10 PM
GUEST,Brian 11 Jul 02 - 12:26 PM
MMario 11 Jul 02 - 02:04 PM
EBarnacle1 11 Jul 02 - 04:41 PM
GUEST,greg stephens 11 Jul 02 - 04:46 PM
Charley Noble 11 Jul 02 - 05:01 PM
Peter Kasin 11 Jul 02 - 11:49 PM
GUEST,greg stephens 12 Jul 02 - 03:39 AM
GUEST,greg stephens 12 Jul 02 - 04:09 AM
GUEST,Brian 12 Jul 02 - 04:57 AM
GUEST,greg stephens 12 Jul 02 - 05:04 AM
GUEST,Brian 12 Jul 02 - 05:24 AM
Charley Noble 12 Jul 02 - 08:59 AM
GUEST 12 Jul 02 - 09:34 AM
EBarnacle1 12 Jul 02 - 11:00 AM
GUEST,greg stephens 12 Jul 02 - 12:41 PM
pattyClink 12 Jul 02 - 03:10 PM
GUEST,chanteyranger 12 Jul 02 - 03:25 PM
radriano 12 Jul 02 - 05:12 PM
GUEST,chanteyranger 12 Jul 02 - 06:19 PM
Charley Noble 12 Jul 02 - 06:39 PM
GUEST,greg stephens 12 Jul 02 - 08:44 PM
Peter Kasin 13 Jul 02 - 12:54 AM
greg stephens 13 Jul 02 - 06:20 AM
greg stephens 13 Jul 02 - 06:36 AM
masato sakurai 13 Jul 02 - 06:57 AM
masato sakurai 13 Jul 02 - 07:00 AM
masato sakurai 13 Jul 02 - 07:25 AM
greg stephens 13 Jul 02 - 07:43 AM
greg stephens 13 Jul 02 - 08:01 AM
GUEST,Melani 13 Jul 02 - 12:58 PM
masato sakurai 13 Jul 02 - 01:37 PM
Ebbie 14 Jul 02 - 01:31 PM
greg stephens 14 Jul 02 - 02:39 PM
Barry Finn 15 Jul 02 - 12:15 AM
John Minear 21 Jan 10 - 11:22 AM
Charley Noble 21 Jan 10 - 05:22 PM
Steve Gardham 22 Jan 10 - 02:41 PM
Lighter 22 Jan 10 - 02:55 PM
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Subject: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: greg stephens
Date: 11 Jul 02 - 06:07 AM

In Stan hugill's shanty book he refers to the list of shanties Dana mentioned in "two years before the mast". He then lists the ones he has located, still in existence. The ones Hugill reckoned are lost are:

Heave to the girls
Hurrah hurrah my hearty fellows
Nancy O
Captain's Gone Ashore
Heave round hearty
Jack Crosstree
Neptune's Raging Fury

Now there is a good concentration of seasong people here on Mudcat. How many of these lost ones have been located post-Hugill. I know Captain's Gone Ashore has (recorded as "The captain go ashore"by the Boat Band and others). But I'm unaware of any of the others. Can anyone help shortening the list of lost songs a bit?


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: GUEST,Brian
Date: 11 Jul 02 - 10:20 AM

This could prove to be a right hornets nest.

We are all aware that traditional folk songs have regional and time variants to text, tune and title. With shanties multiply that by some and then some more.

The best Hugill could do was associate the titles of shanties that he knew, with titles mentioned by Dana. Whether they were the same shanties, or not, is anybodys guess. Similarly, shanties mentioned by Dana may still exist under other titles. To complicate that further, we do not know if the titles given by Dana were in common usage, or whether they were merely of his own reference.

Two Years Before the Mast is an excellent read, but it says nothing other than we sung this or that song. There are no lines quoted from the shanties other than title.

What I will say about shanties, is that over the last twenty something years that I've looked into them, the more I've learned the less I KNOW. Too many people try to give definative answers, because they read it in this book or that book. Hugill, Whall, Terry, Doeflinger etc. could only give a snapshot as an example from their own time. None of them say THIS is THE correct version.

The very nature of the job of shantyman, and purpose of the shanties themselves made them a very fluid form. To try to pin that down to definatives is like trying to glue wind to a wall. If you succeed it ain't wind, and if you don't it keeps moving and changing.

The job of the shantyman was to get the maximum amount of work out of the minimum number of bodies, by setting the pace and rhythm of the tasks, and maintaining moral. The length of time any job would take would depend on a number of factors, number of men, their physical condition, weather etc. So on any two days, the same job may take different lengths of time, and consequently, the number of verses of any shanty bawled out by the same shantyman would vary. Verses would be dropped, added in, borrowed, or made up as required. Multiply that by the number shantymen there were over a how ever long shanties were sung (a whole new debate), and however many lanuages they were sung in. Titles too, were more a common term of reference than actual title. So two shantymen on different ships, may well have known the same shanty by different 'titles'. Compare this picture with some of the adament answers expressed in the Yellar Girls thread! mmmmm!

I said it was a hornets nest! Sorry I can't actually answer your question, Greg. Still perhaps the next person who posts can give the definative answer.

Personally, I find the vast number of possibilities makes the subject much richer than knowing all there is to know about folk music. A few lost shanties, or maybe unassociated titles is a small price to pay.

Good hunting

Brian


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: GUEST,greg stephens
Date: 11 Jul 02 - 10:29 AM

I now what youBrian: but I'm just hoping for a few guesses, songs with Dana's title in the chorus, whatever. I found the Captain Go Ashore quite easily: cant believe the others have all floated away.
Couldnt agree more about certainty and shanties: I received two "corrections" when I quoted shanties in an earlier thread. People informed me of the "right" versions!!


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: MMario
Date: 11 Jul 02 - 10:42 AM

the is a Neptune's Raging fury at the Bodleian Library Broadside collection - though it doesn't resemble a shanty to me.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: GUEST,Brian
Date: 11 Jul 02 - 10:49 AM

Greg. Sorry. I didn't mean to preach to the converted.

I think some shanties may have fallen out of use, or disappeared beneath the waves in an old shantymans head. It's all part of the 'never know what you've lost 'til it's gone' syndrome. Collecting and recording them didn't start 'til they were falling out of use.

Have you read Dana's TYBTM? I can recommend it. I was given a copy when I was a lad (a while ago!!) and couldn't make head nor tail of it so it sat on the shelf. Years later, it got metioned in folk circles, so went home dug it out. Damn near read the print off it since!

Guesses? Now that different! I'll see if I can find some.

regards

Brian


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: EBarnacle1
Date: 11 Jul 02 - 10:52 AM

When I spoke with Stan several times prior to his regretted demise, he told me that he had placed several of his bawdiest with Gershon Legman, who had not yet gotten around to including them in a book. It is possible that some of the 'lost sheep' can be found among that group. I would be willing to commit my publisher to publishing these or others in hard form when there is enough material to make at least a 'decent' pamphlet.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: GUEST,greg stephens
Date: 11 Jul 02 - 11:00 AM

Mmario. I dont think all these have to be actual shanties: I'm afraid I havent got the Dana book to hand, only the Hugill references: but as far as I can recall, Dana mentions some songs specifically as worksongs, and some other which werent necessarily for working, just sung."Neptunes raging Fury" may be one of those. I'll try and chase this up.
Brian, yes, I have read Dana, but a long time ago. I have it somewhere in a box( I moved houserecently and havent unpacked everything). I've just had a look, in order to check the songlist, but I can't immediately find it.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: GUEST,Brian
Date: 11 Jul 02 - 11:12 AM

Looks like I might have to get TYBTM out and read it again (oh the hardship!) and make note which were shanties, and what else they sung. NRF looks like a possible. It doesn't sound like a shanty title, more broadside ballad to me.

Brian


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: masato sakurai
Date: 11 Jul 02 - 11:23 AM

"Neptune's Raging Fury; or, The Gallant Seaman's Sufferings" (the same version as is linked to by MMario) is in Christopher Stone's Sea Songs and Ballads (Oxford, 1906, pp. 22-25; words only). I don't think it to be a shanty, either.

~Masato


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: masato sakurai
Date: 11 Jul 02 - 11:54 AM

From Two Years before the Mast:

The sailor's songs for capstans and falls are of a peculiar kind, having a chorus at the end of each line. The burden is usually sung, by one alone, and, at the chorus, all hands join in, -- and the louder the noise, the better. With us, the chorus seemed almost to raise the decks of the ship, and might be heard at a great distance, ashore. A song is as necessary to sailors as the drum and fife to a soldier. They can't pull in time, or pull with a will, without it. Many a time, when a thing goes heavy, with one fellow yo-ho-ing, a lively song, like "Heave, to the girls!" "Nancy oh!" "Jack Cross-tree," etc., has put life and strength into every arm. We often found a great difference in the effect of the different songs in driving in the hides. Two or three songs would be tried, one after the other; with no effect; -- not an inch could be got upon the tackles -- when a new song, struck up, seemed to hit the humor of the moment, and drove the tackles "two blocks" at once. "Heave round hearty!" "Captain gone ashore!" and the like, might do for common pulls, but in an emergency, when we wanted a heavy, "raise-the-dead" pull, which should start the beams of the ship, there was nothing like "Time for us to go!" "Round the corner," or "Hurrah! hurrah! my hearty bullies!" (CHAPTER XXIX; underlines mine; also HERE)

~Masato


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: radriano
Date: 11 Jul 02 - 12:04 PM

I think I would agree about shanty titles sometimes being misleading. There really are no definitive versions, both in tune and text.

In fact, if I can get on my soapbox for a moment here, I'm irked by all the threads on Mudcat about what are the best songs or dance tunes or whatever. And while I'm on the soapbox, this is exactly why I don't care for the "Rise Up Singing" book. Rise Up Singing is one collection of songs. It is by no means a definitive collection of folk songs and should not be thought of as a song bible. Whew, sorry about that, but I do feel better now.

Oh yeah, we're talking about shanties. Right.

As mentioned earlier, it's unfortunate that many people consider any song about the sea to be a shanty. To further complicate things some shanties were originally music hall songs or folk songs heard by sailors and taken to sea to be turned into shanties, like Hoby Deri Dando (sp?). Stan Hugill is a great source but he was not always totally correct about everything. Greg mentions seven titles in his original posting here and I realize that we're only talking about references from one book but there are probably loads of shanties lost in time. And some of the shanties in existing collections are probably made up for publication anyway. What I'm refering to here are shanties whose lyrics are too artsy to have been sung by hairy shellbacks at sea.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: greg stephens
Date: 11 Jul 02 - 12:10 PM

Well, sure, Radriano. But I'm just proposing a little song-chasing exercise here, looking for the seven lost songs on this specific list of Hugill's. We seem to have two so far. Good hunting for the others.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: GUEST,Brian
Date: 11 Jul 02 - 12:26 PM

At last we seem to have found a thread for people without the 'Definitive Book of Folk Songs'. I thought I was the only one without a copy!

Radriano. Quite right. Songs did flow between land and sea. The shantyman that was afraid of stealing a verse or the whole song if it was worth stealing was no shantyman. But as you say there were work songs (shanties) and entertainment songs (forebitters). I doubt that sailors were anywhere near as choosie as todays 'authorities' on what could or couldn't be sung. They just got on and did it, and bugger where it came from.

Who makes up these rules, anyway?

Brian


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: MMario
Date: 11 Jul 02 - 02:04 PM

no luck on "Jack Crosstree" - but did find this definition:A bar of iron athwart ships at a topgallant masthead, to support a royal mast, and give spread to the royal shrouds; -- called also jack crosstree.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: EBarnacle1
Date: 11 Jul 02 - 04:41 PM

As mentioned above, "Fall over Screaming" is just one collection. In many ways, it is notable more for what is missing than for what is there.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: GUEST,greg stephens
Date: 11 Jul 02 - 04:46 PM

Well I have been trying to keep this on thread but I'd better drift off slightly myself. What is this "Rise up singing" book? What is so good/bad about it?


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: Charley Noble
Date: 11 Jul 02 - 05:01 PM

What joy! A search for missing sea shanties! Where's my time machine?

"Hello, Mr. Brown, do you know any sea shanties?"

"Sure, me boy. Why don't you walk with me over to Billy & Harry's Saloon over on Davis Street and I'll sing you a few. Now, let me buy you a drink."

"Why thanks, Mr. Brown. This tastes mighty sweet for whiskeyyyyyy......"

TIME PASSES SLOWLY AS THE WHITEHALL BOAT ROWS OUT INTO THE HARBOR TOWARD THE "BENJAMIN F. PACKER" AND AS THE BOATMEN DRAW CLOSER YOU WOULD HEAR AN UNCOLLECTED CAPSTAN SHANTY IF YOU WERE ONLY CONSCIOUS...

Cheerily,
Charley Noble


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: Peter Kasin
Date: 11 Jul 02 - 11:49 PM

Yes, Charley, to have been aboard ships circa 1840-1860 with a tape recorder, through the magic of time travel! Hugill lamented the probably hundreds of West Indian shanties lost forever.

There are magical moments, though, when old songs are "found," - like the rowing songs and whaling shanties Roger Abrahams collected in the 1960s, or when the Barroullie Whalers at Mystic sang the rarely heard "Bulldog," which is not found in Abrahams or Hugill/Colcord/Doerflinger, etc. A friend who is a scholar of Pacific Island sea music hears an old woman sing a song that has been passed on to her by her parents, from their parents. So, there are some rare glimmers of hope for finding old songs.

Finding all these, though, sounds pretty daunting. Greg, have you contacted any of the current scholars of sea music? Bob Walser and Stuart Frank come to mind. Who knows if they know something others missed. Worth a try, I'd think.

I vehemently disagree with Radriano and Brian over Rise Up Singing!!! It is indeed the last word on folksongs, containing every song worth singing, with the absolute correct number of verses.

(Just kidding, guys).

chanteyranger


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: GUEST,greg stephens
Date: 12 Jul 02 - 03:39 AM

Well, Cahntyranger,it doesn't seem a very daunting task to me. Impossible, probably, but not dauntng.No, seriously, there are seven songson it and two are knocked off already.I would be very surprised if the rest (or at least some) havent been recorded in the Caribbean sometime: and quite possibly out on CD or published in books. 2/7 in a few hours aint bad.I'll bet we soon have some more.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: GUEST,greg stephens
Date: 12 Jul 02 - 04:09 AM

Chantyranger's comment about Pacific islands is interesting. My thoughts were directed towards the Caribbean as the obvious repository for old English language sea songs, lurking in the huge number of field recordings made there, or still being sung. I'm not too familiar with what is knocking around in the Pacific, but surely theremust be loads of stuff remembered in the islands there as well. Anyone know anything about that? Coincidentally I am going out to eatand sing with the three members of Manuhiri(Pacific women singers, in England for Raise the Spirits festival) tonight. I'll ask them. That's what good about Mudcat, my sights were set on the Caribbean. Thanks for pointing me in another direction.
You'd be surprised where songs turned up. The tape on which I found "The Captain go ashore" had a lot of fabulous obsccure caribbean stuff on, and I was having a bit of transcription difficulty. SoI went to the Caribbean Ladies' Lunch Club in Stoke-on-Trent(industrial city, midddle of England) and asked if any of the elderly ladies could help. Not only could they help, in no time I was listening three Jamaicans singing one of the songs on the tape("Going down Emmanuel Road"), while kneeling on the floor with saucers in their hands, showing me how to play the game associated with the song. None of them had gven the song a thought since leaving Jamaica in the 50's, but there it was, safe in memory in Stoke.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: GUEST,Brian
Date: 12 Jul 02 - 04:57 AM

Hi Guys! I've been long away at sea.

Now look 'ee 'ere Chanteyranger me lad. You come on board my ship wi' one o' them there noo fangling tape recording things, and I'll pitch 'ee and it over the side. Bad magic is what it be, I says!

Just one point Chanteyranger, I never mentioned 'Rise Up Singing'. Perhaps you took my reference to the 'Definitive Book of Folk Songs' to mean that. I was just making the point that some people KNOW all the RIGHT versions, so they must own a copy of the folk song bible (whatever it's actually called). I just don't have a copy myself. Besides, I have other things on my mind when I 'rise up'.:-)

Greg. I think Chanteyranger is right that finding all of them is at least unlikely. I think the best that can be hoped for is vague references that could be possible. It's fine as a bit of fun, or as speculative possibilities. The danger is that the Song Police then start to take it seriously and use it as fact, which I am sure is not your intention.

My feeling is that a lot of shanties were lost in the (roughly) hundred years between the books of Dana and Hugill. Also, geographical location (Dana - America, Hugill - sailing out of UK) would have some effect on what songs and shanties they came across. Obviously, there would be common ground, but there would also be differences too. So, I think Chanteyrangers suggestion that Bob Walser and Stuart Frank may have something to add is worth considering.

cheers

Brian


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: GUEST,greg stephens
Date: 12 Jul 02 - 05:04 AM

It is just a bit of fun, but with a point. If we have a look, if we dont find what we're looking for, we can be damn sure we'll find something equally interesting along the way.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: GUEST,Brian
Date: 12 Jul 02 - 05:24 AM

Fair point, Greg. I like it. I'll be interested to hear what your meal and sing tonight turns up.

Best of luck

Brian


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: Charley Noble
Date: 12 Jul 02 - 08:59 AM

The other comment I would make about Dana's observations is that he doesn't use the term "sea shanty/chantey/chanty" but simply says "sailor's songs" or "work songs." Apparently the term hadn't been invented yet. Dana's observations are among the earliest which focus on these songs we love to sing; it's a true pity that no one has run across his private manuscript of lyrics and tunes. Maybe I'll recreate one and make my millions!

I bet one of the scholars mentioned above knows where Dana's private papers are held. Or is this another case of "Who would want this mouldy old sea chest full of papers? Toss it out!"

Cheerily,
Charley Noble


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: GUEST
Date: 12 Jul 02 - 09:34 AM

In my copy of TYBTM it states

.....His seafaring experiences also led him to prepare and publish (in 1841) 'The Seaman's Friend' (or, as it was called in England, 'The Seaman's Manual'), containing a glossary of sea-terms, laws respecting duties of masters and marines, &c.

In addition to these, Dana wrote several other works, including 'Biographical Sketches', 'To Cuba and Back', 'A Vacation Voyage', besides a large number of reviews, many of which were afterwards collected and published in a volume.

Unfortunately, no mention of sea songs. I have never seen any of his other works, so don't know what they contain.

The Intro goes on to say he died in Rome in 1882. So, if any papers are still in existence, they may not be in the US, anyway.

Brian


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: EBarnacle1
Date: 12 Jul 02 - 11:00 AM

The most important part of picking up unlisted traditional material is simply to be where the people who know it are. I once picked up an unlisted couplet in the middle of the afternoon in Brooklyn on Labor Day Weekend from an old guy who used to be a whaler in the Caribbean. Once you have the basic material, you have to be persistent in filling in the blanks, even if that means you have to go on collecting trips to exotic places. Isn't that rough? Of course, you may find yourself outward bound on an unplanned voyage, but that is the definition of adventure.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: GUEST,greg stephens
Date: 12 Jul 02 - 12:41 PM

Collecting in exotic places, indeed. I'm waiting for the grant to go to St Kitts, but in the meantime I'll keep working on Stoke, with its long-overlooked jewels.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: pattyClink
Date: 12 Jul 02 - 03:10 PM

Great stories, greg and ebarnacle, on listening to old folks who still had the old songs.

Cool thread. I sure don't have any leads on the 'missing songs'.

I would like to tell anybody who hasn't read "Two years before the mast" to read it, especially if you have spent any time in California or have the slightest interest in history or the sea. It is a well-written, absorbing, delightful, profoundly fascinating read.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: GUEST,chanteyranger
Date: 12 Jul 02 - 03:25 PM

Sorry, Brian, but I did misinterpret you to have meant RUS. Well, at least I got to vent a little about how that book is often used. Your point, though, is very well taken.

chanteyranger


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: radriano
Date: 12 Jul 02 - 05:12 PM

I'm afraid the references to "Rise Up Singing" were my fault. I was venting in an earlier post to this thread.

And Greg, I didn't mean to be critical with my remarks. It would indeed be great to find those songs.

But speaking of Abrahams' collections from the Pacific Islands I have an observation to make. For the most part the songs he collected did not have story lines which is a typical feature of sea songs from that area. "Grey Goose Come Home", one of the songs Abrahams collected, I originally heard sung by an English shanty band replete with something of a story line in it. I'll bet many a song underwent this kind of transformation as songs passed from Pacific Island traditions to English traditions.

Greg, "Rise Up Singing" is a collection of songs put out by Sing Out! (the folk song magazine). It's very popular in a lot of circles, loved by many and detested by some. The problem is that if everyone uses that one collection we miss out on the myriad of variants in existance. Just as there is no definitive version of any folk song there is also no definitive collection of folk songs. Problem is that a lot of folks consider RUS to be the bible of songs and arrive at any gathering with book in hand. And some people don't even bother to learn lyrics of a song 'cause they have the book with them. Okay, okay, enough said.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: GUEST,chanteyranger
Date: 12 Jul 02 - 06:19 PM

To clear up some confusion, Abrahams's study is of West Indies shantying, in the Carribbean. My reference to Pacific Island songs was to help make the point that old songs are still being found. Greg, not suggesting that the Pacific Islands are a source to look for the songs you're searching for.

Well said, Radriano, on RUS.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: Charley Noble
Date: 12 Jul 02 - 06:39 PM

"Deep the water, shallow the shore" goes the old West Indies rowing song, and so may it be with the insights of us land-bound aspiring shanty singers. Not that such a liklihood should discourage us from the search, which is most of the fun. Just don't count on a successful catch.

Cheerily,
Charley Noble


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: GUEST,greg stephens
Date: 12 Jul 02 - 08:44 PM

Know what you mean about them song books.I was vaguely running(in a non-prescriptive way) a bit of an informal pissed up session in the peel sailing Club(Isle of Man) at the boatfest last w/end, and there were a group of people with a big folder of song words at the table.And they were leafing through their bloody book when anyone kicked in with a song, and joining in with the words off the song-sheets. Completely oblivious to the fact that the singer who had started the song was singing something completely different. I'm not convinced that this new-fangled policy of teaching everyone to read at school is a good idea.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: Peter Kasin
Date: 13 Jul 02 - 12:54 AM

Shouldn't there be a superhero who's job it is to swoop down and grab these songsters?


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Subject: ADD: The captain go ashore
From: greg stephens
Date: 13 Jul 02 - 06:20 AM

Well here we all are sitting on bollards, wearing blue jumpers, chewing tobacco(always spitting to loo'ard) and talking of this and that. But to revert to some hard content.

THE CAPTAIN GO ASHORE
(fron "The Real Bahamas" recording, also covered by the Boat Band)

1: And the captain go ashore
And the sailor go too
Mind captain mind
Some evil spirit on board your boat
Come a ring ting ting
Come a ring tng ting Going round the garden of old England

2: And the captain go ashore
And the sailor go too
Mind captain mind
Some evil spirit on board your ship
Come a ring ting ting
Come a ring ting ting
Who dat? Who dat?
Sailing round the garden of old England
Come a ring ting
Come a ring ting ting
Who dat?Who dat?
Walking round the garden of old England

And the capatain go ashore
And the sailor go to
Mind captain mind
Some evil spirit on board your ship
Come a ring ting ting
Come a ring ting ting
Who dat? Who dat?
Sailing round the garden of old England


(Don't know if this is Dana's "Captain's gone ashore" but it's a fantastic poetic song.)


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: greg stephens
Date: 13 Jul 02 - 06:36 AM

Missed a line break in last line of verse 1,also a typo in same line. Maybe one of those little sweeper-uppers will come by and tidy it.Please? And delete this post.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: masato sakurai
Date: 13 Jul 02 - 06:57 AM

Thanks, Greg. I have the CD (2-disc Nonesuch edition). Sound clip is HERE (sung by Frederick McQueen).

~Masato


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: masato sakurai
Date: 13 Jul 02 - 07:00 AM

P.S. Type in "Real Bahamas"


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: masato sakurai
Date: 13 Jul 02 - 07:25 AM

I don't intend to say Nancy Whisky is a related song to "Nancy O", but it has this chorus:

O whiskey, whiskey, Nancy Whiskey
Whiskey, whiskey, Nancy-o.

~Masato


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: greg stephens
Date: 13 Jul 02 - 07:43 AM

There's so many Nanny/Nancy songs it's difficultto speculate,isn't it? I quite fancy a Nanny-O quoted by cahppell as being in the Roxburghe Collection.

It is Nanny Nanny Nanny O
The love i bear to Nanny O
All the world shall never know
The love I bear for Nanny-O

The tune for that got around a bit as a fiddle tune at the right sort of time. Admittedly it's nanny not nancy but that's a minor difference.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties PART II
From: greg stephens
Date: 13 Jul 02 - 08:01 AM

The Barra McNeill's(sp?) have a "Nancy O"tune or song listed, anyone familiar with them?


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties PART II
From: GUEST,Melani
Date: 13 Jul 02 - 12:58 PM

Hey, chanteyranger, didn't that guy (sorry, I forget his name;my brain is fried in the East Coast heat)who did the one-man "Two Years Before the Mast" show say that he had had some contact with a direct descendant of Dana's? Maybe that's a contact for finding personal papers.

In regard to land songs used at sea, I believe I recall hearing "Twist and Shout" and "The Itsy Bitsy Spider" used as halyard chanties.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties PART II
From: masato sakurai
Date: 13 Jul 02 - 01:37 PM

Stan Hugill says: "He [Olmstead, in Incidents of a Whaling Voyage, 1841] also mentions one [shanty] used for pulling the teeth out of the jaw of a sperm whale, O Hurrah, My Hearties O!--which may be the same as Dana's Hurrah, Hurrah, My Hearty Fellows. The Quid ["quaint little volume" published in London, 1832] also refers to another work-song, Pull Away Now, My Nancy O!, which perhaps is the one listed by Dana as Nancy O!" (Shanties and Sailors' Songs, Herbert Jenkins, 1969, p. 49)

~Masato


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties PART II
From: Ebbie
Date: 14 Jul 02 - 01:31 PM

Has anyone else reached the age/stage where the brain (?)inserts words that are not there into a sentence? I'm not a particularly 'evil'minded person but I keep seeing this thread's title as 'missing panties'.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties PART II
From: greg stephens
Date: 14 Jul 02 - 02:39 PM

Someone has already started a parallel thread on Dana's panties. At least nobody has so far mentioned the old seasong "Haul'em down you Zulu warriors" and the activity it accompanies, and I won't either. You have to be very careful naming threads round here, when you see what febrile imiginations some Mudcatters have.


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties PART II
From: Barry Finn
Date: 15 Jul 02 - 12:15 AM

As far as what EBarnacle said earlier on (oh, oh, thread creep) about timming & putting yourself in an area where the odds of hearing something different increases, I very much have to go along with except that the odds get slimer daily as the old timers or those that knew the old timers die off. That would leave us with only collecting what already's been written or recorded. Though some of what's been written or collected may have been seen & not heard & some songs heard & not seen, so there's another area. I believe the days of finding unknown sea shanties sung by sailors that worked under sail is "nearly" gone. Maybe in the areas of the West Indies or around the Ackerland (SP?) Islands where the deep water trades outlasted most other areas (up till WWII). As to finding some of the missing shanties among the West Indies it's likely to be next to nil if not worst with only titles & no content to compare with. Some other ares that are possiblies are other traditions that may have some link. An example would be the work song "Drinking that Wine" which is found as a net hauling shanty & as a prison worksong (axe/logging) & another (IMHO) would be "Won't You Help Me To Raise'Em" found in the same fisheries as "Drinking that Wine" & found in the southern prison system as a varient of "O,Alabama".
In the late 70's I was given the title of shantyman on the museum brig, Carthaginian (Maui). I'd help in my spare time lending a hand & a voice in her restoration. An old timer, George Herbert, a master rigger from West Geelong who had worked under sail in both the Baltic & Cape Horn trades dropped by to lend a hand to some old friends of his but more to show & advise them. He loved to sing & play his concertina, uke & mouth harp. At a singing party held on board I ended up taping the whole evening & not being educated in the fine arts of collecting I was happy just to have sung with him. After playing these tapes for 15 yrs I wrote to him & up till he died we swapped tapes of sea songs (me still not finding out much about the songs except that I could only find some not so close versions in print). I never found out where he got some of these (I can make some good guesses though) but my point here is that for me it was pure blind, dumb luck (not the only time my luck has been this good to me) & with serious luck someone else may have uncovered much more at the time, the other side is that to find any old timers these days would take more than serious, blind, dumb luck. Sorry, I'll give up on my thread creep ramblings & you & me a rest, happy hunting
Barry


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: John Minear
Date: 21 Jan 10 - 11:22 AM

Over in another thread   thread.cfm?threadid=126347&messages=1 where I have been working on trying to imagine what shanties might have been sung on board the bark, "Julia Ann", on her three and half voyages from San Francisco to Sydney in the early 1850's, I was looking at the "early" references to sea shanties in the literature. Of course I came across Dana's famous list and then Hugill's famous list of Dana's list and his discussion of the "Lost Shanties". But then I hit a snag.

As near as I can tell, Hugill attributes three extra shanties to Dana that I have been unable to find anywhere in Dana, including his TO CUBA AND BACK and his THE SEAMAN'S FRIEND. They are: "Roll the Old Chariot", "Cheer Up, Sam", and "Neptune's Raging Fury". I have scanned fairly carefully the "Two Years Before the Mast" and I just don't see them.

In his 1961 edition of SHANTIES FROM THE SEVEN SEAS, Hugill discusses Dana on pages 9-10. And on page 562, where he gives us "Cheer Up, Sam", he says, "Another shore-song popular even in Dana's day aboard ship as a capstan song was the minstrel ditty "Cheer Up, Sam"." In neither place does he give any page numbers in Dana.

In his 1969 edition of SHANTIES AND SAILORS' SONGS, he says on page 6, with regard to "Neptune's Raging Fury", "Whether this latter has any connection with the lost shanty bearing the same title and referred to by Dana in his TWO YEARS BEFORE THE MAST is rather doubtful." On pages 48-49, he again lists the songs from Dana, including "Roll the Old Chariot" and "Neptune's Raging Fury" and says, "Elsewhere, he [Dana] gives "Cheer Up Sam" (which is really a minstrel song) as a shanty that they used."

In doing a Google search on "Cheer Up, Sam", I came across a number of literary references to this song, and interestingly enough a number of quotes of this line in various Australian newspapers from the 19th century. It does seem to have been well known. I did not come across a source for it. The other two songs have been well documented outside of Dana.

I did find this note in the 4th edition of W.B. Whall's SEA SONGS AND SHANTIES (1920). It is on page two of that edition as an endnote following the song "Shenandoah". Whall says:

"This was not the only "song," by any means, which was used as a shanty. Dana told us long ago that one of the shanties used in his day was -

                         "Cheer up, Sam,
                         Don't let your spirits go down," etc.

which was made familiar to by the old Christy Minstrels."

So, have I just missed the references in Dana to these three shanties, or are they not there?


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: Charley Noble
Date: 21 Jan 10 - 05:22 PM

John-

I can't find the three songs mentioned above either in the pages I marked in Dana where he discusses shanties.

Charley Noble


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 22 Jan 10 - 02:41 PM

One of the titles mentioned is 'Jack Crosstree'.
IMHO this is the sort of title used for songs by Charles Dibdin Sr and his contemporaries towards the end of the 18thc, all of 'em shore songs, usually sentimental tosh that rarely lasted long before the mast. Jack Rattlin', Tom Tackle, Ned Mizzen, Tom Halliard, Old Uncle Tom Bowling and all, old Uncle Tom Bowling and all! Sorry, got carried away.

(Not Tom Bowling, he was a real seaman from York)


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Subject: RE: Hugill/Dana's missing shanties
From: Lighter
Date: 22 Jan 10 - 02:55 PM

Good going, Steve. Dana specifies this as a shanty; if it was a shore song, as you suggest, it might have been best fitted to the capstan.

Bear in mind, too, that a "jack cross-tree" was an actual iron cross-tree at the head of a t'gallant mast.

Probably not worth mentioning is the possibility that "Jack Cross-Tree!" was occasionally substituted for "John Franswah!" in "Boney."
But in that case Dana would more likely have mentioned Bonaparte rather than the chorus.


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