Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: clueless don Date: 13 Oct 22 - 05:32 PM There was a Disney Sing-Along video with words to Sailor's Hornpipe. I suspect the words were written by Disney staff writers. I don't have it handy, but some of the words were something like: Oh I love to live on the rolling sea Oh a sailor's life is the life for me and I never ever ever do a thing about the weather 'cause the weather never ever does a thing for me. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch Date: 13 Oct 22 - 05:19 PM Lyrics the same as Malcolm Douglas, 03 Aug 01 above. No music. [The Universal Songster; Or, Museum of Mirth, 1825] "On board a well-disciplined man-of-war, no person except the officers is allowed to speak during the performance of the various evolutions. When a great many men are employed together, a fifer or fiddler usually plays some of their favourite tunes; and it is quite delightful to see the glee with which Jack will “stamp and go,” keeping exact time to “Jack's the lad,” or the “College Hornpipe.” On board a revenue cruiser for want of music, it is customary for one of the men to give them a song, which makes the crew unite their strength, and pull together." [R.B., A Cruise of a Revenue Cutter, The United Service Journal and Naval and Military Magazine, Pt.I, 1834] ““Steam's up sir.” touching his cap to the captain, and with great difficulty checking himself from executing another pas de seul round the decks as the ship's fiddler struck up “Jack's the Lad,” while the crew were engaged in running the galley up to the davits.” [Cox, Nearly Eaten, or The Professor's Adventure in Haiti, The Boy's Own Paper, No.271, Vol.VI, 1884] |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: GUEST,stu Date: 27 Mar 20 - 01:43 PM When the Rock of Jib-aar-altaa takes a flying leep at Malta, you can always tell a salior with his night shirt on |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: MGM·Lion Date: 03 Jan 14 - 01:19 PM I remember from long ago [1940s] an exchange in ITMA between Tommy Handley and Clarence Wright, who played the salesman who always began "Good morning. Nice day...". He once offered his goods musically to the hornpipe tune. All I remember is "Do you want some jam? Or a lovely tin of ham? Or some [something else that rhymes with 'jam']?" "No I don't so you'd better hop it Or you're very sure to cop it ...." Sorry about the gaps; but it was 70+ years ago... ~M~ |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: Ged Fox Date: 02 Jan 14 - 01:27 PM Found in "Benton of the Royal Mounted", R.S. Kendall, 1918: '... the old barrack-room chorus "Johnny Green," which, to the tune of the "Sailor's Hornpipe" goes, as all Service men are aware: "Oh, say, Johnny Green! did you ever see the Queen? Did you ever catch a Blue-jacket lovin' a Marine? May the Rock of Gibraltar take a runnin' jump at Malta If I ever see a nigger with a white—rum-tum." ' |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: GUEST,Eliza Date: 13 Oct 10 - 02:46 PM Vic Smith Depends how old a song has to be to be called traditional. I sang "All the girls in Ceylon" in the early fifties, and no doubt it wasn't new even then! The Opies ("The Lore and Language of Children", I think) did quite an extensive study of children's chants and songs, and it turns out many of them have extremely old origins. Anyway, it made me giggle as a child, I'm ashamed to say! |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: Dave Hanson Date: 13 Oct 10 - 10:32 AM The usual song to ' Turkey in the Straw ' is The cow kicked Nellie in the belly in the barn, x3 And the doctor said it wouldn't do her any harm. Dave H |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: pavane Date: 13 Oct 10 - 09:39 AM I have only ever heard "...hang low " sung to college (sailors) hornpipe here in UK. Turkey in the straw is not as well known here, I suppose. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: Vic Smith Date: 13 Oct 10 - 09:00 AM "All the girls in Ceylon Run around with nothing on. All the girls in Calcutta Do a weewee in the gutter. All the girls in Spain Have a piddle down the drain. Nellie put your belly next to mine." .... and they say traditional song is dead! |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: JWB Date: 13 Oct 10 - 08:54 AM Don, like you I've always heard the "...hang low" words sung to a variant of the verse melody from Turkey in the Straw. Perhaps that's the Yank tradition? Jerry |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: clueless don Date: 13 Oct 10 - 08:33 AM I was just looking over this thread, and it is interesting to see that people think "Do your <body parts of your choice> hang low?" is sung to the tune of The Sailor's Hornpipe. Perhaps it is, somewhere in the world. But the tune I know for "Do your ..." is distinct from The Sailor's Hornpipe. Don |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: MGM·Lion Date: 13 Oct 10 - 04:05 AM Nice ~~thank you, Eliza. ~Michael~ |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: GUEST,Eliza Date: 12 Oct 10 - 06:30 PM MtheGM, We always sang (at about 9 years old) "All the girls in Ceylon Run around with nothing on. All the girls in Calcutta Do a weewee in the gutter. All the girls in Spain Have a piddle down the drain. Nellie put your belly next to mine." accompanied by a pseudo-Arabian Nights wiggly dance. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: pavane Date: 12 Oct 10 - 05:29 AM On : From the Devil to a Stranger (1978), Nic Jones, unfortunately not available (See Celtic Music threads) |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: pavane Date: 12 Oct 10 - 04:27 AM I have Jacky Tar (hornpipe) in a book, and did learn to play it at one time. I think Nic Jones may have recorded it, too - I will check. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: MGM·Lion Date: 11 Oct 10 - 01:37 PM Many thanks, Lighter. There is a most informative Wiki entry on this, I find from following your lead. ~Michael~ |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: doc.tom Date: 11 Oct 10 - 09:25 AM And what's the betting that Mother Rackett is our old friend Sally - just a bit older? |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: Lighter Date: 11 Oct 10 - 08:42 AM The familiar tune MtheGM refers to is James Thornton's "Streets of Cairo" (1893): http://www.shira.net/streets-of-cairo.htm Listen to the great Midi! (And the splendidly constrasting moods of the song's two parts!) |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: pavane Date: 11 Oct 10 - 06:53 AM I thought tune "Jacky Tar", or "Jacky Tar with his trowsers on" was a completely different tune (i.e. not the same as College Hornpipe, often called Sailor's hornpipe). |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: MGM·Lion Date: 11 Oct 10 - 04:47 AM I have always known "Do your balls hang low?' to the tune that also carries 'In the South of France, Where they do the hula prance, He'll sing "Nelly put your belly close to mine"', as well as to the Jacky Tar hornpipe: ~~ a mock oriental tune which I can't at the moment precisely place; is it perhaps from Samson & Delilah? Can anyone identify the tune I mean? W H Logan's The Pedlar's Pack Of Ballads & Songs [Edinburgh 1869] also contains Jack Robinson; & also, which no-one above has mentioned, a song called JACKY TAR which has the refrain "With his trousers on"; of which Logan notes "The air to which it has been sung is the well-known dance tune known as the Sailor's Hornpipe, which, it is believed, was danced long before the tune was rendered vocal". Jack-ashore courts a girl successfully, with, it is stressed at the end of each verse, 'his trousers on' ~~ presumably with ref to the fact that, as Phillis Cunnington & Catherine Lucas note in 'Occupational costume in England from the 11th century to 1914' {A&C Black 1967}: "Trousers. or trowsers were not commonly worn in the 18C. Their use was restricted to labourers, sailors, and soldiers, and on occasion to the country squire." ~Michael~ |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailor's Hornpipe From: Haruo Date: 10 Oct 10 - 11:34 PM Apparently the source of this is this site (which may also have other versions of songs that could enrich the Mudcat. |
Subject: Lyr Add: DO YOUR BALLS HANG LOW? From: Haruo Date: 10 Oct 10 - 11:30 PM The following version was just posted to the Yahoo!group of the AA hall I sobered up in. This is not our typical topic, but it's welcome, and seems to be different from any of the specific versions I've found here or elsewhere: DO YOUR BALLS HANG LOW? Tune: Sailor's Hornpipe Tiddly winks young man, get a woman if you can, If you cann't get a woman get a clean old man, From the lofty heights of Malta to the shores of old Gibraltar, Can you do the double shuffle with your balls in a can. Do Your balls hang low, can you swing 'em to and fro? Can you tie 'em in a knot, can you tie 'em in a bow? Can you swing'em o'er your shoulder like a European soldier? When you do a double shuffle do your balls hang low. Do your balls hang tight, can you hide 'em in a fight? Can you tuck 'en neath your arm, can you keep 'em out of sight? Are they tough enough to buckle up another man's hard knuckles? When you do a double shuffle do your balls hang tight. Do your balls hang loose, as loose as a goose? Can you slide 'em down the hall, can you bounce 'em off the wall? Does it really make you stammer when you hit 'em with a hammer? When you do a double shuffle, do your balls hang loose? ===== This is the first one I've seen that says "European" instead of "Continental"; doesn't feel right. Otherwise not bad at all. Haruo |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailors Hornpipe From: Bounty Hound Date: 11 Jun 10 - 05:29 PM Do your balls hang low can you swing 'em to and fro, can you tie them in a knot can you tie them in a bow do you get a funny feeling when you swing them to the ceiling you can always join the navy if your balls hang low Variations on a theme! |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Sailors Hornpipe From: GUEST, Sminky Date: 11 Jun 10 - 11:05 AM To revert back to Malcolm's post about 'Jack Robinson' - the song was composed by comic song writer Thomas Hudson (1791-1844). The phrase before you can say Jack Robinson was already in existence by then. |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: GUEST,Ian Date: 18 Mar 04 - 03:04 PM How funny is this site! Amazing |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: Dave Hanson Date: 03 Mar 04 - 05:11 AM Ting a ling goddamn Find a woman if you can If you can't find a woman Find a clean old man If you'r ever in Gibralter Try a flying fuck at Walter Can you do the double shuffle When your balls hang low Do your balls hang low Can you heave them to and fro Can you tie 'em in a knot Can you tie 'em in a bow Can you throw them o'er your shoulder Like a continental soldier Can you do the double shuffle when your balls hang low Traditional, from ' Bawdy Ballads ' Ed Cray eric |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: Charley Noble Date: 02 Mar 04 - 05:12 PM Barry- Your verse about "Iron Peg" is a keeper. I'm sure it would have been well received in some of the best Sailortown establishments around 1900. Charley Noble |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: GUEST,Barry at the Library Date: 02 Mar 04 - 12:54 PM Here are a couple more verses that I wrote, song was just to good not to have more. We'll go see Iron Peg & get our mainsheets hauled (repeat) Before we go to sea we'll take a girl upon our knee And we'll go see Iron Peg & get our mainsheets hauled We've been on the beach just a day to long (repeat) From everyone we get a curse cus' there's no money in our purse Reap 1st ling again) Barry |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: JohnInKansas Date: 26 Feb 04 - 03:16 PM fiddler - The link provided by Masato back in Sept 01, pub-session-tunes still works. It displays a .gif, and if you right click on it you can "save image as" to put it on your machine. If you don't have an image mangler, you can "Insert Picture, from file" in Word, and it prints quite nicely. It's also in a number of "standard" books, including Fiddler's Fakebook, and Stacy Phillips' vol 2 Fiddle Tunes. John |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: fiddler Date: 26 Feb 04 - 03:47 AM Best thread in ages BUT has anyone sourced some tadpoles for the man. I've know heaps of words to this some many far form Politically correct ans some would get the whip witdrawn if I were a sitting Conservative MP! for some reason I tend not to play it - Don't know why may have to change that. A |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: Charley Noble Date: 25 Feb 04 - 11:16 PM With regard to the verse from Barry: "We'll go down to Mother Rackett's. An' we'll pawn our monkey-jackets..." According to Stan Hugill's notes in SAILORTOWN, p. 299, Mother Rackett or Hackett was the owner of a sailors drinking dive and baording house in Hong Kong in the 1870's. Cheerily, Charley Noble |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: KateG Date: 25 Feb 04 - 06:53 PM Thank you for confirming my suspicions. I learned "Do your ears hang low" as a Brownie scout with appropriate cutesy actions. Many years later the song popped into my head while driving, and as a sang it I had a feeling that the original dangly bits were NOT ears. Glad to see that my gut(ter) feelings were correct. Good old Mudcat!! |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: greg stephens Date: 25 Feb 04 - 02:21 PM GUUST Ben Re Henry Wood: he didnt actually compose any of the tunes of the sea song bit at the Last night of the Proms; they are all old. He arranged a suite of tunes, and the Sailors Hornpipe is the tune that gets played faster and faster while everybody claps along to try and speed the orchestra. This thread lists a lot of vulgar ditties that has been written to the tune over the years. |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: GUEST,Chris Date: 25 Feb 04 - 02:12 PM My Grannie (born 1898) taught me the following words to the sailors hornpipe:- "Holy heck" said Jack "Did you ever see the Queen Did you ever see a sailor smack a tambourine". He's the coxwain of the whaler And he hit another sailor Then they had another tot before the boat shoved off. |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: GUEST,Ben Date: 25 Feb 04 - 09:38 AM More inquiries, I have been trying to find the words to a song heard at the last night of the proms called sailors hornpipe. It was composed by henry wood, and after a little research i have discovered this thread. It is possible that the song itself is henry wood's composition of jack's the lad sailors hornpipe. Can anyone point me in the right direction for said correct lyrics? Ben |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: weepiper Date: 14 Sep 01 - 01:54 PM Re the Haang Low song; I had a friend at school who used to sing something similar that began 'Does yer Ma drink gin, does she drink it from a tin...' but I can't remember the rest. Anyone know it? |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: English Jon Date: 14 Sep 01 - 11:54 AM "tiddlywinks old man, suck a lemon if you can, if you can't suck a lemon suck an old tin can" EJ |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: Steve in Idaho Date: 13 Sep 01 - 03:13 PM Deacon Dan Crary had the sheet music in one of his old song books. I don't have it at work with me so can't recall the date or name. But it had to have been sometime in the 70s. Maybe at his website - if he has one? |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: SeanM Date: 13 Sep 01 - 12:46 AM I've always been fond of the version from Disney's Alice in Wonderland: Oh, a sailor's life is the life for me Tiddle yum tum tum, tiddle tiddle tiddle dee And I never never never do a thing about the weather Because the weather never ever does a thing for me. M |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: masato sakurai Date: 13 Sep 01 - 12:37 AM Libby. Click here. Masato
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Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: GUEST,libby Date: 12 Sep 01 - 02:22 AM hi- i really need to find sailors hornpipe sheet music urgently... that is printable. do you know where you can find it? |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: Gareth Date: 03 Aug 01 - 06:36 PM N H Dave, "Plimsoul Line " The markings are also marked for areas and seasons. Deepest mark = shallowest draught is "WNA" = Winter North Atlantic. Top Mark ie deepest draft+ "TF" = Tropical Fresh. Take a trip to your nearest port and look at the bows of any ship. The initials by the marks represent the classification society wot calculated the limits. Thus L R = Lloyds Register. BTW The original act allowed the owners to set thier own load lines. Result ? "Glug, Glug, Glug !!!" Your pedantic Adjustor of Claims, Gareth
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Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: GUEST Date: 03 Aug 01 - 06:23 PM There's a song on DT called something like "He played his Ukelele when the Ship went Down." Since I'm not techie enough to get the melody, I content myself with singing it to Sailor's Hornpipe, which it fits very well. PS. I also have this masochistic setting for it on mando which requires use of left pinky. The sadistic b----- who tabbed it wrote that it's good for your soul to master this. Get back to me by about 2004 and ask me if I have it yet. Aaargh. CC |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: Snuffy Date: 03 Aug 01 - 06:18 PM I have a tape from Suffolk where the box player plays "The Yarmouth Hornpipe, or Jack's the Lad". I'll see if I can fit the words to that tune any better that the College Hornpipe. Wassail! V |
Subject: Lyr Add: JACK'S THE LAD and JACK ROBINSON From: Malcolm Douglas Date: 03 Aug 01 - 12:30 PM According to William Chappell (Ballad Literature and Popular Music of the Olden Time, 1859), The College Hornpipe was the tune to which Jack's the Lad was sung. He adds, "A copy of the words, printed in Seven Dials, was once in my possession." Nowadays such things are often easily found; there are a number of copies at Bodleian Library Broadside Ballads. The following is transcribed from a sheet printed between 1802 and 1819 by J. Pitts, Wholesale Toy and Marble Warehouse, Great St. Andrew street, 7 Dials, London. JACK'S THE LAD (Bodleian Library, Harding B 25[944] ) Our ship's a port so here I be, With a heart as light as a cork d'ye see 'Pon larboard quarter Poll is jigging, Dressed all in a Sunday rigging, Wench and fiddle always makes a sailor glad Old Nipperkin the landlord keeps the grog afloat And kindly is the liquor handed down each throat For if ever sailor took delight in kissing swigging jigging, dancing fighting Damme I'll be bold to say that Jacks the lad. With my tol de rol; &c Cheerly my hearts ye know Jack Spry; So full of ropes and rigs that I- D'ye hear the mer[ ]ry fiddle going, Blood it sets me off a toeing That'd be Catgut College Hornpipe brisk old dad, Now for a reel Sir David Hunter Blair that's Scotch, Or Langolee or anything but French or Duch For if ever fellow took delight in swigging kissing dancing fighting Damme I'll be bold to say that Jacks the lad. My locker's rich -the devil a mite Why here is a pretty rig Yes I'm right, An old friend like a blubbering ninny Lookd distressed like got my guinea Can't help snivelling somehow when I see folks sad But howsoever should I have luck to fall once more Long side monnsier homeward bound he'll pay the score, For if ever fellow took delight in swigging kissing dancing fighting Damme I'll be bold to say that Jacks the lad. Huzza! a gun- the signal's made All hands on board the anchor's weigh'd Lord how the girls by scores are flying, Fore and aft all sobbing crying, Thoughts of parting makes them all run roaring mad But honour bids her gallant sons to glory go So off again we send to lick the saucy foe For if ever fellow took delight in swigging kissing dancing fighting Damme I'll be bold to say that Jacks the lad. Spelling and punctuation as given; other examples differ in detail. A little ingenuity is needed to sing it to the tune under discussion, particulary in the first verse where additional syllables are required. The following was also sung to the same tune, and is taken from a broadside printed between 1819 and 1844, again by Pitts. JACK ROBINSON (Bodleian Library, Harding B 17[143b]. Tune: The College Hornpipe) The perils and dangers of the voyage pass'd, And the ship to Portsmouth arrived at last, The sails all furl'd and the anchor cast, The happiest of the crew was Jack Robinson; For his Poll he had trinkets and gold galore, Besides of prize money quite a store, And along with the crew he went ashore, As cockswain to the boat, Jack Robinson. Tol de rol, &c. He met with a man, and said, I say Mayhap you may know one Polly Gray, She lives somewhere hereabouts. The man said nay I do not indeed to Jack Robinson; Says he to him I've left my ship, And all my messmates gave the slip, Maybe you'll partake of a good cann of flip, For you're a civil fellow says Jack Robinson. Tol de rol, &c. In a public house then they both set down, And talked of Admirals of high renown, And drank as much grog as came to half a crown, This here strange man and Jack Robinson, Then Jack called out the reck'ning to pay; The landlady came in, in fine array, My eyes and limbs why here's Polly Gray, Who'd thought of meeting here, says Jack Robinson. Tol de rol, &c. The landlady stagger'd her back against the wall, And said at first she did not know him at all, Shiver me, says Jack, why here's a pretty squall, Dam'me don't you know me, I'm Jack Robinson, Don't you know this handkerchief you giv'd to me, 'Twas three years ago, before I went to sea, Every day I look'd at it and thought of thee, Upon my soul I have, says Jack Robinson. Tol de rol, &c. Says the lady says she, I've changed my state, Why you don't mean says Jack, that you've got a mate; You know you promis'd me, says she, I couldn't wait, For no tidings could I gain of you, Jack Robinson And somebody one day, came to me, and said, That somebody else had somewhere read, In some newspaper as how you was dead, I've not been dead at all, says Jack Robinson. Tol de rol, &c. Then he turn'd his quid finished his glass, Hitch'd up his trowsers, -alas! alas! That ever I should live to be made such an ass To be bilk'd by a woman, says Jack Robinson, But to fret and stew about it much is all in vain, I'll get a ship and go to Holland France and Spain, No matter where, to Portsmouth I'll ne'er come back again, And he was off before they could say, Jack Robinson. Tol de rol, &c. Whether the common expression Before you could say Jack Robinson derives from this song or pre-dates it, I have no idea. |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: pavane Date: 03 Aug 01 - 11:36 AM Lots of verses are to be found here and it also confirms the tune as Sailors Hornpipe |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: NH Dave Date: 02 Aug 01 - 11:04 PM n.b. Ships that ply both fresh and salt water have two sets of Plimsol/load lines, the ones for salt water and another set, a bit lower down the side of the vessel for fresh water, which is less buoyant, so the ship must be more lightly loaded. Dave |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: Celtic Soul Date: 02 Aug 01 - 10:32 PM Pavane, I could sing both of them for you. I am, however, technologically challenged. My group performs the Hornpipe occasionally, and I know the "Hang Low" song from (believe it or not) Barney the Dinosaur (sang as "Do your ears hang low?"). I will try to get the music written out for me, but I think this will be some time coming. |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: Charley Noble Date: 02 Aug 01 - 04:53 PM Thanks, Ian. I needed to be reminded what those markings were called. |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: IanC Date: 01 Aug 01 - 09:48 AM Charley Explained here ... Load Lines. "The Merchant Shipping Act of 1876 made load lines compulsory. However, the position of the line was not fixed by law until 1894. In 1906, foreign ships were also required to carry a load line if they visited British ports. Since then, the line has been known in Britain as the Plimsoll Line. To this day, it still carries the name of the MP who fought such a long struggle in parliament to win better safety conditions for ships' crews. Together with other important changes made to ships in the Victorian period, load lines helped to preserve the lives of ships' crews and passengers."
Cheers! |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: Charley Noble Date: 01 Aug 01 - 09:39 AM By the way, any clue what the original reference for "Plimsol Line" is? |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: Charley Noble Date: 01 Aug 01 - 09:29 AM Seems we're getting closer to the real thing. Keep digging and anyone who's queasy about where this thread might lead can shear off now! |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: The Walrus Date: 01 Aug 01 - 08:27 AM Another of the (publically)less repeatable versions of the Sailors Hornpipe Tiddleywinks, Old Man Toddleywinks, old man Find a woman if you can, If you can't find a woman, Do without, old man. When the Rock of Gibraltar Takes a flying leap at Malta You'll never get your bollocks in a corned beef can. "The text is slightly bowdlerised. This nonsense song is a pretty nasty scrap of folklore, and was sung chiefly by those who wished to show off their own toughness. Generall, the words stopped after the first line and the rest of the tune was whistled." (From "The Long Trail- What the British Soldier sang and said in 1914-1918", John Brophy & Eric Partridge - 1965) Regards Walrus
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Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: pavane Date: 01 Aug 01 - 02:49 AM Celtic Soul, Maybe there is a different tune also used for the song? Do you have details? An abc or MIDI file? It would be interesing to find out. |
Subject: Lyr Add: SAILOR'S HORNPIPE From: GUEST,PCW Date: 31 Jul 01 - 02:21 PM The words that I know to Jacky Tar/Jack's the Lad/Sailor's hornpipe are
He's a naval man. You can tell it when he walks.
He's a naval man of the ocean-going sort.
If he gets you in a row boat on the Serpentine,
Surprised you didn't know this version McGrath. I learned it from a guy at the old Hoddesdon Folk Club. |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: GUEST,Frogmore Date: 31 Jul 01 - 02:12 PM On a Savannah Ga. TV station in the 50s there was a weather man named "Capt. Sandy." His theme song was to the tune of the first part of Sailor's Hornpipe. It went, "Yo Ho Ho, what's the weather gonna be? Here's the man who knows, just take a look and see. Here is Capt. Sandy with the weather he has found - for Savannah and for Chatham and the counties all around." A clam on the ocean floor would open his mouth and announce the tide schedule and a pelican would be lowered by a wire and tell the wind direction and velocity. I've been known to surprise my fellow pickers with a rendition of this at the end of the tune. |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: GUEST,Celtic Soul Date: 31 Jul 01 - 01:53 PM From my understanding, "Do your Balls Hang Low" is a different piece of music from "Sailors Hornpipe". The words may fit, however. If so, what the hey! :D |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: Uncle Jaque Date: 31 Jul 01 - 10:41 AM I'm waiting (& hoping) for Dave the Ancient Mariner to check in on this one; would not be surprised if he knows a thing or two about it. Being from and representing Maine, of course the 3rd ME Regimental Field Music includes a version of this in our repitoire. The Drummers - especially our Bass (USN Ret'd.by the way) - do a real bang-up (or should we say "boom-up) job of it! We performed it during our recent Independance Day Parade in famous old Shipbuilding port of Bath, ME, where it was a big hit. Our public "premiere" of the piece was during "Opsail 2000" in Portland, next to the USCG "Eagle". We do it in the key of "G" (1 #) on Bb Military Fife, starting on high-register "G" (for those familiar with the fife/whistle family). |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: MMario Date: 31 Jul 01 - 09:48 AM JC's Tunefinder is an incredible resource. A VERY good place to bookmark... |
Subject: That's Super Mario From: GUEST,Nick Date: 31 Jul 01 - 09:36 AM Thanks for linking me up there |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: MMario Date: 31 Jul 01 - 09:28 AM nick - JC's tunefinder - select the "g" option for a gif of the music - the other options include abc, midi, postscript, etc.... |
Subject: ADD: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: Jacob B Date: 31 Jul 01 - 09:23 AM Do they hang below your knees? Do they tear your BVDs? Do they irritate When you catch them on the gate? Do they feel so nice When they glide along the ice? Do they hang too low in the morning? Any old storm Any old port Life is long Love is short Better get a woman, get a woman if you can If you can't get a woman, get a clean old man or, alternatively Any old port Any old storm Life is short Love is warm Better get a woman, get a woman if you can If you can't get a woman, get a clean old man From the singing of Oscar Brand. Actually, one of the choruses above is the way Oscar Brand sang it, and the other is the way I found myself singing it, but I've forgotten now which is which. And it seems to me that the melody is Turkey in the Straw rather than the Sailor's Hornpipe - but the two tunes are similar. |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: GUEST,Murray on Saltspring Date: 30 Jul 01 - 10:39 PM I have the feeling I imparted this version to MC lang syne, but anyway-- Do your balls hang low? Can you swing them to and fro? Can you tie them oin a knot, Can you tie them in a bow? Can you swing them to the ceiling With that free and easy feeling? Did you ever catch your ballocks In a rat-trap, oh? - Learned in the Royal Navy, 1952, from a public school boy. |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: Charley Noble Date: 28 Jul 01 - 02:50 PM I'm sure that someone has more verses in line with what Barry posted above, which I've only run across from Oscar Brand. I'd be curious if Mother Rackett was one of them Liverpool folk characters. |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: pavane Date: 27 Jul 01 - 06:08 PM If you find a MIDI or ABC, it can easily be converted |
Subject: RE: music to Sailors Hornpipe From: GUEST,Nick Date: 27 Jul 01 - 04:36 PM I was looking for sheet music on the web for this w/o finding, any one know where to find Sailors Hornpipe Sheet Music in Cyberland? |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: The Walrus Date: 27 Jul 01 - 04:31 PM "Do your Balls Hang Low" 2nd Verse
Do they itch when it's hot? Can you stick 'em in a pot? Walrus |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 27 Jul 01 - 04:03 PM Another indication of how the Mudcat doesn't really change that much. Without looking at the dates I never notice the join when these old threads get refreshed. |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: MMario Date: 27 Jul 01 - 03:30 PM original request was from 97 - I refreshed it because someone was asking recently about words to the sailors hornpipe...it was in relation to the Popeye thread |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 27 Jul 01 - 03:21 PM As I recall it:
Do your balls hang low, can you swing 'em to & fro
I wouldn't think that'd go down too well in a school project though... |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: MMario Date: 27 Jul 01 - 03:02 PM hmmmm- never realized that tune was the sailor's hornpipe! - I usually hear it with a more "hillbilly" sound - but it is remarkably similar if it isn't the same...isn't it? |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: pavane Date: 27 Jul 01 - 02:49 PM Do your balls hang low, can you swing 'em to & fro Can you tie them in a knot, can you tie them in a bow Do you get a funny feeling when you bash them on the ceiling {forgotten the next line) Do your balls hang low Sorry it's incomplete - someone will fill the gap tho! |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: MMario Date: 27 Jul 01 - 02:23 PM refresh |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: dick greenhaus Date: 10 Mar 97 - 12:27 PM Hi- The tune is usually listed in tune books as thge College Hornpipe. |
Subject: Lyr Add: SAILOR'S HORNPIPE From: Barry Finn Date: 09 Mar 97 - 08:54 PM If it's not My Bonnie Lies Over The Ocean and it is the Sailor's Hornpipe you’re looking for, I've only heard 1 verse I've added a couple of my own but here's the verse I have:
We’ll have another drink before the boat shoves off. We’ll go to Mother Ratchet’s And we'll pawn our monkey jackets, And we'll have another drink before the boat shoves. The Sailor's Hornpipe is also the only shipboard tune with it's own accompanying dance. |
Subject: RE: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: Anne Cormack Date: 26 Feb 97 - 10:49 PM From the words you mention, it sounds like you might be looking for "My Bonnie Lies Over The Ocean" which is on the database. I found it by looking in the index under M. Anne |
Subject: lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe From: Date: 26 Feb 97 - 09:48 PM I'm helping a friend with a school project. I'm looking for the lyrics to Sailors Hornpipe. I think the following words are in the song somewhere: Oh bring back, oh bring back, oh bring back my bonnie to me. Forgive me if I'm way of course, it's happenned before(too often)! Thanks! |
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