10 Oct 99 - 10:47 AM (#122461) Subject: The Butcher boy From: Melodeon I have mislaid my copy of the murder ballad of this name, I know the first line is "His parents gave him good learnig" I sang it many years ago and was reminded of it when I heard Ray Fisher singing it at Sidmouth this year. Melodeon |
10 Oct 99 - 12:45 PM (#122477) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: The Butcher boy From: * The Butcher Boy - Click Here * |
10 Oct 99 - 03:14 PM (#122516) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: The Butcher boy From: Melodeon Thanks whoever you are but that is not the version I am looking for. It begins My parents gave me good learning, Good learning they gave to me, They sent me to a butchers sop A butchers boy to be. Meloden |
12 Jan 02 - 06:41 PM (#626781) Subject: Lyr Add: THE BUTCHER BOY From: George Seto - af221@chebucto.ns.ca I don't seem to locate (Supersearch having problems.) whether this request was answered in a subsequent request..... From Suzanne's Songbook |
12 Jan 02 - 10:27 PM (#626868) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: The Butcher boy From: Malcolm Douglas There's a list of links to quite a lot of related material here and elsewhere in this earlier discussion: Hanged I shall be. At least one of the previous discussions here gave the date and location of the original murder, if I recall correctly; from Bruce Olson, so pretty reliable.
The text at Henry and Susanne's Songbook, quoted above, came from a record made by Enoch Kent, who learned it from Jeannie Robertson. Disregarding the numerous small changes characteristic of aural learning (dark and the rovin' eye instead of dark and rolling eyes, for instance) there are two changes from her traditional version which impair the sense:
Verse 6, line 2: Oran should be Roarin[g]
Verse 10, line 2: Gates should be fires.
We may as well have a tune available for this set, so here is a midi made from notation in Jeannie Robertson: Emergent Singer, Transformative Voice (James Porter and Herschel Gower, 1995). Until it gets to the Mudcat Midi Pages, it can be heard via the South Riding Folk Network site:
The notation is of the kind that offers several alternatives in many places, so I've gone for the combination of notes which seems best to fit the first verse. In one place it has been necessary to split a note to accommodate the lyric. |
12 Jan 02 - 10:30 PM (#626870) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: The Butcher boy From: Malcolm Douglas I screwed up the midi link. It should have been: |
12 Jan 02 - 10:59 PM (#626885) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: The Butcher boy From: toadfrog I am more familiar with this "Butcher Boy," on Levy Title: Oh! Ma-Ma! (The Butcher Boy). Composer, Lyricist, Arranger: By Rudy Vallee and Paolo Citorello. Based on the popular Italian song success "Luna Mezzo Mare." Additional choruses by The Andrews Sisters. Publication: New York: Shapiro, Bernstein & Co., Inc., 1928. Form of Composition: strophic with chorus Instrumentation: piano and voice, guitar First Line: Mama, dear, come over here, and see who's looking in my windows First Line of Chorus: Oh! Mama! Oh! Get that man for me Performer: Dick Robertson Engraver, Lithographer, Artist: unattrib. photo of Robertson; Immermann Advertisement: ads on inside center margins and on back cover for Shapiro, Bernstein & Co. stock Subject: Portraits Subject: Cartoons Subject: Peddlers Subject: Food Subject: Windows Subject: Courtship Subject: Love Subject: Marriage Call No.: Box: 158 Item: 164 Mama, dear, come over here, and see who's looking in my window. It's the butcher boy and oh! he's got a package in his hand! "Tell me why he winks his eye whenever he comes by my window"? "Daughter, Daughter he's in love and you're in love, and love is grand"! Oh! Mama! Oh! Get that man for me Oh!Mama! How happy I will be! Tra-la-la, and cheery beery be! If I'm going to marry, it's the butcher boy for me! I last heard that tune at the wedding in The Godfather
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13 Jan 02 - 03:30 PM (#627221) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: The Butcher boy From: GUEST,Melodeon Thanks George and Malcolm After 18 months I was astonished that someone resurrected the thread. While looking for something else, about a year ago, tucked into a totally different album sleeve I found what I was looking for. The booklet from 'Fair Game and Foul' vol 7 of Folk Songs of Britain Caedmon Records. Sung by Jean Robertson, although not all of it is on the record the booklet has the full version so I was able to get the bits I had forgotten. As Malcolm says it's sustantially the same as Enoch Kent's version exept that it doesn't have his 4th verse,which doen't ring true to me anyway. Thanks Melodeon
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13 Jan 02 - 03:39 PM (#627224) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: The Butcher boy From: Malcolm Douglas Actually, Jeannie did sing that fourth verse, at least sometimes; the Caedmon series was heavily edited, often for no apparent reason, and bits of songs were often omitted. |
14 Jan 02 - 05:17 AM (#627504) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: The Butcher boy From: Genie If you check out the website for the Record Lady, you'll find a country version of "The Butcher Boy," which is the same story as Joan Baez's "The Railroad Boy."' (This tale has been told above.) I think the song she has is by Judy Canova. Genie Link fixed. You omitted one quotation mark. --JoeClone, 15-Jan-02. |