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Origins: I've Aye Been Fu'

04 Jan 22 - 02:28 PM (#4130992)
Subject: Origins: I've Aye Been Fu'
From: weerover

A fine Ayrshire singer called Angus ("Gus") Russell gave me the words for this song ("I've Aye Been Fu' Since the New Year Came In") many years ago and I sang it a number of times. Now a friend who is still performing intends to record it and would like to credit it properly. If anyone knows its provenance please let me know.


04 Jan 22 - 10:56 PM (#4131060)
Subject: RE: Origins: I've Aye Been Fu'
From: GUEST

Chorus?

PLEASE


05 Jan 22 - 03:21 AM (#4131066)
Subject: RE: Origins: I've Aye Been Fu'
From: Herga Kitty

Jim Mageean sings this, so I'll ask him to remind me who he got it from.

Kitty


05 Jan 22 - 03:54 AM (#4131068)
Subject: RE: Origins: I've Aye Been Fu'
From: weerover

The chorus goes:

I've aye been fu' since the New Year came in (x2),
For it's what wi' the whisky and the brandy and gin
I've aye been fu' since the New Year came in.

wr


05 Jan 22 - 07:21 AM (#4131090)
Subject: RE: Origins: I've Aye Been Fu'
From: Herga Kitty

I've heard from Jim that he also got the song from Angus Russell -

" I got the song from the late Angus Russell of Newcastleton, Scotland.
He said he collected it but I think he wrote it as it’s not in any collection.

The tune is the Scottish air ‘The Laird O’ Cockpen’. I don’t know anyone else who sings it apart from me."

Kitty


05 Jan 22 - 07:13 PM (#4131186)
Subject: RE: Origins: I've Aye Been Fu'
From: Chris Wright

It was composed by Robert Gilfillan of Dunfermline (1798-1850), and published the year after his death; the tune was also his suggestion.

See:

'Poems and Songs' (R. Gilfillan, 1851) pp. 164-166
'Vagabond Songs & Ballads' vol. 2 (R. Ford, 1901) pp. 53-55 'Whistlebinkie' vol. 1 (pub. D. Roberston, 1905 edn) pp. 423-424

Here's Robert Ford's write up:

"I'VE AYE BEEN FOU' SIN' THE YEAR CAM' IN

Air—" The, Laird n' Cockpen."

        I've aye been fou' sin' the year cam' in,
        I've aye been fou' sin' the year cam' in ;
        It's what wi' the brandy, an' what wi' the gin,
        I've aye been fou' sin' the year cam' in !

Our Yule friends they met, and a gay stoup we drank,
The bicker gaed round, an' the pint-stoup did clank;
But that was a nae thing, as shortly ye'll fin'
I've aye been fou' sin' the year cam' in !

Our auld timmer clock, wi' thorl an' string,
Had scarce shown the hour whilk the New Year did bring.
When friends and acquaintance cam' tirl at the pin
An' I've aye been fou' sin' the year cam' in !

My auld Auntie Tibbie cam' ben for her cap,
Wi' scone in her hand, an' cheese in her lap.
An' drank a gude New Year to kith an' to kin
Sae I've aye been fou' sin' the year cam' in !

My strong brother Sandy cam' in frae the South
There's some ken his mettle, but nane ken his drouth ;
I brocht out the bottle, losh ! how he did grin !
I've aye been fou' sin' the year cam' in !

Wi' feastin' at nicht, an' wi' drinkin' at mom,
Wi' here tak' a caulker, an' there tak' a horn;
I've gotten baith doited, an' donner't an' blin'
For I've aye been fou' sin' the year cam' in !

I sent for the doctor an' bade him sit doun,
He felt at my wrist, an' he straiket my crown
He order'd a bottle—^but it turned out gin
Sae I've aye been fou' sin' the year cam' in !

The Sunday bell rang, an' I thocht it as weel.
To slip into the kirk, to steer clear o' the de'il;
But the chiel' at the plate fand a groat left behin'
Sae I've aye been fou' sin' the year cam' in !

'Tis Candlemas time, an' the wee birds o' Spring
Are chirming an' chirping as if they wad sing:
While here I sit bousing—'tis really a sin !
I've aye been fou' sin' the year cam' in!

In the month of May not many years ago a man was arraigned at the bar of a West of Scotland Police Court for being drunk and incapable, and when asked if he was guilty or not guilty, he modestly admitted the impeachment, but leering in the face of the presiding magistrate, pled in extenuation " thae awfu New Year times." A similar case of long-sustained hefuddlement perhaps, many years before, gave Robert Gilfillan, the author of " Why Left I My Hame," who was himself certainly a most temperate and exemplary man, the hint for this rarely graphic and clever bacchanalian song. It can be sung with rare effect and is not without a moral—to the wise."


06 Jan 22 - 05:21 AM (#4131227)
Subject: RE: Origins: I've Aye Been Fu'
From: weerover

Thank you so much, Chris, for your comprehensive post and for vindicating my confident assertion to my wife that Mudcat would have a definitive answer within 48 hours. The version I had did not have the first verse as above.

wr


06 Jan 22 - 05:40 AM (#4131231)
Subject: RE: Origins: I've Aye Been Fu'
From: Herga Kitty

Thank you Chris - it's interesting to see how the words (and number of verses) changed in the version passed on to Jim by Gus Russell).

Kitty


06 Jan 22 - 07:20 PM (#4131318)
Subject: RE: Origins: I've Aye Been Fu'
From: Tattie Bogle

Great Chris! I’m haein’ that!