02 Feb 00 - 06:20 PM (#172537) Subject: When you were sweet 16 - Full Version From: GUEST,cujimmy This song was written by Jim Thornton who fled the famine in Ireland. He wrote it about his wife who perished in Ireland before he left. I know most of the words and would be grateful for all the words of the Full Song not just the short version sung by the Fureys. Thanks for your help - regards - jimmy |
02 Feb 00 - 07:25 PM (#172579) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: When you were sweet 16 - Full Versio From: Brakn Click here and you will find it. Mick Bracken |
02 Feb 00 - 10:08 PM (#172652) Subject: Lyr Add: WHEN YOU WERE SWEET SIXTEEN (J Thornton) From: Tiger Here's what I've got. I've got a MIDI and a recording, if you're desperate. .....Tiger
From The Lester S. Levy Collection of Sheet Music: |
03 Feb 00 - 04:39 PM (#173036) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: When you were sweet 16 - Full Versio From: Kernow John Jimmy If you have any different from this can you post it please. Baz |
03 Feb 00 - 05:18 PM (#173057) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: When you were sweet 16 - Full Versio From: GUEST I was at a Fuies concert a few years ago and Finbar said Jim Thornton had gone over to U.S.A from Liverpool in 1847 and he used to play/sing on street corners in Chicago, a priest befriended him and wrote down the words of the song and so it survived. Is this right or am I mistaken, I,m sure that is what Finbar told the audience - The word are the same as I,ve known except " your dear kind face ", and " I know that it would ease my weary heart ", not much different - regards jimmy |
03 Feb 00 - 05:28 PM (#173066) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: When you were sweet 16 - Full Versio From: Martin _Ryan I don't know if the story is true - but I do know this: it wouldn't be the first time the Fureys embellished/invented a story - often to hilarious effect! Regards |
03 Feb 00 - 07:13 PM (#173147) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: When you were sweet 16 - Full Versio From: Brakn Jsut to add....the Furey's only sang one verse. Mick Bracken |
24 Jun 02 - 08:16 AM (#735648) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: When you were sweet 16 - Full Versio From: Orac This lovely song got carved up by Al Jolson when he recorded it back in 1930. This bastardised version was copied by Perry Como (and others) in the late 1940's and then later by the Furys, whose version seems to be copied by everyone now. The Furys keep circulating this nonsense that James Thornton was Irish. He was English, born in Liverpool in 1861, he and his family moved to the States in 1869. His wife was not Irish either. She was an American lady that he met whilst he was working as a singing waiter. I would urge anyone wanting to learn this song to go back to the 1898 original, the melody of which is in three parts not two. |
24 Jun 02 - 08:57 AM (#735660) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: When you were sweet 16 - Full Versio From: masato sakurai Thornton, James, composer, author, actor; b. Liverpool, Eng., Dec. 4, 1861; d. Astoria, New York, July 27, 1938. ASCAP 1914 (charter member). To U.S. 1870. Educ.: Elliott School, Boston. To work at an early age, became protégé of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Night watchman at seventeen, began professional career as singing waiter in Boston; in vaudeville for fifty years as monologist, singer, and comedian; introduced own songs. Songs: "When You Were Sweet Sixteen";.... (The ASCAP Biographical Dictionary<.I>, 2nd ed., Crown, 1952 p. 500)
Sheet music is also in Favorite Songs of the Nineties (Dover, 1973, pp. 347-350). ~Masato
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24 Jun 02 - 09:09 AM (#735671) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: When you were sweet 16 - Full Versio From: Orac I would like to see how Finbar Fury substantiates his claim that J. Thornton "left Ireland in 1847 after the famine" when he wasn't born until 1861 in England. It seems that the Irish try to claim ownership of everything. Another example is "I'll take you home again Kathleen" written by German American Thomas Westerndorf to remind his wife of the Black Forest that she still missed.... nothing to do with Ireland at all. |
24 Jun 02 - 09:13 AM (#735675) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: When you were sweet 16 - Full Versio From: nutty This sheet music on the Levy site was printed in 1898 WHEN YOU WERE SWEET SIXTEEN |
24 Jun 02 - 09:13 AM (#735676) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: When you were sweet 16 - Full Versio From: masato sakurai Publisher of the Dictionary should have been Crowell, not Crown.
The link to the sheet music (1898). There's a different song with the same title, written by Alfred White, published in 1881, which is at Music for the Nation: American Sheet Music, 1870-1885 (Library of Congress). ~Masato |
24 Jun 02 - 09:20 AM (#735679) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: When you were sweet 16 - Full Versio From: Orac OK... I know its Furey not Fury ... before anyone says anything |
24 Jun 02 - 09:28 AM (#735689) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: When you were sweet 16 - Full Versio From: Malcolm Douglas A link to the sheet music has been posted while I was preparing mine, so I'll just add: Words & Music by James Thornton. Publication: New York: M. Witmark & Sons, Witmark Building, 1898. "Sung With Great Success By Bonnie Thornton..." I missed this thread first time round, and hadn't realised that the Fureys had concocted a completely false story about the song, which is a typical parlour ballad of the period, made to formula for money. Many people nowadays, familiar with the "confessional" style of singer-songwriter, don't seem to realise that not all popular song is based on real-life experiences! The front page of the sheet music, incidentally, has a photograph of Bonnie Thornton looking the picture of health and evidently none the worse for her death in a famine on the other side of the world twenty or more years before she was born. |
24 Jun 02 - 09:30 AM (#735690) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: When you were sweet 16 - Full Versio From: Orac Just out of interest the only recent(ish) authentic version of this song that I have found was recorded by Joan Morris and William Bolcom in 1974 on an album called Vaudeville... well worth a listen. If you can find a copy Harry Macdonaugh recorded it in 1901 on a 7" Berliner ... !!! |
24 Jun 02 - 09:36 AM (#735694) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: When you were sweet 16 - Full Versio From: Orac The recording by the Fureys is nothing like the song written in 1898 ... Al Jolson has a lot to answer for. |
24 Jun 02 - 09:37 AM (#735695) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: When you were sweet 16 - Full Versio From: GUEST,Martin Ryan The Fureys took/take great pride in their inventive backgrounds for songs. I remember a particularly hilarious expanationo f the origins of "Biddy's Battering Ram"! Regards |
24 Jun 02 - 09:46 AM (#735700) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: When you were sweet 16 - Full Versio From: Orac Does anyone have a photo of James Thornton? |
24 Jun 02 - 09:57 AM (#735705) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: When you were sweet 16 - Full Versio From: nutty The Levy site also lists this publication although does not show it Title: When You Were Sweet Sixteen. Composer, Lyricist, Arranger: Words and Music by James Thornton. Publication: New York: Shapiro, Bernstein & Co., Inc., 1898 and 1947.. Form of Composition: strophic with chorus Instrumentation: piano and voice First Line: When first I saw the lovelight in your eye First Line of Chorus: I love you as I never loved before Performer: Featured by Perry Como, Victor Record No. 20-2259. From the Columbia Picture "The Jolson Story." Engraver, Lithographer, Artist: unattrib. photo of Como Advertisement: ads on back cover for Shapiro, Bernstein & Co. stock |
24 Jun 02 - 10:23 AM (#735720) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: When you were sweet 16 - Full Versio From: Orac It doesn't show the 1947 publication for copyright reasons. I have both the recordings by Al Jolson and Perry Como... they are both dreadful. |
24 Jun 02 - 10:46 AM (#735735) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: When you were sweet 16 - Full Versio From: masato sakurai Harry Macdonough's recording, mentioned by Orac above, can be heard online at The Virtual Gramohone site (Click here).
Performer heading: Macdonough, Harry, 1871-1931 ~Masato |
24 Jun 02 - 11:19 AM (#735749) Subject: RE:When you were sweet 16 - Full Version From: Orac Yes I found that too but its only half the song. Maybe its all they could get on a 7 inch record. The full song is quite long. |