27 Dec 01 - 04:56 PM (#617224) Subject: Trooper and the Maid... In English??? From: Clinton Hammond I'm sat here listening to Old Blind Dogs version... and the song is wicked cool! But even the half-anglo version in the DT leaves me shaking my head... Anybody got a good version, or can clarify the Scots? ie, "an I'll gar all your ribbons reel"??? What the hell does that (and a bunch of the rest of the song) mean??? ;-) Note: I -am- looking for kinda a line by line scan.. so for those out there who wanna summaries the song, please save your typing o.k... |
27 Dec 01 - 05:06 PM (#617235) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Sorcha Clinton, I'll go looking. Meanwhile, this thread identifies it as a version of As I Roved Out. |
27 Dec 01 - 05:30 PM (#617250) Subject: Lyr Add: THE TROOPER AND THE MAID (from Ed McCurdy From: Coyote Breath Sorry, I don't know how to do blue clicky stuff. I know of a song called The Trooper and the Maid. I found it on a "Best of Dalliance" album of many years back Ed McCurdy sang it.
There was an old woman lived under the hill
She had a daughter, her name was Tess
One day a trooper came riding by
He drank one pot and then another
And when at last to bed they went
Quoth she "what is this so stiff and warm?"
"And what is this hangs under his chin?"
Quoth he: "what is this?" (I am missing some words here)
"And what if my nag should chance to slip in?"
"And what if the grass should chance to fail?" but perhaps that isn't the song you meant? |
27 Dec 01 - 05:36 PM (#617257) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Clinton Hammond It is not CB... but ta fer the attempt eh! ;-) |
27 Dec 01 - 05:39 PM (#617260) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Susan of DT Coyote, I think Clinton is talking about Child #299 The Trooper and the Maid, which has the line he is referring to. Your "L" do not cause line breaks - that is <> with br in between the brackets. Clinton - I think that is the most mysterious line in the song. The rest of it seems fairly straight forward, but then I sing a lot of Scots songs. What else in the song do want help with? |
27 Dec 01 - 05:42 PM (#617266) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Clinton Hammond Pffft... It'd almost be easier to list the stuff that I -don- need help with! LOL!!!!! Ummm... tell y what... I'll come back tomorrow and refresh this thread, with the lines and such I'm stuck on k! I'd do it now, but I'm an hour behind schedule getting ready for tonight's gig... Ta eh! ;-) |
27 Dec 01 - 05:43 PM (#617267) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Sorcha Clinton, go look at this one at Contemplator. It's fairly understandable English--is it the same version? |
27 Dec 01 - 06:14 PM (#617286) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Clinton Hammond Compired to the one posted above, they've compressed her leading his horse, leading him and feeding him... In the obd version there are verses after he's lain down side her...
The trumpet sounds (?) furrow dales
The pipes'd play at (?)
An' when will you come back again And they end it with something like...
Cheese and bread for cows and dames (?) (danes???), They also don't have a 2nd chorus t all... |
27 Dec 01 - 07:13 PM (#617321) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Metchosin Eee Clinton, I'll give er a go for you if I get some time this evening and someone doesn't do it afore me, glad you liked it. |
27 Dec 01 - 07:23 PM (#617328) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Clinton Hammond cool... I'm only gonna be here for another few mos, but I'll check back in tomorrow! ;-) |
27 Dec 01 - 07:50 PM (#617350) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: GUEST,Desdemona This is what it looks like as Child ballad #299, the same general theme as "The Light Dragoon", with no "lolly lolly", alas. Wish I knew what it meant to "gar all one's ribbons reel"...I think. http://www.contemplator.com/folk5/trooper.html PS--I can't blue-clicky either. |
27 Dec 01 - 09:15 PM (#617381) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Malcolm Douglas Gar all your ribbons reel means, literally, make all your ribbons spin/ wheel/ fly about. I'm thinking that an equivalent American expression might be something like shake your bootie, perhaps?
If we knew where the Old Blind Dogs got their set from, I'd be better placed to help, but they don't seem to be all that conscientious about acknowledging their sources; or perhaps it's just that people who've asked about their recordings here in the past haven't quoted any sleevenotes there may have been. Did they give any information at all? |
27 Dec 01 - 11:27 PM (#617438) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Stewie I don't know the particular version either [it is probably a conflated text] but, in respect of the stanzas quoted by Clinton, Child's A and B texts have:
The trumpet sounds thro Birldale
There's bread and cheese for musqueteers In his 'Additions and Corrections' section, Child gives a D version which has:
Bread and cheese for gentlemen 'The Folksinger's Wordbook', with attribution to Child albeit these precise words do not appear in any of Child's 4 texts, gives - it appears to be the one Clinton is after:
It's breid and cheese for carles and dames 'Carles' are peasants or lowly people. 'Dames' in this context are probably 'unmarried girls'. --Stewie.
|
28 Dec 01 - 10:08 AM (#617587) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Maryrrf Which Old Blind Dogs album is that song on? I have three of them and that song isn't on them. Love that group! |
28 Dec 01 - 10:59 AM (#617601) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Clinton Hammond It's off Close To The Bone... track 10... listed as "10.The Trooper and The Maid or The Trumpet Sounds At Burreldales" Liner notes, I have none... I've never had the chance to by OBD's stuff... Stewie... Damn fine post mate! ta... that helps me an awful lot... nd by the way, I love your work on Family Guy! Hehehe! |
28 Dec 01 - 03:50 PM (#617732) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Maryrrf Thanks, Clinton. I'll look for that one. |
28 Dec 01 - 04:04 PM (#617741) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Metchosin From the liner notes on Close to the Bone, Old Blind Dogs took their version of the lyrics straight from a group called the Gaugers. |
28 Dec 01 - 06:45 PM (#617807) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Susanne (skw) The Gaugers in turn found many of their songs in the Greig-Duncan collection. Does anybody have access to it? (I know the Inverness Municipal Library has a copy!) |
28 Dec 01 - 10:12 PM (#617896) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Malcolm Douglas That's Greig-Duncan vol. 7, I think, which I don't have yet. There's a text in Ord, too, The Trumpet Sounds at Burreldales, but no tune is given and it's quite a bit different from the set Clinton has quoted from. The Old Blind Dogs do seem to have got quite a bit of their repertoire from The Gaugers, who did their research and acknowledged their sources. Pity the OBD don't seem to have thought the tradition important enough to pass on the information. |
29 Dec 01 - 12:22 AM (#617943) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Metchosin Bah! Humbug! The delight of their singing and their mucianship makes up for any archival shortcomings. For some the music counts, not the bibliography. |
29 Dec 01 - 01:15 AM (#617955) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Melani I know a version of it from a very old Theodore Bikel record called "A Folksinger's Choice." (Notable for him in that all the songs are in English--or Scots, which is at least semi-understandable.) I can't remember all the verses, but the chorus goes:
Bonnie lassie, will ye lie near me, It's sort of fast-paced. |
29 Dec 01 - 04:31 AM (#617983) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Clinton Hammond Metch!!! I hear ya 100%!!! feckin' -A- right on! ^5's!!!! |
29 Dec 01 - 05:23 AM (#617995) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: pavane Nic Jones did a version with very little Scots in it - but I don't know if he recorded it - I have it on a tape of a live performance c1973 |
29 Dec 01 - 11:05 AM (#618071) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Mr Red Coyote Breath Hey Am I missing something here or is that song called "A Trooper Watering his Nag" and published in "Pills to Purge Melancholy" by Thomas D'Urfey in 1717? And wasn't it considered an old song then? Sung by the "City Waites" on the eponymous tape sold by "Past Times" in their numerous shops up & down the UK? When I sung this once a lady thanked me for singing the whole song because she only knew it as an innocent one verse nursery rhyme. Dover Books published a two volume (as opposed to 3) edition in the 50's (1950's). There is a Dover copy on open shelves at the Bodleain. I dont think it is the song CH was searching for. |
29 Dec 01 - 05:13 PM (#618234) Subject: Lyr Add: THE TROOPER AND THE MAID From: Malcolm Douglas As Mr. Red says, a different song, though, like many others, it does have a trooper in it. In the DT: TROOPERS HORSE From Lloyd's Folksong in England TROOPER WATERING HIS NAGG From Pills. On the other question: for myself, I can't understand how anybody who really loves the music can fail to want to know as much as possible about it; and that includes where, and who, it came from. It's not a choice between music and "bibliography" (though I prefer "provenance"; the simple courtesy of properly acknowledging your source) -it's all part of the greater whole. If it's traditional music, then it has a history and a context; ignore them, and you run the risk of turning the song into an ephemeral commodity like a pop song, however well you play and sing it. I don't expect everybody to agree with me, but I don't accept that an interest in the background of a song implies any lack of interest in or appreciation of music or musicianship. My own experience has been quite the opposite; appreciation is enhanced, not diminished, by the greater understanding it can bring. Peter Hall, a founder-member of the Gaugers, printed a set of this song in The Scottish Folksinger (Norman Buchan & Peter Hall, 1973); it came from Last Leaves of Traditional Ballads and Ballad Airs (edited by Alexander Keith from the Greig collection). Full details as to source will be in the volume of the Greig-Duncan Collection referred to above. There is no indication of a chorus, though the second verse is used as such by many Revival singers. THE TROOPER AND THE MAID A trooper lad cam' here last nicht, Wi' ridin' he was weary, A trooper lad cam' here last nicht, Fan the moon shone bricht an' clearly. "Bonnie lassie, I'll lie near ye noo, Bonnie lassie, I'll lie near ye, An' I'll gar a' your ribbons reel Or the mornin' ere I leave ye." She's ta'en his heich horse by the heid, An' she's led him to the stable, She's gi'en him corn an' hay till ate, As muckle as he was able. She's ta'en the trooper by the han', An' she's led him to her chamber , She's gi'en him breid an' wine to drink, An' the wine it was like amber. She's made her bed baith lang an' wide, An' she's made it like a lady, She's ta'en her wee coatie ower her heid, Says, "Trooper, are ye ready?" He's ta'en aff his big top coat, Likewise his hat an' feather , An' he's ta'en his broadsword fae his side, An' noo he's doon aside her. They hadna' been but an oor in bed, An oor an' half a quarter, Fan the drums cam' beatin' up the toon, An' ilka beat was faster. It's "Up, up, up" an' oor curnel cries, It's "Up, up, up, an' away," It's "Up, up, up" an' oor curnel cries, "For the morn's oor battle day." She's ta'en her wee cloakie ower her heid An' she's followed him doon to Stirlin' , She's grown sae fu' an' she couldna boo, An' they left her in Dunfermline. "Bonnie lassie, I maun leave ye noo, Bonnie lassie, I maun leave ye, An' oh, but it does grieve me sair That ever I lay sae near ye." It's "Fan'll ye come back again, My ain dear trooper laddie, Fan'll ye come back again An' be your bairn's daddy?" "O haud your tongue, my bonnie lass, Ne'er let this partin' grieve ye, When heather cowes grow ousen bows, Bonnie lassie, I'll come an' see ye." Cheese an' breid for carles an' dames, Corn an' hay for horses, Cups o' tea for auld maids, An' bonnie lads for lasses. fan = when Or = ere heich = high, tall till ate = to eat muckle = much fae = from grown sae fu' = grown so full, big couldna boo = couldn't bend heather cowes = heather twigs ousen bowes = oxen yokes Other terms have already been explained, though dames in this particular case are probably married women. The tune is exactly the same as that given with the DT file: TROOPER AND THE MAID; as Clinton says, that text has been partly anglicised for some reason, and appears to be a slightly altered and shortened arrangement of the Last Leaves set. John Ord included a short set, without the bedroom scene or the tune, in his Bothy Songs and Ballads (1930). He didn't indicate a source for that particular one, but it appears to be a cut-down copy of Child's version A (from Buchan's Ballads of the North of Scotland). There's a related English set in the DT, incidentally, though without a tune: THE LIGHT DRAGOON. It was transcribed from a Mike Waterson record; he in turn got it from a 1951 recording made by Peter Kennedy and Alan Lomax of Harry List of Sweffling, near Framlingham in Suffolk (Folk Songs of Britain vol. 2: Songs of Seduction; Caedmon TC 1143 / Topic 12T 158/ Rounder CD 1778). You can hear a brief sound clip (Real Audio) here: The Light Dragoon Sung first by Harry List, then by his son Fred. The clip is from part 3 of Keith Summers' Sing, Say or Pay! A Survey of East Suffolk Country Music at Rod Stradling's Musical Traditions. Normally I wouldn't link directly to the sound sample, but in this case the link is missing from the article, so it's the only option. |
29 Dec 01 - 05:35 PM (#618245) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Clinton Hammond "partly anglicised for some reason," I suspect that it's done because, if a North American tries to sing in Braod Scots, he usually just ends up sounding like an idiot! LOL!!!!!!!! ;-) This is the sound that I'm trying to avoid... |
30 Dec 01 - 02:11 PM (#618605) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Keith A of Hertford Malcom, I know the third line of the "Up up up.." verse as "Sheath Your sword in its scabbard case," which makes a colourful double entendre. Pulling my cloakie oer my heed, Keith. |
08 May 18 - 09:33 PM (#3923035) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: GUEST,Connecticut Puritan "I'll gar all yer ribbons reel" = I'll give all your ribbons a whirl". Based upon the outcome of their liaison (she grew so full, she could not bow), you figure out the meaning of the thinly veiled message that the trooper conveyed to the maid by this phrase. |
08 May 18 - 10:34 PM (#3923041) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: GUEST,julia L We have a version from Maine (British Ballads from Maine by Fanny Eckstorm from Mrs James McGill, Chamcook NB 1925) Bonny lassie I'll lie near ye yet Bonny lassie I'll lie near ye I'll tie all yer ribbons yet Bonny lassie I'll lie near ye Does this mean he'll take care of her afterwards? Verses They hadna been there lang in bed And yet they were na sleepin' 'T il the pipes played at oor gate And it's up and awsa' bonny lassie Bonnie lassie I maun leave ye noo Bonnie lassie I maun leave ye And it's sair the day you'll rue That e're ye lay sae near me It's bread and cheess for the cavalry men Corn and hay for the horses Pipes and tobacco for old wives And lads for all bonnie lasses |
09 May 18 - 04:46 AM (#3923062) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Trooper and the Maid... In English?? From: Keith A of Hertford Does this mean he'll take care of her afterwards? Sadly, I think not. |