04 Apr 02 - 07:04 PM (#683235) Subject: Good English Ale From: artbrooks Looking for lyrics to a song that might be called "Ale" or "Good English Ale". the last two lines in the chorus are: A lump of fatty bacon And a pint of good ale I've had no luck in the usual places. |
04 Apr 02 - 07:11 PM (#683241) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Good English Ale From: greg stephens Ale ale glorious ale/served up in pewter it tells its own tale/some folks like radishes and some curly kale/but give i boiled parsnips and a gurt dish of taties/ and a lump of fatty bacon and a pint of good ale. Well,that's the chorus.I hope some computery person will provide you with a blue clicky for the rest, but if not I'll type out the verses for you tomorrow. |
04 Apr 02 - 07:16 PM (#683247) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Good English Ale From: greg stephens PS I'm feeling a bit lethargic because I've just come in from The Black's Head in Stoke where i've been supping some. |
04 Apr 02 - 07:36 PM (#683273) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Good English Ale From: masato sakurai Glorious Ale in the DT. ~Masato
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04 Apr 02 - 07:39 PM (#683274) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Good English Ale From: greg stephens Thanks, Masato, I knew I could rely on you to save me the trouble. |
04 Apr 02 - 08:01 PM (#683294) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Good English Ale From: artbrooks Thanks...the version I had heard didn't have "Glorious" in the title. |
04 Apr 02 - 08:14 PM (#683301) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Good English Ale From: Snuffy Whenever I'm singing the chorus, I have to concentrate really hard to avoid slipping into "Mud, glorious mud"
Ale, ale, glorious ale WassaiL! V |
04 Apr 02 - 08:20 PM (#683306) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Good English Ale From: greg stephens "mud mud glorious mud" is a parody of "beer beer glorious beer". "Ale ale glorious ale" is a different song. Confusing: theres probably a connection somewhere. |
04 Apr 02 - 08:25 PM (#683311) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Good English Ale From: masato sakurai "Beer, beer, glorious beer" (a bit of it) was sung by Alfred Doolittle in the musical My Fair Lady. ~Masato |
05 Apr 02 - 12:38 AM (#683417) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Good English Ale From: GUEST,Tony I have it on a compilation album called "Tale of Ale" by a number of British artists. It was also popular in Morris circles when I was in England. |
05 Apr 02 - 06:31 PM (#684050) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Good English Ale From: GUEST,CraigS Horticultural significance, on behalf of my friend Steve Wagstaffe, who always makes the distinction - not curly, but CURLE-EYE kale! |
06 Apr 02 - 02:08 AM (#684334) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Good English Ale From: Lucius If only I could do a blue clickie..... Look up GOOD ALE in the DT. Similar to Glorious Ale, and often sung in the same circles. |
06 Apr 02 - 04:50 AM (#684385) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Good English Ale From: Sky I looked at the clicky thing - coz I really like this song - but it was missing my favourite verse "God rest all tea-totallers they drinks water neat - which must rot they gutses and give they damp feet. But give I boiled parsnips…. etc There is definitely more but I can't find my tape to refresh my memory... ho hum, ought to tidy up more I guess |
06 Apr 02 - 02:33 PM (#684590) Subject: Lyr Add: GLORIOUS AILE From: Franky Hello my friend Please find appended the lyrics you require GLORIOUS ALE
CHO: Ale, Ale, Glorious Ale
When I was a young man my father did say,
Now our MP's in parliament, our safety to keep Kind regards Franky
Gosport, Hampshire, England, United Kingdom |
06 Apr 02 - 02:39 PM (#684592) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Good English Ale From: greg stephens |
06 Apr 02 - 02:42 PM (#684593) Subject: Lyr Add: GLORIOUS ALE From: Franky Another version
When I was a young man my father did say
CHORUS: Ale, Ale, Glorious Ale
Our MP's in parliament our faith for to keep
Some folks is teetotalers, they drink water neat Enjoy Kind regards |
10 Sep 13 - 06:57 AM (#3557751) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Good English Ale From: alanww Earliest origins of Ale, Ale, Glorious Ale? Thanks. Alan |
10 Sep 13 - 11:02 PM (#3558000) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Good English Ale From: Joe_F Will Whitely used to sing it "...and give them *webbed* feet". I'm not sure which is funnier. |
11 Sep 13 - 09:44 AM (#3558086) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Good English Ale From: GUEST,Guest Suffolk accapella band 'Triangle' sing this with extra verses still. Check 'em out |
11 Sep 13 - 04:08 PM (#3558173) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Good English Ale From: GUEST,SteveG Cookieless again! Like Alan I'd also like some thoughts on origins. In my own index I only have the one version collected by Mike Yates from the Cantwell family, Oxon in 1964, and this version has quite a few minor differences from the one I used to sing in the folk clubs in the 60s. I haven't seen any broadside copies though I have a vague recollection of recording a fragment locally. I remember being surprised at finding it in Yorkshire in oral tradition when all the versions I had hitherto heard had a definite west-country feel to them. At the time that suggested a possible origin in a country bumpkin Music Hall song such as those being put out on 78s in the 20s with exaggerated accents. |
11 Sep 13 - 04:17 PM (#3558176) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Good English Ale From: GUEST,SteveG Just checked Roud. 6 versions some duplicated. Earliest version there was collected by Francis Collinson in 1945 in Gloucestershire. 1920s Music Hall is looking ever more likely. |
20 Sep 13 - 01:36 PM (#3560090) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Good English Ale From: Jim Dixon Information from WorldCat.org: ALE ALE GLORIOUS ALE appears on an LP called "A Wench, a Whale and a Pint of Good Ale" (Score, [1966]). The album is attributed to Martyn Wyndham-Read, Danny Spooner, Gordon MacIntyre, and Peter Dickie, but it isn't clear whether they all sang on each cut. ALE GLORIOUS ALE was sung by Denis Manners on a various-artists LP called "Festival at Towersey" (Oxford, UK : Zeus Records, 1968). |