19 Jul 98 - 02:30 PM (#32907) Subject: Lyr Req: Free and Easy From: I'm looking for the words to this song, I have heard it is by, or sung by Dave Weber. The chorus goes:
I'll be free and easy still, Free and easy, free and easy I'll be free and easy still. Blessings Barbara |
26 Jul 98 - 11:38 AM (#33380) Subject: Lyr Add: FREE AND EASY From: Bigj I'm a lad that's free and easy Wheresoe'er I chance to be, And I'll do my best to please ye, If you will but list to me.
CHORUS: So let the world jog as it will
Some there are who meet their troubles
The great have cares I little know of,
Then why waste our time in fretting,
I care for all, yet care for no man,
That's a version from the book 'Victorian Street Ballads' published in 1937 - reproductions of street ballads. However, while I haven't heard Dave's version - a fine singer - I suspect it is probably similar to the version sung by Johnny Collins, remembered thus:-
I'm the lad that's free and easy
Chorus
There's a girl that I could fancy
If this girl she should prove civil |
26 Jul 98 - 04:19 PM (#33398) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Free and Easy From: Barbara That's it, the second one, but all the words are wonderful Thanks ever so much Bigj. Blessings, Barbara |
09 May 07 - 10:40 PM (#2047534) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Free and Easy From: Artful Codger The following version is as Bill Spence sings it on the LP Fennigmania by Fennig's All-Stars (1981). It's basically the same as the second set above (diffs emboldened) with an additional verse (the second). Free and Easy 1. I'm the lad that's free and easy, Oh, but a simple country clown, And I'll do my best to please you For they calls me Honest John. Chorus: Oh, let the world jog on as it pleases, I'll be free and easy still; Free and easy, free and easy, I'll be free and easy still. 2. If a king should sit beside me, I'll drink my cup with the usual glee. When paupers laugh and fools deride me, Still I'll free and easy be. 3. There's a lady that I fancy; Oh, that she might fancy me! Then I'd call her "Lovely Nancy" And I'd free and easy be. 4. If this lady should prove civil, True and constant I would be, But if she's saucy as the devil, Still I'll free and easy be. (Reprise of first verse:) I'm the lad... In the liner notes, Bill says he learned it from a Topic LP by The Broadside From Grimsby, who got it from Bryan Cooper of Barrow-on-Humber, 1906. My simplified transcription of the tune follows. I give two versions of the chorus: a solo and a trio. The solo duplicates the tenor line of the trio, except at the end of second line (the first "easy still"), where I opted to stay around F# instead of going up to B. I'm sure I've made other unintentional alterations; caveat emptor. X:1 T:Free and Easy C:Victorian broadside S:Bryan Cooper of Barrow-on-Humber, 1906 S:By way of The Broadside From Grimsby and Bill Spence (Fennig's All-Stars) S:Transcription from _Fennigmania_ by Fennig's All-Stars M:4/4 L:1/8 Q:1/4=138 K:E %%MIDI program 1 25 % % Verse "E"E3FG2E2 | "A"A2G2 "B"F2E2 | "E"G2GAB2A2 | "A"c2c2 "B"B3z | w: I'm the lad that's free and ea-sy, Oh, but a sim-ple coun-try clown, "E"B3BG2E2 | "A"c2c2 "F#7"^A2F2 | "B"B3cB2A2 | G2F2 "E"E3z | w: And I'll do my best to please you For they calls me "Ho-nest John". % % Chorus (as a solo) "E"G2GFE2B,B, | E2EFG2B2 | "A"c3c "E"B2G2 | "F#7"F2G2 "B"F3z | w: Oh, let the world jog a-long as it plea-ses, I'll be free and ea-sy still. "E"B2B2G2E2 | "A"c2c2"F#7"^A2F2 | "B"B3cB2A2 | G2F2 "E"E3z | w: Free and ea-sy, free and ea-sy, I'll be free and ea-sy still. % % Chorus (as a trio) % Note: The chorus is sung only once per verse, not as a solo followed by % harmony. "E"[E2G2B2][EGB][DFA][B,2E2G2][G,B,E][G,B,E] | [B,2E2G2][B,EG][DFA][E2G2B2][G2B2e2] | \ w: Oh, let the world jog a-long as it plea-ses, \ "A"[A3c3e3][Ace] "E"[G2B2e2][E2G2B2] | "F#7"[^A2F2c2][F2^A2e2] "B"[F3B3d3]z | w: I'll be free and ea-sy still.* "E"[G2B2e2][G2B2e2][E2G2B2][B,2E2G2] | "A"[A2c2e2][A2c2e2] "F#7"[F2^A2c2][C2F2^A2] | \ w: Free and ea-sy, free and ea-sy, \ "B"[F3B3d3][Gce][F3B3d3][EAc] | [D2G2B2][C2F2A2] "E"[B,3E3G3]z || w: I'll be free and ea-sy still.* And here's the chorus separated into three voices; you may find this more suitable for printing a score or hearing each line: X:2 T:Free and Easy (3-part chorus only) M:4/4 L:1/8 Q:1/4=138 K:E %%MIDI program 1 25 % alto %%MIDI program 2 41 % melody %%MIDI program 3 33 % bass % Uncomment the next line to suppress the chord accompaniment % %%MIDI gchordoff V: 1 name=Alto sname=A B2BAG2EE | G2GAB2e2 | e3ee2B2 | c2e2d3z | w: Oh, let the world jog a-long as it plea-ses, I'll be free and ea-sy still. e2e2B2G2 | e2e2c2^A2 | d3ed3c | B2A2G3z || w: Free and ea-sy, free and ea-sy, I'll be free and ea-sy still. % V: 2 name=Tenor sname=T % melody "E"G2GFE2B,B, | E2EFG2B2 | "A"c3c "E"B2G2 | "F#7"F2^A2"B"B3z | w: Oh, let the world jog a-long as it plea-ses, I'll be free and ea-sy still. "E"B2B2G2E2 | "A"c2c2 "F#7"^A2F2 | "B"B3cB3A | G2F2 "E"E3z || w: Free and ea-sy, free and ea-sy, I'll be free and ea-sy still. % V: 3 name=Bass sname=B E2EDB,2G,G, | B,2B,DE2G2 | A3AG2E2 | ^A2F2F3z | w: Oh, let the world jog a-long as it plea-ses, I'll be free and ea-sy still. G2G2E2B,2 | A2A2F2C2 | F3GF3E | D2C2B,3z || w: Free and ea-sy, free and ea-sy, I'll be free and ea-sy still. |
10 May 07 - 03:50 AM (#2047691) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Free and Easy From: Rowan Was this song also recorded by Bernard Wrigley (very well, if my memory is correct) or is my memory fading? Cheers, Rowan |
10 May 07 - 03:57 AM (#2047692) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Free and Easy From: GUEST,padgett I got this one from an EFDSS book and from The Broadside Band from Grimsby which included Brian Dawson and John Conolly Johnny Collins sings this but does not have the second verse which starts " If a King should sit beside me" I have had an interesting contribution from Graeme Knights who got it from Ruariridh Gregg showing how this evolved over the years (century or two) Interesting Victorian Street ballad I suspect had Music Hall re write Ray |
10 May 07 - 05:20 AM (#2047763) Subject: RE: Req/ADD: Free and Easy From: Artful Codger Can you post the tune from one (or more) of these earlier versions? (TIA) |
10 May 07 - 07:37 AM (#2047847) Subject: RE: Req/ADD: Free and Easy From: masato sakurai There're 9 editions at Bodleian Library Broadside Ballads. im the lad thats free and easy [first line] |
10 May 07 - 03:12 PM (#2048302) Subject: RE: Req/ADD: Free and Easy From: nutty A real collection of verses among all those broadsides .... thanks Masato |
11 May 07 - 04:51 AM (#2048968) Subject: RE: Req/ADD: Free and Easy From: Artful Codger Thanks, Masato! The Fennig's version is fairly close to Johnson Ballads 507, published between 1846 and 1854, making it perhaps the earliest exemplar in the set. It includes the "If a King" verse (fourth verse rather than second) and a four-line chorus. One notable word change: "puppies" instead of "paupers". All the broadside choruses begin "So let the world jog as it will" rather than "...jog along as it pleases". Only one other verse not yet covered appears in the Bodley's broadsides [in Harding B11(1258) and Firth b.27(497)]: I envy neither great nor wealthy, Poverty I ne'er despise, Let me be contented, healthy, And the boon I'll dearly prize. |