04 May 05 - 10:11 AM (#1477831) Subject: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: Blackcatter Looking around the Mudcat, this song has been discussed plenty of times, but I haven't been able to find any info on it's origins - anyone know who wrote it and when? It's hardly an old song, so it should be known somewhere. Anyone got and old album with the credit on it? |
04 May 05 - 10:37 AM (#1477857) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: Leadfingers I've always thought this was another that came out of the Liverpool Spinners stable - There were a lot of songs written by them and adapted into the well known form by them ! |
04 May 05 - 11:13 AM (#1477895) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: Brakn I'm nearly sure that it was written by a Liverpudlian or a Birkenheadcase. |
04 May 05 - 11:18 AM (#1477901) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: belfast The New City Songbook was a series of small songbooks produced by MacColl and Seeger. Vol.7 (1972) contains this song and credits the lyrics to Paul O'Brien. I have vague memeories of Paul as a guy from Dublin who was a friend of MacColl's. Other people out there may have more info. |
04 May 05 - 11:22 AM (#1477906) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: Brakn I see it's credited on a couple of sites to an Anthony Murphy. I hope we're talking about the same song. |
04 May 05 - 12:15 PM (#1477945) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: belfast My apologies. I was talking about a different song, to the tune of "|The Rocks of Bawn". A similar theme but a different approach. |
04 May 05 - 12:17 PM (#1477946) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: Leadfingers I've just checked on one of my Vinyls and the Spinners credit Murphy ! |
04 May 05 - 12:17 PM (#1477947) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: MartinRyan Several songs, old and new, with "orange and green" in their titles. Regards |
04 May 05 - 12:33 PM (#1477962) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: GUEST,Dale I see the Irish Rovers credit Anthony Murphy. Scanning a list of their songs, I see pretty much giving credit where credit is due. Like many groups, they credit themselves for traditional songs but credit the rest correctly, so I am inclined to believe that attribution. Couldn't find any information on Anthony Murphy, date, ect. though. |
04 May 05 - 12:46 PM (#1477972) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: Snuffy I was looking at my Grehan Sisters recordings last night, and I'm sure there is a name on the credits for this one. I'll check tonight. As the Spinners have been mentioned, I assume we are talking about the song to the tune of Rising of the Moon/Wearing of the Green with a chorus that goes: Oh it is the biggest mix-up that you have ever seen My father he was Orange and my mother she was Green and not one of the other Orange and Green songs |
04 May 05 - 12:47 PM (#1477974) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: GEST I have it as written by Anthony Murphy and arranged by The Irish Rovers (The Unicorn, 1967, Decca) at GEST Songs Of Newfoundland And Labrador. |
04 May 05 - 02:47 PM (#1478063) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: Brakn Previous thread. Another snippet. |
04 May 05 - 02:56 PM (#1478071) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: Brakn Second link looks like BNP site. Just thought I mention that fact! |
04 May 05 - 03:03 PM (#1478080) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: Geoff the Duck A friend, Jim Jarratt, once wrote a song called "Goodbye to the orange and green" about the changing of the livery of buses in Halifax, West Yorkshire. (CLICK HERE for information) Quack GtD. |
04 May 05 - 05:02 PM (#1478184) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: Jim McLean I wrote a song about Prince Charles and the chorus goes 'It is the greatest mix-up that I have ever seen, His father is a German and his mother is a queen'. It's printed in my songbook published in 1968 so I must have written it around 66 or 67. It's to the tune 'The rising of the moon' so I reckon I must have heard the 'Orange and Green' song around then. |
04 May 05 - 07:28 PM (#1478309) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: Snuffy According to Mick O'Farrell on this thread the Grehan Sisters version was released in 1968. |
04 May 05 - 09:13 PM (#1478382) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: Blackcatter Thanks for the help - just to be clear I did mean the: Oh it is the biggest mix-up that you have ever seen My father he was Orange and my mother she was Green song. |
16 Aug 05 - 02:42 AM (#1542879) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: GUEST,KJCMFCC@aol.com Hi all, Looking to find song writing credits and permission to record "The Orange and the Green". Does any one know how to contact Anthony Murphy or whomever holds rights to the piece? Thanks, Kevin Connors |
08 Mar 10 - 02:06 AM (#2858864) Subject: RE: DT Attribution & Minor Corrections PermaThread From: Genie Correction of lyrics to "The Orange And The Green" in the DT: The DT has the opening lines as "Once there was an Irishman, a Protestant was he, My mother was a Catholic, from Kelsey town came she ..." It should be "My father was an Englishman,* proud Protestant was he; My mother was a Catholic ... " *There are variations in the lyrics to this song, but In the versions I've heard, the father is English. But even if he's Irish, the point of the song is that the Protestant man is the singer/narrator's father, not just any "Irishman" or "Englishman." |
08 Mar 10 - 02:43 AM (#2858881) Subject: Add Version: The Orange and The Green From: Joe Offer The other credible transcription I've found is the one from GEST Songs Of Newfoundland And Labrador I'm going to post it below, formatted for the Digital Tradition. I have to say it's not like most recordings I've found. Anybody have the original Anthony Murphy version? -Joe- THE ORANGE AND THE GREEN (Anthony Murphy) Oh, it is the biggest mixup that you have ever seen, Me father, he was Orange, and me mother, she was Green. Baptised by Father Riley, I was christened David Anthony, Oh, it is the biggest mixup that you have ever seen, With me mother every Sunday, Both sides tried to claim me, Oh, it is the biggest mixup that you have ever seen, One day me mom's relations, We tried to smooth things over, Oh, it is the biggest mixup that you have ever seen, Now, me parents never could agree, They both passed on, God rest them, Oh, it is the biggest mixup that you have ever seen, Yes, it is the biggest mixup that you have ever seen, ####.... Parody of Wearing Of The Green by Anthony Murphy of Huyton, Liverpool, England, who regularly performed this song live at the Wash House Folk Club in Liverpool ca.1960 ....####This variant was arranged by The Killicks of Grand Falls-Windsor, NL. Oh, my father was an Ulster man, @Irish @political filename[ ORANGREN TUNE FILE: WEARGREN CLICK TO PLAY RB OCT98 |
08 Mar 10 - 08:38 PM (#2859681) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: Genie Thanks, Joe. Actually, "Ulsterman" is the lyric that I originally learned. "Englishman" was just a fleeting brain fart. |
08 Mar 10 - 08:41 PM (#2859683) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: Joe Offer Ah, brain farts. I get those a lot lately... But still, can anybody come up with the original Anthony Murphy lyrics? -Joe- |
09 Mar 10 - 11:01 AM (#2860116) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: goatfell I didn't know that brains could fart and that farts could get drunk |
09 Mar 10 - 09:11 PM (#2860644) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: Joe Offer Hi, Goatfell - You'll learn lots of things if you stick around. But does anyone have further comment about this version, and whether it's definitive enough to be submitted as a correction to the Digital Tradition? -Joe- |
19 Mar 11 - 05:55 AM (#3116891) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: GUEST I believe it's the Orange LODGE, not the Orange LADS that try to save the singer's soul. |
19 Mar 11 - 09:38 PM (#3117328) Subject: RE: Origins: The Orange & The Green From: GUEST,DWR The second one put up by Joe does say LODGE, and that is what I hear, both by The Grehan Sisters and The Irish Rovers. |