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Southwark Mariner |
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I was reading this article: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-glasgow-west-55661351It's been pretty miserable for too long (in general and for GTFC). I see there's some sort of craze for sea shanties at the moment. Surely this is something The Mariners can clock on to and bring a bit of a smile? Lloyd Griffith with his singing perhaps can organise something? Maybe this is already happening though.
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Dan |
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Exile
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Quoted from John Fenty, April 2013
I deconstructed the flag to the point where it was safe and couldn’t be considered a danger
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arryarryarry |
January 18, 2021, 10:34pm |
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I think things are bad and sad enough with the club at the moment to have to listen to sea shanties as well.
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KingstonMariner |
January 18, 2021, 10:56pm |
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Meths Drinker
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With all the players going over at the slightest touch Blow the Man Down would be appropriate.
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| Through the door there came familiar laughter, I saw your face and heard you call my name. Oh my friend we're older but no wiser, For in our hearts the dreams are still the same. |
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promotion plaice |
January 20, 2021, 10:25pm |
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| When Leeds trainer Les Cocker was once told Norman Hunter had broken a leg, he asked: “Whose is it?” |
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Southwark Mariner |
January 20, 2021, 10:51pm |
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I thought the lyrics to Haul Away Joe would lend themselves to something about Holloway!
Runaway Home
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KingstonMariner |
January 20, 2021, 11:09pm |
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Meths Drinker
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I thought the lyrics to Haul Away Joe would lend themselves to something about Holloway!
Runaway Home
“Haul away your rolling king, heave away, haul away Haul away, you'll hear me sing, we're bound for South Australia” Becomes Holloway, I took the mick, run away, Holloway Holloway, I legged it quick, because I can’t screw all o’ ya
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| Through the door there came familiar laughter, I saw your face and heard you call my name. Oh my friend we're older but no wiser, For in our hearts the dreams are still the same. |
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Southwark Mariner |
January 20, 2021, 11:37pm |
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“Haul away your rolling king, heave away, haul away Haul away, you'll hear me sing, we're bound for South Australia”
Becomes
Holloway, I took the mick, Holloway, run away Holloway, I legged it quick, because I can’t screw all o’ ya
A different shanty but the idea is sound!
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Azimuth |
January 21, 2021, 12:21am |
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“Haul away your rolling king, heave away, haul away Haul away, you'll hear me sing, we're bound for South Australia”
Becomes
Holloway, I took the mick, Holloway, run away Holloway, I legged it quick, because I can’t screw all o’ ya
Brilliant
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KingstonMariner |
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Meths Drinker
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A different shanty but the idea is sound!
I don’t know the other ‘haul away’ song. How does it go?
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| Through the door there came familiar laughter, I saw your face and heard you call my name. Oh my friend we're older but no wiser, For in our hearts the dreams are still the same. |
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Southwark Mariner |
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ginnywings |
January 21, 2021, 10:39am |
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Sea shanties may not be to the taste of everyone, but I have been in the Endeavour pub in Whitby during the Folk Week when there has been a shanty session, and the atmosphere is amazing. Hearing South Australia sung by an entire packed pub is something to behold.
They do some about GY too.
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Shipwrecked In Gainsborough |
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Just had a listen to that one(Bound for south Australia). have to admit with a bit of lyric tinkering to make it Town/Gy related, it would make an awesome club song from the terraces. Not hard for most to learn the heave away haul away bit....any takers?.
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Fishbone |
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KingstonMariner |
January 21, 2021, 10:09pm |
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Sure they've been discussed before but: Various versions of the Grimsby Fisherman (This the Sheringham Shantymen) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q5iaY3OZXvIThe Grimsby lads (John Connolly) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tXS6hI0JUAgThree score and ten, still my favourite https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aUvwt6LYiSA
I remember listening to an LP that my sister and brother-in-law had (probably early 70s vintage or earlier) by a Grimsby based band called the Broadside, and they sang a song called Fiddler's Green. Not a shanty, but stuck with me the last 35-40 years. As an aside, I think a lot of Sheringham fishing families moved to GY. My paternal great grandmother was born in Sheringham around 1900. Her son was an inshore fisherman out of Grimsby.
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| Through the door there came familiar laughter, I saw your face and heard you call my name. Oh my friend we're older but no wiser, For in our hearts the dreams are still the same. |
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HackneyHaddock |
January 22, 2021, 11:18am |
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Some of these are fantastic and would lend themselves really well to a couple of thousand people singing them, as well as giving us a bit more of an identity, especially when there are lyrics referring to the Town itself.
Shanties, like any folk song or story, depend on being re-told and passed down. We have so much debate at the moment about what British culture means, and should we be preserving this or that statue or renaming this or that street, that we sometimes forget about the parts of our culture we actively fail to preserve: Victorian Libraries, our industrial heritage buildings, our traditional architecture, local foods, knowledge of literature or music. Maybe reviving these songs could be a source of local pride as the town looks forward to a bit of a comeback, both the football club once the rescue deal is completed, and the town with new industries and regeneration?
I say let's go with "Sailing over the Dogger Bank" and "Three Score and Ten"; the former as something to sing before and during games and easily learned, and the latter as a sort of emotive, scarf-holding anthem much in the way of YNWA or Hibernian's Sunshine on Leith.
Perhaps a local band or musicians could re-work these songs in a rock-folk style like the Pogues or Dropkick Murphys that could be played before games with lyrics on the screen? Would take time for people to learn, but could become a great part of the club.
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Tinymariner |
January 22, 2021, 12:45pm |
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Three Score and ten has a very interesting background.
Provenance Three-score-and-ten, sung by Jim Potter and his appropriately named group 'Three Score and Ten' Jim preceded his performance with the following introduction:-
'Hull Times, 2nd of March, 1889. As day after day passes and no tidings arrive of the missing Grimsby smacks, it is beginning to be realized that the gale of the 9th will prove one of the most disastrous to the Grimsby fishing trade on record. All together nearly a dozen fishing vessels carrying between 60 and 70 hands are missing. Most of these vessels were only provisioned for 8 or 9 days and many of them have been out now for over a month. Of the safety of 7 of them all hope has now been abandoned. Portions of the wreck from the 'Kitten' have now been picked up at sea and brought into port, and the 'British Workman' was seen to be reduced to a mere wreck by a heavy sea on the morning of the gale. Many of the men who have been lost leave wives and families and an immense amount of distress will be caused among the fishing population. The total number of vessels lost will, it is feared, be near 15 and between 70 and 80 lives of men and boys.
The vessels lost were:-
The Sea Searcher, trawl smack, 5 hands The John Witterington, 11 hands The Eton, iron steam trawl smack, 8 hands The British workman, cod smack, 7 hands The Sir Frederick Roberts, trawl smack, 5 hands The Kitten, trawl smack, 5 hands The Harold, trawl smack, 5 hands. Though this disaster song was composed in Grimsby it belongs rightly to the whole of the fishermen of the east coast, and we have the Filey Fishermen's Choir to thank for the preserving of this splendid oral version. The event it is based upon occurred as late as 1889 and William Delf, its author, had his song printed on a broadside no doubt to raise money for the relief of the bereaved families.
We have to thank Grimbarian song-writer and librarian John Conolly for unearthing the original broadside, which since has been much copied. The song has become very popular in the current folk revival having been recorded by Yorkshire's singing family, The Watersons.
Nigel Hudleston has suggested that the tune is based on Jingle Bells which was composed in America as a minstrel song in 1867. The Hudleston version as sung by Jack Pearson and The Filey Fishermen's Choir can be found in Songs of the Ridings, Pindar, 2001, p45, along with a copy of the original broadside. The recording was released on an EP produced by Excel Services in the 1960s.
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Fishbone |
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great info Tinymariner! Thanks
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