Rattlin’ Roarin’ Willie

trad 

 

Robert Burns wrote in 1788 “The last stanza of this song is mine: it was composed out of compliment to one of the worthiest fellows in the world, William Dunbar Esq, writer to the signet Edinburgh, and Colonel of the Crochallan Corps-a club of wits who took that title at the lime of raising the Fencible regiments. RB.” The ‘Crochallan’ part of the title came from the innkeeper of the Anchor Close tavern (where the Crochallan Fencibles met), Dawney Douglas loved whistling the old Gaelic air Cro Chalien (Colin’s Cattle).

Barra MacNeills: Rattlin’ Roarin’ Willie

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T-h-sMWPg6Q

Rattlin’ roarin’ Willie oh he held to the fair For to sell his fiddle an’ buy some other ware Bu’ partin’ with his fiddle th’ saut-tear blin’t his eye Rattlin’ roarin’ Willie! You’re welcome home to me Oh Willie come sell your fiddle Oh sell your fiddle so fine Willie come sell your fiddle and buy A pint o’ wine “If I should sell my fiddle the worl’ Would think I was mad” But many a rantin’ day My fiddle an’ I have had As I came by Crochannan, I cannily keekit bent Rattlin’ roarin’ Willie was seaten at yon boord-en S?aten at yon boord-en, and amang good company Oh rattlin’ roarin’ Willie! You’r? welcome home to me

 

 

Ready for the Storm

Dougie MacLean 1981

 

Dougie MacLean: Ready for the Storm

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=elF9a42FDWg

The waves crash in the tide rolls out It’s an angry sea but there is no doubt That the lighthouse will keep shining out To warn a lonely sailor And the lightning strikes And the wind cuts cold Through the sailor’s bones Through the sailor’s soul ‘Til there’s nothing left that he can hold Except a rolling ocean Chorus: Oh I am ready for the storm Yes sir ready I am ready for the storm I’m ready for the storm Oh give me mercy for my dreams ‘Cause every confrontation seems to tell me What it really means To be this lonely sailor And when the sky begins to clear The sun it melts away my fear And I shed a silent weary tear For those who mean to love me The distance it is no real friend And time will take its time And you will find that in the end It brings you me This lonely sailor And when You take me by the hand And You love me, Lord, You love me And I should have realized I had no reasons to be frightened

 

 

Red River Valley

trad 1870s

 

While often associated with cowboy singing and the Red River that is part of the Texas-Oklahoma border, the origins of the song appear to instead be from the Red River that makes up the North Dakota-Minnesota border and flows into Manitoba. Canadian folklorist Edith Fowke believes the song’s origins are in 1870 and the narrator is a M‚tis woman.

Woody Guthrie: Woody Guthrie – “Red River Valley” [Official Audio]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TM54-ZRd-9k

From this valley they say you are going, I will miss your bright eyes and sweet smile, For alas you take with the sunshine That has brightened my pathway awhile. Chorus: Come and sit by my side if you love me, Do not hasten to bid me adieu. But remember the Red River Valley And the girl who has loved you so true. For this long, long time I have waited For the words that you never would say, But now my last hope has vanished When they tell me you’re going away. When you go to your home by the ocean May you never forget the sweet hours That we spent in the Red River Valley Or the vows we exchanged mid the bowers. Will you think of the valley you’re leaving? Oh, how lonely and dreary ’twill be! Will you think of the fond heart you’re breaking And be true to your promise to me.

 

 

The Return

Archie Fisher 2001

 

When Fisher died in 2025, Amy Davenport told Thank Goodnes It’s Folk about meeting him at a festival and upon hearing her sing in a pub and learning that she sang Witch of the West-mer-lands, he told her he’d written a sequel and would love her help bringing it into the world. They exchanged emails for the finishing touches of the song.

Amy Davenport: https://gavinandamydavenport.bandcamp.com/track/the-return

https://gavinandamydavenport.bandcamp.com/track/the-return

Long was the hour for the valiant knight That would ne’er be sick or slain. Lonely the bower in the candlelight With neither kith nor kin. Stormclouds over the full moon raced As we swung to the dapple grey. And man and horse to the westward faced On the eve of an All-Saints Day. And lo, ‘neath the long green grassy mound Lie the bones of his noble steed. Gone to their graves are his brindled hounds, That were never matched for speed. Freed to the wind were his grey hawk’s wings, Never to be seen again. Lost were the songs that the young men sing As they ride o’er the plain. The rowan shield burned on his breast As the old man rode again. Over the rocky kirkstan crest In the howling wind and rain. Weary the step of his garron’s stride As they slowly wended down To the banks of the winding waterside All under a paley moon Cold was the crack of the raven’s cry That echoed from the fell. Fierce were the flames of the morning sky As the burning gates of Hell. Over his breast on the mantle white The rowan shield burned red. And, there in the rays of the dawning light, The berries burst and bled. “Oh, where is your hawk and your brindled hounds?” Came the screeching houlet’s call. “Gone to the dank and the wormy ground, That will ay consume us all. Where is the maid of the jet black mare who held me fast in sleep?” “Under the long dark winding mere, She rests in the watery deep.” He’s laid his hand on his hunting horn And, with his dying breath, Has blown a blast to the blazing morn That would route the Angel of Death. High in the cusp of the starry night He heard his grey hawk mew. As out of the mist came morning light, His ghostly grey hounds flew. He has gathered a snatch of the goldenrod All withered in the wood And scattered it over the water’s brim Where his ghostly greyhounds stood. Flecked was the coat of the lithe black mare That rose from the watery deep. White were the locks of the maiden’s hair, And her brown eyes heavy with sleep. “Waily, waily my noble lord, Who wakes me from my rest. There’s none can heal the wounds of time That lie bloody on your breast. Climb from your silvered saddle down And swing to my back astride. Gather your hawk and your brindled hounds And together we will ride.” His saddlecloth was the velvet blue Trimmed round with a silver chain. He’s kissed her pale lips aince and twice, Aye, and three times round again. And over the lake with his hounds at heel And his good grey hawk in hand, Rode the knight of the blood-red rowan shield And the witch of the West-mer-land.

 

 

Revolution

Dick Gaughan 

 

I come like a comet new born Like the sun that arises at morning I come like the furious tempest That follows a thundercloud’s warning I come like the fiery lava From cloud-covered mountains volcanic I come like a storm from the north That the oceans awake to in panic I come because tyranny planted My seed in the hot desert sand I come because masters have kindled My fury with every command I come because man cannot murder The life-giving seed in his veins I come because liberty cannot Forever be fettered by chains I come because tyrants imagine That mankind is only their throne I come because peace has been nourished By bullets and cannon alone I come because one world is two And we face one another with rage I come because guards have been posted To keep out the hope of the age From earliest times the oppressed Have awaked me and called me to lead them I guided them out of enslavement And brought them to high roads of freedom I marched at the head of their legions And hailed a new world at its birth And now I shall march with the peoples Until they unfetter the earth And you, all you sanctified moneybags Bandits anointed and crowned Your counterfeit towers of justice And ethics will crash to the ground I’ll send my good sword through your hearts That have drained the world’s blood in their lust Smash all your crowns and your sceptres And trample them into the dust I’ll rip off your rich purple garments And tear them to rags and to shreds Never again will their glitter Be able to turn people’s heads At last your cold world will be robbed of It’s proud hypocritical glow For we shall dissolve it as surely As sunlight dissolves the deep snow I’ll tear down your cobweb morality Shatter the old chain of lies Catch all your blackhooded preachers And choke them as though they were flies I’ll put a quick end to your heavens Your gods that are deaf to all prayer Scatter your futile old spirits And clean up the earth and the air And though you may choke me and shoot me And hang me your toil is in vain No dungeon, no gallows can scare me Nor will I be frightened by pain Each time I’ll arise from the earth And break through all your weapons of doom Until you are finished forever Until you are dust in the tomb

 

 

Rhode Island is Famous for You

Howard Dietz 1948

Arthur Schwartz 

Written for a Broadway musical revue, Inside USA, which celebrated each of the then 48 states. It played 399 performances and ran one year, closing on Valentine’s Day of 1949. It has traditionally been interpreted as a love song, from its musical theater inception to later covers, notably by artist Blossom Dearie. In Inside USA, the song was originated by Jack Haley and Estelle Loring.

Blossom Dearie: Blossom Dearie – Rhode Island Is Famous for You, 1960

https://youtu.be/IXxL3B36KJw?si=VGsUm0xUnPKonbYO

Copper comes from Arizona Peaches come from Georgia And lobsters come from Maine The wheat fields are the sweet fields of Nebraska And Kansas gets bonanzas from the grain Old whiskey comes from old Kentucky Ain’t the country lucky New Jersey gives us glue And you, you come from Rhode Island And little old Rhode Island is famous for you Cotton comes from Louisiana Gophers from Montana And spuds from Idaho They plow land in the cow land of Missouri Where most beef meant for roast beef seems to grow Grand canyons come from Colorado Gold comes from Nevada Divorces also do And you, you come from Rhode Island And little old Rhode Island is famous for you Pencils come from Pennsylvania Vests from Vest Virginia And Tents from Tent-essee They know mink where they grow mink in Wyo-mink A camp chair in New Hamp-chair, that’s for me And minnows come Minnesota Coats come from Dakota But why should you be blue For you, you come from Rhode Island And little old Rhode Island is famous for you

 

 

Riley Boys

Carol Denney 2004

 

Finest Kind liner notes say “metaphor for the Iraq war dead…in small town West Virginia. The quiet, dignified voice of this song reflects a rural community where discussion of the war is more nuanced but, as she says, ‘the loss of one person is felt deeply, and mourned collectively.'” There are two other choruses but changing up choruses every time is hard for social sings.

Finest Kind: https://ianrobb1.bandcamp.com/track/the-riley-boys

https://ianrobb1.bandcamp.com/track/the-riley-boys

It was lovely in the spring, all the flowers were in bloom And we met beside the shore for a moment There were birds and there were planes flying patterns all around And we shared a single sound for a moment Chorus: If the Riley boys were here they would tell us not to cry Dry your eyes they’d say there’s work to do tomorrow If the Riley boys were here we’d hold fast another year And be thankful for what mercy we could borrow If it’s quiet in the streets it is not for want of feet That would march if they could only find the way If the halo round the light on this quiet street tonight Were the hearts that wander by it would be crying It’s so hard to read the news and so beautiful outside And the world that seemed so wide now seems so broken All the things we love and keep in our dreams and in our sleep Startled birds that we have suddenly awoken

 

 

Rise No More

Nancy Kerr 2023

 

“A reflection on the demise of the British steel industry, written after standing in an old Sheffield steel forge, now an industrial heritage museum and reminiscent of the bones of a great whale.”

Melrose Quartet: https://melrosequartet.bandcamp.com/track/rise-no-more

https://melrosequartet.bandcamp.com/track/rise-no-more

What mired Jonah’s creature To see her rise no more? What fate conspired to breach her One hundred miles from shore? For our children stand in silence And view her bones in awe This heart unreal, these ribs of steel Shall sleep and rise no more Chorus: Rise no more oh rise no more We shall not meet my friend on Canaan’s shore Where heav’nly arcs our souls restore So sleep and rise no more Like a drunken man still drowning Work’s thirst long gone before The veins within her pounding Not blood but molten ore For she drew no dragon’s bonus To burn all England’s poor All those who bleed this earth for greed Go sleep and rise no more The legend of her shining Dark carols only sing Of casting ore and grinding The echoes only ring Bright tears upon us raining From steelos gone before For all that streamed is nought but dream So sleep and rise no more

 

 

The Robert Whitworth

Neil Kimber 2001

Ros Kimber 

Kimber’s Men: ROBERT WHITWORTH

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7gUfzAvGsms

Captain Gibson hear our plea Six men’s lives are in peril at sea Send the boats oh, send the boats The Whitby Visitor is no more Chorus 1: Shovel the snow lads, seven feet tall Hooves a’pounding, clear and haul Clear and haul lads, clear and haul Hooves a’pounding, clear and haul Coxswain shouted, “Can’t you see We could never clear that sea Boats not for sailing, not today.” But six men’s lives we shall yet save Grab the shovels, s?as of snow Through blizzards drift we shall go O’er the moors boys, o’er the moors At Robin Hood’s Bay we’ll launch there Harness fastened leathers tight Ne’er anyone had seen such sight Steady up boys, steady up Mighty beasts haul the load Hundreds fight the snow that day More horses harnessed on the way Twixt cozy homes with fires that glow But pounding seas still lay ahead Chorus 2: Pull the oars lads, seven feet tall Waves a’pounding, heave and haul Heave and haul lads, heave and haul Waves a’pounding, clear and haul Exhausted men can barley stand But the Robert Whitworth will be manned Oars all smashed and steering broke With salty tears they head for shore We’ll try again we shall not fail Eighteen men shall fight the gale Hours passed men hauled aboard White horses crashing to the bay Such a journey ne’er forget Inner strength will save men yet Fight nature’s forces for precious life Lifeboat men to you I praise

 

 

Robin Hood

Pete Sutherland 1999?

 

“Mr Wilson’s Music Class” apparently in Wyoming? Robin Hood 2025

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8tmurySkmYg

A long time ago? we don’t know how long? There lived a man named Robin? and this is Robin’s song? He was living in the trees? he was swinging down the vines? With his men all dressed in green? and Maid Marion by his side? Chorus: Robin Hood, Robin Hood, roamed around the neighborhood Helping people out of trouble like he knew he should Knew he should, should be good, good old Robin Hood King John held a contest? to catch Robin Hood? With a prize golden arrow? saying “boy won’t this be good”… The beggar drew his bow? it was Robin in disguise? He was the best of all them? So of course he won the prize? King John robbed the people? Till he heard the doorbell ring? It was merry men a-calling? Upon the robber king? There’s a fire in the castle? It was set by Little John? The king jumped out the window? And he ran the marathon? Now were they really people? In those tights and pointy hats? Or was it like the movie? Starring bears and snakes and cats? Now Robin married Marion? And they lived out in the forest? They lived happily ever after? Now here comes the chorus?