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Hush you bye, Don't you cry, Go to sleep-y lit-tle ba - by When you wake, you'll have sweet cake, and All the pret-ty lit-tle hor-ses A brown and a gray and a black and a bay and a Coach and six-a lit-tle hor - ses A black and a bay and a brown and a gray and a Coach_____ and six-a lit-tle hor-ses. Hush you bye,
Hush-a-bye you sweet little baby and don't you cry anymore. Daddy is down at his stockbroker's office a keeping the wolf from the door. Nursie will raise the window shade high, So you can see the cars whizzing by. Home in a hurry each daddy must fly To a baby like you. Hush-a-bye you sweet little baby and close those pretty blue eyes.
Download as PDF; Printable version ... a song recorded by The Mystics; Hushabye, by Hayley Westenra "All the Pretty Little Horses", a lullaby also called "Hush-a-bye"
"Hush-a-bye baby" in The Baby's Opera, A book of old Rhymes and The Music by the Earliest Masters, ca. 1877. The rhyme is generally sung to one of two tunes. The only one mentioned by the Opies in The Oxford Book of Nursery Rhymes (1951) is a variant of Henry Purcell's 1686 quickstep Lillibullero, [2] but others were once popular in North America.
"Hushabye" was covered by the Beach Boys on their 1964 album All Summer Long, featuring Brian Wilson and Mike Love on lead vocals. In 1993, two new versions of the song appeared on the Beach Boys' Good Vibrations box set, one live version and the other a split track with vocals in one channel and instruments in the other.
Dolly Parton opens her 1980 song "Hush-A-Bye Hard Times" with an a cappella verse from the song. The North Carolina band Red Clay Ramblers featured the song on their 1981 album Hard Times. Recorded by Irish singer Mary Black on her 1984 album Collected. Akiko Yano sings this song on her 1989 album "Welcome Back".
Charles Millward (1830–1892) was an English musician, composer, actor, journal proprietor and monumental mason.. Grave of Charles Millward in Highgate Cemetery. Compare entry on Sir William Schwenck Gilbert for correction of erroneous titles: In 1865–66, Gilbert collaborated with Charles Millward on several pantomimes, including one called Hush-a-Bye, Baby, On the Tree Top, or, Harlequin ...
Joseph Ritson was a young London antiquary, originally from Stockton-on-Tees, whose interests were in the early 1780s turning towards nursery rhymes.In 1781 he bought a copy of the pioneering collection Mother Goose's Melody, [1] and the following year encouraged his nephew to note down any such rhymes he came across. [2]