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Folk singer and scholar Fay Hield was commissioned by the EFDSS to create new musical arrangements, drawing on the archive material, to accompany the project. [4] She assembled a collective of musicians to perform at the launch party in June 2013, but after creating a set the musicians decided to extend the collaboration by producing an album and touring under The Full English name in order to ...
Hold Down a Chord Book 2: Finger Picking Folk Guitar Styles (BBC Publications, 1969) Saturday Night: Twenty Tabulated Folk Songs for the Guitar (BBC Publications, 1969) The John Pearse single string melody method for folk guitarists (Feldman, 1969) 1st Guide To Guitar – a Simple Course Providing the Basics (Amsco Music Pub., 1970) The John ...
Beautiful Sunday (song) Beer, Beer, Beer; A Beuk o' Newcassell Sangs; Bingo (folk song) The Birthday Party (song) The Bishoprick Garland; The Bitter Withy; Blackbird (Beatles song) Blackleg Miner; Blacksmith (song) Blaydon Races; Blow the Man Down; Blow the Wind Southerly; Blyth and Tyneside Poems & Songs; Boar's Head Carol; Bob Cranky's Adieu ...
"Down in Yon Forest" (or "Down in Yon Forrest"), also known as "All Bells in Paradise" and "Castleton Carol," [1] is a traditional English Christmas carol dating to the Renaissance era, ultimately deriving from the anonymous Middle English poem known today as the Corpus Christi Carol. [2] The song was originally associated with Good Friday or ...
The Irish traditional singer Paddy Tunney recorded versions of both songs. A well as the traditional singers, the two songs have been covered by numerous artists including Isla Cameron, Anne Briggs, Bert Jansch, Sandy Denny, Show of Hands, Oysterband, the Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem, particularly during the folk music boom in Britain in the 1960s.
Beer, Beer, Beer", also titled "An Ode to Charlie Mops - The Man Who Invented Beer" [1] and "Charlie Mops", is a folk song originating in the British Isles. The song is often performed as a drinking song and is intended as a tribute to the mythical inventor of beer, Charlie Mops. It was also a song used in the game "A Bard's Tale."
[1] [2] It is also one of the three arrangements on which English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams based his Sea Songs, originally arranged for military band in 1923 as the second movement of his English Folk Song Suite, [3] and subsequently re-arranged for full orchestra in 1942 by the composer. [4]
English folk-song collectors (36 P) English folk songs (47 C, 329 P) Pages in category "English folk music" The following 22 pages are in this category, out of 22 total.