Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Camp songs or campfire songs are a category of folk music traditionally sung around a campfire for entertainment. Since the advent of summer camp as an activity for children, these songs have been identified with children's songs, although they may originate from earlier traditions of songs popular with adults.
Sing Around the Campfire is the 16th album by children's entertainers Sharon, Lois & Bram, originally released in 1995. This album is a collection of songs for round the campfire. This is the third official compilation from the Sharon, Lois & Bram collection.
The tracks on Camp Favorites are traditional songs that children might sing at summer camp, and the record sleeve is illustrated with a group of youngsters singing around a campfire. Camp Favorites was unknown among Phil Ochs fans until 2000, when David Cohen prepared his comprehensive catalog of Ochs' works ( Phil Ochs: A Bio-Bibliography ...
Mr.Newton was then commissioned by Girlguiding UK to write a piece for their centenary in 2010. He wrote a shorter piece, called "Centenary Fantasia" which is a medley of campfire songs. The National Scout and Guide Concert Band (NSGCB) was reformed in its current format in 2016 as a joint concert band of The Scout Association and Girlguiding ...
"Sarasponda" is a children's nonsense song that has been considered a popular campfire song. It is often described to be a spinning song, that is, a song that would be sung while spinning at the spinning wheel.
Chater edited and compiled the following songbooks, the vast majority published by the Girl Guides Association: The First Book of Camp Fire Songs (1944) [49] Fireside Songs in Two Parts: Traditional Tunes for Unaccompanied Equal Voices (1945) [50] A Baker's Dozen: 13 Singing Games for Brownies (1947) [51] A Brownie's Day (1948) with Joy ...
After early adoption by the Scandinavian Scout organisations, the song became eventually (starting in the 1940s and 1950s) a global hit among Scouts. The Ging Gang melody is today the same as in 1905, whereas the spelling of the lyrics has changed in translations.
This song is performed by children in American elementary school plays about the First Thanksgiving to typify Native American lifestyle only using the first verses. [ citation needed ] In the 2019 film Brotherhood , directed by Richard Bell is based on a true story of a 1926 canoeing accident in an Ontario, Canada lake at a boys' summer camp.