Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"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.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
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.
Another variation is sung at the opening and closing campfires at Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan Scout Reservation in Pearson, Wisconsin. [citation needed] Cuyuna Scout Camp of Crosslake, Minnesota uses this song as one of the three it uses to close its Sunday and Friday night campfire programs, [8] as does Camp Babcock-Hovey in Ovid, New York. [citation needed]
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 ...
In 1907, on Brownsea Island in England, he conducted the first Scout Camp for boys. At the end of that camp, he gave some the ashes from the camp fire to each of the boys and kept some for himself. Legend says on his journeys throughout the world he would take ashes from campfires he would attend and spread them in the next ceremonial campfire ...
Cartoon Saloon was established in Kilkenny during 1999 by Tomm Moore, Nora Twomey, [8] and Paul Young. [9] The three were all alumni of the Ballyfermot College of Further Education’s animation degree course. [10] Cartoon Saloon began working on a trailer for its first feature film, The Secret of Kells, that same year. [11]
The first official record was the release of a home video in 1988, distributed by Fries Home Video, [5] a subdivision of Fries Entertainment, Inc.A version of the song was used as the closing theme of Lamb Chop's Play-Along, a 1992 televised puppet show on PBS.