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As a response, the band released the 2012 album Drunken Sailor, which includes the title track and a prequel that tells the earlier life of the drunken sailor called "Whores and Hounds". [23] Don Janse produced an arrangement in the early 1960s which has been included in several choral music anthologies.
It contained all these tracks except "Old Woman Tossed Up in a Blanket" and "Boys and Girls come out to Play". Two tracks were missing from "The Drunken Sailor". In its place there was a new track – "Humpty Dumpty", with leads vocals by Bob Johnson. In 1989 EMI/Music For Pleasure released a 3-CD set called "The Children's Collection".
In their place there was a new track - "Humpty Dumpty". In 1989 EMI/Music For Pleasure released a 3-CD set called "The Children's Collection". One CD consisted of a different selection of these tracks. The same two tracks were missing from "The Drunken Sailor", but all the tracks from "My Very Favorite Nursery Rhymes" were present.
The songs are listed in the index by accession number, rather than (for example) by subject matter or in order of importance. Some well-known songs have low Roud numbers (for example, many of the Child Ballads), but others have high ones. Some of the songs were also included in the collection Jacobite Reliques by Scottish poet and novelist ...
Sailing Medley: "Blow the Man Down"/"My Bonnie Lies over the Ocean"/"Sailing, Sailing"/"Drunken Sailor" "Camptown Races" (Stephen Foster) "Old Blue" "Here We Go Loopty-Loo" "The Sidewalks of New York" "Shortnin' Bread" "John Jacob Jingleheimer Schmidt" "Thumbelina" (Larry Groce) "The Bear Went Over the Mountain" "Red River Valley" "Skip to My Lou"
Sail On, Sailor; Sailing, Sailing; Sailor (song) The Sailor Song; A Sailor's Life; The Saucy Arethusa; Seemann (Lolita song) Seemann (Rammstein song) Ship Ahoy! (All the Nice Girls Love a Sailor) Son of a Son of a Sailor (song) The Song of the Marines; Song of the Yue Boatman
The tune was first printed as the "College Hornpipe" in 1797 or 1798 by J. Dale of London. [3] However, versions of the tune are found in earlier manuscript collections – for example, a syncopated version in the William Vickers manuscript, written on Tyneside, dated 1770.
Two Birds may refer to: "Two Birds" , the 12th episode of the American TV drama Awake; Two Birds, a 2008 Icelandic film; Two Birds with the Wings of One, 2006 ballet by Jean-Pierre Bonnefoux; At Swim-Two-Birds, a 1939 novel by Brian O'Nolan; One Stone and Two Birds, a 2005 Taiwanese film; Two Birds, a 2017 album by Trixie Mattel