Google apps
Main menu

"Olden Days"

10 Comments -

1 – 10 of 10
Blogger Sam Dodsworth said...

I read "Chips With Everything" at school, so I've always assumed that "The Cutty Wren" was about the Peasants' Revolt. But now you mention it, the actual words don't mean much and Wikipedia thinks the earliest known version is late C18(*). I think it'll always sound menacing to me, though.


(*) Is this actually true of all "ancient" folk songs, in the way that all "ancient" customs and ceremonies started in 1850?

Thursday, 22 April, 2010

Comment deleted

This comment has been removed by the author.

Thursday, 22 April, 2010

Blogger Mike Taylor said...

The Voodoo Child reference (playing the guitar like a percussion instrument) is a reference to the Jimi Henrix song "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)" -- not to be confused with "Voodoo Chile" (and, yes, that is the correct spelling), a very different song from the same album.

There's a not bad live video of Hendrix playing the song at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v7yPRYL_Oq0 -- you can hear the percussive effect right at the start.

Thursday, 22 April, 2010

Comment deleted

This comment has been removed by the author.

Thursday, 22 April, 2010

Blogger Andrew Rilstone said...

Cutty Wren can obviously be taken as a revolutionary song in some way or other. After going to great lengths to catch, kill, and cook the smallest of all birds, only the spare ribs are given to the poor. But presumably it's referring to some older tradition as well.

I'm rather partial to Les Barker's version, sung by June Tabor in an uncharacteristically light moment:

"Its not very big though says Millda to Molda,
We won't need much stuffing I don't see the sense.
Of course its not big though said Molda to Millda,
Its one of the salient features of wrens."

Thursday, 22 April, 2010

Blogger Louise H said...

I'm beginning to quite like some of this stuff. Keep up the links.

Re two guitars; many many years ago I was working for a couple of weeks at the woolly monkey sanctuary in Cornwall and was around for the period round the funeral of the founder. It was a huge old house, with people everywhere and I walked past this room and heard two or quite possibly three people playing acoustic guitars. Glanced in and there was just John Williams (the guitarist, not the composer) twiddling away. How on earth anyone could make that many notes come out of a guitar at once still baffles me.

Thursday, 22 April, 2010

Comment deleted

This comment has been removed by the author.

Thursday, 22 April, 2010

Blogger Mike Taylor said...

Also on the subject of one guitarist sounding like many, are you familiar with Phil Keaggy? His wholly absurd piece The Reunion is here on Youtube if you want to get an idea: if the slow part at the beginning bores you (shame on you!), skip forward to 1:00 and listen through to 2:25 or so. Also the section from 3:00 onwards.

Thursday, 22 April, 2010

Blogger Gavin Burrows said...

I'd been tempted to leave a post asking for Doctor Who andfolk stuff, but hadn't wanted to push my luck!

Thursday, 22 April, 2010

Blogger Sam Dodsworth said...

Cutty Wren can obviously be taken as a revolutionary song in some way or other. After going to great lengths to catch, kill, and cook the smallest of all birds, only the spare ribs are given to the poor.

I always imagined it as passers-by questioning a bunch of angry-looking men with weapons who say they're "just going for a little walk".

Monday, 26 April, 2010