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On this page:
Link to videos of Nick at Shepherdstown
Comment on A Whiter Shade of Pale
Audioclips of Nick on concertina
Lyrics to Large Boots
Lyrics to SUZANNA'S A FUNICLE MAN
Nick provides lyrics to FIVE FOOT FLIRT
ALCOHOLIC'S ANTHEM
HAVE SOME MADIERA, M'DEAR
LLOYD GEORGE"S BEER
Video: Planxty Fanny Power
The Oggy Man
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| Videos of Nick at Shepherdstown, 2004 |
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I will always remember Nick's unlikely playing of A Whiter Shade of Pale on his concertina. He would just shut out everything else and play that song with intensity. I looked up the lyrics, which are strange and indecipherable, except for this line which jumped out at me. Nick brought us all both music and laughter.
If music be the food of life
then laughter is its queen
A Whiter Shade of Pale, Procol Harum, words by Keith Reid
- Mary Ellsworth, Takoma Park, MD
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Here is an audio clip of Nick playing his concertina.
Here is another - This one is \"Roll Alabama, Roll\"
He made these recordings for me last summer (2007) for a project I was working on.
--Bill Brown
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Nick had been singing this one recently at morris outings:
LARGE BOOTS
There was an old fellow called Anthony Clare
And he was a hell of a conjurer
There wasn't the like of him anywhere
For twisting and twirling his boots.
CHORUS: For they were large boots!
Large boots! Boots as heavy as lead.
With a dexterous twist of his muscular wrist
He could flick 'em right over his head!
As he was walking down the street,
>Little Miss Brown he chanced to meet,
>Twisting and twirling his boots.
As he was twirling them round and round,
Down they came with a hell of a bound,
Right on the head of her favourite hound
>Twisting and twirling his boots.
Little Miss Brown was overwrought -
She told her story to the court:
That in her opinion no-one ought
To Twist and twirl their boots.
The Judge declared the case was clear:
The fine would be a barrel of beer,
>For anyone else who came in here
Twisting and twirling their boots.
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Nick always seemed to wait until everyone had a few beers in them to spring this song on them, which made for a great deal of hilarious confusion as they tried to get the chorus and it's rapid-fire sound-effects in the right order. Not sure if this is his version, but it is close.
--Bill Brown
SUZANNA'S A FUNICLE MAN
The was an old farmer who had an old sow
(grunt) ow (whistle) ow (PFTHTTT) idle-e-dow
Suzanna's a funicle man
ch: Sing lassy go rings below
Suzanna's a funicle man
(grunt) an (whistle) an (PFTHTTT) idle-e-dan
Suzanna's a funicle man
Now this old sow had nine little pigs
(grunt) ig (whistle) ig (PFTHTTT) idle-e-dig
Suzanna's a funicle man
ch:
These nine little pigs, they got out of their sty
(grunt) i (whistle) i (PFTHTTT) idle-e-di
Suzanna's a funicle man
ch:
(grunt) eet (whistle) eet (PFTHTTT) idle-e-deet
Suzanna's a funicle man
ch:
They got in the barn and they ate all the corn
(grunt) orn (whistle) orn (PFTHTTT) idle-e-dorn
Suzanna's a funicle man
ch:
These nine little pigs, grew big and grew fat
(grunt) at (whistle) at (PFTHTTT) idle-e-dat
Suzanna's a funicle man
ch:
That's the end of this little song
(grunt) ong (whistle) ong (PFTHTTT) idle-e-dong
Suzanna's a funicle man
ch:
Five Foot Flirt (Cyril Tawney)
>From: Aldona Joseph>To: Nick Robertshaw <bignick@paraglyph.com>
>Subject: Lyrics please
>Date: Sun, Jan 30, 2000, 1:31 AM
>
> Hi Nick!
>
> It was great hearing you sing. Let's do it again
> sometime soon.
>
> Any chance I can convince you to send me the lyrics
> for "Five Foot Flirt?" It's not the easiest set of
> words to get your tongue around if you've forgotten
> how they go.
>
> Thanks!
>
> Aldona
To: Aldona JosephFrom: Nick Robertshaw <bignick@paraglyph.com>
Subject: Re: Lyrics please
Date: Sun, Jan 30, 2000, 10:48 PM
You forgot a song????
FIVE FOOT FLIRT
Now don't say Jim Johnson weren't with 'ee last night
I heard him as plain as can be
I was crossing the road when I heard a strange sound
Down by the sycamore tree
I thought p'raps a cow had got stuck in the mud
And pulled out her foot with a moo
I'm satisfied now that that noise were'nt a cow
It were Jim kissing you
CHORUS
You'm a five foot flirt in the robes of an angel
You'd better had leave I alone
The way that you'm acting it nearly un-nerves I
The thing that preserves I is my joviality
Though I've got trouble as thick as the stubble
It's you that's the worst of them all
Keep out of my track if you want to come back
You can crawl, crawl, crawl.
Remember what happened last Saturday night
The air was so peaceful and still
Like a bolt from the blue came a hallabaloo
A growling and cackling so shrill
It came to me head as I crawled from me bed
There's a fox at me chickens 'tis true
I crept out in me socks and bumped into the fox
It were Jim kissing you
-----
Now what's your excuse for last Sunday in church
It fair turned the poor vicar gray
The organist was rendering 'Lead Kindly Light'
Jim Johnson kept pumping away
Then all of a sudden the organ stopped short
The vicar got into a stew
When he went 'round behind tell me what did he find?
He found Jim kissing you.
-----------------------------------------------------
Why don't we sing ballads? Have the Kippers and the finger-in-ear
posers ruined the crowd for them? Will they sit still in the absence of shanty
choruses, humor, and bawdry? Can they deal with the rape, violence, and
incest or is it too close to home?
Let's do a ballad session.
--
Nick Robertshaw
ParaGlyph. 301 694 8604
______________________________________
Nick certainly knew a lot of songs about drinking -- here's a few that he always sang with that special twinkle in his eye.
-- Aldona Joseph
ALCOHOLIC'S ANTHEM
(Harold Gretton -- to the tune of MEN OF HARLECH)
What's the use of drinking tea,
Indulging in sobriety,
And teetotal perversity?
It's healthier to booze.
What's the use of milk and water?
These are drinks that never oughter,
Be allowed in any quarter.
Come on, lose your blues,
Mix yourself a shandy,
Drown yourself in brandy,
Sherry sweet,
Or whisky neat,
Or any kind of liquor that is handy.
There's no blinking sense in drinking,
Anything that doesn't make you stinking,
There's no happiness like sinking,
Blotto to the floor.
Put an end to all frustration,
Drinking may be your salvation,
End it all in dissipation,
Rotten to the core.
Aberrations metabolic,
Ceilings that are hyperbolic,
These are for the alcoholic,
Lying on the floor.
Vodka for the arty,
Gin to make you hearty,
Lemonade was only made,
For drinking if your mother's at the party,
Just steer clear of home-made beer,
And anything that isn't labeled clear,
There is nothing else to fear, so
Bottom's up, my boys.
HAVE SOME MADIERA, M'DEAR
(
She was young! She was pure! She was new! She was nice!
She was fair! She was sweet seventeen!
He was old! He was vile and no stranger to vice!
He was base! He was bad! He was mean!
He had slyly inveigled her up to his flat
To view his collection of stamps,
And he said as he hastened to put out the cat,
The wine, his cigar and the lamps:
'Have some
You really have nothing to fear;
I'm not trying to tempt you-that wouldn't be right.
You shouldn't drink spirits at this time of night;
Have some
It's very much nicer than Beer;
I don't care for Sherry, one cannot drink Stout,
And Port is a wine I can well do without;
It's simply a case of Chacun a son GOUT!
Have some
Unaware of the wiles of the snake in the grass,
Of the fate of the maiden who topes,
She lowered her standards by raising her glass,
Her courage, her eyes-and his hopes.
She sipped it, she drank it, she drained it, she did;
He quietly refilled it again
And he said as he secretly carved one more notch
On the butt of his gold-handled cane:
'Have some
I've got a small cask of it here,
And once it's been opened you know it won't keep.
Do finish it up-it will help you to sleep;
Have some
It's really an excellent year;
Now if it were Gin, you'd be wrong to say yes,
The evil Gin does would be hard to assess
(Besides, it's inclined to affect m' prowess!)
Have some
Then there flashed through her mind what her mother had said
With her antepenultimate breath:
'Oh, my child, should you look on the wine when 'tis red
Be prepared for a fate worse than death!'
She let go her glass with a shrill little cry.
Crash, tinkle! it fell to the floor.
When he asked: 'What in heaven ... ?' she made no reply,
Up her mind and a dash for the door.
'Have some
Rang out down the hall loud and clear.
A tremulous cry that was filled with despair,
As she paused to take breath in the cool midnight air;
'Have some
The words seemed to ring in her ear
Until the next morning she woke up in bed,
With a smile on her lips and an ache in her head-
And a beard in her earhole that tickled and said:
'Have some
LLOYD GEORGE"S BEER
(R.P Weston and Bert Lee, 1915 -- A WWI song in reponse to government attempts to limit alcohol consumption during the war)
We shall win the war, we shall win the war,
As I said before, we shall win the war.
The Kaiser's in a dreadful fury,
Now he knows we're making it at every brewery.
Have you read of it, seen what's said of it,
In the Mirror and the Mail.
It's a substitute, and a pubstitute,
And it's known as Government Ale (or otherwise).
Lloyd George's Beer, Lloyd George's Beer.
At the brewery, there's nothing doing,
All the water works are brewing,
Lloyd George's Beer, it isn't dear.
Oh they say it's a terrible war, oh law,
And there never was a war like this before,
But the worst thing that ever happened in this war
Is Lloyd George's Beer.
Buy a lot of it, all they've got of it.
Dip your bread in it, Shove your head in it
From January to October,
And I'll bet a penny that you"ll still be sober.
Get your cloth in it, make some broth in it,
With a pair of mutton chops.
Drown your dogs in it, pop your clogs in it,
And you'll see some wonderful sights (in that lovely stufo).
Lloyd George's Beer, Lloyd George's Beer.
At the brewery, there's nothing doing,
All the water works are brewing,
Lloyd George's Beer, it isn't dear.
With Haig and Joffre when affairs look black,
And you can't get at Jerry with his gas attack.
Just get your squirters out and we'll squirt the buggers back,
With Lloyd George's Beer.
***************
Planxty Fanny Power [Quicktime movie, 32.0 MB ]
(patience - it's a Large file]
composed by Turlogh O'Carolan, 17th Century, Ireland.
Nick playing his Jeffries Duet concertina, April 2005, along with an unknown recording, in an unknown location.
(If you can identify the recording or the location please add the information here.)
***************
The Oggy Man
- by Cyril Tawney,
(Contrasts the disappearance of the oggie, or Cornish pasty, seller at Devonport docks with a sailor's lost love. This version was transcribed from a recording of Nick Robertshaw, August of 2002)
Oh the rain's softly falling and the oggy man's no more
I can't hear him calling like I used to before
I came through the gateway and I heard the sergeant say
Oh the big boys they are coming, see the stands across the way
But the rain's softly falling and the oggy man's no more
Twas there that she told me, 'ere she bade me goodbye
There's no one that could love you one half as much as I
My love it will endure dear like the leaves unto the fall
As faithful as that oggy man beneath the dock yard wall
But the rain's softly falling and the oggy man's no more
***************
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