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Side One
Kellyburn Braes—Roy Guest Johnny I Hardly Knew You—Ray and Archie Fisher John Riley—Eleanor Leith Mason's Apron—Barney McKenna Side Two Strangest Dream—Roy Guest Blackleg Miner—Ray and Archie Fisher Water Is Wide—Eleanor Leith The Roving Ploughboy—Corrie Folk Trio and Paddie Bell Johnny McEldoo—Ray and Archie Fisher Everybody Loves Saturday Night—Roy Guest Recording first published 1964. All recordings made at folk concerts with Edinburgh audiences. Recorded in Edinburgh and introduced and produced by W. Gordon Smith The Corrie Folk Trio Ray and Archie Fisher Barney McKenna Eleanor Leith Roy Guest |
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The Hoot'nanny Show Volume 2 |
Sleeve Notes:
Side One
KELLYBURN BRAES (Roy Guest)
There are few jollier jumpv Irish songs than tins. Even if its rhythms,
bounce, and chirpy tune failed to catch the attention and set the feet
tapping, its message—if such yon can, call it—could attract its own
audience ... surely the women are worse than the men, when you send them
to hell they get sent hack again.
JOHNNY I HARDLY KNEW YOU (Ray and Archie Fisher)
Another Irish song, but there is nothing very pleasant about it. A song of
protest, an anguished cry against war, the determined—if historically
fruitless—resolution by a woman that men will never fight again. Theyre
rolling out the guns again, but they never will take our sons again means
what it says on this occasion because Johnny has come back from the war
... you hadn't an arm, you hadn't a leg, you're an eyeless, boneless,
chicken-less egg, you'll have to be put with a bowl to beg.
JOHN RILEY (Eleanor Leith)
Scholars squabble over the origins of this beautiful ballad, manv of them
claiming it as a seventeenth century British broadside ballad. Today it
is usually thought of as an American song, largely because of the
beautiful interpretations of it by Joan Baez and others. Eleanor thinks of
it simply as a ballad about a young girl, the young girl of every boy's
imaginings.
MASON'S APRON (Barney McKenna)
For one brief second, the flashing moment between a string being plucked
and unplucked (or "picked" in the contemporary folk idiom), this recording
is imperfect. But in its space and time and virtuosity and subtlety and
sheer driving energy it is an excellent illustration of the tenor banjo
playing of one of the great folk artists of the world.
Side Two
STRANGEST DREAM (Roy Guest)
A very different sort of protest against war, gentler, ironic, using
fantasy to ridicule the basic insanity of any situation that could provoke
a war.
BLACKLEG MINER (Ray and Archie Fisher)
Industrial strife in the bitter bad old days of the mines provoked this
Northumbrian ballad. Few songs are so completely unyielding in their
attitude. The blackleg or the scab—the worker who defies the strike call
of his mates—is still regarded as something that belongs under a stone. It
is not a pretty song. Indeed, in these more tolerant times, it is a
provocative, ugly song. But it expresses in most eloquent terms the
genuine emotions of people at bay.
WATER IS WIDE (Eleanor Leith)
Probably the most international of all folk songs, different versions of
it being shared by many countries, I leaned my back against an oak,
thinking it was a trusty tree, but first it bended then it broke, and so
did my false love to me is probably the verse that exists in all of the
versions. There is even a version, on O Waly, Waly lines, which is
unmistakably an Edinburgh variation of the old song. Eleanor's lyric,
however, comes from across the Atlantic.
THE ROVING PLOUGHBOY (Corrie Folk Trio and Paddie Bell)
An uncomplicated but lovely romantic ballad from the north-cost of
Scotland—that great storehouse of much that is best in Scottish folk
music.
JOHNNY McELDOO (Ray and Archie Fisher)
Rav and Archie have turned this whimsical Irish song about gluttony into a
whimsical Scottish song about the same thing. The melody swings along with
an insistent wallop; the lyric, a tongue-twister if ever there was one, is
a singer's nightmare.
EVERYBODY LOVES SATURDAY NIGHT (Roy Guest)
A song that is thought of today as nothing, much more than good fun. But
in its origins in Africa it was, in its- way, a protest against the
restriction of the freedom of the individual. Roy Guest has since made it
a personal tour-de-force.