Tramps and Hawkers
DESCRIPTION: "Come a' ye tramps and hawker lads and gaitherers o' blaw... I'll tell tae ye a rovin' tale, an' places I hae been, Far up intae the snowy north or sooth by Gretna Green." The singer describes his travels, sights he has seen, worries he hasn't had
AUTHOR: unknown
EARLIEST DATE: 1909 (Greig/Duncan3)
KEYWORDS: rambling
FOUND IN: Britain(Scotland(Aber,Bord))
REFERENCES (4 citations):
Greig/Duncan3 487, "Come All Ye Tramps and Hawkers" (2 texts, 1 tune)
Kennedy-FolksongsOfBritainAndIreland 358, "Tramps and Hawkers" (1 text, 1 tune)
McMorland/Scott-HerdLaddieOTheGlen, pp. 51, 150, "Come Aa Ye Tramps and Hawkers" (1 text, 1 tune)
DT, HAWKRS*
Roud #1874
RECORDINGS:
Jimmy MacBeath, "Come All Ye Tramps And Hawkers" (on Lomax43, LomaxCD1743, Voice20)
CROSS-REFERENCES:
cf. "Davy Faa (Remember the Barley Straw)" (tune)
cf. "Paddy West" (tune)
cf. "Hermitage Castle" (tune)
SAME TUNE:
Davy Faa (Remember the Barley Straw) (File: K188)
Paddy West (File: Doe113)
Hermitage Castle (File: McSco056)
Doctor Fletcher (Dr. Pritchard) (File: Guig111)
ALTERNATE TITLES:
The Jolly Beggar
NOTES [100 words]: This song is best known not for its banal lyrics but for its widely-recognized and used tune (also known as "Paddy West"). - RBW
Yates, Musical Traditions site Voice of the People suite "Notes - Volume 20" - 15.1.04: "It was first collected from both James Angus and James Morrison in 1909 and appears in the Greig-Duncan Collection Vol 3 p.271."
Greig/Duncan3: "Hamish Henderson mentions in the notes to the record Come A' Ye Tramps and Hawkers(Collector Records,Jes 10) that the song 'is reputed to have been composed by 'Besom Jimmy,' a much travelled Angus-born hawker of the last century." - BS
Last updated in version 4.2
File: K358
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