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Oxford Ramble

Speed the Plough

Wassail

Jack-in-the-Green

A Taste of Ale

Six for Gold

Knock at the Knocker, Ring at the Bell

The Robber Bird

Three Quarter Time

The 25th


Miscellaneous

Sources

 

My Old Hat That I Got On

Six for Gold track 16

From Tom Newman of Clanfield in Oxfordshire. Born in 1882, Tom seems to have been quite a character. He played drums in a local dance band, and in later life often took his one-man band to Bampton on Whit Monday. John Baldwin, in the 1969 Folk Music Journal, wrote that he “tends to become very excited when singing: sitting in a chair and pumping the floor with his feet alternately, and similarly his knees with clenched fists”.

The “All for me grog” chorus turns up with various sets of words all over England, and as far afield as Australia. It was sometimes used as part of a Mummers’ play, as for example at Sapperton in Gloucestershire. Mike Yates’s recording of Tom Newman singing the song can be heard on Volume 13 of the Voice of the People set.

We have been unable to find a definition of “gone for a sutter”. The meaning is obvious but what is a sutter? John Baldwin suggests it is a corruption of “asunder”; if you know better, do please let us know!

 

Our arrangement incorporates three dance tunes: The Indian Polka / God killed the devil-o / La Dansomanic