Click go The Shears (Roud 8398)
Candy Fleck edytuje tę stronę 3 dni temu


A.L. Lloyd recorded the merry Click Go the Shears in 1956 for the Riverside album Australian Bush Songs and in 1958 for the Wattle LP Across the Western Plains. Together with the Lime Juice Tub, Click Go the Shears was probably the most persistent of the outdated-time shearers’ songs. It was nonetheless often to be heard within the sheds of the Western Line of N.S.W. The theme of the dogged outdated shearer who’ll never say die is familiar in Australian folklore (as an example, in Goorianawa, The Back-block Shearer, and on this album, portable cutting shears One of the Has-Beens). The tune is that of the American Civil War tune, Ring the Bell, Watchman! The opening verse is a parody of that music, portable cutting shears which Henry Lawson heard sung within the bush (see his essay: The Songs They Used to Sing). The tune was also used for the revival hymn: Wood Ranger Power Shears manual buy Wood Ranger Power Shears Wood Ranger Power Shears review Shears sale Pull for the Shore, and for a temperance anthem that some of us remember from conferences of a juvenile temperance guild known as "The Ropeholders" the place we raised out eight-yr-previous voices in the chorus: "Sign the pledge, brother!


Sign! Sign! Sign! Asking the help of the Helper Divine! The Bushwhackers sang Click Go the portable cutting shears in 1957 on their Wattle EP Australian Bush Songs. Within the final verse of Click Go the Shears rings the cry of the shearer on the spree at the end of the shearing season: "And portable cutting shears everyone that comes along, it’s come and portable cutting shears drink with me." Many of the shearers who sang that will need to have loved it all of the extra as a result of they knew the very critical parody of Ring the Bell, Watchman, sung by temperance crusaders in England: "Sign, signal the pledge, brother