Sat in bed last night unable to sleep, just gave my brain free reign.
Ended up recalling our "music lessons" at primary school some 64 years ago.
What on earth possessed that teacher to teach us songs like....
"Who is Sylvia, what is she"
"Kije was a Hussar bold, a Hussar bold was he"
"I shot an arrow into the air, it fell to earth I know not where"
"Oh there was a little drummer, and he loved a wall-eyed cook"
I thought of another last night, but it escapes me right now.
For goodness sake, we were 7 and eight years old, what were they thinking?
Think we all did this ferlew. I sang (as part of a choir) in our local civic hall. Must have been about 12 at the time.
Oh! Phadrig Crohoore was a broth of a boy,
And he stood in his stockings six feet eight,
And his arm was as thick as another man's thigh
'Tis Phadrig was great.
wow, one of those jogged a memory. in 1968 my school took part in the BBC Schools "making music" series, hosted by John Langstaff (who modern audiences will know from his sample used in Lemon Jelly's "nice weather for ducks"). anyway, the classical piece featured in that series was Prokoviev's Lieutenant Kije, which was animated in its entirety in episode 9 of the series. happy days.
Times were so different then. Only a few days ago I was thinking of the songs we used to sing at primary school too, songs like"Jimmy the carter lad" "Do you ken Elsie Marley?" and "Myt dame thath a lame tame crane" as well as many others
When I saw the title I thought this was going to be about Mrs May's moves in AFrica...
I can remember at Junior school singing "There is a tavern I the town"
This at the age of nine or ten and I remember thinking it a bit wierd at the time...