Welcome to the Dragon Folk Club

Welcome to the official blog of the Dragon Folk Club, which meets for a singers night every Friday at The Bridge Inn, Shortwood, Bristol. Everyone is welcome whether you sing, play or just listen.

Showing posts with label Welsh history 101B. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Welsh history 101B. Show all posts

Tuesday, 7 March 2023

St David's Day 2023

After a good run of well peopled sessions we were down to a core of two last week. With one of those due to be absent this Friday (10th March) it's really important that you make an effort to join us whether you are a regular, an occasional visitor or a first timer.

There will be no theme, we don't bite and anything goes as long as it's acoustic. So, whether you mostly sing, play, recite or just listen, you will be equally welcome to experience our free entry, warm welcome, great acoustics and the reasonably priced bar.

Join us this or (almost) any Friday from 8:15pm in the pool room of The Bridge Inn, Shortwood, Bristol (UK), BS16 9NG.

Once at the pub, if you need help to find us, be sure to mention "Dragon Folk Club" at the bar and you should be pointed in the right direction.

And now back to last week. With the theme of St David's Day there was some effort made to sing things Welsh or about Wales or the Welsh, and then as usual that was stretched a bit: to wales, New South Wales, and a few songs which missed the mark, but never mind.

MC Colin started us off with Welsh history 101B (Heather Rose Jones) which Simon followed with Fiddler's Dram's Day Trip to Bangor (Debbie Cook).

Simon read a poem by recently deceased, adopted Welshman, Les Barker. The poem in question was The Ice Cream Bells of Porthcawl. This required the reader to pronounce that well-known Welsh village name which also gave one of Colin's songs its title; that title being Llanfairpwllgwyngyll...gogogoch!, a parody of Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious, written by Kristof Robertson.

Most of the other songs not included in the "a selection" playlist linked below were sung by Colin from the pen of Dawson Smith. He sang three of these: Rebecca, Rebecca about the Rebecca Riots, Children Born to the Valleys, and From Green to Black.

Simon finished the evening with the Bristol-based Welsh Back Quay written by local shanty singer Ian "Nobby" Dye.

Now listen to a selection of songs sung during this session.

(Number of people present - 2 of whom 2 performed)

Tuesday, 8 March 2022

St David's Day 2022

(Photo: Simon Meeds)
We're cooking on gas now. Five people two weeks in a row. This is what I'm talking about! Keep them coming and we'll be back to a sustainable, post-COVID sing-around club before you know it.

The optional theme last Friday was Wales and St David. Some stuck to it, others found tenuous links: very tenuous in some cases. It was great to see Gary pay us a visit after a long absence.

Colin, playing MC, started us off with Welsh History 101B (Heather Rose Jones). This was followed by Gary with his self-penned The Cobblestones of Carter Street. It was a sad tale of his childhood in Salford, where his mother tried to persuade him that it was the taunting by Gary and his friends which led to the suicide of the local rag and bone man.

Simon went topical rather than Welsh with The Marsh Family's version of the John Tams / traditional Over the Hills and Far Away (roud 3098). The family's version addresses the current crisis in Ukraine.

Mike went back to Wales with Max Boyce's Duw it's Hard. Geoff came through the door just as it was his turn to sing, and he brought out Roger Miller's King of the Road, to which we were all able to sing along.

I'll leave you to listen to most of the songs that were sung on the "a selection" link, and skip straight to the last round of four, Mike having left earlier in the evening. It started with Colin, still soldiering on with the Welsh theme and singing Men of Harlech (roud 24790, English words by Thomas Oliphant). Gary sang his own song The Loam and the Clay. Simon gave us Elizabeth Padgett's song The Plover Catcher about Lincolnshire in wartime.

Finally, it fell to Geoff to close the evening, which he did with The Kerry Recruit (roud 520, laws J8).

Now listen to a selection of songs sung during this session.

(Number of people present - 5 of whom 5 performed)

Monday, 3 March 2014

St David's Day

Phil Tanner (www.folkwales.org.uk)
This week's session was held on the eve of St David's Day, so the theme was anything vaguely related to that day, to Wales or symbols of Welshness. Well for the sake of convenience it was also stretched to whales, or rather whaling!

Mike started the evening off with Hob y Deri Dando, even singing one verse in Welsh, while Steve kicked off the pseudo theme of whaling with Bonny ship the Diamond.

Our one Welsh regular, Lesley, despite earlier promises, wasn't able to be with us, but Richard, her husband, filled in ably, singing all of his songs in Welsh. He started off with Rhyfelgyrch Gwŷr Harlech (Men of Harlech), went on to ffoles Llantrisant (Foolish Llantrisant girls) and Calon Lân (Pure heart) with words by Daniel James and tune by John Hughes). Next came fflat Huw Pugh by John Glyn Davies (link in Welsh), about legendary Welsh sailor, Huw Pugh the captain of a 60 ton "flat" ship named the Ann of Liverpool.