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.

Thursday, 29 June 2023

Old friends

Tom, just a few years ago
The usual scribe was absent for last week's Dragon Folk Club session and will also be away this Friday. The report will take a slightly different format for now: not all facts will be checked and there will be no YouTube playlist of songs at least for the moment.

It was great to see that our old friend Tom turned up
for the first time in quite a while and complete with his banjo! Occasional visitors Steve and Jane also made a welcome appearance.

  • Colin - Bring it on home (Sam Cooke)
  • Denny - Collier Laddie (roud 3787)
  • Paul - God speed the plough (roud 1475)
  • Geoff - The Cape (Guy Clark)
  • Tom - Raining in my heart (Felice Bryant, Boudleaux Bryant)
  • Steve - Jolly Waggoner (roud 1088)
  • Jane - A new story "Belief", on the subject of war and refugees
  • Colin - Day-o (Jerry Silverman)
  • Denny - The wizard of Alderley Edge (Pete Coe)
  • Paul - The Farmer's Boy (roud 408)
  • Geoff - The Manchester Rambler (Ewan MacColl)
  • Tom - Everyone (Bryan Cookman)
  • Steve - Adieu, sweet lovely Nancy (roud 165)
  • Jane - The beggar the priest and the cobbler (given to Jane by Sheila Stewart)
  • Colin - Between the wars (Billy Bragg)
  • Denny - Miner's Lifeguard (roud 3510)
  • Paul - Rolling down to old Maui (roud 2005)
  • Geoff - Universal soldier (Buffy Sainte-Marie)
  • Tom - Eyes of a painter (Kate Wolfe)
  • Steve - The lock keeper (Stan Rogers)
  • Colin - The rigs of the times (William James Emberley - roud 876)
  • Denny - Young Banker (roud 3321)
  • Paul - Rose of Allandale (Charles Jefferys and Sidney Nelson - roud 1218)
  • Geoff - Copper kettle (Albert Frank Beddoe)
  • Steve - Bonnie ship the Diamond (roud 2172)
  • Jane - Old Nick's cow cafĂ©

(Number of people present - 7 of whom 7 performed)

Tuesday, 20 June 2023

Blood and Roses

(Photo: webentwicklerin)
Last week's Dragon Folk Club session continued the trend of eclectic songs and of meeting new and old friends. Notably, we saw the return to the club of old friend Roger who came with occasional visitor John. Roger said he would try to persuade his wife Chris along next time; it would be excellent to see and hear Chris again. We also had an unexpected and welcome visitor, but more of her later.

Your scribe wasn't around at the very beginning of the session, so please forgive any slight inaccuracies. Denny started things off with Young Banker (roud 3321), which Paul followed with the Ballad of Cursed Anna (Jonathan Kelly).

Sue gave us (Haywire Mac) Harry McClintock's Big Rock Candy Mountain (roud 6969) and Bob sang Sweet Little Liza (Dick van Altena). The latter was the first new song of the evening for the Dragon database. As usual this doesn't mean it definitely hasn't been sung at the club before, but that it probably hasn't been recorded in this blog.

Colin's first of the evening was The Greenside Wakes Song (roud 4585). Not only is is new to the database, but nowhere to be found on YouTube (at least not as a song), and therefore it is not in the "a selection" playlist linked below. The only song of the evening which is missing.

John B fittingly gave us Sloop John B (roud 15634) with accompaniment from Roger and singing from all assembled. Meanwhile, Roger's turn brought Ralph McTell's Streets of London.

Simon completed the first round with Roger Whittaker's geographically inaccurate Durham Town. A boy sitting by the river in Durham would be by the River Wear and not the Tyne. How should South African Roger know?

Denny quickly picked up on that and made a pairing with The Water of Tyne (roud 1364), the third song new to the database that evening.

Paul also brought a new song to the party with Seven Virgins (roud 127), from the singing of Norma Waterson.

The new songs for the database were coming thick and fast when Bob sang The Last Ride, written by Robert Halcomb and Ted Daffan, and made famous by Hank Snow.

John had found a new song from Glacia Robinson in the form of Survivor.

Paul got us all singing along to Blood Red Roses (roud 931) which AL Lloyd suggested might be from the early 19th century, but the chorus at least of which Bert himself seems to have brought in possibly with some standard shanty verses.

Bob shook us all up with I knew the bride when she used to rock'n'roll (Nick Lowe) - another new song to the database.

Paul revisited his rendition of Alex Glasgow's Close the Coalhouse Door from the previous week for Bob's benefit since he had been absent.

John was Knockin' on Heaven's Door, but not with the straight Bob Dylan version, rather with words by Ted Christopher relating to the 1996 Dunblane Massacre where in an incident unusual in the UK 16 pupils and one teacher were killed and 15 were injured at a primary school. The man with the gun also shot himself dead. It remains the deadliest mass shooting in British history. It resulted in the private ownership of most handguns within Great Britain being made illegal with few exceptions.

It was Denny who introduced us to A Mon Like Thee which was written by Edmund Hill from St Helens in Merseyside, formerly Lancashire.

It was around about this time that the door opened and there stood Allie, a pub regular who some of us have come to know in passing and have regularly encouraged to join us for the singing. She declared that she had been standing outside the door for some time and was enjoying the music. We tried again to encourage her to enter and while she did not, she stood on the threshold and sang a creditable performance of Here Come the Navvies, written by Ian Campbell. I hope we see and hear more of Allie in the future. She was about to head into singing the Lincolnshire Poacher (roud 299, laws L14), but in the end disappeared off down the corridor.

The last "new" song of the evening was John's singing of Farewell Angelina (Bob Dylan) before Simon brought the session to a close with When All Men Sing (Keith Scowcroft, Derek Gifford).

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

(Number of people present - 9 of whom 9 performed)

Tuesday, 13 June 2023

Sumer is icumen in

Catacombs of Paris
(Photo: Simon Meeds)
Things are getting warmer at The Bridge at last and some of us are "casting clouts". Five slightly less heavily clothed singers turned up to make some noise on a Friday evening.

Colin was MC as usual ans started the session off with Bobby Sands' Back home in Derry.

Paul took us on our first antipodean journey of the evening with The Green Man from the pen of John Thompson who is a member of the Australian band Cloudstreet.

Denny brought us a serving of Good English ale (roud 1512), after which Simon tried to put us to sleep with John o' dreams (Bill Caddick, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky).

Geoff completed the first round with Dinny the piper (roud 8147).

I'll randomly mention a few more of the songs we sang.

Paul sang Generations of change by Matt Armour, which was new to the Dragon database. It was alsoPaul who sang another song new to the database, though not necessarily new to the Dragon, which was Close the coalhourse door by Alex Glasgow, clearly about the hard life of a miner, but with an extra verse dealing with the Aberfan Disaster.

Denny was suffering from the after-effects of a dental appointment which didn't stop her singing, but we later learned that while Paul was waiting for her session in the chair to finish he had rewritten Close the coalhouse door "Close the dentist's door, there's blood inside... there's bones inside... there's screams inside... there's gold inside." We heard the world premier.

There was some discussion after Geoff had sung the challenging Rocky road to Dublin (roud 1676 - DK Gavan) in slip-jig time (9/8).

Colin sang his own song, John Chiddy about a local (Hanham) man who was killed while averting a rail disaster in 1876, and for whose widow and children a house was built with donations.

Simon closed the evening singing Stan Rogers' Northwest Passage.

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

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

Tuesday, 6 June 2023

When is the blues not blue?

Lake Wakatipu, South Island, New Zealand
(Photo: Simon Meeds)
At last Friday's Dragon Folk Club there were six singers who sang 37 songs with no official theme. Pretty good going as always. Two of those wont be around this week, and another two will be missing next week then we are into holiday season when anything could happen, so we need all the support we can get from regulars, friends we know and friends we have yet to meet. You know who you are... maybe.

Colin, MCing as usual, kicked things off with John Tams' Steelos, about Steel, Peech and Tozer, a steelworks in Rotherham. From steel we moved to the sea with Simon singing Lukey's Boat (roud 1828), a comic song from the east coast of Newfoundland.

Back inland, Denny took us to South Island New Zealand and the Shotover River, which flows into Kawarau River and thence on to Lake Wakatipu. Shotover, once one of the richest gold-bearing rivers in the world, inspired Paul Metsers to write Farewell to the gold.

Paul then brought us back to England albeit a fictional place in the country, with Rose of Allandale (roud 1218 - words by Charles Jefferys and music by Sidney Nelson). So, despite beliefs to the contrary it's neither Irish, Scottish, nor strictly traditional, being written by named English composers and first published in 1833.

Bob promised to really depress us later in the evening, but in the meantime whetted our blues appetite with Blood red river (roud 15807). Following on in a red, rivery vein, Sue finished off the first round with Red river valley (roud 756). The linked recording of Bright Sherman Valley (linked with I'll be all smiles to-night love) by Luther B Clarke is the earliest recording of the song albeit not in the relatively modern popular version. Incomprehensibly this song (Red river valley) is the first of this week's that are new to the Dragon database though it certainly isn't new to the club.

Other songs sung during the evening that are new to the database include two blues parodies by Loudon Wainwright III and both sung by Paul: I'm alright and Haven't got the blues (yet). These apparently followed on from a conversation between Paul and our resident blues-man, Bob. Paul decided to look through his own collection of blues to see what he could sing - these were the only ones he decided would work (allegedly).

Other "new" songs were:

Colin finished the evening with the eminently sing-along Air Fa La La Lo (Traditional gaelic translated by Hugh S. Roberton).

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

(Number of people present - 6 of whom 6 performed)