Drunken Sailor The Drinking Song
Chords & Lyrics
Further Reading: BBC: Sea Shanties, The Mudcat Cafe: Oro Se Do Bheatha Bhaile
The Irish Rover Hyperbole On The High Seas
The Clancy Brothers (Pat, Liam and Tom) and Tommy Makem collectively copyrighted their adaptation and arrangement of The Irish Rover in 1962. However, despite what you may have heard, they did not compose the song: the lyrics have traditional origins and the melody likely stems from a 19th-century Irish tune. The Irish Rover follows a rag-tag crew -- including "Johnny McGuirk who was scared stiff of work," and "Slugger O'Toole who was drunk as a rule," -- as they sail for New York aboard the cargo ship, The Irish Rover. Sickness and stormy seas eventually claim the lives of all on-board, with the exception of the song's narrator. Some of the ship's mythical cargo included "five million hogs, six million dogs," and "Seven million barrels of porter."
Further Reading: The Mudcat Cafe: Irish Rover, The Session: Irish Rover
Back Home In Derry The Voyager's Lament
In comparison to The Irish Rover, Back Home In Derry has a tone that is much more somber. Instead of following a crew that is sailing joyously to New York, the song follows a group of prisoners being transported, amongst miserable conditions, to an Australian penal colony. The IRA activist and hunger-striker Bobby Sands penned the words to Back Home In Derry -- in a poem called "The Voyage" -- while in prison just prior to his death in 1981. Christy Moore added a chorus to the lyrics and borrowed the melody of Gordon Lightfoot's song, The Wreck Of The Edmund Fitzgerald, to form the finalized version of Back Home In Derry we know today.
Chords & Lyrics
Further Reading: The Mudcate Cafe: Edmund Fitzgerald / Back Home In Derry, 3 Pints Gone: Back Home In Derry
Barrett's Privateers A Canadian Maritimes Masterpiece
Chords & Lyrics
Further Reading: The Mudcat Cafe: Barrett's Privateers
The Downeaster "Alexa" The Fishing Song
Chords & Lyrics
Further Reading: Ohio State University: Downeaster Alexa: A Fishery Story
Lyrical Time-line:
- 1778: The Antelope sets sail from Nova Scotia in search of "American gold"
- 1803: Unnamed ship departs from Derry, Ireland "for Australia bound"
- 1806: The Irish Rover sets sail from the "coal quay of Cork", Ireland for New York
Runners Up:
- Farewell to Nova Scotia (traditional)
- The Craic Was 90 In The Isle of Man (Barney Rush)
- The Mermaid (traditional)
- Paddy's Green Shamrock Shore (traditional)
- Thousands Are Sailing (Phil Chevron of the Pogues)
P.S. Hey there! If you liked this post, I have a hunch you'll love NEON DRUID: An Anthology of Urban Celtic Fantasy. It's a collection of 17 short stories all rooted in Celtic mythology.
P.P.S. You can also check out my new blog, Irish Myths, where I unveil the secrets of Celtic mythology, Irish mythology, and Irish folklore.
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