Song Books: Difference between revisions

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* Come All you Bold Miners, by A L Lloyd, second edition 1978, Laurence and Wishart
* Come All you Bold Miners, by A L Lloyd, second edition 1978, Laurence and Wishart


* A Taste of Ale, by Roy Palmer, 2000m, Green Branch, Lechlade
* A Taste of Ale, by Roy Palmer, 2000, Green Branch, Lechlade


* The Rambling Soldier, by Roy Palmer, 1977, Peacock Books
* The Rambling Soldier, by Roy Palmer, 1977, Peacock Books

Revision as of 09:58, 29 March 2007

General Antholgies

Books of folk songs can be comprehensive anthologies of songs from a region, from a country, or a nation. Three important ones published in the early part of the current revival are:

  • The Penguin Book of English Folk Songs, by AL Loyd and Ralph Vaughan Williams, several editions from 1959 onwards, Penguin Books
  • The Singing Island, by Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger, 1960, Mills Books
  • Folk Songs of Great Britain and Ireland, by Peter Kennedy, 1975, Cassell

The last two of these have the songs arranged by theme and so are useful for finding songs on a particular topic.

Specific Subjects

  • Come All you Bold Miners, by A L Lloyd, second edition 1978, Laurence and Wishart
  • A Taste of Ale, by Roy Palmer, 2000, Green Branch, Lechlade
  • The Rambling Soldier, by Roy Palmer, 1977, Peacock Books
  • One Hundred Songs of Toil, by Karl Dallas, 1974, Wolfe
  • Shanties from the Seven Seas, 1961, Routledge & Kegan Paul