Difference between revisions of "Cecil J. Sharp (1916) ''One Hundred English Folk Songs''"

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Link to the Song Books page[[http://folkopedia.efdss.org/wiki/Song_Books]])
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Links to the [[Song Books]] page and to [[Tune Analysis: How To Dissect, Interpret and Categorize Anglo-American, Celtic and English Folk Melodies]].
  
Cecil J. Sharp (1916) ''One Hundred English Folk Songs'' can be freely downloaded from the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP) here.[http://imslp.org/wiki/100_English_Folksongs_(Sharp,_Cecil)]
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PDF page images of Cecil J. Sharp (1916) ''One Hundred English Folk Songs'' can be freely downloaded from the Internet Archive here.[https://archive.org/details/onehundredengli00shargoog/page/n11/mode/2up]
  
 +
ABC file of all 100 folk songs: [[File:Sharp100.abc]]
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 +
'''BALLADS'''
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 +
'''[[01 Henry Martin]]'''
 +
 +
'''[[02 Bruton Town]]'''
 +
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'''[[03 The Knight and the Shepherd's Daughter]]'''
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'''[[04 Robin Hood and the Tanner]]'''
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'''[[05 The Wraggle Taggle Gypsies, O!]]'''
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'''[[06 Lord Bateman]]'''
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'''[[07 Barbara Ellen]]'''
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'''[[08 Little Sir Hugh]]'''
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'''[[09 Geordie]]'''
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'''[[10 Lady Maisrie]]'''
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'''[[11 The Outlandish Knight]]'''
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'''[[12 The Coasts of High Barbary]]'''
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'''[[13 The Cruel Mother]]'''
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'''[[14 The Golden Vanity]]'''
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'''[[15 Lord Thomas of Winesbury]]'''
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'''[[16 The Green Wedding]]'''
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'''[[17 The Briery Bush]]'''
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'''[[18 Lord Rendal]]'''
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'''[[19 Blow Away the Morning Dew]]'''
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'''[[20 The Two Magicians]]'''
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'''[[21 The Duke of Bedford]]'''
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'''[[22 Death and the Lady]]'''
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'''[[23 The Low, Low Lands of Holland]]'''
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'''[[24 The Unquiet Grave ''or'' Cold blows the wind]]'''
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'''[[25 The trees they do grow high]]'''
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'''[[26 Lord Lovel]]'''
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'''[[27 False Lamkin]]'''
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'''[[28 Lord Thomas and Fair Ellinor]]'''
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'''[[29 The Death of Queen Jane]]'''
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 +
'''SONGS'''
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'''[[30 Farewell, Nancy]]'''
  
 
'''[[31 Sweet Kitty]]'''
 
'''[[31 Sweet Kitty]]'''
  
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'''[[32 The Crystal Spring]]'''
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'''[[33 The Seeds of Love]]'''
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'''[[34 The Sprig of Thyme]]'''
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'''[[35 The Cuckoo]]'''
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'''[[36 Blackbirds and Thrushes]]'''
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'''[[37 The Drowned Lover]]'''
  
 +
'''[[38 The Sign of the Bonny Blue Bell]]'''
  
Tune Analysis: Heptatonic. C Dorian. Note how all the A flats are naturalised. If they were not the tune would be C Aeolian.
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'''[[39 O Waly, Waly]]'''
  
Sheet Music (1916) [[File:31SweKit_1916_Sheet_Music-pdf.pdf]]
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'''[[40 Green Bushes]]'''
  
Cecil Sharp's Note (1916) [[File:31SweKit_1916_Note.pdf]]
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'''[[41 Bedlam]]'''
  
MIDI Sequence [[File:31SweKit.mid]]
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'''[[42 The Bold Fisherman]]'''
  
PDF [[File:31SweKit.pdf]]
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'''[[43 The Rambling Sailor]]'''
  
Music XML [[File:31SweKit.xml]]
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'''[[44 Dabbling in the Dew]]'''
  
ABC Code
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'''[[45 The Saucy Sailor]]'''
  
X:31<br>
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'''[[46 Fanny Blair]]'''
T:31 Sweet Kitty<br>
 
C::From 'One Hundred English Folk Songs' (1916) <br>
 
P:Collected by Cecil J. Sharp<br>
 
%%scale 0.83<br>
 
%%pagewidth 21.00cm<br>
 
%%leftmargin 1.00cm<br>
 
%%rightmargin 1.00cm<br>
 
L:1/4<br>
 
Z:Transcribed by Lewis Jones<br>
 
M:3/4<br>
 
I:linebreak $<br>
 
K:Cm<br>
 
Q: 1/4=120<br>
 
V:<br>
 
V:1<br>
 
G | G F G | (=A/B/) c B/ A/ | G F G | B2 B |$ =A c c | G B G | F (B/=A/) D | D2 (C/B,/) | %9<br>
 
w: As|he was a-|rid\- * ing and a|ri- ding one|day, He|met prett- y|Kitt- y all|on the * high-|way. Sing *|<br>
 
C3/2 D/ E/C/ |$ D B, z | G3/2 =A/ B/A/ | G F G | E (F/E/) D | C2 |] %15<br>
 
w: Fol the didd- le|de- ro,|Fol the didd- le|de ro, Sing|le- ro\- * i-|day.|<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:1 As he was a-riding, and a-riding one day,<br>
 
W:He met with sweet Kitty all on the highway;<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:Chorus Sing fol the diddle dero,<br>
 
W:Fol the diddle dero,<br>
 
W:Sing le-ro-i-day.<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:2 I gave her a wink and she roll'd her black eye;<br>
 
W:Thinks I to myself I'll be there by and by.<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:3 Come saddle my horse and away I will ride<br>
 
W:To meet with sweet Kitty down by the seaside.<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:4 Six times he rode round her, but he did not know;<br>
 
W:She smiled in his face and said: There goes my beau.<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:5 I said: Pretty maiden don't smile in my face,<br>
 
W:I do not intend to stay long in this place.<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:6 If you'd know my name, you must go and enquire;<br>
 
W:I was born in old England, brought up in Yorkshire.<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:7 Come, all pretty maidens, whoever you be,<br>
 
W:With roving young fellows don't make yourself free.<br>
 
W:<br>
 
  
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'''[[47 Arise, Arise]]'''
  
'''34 The Sprig of Thyme'''
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'''[[48 Searching for Lambs]]'''
  
Tune Analysis: In his Note Sharp designates this tune as Aeolian. More precisely, it is either A Aeolian or A Dorian. It is Hexatonic with no F (6th). If the Fs are presumed to be natural the tune is indeed A Aeolian; but if they are presumed to be sharpened the tune is A Dorian.
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'''[[49 Green Broom]]'''
  
Sheet Music (1916) [[File:34SprThy_1916_Sheet_Music.pdf]]
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'''[[50 Bonny Lighter Boy]]'''
  
Cecil Sharp's Note (1916) [[File:34SprThy_1916_Note.pdf]]
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'''[[51 The Sweet Primeroses]]'''
  
MIDI Sequence [[File:34SprThy.mid]]
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'''[[52 My Bonny, Bonny Boy]]'''
  
PDF [[File:34SprThy.pdf]]
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'''[[53a As I walked through the meadows. (''First Version'')]]'''
  
Music XML [[File:34SprThy.xml]]
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'''[[53b As I walked through the meadows. (''Second Version'')]]'''
  
ABC Code:
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'''[[54 Erin's Lovely Home]]'''
  
X:34<br>
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'''[[55 The True Lover's Farewell]]'''
T:34 The Sprig of Thyme<br>
 
P:Collected by Cecil J. Sharp<br>
 
C:From 'One Hundred English Folk Songs' (1916)<br>
 
%%scale 0.83<br>
 
%%pagewidth 21.00cm<br>
 
%%leftmargin 1.00cm<br>
 
%%rightmargin 1.00cm<br>
 
L:1/16<br>
 
M:4/4<br>
 
I:linebreak $<br>
 
Q:1/4=100<br>
 
K:Aaeo<br>
 
V:<br>
 
V:1<br>
 
A4 | D4 D3 C D4 A3 G | A12 (A2>B2) | (c2>d2) e3 d (B2>d2) c3 B |$ A12 A4 | %5<br>
 
w: O|once I had time of my|own, and *|in * my own gard\- * en it|grew. I|<br>
 
c3 e d3 c (B2>d2) c3 B | A4 A3 A E4 A4 | E4 E3 E D4 D3 D |$ c6 A2 G4 (3(A2B2c2) | %9<br>
 
w: used to know the place * where my|thyme it did grow, But|now it is cov- er'd with|rue, with rue, But * *|<br>
 
E4 D3 C D4 A3 G | A8 z4 |] %11<br>
 
w: now it is cov- er'd with|rue.|<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:1. Once I had thyme of my own,<br>
 
W:And in my own garden it grew;<br>
 
W:I used to know the place where my thyme it did grow,<br>
 
W:But now it is cover'd with rue, with rue,<br>
 
W:But now it is cover'd with rue.<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W: 2 The rue it is a flourishing thing,<br>
 
W:It flourishes by night and by day;<br>
 
W:So beware of a young man's flattering tongue,<br>
 
W:He will steal your thyme away, away,<br>
 
W:He will steal your thyme away.<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:3 I sowed my garden full of seeds;<br>
 
W:But the small birds they carried them away<br>
 
W:In April, May, and in June likewise,<br>
 
W:When the small birds sing all day, all day,<br>
 
W:When the small birds sing all day.<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:4 In June there was a red-a-rosy bud,<br>
 
W:And that seem'd the flower for me;<br>
 
W:And often times I snatch-ed at the red-a-rosy bud,<br>
 
W:Till I gain-ed the willow, willow tree,<br>
 
W:Till I gain-ed the willow tree.<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:5 O the willow, willow tree it will twist,<br>
 
W:And the willow, willow tree it will twine;<br>
 
W:And so it was that young and false-hearted man<br>
 
W:When he gain-ed this heart of mine, of mine,<br>
 
W:When he gain-ed this heart of mine.<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:6 O thyme it is a precious, precious thing<br>
 
W:On the road that the sun shines upon;<br>
 
W:But thyme it is a thing that will bring you to an end,<br>
 
W:And that's how my time has gone, has gone,<br>
 
W:And that's how my time has gone.<br>
 
W:<br>
 
  
 +
'''[[56 High Germany]]'''
  
'''86 Botany Bay'''
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'''[[57 Sweet Lovely Joan]]'''
  
Tune Analysis: Heptatonic, E Aeolian.
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'''[[58 My Boy Willie]]'''
  
Sheet Music (1916) [[File:86BotBay_1916_Sheet_Music.pdf]]
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'''[[59 Whistle, Daughter, Whistle]]'''
  
Cecil Sharp's Note (1916) [[File:86BotBay_1916_Note.pdf]]
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'''[[60 Mowing the Barley]]'''
  
MIDI Sequence [[File:86BotBay.mid]]
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'''[[61 I'm Seventeen Come Sunday]]'''
  
PDF [[File:86BotBay.pdf]]
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'''[[62 The Lark in the Morn]]'''
  
Music XML [[File:86BotBay.xml]]
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'''[[63 Hares on the Mountains]]'''
  
ABC Code:
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'''[[64 O Sally, my dear]]'''
  
X:86<br>
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'''[[65 Gently, Johnny, my Jingalo]]'''
T:86 Botany Bay<br>
 
P:Collected by Cecil J. Sharp<br>
 
C:From 'One Hundred English Folk Songs' (1916)<br>
 
Z:Transcribed by Lewis Jones<br>
 
%%scale 0.83<br>
 
%%pagewidth 21.00cm<br>
 
%%leftmargin 1.00cm<br>
 
%%rightmargin 1.00cm<br>
 
L:1/8<br>
 
M:4/4<br>
 
I:linebreak $<br>
 
Q:1/4=120<br>
 
K:G<br>
 
V:<br>
 
V:1<br>
 
B2 | e2 (dc) B2 E2 | A2 (FE) D2 (EF) | (GE)(AG) E2 D2 | E6 (EF) |$ G2 A2 (Bc) (dB) | %6<br>
 
w: Come|all young * men of|learn- ing * good a *|warn\- * ing * take by|me, I'll *|have you quit * night *|<br>
 
(e2 d2) e2 B2 | d2 d2 e2 (BA) | B6 (EF) |$ G2 A2 (Bc) (dB) | (e2 d2) e2 B2 | d2 f2 (ed) (BA) | %12<br>
 
w: walk\- * ing and|shun bad comp- a\- *|y; I'll *|have you quit * night *|walk\- * ing or|else you'll rue * the *|<br>
 
B6 d2 | e2 d2 B2 E2 |$ (A2 FE) D2 (EF) | (GE) (AG) EE D2 | E4 z2 | %17<br>
 
w: day, And|you will be trans-|por\- * * ted and *|go * to * Bot- an- y|Bay.|<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:1 Come, all young men of learning good, a warning take by me.<br>
 
W:I'll have you quit night-walking and shun bad company;<br>
 
W:I'll have you quit night-walking or else you'll rue the day,<br>
 
W:And you will be transported and go to Botany Bay.<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:2 I was brought up in London town, a place I know full well;<br>
 
W:Brought up by honest parents, the truth to you I'll tell.<br>
 
W:Brought up by honest parents, who loved me tenderly,<br>
 
W:Till I became a roving blade to prove my destiny.<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:3 My character was taken, and I was sent to gaol.<br>
 
W:My parents tried to clear me but nothing would prevail.<br>
 
W:'Twas at our Rutland sessions the Judge to me did say:<br>
 
W:The Jury's found you guilty, you must go to Botany Bay.<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:4 To see my poor old father as he stood at the bar;<br>
 
W:Likewise my dear old mother her old gray locks she tore.<br>
 
W:And in tearing of her old gray locks these words to me she did say:<br>
 
W:O son! O son! what hast thou done? Thou art bound for Botany Bay.<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:NOTE<br>
 
W:<br>
 
W:I do not know of any published versions of this song. I made use of the tune in Mr. Granville Barker's production of<br>
 
W:Hardy's 'Dynasts,' setting the words of the "Trafalgar" song to it. <br>
 
W:<br>
 
  
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'''[[66 The Keys of Canterbury]]'''
  
''''''
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'''[[67 My Man John]]'''
  
Tune Analysis:
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'''[[68 O No, John]]'''
  
Sheet Music (1916) [[File:]]
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'''[[69 The Brisk Young Bachelor]]'''
  
Cecil Sharp's Note (1916) [[File:]]
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'''[[70 Ruggleton's Daughter of Iero]]'''
  
MIDI Sequence [[File:]]
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'''[[71 William Taylor]]'''
  
PDF [[File:]]
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'''[[72 Sweet William]]'''
  
Music XML [[File:]]
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'''[[73 The Wachet Sailor]]'''
  
ABC Code:
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'''[[74 Scarborough Fair]]'''
  
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'''[[75 Brimbledon Fair, ''or'' Young Ramble-Away]]'''
  
''''''
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'''[[76 Bridgwater Fair]]'''
  
Tune Analysis:
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'''[[77 The Crabfish]]'''
  
Sheet Music (1916) [[File:]]
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'''[[78 The Beggar]]'''
  
Cecil Sharp's Note (1916) [[File:]]
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'''[[79 The Keeper]]'''
  
MIDI Sequence [[File:]]
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'''[[80 The Three Sons]]'''
  
PDF [[File:]]
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'''[[81 Jack Hall]]'''
  
Music XML [[File:]]
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'''[[82 Driving away at the Smoothing Iron]]'''
  
ABC Code:
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'''[[83 The Robber]]'''
  
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'''[[84 John Barleycorn]]'''
  
''''''
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'''[[85 Poor Old Horse]]'''
  
Tune Analysis:
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'''[[86 Botany Bay]]'''
  
Sheet Music (1916) [[File:]]
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'''[[87 Admiral Benbow]]'''
  
Cecil Sharp's Note (1916) [[File:]]
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'''[[88 Bold Nelson's Praise]]'''
  
MIDI Sequence [[File:]]
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'''[[89 Spanish Ladies]]'''
  
PDF [[File:]]
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'''[[90 The Ship in Distress]]'''
  
Music XML [[File:]]
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'''[[91 Come all you worthy Christian men]]'''
  
ABC Code:
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'''[[92 Wassail Song]]'''
  
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'''[[93 It's a rosebud in June]]'''
  
''''''
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'''[[94 A Brisk Young Sailor]]'''
  
Tune Analysis:
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'''[[95 The Sheep-Shearing]]'''
  
Sheet Music (1916) [[File:]]
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'''ACCUMULATIVE'''
  
Cecil Sharp's Note (1916) [[File:]]
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'''[[96 The Twelve Days of Christmas]]'''
  
MIDI Sequence [[File:]]
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'''[[97 The Ten Commandments]]'''
  
PDF [[File:]]
+
'''[[98 The Tree in the Wood]]'''
  
Music XML [[File:]]
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'''[[99 The Barley-Mow]]'''
  
ABC Code:
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'''[[100 One man shall mow my meadow]]'''

Latest revision as of 19:12, 17 March 2021

Links to the Song Books page and to Tune Analysis: How To Dissect, Interpret and Categorize Anglo-American, Celtic and English Folk Melodies.

PDF page images of Cecil J. Sharp (1916) One Hundred English Folk Songs can be freely downloaded from the Internet Archive here.[1]

ABC file of all 100 folk songs: File:Sharp100.abc

BALLADS

01 Henry Martin

02 Bruton Town

03 The Knight and the Shepherd's Daughter

04 Robin Hood and the Tanner

05 The Wraggle Taggle Gypsies, O!

06 Lord Bateman

07 Barbara Ellen

08 Little Sir Hugh

09 Geordie

10 Lady Maisrie

11 The Outlandish Knight

12 The Coasts of High Barbary

13 The Cruel Mother

14 The Golden Vanity

15 Lord Thomas of Winesbury

16 The Green Wedding

17 The Briery Bush

18 Lord Rendal

19 Blow Away the Morning Dew

20 The Two Magicians

21 The Duke of Bedford

22 Death and the Lady

23 The Low, Low Lands of Holland

24 The Unquiet Grave ''or'' Cold blows the wind

25 The trees they do grow high

26 Lord Lovel

27 False Lamkin

28 Lord Thomas and Fair Ellinor

29 The Death of Queen Jane

SONGS

30 Farewell, Nancy

31 Sweet Kitty

32 The Crystal Spring

33 The Seeds of Love

34 The Sprig of Thyme

35 The Cuckoo

36 Blackbirds and Thrushes

37 The Drowned Lover

38 The Sign of the Bonny Blue Bell

39 O Waly, Waly

40 Green Bushes

41 Bedlam

42 The Bold Fisherman

43 The Rambling Sailor

44 Dabbling in the Dew

45 The Saucy Sailor

46 Fanny Blair

47 Arise, Arise

48 Searching for Lambs

49 Green Broom

50 Bonny Lighter Boy

51 The Sweet Primeroses

52 My Bonny, Bonny Boy

53a As I walked through the meadows. (''First Version'')

53b As I walked through the meadows. (''Second Version'')

54 Erin's Lovely Home

55 The True Lover's Farewell

56 High Germany

57 Sweet Lovely Joan

58 My Boy Willie

59 Whistle, Daughter, Whistle

60 Mowing the Barley

61 I'm Seventeen Come Sunday

62 The Lark in the Morn

63 Hares on the Mountains

64 O Sally, my dear

65 Gently, Johnny, my Jingalo

66 The Keys of Canterbury

67 My Man John

68 O No, John

69 The Brisk Young Bachelor

70 Ruggleton's Daughter of Iero

71 William Taylor

72 Sweet William

73 The Wachet Sailor

74 Scarborough Fair

75 Brimbledon Fair, ''or'' Young Ramble-Away

76 Bridgwater Fair

77 The Crabfish

78 The Beggar

79 The Keeper

80 The Three Sons

81 Jack Hall

82 Driving away at the Smoothing Iron

83 The Robber

84 John Barleycorn

85 Poor Old Horse

86 Botany Bay

87 Admiral Benbow

88 Bold Nelson's Praise

89 Spanish Ladies

90 The Ship in Distress

91 Come all you worthy Christian men

92 Wassail Song

93 It's a rosebud in June

94 A Brisk Young Sailor

95 The Sheep-Shearing

ACCUMULATIVE

96 The Twelve Days of Christmas

97 The Ten Commandments

98 The Tree in the Wood

99 The Barley-Mow

100 One man shall mow my meadow