Difference between revisions of "Blackbird Get Up"

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“[[Blackbird Get Up]]” is track 9 on ''[[Shower Chanteys]]'', recorded 20 December 2017 at [[Mill Pond Music Studio]].<ref>“Blackbird Get Up,” recording by Chris Maden. [https://musicbrainz.org/recording/fdfcae7d-b59a-4c38-8186-a0603cb718a4 MusicBrainz].</ref>
 
“[[Blackbird Get Up]]” is track 9 on ''[[Shower Chanteys]]'', recorded 20 December 2017 at [[Mill Pond Music Studio]].<ref>“Blackbird Get Up,” recording by Chris Maden. [https://musicbrainz.org/recording/fdfcae7d-b59a-4c38-8186-a0603cb718a4 MusicBrainz].</ref>
  
More coming soon…
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“Blackbird Get Up” is a rowing chantey from [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Vincent_(Antilles) St. Vincent],<ref>Roger D. Abrahams.  ''Deep the Water, Shallow the Shore: Three Essays on Shantying in the West Indies''.  Austin: American Folklore Society, 1974.</ref> and has one of the most fascinating (to me) stories of all these songs.  Yankee whalers would sometimes set sail with a skeleton crew and pick up additional hands in the Caribbean, including French-creole speakers from St. Vincent.  The Vincentians learned how to hunt whales from longboats, and they learned some of the English-language chanteys.  They didn’t really have the infrastructure to build whaling ships on St. Vincent, but they could and did build whaleboats; they would put to sea in the boats and hunt whales near the shore.  In addition to the English chanteys they’d learned, they developed some songs of their own; this is one of them.  (Their version of “Shenandoah” is also an amazing example of the folk process.)  The Mudcat thread linked above has some more details and discussion.
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[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3bGXsHolM6E This video] has some retired Barrouallie whalemen rowing a whaleboat,from the Sea Music Festival at [https://www.mysticseaport.org/ Mystic Seaport], 2010.  That video starts slowly; at 7 minutes, you can hear “Blackbird Get Up” from the water, then from the concert stage.  A search for “Barrouallie” will find a bunch of other videos by these guys if you like that.
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==

Revision as of 17:43, 10 October 2018

]

“Blackbird Get Up” is a sea chantey.


External links


Liner Notes

Blackbird Get Up” is track 9 on Shower Chanteys, recorded 20 December 2017 at Mill Pond Music Studio.[1]

“Blackbird Get Up” is a rowing chantey from St. Vincent,[2] and has one of the most fascinating (to me) stories of all these songs. Yankee whalers would sometimes set sail with a skeleton crew and pick up additional hands in the Caribbean, including French-creole speakers from St. Vincent. The Vincentians learned how to hunt whales from longboats, and they learned some of the English-language chanteys. They didn’t really have the infrastructure to build whaling ships on St. Vincent, but they could and did build whaleboats; they would put to sea in the boats and hunt whales near the shore. In addition to the English chanteys they’d learned, they developed some songs of their own; this is one of them. (Their version of “Shenandoah” is also an amazing example of the folk process.) The Mudcat thread linked above has some more details and discussion.

This video has some retired Barrouallie whalemen rowing a whaleboat,from the Sea Music Festival at Mystic Seaport, 2010. That video starts slowly; at 7 minutes, you can hear “Blackbird Get Up” from the water, then from the concert stage. A search for “Barrouallie” will find a bunch of other videos by these guys if you like that.

References

  1. “Blackbird Get Up,” recording by Chris Maden. MusicBrainz.
  2. Roger D. Abrahams. Deep the Water, Shallow the Shore: Three Essays on Shantying in the West Indies. Austin: American Folklore Society, 1974.