Accessibility


Font sizing

Contrast

Monochrome

Sign up to ITMA Archive

Signing up to the ITMA archive provides the ability to save content you find across the site and access directly from your own dashboard.

Register now

Reset Password

Login

A Grand Time: Transmission, retention and change

Written by Rebecca Draisey-Collishaw

“Folksong in Newfoundland owes a great deal to the people of Irish descent. They have a genius for music and learn not only the Irish songs, but any other lovely airs they hear, and they render them most sweetly. I am inclined to credit the Irish with a large share in keeping the Newfoundland folk-music so melodious.”

Elisabeth Bristol Greenleaf & Grace Yarrow Mansfield on Newfoundland song (1933:xxxi–xxxii)
1 Text • Currently viewing:

Transcript of 'Wait till my ship comes in' [Jack was a sailor] / Caroline Brennan

Jack was a sailor, song (Jack was a sailor on board of a whaler …) A handwritten transcript of ‘Jack was a sailor onboard a whaler.’ The source of the transcript is not specified. This may have come from Caroline Brennan; in several of Aidan O’Hara’s field recordings Caroline promises to write out the words for her songs.

See also https://www.vwml.org/record/RoudFS/S149586

John Joe English, Anita Best, and Elsie Best on stage at the Newfoundland Folk Festival / Len Penton, photographer Singer and folklorist Anita Best is just one of the people who visited the Cape Shore to learn songs from John Joe English. Some of the results of these visits are published in Come and I Will Sing You: A Newfoundland Songbook (1985).
Johnny Burke at the St John’s Regatta in 1903 (photo from The Newfoundland Quarterly 3(2), September 1903:4; public domain).

“The ‘Doyle’ songs, often frolicking and upbeat in nature, consequently formed a canon of Newfoundland folk song.”

Anna Kearney Guigné on the influence of the Doyle songsters (2016:4)
John Joe English sings for the Roche brothers / Aidan O'Hara
The road to Cuslett, Placentia Bay, Newfoundland, ca. 1975 / Aidan O'Hara

“The local song is much more significant for understanding the function of folk song in a community than is an infrequently sung or little known older ballad, no matter how much more satisfying the rare ballad may be to our aesthetic sensibilities, or our egos.”

Herbert Halpert on song collecting (1951:40, quoted in Casey, Rosenberg, Wareham 1972:397)
  • 4 Tracks
  • • Now Playing:

The northeast gale / Denis McGrath

30 July 1978

0:00
0:00
  • The northeast gale / Denis McGrath

  • The drunken captain / Dermot Roche

  • My boy Willie / John Joe English

  • Jack was a sailor on board a whaler / Caroline Brennan

Quigley and Picco / Bernard Nash ; Tom Murphy

  • 3 Tracks
  • • Now Playing:

The emigrant from Newfoundland / Gerald Campbell

0:00
0:00
  • The emigrant from Newfoundland / Gerald Campbell

  • The shores of Grand Lake / Frankie Nash

  • The days of the week / Stan McGrath

  • 2 Tracks
  • • Now Playing:

The cottage by the sea / Jack Mooney

0:00
0:00
  • The cottage by the sea / Jack Mooney

  • The gambling man / Jack Mooney

“Record players were becoming more and more prevalent, both in St John’s and in the outport villages, and the ordering of records by mail from the mainland became quite common. It would not be surprising to find a Jimmie Rodgers or Hank Snow record in the possession of an outport family (of perhaps better than average income) by the late 1930s.”

Michael Taft on commercial recordings in Newfoundland (1975:xii)
Albert Roche sings while Gerald Campbell looks on, ca. 1975 / Aidan O'Hara