Damned earworms
Jan. 5th, 2006 03:13 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Yanno, if someone was to come up with the full and definitive text of THE BALLAD OF SPRINGHILL, I'd think highly of that kind person. I've been poking around and I still can't find the songbook, but keep coming up with snatches like:
There's blood on the stone where the miners lie,
Six long miles from the sun and sky, boys,
Six long miles from the sun and sky.
And I can't remember whether that was something cooked up in a 3 AM jam session with Mike Seeger and the New Lost City Ramblers under the influence of various chemicals, or what....
Much too long ago.
There's blood on the stone where the miners lie,
Six long miles from the sun and sky, boys,
Six long miles from the sun and sky.
And I can't remember whether that was something cooked up in a 3 AM jam session with Mike Seeger and the New Lost City Ramblers under the influence of various chemicals, or what....
Much too long ago.
no subject
Date: 2006-01-05 12:32 pm (UTC)Ballad of Springhill
(The Springhill Mine Disaster)
by Ewan McColl and Peggy Seeger, copyright 1960, Stormking Music
In the town of Springhill, Nova Scotia,
Down in the dark of the Cumberland Mine,
There's blood on the coal and the miners lie
In the roads that never saw sun nor sky,
In the roads that never saw sun nor sky.
In the town of Springhill, you don't sleep easy,
Often the earth will tremble and roll,
When the earth is restless, miners die,
Bone and blood is the price of coal (twice).
In the town of Springhill, Nova Scotia,
Late in the year of fifty-eight,
Day still comes and the sun still shines,
But it's dark as the grave in the Cumberland Mine,
Dark as the grave in the Cumberland Mine.
Down at the coal face, miners working,
Rattle of the belt and the cutter's blade,
Rumble of rock and the walls close round
The living and the dead men two miles down (twice).
Twelve men lay two miles from the pitshaft,
Twelve men lay in the dark and sang,
Long, hot days in the miner's tomb,
It was three feet high and a hundred long,
Three feet high and a hundred long.
Three days passed and the lamps gave out,
And Caleb Rushton he up and said:
"There's no more water nor light nor bread
So we'll live on songs and hope instead.
Live on songs and hope instead."
Listen for the shouts of the bareface miners,
Listen through the rubble for a rescue team,
Six hundred feet of coal and slag,
Hope imprisoned in a three-foot seam (twice).
Eight days passed and some were rescued,
Leaving the dead to lie alone,
Through all their lives they dug a grave,
Two miles of earth for a marking stone (twice).
no subject
Date: 2006-01-05 12:52 pm (UTC)We played around with it, way back when, and I ended up with garble in my head. And the version I found on the net didn't help, being garbled itself.
Of course, some of the singers I knew never did their stuff the same way twice. Even sober.
no subject
Date: 2006-01-05 01:36 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-01-05 02:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-01-05 02:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-01-05 02:12 pm (UTC)