Donate SIGN UP

for ladies and gents in their sixties and seventies

Avatar Image
crisgal | 18:54 Tue 25th Apr 2006 | Music
4 Answers

my mum, who's 69 and brought up in lancashire, knows some great little songs that she sings to my daughter. They are songs she use to sing with her sisters when they were children.Like:


Mary Ellen at the church turned up


sammy, you're face is jammy


There was i waiting at the church


etc. I was wondering if this was just a northern thing, or did everyone sing them? They are not really playground songs, I think she sang them more as a teenager. It would be great to hear other people's versions. Do you know any?

Gravatar

Answers

1 to 4 of 4rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by crisgal. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.

My late father who would be 73 now used to sing these to me when I was little. He hailed from Yorkshire.


His favourites included The Quartermasters Stores(?), On Ilkley Moor bah tat( his fave being a Yorkshire man), Donald, wheres your troosers, and he was also partial to a Stanley Holloway monologue or two

Yes Alibobs! My father who would be 80 sang The Quartermaster's Stores to me too. No one else has ever heard of it.


Altogether:


There were rats, rats, big as (expletive) cats
In the stores, in the stores,
There were rats, rats, big as (expletive) cats
In the Quartermaster's Stores


My eyes are dim I cannot see,
I have not brought my specs with me
I have


not


brought


my-y


specs


with


me.


How about


-Shire (shy-er)


-Shire


Somersetshire


The skipper looked on her with pride


He'd have a blue fit if he saw all the (expletive)


on the side of the Somersetshire.


IYou see I was introduced to (expletives), at least in musical form, at an early age.

Sorry, it's just come back, there's a chorus to the Somersetshire one.


This is my story, this is my song


We've been in the Air Force too (expletive) long


So roll on the Rodney, the Nelson, Renown


But we can't say the Hood 'cause the (expletive)'s gone down.


I see the Hood 'went down' in 1941 so this dates it !



You might enjoy www.monologues.co.uk lots of old favourites from the likes of Stanley Holloway, Billy Bennett and many more.

1 to 4 of 4rss feed

Do you know the answer?

for ladies and gents in their sixties and seventies

Answer Question >>

Related Questions

Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.