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  2. Simple Gifts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_Gifts

    See media help. "Simple Gifts" is a Shaker song written and composed in 1848, generally attributed to Elder Joseph Brackett from Alfred Shaker Village. It became widely known when Aaron Copland used its melody for the score of Martha Graham 's ballet, Appalachian Spring, premiered in 1944. [1]

  3. Danny Boy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danny_Boy

    Genre. Folk. Songwriter (s) Frederic Weatherly (lyrics) in 1910. Recording. Performed by Celtic Aire of the United States Air Force Band. file. help. " Danny Boy " is a song with lyrics written by English lawyer Frederic Weatherly in 1910, and set to the traditional Irish melody of "Londonderry Air" in 1913.

  4. Oh Shenandoah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oh_Shenandoah

    The song "Shenandoah" appears to have originated with American and Canadian voyageurs or fur traders traveling down the Missouri River in canoes and has developed several different sets of lyrics. Some lyrics refer to the Oneida chief Shenandoah and a canoe-going trader who wants to marry his daughter.

  5. SongMeanings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SongMeanings

    March 5, 2001; 23 years ago (2001-03-05) Current status. online. SongMeanings is a music website that encourages users to discuss and comment on the underlying meanings and messages of individual songs. [1][2][3] As of May 2015, the website contains over 110,000 artists, 1,000,000 lyrics, 14,000 albums, and 530,000 members. [4]

  6. Wade in the Water - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wade_in_the_Water

    The lyrics to "Wade in the Water" were first co-published in 1901 in New Jubilee Songs as Sung by the Fisk Jubilee Singers by Frederick J. Work and his brother, John Wesley Work Jr., an educator at the historically black college in Nashville, Tennessee, Fisk University. Work Jr. (1871–1925)—who is also known as John Work II—spent thirty ...

  7. Iko Iko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iko_Iko

    Iko Iko. " Iko Iko " (/ ˈaɪkoʊ ˈaɪkoʊ /) is a much-covered New Orleans song that tells of a parade collision between two tribes of Mardi Gras Indians and the traditional confrontation. The song, under the original title " Jock-A-Mo ", was written and released in 1953 as a single by James "Sugar Boy" Crawford and his Cane Cutters but it ...

  8. The Fields of Athenry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fields_of_Athenry

    The Fields of Athenry. " The Fields of Athenry " is a song written in 1979 by Pete St. John in the style of an Irish folk ballad. Set during the Great Famine of the 1840s, the lyrics feature a fictional man from near Athenry in County Galway, who stole food for his starving family and has been sentenced to transportation to the Australian penal ...

  9. Waltzing Matilda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waltzing_Matilda

    It has been described as the country's "unofficial national anthem". [ 1 ] The title was Australian slang for travelling on foot (waltzing) with one's belongings in a "matilda" (swag) slung over one's back. [ 2 ] The song narrates the story of an itinerant worker, or " swagman ", boiling a billy at a bush camp and capturing a stray jumbuck ...