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  2. Australian folk music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_folk_music

    Cover to Banjo Paterson's seminal 1905 collection of bush ballads, entitled The Old Bush Songs. Australian folk music is the traditional music from the large variety of immigrant cultures and those of the original Australian inhabitants. Celtic, English, German and Scandinavian folk traditions predominated in the first wave of European ...

  3. Bush ballad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bush_ballad

    Cover of Old Bush Songs (1905), Banjo Paterson's seminal collection of bush ballads. The bush ballad, bush song, or bush poem is a style of poetry and folk music that depicts the life, character and scenery of the Australian bush. The typical bush ballad employs a straightforward rhyme structure to narrate a story, often one of action and ...

  4. Waltzing Matilda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waltzing_Matilda

    "Waltzing Matilda" is a song developed in the Australian style of poetry and folk music called a bush ballad. 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" slung over one's back. [2]

  5. Music of Australia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Australia

    Australian music's early western history, was a collection of British colonies, Australian folk music and bush ballads, with songs such as "Waltzing Matilda" and The Wild Colonial Boy heavily influenced by Anglo-Celtic traditions, Indeed many bush ballads are based on the works of national poets Henry Lawson and Banjo Patterson.

  6. William G. James - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_G._James

    A fourth set of Australian Christmas Carols was written in the 1970s and given to the Wayside Chapel, Kings Cross. They have since disappeared. [5] Outback themes were common in his secular songs as well, in compositions such as "Bush Song at Dawn", familiar to many Australian children of the 1950s and 1960s through the school songbooks of the ...

  7. Jim Jones at Botany Bay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Jones_at_Botany_Bay

    Jim Jones at Botany Bay" (Roud 5478) [1] is a traditional Australian folk ballad dating from the early 19th-century. The narrator, Jim Jones, is found guilty of poaching and sentenced to transportation to the penal colony of New South Wales. En route, his ship is attacked by pirates, but the crew holds them off.

  8. Bush band - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bush_band

    Bush bands also play bush ballads, many of which date to the 19th century. Among the most notable bush lyricists was the poet Banjo Paterson (1864–1941). The Bush Music Club, based in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, hold regular bush dances and Colonial Balls where bush bands perform. [1]

  9. Australian country music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_country_music

    Australian country music is a part of the music of Australia. There is a broad range of styles, from bluegrass, to yodeling to folk to the more popular. The genre has been influenced by Celtic and English folk music, the Australian bush ballad tradition, as well as to a lesser extant by popular American country music. [1]