Yep, your right, good old Ken.
I've just PM'd you by the way.
Saludos,
Bob.
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Yep, your right, good old Ken.
I've just PM'd you by the way.
Saludos,
Bob.
on to it ;)
" Get your kicks ... on the M25" " Sweet Home Melton Mowbray" "Slough ... my kinda town, Slough is" "On the Jubilee, Victoria and the Central lines" . Yeah, you might have a point :p
24 hours from Tunbridge Wells....
Re Slough. Not a song but a poem:
Come, friendly bombs, and fall on Slough
It isn't fit for humans now
There isn't grass to graze a cow.
Swarm over, death!
John Betjeman
There's far more songs that are regional without mentioning the town/city
Fog on the Tyne
Steel River (Chris Rea)
Ferry across the Mersey (already mentioned)
The road to hellQuote:
... on the M25
And such a lovely warm poem it is.....
This is kind of funny, I've lived in Missouri USA all of my life (52 years of it) and I've always thought UK had the coolest names and that our names were dopey; your town names are classy, whereas we are graced with the likes of Toadsuck Arkansas and Intercourse Pennsylvania. And yes, those are really places.
I guess many are familiar with the Johnny Cash version of "I've been everywhere" - but did you know that this was originally an Australian song written by Aussie Geoff Mack in 1959 and listed Australian towns.
Not only was it adapted to North America, but New Zealand too.
There was even a version listing Beers !
I guess it depends on which one you hear first and become familair with. The others would just sound wrong afterwards.
I suspect this is applying to all those other songs discussed...
"Give Me a Home Among The Oak Trees" wouldn't seem right though.. :(
Steve I knew about Geoff Mack writing the original song. Hank Snow recorded a version a few years before Johnny Cash. I like all the versions that I have heard.
The lyrics that Hank recorded:
http://www.cowboylyrics.com/tabs/sno...here-1964.html
Here's Hank Snow performing the song. Well worth watching! (Great suit! I've got to get me one like that!) Hank Snow was from Nova Scotia (near where I live) and long before he became a country music star he and his band toured all the little dance halls of Nova Scotia. My father remembers seeing him at a dance -- the cover charge was 25 cents!
Here is the Australian version performed by Lucky Starr who had a hit with it in 1962. And here's the original by Geoff Mack.
It seems to me Boxcar Willie also had a version after Hank Snow and Johnnie Cash.
Regards, Ross