| New Zealand FOLK*SONG |
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Song List - Origins of this Song - Home
Ship's Mate David Loweriston and other sealers were left on an island in Open Bay (now Jackson Bay?) in Fiordland, New Zealand in 1810. They were there for nearly 4 years before being rescued by the Governor Bligh. Full story
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Garland in this 30 Kb MP3
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Sealers
The tune and structure was obviously derived from the old Captain Kidd song series ("My Name is Captain Kidd," "My Name is Samuel Small," "Ye Jacobites By Name," "What Wondrous Love is This?" etc.) For example;-For full details into the origins of this song, read Frank Fyfe's 1970 research paper.
My name is Captain Kid, who has sailed, who has sailed, My name is Captain Kid, who has sailed. My name is Captain Kid; What the laws did still forbid Unluckily I did while I sailed, while I sailed. All the versesThe lyrics probably originated on the Sydney waterfront after Loweriston sued the owners of the 'Active' for abandoning his group.
The song was then taken to Kororareka in New Zealand, where Yankee whaling crews learnt it and carried the song back to Halifax, where it was eventually collected by John Leebrick.
(JA) I tried singing a topical version of Davy Lowston in 1981.
For obvious reasons, I never got any requests to sing it again!
I'm Arthur Alan Thomas, I was framed, I was framed, For shooting Harvey Crewe I was blamed, Lies about me they did tell, and I spent 9 years in hell, I was framed.
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Davy Lowston is a serious song about great deprivation. Your audience is emotionally affected. When you perform this, it is useful to follow with something humorous to give your audience some emotional relief. For instance, you could follow a couple of standard verses of She'll be Right and then...
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gone sealing in Fiordland; you've been stranded there ten years, and you're eating salty sealmeat, and weeping salty tears, And you'd pay a million dollars for a Big Mac and some beers, Well don't worry mate, she'll be right. She'll be right mate, she'll be right Don't worry mate, she'll be right. Just pull out your old cell phone, Call a chopper and fly home, And don't worry mate, she'll be right. |
Davy Lowston On Record
- Recorded in NZ by
- Val Murphy 1965,
Song Spinners 1967,
Neil Colquhoun 1972,
Graham Wilson 1982,
Marcus Turner 1983,
Martin Curtis 1985,
Phil Garland 1996,
Mike Harding 1998.
Maritime Crew 2000
Maritime Crew 2003
- Also recorded in England by
- Carthy & Swarbrick
- June Tabor
The English variant has picked up references to the sealers who departed south from Port Stanley in the Falkland Islands to the iceburg-girt Antartic islands.
...Our captain John McGraw, he set sail, he set sail Oh, yes, for old Port Stanley, he set sail "I'll return, men, without fail", but he foundered in the gale, And went down, and went down, and went down So come all you lads who venture far from home, far from home So come all you lads who venture far from home Where the icebergs tower high, that's a pitiful place to die, Never seal, never seal, never sealA transcript of June Tabor's version has her singing all the parrs haul in (??).
This seems to be a totally meaningless mis-interpretation of all of 'aarrss' fall ill.
...We cured ten thousand skins for the fur. Brackish water, putrid sea, we did all the parrs haul in For to die, for to die, for to die.