The Music Man (song)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

"The Music Man" is a popular

folksong among children, rugby players, and Hash House Harriers
.

History

"The Music Man" is a free translation of the original German folksong from Silesia "Ich bin ein Musikante" ('I am a musician'), collected by Ludwig Erk and Wilhelm Irmer, and published in Die deutschen Volkslieder mit ihren Singweisen (1838).[1]

"The Music Man" was translated and arranged by George Coote and Harold Packham in 1951, for the Tonic Music Company of London.

Black Lace, a British pop group from Ossett in West Yorkshire, in 1989 and reached #52 in the UK singles charts.[6]

Another translation of the same song is "I Am a Fine Musician". This was first translated by Felix Günther for The Children's Record Guild (starting "I am a fine musician, I travel through the world"), and sung by George Rasely and Mardi Bryant as "The Musicians" on the record Sing Along (1949).[7] Charles Randolph Grean decided to produce a version of this song; he recruited Tom Glazer to write it (starting "I am a fine musician, I practice every day"), and it was performed by Dinah Shore, Betty Hutton, Tony Martin, and Phil Harris as The Musicians (1951). This was later performed on The Dick Van Dyke Show (6 March and 18 December 1963),[8] and Sesame Street (21 November 1969). A variant of the song, ("I am a fine musician, I travel round the world") was included in Marion Grayson's Let's Do Fingerplays (1962),[9] and was mentioned by Henry Miller.[10] A related version "I am a young musician, from London I have come", was published in Die schönsten Lieder 2 (1995), with the first line rhyming with the instrument ("from London I have come ... drum"; "I come from old Berlin ... violin", and so on).[11]

Other similar songs, perhaps based to varying extents on the original German version, include Peter Kennedy's "The German Musicianer" in Folk Songs of Britain and Northern Ireland (1975),[12] and Walter Greenaway's "The Wonderful Musician" (1871), which has a chorus that begins: "A big drum, a kettle drum, the fiddle, flute, and piccolo, piano, harp, harmonium and many more beside".

Song structure and lyrics

Each verse begins with the following chorus lines, divided between the lead singer ("The Music Man") and the audience. There are variations which follow roughly the same tune:

The Music Man: "I am the music man, And I come from down your way and I can play!"
Audience: "What can you play?"[13]

The line "I come from down your way" is found in the original 1951 recordings.[3] Some later versions change this line to "I come from far away".[5]

For each verse the participants act out different

instruments with specific actions. Some of the actions for the adult version can be rude or crude. They may also attempt to imitate the sound of each instrument. It is sometimes performed in cabaret with the audience challenging the artistes to ever more extravagant – and difficult – renditions of, for example, the flugelhorn
.

After each verse, singers sing the previous verses in reverse order before singing the main chorus lines again.

See also

References

  1. ^ Erk, Ludwig; Irmer, Wilhelm, eds. (1838). "No. 22: Musikantenlied". Die deutschen Volkslieder mit ihren Singweisen (in German) (2 ed.). Berlin: Plahn'sche Buchhandlung (Louis Nitze). pp. 18–19.
  2. ^ "Packham, Harold". Catalog of Copyright Entries Third Series: Published Music: January–June 1951. Vol. 5, Part 5A, Number 1. Washington D. C.: Copyright Office. 1951. p. 167.
  3. ^ a b "Billy Cotton - The Music Man / Bless 'Em All - Decca". 78 RPM. Retrieved 2024-03-19.
  4. ^ "The Radio Revellers - The Music Man / Sweet Violets - Columbia". 78 RPM. Retrieved 2024-03-19.
  5. ^ a b Ireson, Barbara; Rowe, Christopher, eds. (1978). "The Music Man". Over and Over Again. London: Beaver Books. pp. 100–101, 219.
  6. ^ "BLACK LACE | Full Official Chart History". officialcharts.com. Archived from the original on 23 April 2023. Retrieved 2023-05-11.
  7. ^ "George Rasely And Mardi Bryant - Sing-Along - The Children's Record Guild". 78 RPM. Retrieved 2024-03-19.
  8. .
  9. ^ Grayson, Marion, ed. (1962). "I Am a Fine Musician". Let's Do Fingerplays. Washington: Robert B. Luce. p. 87.
  10. ^ Miller, Henry (1964). "The Unilateral, Multilingual, Sesquipedalian Activity". Henry Miller on Writing. New York: New Directions Book. p. 127.
  11. ^ Die schönsten Lieder 2 (in German). Berlin: KDM Verlag. 1995. pp. 52–53.
  12. ^ Kennedy, Peter, ed. (1975). "201: The German Musicianer". Folksongs of Britain and Ireland. London: Cassell. p. 478.
  13. .

External links