Donkey Riding

"Donkey Riding" is a traditional work song or sea shanty originally sung in Canada, Scotland and the Northeastern United States. It has also become popular as a children's song.[1] The earliest written record of the song dates to 1857.[2] The tune and words are an adaptation of "Highland Laddie".[2] It is generally, but not universally,[1] agreed that the "donkey" of the song title is a reference to the steam donkey, a kind of general-purpose steam engine.[3] Stan Hugill, a sea-music historian, said that he had been informed that the song was also sung in the Gulf Ports as well as being popular at sea.[4]

A steam donkey, a type of steam-powered winch. The title "Donkey Riding" is thought to reference this type of machine.

Recordings

Recordings of this song include:

gollark: So `MOVI` has been replaced with `ADDI` with the source register as 0.
gollark: Perhaps there could be some sort of unholy union of both, yes.
gollark: No, I mean a stack in the sense of a stack machine instead of a register machine.
gollark: Maybe I should just do stacks, those are fun.
gollark: Yaaay!

References

  1. Douglas Coombes (1974) Songs for singing together: fifty songs from around the world taken from the BBC's music programme for schools 'Singing Together' , BBC Publications
  2. CSU Fresno Ballad Index
  3. "Alliance Music Publications Inc. - Donkey Riding". Alliancemusic.com. Retrieved 2013-08-31.
  4. Shantypedia
  5. "Great Big Sea Embraces Stylistic Mix" (June 14, 1997) Billboard p.46


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