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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsWhat music are people listening to today, especially while cooking?
I'll start. So far, it's been Broadway original cast albums, Nanci Griffith, Gordon Lightfoot, and my only Xmas album.
I grew up on the Firestone annual Xmas albums, bought by my dad. (He also collected as many of the Lucky Strike 'Remember How Great' albums as he could - anybody remember those?) I guess I like the classics well enough, as long as I'm not subjected to them all day, every day starting with Thanksgiving on. Just don't get me started on Christmas Shoes, or Santa Got Run Over, or even All I Want. Either version; Mariah Carey or the kid missing his 2 front teeth. I did once translate the Chipmunk Song into Irish for a party - having done all the work, I was Alvin - but I'm not tempted to buy it. And the only Santa Baby belongs to Eartha Kitt. No other need apply.
But DH's whole family is extremely, and justifiably, proud of their heritage. So his aunt asked relatives in Ireland to recommend a traditional Irish album, which she bought. We got it within a week or two, with an Xmas card telling how/why she got it and the addendum "This is the most awful thing I've ever heard, and I thought of you."
Honest, she didn't mean it that way. She just knew we liked more traditional music. Her idea of good was the Irish tenor from the Lawrence Welk show, doing Toora Loora Loora. And this album dared to suggest that there was economic inequity in the Old Country and it might just be undeserved. She was as Republican (old school, not MAGA) as it gets, and this was not to be bourne.
It was Christmas and Winter Songs, by Noel McLoughlin. It's quite good.
Squeaky41
(288 posts)jmbar2
(6,275 posts)Wonderful jazz and blues singer performing classics and lesser known songs. Mellow and light with a fine piano and guitar ensemble.
doc03
(37,093 posts)The Blue Flower
(5,656 posts)The Klezmatics. While making my Christmas latkes for the grandkids.
SamKnause
(13,927 posts)Grumpy Old Woman
(10 posts)Watching a bunch of crows mobbing a larger hawk, I was reminded that, while perhaps less than a hundred people control almost all the world's wealth, there are a lot more of us than there are of them.
Poem was by Kipling. Several versions on YouTube, but I heard it first in concert by Leslie Fish.
The Lyrics:
Rome never looks where she treads
Always her heavy hooves fall
On our bellies, our hearts, and our heads;
And Rome never heeds when we squall
Her sentries pass on and thats all
And we gather behind them in hordes
And plot to re-conquer the Wall
With only our tongues for our swords
We are the Little Folkwe!
Too little to love or to hate
But leave us alone and youll see
How fast we can drag down the State!
We are the worm in the wood!
We are the rot at the root!
We are the taint in the blood!
We are the thorn in the foot!
Mistletoe killing an oak
Rats gnawing cables in two
Moths making holes in a cloak
How they must love what they do!
Yesand we Little Folk too
We are busy as they
Working our works out of view
Watch, and youll see it some day!
For we are the Little Folkwe!
Too little to love or to hate
But leave us alone and youll see
How fast we can drag down the State!
We are the worm in the wood!
We are the rot at the root!
We are the taint in the blood!
We are the thorn in the foot!
No , maybe we are not strong
But we know Peoples that are
And gladly well guide them along
To smash and destroy you in War!
Well we shall be slaves just the same
But when have we never been slaves?
And youyou will die of the shame
And then we shall dance on your graves!
For we are the Little Folkwe!
Too little to love or to hate
But leave us alone and youll see
How fast we can drag down the State!
We are the worm in the wood!
We are the rot at the root!
We are the taint in the blood!
We are the thorn in the foot!