Saw these guys at their 1st Sidmouth gig. It took me an hour to fetch my jaw from the floor. Best original/authentic sounding Irish music I'd heard in years.
This is the very first song I’ve heard from them on youtube. The day this pandemic is over, the very first thing I wanna do is go to a gig of theirs. I swear.
Bloody hell - yet another from the band with no comparison. I'm left speechless - thank you so much for what you've done with this beautiful tune. Comparisons with the original tread on the profane but I reckon this version of Lankum's is without equal.
A couple weeks ago I randomly clicked on one of their songs simply because I was curious about the title of one of their videos. Man these guys made me fall in love with them.
That accordion (a Russian "bayan") has wonderful deep basses. Dunno if she playw with the right hand, but if she wants to, it only takes 3 fingers to cover it all. Interesting that the internals have all the reed tongues on one massive reed plate, which makes the accordion particularly robust. They are often assembled without wax, just using leather gaskets. Lovely setting of this tune.
That particular bayan looks like it had “totally broken” going for it too. 😸 The bass chord buttons seem all sunken under the keyboard. Happens if they get dropped. But it’s the massive bass notes that are still there that just shake you. 🪗
my mom would sing a song similar to this one, but the refrain ended with "we all belong to a happy family." it also had more verses with different animals, too. and the names of the family members were different. can't find a rendition of it anywhere, though, if anyone can help!
I was just looking these lyrics up the other day and found what appears to be an older version of the lyrics, matching your description, here: www.traditionalmusic.co.uk/folk-song-lyrics/Happy_Family.htm
From the band's old bandcamp page, might be helpful: We first heard this cheerful semi-nonsense song from a recording of the singer, poet, storyteller and Gypsy-rights activist, Jasper Derby Smith (1921-2003), who sings it on the Topic LP The Travelling Songster (12TS304). At the time of recording Jasper lived on the side of the road in Sevenoaks, Kent, along with his brother Levi and sister Minty, who also appear on the LP. Jasper, of Anglo-Romani descent, was a founder member of the Gypsy liaison council in the sixties, and attended the first World Romany Congress in London 1971. He found short-lived media fame when, under threat of eviction, he built a 25-foot-high cardboard rocket to take him and his family to a new home in the sky, explaining ‘The council won’t leave us anywhere to live down here!’. Versions of the song are known to have been in print as ‘My Father Kept a Horse’ as early as the 1830s and in later ballad sheets it commonly appears as ‘The Happy Family’ and ‘The Irish Familie’. The word ‘jub’ in the third verse is Anglo-Romani, stemming from the Sanskrit ‘yuka’, and meaning ‘flea’.
@@FireDrawNear thank you! very interesting. i've sinced asked my mom about where she learned it, and she doesn't quite recall...though she says that she's known it since childhood; she had a pretty chaotic upbringing, with lots of people coming and going, so i imagine that one of them taught her the verses
Saw these guys at their 1st Sidmouth gig. It took me an hour to fetch my jaw from the floor. Best original/authentic sounding Irish music I'd heard in years.
Maurice Condie I was there too, Maurice, and likewise! Hope you’re keeping well.
@@gillianloomes-quinn1289 I am very well Gillian. Hope you are likewise.
@@gillianloomes-quinn1289 o
It’s so refreshing when people sing in their own accent.
I can't for the life of me understand why anyone would sing differently.
Haunting, emotional, beautiful piece of music by incredible musicians ❤ gives me the feels every time I listen
This is the very first song I’ve heard from them on youtube. The day this pandemic is over, the very first thing I wanna do is go to a gig of theirs. I swear.
One of the finest performances I have EVER seen! Stirs the Celtic blood 20K km away!
The spirit of the Celts is strong!!! Much love from Wales
Who could possibly dislike this? That’s just absurd.
Ahh ,no accounting for taste Brett?lol!
Those who disliked didn’t have Rosie in their arms
@@masayoshibernardolonghinin7125 nor ears stuck on the side of their fucking head either.
absolutely gorgeous.....brings tears to my eyes.
Got to see these guys live. The Barbican in London sold out in literally minutes.
This makes the hair on my arms stand up on end. 👌🏻
Bloody hell - yet another from the band with no comparison. I'm left speechless - thank you so much for what you've done with this beautiful tune. Comparisons with the original tread on the profane but I reckon this version of Lankum's is without equal.
It took me to long to find this group. Incredible, thanks for sharing your talent.!! Love from across the sea.
That deep drone get me going anyway 😊
A couple weeks ago I randomly clicked on one of their songs simply because I was curious about the title of one of their videos. Man these guys made me fall in love with them.
The Neu shirt is just icing on the cake.
Beautiful, cuts to the bones. Xxxx
i play it regular...pure class.
Wonderfully refreshing. A grand kick up the folk arts.
This was incredible. I love the droning and the simple vocals. Absolutely loved this. I want this played just like this at my funeral. Great greatjob
Stunningly beautiful.
Such a wonderful rich and characterful sound, love it :)
14 people were standing on their heads when they tried to like this video
Wonderful. New music from old roots!
This is sounding great well done
up there. Songs that tell a tale!
Soulful!
Learned from the singing of Antaine O'Farachain of Inchicore in Dublin. Powerful stuff.
Radie Peat has the beauty of a medieval princess.
Brilliant
Wow! Thankyou. R.
Warms my cold soul 🔥😜😘
amazing music .....thnxxxxxxxx
Traveler song, good stuff
Very moving
stellar
sklarsglard
Feckn awesome
This gets so subtle & nuanced it might well be a song a sleepwalker hears. Almost hypnotic
Wow...it doesn't get any better dan dat.
Jolly good .
You can use Jolly before beggarman but not before good
nice work!
The best
That accordion (a Russian "bayan") has wonderful deep basses. Dunno if she playw with the right hand, but if she wants to, it only takes 3 fingers to cover it all. Interesting that the internals have all the reed tongues on one massive reed plate, which makes the accordion particularly robust. They are often assembled without wax, just using leather gaskets. Lovely setting of this tune.
Robert English great info! I love the off sounding bass tones they have, could never quite put my finger on what it was. Cheers! Great fucking band
That particular bayan looks like it had “totally broken” going for it too. 😸
The bass chord buttons seem all sunken under the keyboard. Happens if they get dropped.
But it’s the massive bass notes that are still there that just shake you. 🪗
@@babybloc Radie dropped the chord buttons indeed, when she rebuild this acordion, because she only uses basses anyway 🙂
@ Saves weight that way if you take the treble reed plates out. Those things add up ⚖️🪗
❤
bravo xxx
my mom would sing a song similar to this one, but the refrain ended with "we all belong to a happy family." it also had more verses with different animals, too. and the names of the family members were different. can't find a rendition of it anywhere, though, if anyone can help!
I was just looking these lyrics up the other day and found what appears to be an older version of the lyrics, matching your description, here: www.traditionalmusic.co.uk/folk-song-lyrics/Happy_Family.htm
I want Radie to adopt my children
From the band's old bandcamp page, might be helpful: We first heard this cheerful semi-nonsense song from a recording of the singer, poet, storyteller and Gypsy-rights activist, Jasper Derby Smith (1921-2003), who sings it on the Topic LP The Travelling Songster (12TS304). At the time of recording Jasper lived on the side of the road in Sevenoaks, Kent, along with his brother Levi and sister Minty, who also appear on the LP. Jasper, of Anglo-Romani descent, was a founder member of the Gypsy liaison council in the sixties, and attended the first World Romany Congress in London 1971. He found short-lived media fame when, under threat of eviction, he built a 25-foot-high cardboard rocket to take him and his family to a new home in the sky, explaining ‘The council won’t leave us anywhere to live down here!’. Versions of the song are known to have been in print as ‘My Father Kept a Horse’ as early as the 1830s and in later ballad sheets it commonly appears as ‘The Happy Family’ and ‘The Irish Familie’. The word ‘jub’ in the third verse is Anglo-Romani, stemming from the Sanskrit ‘yuka’, and meaning ‘flea’.
@@FireDrawNear thank you! very interesting. i've sinced asked my mom about where she learned it, and she doesn't quite recall...though she says that she's known it since childhood; she had a pretty chaotic upbringing, with lots of people coming and going, so i imagine that one of them taught her the verses
@@MrXyzzy99
Even by youtube comment section standards that's a pretty weird thing to say.
Irish traditional music is oriental, no more proof need than this performance
I think it was Yeats said Ireland was part of Asia until the Battle of the Boyne ;)
Saw dem
wow
Sound.
LOVE you 💞🦋ヽ♡`♪
i love the way they all kept straight faces throughout the video...
And eyes closed nearly the whole time... Totally absorbed in the music.
as opposed to what?
cracking up laughing?
Very pretty. Was sort of hoping for a little jig at the end thare
That's not the same dude dhirts s fit tho
To long lads great though but include a little Justin bieber in your set
Play some Justin bieber
A crowd of banshee there go my hearing
Fool
Shush now Stokes
It was already gone.
And you, most likely being Irish! So happy I don’t hear what you hear!
I find the lyrics in kind and lacking in ultimate performance also the top over key is wanning some what un dubious