I've only heard this sung in Maryland accents by a folk song group
Gah! And you were able to listen to this and not wind up sticking forks in your ears?
Note: Even though places such as Dundalk, Glen Burnie, etc. may call to mind a lovely Scots accent, the true Bal'mer accent is pretty amazing, hon.
Caroma,
Actually that song is by Shel Silverstein.(It's called "Son of a Scoundrel"). And you know of Clam Chowder? Yay!
I don't think any of them sing in Bal'mer accents, so no need to wince.
Oh yeah, they don't have thick accents or anything, but they do have that lovely cadence from the Mason-Dixon area. I have two live cassettes from Boskones and a record.
Shel Silverstein was American. Heh. Have any Aussies heard of the song?
Y'know I have access to a couple of CDs with recent Clam Chowder
recordings on them.(Ok, they have songs by other people on them too,
as they are recordings from cons.) Let me know if you're interested...
t /shameless dealer
Just checked the TV section of my local rag and Buffy is listed for 10:30PM next Tuesday
I made these points earlier, but fine, no one listens to me. Allan Lang "Previously 1: The Who Whating How With Huh?" Feb 3, 2003 6:07:05 pm EST
the Kinsey report on American sexual attitudes in the 1940s reported something like 25% of men having experienced bestiality (almost all were farmboys unaware of the social taboo)
.....and I'm the only person whose jaw dropped at the fact that the farmboys
didn't realise there was a social taboo involved?
And you can't think of Scotland and England of 1746 in today's terms. The split wasn't Scotland/England it was Highland/Lowland. An old dying way of life compaired to the new expanding one. A lot of the landowners had lands in both countries. Old loyalities and grudges between clans could decide whose side they fought on as much as anything else. But as usual religion was right in there in the mix. That's why the Stuarts lost the throne in the first place.
Yes. Yes. Yes. SO glad you said this, because I nearly sprained something in my efforts not to say this myself. Although I'd have been less eloquent.
Well, if you don't talk about sex, you don't know what's customary. That was part of what made the Kinsey report so scandalous -- it showed a lot of people that what they thought was outré was actually routine in many places.
Well, if you don't talk about sex, you don't know what's customary.
Okay, I can see the logic in that. My eyes are still on stalks, but I do see the logic.
Well, if you don't talk about sex, you don't know what's customary.
Y'know, if your sex partners are all of the four-legged variety, I'm not entirely sure talking would help here anyway.
I remember reading in college about this appalling study done on, I think, the Orkneys, where it became clear that female orgasm was damned near unknown, as was anything but male-superior sex. (The number of wives who'd ever had a husband put a month on their breast, for instance, was shockingly low.)