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For more than two hundred years whaling was one of the greatest
industries of New England. But whaling was more than a business; it
represented the highest order of adventure-excitement, danger, hope
of financial gain, and heartbreak. The songs whalemen sang
reflected these feelings and experiences. They were, in effect, a
record of life on board a whaling ship. This work is one of the
largest collections of ballads and songs traditionally sung by the
seamen. It contains over 175 songs, with music provided for most of
them. There are songs of storm, shipwrectk, love, tragedy, and
death; gospel, parlor, bawdy songs, and more! The author's
introduction details the history of whaling and discusses how and
why these songs were recorded. In addition, he gives complete
histories of the songs; relates the events the ballads celebrate;
gives variants; and defines whaling expressions. This is an
essential book for ballad students, folklorists, historians, and
seamen. Folk singers will especially welcome this rich source of
material. And general readers will delight in these adventurous
tunes and their tales of love, the sea, and the ship. First
published in 1964, Songs the Whalemen Sang is now reissued by
Mystic Seaport.
This long-awaited sequel to Gale Huntington's classic collection,
Songs the Whalemen Sang, assembles more than 200 songs from
whalemen's journals, log books, and popular music of the whaling
era: whaling songs, sea songs, traditional ballads, popular songs,
gospel songs, and a couple of fiddle tunes, nearly all accompanied
by musical notation. It represents the culmination of Huntington's
career as a collector, historian, writer and musician.
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