I think I’ve known this song all my life. In Ireland, it’s sung as over here, in other parts of the world, as over there. There are many variations of the words.
Oh the Praties they grow small over here, over here
Oh the Praties they grow small over here
Oh the Praties they grow small,
And they're failing since the fall
So we eat them coats and all, over here, over here
Oh, I wish that we were geese night and morn, night and morn
Oh, I wish that we were geese night and morn,
Oh, I wish that we were geese
Who can die and take their peace
Who can fly, and take their ease eating corn, eating corn.
But the God in whom we trust, over here, over here,
But the God in whom we trust, over here,
But the God in whom we trust,
He will give us crumb and crust
and he'll raise us from the dust, over here, over here.
Having nothing to do with potato famine, American folksinger Cheryl Wheeler has a funny song about the personalities of potatoes, called reasonably enough, Potato. It’s on her album Sylvia Hotel.
Then there’s the modern folk classic, The Fields of Athenry, written by Pete St. John in the mid 1970s and recorded by Danny Doyle, Finbar Furey, The Dropkick Murphys, and many others. Doesn’t speak of potatoes but is the tale of a man sentenced to transportation to Australia for stealing corn to feed his family during The Great Hunger.
You can listen to it here : Fields of Athenry
and here is a bit of the lyric
By a lonely prison wall, I heard a young girl calling
"Michael, they have taken you away
For you stole Trevelyan's corn
So the young might see the morn'
Now a prison ship lies waiting in the bay"
Low lie the fields of Athenry
Where once we watched the small free birds fly
Our love was on the wing
We had dreams and songs to sing
It's so lonely 'round the fields of Athenry

Thousands Are Sailing
Potato2008 is the place for more information about the International Year of the Potato
One of the better versions of The Fields of Athenry is on Finbar Furey’s recording Chasing Moonlight

you may also want to see
Voices: Cherish the Ladies
this is part of a carnival of posts from featured bloggers at Lonely Planet about Food Around the World, hosted by Kat at Tie Dye Travels.
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I never imagined there would be so much music dedicated to the humble potato!
ReplyDeleteLOVE this. who knew?
ReplyDelete