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by
Neil O'Neill
1. | Listen to Caledonia Farewell (Jamie Raeburn) by Neil O'Neill |
| 244 | plays | 3:44 | $0.15 | 3 | ||
2. | Listen to Coulter's Candy (Alli Balli Be) by Neil O'Neill |
| 309 | plays | 2:03 | $0.15 | 4 |
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7 RECs for this Album
5 with a review
walterm Rec'd this on Nov 11, 2007:
Street Cred: 380
Rec's: 27
“Alli Balli Be is a catchy song that stays in your head :)”
cyberehrlich Rec'd this on Apr 26, 2008:
Street Cred: 1833
Rec's: 166
“Great Song, I will listen to this many times!”
cyberehrlich Rec'd this on Apr 26, 2008:
Street Cred: 1833
Rec's: 166
“Great Song, I will listen to this many times!”
mohurley Rec'd this on Oct 30, 2007:
Street Cred: 359
Rec's: 24
“Alright, I confess I'm a sucker for Celtic ballads and deportation songs worth their salt. Jamie Raeburn (its other name) has been floating around for over a hundred years. I love Neil's honey-smooth voice and rollicking guitar in this song. Gabriel Duffin's puckin' on the banjo and bodhran adds to the seaworthiness of this ballad.
(PS: that's me on the backup chorus).”
mohurley Rec'd this on Nov 10, 2007:
Street Cred: 359
Rec's: 24
“Coulter's Candy is a real Weegie (Glesga) street song or rather, an early form of advertising jingle from the 1840s - 1890s meant to loosen pennies from the hands of babes.
Some say that when the farm failed, John Coulter (or Robert Coultart) and his wife Masie moved into town and made candies wrapped in wax paper. He would hawk his toffee (or anise) candy in the Glesga streets (or the streeets of Peebles or Melrose, depending upon who yer talkin tae—even the Geordies of Newcastle and the Irish insist it's THEIR song!)
Anyway, Coultart sang Ally bally to alert the children who would come running to buy candy from the sack of the Scottish Pied Piper—just like how kids today do when the ice cream cart comes by. Supposedly the recipe died with Coultart in the 1890s.
Donovan recorded Coulter's Candy on the album, the HMS Donovan for his wee bairn to be in the 1970s.
Sung in the broad Scots tongue (in case ye canna ken it). Coulter's Candy will leave ye greetin' for anither sweet bawbee and a wee tune from the Scotch Melody Maker, himself, Neil O'Neill.
”
