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So Early In the Morning: Irish Children's Songs, Rhymes, and Games

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Download links and information about So Early In the Morning: Irish Children's Songs, Rhymes, and Games by The Clancy Children. This album was released in 1962 and it belongs to World Music, Kids, Celtic genres. It contains 46 tracks with total duration of 32:55 minutes.

Artist: The Clancy Children
Release date: 1962
Genre: World Music, Kids, Celtic
Tracks: 46
Duration: 32:55
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Mitty Matty Had a Hen 0:37
2. Shelly Kee Bookey 0:21
3. Big Ship Sailing 0:43
4. Rain, Rain 0:14
5. When I Was Young 0:34
6. Three Gray Geese 0:11
7. Tom Tom the Piper's Son 0:12
8. Red Fox 1:24
9. Frosty Weather 0:14
10. Oliver Twist 0:12
11. Mammy, Mammy 0:24
12. Seotin Seo 1:02
13. Frog In the Well 2:38
14. See Saw 0:13
15. She Didn't Dance 0:39
16. As I Went Up an Apple Tree 0:12
17. Around to the Butcher's Shop 0:20
18. Paddy On the Railway 0:21
19. Oh Rodger Rum 0:38
20. There Was an Old Man At the Fair 0:13
21. Goodie On a Saucer 0:22
22. One, Two, Three 0:18
23. Dance to Your Daddy 0:28
24. Old Nanny Witch 0:11
25. King of the Castle 0:11
26. O-Row Shay 1:40
27. Jeremiah, Blow the Fire 0:39
28. Wall Flowers 1:15
29. I've Come All the Way from Dublin 1:43
30. Coming to Work, Sir 0:10
31. Bread Rhyme 0:11
32. Postman, Postman 0:17
33. Man of Double Deed 0:38
34. Are You Ready for a War 1:52
35. Wren Song 0:59
36. Sally Go 'Round the Moon 0:19
37. Old Nanny Gray 0:21
38. Why Don't You Get Johnny's Supper 0:33
39. Ahem, Ahem 0:33
40. She Can Knit 0:36
41. Soldier, Soldier 1:58
42. All Along 0:24
43. Oro My Little Boat 1:31
44. As I Roved Out 0:43
45. Paper of Pins 1:49
46. Rattlin' Bog 1:52

Details

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Yet more Clancy relatives delve into the copious history of Irish music with this 46-cut set. Most of the pieces are very brief snippets from well-known songs, but the overall set gives a fair idea of what might be sung or played in the kitchen of an Irish house as late as the early '60s. Regrettably, many of the best Irish musical traditions have withered away in later decades, swept away by the twin ogres of radio and television. It's fortunate that listeners have this kind of document by which to remember such a tradition.