Friday, December 23, 2022

John Thompson - A Tribute. A celebration of John at Woodford Folk Festival 2022

 Our beloved John Thompson was diagnosed with cancer in 2017, and died on 4 February, 2021. Creative to the last, he continued to write songs and sang almost to his last day.

At Woodford Folk Festival this year, we are celebrating John with a tribute concert which includes the remaining members and regular collaborators of John's bands Cloudstreet and The Ceilidh Clan (Nicole Murray, Emma Nixon, Donald McKay, Rebecca Wright and Erin Sulman), his bandmates from One Step Forward (Maree Robertson and Ann Bermingham) and dear friends including The Spooky Men's Chorale, Fred Smith, Don Jarmey, Ian Dearden, Lachlan Baldwin, Mal Webb, and Belswagger Morris dancers.

Everyone is invited to two singing workshops run by Nicole, where she will teach choral harmonies to John's signature song, The Green Man, so the audience can be a wondrous choir at the concert.

Workshop 1: Singing the Green Man with Nicole: The Mill, 9pm 27 Dec at Woodford Folk Festival

Workshop 2: Singing the Green Man again with Nicole: Bob's Bar, 7.30am 28 Dec at Woodford FF

Nicole will be appearing in the Two Leggy Redheads (whoops, it turned out to be called Good Morning Woodfordia! -ed) breakfast show after the second workshop, at Bob's Bar, to talk about John and the tribute concert with Fiona Scott-Norman.

Concert: John Thompson - A Tribute: Luna, 9am 29 Dec at Woodford Folk Festival 2022.

Here you will find lyrics to The Green Man, Bill and the Bear, The Brisbane River, and Kevin (if I can find them).

The Green Man
by John Thompson

Chorus:The Green Man's a traveller, a reveller, unraveller
Of dreams and of fancies, from first to the last.
Older than all men, living in all things
Son, father and sage,
Long live the Green Man!

• First light of first morning saw the Green Man there waiting
He saw the creation and joined in the dance
All creatures grew 'round him, he grew with them singing
The first song of all, sing of the Green Man

•Quietly watching and waiting and learning
The storms are his fury, the lightning his laugh
The first leaf of spring, his beauty and glory
His stillness his power, in the trees is his path.

•There are fewer trees now, but the man is not sleeping
'Though our ruin brings sorrow to time's oldest heart
In our souls we may find him and remember his wisdom
And rekindle the flame; once again make a start.

Choir words and harmonies

The choir sings (with long syllables):
Green tree dream
Old forest father
Green Man


Nicole will teach the parts by ear at the workshops, and if you use sol-fa, the notes are here:
















The Green Man Audio Practice Parts

GREEN MAN HIGH PART

GREEN MAN MIDDLE PART

GREEN MAN LOW PART


Bill and The Bear

John Thompson


Come listen now, good people here, to a story of renown,

Of the day a hundred years ago when the circus came to town

Mr Wirth and all his gallant crew, they raised the bigtop high

And all the folk for miles around gathered under a canvas sky.


And were you there in the clear night air,

when William Sinclair he fought the bear?

Were you there to see William Sinclair,

when he wrestled the bear to the ground?


There were dancing ponies and tumbling clowns, the best you ever did see,

A lion tamer and a high wire act, a girl on the flying trapeze,

There was a fat ringmaster in a big top hat, he slashed his whip through the air

With a roar and a growl, the cage went clang! It was Sampson the mighty bear.

Chorus


He was ten feet high, he was nine feet wide, a mountain of muscle and fur,

A mighty beast, as black as the coal, the ground shook with his roar.

Then the man with the whip, he called for quiet,

not sound from those who were there,

“I’ve a crisp ten pounds for any man here who’s brave enough to wrestle the bear”.

Chorus


Bill and his family had come to see the show, his youngest newly born

The strongest man to ever walk the range, he could carry his weight in corn

He sized up the beast, with a glance at his wife, he slowly raised his hand

“I’ll have a go,” he heard himself say. Then up struck the band!


Stripped to the waist, Bill entered the ring, circling and bouncing round

First left then right, till he lunged right in, the crowd didn’t make a sound.

They twisted and they turned as they wrestled and they grappled

At the skin and the muscle and the hair

With a mighty roar Bill threw Sampson down, he raised his fist in the air.


And were you there in the clear night air

When William Sinclair he beat the bear?

Were you there to see William Sinclair when he wrestled the bear to the ground?


You’ve never heard a roar quite like it, the shouts split the midnight air

Bill was raised above all the heads of the crowd to the cheers of everyone there

And to this day when you see the name of the famous Bill Sinclair

Raise your glass and drink to the health of the only man to ever beat the bear.


The Brisbane River

John Thompson


The Turrbal people saw her born (the banks of the Brisbane River)

Their memories, they still live on (the banks of the Brisbane River)

The dreaming days they may be gone

But long may the dreaming continue on

We live the dreams and sing the songs

On the banks of the Brisbane River


A storm blew Finnegan and Parsons north (to the banks of the Brisbane River)

Mr Thompson never made it ashore (the banks of the Brisbane River)

To the Illawarra they were bound

But on Moreton Island they ran aground

They laboured north until they found

The banks of the Brisbane River


Lord Brisbane sent John Oxley north (the banks of the Brisbane River)

He anchored The Mermaid just off shore (the banks of the Brisbane River)

Though they thought him long since dead

Finnegan met them at the heads

The natives had kept that convict fed

On the banks of the Brisbane River


Named for the governor of New South Wales (The banks of the Brisbane River)

1823 saw white man’s sails (by the banks of the Brisbane River)

Thousands of settlers to her were bound

She soon became young Queensland’s town

Federation heard the cheers resound

By the banks of the Brisbane River


The bridges they stretch from side to side (The banks of the Brisbane River)

The mighty Story Bridge was Brisbane’s pride (on The banks of the Brisbane River)

The shipyards they are long since gone

And the ironwood wharves have been torn down

The banks have burst through the streets of the town

The banks of the Brisbane River


She saw our rise, she’ll see our fall (The banks of the Brisbane River)

Her gentle waters will outlive us all (The banks of the Brisbane River)

Long may her gentle waters run

Past the mangrove mud and past the town

That gave us our lives and gave her a name

The banks of the Brisbane River


The mighty serpent flows to this day (The banks of the Brisbane River)

Through a great glass town she winds her way (The banks of the Brisbane River)

From Stanley’s heights in the Great Divide

Dammed at Wivenhoe then on to the tide

When the city cats purr, she’s our joy and pride

The banks of the Brisbane River