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Cumulative song

A cumulative song is a song with a simple verse structure modified by progressive addition so that each verse is longer than the verse before. Cumulative songs are popular for group singing, in part because they require relatively little memorization of lyrics, and because remembering the previous verse to concatenate it to form the current verse can become a kind of game.

"The Twelve Days of Christmas" is a cumulative song.

Structure edit

Typically, the lyrics take the form of a stanza of at least two lines. In each verse, the text of the first line introduces a new item, and the other line uses the words to begin a list which includes items from all the preceding verses. The item is typically a new phrase (simultaneously a group of words and a musical phrase) to a line in a previous stanza.

The two lines are often separated by refrains. Many cumulative songs also have a chorus.

Songs with two-line stanzas edit

One of the most well-known examples of a cumulative song is the Christmas song "The Twelve Days of Christmas", which uses a two-line stanza, where the second line is cumulative, as follows:

On the first day of Christmas, my true love sent (or "gave") to me
A partridge in a pear tree.

On the second day of Christmas my true love sent to me
Two turtle doves and a partridge in a pear tree.

On the third day of Christmas, my true love sent to me
Three french hens, two turtle doves and a partridge in a pear tree.

and so on until

On the twelfth day of Christmas, my true love sent to me
Twelve drummers drumming, eleven pipers piping, ten lords a-leaping, nine ladies dancing, eight maids a-milking, seven swans a-swimming, six geese a-laying, five gold(en) rings, four calling birds, three french hens, two turtle doves and a partridge in a pear tree.

The first gift (the partridge) is always sung to a "coda melody" phrase. For the first four verses, the additional gifts are all sung to a repeated standard melodic phrase. In the fifth verse, a different melody, with a change of tempo, is introduced for the five gold(en) rings; and from this point on the first five gifts are always sung to a set of varied melodic phrases (with the partridge retaining its original coda phrase). Thence forward, the wording of each new gift is sung to the original standard melodic phrase before returning to the five gold(en) rings.

Songs with refrains edit

In many songs, an item is introduced in the first line of each stanza and extends the list in another line. An example is The Barley Mow (Roud 944):

Here's good luck to the pint pot,
Good luck to the barley mow
Jolly good luck to the pint pot,
Good luck to the barley mow

Oh the pint pot, half a pint, gill pot, half a gill, quarter gill, nipperkin, and a round bowl
Here's good luck, good luck, good luck to the barley mow

The second verse substitutes a larger drink measure in the first line. In the second line the new measure heads the list and is sung to the same musical phrase as pint pot.

Here's good luck to the quart pot,
Good luck to the barley mow
Jolly good luck to the quart pot,
Good luck to the barley mow

Oh the quart pot, pint pot, half a pint, gill pot, half a gill, quarter gill, nipperkin, and a round bowl
Here's good luck, good luck, good luck to the barley mow

One version of the final line and refrain is:

Oh the company, the brewer, the drayer, the slavey, the daughter, the landlady, the landlord, the barrel, the half-barrel, the gallon, the half-gallon, the quart pot, pint pot, half a pint, gill pot, half a gill, quarter gill, nipperkin, and a round bowl
Here's good luck, good luck, good luck to the barley mow

Alan Lomax recorded Jack French singing The Barley Mow at the Blaxhall Ship, a famous singing pub in Suffolk, in 1953. This recording is available online at the Cultural Equity website.[1]

Songs with a chorus edit

A chorus (often with its own refrain) may be added to the stanzas as in "The Rattlin' Bog" (Roud 129):

Hi ho, the rattlin' bog,
The bog down in the valley-o,
Hi ho, the rattlin' bog,
The bog down in the valley-o.

1. Now in the bog there was a tree,
A rare tree, a rattlin' tree,
The tree in the bog,
And the bog down in the valley-o.

Hi ho, the rattlin' bog,
The bog down in the valley-o,
Hi ho, the rattlin' bog,
The bog down in the valley-o.

2. And on that tree there was a branch,
A rare branch, a rattlin' branch,
The branch on the tree, and the tree in the bog,
And the bog down in the valley-o.

Hi ho, the rattlin' bog,
The bog down in the valley-o,
Hi ho, the rattlin' bog,
The bog down in the valley-o.

One version of the final line+refrain is:

The feather on the wing, and the wing on the bird, and the bird on the nest, and the nest on the twig, and the twig on the branch, and the branch on the tree, and the tree in the bog,
And the bog down in the valley-o.

Each phrase is sung to the same two-note melody.

Hamish Henderson recorded William Sinclair Mitchell, Agnes Mitchell and Agnes Mitchell singing The Rattling Bog in 1979. The recording is available on line on the Tobar an Dualchais – Kist o Riches website.[2]

Jim Carroll and Pat McKenzie recorded Pat McNamara singing The Bog Down in the Valley in Kilshanny, in 1975. The recording is available online on the Clare County Library website.[3]

Cumulative songs in languages other than English edit

Yiddish folk music contains many prominent examples of cumulative songs, including "?װאָס װעט זײַן אַז משיח װעט קומען" and "מה אספּרה," or "What Will Happen When the Messiah Comes?" and "Who Can Recall" (a Yiddish version of the Passover song "Echad Mi Yodea").[4][5]

The Passover seder contains two Hebrew cumulative songs: Echad Mi Yodea and Chad Gadya.

Song examples edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Cultural Equity Research Centre http://research.culturalequity.org/rc-b2/get-audio-detailed-recording.do?recordingId=7625 Retrieved 2017/04/18
  2. ^ Tobar an Dualchais / Kist o Riches Track ID - 83348 http://www.tobarandualchais.co.uk/track/83348?l=en Retrieved 2017/04/18
  3. ^ Clare County Library; Songs of Clare; http://www.clarelibrary.ie/eolas/coclare/songs/cmc/bog_down_in_valley_pmcnamara.htm Retrieved 2017/04/18
  4. ^ a b Maria Wirf Naro; Martin B. Fischer, eds. (2012). Translating Fictional Dialogue for Children and Young People. Frank & Timme GmbH. p. 25. ISBN 978-3-86596-467-0.
  5. ^ a b . Macmillan Publishing. Archived from the original on 2012-06-17. Retrieved 2014-07-07.
  6. ^ Robert B. Waltz; David Engle (eds.). "Barley Mow, The". The Ballad Index. Retrieved 2014-07-07.
  7. ^ Reid, Rob (1995). Children's Jukebox: A Subject Guide to Musical Recordings and Programming Ideas for Songsters Ages One to Twelve. American Library Association. p. 61. ISBN 9780838906507.
  8. ^ a b Reid, Robert (2007). Something Musical Happened at the Library: Adding Song and Dance to Children's Story Programs. American Library Association. p. 70. ISBN 9780838909423.
  9. ^ "Guerres de clocher | Song".
  10. ^ "Jouer dehors by Passe-Partout | Song".
  11. ^ "Moshpit à St-Dilon | Song".
  12. ^ Roger deV. Renwick (17 December 2001). Recentering Anglo/American Folksong: Sea Crabs and Wicked Youths. Univ. Press of Mississippi. p. 89. ISBN 978-1-57806-393-2.
  13. ^ Cusic, Don (2003). It's the Cowboy Way!: The Amazing True Adventures of Riders in the Sky. University Press of Kentucky. pp. 166–167. ISBN 978-0-8131-2882-5.
  14. ^ Malloy, Dave. "Prologue". Genius. Retrieved 28 September 2016.
  15. ^ "Horseshoes & Hand Grenades serve up refreshing jolt of Wisco-grass". 2 July 2017.
  16. ^ "The Celtic Jewish Connection". 5 August 2009.
  17. ^ "Le reel alcalinisant".
  18. ^ Osera, Peter-Michael. "Functional Decomposition". ESAP Computer Science. University of Pennsylvania.
  19. ^ Kutner, Jon (February 10, 2013). "Star Trekkin' (The Firm)".
  20. ^ "A Hole in the Bottom of the Sea". Publishers Weekly (published June 2013). 2013-04-29. Retrieved 2014-07-07.
  21. ^ "Today is Monday by Eric Carle". Teachers – Scholastic. Scholastic. Retrieved 2014-07-17.
  22. ^ Nelsen, Marjorie R.; Nelsen-Parish, Jan (2002). Peak with Books: An Early Childhood Resource for Balanced Literacy. Cengage Learning. p. 242. ISBN 9780766859487. A catchy, cumulative song featuring a different food for each day of the week.
  23. ^ . Hymns and Arias. Archived from the original on 1 March 2015. Retrieved 4 July 2015.
  24. ^ . Hymns and Arias. Archived from the original on 2000-12-17. Retrieved 2018-10-08.

cumulative, song, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, december,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Cumulative song news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message A cumulative song is a song with a simple verse structure modified by progressive addition so that each verse is longer than the verse before Cumulative songs are popular for group singing in part because they require relatively little memorization of lyrics and because remembering the previous verse to concatenate it to form the current verse can become a kind of game The Twelve Days of Christmas is a cumulative song Contents 1 Structure 1 1 Songs with two line stanzas 1 2 Songs with refrains 1 3 Songs with a chorus 2 Cumulative songs in languages other than English 3 Song examples 4 See also 5 ReferencesStructure editTypically the lyrics take the form of a stanza of at least two lines In each verse the text of the first line introduces a new item and the other line uses the words to begin a list which includes items from all the preceding verses The item is typically a new phrase simultaneously a group of words and a musical phrase to a line in a previous stanza The two lines are often separated by refrains Many cumulative songs also have a chorus Songs with two line stanzas edit One of the most well known examples of a cumulative song is the Christmas song The Twelve Days of Christmas which uses a two line stanza where the second line is cumulative as follows On the first day of Christmas my true love sent or gave to me A partridge in a pear tree On the second day of Christmas my true love sent to me Two turtle doves and a partridge in a pear tree On the third day of Christmas my true love sent to me Three french hens two turtle doves and a partridge in a pear tree and so on until On the twelfth day of Christmas my true love sent to me Twelve drummers drumming eleven pipers piping ten lords a leaping nine ladies dancing eight maids a milking seven swans a swimming six geese a laying five gold en rings four calling birds three french hens two turtle doves and a partridge in a pear tree The first gift the partridge is always sung to a coda melody phrase For the first four verses the additional gifts are all sung to a repeated standard melodic phrase In the fifth verse a different melody with a change of tempo is introduced for the five gold en rings and from this point on the first five gifts are always sung to a set of varied melodic phrases with the partridge retaining its original coda phrase Thence forward the wording of each new gift is sung to the original standard melodic phrase before returning to the five gold en rings Songs with refrains edit In many songs an item is introduced in the first line of each stanza and extends the list in another line An example is The Barley Mow Roud 944 Here s good luck to the pint pot Good luck to the barley mow Jolly good luck to the pint pot Good luck to the barley mow Oh the pint pot half a pint gill pot half a gill quarter gill nipperkin and a round bowl Here s good luck good luck good luck to the barley mow The second verse substitutes a larger drink measure in the first line In the second line the new measure heads the list and is sung to the same musical phrase as pint pot Here s good luck to the quart pot Good luck to the barley mow Jolly good luck to the quart pot Good luck to the barley mow Oh the quart pot pint pot half a pint gill pot half a gill quarter gill nipperkin and a round bowl Here s good luck good luck good luck to the barley mow One version of the final line and refrain is Oh the company the brewer the drayer the slavey the daughter the landlady the landlord the barrel the half barrel the gallon the half gallon the quart pot pint pot half a pint gill pot half a gill quarter gill nipperkin and a round bowl Here s good luck good luck good luck to the barley mow Alan Lomax recorded Jack French singing The Barley Mow at the Blaxhall Ship a famous singing pub in Suffolk in 1953 This recording is available online at the Cultural Equity website 1 Songs with a chorus edit A chorus often with its own refrain may be added to the stanzas as in The Rattlin Bog Roud 129 Hi ho the rattlin bog The bog down in the valley o Hi ho the rattlin bog The bog down in the valley o 1 Now in the bog there was a tree A rare tree a rattlin tree The tree in the bog And the bog down in the valley o Hi ho the rattlin bog The bog down in the valley o Hi ho the rattlin bog The bog down in the valley o 2 And on that tree there was a branch A rare branch a rattlin branch The branch on the tree and the tree in the bog And the bog down in the valley o Hi ho the rattlin bog The bog down in the valley o Hi ho the rattlin bog The bog down in the valley o One version of the final line refrain is The feather on the wing and the wing on the bird and the bird on the nest and the nest on the twig and the twig on the branch and the branch on the tree and the tree in the bog And the bog down in the valley o Each phrase is sung to the same two note melody Hamish Henderson recorded William Sinclair Mitchell Agnes Mitchell and Agnes Mitchell singing The Rattling Bog in 1979 The recording is available on line on the Tobar an Dualchais Kist o Riches website 2 Jim Carroll and Pat McKenzie recorded Pat McNamara singing The Bog Down in the Valley in Kilshanny in 1975 The recording is available online on the Clare County Library website 3 Cumulative songs in languages other than English editYiddish folk music contains many prominent examples of cumulative songs including װא ס װעט זײ ן א ז משיח װעט קומען and מה אספ רה or What Will Happen When the Messiah Comes and Who Can Recall a Yiddish version of the Passover song Echad Mi Yodea 4 5 The Passover seder contains two Hebrew cumulative songs Echad Mi Yodea and Chad Gadya Song examples edit Father Abraham Had Many Sons The Twelve Days of Christmas The Barley Mow 6 Chad Gadya 5 Echad Mi Yodea 4 Alouette The Austrian Yodeler Once An Austrian Went Yodeling When I Build My House by Parachute Express Birthday Cake by Parachute Express 7 8 Children Go Where I Send Thee The Court of King Caractacus by Rolf Harris Don t Be Anything Less Than Anything You Can Be from the musical Snoopy Du Hast is partially cumulative it s a fairly popular German industrial song making its cumulative parts somewhat novel Eh Cumpari Getta Loada Toad from the musical A Year with Frog and Toad Grandmother s Farm by Hap Palmer on his album Witches Brew The Green Grass Grew All Around Green Grow the Rushes O Guerres de clocher by Quebec Redneck Bluegrass Project 9 The Herring Song or Herring s Heads The House at the Top of the Tree by They Might Be Giants on their album No I Bought Me a Cat known by various other titles such as My Cock Crew and Barnyard Song 8 I Am a Fine Musician from two episodes of the Dick Van Dyke Show I Have a Song to Sing O from Gilbert amp Sullivan s opera The Yeomen of the Guard Jouer dehors by Jerome 50 amp Julyan sung by Passe Partout 10 Katootje Dutch traditional sung by Wim Sonneveld in 1955 Langt ud i Skoven a traditional Danish folk song played by Dreamers Circus and DR BorneKoret on their album Langt ud i Skoven from 2022 Moshpit a St Dilon by Margaret Tracteur 11 Most Beautiful Leg of the Mallard sung by Henry Mitchelmore on The Voice of the People vol 07 The Music Man Must Be Santa a Christmas song popularized by Mitch Miller My Hand on My Head Some versions of Old King Cole Old McDonald Had a Farm 12 One Little Coyote by Riders in the Sky on their album Harmony Ranch 13 Pat the Cat by Don Spencer Prologue from Natasha Pierre amp The Great Comet of 1812 makes use of the format to familiarise the audience with the cast of the musical 14 The Rattlin Bog 15 16 Le reel alcalinisant by Quebec Redneck Bluegrass Project 17 Rig a Jig Jig The Schnitzelbank Song Song of Love from the musical Once Upon a Mattress 18 Star Trekkin a 1987 parody song by The Firm 19 There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly There s a Hole in the Bottom of the Sea 20 Today is Monday 21 22 White Pyjamas by Franciscus Henri Il Pulcino Pio and its various language versions Alla fiera dell est an Italian song by Angelo Branduardi and its English version Highdown Fair One Man Went To Mow Roud 143 is an example of a cumulative counting song To Kokoraki as sung by Donald Swann on Flanders and Swann s At the Drop of a Hat is a Greek counting song about animals Oh Sir Jasper is the opposite of a cumulative song in which words are successively omitted from the chorus each time it is sung 23 The Camping Song from the Noddy episode Twinkle Twinkle Little Goblins 24 Why We Build the Wall by Anais Mitchell La feria de Cepillin by the Mexican clown and singer Cepillin A benn dilun On Monday also known as Kokerikero a Breton folk counting song about animals Mountain People by Super Furry Animals Got No Beard by The Longest Johns A Velha a Fiar Brazilian folk songSee also editCumulative tale Announcer s test Round music The Complexity of SongsReferences edit Cultural Equity Research Centre http research culturalequity org rc b2 get audio detailed recording do recordingId 7625 Retrieved 2017 04 18 Tobar an Dualchais Kist o Riches Track ID 83348 http www tobarandualchais co uk track 83348 l en Retrieved 2017 04 18 Clare County Library Songs of Clare http www clarelibrary ie eolas coclare songs cmc bog down in valley pmcnamara htm Retrieved 2017 04 18 a b Maria Wirf Naro Martin B Fischer eds 2012 Translating Fictional Dialogue for Children and Young People Frank amp Timme GmbH p 25 ISBN 978 3 86596 467 0 a b Had Gadya Illustrated by Seymour Chwast Afterword by Rabbi Michael Strassfeld Macmillan Publishing Archived from the original on 2012 06 17 Retrieved 2014 07 07 Robert B Waltz David Engle eds Barley Mow The The Ballad Index Retrieved 2014 07 07 Reid Rob 1995 Children s Jukebox A Subject Guide to Musical Recordings and Programming Ideas for Songsters Ages One to Twelve American Library Association p 61 ISBN 9780838906507 a b Reid Robert 2007 Something Musical Happened at the Library Adding Song and Dance to Children s Story Programs American Library Association p 70 ISBN 9780838909423 Guerres de clocher Song Jouer dehors by Passe Partout Song Moshpit a St Dilon Song Roger deV Renwick 17 December 2001 Recentering Anglo American Folksong Sea Crabs and Wicked Youths Univ Press of Mississippi p 89 ISBN 978 1 57806 393 2 Cusic Don 2003 It s the Cowboy Way The Amazing True Adventures of Riders in the Sky University Press of Kentucky pp 166 167 ISBN 978 0 8131 2882 5 Malloy Dave Prologue Genius Retrieved 28 September 2016 Horseshoes amp Hand Grenades serve up refreshing jolt of Wisco grass 2 July 2017 The Celtic Jewish Connection 5 August 2009 Le reel alcalinisant Osera Peter Michael Functional Decomposition ESAP Computer Science University of Pennsylvania Kutner Jon February 10 2013 Star Trekkin The Firm A Hole in the Bottom of the Sea Publishers Weekly published June 2013 2013 04 29 Retrieved 2014 07 07 Today is Monday by Eric Carle Teachers Scholastic Scholastic Retrieved 2014 07 17 Nelsen Marjorie R Nelsen Parish Jan 2002 Peak with Books An Early Childhood Resource for Balanced Literacy Cengage Learning p 242 ISBN 9780766859487 A catchy cumulative song featuring a different food for each day of the week Oh Sir Jasper Hymns and Arias Archived from the original on 1 March 2015 Retrieved 4 July 2015 Noddy Song The Camping Song Hymns and Arias Archived from the original on 2000 12 17 Retrieved 2018 10 08 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cumulative song amp oldid 1218619904, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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