Over and over I come back to the music that pirates in the
Golden Age would have heard and sung. So much music has come and gone since
1715 that it’s hard for us to get a handle on what music was like back then.
We tend to concentrate on sea shanties, but most of the
shanties we know are products of the 18th century. I believe that
the influx of sailors of African origin into European shipping changed sea-songs
permanently. Shanties, I think, were influenced strongly by the African
tradition of call-and response song structure. (I also believe that this African
structure strongly influenced the creation of the military “jody” or call-and-response
marching cadence. But that’s a discussion for another time.”)
Music was everywhere in the early 1700’s. People did not
wait until they were “professional quality” before singing or playing and instrument
in public. Anyone who Often could scrape a song out on a fiddle or toot a horn
would do so. People sang while they worked. People danced when they were happy.
Often songs educated their listeners. In the absence of
history classes, the ballads about Robin Hood provided a glimpse of English
history. We know they inspired Sam Bellamy and his crews.
So here are a few 17th century songs. (I don’t
note 18th century songs, since so many of them date from long after
the Age of Pirates.)
My favorite of the old songs remains “The Fair Maid of
Amsterdam” also called “A-Rovin’.” This is a Really Old Song. The earlies
records of it come from 1608, and it was not a new song then. This means that
it was a song sung not only by Blackbeard, but by Avery, and even by Sir Frances
Drake, king of the Elizabethan Sea Dogs. And yet we can listen to it easily, with
no more than the click of a button.
Next, I’m going to share a slightly more recent song. Many
English ballads were collected by Francis James Child during the second half of
the 19th century. Their lyrics and Child's studies of them were published as
the 2,500-page book called The English
and Scottish Popular Ballads. The tunes of most of the ballads were
collected and published by Bertrand Harris Bronson in and around the 1960s.
Scholarly work like this has enabled us to enjoy these old
songs. I am sharing a popular Robin Hood ballad from about 1640. If you enjoy
it, other songs from the Child Ballads are available on YouTube.
And our last song is younger yet. “Over the Hills and Far
Away” goes back far enough that we aren’t sure of its origins, but this version
was produced for a play in 1706, right in the middle of our time period. I also
like the sentiment, one of running away from cares and seeking adventure. (OK,
maybe I don’t believe in dumping spouses and children. But
Our 'prentice Tom may now refuse
To wipe his scoundrel master's shoes
Sounds like the road to piracy, and all in a good cause.
There you go. A bit of research will lead you to yet more songs and ballads... The search gets easier every day.