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Folk Songs To Celebrate Spring

Rob Glover
/
Flickr
Maddy Prior performing at the 2016 Cropredy Folk Festival in Oxfordshire, England.

May brings warm weather and blooming flowers here in the northern hemisphere. In folk songs, it also brings courtship. Countless traditional ballads in the English language (and other languages as well) begin by specifying that the action takes place in May. Some end happily, some not. Here are a few of them.

Maddy Prior - Staines Morris

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mWAEF23wN9A

Maddy Prior is probably best known as the lead singer of the seminal English folk-rock band Steeleye Span. Here she sings a song about the English custom of dancing around the maypole and the attendant shenanigans.

The lyrics have a known author: 17th-century comic actor Robert Cox published them in 1656 as “The Maypole Song." It’s not known what tune Cox used, though. It wasn’t until the 19th century that the words were joined up with a traditional dance tune called “Staines Morris.”

Charlie Waller and the Country Gentlemen - One Morning in May

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PKE8YcF5wYM

Bluegrass greats The Country Gentlemen sing this song of a chance meeting and courtship by music. The story ends in betrayal. The man is married, and he’s going back to his wife. This song has roots in the British Isles, but several versions have been collected in America as well. In some versions, the soldier is a cowboy, with a wife in Arizona.

Ariko - Cest dans le mois de mai

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fk3ht6ifVws

Ariko is a family band from Lafontaine, Ontario, fronted by the three Lafaive sisters, with their parents occasionally joining in as a rhythm section. The lyrics say “it’s in the month of May that the girls are beautiful, and the men all change their lovers. But I won’t change mine, because she’s too beautiful.”

Robin and Linda Williams - Across the Blue Mountains

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uids7HtWG4U

Here’s a song of courtship and intrigue. This time, we know from the start that the man is married, and so does the object of his affections. Despite her mother’s warnings, she agrees to go with him, and they ride off together, perhaps to live happily ever after?

Noel Lenaghan - Heather Down the Moor

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c7bJd60VEw8

Irishman Noel Lenaghan sings this song of dalliance in May, accompanied by Elizabeth Nicholson on harp and Bob Sopor on bouzouki. Interestingly, in this song it’s the man who wants to settle down, but the woman leaves without telling him her name.

Karen Impola is the host of IPR's The Folk Tree