Buy
Double CD now using
Credit card or PayPal
or
Download tracks or two individual albums from
your favourite download provider
Greg's new double album, launched in Winton, Queensland, Winton’s
wisp of Banjo
Paterson Double Album is a showcase of
Banjo’s popular and not-so-well-known poems plus Waltzing
Matilda and more. It features Stewart Peters singing Australia’s most
famous song. Greg has also included his own original poem It’s Winton, eh? as an
introduction to this famous outback town, the birthplace of Waltzing Matilda.
Produced by Soundshed
Music, the double album contains 35 tracks
with Greg’s take on Banjo Paterson’s classic poems. It includes
Greg’s version of The Man From
Snowy River in 15 different accents, as well as a
straight version too! There's also the Spoonerised Waltzing
Matilda, or Maltzing Watilda.
There are poems from Henry Lawson, C J Dennis, Mary Gilmore and
Edward Harrington too, all linked to Waltzing Matilda and Banjo
Paterson.
The eternal popularity of Banjo Paterson’s poems shines through in
this collection.
Buy
Double CD now using Credit
card or PayPal
or
Download tracks or two individual albums from
your favourite download provider such as iTunes, Apple Music, Spotify or
(download from
CD Baby, prices in $US)
The Tracks
Volume 1
- It’s
Winton, Eh? (2:50) – A Gregory North original
poem about the famous outback town of Winton – birthplace
of Waltzing Matilda.
The town has so much to experience, even if the water’s not
the best!
- As
Long as Your Eyes are Blue (A
B
Paterson) (1:15) – Banjo Paterson’s love poem to his one-time
fiancée, Sarah Riley.
- Waltzing
Matilda (A
B
Paterson) (3:41) – The orignal version as written by Banjo
Paterson and Christina Macperson in the Winton area in the mid
1890s. Sung by Stewart Peters.
- Clancy
of The Overflow (A B Paterson) (2:44) – This is
the poem that brought Banjo to prominence as a poet in the
pages of The Bulletin.
- The
Man
From Ironbark (A B Paterson) (3:57) – This poem
tells what happened when a bushy from a place now called
Stuart Town, near Banjo’s birthplace around Orange NSW, came
to the big smoke of Sydney.
- The
Man
From Snowy River (A B Paterson) (6:37) – Banjo’s
most famous poem which made him one of the greatest authors in
Australian literature and one of the first celebrities of
popular culture.
- Come
By Chance (A B Paterson) (2:48) – A poem about a
real place in the Pilliga district of NSW.
- A
Bush Christening (A B Paterson) (2:56) – Strange
things happen in the outback. Because of the isolation,
sometimes things get put off, even important things like
christenings.
- In
the Droving Days (A B Paterson) (4:44) – The old
drover in this poem would surely have passed through the
Winton area. The description of the landscape is so vivid.
- The
Geebung Polo Club (A B Paterson) (3:19) – Banjo
was a skilled horseman and keen polo player but I wonder how
much of this poem is based on experience.
- The
Travelling Post Office (A B Paterson) (2:56) –
Communication in the outback has always been difficult but
sometimes amazing things happen. Even if one of the
correspondents can’t write.
- Mulga
Bill’s Bicycle (A B Paterson) (3:06) – An
adventure of another of Banjo’s bush characters and early
adopter of new technology.
-
It’s Grand (A B Paterson) (1:44) – Life in
Australia can be tough, especially during drought.
- The
Man
From Snowy River (A B Paterson – Greg’s
interpretaion) (7:51) – Australia’s best-known poem never
sounded like this! With 15 different accents, this classic
ballad is sure to provoke a giggle, a laugh, or a total
collapse! Often requested at Bush Poetry events it is becoming
a crowd favourite all over again.
- The
Daylight is Dying (A B Paterson) (1:54) – The
last poem in Paterson’s first book, The
Man From Snowy River and Other Verses.
Buy Double CD now using Credit card or PayPal
or
Download tracks or two individual albums from
your favourite download provider
such as iTunes (Volume 1), Apple Music, Spotify or
(download Volume 1 from CD Baby, prices in $US)
Volume 2
- Song
of the Artesian Water (A B Paterson) (4:52) – a
poem possibly inspired by Winton's artesian bore,
completed in 1895.
- Been
There Before (A B Paterson) (1:32) – the story
of a broke traveller visiting Walgett NSW.
- The
Lost Drink (A B Paterson) (1:23) – the elusive
hangover cure.
- The
Man Who Was Away (A B Paterson) (1:56) – a tale
of a widow's embarrassing interaction with a solicitor.
- How
the Favourite Beat Us (A B Paterson) (4:11) –
the story of a horse race and the lessons learnt.
- Lost
(A B Paterson) (3:00) – the moving story of an ill-fated
ride.
- Johnson’s
Antidote (A B Paterson) (5:18) – a snake bite
cure that didn't go so well.
- The
Last Parade (A B Paterson) (2:10) – inspired by
the plight of the Australian horses at the Boer War.
- The
Lay of the Motor Car (A B Paterson) (1:17) –
back when they were the new fad!
- The
Old Australian Ways (A B Paterson) (2:58) –
comparing the ways of English folk to our old Australian
ways.
- A
Mountain Station (A B Paterson) (2:01) – a
prophesy about Banjo's property near Yass in NSW.
- Song
of the Wheat (A B Paterson) (2:56) – a tribute
to the staple crop .
- We’re
All Australians Now (A B Paterson) (2:31) –
Banjo's encouragement to the soldiers in World War I.
- Moving
On (A B Paterson) (0:43) – from his wartime
experience.
- A
Dog’s Mistake (A B Paterson) (1:36) –from his
book for children.
- Morgan
(Edward Harrington) (3:30) – the story of the notorious
bushranger that held up the home of one of the families
later involved in the creation of Waltzing Matilda.
- Freedom
on the Wallaby (Henry Lawson) (1:57) – a
strongly worded challenge to authority which may have
influenced our unofficial anthem.
- The
Swagman (C J Dennis) (2:32) – a look at one of
the characters in the famous song.
- No
Foe Shall Gather Our Harvest (Mary Gilmore)
(2:21) – a patriotic call to arms during war from the
poet on the other side of the ten dollar note.
- Maltzing
Watilda (A B Paterson, adapted from 1903 Marie
Cowan arrangement for Billy Tea) (2:20) – a Spoonersied
version ... with apologies to Banjo.
Buy Double CD
now using Credit card
or PayPal
or
Download tracks or two individual albums
from your favourite download provider such as iTunes (Volume 2), Apple Music, Spotify or
(download Volume 2 from CD Baby, prices in $US)
|