Greensleeves

Greensleeves is a traditional English folk song (or tune), basically a ground of the form called a romanesca; the widely-believed legend is that it was composed by King Henry VIII (1491 - 1547). It likely circulated in manuscript, as most social music did, long before it was printed. A tune by this name was registered at the London Stationer's Company in 1580 as "A New Northern Dittye of the Lady Greene Sleeves." No copy of that printing is known. It appears in the surviving A Handful of Pleasant Delights (1584) as "A New Courtly Sonnet of the Lady Green Sleeves. To the new tune of Green sleeves." Whether this suggests that an old tune of "Greensleeves" was in circulation, or which one our familiar tune is, remain mooted. In Shakespeare's The Merry Wives of Windsor, written around 1602, the character Mistress Ford refers twice without any explanation to "the tune of 'Green Sleeves'", but the best known reference, also from The Merry Wives of Windsor, has Falstaff exclaim:
Let the sky rain potatoes! Let it thunder to the tune of 'Greensleeves'!
All of these allusions suggest that the song was well known at that time. "Greensleeves" has inspired a number of derivative works. The British composer Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958) composed a Falstaff opera, Sir John in Love (1935), from which Ralph Greaves adapted a Fantasia on "Greensleeves." Its slow tempo has inspired modern languishing renditions. The Christmas carol "What Child is This?" by William Chatterton Dix (1837-1865) used the melody of "Greensleeves" (Bb Dieu in French). The traditional lyrics of "Greensleeves" as a conventional lover's lament has many versions, often varying simply in the syllabic density. The first printed version begins:
   
Alas my loue, ye do me wrong,
to cast me off discurteously:
And I haue loued you so long
Delighting in your companie.
Greensleeues was all my ioy,
Greensleeues was my delight:
Greensleeues was my heart of gold,
And who but Ladie Greensleeues.
Many versions use updated grammar, or a mix. Here is the same verse in a sparser version:
Alas, my love, you do me wrong
To cast me out discourteously,
For I have loved you for so long,
Delighting in your company.
During a "Stump the Band" segment on The Tonight Show starring Johnny Carson, an audience member sung a ditty called "Green Stamps" (about a grocery clerk, if memory serves) to that tune. The refrain began, "Green Stamps were all she gave . . ." Leonard Cohen paraphrased "Greensleeves" in his 1974 song "Leaving Green Sleeves" (off the album New Skin for the Old Ceremony).

External link

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
olive backed oriole
norwegian institute of marine research
iwin.com
figbird
viologen
next game, inc.
dairy farm
particle in a ring
loughborough endowed schools
list of euroregions
thomas burton
ian page
electronic road pricing
game development studio
busy wait
peace one day
canary island pine
carolina wren
open services architecture
osa
color histogram
forrest towns
blue (magazine)
1652 in science
hkr international limited
gordie howe hat trick
limehouse link tunnel
holidays in india
sea pen
typosquatting
this left feels right
full sail
saint brieuc
robot dreams
martin de porres
kevin sheedy
mamba
flag of cayman islands
coat of arms of the cayman islands
mckeeva bush
hawthorne effect
bruce dinwiddy
pound hill, crawley
maximum rocknroll