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Posted by: Fusive Monday, February 13, 2006
Eric Bogle (born September 23, 1944) is a Scottish-born Australian singer and songwriter. He was born in Peebles, Scotland, and emigrated to Australia in 1969. He currently resides near Adelaide, South Australia. Perhaps his best-known song, written in 1972, is "And The Band Played Waltzing Matilda", a haunting evocation of the ANZAC experience fighting in the Battle of Gallipoli; it has also been interpreted as a reaction to the Vietnam war.

Eric Bogle
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Eric Bogle (born September 23, 1944) is a Scottish-born Australian singer and songwriter. He was born in Peebles, Scotland, and emigrated to Australia in 1969. He currently resides near Adelaide, South Australia. Perhaps his best-known song, written in 1972, is "And The Band Played Waltzing Matilda", a haunting evocation of the ANZAC experience fighting in the Battle of Gallipoli; it has also been interpreted as a reaction to the Vietnam war.

His songs cover a wide range, including bright comic songs, satires ("I Hate Wogs"), protest songs and other serious considerations of the human condition. Some idea of the breadth of his work can be gained from the fact that another of his well-known songs is "The Aussie Bar-B-Q", a cheerful ditty about a completely different Australian institution.

In a similar vein to "And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda", his song "No Man's Land" refers to the old Scots song "Flowers of the Forest" being played over the grave of a World War I soldier. (Bogle is also on record as calling the song "The Green Fields of France", and it has sometimes been covered as "Flowers of the Forest".)

On the lighter end of the scale, other well-known songs include two homages to departed pets, "Little Gomez" and "Nobody's Moggy Now", and his homage/diatribe to his folk music fans, "Do You Know Any Dylan?".

Many of his songs have been extensively covered by other artists, particularly those in an anti-war vein. "And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda" and "No Man's Land" both gained fame in versions by June Tabor and The Clancy Brothers. "And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda" was covered by John McDermott and The Pogues, and "All the Fine Young Men" was recorded by De Dannan. Recently, the Dropkick Murphys covered "The Green Fields of France.""

 

  

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Re: Eric Bogle    By Anonymous on Monday, April 10, 2006
As a lover of folk music since my early teens, Baez, Corries, Dylan, Fisher, Imlach, Jansch, Paxton etc. I revel in being able to return to my roots. Eric Bogle epitomises all of my dreams of people being together and forgetting religion and race. True folk music lovers have always had one thing in common - the love of humanity and music.

Many are the nights that I spent at the Elphinstone hotel in Biggar, Lanarkshire in the late 60s when we substituted Protestant terms for Irish Rebel terms in our folk music and vice versa. We had many great Hootenannies and always ended the evenings in an admiration for our respective views. We had a ball! We loved songs like The Cruel War, Killiecrankie, Springhill Mining Disaster, I'am a Rover, Teach Your Children and so many more I can't mention lest I hog this space.

Although I knew the name Eric Bogle, I was not aware of his huge contribution to the world of folk music until some fifteen years ago when I mourned the death of Roy Williamson of the Corries. Since that time I have enjoyed some of the best music ever to be performed by a Scottish artist.

No Man's Land is the most poignant song ever to describe the reality of the First World War and the tune and words must stick in the minds of those who have an ear and love for music.

For me, Eric's Somewhere in America displays the true charachter of an individual who left his native land in pursuit of a goal knowing that he would hurt someone along the way. He left his mum Nancy in Peebles in 1969 to explore the world and realise his true vocation. I wish that I had possessed the courage to do likewise a few years later.

My only wish now is to attend the Eric appearances at Peebles and Biggar in June and August 2006 and I would be greatly honoured if he would allow me to join him in one verse of Somewhere in America.

A Lanarkshire lass who was born in Lanark in 1950 and sang and played guitar in the folk scene in the 1960s. Never as good as Barbara Dickson, but not too bad.

Grizel Robertson



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