Aquila Children's Magazine AQUILA Magazine Best Bits | Page 60

AQUILA HQ is a flying-fish flap from sung during the Victorian era, a period AQUILA: Did pirates sing sea shanties the English Channel, so that known for being more than a little and if so, were they the same? obviously means there is nothing strait-laced and prudish (some historians Jowan: Nobody knows if pirates sang sea we love more than a good ol’ sea shanties, but I like to think they did. We were they invented? And why are think even the word ‘trousers’ was frowned upon!) . At this time the British upper classes weren’t keen on wild at least the 15th century onwards. For all they so rude? We decided to say outbursts of emotion. There were the meticulous detail that went into ‘Ahoy’ to Jowan Collier, a shanty developments during this time to recording the crew and the cargo, no one expert from the British Library’s challenge this strict hierarchy, but seems to have written down what was Sound Archives, to find out more. largely Victorian society stuck to a rigid sung on board. shanty, but what are they? Why have a record that sailors sang at sea from class system. In contrast, sea shanties AQUILA: What exactly are sea shanties and what are they used for? Jowan: Sea shanties are work songs. They were popular aboard British vessels from around the middle of the 19th century to the beginning of the 20th century. Sea shanties usually have a lead singer known as a shantyman, who is in charge of singing the verses. The rest of the ship’s crew chimes in on were bawdy, rude, salacious outbursts of Pirates had their heyday around the 18th emotion, tales full of miserable working century, so they may have sung what we conditions, drunken sailors and wives now call forebitters, recreational songs left alone on shore. They were tough that were sung in taverns, after the songs for tough times. captain and crew had come ashore. These were usually single, unaccompanied Shanties were passed from sailor to voices (with the same rude content). sailor through the oral tradition. Very Officers of the Royal Navy would not have few were written down by sailors approved! themselves. Instead, early folk-song collectors like Percy Grainger and Cecil AQUILA: Humans seem drawn to using Sharp recorded many of the shanties on music to help with work – Disney’s Snow voice. their behalf a little later on. This could White whistled while she worked. Tidy suggest that a number of the sailors up songs are used in schools and I The songs were used to help co- were illiterate, or that writing the words always have a loud radio blasting when down could get them into trouble with (if) I wash up. Why do you think music the people they were probably working helps us work? for. Jowan: Music helps some of us organise the chorus. The shantyman would have been chosen due to his strong singing ordinate much of the manual labour that needed to be done around the ship. For hard jobs, like hoisting the sail, the chorus comes at the end of every line. This makes sure the sailors all pull the rope at once. Each line between gives them time to catch their breath. Because they were meant to accompany work, sea shanties are traditionally sung a cappella (without any instruments). Some modern shanty groups now add our efforts. It gives parameters to our AQUILA: Why did these work songs zipping thoughts. Housework, for stop being sung on board? example, is solitary and repetitive. A tune Jowan: Gradually older wind-powered gives my brain something to latch onto. ships started being replaced by newer Singing together gives you a much models fitted with new technologies, greater sense of purpose and can bring a such as steam. With less heavy work to team together. do, the need for sea shanties died out. their own instrumental arrangements. The tradition kept on going until the AQUILA: How do sea songs differ from 1920s. Eventually, in the 1950s, the last sea shanties? AQUILA: What else can sea shanties shantyman, a chap called Stan Hugill, Jowan: Sea shanties have been ashore for wrote down all the songs he could the past one hundred years or so, they remember and taught them to younger, have become mixed with whaling songs, if more land-based, folks. sea-related songs and forebitters – the tell us about the lives of the sailors that sung them? Jowan: These songs were most widely