The Sidewalks of New York (1894)

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  • Опубликовано: 6 фев 2018
  • A waltz song and chorus that identifies the big apple.
    Lyrics:
    1. Down in front of Casey's
    Old brown wooden stoop
    On a summer's evening
    We formed a merry group
    Boys and girls together
    We would sing and waltz
    While the "Ginnie" played the organ
    On the sidewalks of New York
    Chorus:
    East side, west side, all around the town
    The tots sang "ring a rosie"
    "London Bridge is falling down"
    Boys and girls together
    Me and Mamie Rorke
    Tripped the light fantastic
    On the sidewalks of New York
    2. That's where Johnny Casey
    And little Jimmy Crowe
    With Jakey Krause the baker
    Who always had the dough
    Pretty Nellie Shannon
    With a dude as light as cork
    First picked up the waltz step
    On the sidewalks of New York
    3. Things have changed since those times
    Some are up in "G"
    Others they are on the hog
    But they all feel just like me
    They would part with all they've got
    Could they but once more walk
    With their best girl and have a twirl
    On the sidewalks of New York
    ----------------------------------------------
    words and music by Chas. B. Lawlor and James W. Blake
    published by Howley Haviland & Co.
    A small-time vaudevillian, Charles Lawlor had often watched children dancing on the sidewalks. He met up with James Blake, another vaudevillian, in a hat store. On Blake's block when he was a kid, everyone was Irish. They developed these lyrics that provide an idealized view of NYC neighborhoods in the 1890s. They were paid $5000 for the song by a publisher. Lawlor died penniless in 1925. Blake went blind, was penniless and performing in obscurity by 1934. He died in 1935. There is a companion song called The Streets of the Crowded City.
    sung by sheet music singer, Fred Feild
    piano according to the sheet music
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Get the sheet music and MIDI at:
    www.sheetmusicsinger.com/the-...
  • ВидеоклипыВидеоклипы

Комментарии • 79

  • @wetarez
    @wetarez Год назад +9

    Written the year my grandfather was born on the lower east side. so nice to find this.

  • @iankilfoil6428
    @iankilfoil6428 3 года назад +30

    My grandma had a music box that played this (she was born in NYC in 1887), I loved it and played it all the time when I was very young

    • @virginiaordaya
      @virginiaordaya 4 месяца назад

      My grandmother (born 1919) who raised me gave me a little pillow with a wind-up music box inside with this song and I would fall asleep with it. I miss her so much.

  • @stevekundzala676
    @stevekundzala676 5 месяцев назад +4

    Kids LOVE simple songs like this!

    • @Quacktivate
      @Quacktivate 3 месяца назад

      This type of music used to be mostly listened to by adults

  • @janettediazphotos
    @janettediazphotos 4 года назад +31

    It's so cool you bring old music back to life.

  • @bidigitals
    @bidigitals 3 года назад +14

    What a wonderful singalong and memory of singing this some sixty years ago. Thank you SO much! Really moved in the moment. Great things to you!

  • @jaein7779
    @jaein7779 4 года назад +7

    God Bless Al Smith. May God always embrace thee for thy good works.

  • @Papin47
    @Papin47 Месяц назад +1

    A Treasure trove of the good stuff. Thank you S.M.S. Had to subscribe!💙

  • @charlesmangum3108
    @charlesmangum3108 Год назад +5

    I learned something new. I knew the chorus, but I did not know, or forgot, it was a whole song. Love it.

  • @iammissiemarie4302
    @iammissiemarie4302 5 месяцев назад +1

    I just finished watching a George Carlin special and this song was playing without the words. A core memory was unlocked and I started singing it. I learned this in the late 80s from my third grade music teacher. I knew it was an old song but here I am now, surprised at how old it actually is! I got weird looks from my hubby as I was singing it. Lol

  • @benjaminclasper3066
    @benjaminclasper3066 Год назад +2

    It’s a beautiful little ditty.

  • @JosephZygnerski
    @JosephZygnerski 3 года назад +6

    My grandmother used to sing the chorus to my mother (with the chorus of Daisy Bell added on to the end) and my mother sang it to me. So interesting to be in an age where we can find these songs again.

    • @iankilfoil6428
      @iankilfoil6428 3 года назад

      My grandma had a music box that played this song

  • @Mikeyboy609
    @Mikeyboy609 3 года назад +2

    i remember when i was on my great grandmothers knee and she would sing this to me.....:)

  • @robertorourke2358
    @robertorourke2358 4 года назад +8

    This song mentions waltzing and is in a waltz rhythm, but can you imagine waltzing to it? I finally figured out why: it was originally sung at a tempo suitable for waltzing. That's appropriate, since this is a nostalgic song about a past New York, not a celebration of New York now.

  • @zoeiiseda246
    @zoeiiseda246 Год назад +2

    This is awesome. I never heard the entire song.

  • @miamitequesta-yoruba6899
    @miamitequesta-yoruba6899 2 года назад +2

    Ohh this is the tune I heard in the John Phillip Sousa (1952) movie

  • @JJDSports2012
    @JJDSports2012 6 лет назад +7

    Really appreciate you including the verses so often. Those add much to the historicity and beauty of the songs.

    • @sheetmusicsinger9651
      @sheetmusicsinger9651  6 лет назад +4

      Yes, there are many reasons that the verses got lost. One of the first was The Illustrated Song. Glass slides were projected from a lantern in theaters and the audience could sing the latest choruses. But I feel strongly that the entire song as written is a unit. The verses give the setting for the chorus (refrain). I always do the whole song and put the full lyrics in the description. You can sing many of these yourself over at the blog Sheet Music Singer .com

    • @bidigitals
      @bidigitals 3 года назад

      I'll second that!

  • @989787777778787
    @989787777778787 5 лет назад +15

    This music speaks life, back then music was meant for the life of people. Not today, the music of today only speaks death into existence mocking the very foundation of life as we desperately need. Music is not what it use to be sadly, and it only will change when Heaven comes back. Amen.

  • @GCBBQ
    @GCBBQ 4 месяца назад +1

    This is a song that is referenced in alot of old NY literature and older movies I've seen. I've always wondered what it sounded like and know I know lol TY

  • @isaaccollins3835
    @isaaccollins3835 Год назад +1

    i love the song and love old music

  • @Limba777
    @Limba777 3 года назад +2

    This makes me cry

  • @lolanola7974
    @lolanola7974 2 года назад +1

    We grew up singing the chorus while we were playing potsy and kick the can. Forgot the rest of the words long ago. Thanks for bringing it back!!

  • @benjaminclasper3066
    @benjaminclasper3066 Год назад +3

    The bit I always love is the intro where it has the little bit and it does a little ditty start which is so conflicting and beautiful and lovely. And the pitch and key scale it’s in is just fine for this song and it’s very relaxing I think it’s today in sort of a Victorian New York American style music I think.

  • @sharonholdren7588
    @sharonholdren7588 2 года назад +1

    That was a great memory.

  • @benjaminclasper3066
    @benjaminclasper3066 Год назад +1

    And an old favourite but a goldie too.

  • @LeotheTiger1234
    @LeotheTiger1234 10 месяцев назад +1

    I knew just the chorus of this before seeing this thanks to the animatronic band Daniel and the Dixie Diggers. I thank you for teaching me the verses to this.

  • @Mountchoirboy
    @Mountchoirboy 4 года назад +5

    Saw a video about this song and it was so sweet. I wish we'd sing it at New Years eve. The video traced the exact people this song was written for and about. "Baker always had the dough" corny but way sweet!

    • @ronaldfazekas6492
      @ronaldfazekas6492 4 года назад

      There was an old Abbott and Costello routine in which Bud is trying to get Lou to get a job as a baker "because bakers get dough to loaf!"

    • @scienz
      @scienz 2 года назад

      link to the video! please. :-)

  • @baribach8701
    @baribach8701 4 месяца назад +1

    For Annie Clark and Danny O'Connell and New York City

  • @davidnollmusic363
    @davidnollmusic363 3 года назад +2

    Thanks so much!

  • @ronaldfazekas6492
    @ronaldfazekas6492 4 года назад +6

    Until recently, I had (as did most of us) thought the name was "Mamie O'Rourke"

    • @teresamanley7154
      @teresamanley7154 3 года назад

      in the original song it was....somehow it got "Americanized" as most things back then did....it WAS originally Mamie O'Rourke.....a true Irish lass.

    • @teresamanley7154
      @teresamanley7154 3 года назад

      @David Meller not maybe.....that was the original name of the girl.

    • @ronaldfazekas6492
      @ronaldfazekas6492 3 года назад

      @@teresamanley7154 I was just taking it from the lyrics printed on the piano roll shown

  • @user-so6tf4se5v
    @user-so6tf4se5v 9 дней назад +1

    MERRY MELODIES Opening Title

  • @royst.george7328
    @royst.george7328 3 года назад +1

    Nice!

  • @bidigitals
    @bidigitals 3 года назад +6

    PS: After all these decades, no, let's argue: It's Mamie O'Rourke, I say, and further supported by its Irishness, no? :-) Cheers. You're such a mentsch!

  • @bill291212
    @bill291212 4 года назад +6

    I was just reminded of this song, they disgraced the Belmont Stakes when they stopped playing this after the race. With the coronavirus Belmont they should have played it again!

    • @robertorourke2358
      @robertorourke2358 4 года назад +1

      I agree on your point, but I may be biased. If they do it this way, those whose knowledge of the song comes from the Belmont will be confused.

  • @karengray2003
    @karengray2003 4 года назад +1

    I like it :)

  • @caroldefender4144
    @caroldefender4144 2 года назад +4

    Great song! Sometimes I sing it as "The Sidewalks of Frankfurt", about the children from my current favorite book, Struwwelpeter.

  • @RoccoFirenze
    @RoccoFirenze 4 года назад +3

    THE DEUCE!

  • @paulinetrivago.7540
    @paulinetrivago.7540 4 года назад

    You forgot to put this song in the chronological playlist for 1890-1894

  • @gardenglory6624
    @gardenglory6624 3 года назад +6

    Its a lovely lovely song....I've been to New York its a humbling place with all the history that has happened there. Incredible. I love this song, takes you back in time (not to a gentler time necessarily but it does time warp you back in time) Lovely. Its a piece of history, glad I got to listen to it, especially after watching the entire documentary of how this song came to be.
    You can watch that documentary on the link down below.
    ruclips.net/video/hXM-g-UAJiA/видео.html

  • @johnjennings2347
    @johnjennings2347 Год назад +1

    Very good. Is it London Bridgeis or London bridge is falling down.

  • @sussmanbern
    @sussmanbern 4 года назад +7

    I assume that "up in G" means 'up in God's Heaven" (or maybe it means a prison). "Ginny played the organ" is not Jenny but Guinea, with a hard G, an epithet for an Italian person.

    • @sheetmusicsinger9651
      @sheetmusicsinger9651  4 года назад +1

      Up in G might be gold, G for grands, or money. They were rich.

    • @robertorourke2358
      @robertorourke2358 4 года назад +1

      How about "on the hog"? I take a proprietary interest in this song.
      Robert B. O'Rourke

    • @iankilfoil6428
      @iankilfoil6428 3 года назад +1

      @@robertorourke2358 I believe that it means to be rich, my grandparents used to use the term "living high on the hog", which meant someone was very rich

    • @bernardbrenner6088
      @bernardbrenner6088 2 года назад

      When it says The "Ginnie" played the organ, it means that he was an organ grinder.

  • @RussGon
    @RussGon 6 лет назад

    I enjoy your recordings very much. Years ago I had a recording of this song by the Robert Cormier Singers. According to the liner notes, they were unable to find out what was meant by "up in 'G'". Do you know what it means? Thanks.

    • @sheetmusicsinger9651
      @sheetmusicsinger9651  6 лет назад +1

      Great to have you on board. I've always thought "up in G" meant "well off financially". Perhaps G stands for Grands, thousands of dollars. Then "on the Hog" might mean so poor they had to "eat pork"? It has something to do with possessions as both are willing to part with all they've got later in the verse.

    • @RussGon
      @RussGon 6 лет назад +1

      Thanks, that makes sense to me. I somehow knew you’d have a logical answer. Your approach to these songs are truly wonderful. You bring to them to life once again, by letting the songs speak for themselves, just as written, but still inject your own musical talent to put them across. Rare for any musician, but indispensable for a scholar. Your work is greatly appreciated - I’ve been singing “Me and Mamie O’Rourke” my whole life and now I know it’s wrong!

    • @sheetmusicsinger9651
      @sheetmusicsinger9651  6 лет назад +1

      Yes, these old sheet music songs certainly speak for themselves. This is honest history. Let's let them sing out.

    • @ac2496
      @ac2496 4 года назад

      Someone else said it might be jail, as gaol means jail in Gaelic. Meanwhile the others are riding hog...

    • @PotterPossum1989
      @PotterPossum1989 Год назад

      Up in Glory, maybe, up in Heaven. Reliving that memory may be sweeter than Heaven for them.

  • @lennybuttz2162
    @lennybuttz2162 5 лет назад +4

    When we sang this song we sang it much faster. It's ginny not Jenny, a ginny was a carriage horse.

    • @Rancho91362
      @Rancho91362 4 года назад +1

      "Ginnie" was slang for an Italian.

    • @bernardwilson9519
      @bernardwilson9519 4 года назад +5

      Although spelled “Ginnie,” the intent was to have it mean “Guinea,” a street term of that era for an Italian. It’s pronounced with a hard G. The “Guinea” was playing an organ in the song, with that organ being a hardy-gurdy (Google it)!

  • @ThinkingSk3ptically
    @ThinkingSk3ptically 6 лет назад +1

    Fred, may I ask you where you are from? (I'm NOT asking the precise location, the city/town, of course NOT!) Just the state or region... I've noticed you distinguish 'whine' and 'wine'...so, I think you're from the South! Am I correct? :-)

  • @christopher3386
    @christopher3386 2 года назад +1

    It's "New Yaaaawwwwk" ;-)

  • @IoanaNoemyToma
    @IoanaNoemyToma 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thank u! Veto uebertox! Stop the hoax!

  • @robertorourke2358
    @robertorourke2358 4 года назад

    Is this "Tempo di valse"?

    • @DavidBurgessMechanicalMusic
      @DavidBurgessMechanicalMusic 2 года назад

      Sidewalks Of New York is the song.

    • @robertorourke2358
      @robertorourke2358 2 года назад

      @@DavidBurgessMechanicalMusic Yes, I know. I take note of songs with my surname. I was asking if it was being performed in waltz tempo.

    • @DavidBurgessMechanicalMusic
      @DavidBurgessMechanicalMusic 2 года назад

      @@robertorourke2358 Ah, that sorta confused me since I thought you were asking for the title. Oh well.

  • @OGRE_HATES_NERDS
    @OGRE_HATES_NERDS 3 года назад +2

    george carlin complaints and greivances