Richard Thompson - Blackleg Miner download song

  • Artist: Richard Thompson
  • Song: Blackleg Miner
  • Genre: Pop
  • Length: 03:25
  • Size: 6.4MB
  • Bitrate: 256Kbps
  • Date:
  • Upload by: Kirill
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Download Richard Thompson - Blackleg Miner

Top songs Richard Thompson

# Song Bitrate Length
1 Richard Thompson - A Heart Needs A Home 320 04:08
2 Richard Thompson - Dad's Gonna Kill Me 160 06:32
3 Richard Thompson - Oops! I Did It Again 320 03:36
4 Richard Thompson - Fire In The Engine Room 256 03:46
5 Richard Thompson - I Ain't Going To Drag My Feet No More 160 05:19
6 Richard Thompson - It Won't Be Long 192 02:28
7 Richard Thompson - Skull And Cross Bones 192 04:02
8 Richard Thompson - Kiss 160 03:54
9 Richard Thompson - Nearly In Love 320 04:20

Comments

Mitzzle

2020-11-28 03:23:05 | Profile
Actually the first time I heard this song was on a programme on the BBC early on a Saturday morning. The programme was for kids and used the song to try to explain the strikes and bitterness that came from them. The song stuck in my head till I heard RT dong this.

Лео Леон

2020-07-19 08:58:25 | Profile
saw steeleye play this in the midst of the miners strike against thatcher. I defy anyone who was there to tell me folk music has no relevance!

Ej MoreG

2019-08-20 08:18:50 | Profile
Great stuff and that "1000 years of Popular music" should be on the school crariculam

DamnedFromHell

2019-07-14 13:52:31 | Profile
In "The Scab", Jack London famously wrote that "After God had finished the rattlesnake, the toad, and the vampire, he had some awful substance left with which he made a scab. A scab is a two-legged animal with a corkscrew soul, a water brain, a combination backbone of jelly and glue. Where others have hearts, he carries a tumor of rotten principles. When a scab comes down the street, men turn their backs and angels weep in heaven, and the devil shuts the gates of hell to keep him out..."

pizzabaecker123

2019-07-10 07:48:01 | Profile
The song originated in County Durham, England, the locations of Seaton-Delaval and Seghill are mentioned as are gruesome punishments for the strike-breaking miner at those places.The song was written in Northumbrian dialect, perhaps as far back as 1844 but there have been many strikes since then.A hundred years later it was sung on the picket lines in the strike of 1984-85.BTW: The Seaton Delavel mine closed in 1960 and Seghill in 1965 over a century after the song is supposed to have appeared.

RecordReserve

2019-06-29 09:47:19 | Profile
actually, i agree with you. folk music is always limited in school curricula and usually to stuff that nobody could possibly really like. and it puts people off folk music for life.

g3rrar1

2019-06-27 06:09:00 | Profile
Anyone else think this sounds a bit like Galway girl...

Leif Retzer

2019-06-26 16:06:52 | Profile
Trouble with folk singers is that they put on folky accents & ruin a good song.

Matt Canuto

2019-06-26 07:36:18 | Profile
Glück auf! Greetings to all Miners. A special thanks to all the significant others of the brave men. You keep them grounded - or better "uplifted"

Gaby Mancari

2019-06-25 16:22:40 | Profile
I worked in mines in Northumberland between 1968 and 1972. The Seghill mine headgear was still in place at that time, although the mine had closed. I sometimes perform this song myself.

XlebenverbotenX

2019-06-23 23:31:05 | Profile
Richard Thompson makes me smile and want to cry....he is amazing!

Alfredo Iceman

2019-06-22 09:33:28 | Profile
Fraternal greetings from an ex Durham coal miner. workers of all lands unite.

софия САИД

2019-06-20 13:26:04 | Profile
Steeleye Span did a great version of this song way way back on their “Hark the Village Wait” album. The album they recorded with Gay and Terry Woods. Terry had earlier played with “Sweeney’s Men” and later went on to join “The Pogues”.