List of songs about Liverpool
Appearance
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (April 2018) |
This is a list of songs referencing the city of Liverpool, England:
- "100 Miles to Liverpool" - Lindisfarne
- "Blow the Man Down" - traditional sea shanty
- "Capaldi’s Cafe" - Deaf School[1]
- "Does This Train Stop on Merseyside?" - Amsterdam
- "Faulkner and Hope" - Deaf School
- "Fearless" - Pink Floyd
- "Ferry Cross the Mersey" - Gerry & the Pacemakers
- "Go to Sea Once More" - traditional sea shanty[2]
- "Going Down to Liverpool" - The Bangles
- "Heart As Big As Liverpool" - The Mighty WAH!
- "I Wish I Was Back In Liverpool" - The Dubliners
- "In My Liverpool Home" - Peter McGovern, The Scaffold, The Spinners
- "In Liverpool" - Suzanne Vega
- "Kardomah Cafe" - The Cherry Boys
- "Leaving of Liverpool" - traditional folk song, performed by The Pogues, The Dubliners
- "Let's Dance to Joy Division" - The Wombats
- "Liverpool" - Cherry Vanilla
- "Liverpool 8" - Ringo Starr
- "Liverpool 8" - Deaf School
- "Liverpool 8 Medley" ("Liverpool 8", "Children Of The Ghetto", "Stanhope Street") - The Real Thing
- "Liverpool Blues" - The Vipers
- "Liverpool Drive" - Chuck Berry
- "Liverpool Docks" - Smokie
- "Liverpool Girl" - Ian McNabb
- "Liverpool, I'll meet you there" - Ian Morris
- "Liverpool Lullaby" - Judy Collins, Cilla Black
- "Liverpool Lou" - Dominic Behan, The Scaffold
- "Liverpool Rain" - Racoon
- "Long Haired Lover from Liverpool" - Jimmy Osmond
- "Maggie May" - traditional song, not to be confused with "Maggie May" by Rod Stewart
- "Off To Sea" - The Longest Johns
- "On The Boat To Liverpool" - Nathan Carter
- "OHM" - Pardon Us[3]
- "Penny Lane" - The Beatles
- "Rock Ferry" - Deaf School
- "Roll, Alabama, Roll" - traditional sea shanty
- "Rotterdam (Or Anywhere)" - The Beautiful South
- "Santianna" - traditional sea shanty
- "Sealand" - Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark
- "Strawberry Fields Forever" - The Beatles
- "Streets of Kenny" - Shack
- "The Skipper's Lament" - John Haines
- "Johnny Todd" - traditional sea shanty
- "Villiers Terrace" - Echo and the Bunnymen
- "Whiskey on a Sunday" - written by Glyn Hughes, covered by The Dubliners, Danny Doyle
- "Whip Jamboree" - traditional folk song
References
[edit]- ^ from the Album Don’t Stop the World 1977 , Warner Bros Recordsa
- ^ "Go to sea once more". Punktastic.com. 27 January 2021. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
- ^ Bushell, Glen (30 January 2017). "Hear the new EP from Pardon Us". Punktastic.com. Retrieved 22 January 2018.