Silver Dagger (song)

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"Silver Dagger"
Song

"Silver Dagger", with variants such as "Katy Dear", "Molly Dear", "The Green Fields and Meadows", "Awake, Awake, Ye Drowsy Sleepers" and others (Laws M4 & G21, Roud 2260 & 2261), is an American folk ballad, whose origins lie possibly in Britain.[1][2] These songs of different titles are closely related, and two strands in particular became popular in commercial Country music and Folk music recordings of the twentieth century: the "Silver Dagger" version popularised by Joan Baez, and the "Katy Dear" versions popularised by close harmony brother duets such as The Callahan Brothers, The Blue Sky Boys and The Louvin Brothers.

In "Silver Dagger", the female narrator turns away a potential suitor, as her mother has warned her to avoid the advances of men in an attempt to spare her daughter the heartbreak that she herself has endured. The 1960 recording by Joan Baez features only a fragment of the full ballad.[3] "Katy Dear" uses the same melody but different lyrics, telling a similar story from a male perspective.[4]

History

The song exists in a large number of variations under many different titles, and with lyrics that may show mixture of different songs. Of interest are early versions of two songs, "Silver Dagger" and "Drowsy Sleeper", whose lyrics have some relation to each other, but differ in lines, verse rhythm and outcome.[5] The plot of "Silver Dagger" is similar to that of "Drowsy Sleeper" whereby the parents object to a match between a boy and a girl, except that the silver dagger is used as a suicide weapon, while in "Drowsy Sleeper" the couple elope.[5][6] The texts of these two songs may share a common origin in the older theme of night visit in traditional English songs.[7][8] However, at some point in the 19th century, there also appears to have been a fusion of these two different songs whereby the tragic ending of "Silver Dagger" becomes attached to "Drowsy Sleeper", giving rise to some later variations of the song.[5]

Steve Roud observes:

"A whole book could be written about this song which involves its connections with other songs which involve young men at their sweethearts' windows at night, disapproving parents and silver daggers. Hugely popular with North American traditional singers, 'Drowsy Sleeper' was also collected regularly in Britain and appeared on broadsides there from at least the 1820s" [9]

The earliest known text of "Drowsy Sleeper" in Britain may be dated to 1817, and the first verse of a variant of the song appears in a songbook of American folk songs first published in 1855, John G. McCurry's The Social Harp.[6][10] A version of "Drowsy Sleeper" was published in a broadside ("Who's at My Bedroom Window?") by H. J. Wehman in 1890.[11] A version collected in Kentucky was printed in The Journal of American Folk-Lore in 1907, and three versions were collected by Henry M. Belden in 1908.[12][13] Cecil Sharp published an English version from Somerset in 1908 as "Arise! Arise!".[14] Sharp also collected a version of the song in the United States as "Awake, awake", sung by Mary Sands in Madison County, North Carolina on August 1, 1916.[6][15]

The song was recorded commercially as "O! Molly Dear Go Ask Your Mother" by Kelly Harrell in 1926, as "Sleepy Desert" by Wilmer Watts And The LoneLy Eagles in 1929, and as "Wake Up You Drowsy Sleeper" by The Oaks family in 1930. As "Katie Dear (Silver Dagger)" it was recorded by the Callahan Brothers in 1934, and as "Katie Dear" by the Blue Sky Boys in 1938.[6] (Country music authority Bill C. Malone states that the Callahan Brothers learned traditional ballads like "Katie Dear" from their mother). In 1956 it was recorded by the Louvin Brothers.[16] The song was part of the repertoire of the Country Gentlemen, who toured both the bluegrass and folk music circuits during the 1950s and 1960s. In the early 1960s, "Katie Dear" was recorded by folk revival musicians, including Joan Baez, and Ian & Sylvia. Today it is commonly performed and recorded by bluegrass musicians.

The differences in titles and some lyrics may also be a result of the song being handed down through the unwritten, oral tradition, or adapting from different sources, and where each performer may add their own verses and nuances to the song.[17] These songs have been sung using different tunes. Relation to other songs such as Old Virginny/Man of Constant Sorrow and Come All You Fair and Tender Ladies have also been noted.[6][7]

Lyrics

Recordings and performances

The song has also been widely performed and recorded by bluegrass musicians, as many songs thought of as traditionally bluegrass songs actually trace back to what is now known as "old-time" music.

20th century

21st century

  • Old time revival string band Old Crow Medicine Show has a version of the song on their 2001 album Eutaw.
  • Roger Mcguinn, the lead singer and guitarist on many of The Byrds' hits, released a version of the song on the four-CD box set The Folk Den Project 1995-2005.
  • Silver Dagger was recorded for the 2005 live album Smugglers and Bounty Hunters by British band The Men They Couldn't Hang
  • Irish-American Celtic group Solas recorded it for their 2006 album Reunion: A Decade of Solas.
  • Bluegrass band The Gruff from Victoria, BC, Canada, recorded "Silver Dagger" on their 2006 self-titled album on Goat Tea Records.
  • In 2007 it was recorded by Scottish singer Maeve MacKinnon and appeared on her album Don't Sing Love Songs.
  • The song has been recorded by White Antelope aka Robin Pecknold of the Seattle band Fleet Foxes.
  • The traditional singer Mary Lomax was recorded by Art Rosenbaum in 2007 singing The Drowsy Sleeper. The recording was issued by Dust-to-Digital Records on Art of Field Recording Volume I.
  • This song has also been recorded by Lac La Belle, on their first album, called Lac La Belle, in 2009 (Detroit, USA).
  • Jim Moray has recorded a version of this song which is available on his 2010 album In Modern History.
  • The song is sung by Marideth Sisco in the 2010 film Winter's Bone.
  • English folk trio The Staves often perform the song live. It has been included in their Live at Cecil Sharp House EP (2011).
  • Birch Book has recorded his version of this song on his album Tomorrow's Sun Will Rise the Same (2010)
  • In season 5, episode 2 ("Gently with Class") of the British television series Inspector George Gently, the song is performed by Ebony Buckle, who plays the role of singer "Ellen Mallam" in that episode.
  • Seasick Steve has a version on his album Sonic Soul Surfer (2015)

Adaptations

  • Dame Darcy recorded a quite different version of the song, found on her Greatest Hits album.
  • British band Saint Etienne's song "Like a Motorway" is based on the ballad. It was featured on their album Tiger Bay (1994), an homage to folk music presented in a modern style. The melody follows the original closely, but new lyrics paint a darker picture of the suitor's fate.
  • Hey Rosetta gave us their own take on this song, which found on her Red Songs EP. The song however, is entitled, "Who Is At My Window Weeping" rather than "Silver Dagger".
  • William Gibson in the second book of his Sprawl Trilogy, Count Zero, uses the third stanza of this song to hint at the past of the heroine, Angie Mitchell.

See also

References

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  4. Lyle Lofgren. "Remembering The Old Songs: KATIE DEAR (Laws G21)." 2002-03. Inside Bluegrass. Retrieved 2010-12-15.
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  9. Roud, Steve, 2015, Song notes to My Bonnie Lies Over The Ocean: British Songs in the USA (CD boxset), Nehi Records NEH3X1.
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  23. Dino Valenti
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External links

http://www.dansher.com/band/SilverDagger.pdf - Words and chords to Silver Dagger