Shenandoah - The Robert Shaw Chorale , Chanticleer , Sissel Kyrkjebø - 2001

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Apr 3, 2017, 2:56:31 AM4/3/17
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  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IBH2QrUyz7o
   Shenandoah - The Robert Shaw Chorale

   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1QvoqvX2VPE
  Shenandoah Chanticleer

  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W1EG_4IBzbA
   Sissel Kyrkjebø - Shenandoah - 2001
 
 
  Shenandoah

     Oh, Shenandoah, I long to hear you

     Look away, you rollin' river

     Oh, Shenandoah, I long to hear you

     Look away. We're bound away

   Across the wide Missouri



Now the Missouri is a mighty river

Look away, you rollin' river.

Indians camp along her border

Look away. We're bound away

Across the wide Missouri



Well a white man loved an Indian maiden

Look away, you rollin' river

With notions his canoe was laden

Look away, we're bound away

Across the wide Missouri



Oh Shenandoah, I love your daughter

Look away, you rollin' river

It was for her I'd cross the water.

Look away, we're bound away

    Across the wide Missouri



     For seven long years I courted Sally

     Look away, you rollin' river

     Seven more years I longed to have her

     Look away, we're bound away

     Across the wide Missouri



     Well, it's fare-thee-well, my dear,
     I'm bound to leave you
     Look away you rollin' river
     Shenandoah, I will not deceive you
     Look away, we're bound away
     Across the wide Missouri

 
Shenandoah  Perhaps one of America’s most recognizable folk tunes, the origins of "Shenandoah" are not so easily deciphered. Like many folksongs, it is impossible to determine exactly when the song was composed, yet it probably did not originate later than the Civil War. In any case, by the nineteenth century, "Shenandoah" had achieved widespread popularity, both on land and at sea.

American folklorist Alan Lomax suggested that "Shenandoah" was a sea-shanty and that the "composers" quite possibly were French-Canadian voyageurs. Sea shanties were work songs used by sailors to coordinate the efforts of completing chores such as raising the ship’s anchor or hauling ropes. The formal structure of a shanty is simple: it consists of a solo lead that alternates with a boisterous chorus. With the sweeping melodic line of its familiar refrain, "Shenandoah" is the very nature of a sea shanty; indeed, the song’s first appearance in print was in an article by William L. Alden, titled “Sailor Songs,” that was published in Harper’s New Monthly Magazine (1882).

As unclear as is the song’s origin, so is the definitive interpretation of its text. Some believe that the song refers to the river of the same name. Others suggest that it is of Native American origin, for it tells the tale of Sally, the daughter of the Indian Chief Shenandoah, who is courted for seven years by a white Missouri river trader. Regardless of these textual discrepancies, "Shenandoah" remains an American classic.
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