Song picture
When You and I Were Young, Maggie
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Album   $7
The words for this song come from a poem by Canadian G. W. Johnson of Glanford, Ontario (near Hamilton).
flute usa canada canadian traditional fiddle banjo ireland tin whistle historic united states britain bones period historical stephen foster 19th century nineteenth century
Artist picture
Musicians performing the 19th century folk music of Canada, the United States, Ireland and the U.K. on period instruments.
The artists that participated to produce these recordings of 19th century period folk music have all been costumed staff, guides, and tradespeople at historic sites across Canada (Upper Canada Village, Black Creek Pioneer Village, etc.). The music presented is performed on historically accurate instruments such as mandolin, fiddle, tin-whistle, wooden flute, bones, banjo, melodeon, button accordion, guitar, jaw harp and zither.
Song Info
Charts
#13,799 today Peak #585
#3,053 in subgenre Peak #54
Author
G. W. Johnson; J. A. Butterfield
Rights
2002 Brent Santin
Uploaded
May 28, 2006
Track Files
MP3
MP3 2.7 MB 128 kbps 2:56
Story behind the song
The words for this song come from a poem by Canadian George W. Johnson of Glanford, Ontario (near Hamilton). In it he refers to his young wife, Maggie Clarke, who died of typhoid fever in 1865. The music was added in 1866 by James Austin Butterfield. (Banjo, zither, vocals - G. Mallon; Piano - B. Santin)
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