Traditional Music Hard Times Come Again Stephen Foster Sheet

Song

"Hard Times Come up Again No More"
HardTimesComeAgainNoMore1854.png

1854 sheet music cover

Vocal
Published 1854
Songwriter(due south) Stephen Foster

"Hard Times Come Again No More" (sometimes, "Hard Times") is an American parlor song written by Stephen Foster. It was published in New York past Firth, Pond & Co. in 1854 every bit Foster'southward Melodies No. 28. Well-known and popular in its day,[1] both in America and Europe,[2] [3] the song asks the fortunate to consider the plight of the less fortunate and includes one of Foster's favorite images: "a pale drooping maiden".

The first audio recording was a wax cylinder by the Edison Manufacturing Company (Edison Gold Moulded 9120) in 1905. It has been recorded and performed numerous times since. The song is Roud Folk Vocal Index #2659.

A satirical version nearly soldiers' food was popular in the American Civil War, "Hard Tack Come Once again No More".

Lyrics [edit]

Let us suspension in life'southward pleasures and count its many tears,
While we all sup sorrow with the poor;
There'due south a vocal that will linger forever in our ears;
Oh! Difficult times come again no more.

Chorus:
'Tis the song, the sigh of the weary,
Hard Times, hard times, come up once more no more.
Many days you lot take lingered around my cabin door;
Oh! Difficult times come once again no more.

While nosotros seek mirth and beauty and music light and gay,
At that place are frail forms fainting at the door;
Though their voices are silent, their pleading looks will say
Oh! Hard times come again no more.
Chorus

There's a stake weeping maiden who toils her life away,
With a worn eye whose amend days are o'er:
Though her vocalization would be merry, 'tis sighing all the mean solar day,
Oh! Difficult times come up again no more.
Chorus

'Tis a sigh that is wafted across the troubled wave,
'Tis a wail that is heard upon the shore
'Tis a dirge that is murmured around the lowly grave
Oh! Hard times come again no more than.
Chorus

Recordings [edit]

"Difficult Times Come Once more No More" has been included in the post-obit:

  • Jennifer Warnes, from her 1979 album Shot Through The Heart.
  • Dolly Parton opens her 1980 song "Hush-A-Bye Difficult Times" with an a cappella poesy from the song.
  • The Northward Carolina band Scarlet Clay Ramblers featured the song on their 1981 anthology Hard Times.
  • Recorded past Irish vocalizer Mary Black on her 1984 anthology Nerveless.
  • Akiko Yano sings this song on her 1989 anthology "Welcome Back".
  • On Syd Harbinger's 1989 debut album Surprise, Straw and X frontman and solo creative person John Doe recorded a version of the song.
  • Past Scottish group The Proclaimers on a 1989 BBC radio session.
  • By Kate & Anna McGarrigle on the 1991 Songs of the Ceremonious State of war drove.
  • By Emmylou Harris in her 1992 live album At the Ryman.
  • Past Bob Dylan for his 1992 album Good every bit I Been to You.
  • As the penultimate runway on the 1992 debut anthology from The Lost Dogs, Breathtaking Routes.
  • Harvey Reid plays his audio-visual guitar on his 1994 album Chestnuts.
  • In Serial One (1995) of the "Transatlantic Sessions", the song was performed past an ensemble equanimous of Kate and Anna McGarrigle, Rufus Wainwright, Emmylou Harris, Mary Blackness, Karen Matheson and Rod Paterson.[iv] [ amend source needed ]
  • The 1995 picture show Georgia, sung by Mare Winningham.[5] [six] [seven]
  • The 1995 movie The Neon Bible performed past Thomas Hampson.
  • Nanci Griffith on her 1998 effort Other Voices Besides (A Trip Back to Bountiful).
  • Ambassadors of Harmony perform an a cappella male chorus barbershop arrangement on their 2000 album Sing Sing Sing! [eight]
  • The 2000 Appalachian Journey, for voice & piano with Edgar Meyer (bass), James Taylor (vocals) Mark O'Connor (violin or fiddle) and Yo-Yo Ma (cello).
  • Eastmountainsouth (aka Peter Bradley Adams & Kat Maslich) recorded this vocal on their eponymous album in 2003.
  • Johnny Greenbacks on the Redemption Songs disc of the 2003 Unearthed box ready of out-takes and alternate versions from his American Recordings serial.
  • Mavis Staples recorded it for the Grammy accolade-winning album Beautiful Dreamer (2004).
  • Randy VanWarmer recorded this song on his 2005 anthology Randy VanWarmer Sings Stephen Foster.
  • In 2005, the song was included in the soundtrack Cameron Crowe'southward Elizabethtown, performed past Eastmountainsouth.
  • The 2005 film My Blood brother's War by Whitney Hamilton.
  • Matthew Perryman Jones included it on his 2006 album Throwing Punches in the Dark.
  • Andru Bemis recorded information technology on his 2006 album Rail to Reel.
  • Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band's 2009 Working on a Dream Bout and captured on their 2010-released London Calling: Live in Hyde Park concert video, in the midst of the Great Recession.
  • Mary J. Blige and The Roots at the 2010 Hope for Haiti Now: A Global Benefit for Earthquake Relief telethon.
  • In the Flavor 2 finale of Parenthood by the same proper noun, the song was contributed to the soundtrack past Brett Dennen.
  • The 2012 Voice of Ages past The Chieftains, with Paolo Nutini.
  • The 2012 Eesti Kullafond drove of Estonian folk-pop group Folkmill.[9]
  • An Iron & Wine functioning featured in commercials promoting the 2012 Copper television serial on BBC America.
  • Black 47, on the 2014 album Concluding Call.
  • The 2014 9/11 Memorial commemoration (bagpipes adaption).
  • Kristin Chenoweth performed the song on her 2014 live album Coming Home.
  • Katy Treharne sings it on the Tearfund with 'Westward End has Faith' 2015 album Speechless.[10]
  • Joel Plaskett's 2015 album The Park Avenue Sobriety Test.
  • Annie Moses Band performed the song on their 2015 album American Rhapsody.
  • Australian artists Paul Kelly and Charlie Owen included the song on their 2016 anthology Death's Dateless Night.
  • Civilization Six uses the song as the leitmotif of the American civilization.
  • Madeleine Peyroux sang it on her album Secular Hymns (2016).
  • Shuli Natan sang information technology in Hebrew.[11]
  • Mavis Staples' version opens the second episode of Ken Burns' 2019 PBS documentary miniseries, Country Music.
  • The Longest Johns released a recording of the song in 2021 every bit the get-go unmarried of their forthcoming album Smoke and Oakum.
  • Hailee Steinfeld performed on pianoforte joined by Adrian Blake Enscoe in Dickinson season iii, episode v.

References [edit]

  1. ^ R. J. "The Fields of June". Southern Literary Messenger, vol. XXI, no. 8 (August 1855) Richmond, Virginia, p. 503: "Amongst these may exist mentioned that sad plaintive beautiful melody of Foster'southward—'Hard times come again no more.' Accept you heard it? What an echo of sadness in it! 'Tis the song the sigh of the weary— / Hard time! hard times! / Many days you have lingered / Effectually my motel door, / Simply hard times come again no more!"
  2. ^ Sandford, Henry, Mrs. The Girls' Reading-Book. London: West. & R. Chambers (1876), p. 201: "Information technology was in a sewing-school in Lancashire, during the latter part of the Cotton Famine, that the well-known song 'Hard times, hard fourth dimension, come up once more no more!' first became familiar to my ears."
  3. ^ Hubbard, W. Fifty. (ed.). History of American Music. New York: Irving Squire (1908), p. lxxx: "Other songs beside those designated as plantation melodies, only all more than or less impregnated with sentiment, now came rapidly from his pen and obtained a wide popularity not only in America merely in Europe every bit well. Such songs as ...'Hard Times Come Again No More', ... accept become familiar to many nationalities."
  4. ^ "Hard Times Come Over again No More than". YouTube.com. Archived from the original on 2021-12-19.
  5. ^ Karger, Dave (Jan 22, 2010). "'Hope For Haiti Now': The telethon's 10 best performances". EW.com . Retrieved October 20, 2021.
  6. ^ Johnson, Malcolm (Apr 12, 1996). "`GEORGIA,' WITH HEARTFELT SINGING AND ACTING, LINGERS LONG ON THE MIND". courant.com . Retrieved Oct 20, 2021.
  7. ^ Turan, Kenneth (December 8, 1995). "Movie REVIEW : 'Georgia' Has Eye and Soul". LATimes.com . Retrieved October 20, 2021.
  8. ^ "Sing Sing Sing!". aoh.org. Archived from the original on 16 July 2016. Retrieved 24 July 2016.
  9. ^ "Folkmill – Eesti Kullafond". lasering.ee . Retrieved xv May 2016.
  10. ^ "Speechless". amazon.com . Retrieved 14 May 2016.
  11. ^ "זמן חשוך אל תשוב לכאן סטפן פוסטר נוסח עברי אהוד מנור שולי נתן והפונדקאים". Archived from the original on 2021-12-19 – via world wide web.youtube.com.

External links [edit]

  • "Hard Times Come up Again No More", Edison Male Quartette (Edison Golden Moulded 9120, 1905)—Cylinder Preservation and Digitization Project.
  • "Difficult Times Come Again No More" at the Vaughan Williams Memorial Library

bolesanite1966.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_Times_Come_Again_No_More

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