Babylon (ballad)

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Template:Short description "Babylon", also called "The Bonnie Banks o' Fordie" or "The Banks o' Airdrie" (Child 14,[1] Roud 27) is an English-language folk song.

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Synopsis

An outlaw comes upon three sisters in the woods. He threatens each one in turn to make her marry him. The first two refuse and are killed. The third threatens him with her brother or brothers. He asks after them and discovers that he is the brother. He commits suicide.

Parallels

Forms of this ballad are known throughout all of Scandinavia ("Töres döttrar i Wänge").[2]

Recordings

Traditional recordings

Betsy Miller of Scotland sang a traditional version of the song, presumably learnt from her Scottish family or community, with her famous son Ewan MacColl on the 1960 album A Garland Of Scots Folksong;[3][4] only three other Scottish recordings were made.[5][6][7] Helen Hartness Fladers recorded several traditional versions in the New England region of the United States,[8][9][10][11] and Kenneth Peacock recorded two Canadian versions (1951 and 1960).[12][13]

Popular recordings

Following are some of the notable recordings of the ballad, including the artists, titles, albums, and years:

Artist Title Album Year
Dick Gaughan "The Bonnie Banks o Fordie" No More Forever 1972
Malinky "The Bonnie Banks o Fordie: Pennknivsmördaren" The Unseen Hours 2005
Nic Jones "The Bonnie Banks of Fordie" Landmarks (compilation) 2006
John Jacob Niles "Bonnie Farday" (aka "Babylon") My Precarious Life in the Public Domain 2006
Old Blind Dogs "The Bonnie Banks o' Fordie" New Tricks 1997
Alastair Roberts "Babylon" What News 2018

In Art

File:Fordie.jpg
The Bonnie Banks o' Fordie, a woodblock illustration by Charles Hodge Mackie (1896)

The artist Charles Hodge Mackie contributed the woodblock illustration By the Bonnie Banks o' Fordie to The Evergreen: A Northern Seasonal, The Book of Winter, published by Patrick Geddes and Colleagues in 1896.[14] He had painted an oil on board sketch of this subject while in France in the summer of 1894. The woodblock composition was subsequently worked up as an oil painting which was exhibited at the Royal Scottish Academy in 1897.[15]

See also

References

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  14. Geddes, Patrick (1896), The Evergreen: A Northern Seasonal, The Book of Winter, Patrick Geddes and Colleagues, Edinburgh. p. 97
  15. Clark, Pat (2016), People, Places & Piazzas: The Life & Art of Charles H. Mackie, Sansom & Company, Bristol, p. 41, pl. 9 & 16, Template:Isbn

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External links

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