Sweeney's Men is an album by Sweeney's Men,[1] recorded in early 1968 after 'Galway Joe' Dolan had left the band and been replaced by Terry Woods.[2]: 75–77
| Sweeney's Men | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by Sweeney's Men | ||||
| Released | 1968 | |||
| Recorded | Early 1968, at Livingston Studios, Barnet | |||
| Genre | Folk music of Ireland, Scotland, England and American Old-timey | |||
| Length | 43:29 | |||
| Label | Transatlantic | |||
| Producer | Bill Leader | |||
| Sweeney's Men chronology | ||||
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| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| Allmusic | |
Johnny Moynihan contributed "Rattlin' Roarin' Willy"—a song written by Robbie Burns and set to the slip jig rhythm (9/8)—and also Pecker Dunne's "Sullivan John", which had previously been sung by Dolan before he left the band.[2]: 75 Moynihan also sang "Dicey Riley" and "The Handsome Cabin Boy", which he learnt from the singing of A.L. Lloyd.[3] "Johnston" is Moynihan's version of the tale of sinister murder also known as "Three Huntsmen", listed as entry H185 in Sam Henry's collection, Song the People[4]: 128 [5]
Andy Irvine contributed the sea shanty "Sally Brown", which he learnt from a Library of Congress recording of an old sailor in a Seamen's Home in Virginia. He also recorded the ballad "Willy O' Winsbury", the lyrics of which he learned from Child's English and Scottish Popular Ballads, and which he set to a different air.[2]: 75 Irvine also covered the English folk song "Dance to Your Daddy", along with the Irish traditional song "Reynard The Fox", which celebrates a fox chase that took place in 1793.[3]
Terry Woods brought the well-known American ballad "Tom Dooley" and also the southern ballad "The House Carpenter", based on a recording by Clarence Ashley.[2]: 76 Woods also composed new music for "My Dearest Dear", a song by Peggy Seeger.[3]
Moynihan and Irvine learnt the slip jig "The Exile's Jig" from a group of traditional musicians based in Dublin called Ceoltóirí Chualann, led by Seán Ó Riada.[3]
The album was re-released on CD in 1996, packaged together with Sweeney's Men second album, The Tracks of Sweeney.[6]
(*) Additional track on the 1996 CD.[6]