Waltzing Matilda"Waltzing Matilda" is Australia's most widely known folk song and one that has been popularly suggested as a potential national anthem many times. It is certainly easily recognisable and easily sung, but its lyrics describe a swagman who steals a sheep and drowns himself when law enforcement arrives, and as such it is unlikely to ever gain acceptance in official circles over the current national anthem, "Advance Australia Fair". Many Australians, however, continue to regard it with great favour and sentimentality, and the possibility of using the tune, but writing new lyrics for it, has been considered as a possible way of solving the problem. It enjoyed a brief period of official recognition as the Australian national song (coexisting with "Advance Australia Fair" as the National Anthem), was used at the Montreal Olympic Games in 1976, and has more recently gained popularity as a sporting anthem for the Australian Rugby Union Team. As at 2004 it has no official status, but it continues to be used unofficially (and sometimes in error) in many contexts.
LyricsOnce a jolly swagman camped by a billabong, The words unfamiliar to non-Australians are:
VariationsOther current variations include the third line of the chorus constantly saying "And he sang as he sat and waited by the billabong" or "And he sang as he watched and waited 'til his billy boiled". Banjo Paterson's original version has slightly different lyrics to the ones generally known today. The first verse originally ran like this: Oh, there once was a swagman camped in the billabong, An even earlier version used the term "A-roving Australia" rather than "waltzing matilda". However, he was talked out of using this. HistoryThe song was written in 1895 by Banjo Paterson, a famous Australian poet, and the music written (or possibly adapted) by Christina Macpherson. Banjo Paterson wrote the piece while staying at the Dagworth Homestead, a bush station in Queensland. While he was there his hosts played him a traditional Celtic folktune called the Craigeelee, and Paterson decided that it would be a good piece to set lyrics to, producing the song during the rest of his stay. The tune is most probably based on the Scottish song "Thou Bonnie Wood of Craigielea" which Christina Macpherson heard played by a band at the Warrnambool steeplechase. Robert Tannahill wrote the words in 1805 and James Barr composed the music in 1818. In 1893 it was arranged for brass band by Thomas Bulch. The tune again was possibly based on the old melody of "Go to the Devil and Shake Yourself" composed by John Field (1782-1837) some time before 1812. It's sometimes also called: "When Sick is it Tea you want?" (London 1798) or "The Penniless Traveller" (O'Neill's 1850 collection). There is also speculation about the relationship it bears to "The Bold Fusilier", a song dated by some back to the eighteenth century. "Waltzing Matilda" is probably based on the following story:
The owner of Dagworth Homestead and three policemen gave chase to a man named Samuel Hoffmeister - also called Samuel "French(y)" Hoffmeister. Rather than be captured, Hoffmeister shot and killed himself at the Combo Waterhole. Bob Macpherson (the brother of Christina) and Banjo are said to have taken rides together at Dagworth. Here they may have passed the Combo Waterhole, where Bob may have told this story to Banjo. The song itself was first performed on 6 April 1895 at the North Gregory Hotel in Winton, Queensland. The occasion was a banquet for the Premier of Queensland. It became an instant success. In 1903 it was picked up by the Billy Tea company for use as an advertising jingle, making it nationally famous. A third variation on the song, with a slightly different chorus, was published in 1907. Paterson sold the rights to Waltzing Matilda and "some other pieces" to Angus and Robertson Publishers for "five quid" (a "quid" is Australian slang for a pound, the then unit of currency). The song was falsely copyrighted by an American publisher in 1941 as an original composition. However, no copyright applies in Australia. The song has been covered by a number of Australian artists over the years, notably Lazy Harry, and it is invoked as an Australian icon in Eric Bogle's anti-war song "And The Band Played Waltzing Matilda". The American singer Tom Waits combined "Waltzing Matilda" with original material in "Tom Traubert's Blues (Four Sheets to the Wind in Copenhagen)". The score of the 1959 film On the Beach, written by Ernest Gold is based heavily on motifs from "Waltzing Matilda". The film, about the end of the world in a nuclear holocaust, is set in Australia and director Stanley Kramer was insistent on the "Waltzing Matilda" motif. The song itself is heard in the last minutes of On the Beach. External links
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