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Handed Down

Handed Down

De : Jenny Shaw
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Handed Down celebrates traditional songs and the people who sing them. The show is presented by Jenny Shaw, an amateur musician and professional writer. Each episode is full of music, tales and curiosities as we delve into the history a single song, often with the help of a fellow folk musician, to uncover the strange stories and colourful characters that lie beneath.

These are the songs that have been handed down from our ancestors. This podcast and the people involved in it help keep them alive so that we can hand them down in turn to future generations.

© 2026 Handed Down
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    Épisodes
    • As I Roved Out - Heartbreak, Famine and Class Struggle
      Jan 11 2026

      It's not often that I'm stumped by a folk song, but this is one tricky little character. It is also beautiful, graceful and weirdly catchy... and extremely elusive.

      Nonetheless, there's quite a bit to say about land, class and medieval shepherdesses, though surprisingly little about parted lovers. Given the setting and context, romantic heartbreak suddenly doesn't feel like the end of the world.

      Somehow we end up in Scotland, though only tentatively, and discover a mystery. But then we get to hear the song itself which, as ever, is balm to the soul.

      Music

      A clip of Bridget Tunney singing As I Roved Out. See and hear the full version here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YOlZhqrVrQU

      My Lagan Love (traditional, Donegal)

      The Frost is All Over (traditional, Donegal)

      L'autrier Jost' Una Sebissa (Marcabru, 1129-1150)

      The Airy Bachelor (Traditional, Donegal)

      All music performed by Jenny Shaw unless otherwise stated.

      References

      https://balladindex.org/Ballads/K150.html

      David Hammond (1979) Review of “The Irish Song Tradition” by Sean O’Boyle. The Canadian Journal of Irish Stories, 5 (1) pp124-127

      Land hunger, unemployment and poverty in pre-Famine Roscommon, Galway & Mayo | Divergent Paths

      https://faculty.washington.edu/petersen/lba/marcabru.htm

      Text of Robene and Makyne: https://ia600308.us.archive.org/29/items/robeneandmakynea00henruoft/robeneandmakynea00henruoft.pdf

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      21 min
    • George Collins - Don't Go Kissing Watery Tarts
      Apr 15 2025

      George Collins is a handsome young man with his whole life ahead of him, so why does he die within a few short verses and leave a trail of devastation in his wake?

      Today’s episode takes us back to supernatural legends from medieval Northern Europe, in which brave young men are easily seduced. We also travel across the Atlantic to meet a dying hobo who wandered into this song sometime in the late 19th Century.

      In the end, these legends are a legacy of the things we didn’t properly understand. Nonetheless, if you do meet a beautiful maiden by the riverside it’s best just to back away, jump on your horse and ride home as fast as you can.

      Music

      Verses from two different versions of George Collins as recorded in the Folk Song Society Journey 1909: https://archive.org/details/sim_folk-song-society-journal_1909_3_13/page/300/mode/2up

      Traditional Breton Tune

      Faroese Folk Tune – Grímur á Miðjanesi

      Incidental music – Rosebud in June

      The historic American recording, and many others, can be found here: https://www.mustrad.org.uk/articles/collins.htm

      Final song: This is the version sung by Shirley Collins on The Sweet Primroses, 1967. I’ve slowed it down and recorded it with a guitar accompaniment which is somewhat inspired by Dolly Collins’ beautiful organ arrangement.

      References

      Bluegrass Messengers - George Collins- Barbara M. Cra'ster 1910

      https://archive.org/details/englishscottishp22chilrich/page/278/mode/2up?view=theater

      https://www.mustrad.org.uk/articles/collins.htm

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gwerz_an_Aotrou_Nann

      https://balladspot.blogspot.com/2016/03/sir-olof-and-elves.html

      https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=xlIJAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA161&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q&f=false

      https://archive.org/details/sim_folk-song-society-journal_1909_3_13/page/300/mode/2up

      https://archive.org/details/folksongsofsouth00coxj/page/110/mode/2up

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      21 min
    • Apple Tree Wassail with Lunatraktors
      Feb 2 2025

      What a time we had, talking about the bones and the spirit of the Wassail. The Lunatraktors, Carli and Clair, get right to the heart of things with their "Broken Folk" which provides an anchor, a refuge and solace, a shamanic art and a collective experience. They are experts at asking questions of our tradition, and passionate about telling the stories that have been hidden or lost.

      The Wassail is about apples and cider and community and collectivism and so much more, and Lunatraktors' embodied approach to folk turns this an intense experience. We explore both the light and the dark of recent history and ask: what will be left when the apocalypse comes? Folk. The answer is folk, and it can be deeply healing.

      But in the end you have to laugh. Their music can be dark and tragic but it is also playful and fun and, after we'd unpicked the state of everything, we were all gurning.

      Content warning: This episode includes a discussion about suicide

      Music

      Now The Time

      Rigs of the Time

      Unquiet

      Apple Tree Wassail

      Songs are all from Lunatraktors, and if you want more please visit their website: https://www.lunatraktors.space/ or find all the points of connection on linktr.ee/lunatraktors




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      1 h et 10 min
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