Old Time Bush Concert, Programme presented by the Sydney Bush Music Club


Bush Ballads were sung by the early settlers in this country. They usually adapted songs from their homelands, putting words to familiar tunes to express their reaction to a new and strange environment. Many of the older folk songs are anonymous but research is discovering the authors of more and more of them. There are often several versions of the sane song, since shearers, drovers, shepherds and gold-diggers altered them to suit their own environments.
The Sydney Bush Music Club has done much work in collecting these old songs with tape recorders and is doing much also to make Australians aware of their rich heritage in this field.
There is much social and political history in bush ballads, since they sprang direct from the lives of the people who wrote them and sung them. Banjo Paterson was one of the first to make a comprehensive collection of bush ballads, in his Old Bush Songs (1905) a revised edition of this book is available - edited by Douglas Stewart and Nancy Keesing.


THE PROGRAMME WILL INCLUDE - 1. Click go the shears
(Anon) 2. The Old Bullock Dray
(Anon) 3. Nine Miles from Gundagai
(Anon) 4. Wild Rover no More
(Anon) 5. Sixteen thousand miles from home
(Anon) 6. Dennis O'Reilly
(Anon) 7. The Convict's Lament (Anon)
8. The Black Velvet band
(Anon) 9. Frank Gardiner
(Anon) 10. Bold Jack Donahoe
(Anon) 11. The death of Ben Hall
(Anon) 12. The Cry Lookout Below
13. A Bushman's song (A.B. Paterson)
14. The Ram of Darby
15. The Ryebuck Shearer
(Anon) 16. The Rabbiter's Song
17. The Station Hand's Reply
18. The Never Never Plan
19. Charlie Mopps
20. The Pub with no beer
(Slim Dusty) 21. Out on the Condamine
22. The Flash Stockman
(Anon) 23. Native Mate
24. The Drover's Dream
(Anon) 25. The Old Bark Hut
(Anon) 26. Waltzing Matilda (A.B. Paterson) 27. Botany Bay
(Anon)
Songs were published in the following songsheets from Fran Shaw's collection and other BMC publications.
Colonial Ballad Song Sheet Dec 1956 - no. 1, no. 2, no. 6, no. 11, no. 27,
Bush Music Club Song Sheet, No. 1, 1957 - no. 24
Bush Music Club Song Sheet. Dec 1957 - no. 4, no. 22 Bush Music Club publications - no. 15, no. 19,
Ben Hall book - Fuller versions of several established songs - no. 9
Singabout 1(3), p.3 - no.12 Singabout 1(4), Spring 1956, p.16 - no. 14 Singabout 2(3), 1957 - no. 17, no. 21, no. 27, Singabout 2(4), Spring 1958 - no.3, no 23 Singabout, 3(1), Summer 1958 - no. 18
Singabout 3(2) Autumn 1959, p.14 Singabout, 4(2), Oct 60, p.18 - A Pub without Beer, the original of no.20, Slim Dusty's Pub with no Beer. Waltzing Matilda was written in 1895, but wasn't published until 1903.
no. 10 - Bold Jack Donahoe - published by John Meredith in the Bulletin, April 6, 1955
no. 13 - A Bushman's Song published by John Meredith in the Bulletin, 1955
Convicts Lament was the alternative name for Morton Bay, & A Bushman's Song was also known as Travelling down the Castlereagh (Alex Hood, 13th Dec 2020)
John Manifold - Bandicoot ballads, Rams Skull Press, 1953. no. 7, Morton Bay - aka The Convict's Lament
A copy of this leaflet was pasted into the red Minutes Book, along with the following handwritten report & newspaper clipping.

This festival was (missing word) in honour of A.B 'Banjo" Paterson, Australian poet, who was born at Orange. The Bush Music Club was invited to perform at an "Old Time Bush Concert" as a part of the Festival. On arrival we were interviewed at the local radio station 2GZ, and later performed at a picnic at Lake Canobolas. The highlight of the trip was the BMC's presentation of the "Old Time Bush Concert" compared by Alan Scott. It was performed to a very enthusiastic audience at the Orange School of Arts.
Clipping from
CentralWestern Daily, Monday October 19, 1960.
"OLD-TIMERS" Members of the Sydney Bush Music Club were given a warm reception wherever they appeared at Orange at the weekend. They are pictured playing at Lake Canobolas, and they also appeared in the streets, at the Lord's Place carnival, and at a concert at the School of Arts on Saturday night. The musician at the far right is holding a "lagerphone" - a broomstick covered with beer bottle tops which jingle when struck.
Festival 'worth holding again" Orange's first Banjo Paterson Festival Week proved highly successful and was "worth holding again" ... financial success ... carnival set up in Lord's Place ... Old Time Bush concert was a highlight ... club members also sang in the streets ... on Saturday and at the regatta at Lake Canobolas ...
Concert Party - Jamie Carlin, Sam Ramsey (behind Jamie's concertina), Jan Jones, Frank Maher, Gay Scott, Alan Scott, Jack Barrie. Jan's broken arm meant Frank was invited to play the bones with Concert Party.
Program from Jamie Carlin's collection, photos from BMC archives
from Frank Maher - Practices were held ta Jack Barrie's place before the Festival as he had a large living area (good for dancing) Frank, 2021.
The Banjo Paterson Festival and the Bush Music Club.
The Banjo Paterson Festival
and the Bush Music Club
As well as his poetry, Banjo Paterson is remembered for "Old Bush
Songs". This was a collection of ballads and songs sung by the
shearers, station-hands and bullockies of Paterson's days. It is
appropriate that the Bush Music Club is taking part in the Banjo
Paterson Festival, because this Club is carrying on with what he started
in "Old Bush Songs".
Although Paterson complained that those songs were dying out, many of
these are still remembered today and Bush Music Club members have been
responsible for finding people who knew them. Using tape-recorders,
these enthusiasts have recorded scores of songs that otherwise
might have been lost when the singers, mostly old folk have passed on.
"The Old Bark Hut" and "The Wild Colonial Boy" are still remembered, and
some of Paterson's own poems have become popular as songs. "A Bushman's
Song" is one widely known in New South Wales and Queensland. Sung to a
variety of tunes it is usually called "The Old Jig-Jog". And every
Australian can sing "Waltzing Matilda"
Continuing Paterson's idea of making the songs available to all, the
Bush Music Club publishes a magazine, Singabout, in which is printed
words and music of many bush songs, as well as modern songs in the
traditional style. These bush songs, are Australia's folk-songs and
reflect public feeling at the time when they were made up. Their
popularity today is due to the fact that the feeling is the same now as
it was then.
It is this feeling that made "The Pub With No Beer" well known over
western New South Wales before it made its appearance on Sydney's Hit
Parades. The same feeling keeps selling records like The Drover's Dream.
No better or worse than the songs of other countries, they are dear to
us simply because they are Australian.
THE BUSH BAND.
Almost as soon as it as formed in 1954 the Bush Music Cub started a
2.
Concert Party to sing Australian songs. They decided to use the
instruments that were played for dances in the bush to accompany the
singing. These were the accordion, concertina and fiddle, mostly as well
as the tin-whistle and mouth organ. The bones provided a good rhythm,
as did that particularly Australian instrument, the lagerphone. This
consists of a broomstick with bottle tops ( preferably from lager
bottles ) nailed loosely on so that they jingle when the instrument is
bounced on the floor or hit with a stick. The guitar often strikes a
more modern note.
This music, plus the forthright singing of the vocalists immediately
proved popular, and the Concert Party has performed at countless
functions in the Sydney area. Audiences range from the Sargeant's Mess
at a military camp to teenagers and old-age pensioners. One group became
The Shearers Band for a large Sydney store during Wool Week 1959 and
sang to thousands of customers at that time. At other times the Concert
Party has been well received at Mudgee and Nowra, and was so popular at
the "Back to Gulgong Weekend" they were invited back specially to do
another concert.
These groups have made two records, the first was Australian
Traditional Bush Songs with four well-known items. The second, Songs
from the Shearing Sheds, has a dozen songs of widely differing
character. The performers are all amateurs, giving their spare time from
a variety of jobs.
The group that will visit Orange will have two girls, a nurse and a
typist who rattle the bones and play the lagerphone. The four men play
concertina, tin whistle, guitar and lagerphone, and follow the trades of
carpenter, telephone technician, factory hand and mail sorter.
They will bring a tape recorder and look forward to meeting any folk
with long memories who can add to their repertoire of songs and dances.
They also look forward to providing some real Australian entertainment
at the Banjo Paterson Festival. (BMC Archives)
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