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Do you know all these tunes? (Original Post) True Dough Mar 30 OP
Winslow Arizona dweller Mar 30 #1
What's on your mind? True Dough Mar 30 #10
I'm gone dweller Mar 30 #12
I know 13 LA Blue Bengal Mar 30 #2
"you take the high road, and I'll take the low road, and I'll get to niyad Mar 30 #17
On down the Mississippi to the Gulf of Mexico is from "The Battle of New Orleans" written by Jimmy Driftwood, a teacher KitFox Mar 31 #31
Six Days on the Road taxi Mar 31 #32
A little short of 80% chowmama Mar 30 #3
Yes, I know every one of those. But Croney Mar 30 #4
Harlem - Take The A Train Ptah Mar 30 #5
Perfect score! Hahaha! 😎 littlemissmartypants Mar 30 #6
Anywhere - I've Been Everywhere Ptah Mar 30 #7
Unsure about the Scotland one... 2naSalit Mar 30 #8
Margaritaville dweller Mar 30 #9
Richmond - Last Train from Poor Valley fargone Mar 30 #11
Took my chances on a big jet plane True Dough Mar 30 #13
Starring in our own late, late show True Dough Mar 30 #14
Blue Bayou Some Day Buzz cook Mar 30 #15
For those of you not familiar with the Scotland reference, you're in for a treat. 3catwoman3 Mar 30 #16
Wow! I knew the song, but I'd never heard of that Australian singer of Celtic songs. I did some highplainsdem Mar 31 #30
I know 10. niyad Mar 30 #18
Tennessee? nuxvomica Mar 30 #19
West Virginia by way of country roads wnylib Mar 31 #20
Kankake, Memphis, New Orleans on the Illinois Central Railroad wnylib Mar 31 #22
Coney Island (vacation) flvegan Mar 31 #21
Surf City 10 Turtle Day Mar 31 #23
It's early morning for me here Niagara Mar 31 #24
San Francisco WestMichRad Mar 31 #25
New York...Stuck in Lodi again. MiHale Mar 31 #26
I'm taking a Greyhound on the Hudson River Line Pobeka Mar 31 #27
Hop on the bus, Gus True Dough Mar 31 #28
Every one. highplainsdem Mar 31 #29
Sure, and you can hitch a ride ... surrealAmerican Mar 31 #33

niyad

(133,401 posts)
17. "you take the high road, and I'll take the low road, and I'll get to
Mon Mar 30, 2026, 11:26 PM
Mar 30

Scotland before you. ."

See post 16 for the video

KitFox

(590 posts)
31. On down the Mississippi to the Gulf of Mexico is from "The Battle of New Orleans" written by Jimmy Driftwood, a teacher
Tue Mar 31, 2026, 11:38 AM
Mar 31

trying to get his students interested in history. Home tonight is from Dave Dudley’s truck driving song “ Six Days on the Road”. Sometimes I wonder how I have accumulated strange trivia and that surprisingly I recall it!😅

True Dough

(27,072 posts)
13. Took my chances on a big jet plane
Mon Mar 30, 2026, 09:59 PM
Mar 30

Never let 'em tell you that they're all the same...

Going to California with an achin' in my heart.

3catwoman3

(29,631 posts)
16. For those of you not familiar with the Scotland reference, you're in for a treat.
Mon Mar 30, 2026, 11:00 PM
Mar 30
&list=RDgb8AGuD2uOI&start_radio=1




And I'm only sure of 11

highplainsdem

(62,699 posts)
30. Wow! I knew the song, but I'd never heard of that Australian singer of Celtic songs. I did some
Tue Mar 31, 2026, 11:12 AM
Mar 31

googling and listened to more of her music yesterday. She's incredible.




Re that song you posted - I hadn't known its history, but I saw people responding on YouTube post about it. And this is what Wikipedia says:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bonnie_Banks_o%27_Loch_Lomond

The song has often been dated to 1746, and it has long been associated with the Jacobite rebellion. In December 1745, Bonnie Prince Charlie retreated to Scotland, and the lyrics have been interpreted as a lament of the march.[4] One of the soldiers rues his sacrifice for the king.[5] In Celtic mythology, the "low road" was a fairy route for a soldier's soul to return home when killed abroad.[6]

Another common interpretation is that the chorus are the final words spoken by one of the Jacobite rebels prior to his execution, perhaps in Carlisle where dozens of rebels were executed.[7][8]: 276  He sees his lover at the gallows and tells her they will meet again in Scotland, albeit by different routes.[9] Ironically, the song became one of a handful of folk signifiers for British unity as the nation expanded its empire.[10]

One of the earliest sheet music printings of the ballad was in 1840 by Paterson and Sons in Edinburgh. It was titled "Bonnie Loch Loman" and credited to "a lady" with arrangements by Finlay Dunn and John Thomson. Lady John Scott was often cited as the composer of "Loch Lomond", but she only transcribed the melody and lyrics after hearing it sung by a boy in the Edinburgh streets.[11] In his 1898 novel Wild Eelin, William Black has the title character, Eelin MacDonald, directly refute the idea that a street urchin in Edinburgh would ever sing the song, dismissing it as "spurious".[12]: 86–7 

The actual composer is unknown. Precedents for the tune have been found in several other folk songs, such as the Danish/Faroese tune "Dankonning lod gribe en havfrue fin" (The Dane-King Captured a Mermaid).[13] "Loch Lomond" along with "The Oak and the Ash" also bear a resemblance to "Godesses", a tune in John Playford's 1651 compilation The Dancing Master.[14][15]

Niagara

(11,908 posts)
24. It's early morning for me here
Tue Mar 31, 2026, 07:42 AM
Mar 31

A few fun facts:




Since it's early morning I can recognize a few songs but I'm only beginning my caffeine intake.


I was going to submit the song Yellow Submarine for a Lounge response some time back and I forgot the name of the song. *sigh*


Eddie Money is one of my favorite male singers.


I can't listen to the song Margaritaville while I'm driving at all because it makes me feel intoxicated.


One of my favorites songs is Down in Mexico and is never given credit, ever.

&list=RDzEdj8J-Wods


Good morning everyone!



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