Come Follow Me to the Greenwood Tree
"Come Follow Me to The Greenwood Tree" | |
---|---|
Song | |
Published | 1652[1] |
Genre | Round, Children's song |
Songwriter(s) | John Hilton[2] |
"Come Follow Me to the Greenwood Tree" (sometimes shortened to: Come Follow Me to the Greenwood) is a 17th century English language children's song by John Hilton (1599–1657).
Origin
[edit]Come Follow Me to the Greenwood Tree was written as a three-part round by John Hilton. He later published it in "Catch that Catch Can" or "A Choice Collection of Catchers, Rounds and Canons for Three or Four Voices" in London in 1652.[1]
Lyrics
[edit]The original 17th century lyrics are as follows:
Come, follow, follow, follow, follow, follow, follow me,
Whith-er shall I follow, follow, follow, Whith-er shall I follow, follow, thee?
To the greenwood, to the greenwood, to the greenwood, greenwood tree.[3]
The most common modern version is often sung as a round for four voice parts. A possible arrangement for SATB is as follows:
Soprano Alto Tenor Bass Come, follow, follow, follow, follow, follow, follow me, Where shall I follow, follow, follow. Come, follow, follow, follow, follow, follow, follow me. Where shall I follow, follow, thee. Where shall I follow, follow, follow, follow. Come follow, follow, follow, follow, follow, follow, me. To the greenwood, to the greenwood, to the greenwood, greenwood tree. Where shall I follow, follow, thee Where shall I follow, follow, follow. Come follow, follow, follow, follow, follow, follow, me. To the greenwood, to the greenwood, to the greenwood, greenwood tree.. Where shall I follow, follow, thee. Where shall I follow, follow, follow. To the greenwood, to the greenwood, to the greenwood, greenwood tree. Where shall I follow, follow, To the greenwood, to the greenwood, to the greenwood, greenwood tree.
Pop Culture
[edit]The song was featured in an animated insert on Sesame Street, in which the three turtle kids teach their Uncle Edgar (the banjo playing turtle) about round singing. The title is a parody of the original as it uses "Redwood" in place of "Greenwood Tree".[4]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Robert Bielefeld (2011). Cantiga's Renaissance Festival Favorites. Mel Bay. p. 123.
- ^ Richard Clark (1824). The First Volume of Poetry; Revised, Improved, and Considerably Enlarged. R. Clark. p. 522.
- ^ Salli Terri (1999). Rounds for Everyone: Unison Choral Collection. Lawson-Gould. p. 18.
- ^ "Sesame Street - Come Follow Me (To The Redwood Tree)". YouTube. 27 July 2007. Archived from the original on 2010-07-30.