Slawko the music man: Difference between revisions
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Other song names: "The German Doctor" "Auch Von music man" "Auch Von de music man" "The German Music Song" "Ach Von De Musica" "Ach Ven de Musica" | Other song names: "The German Doctor" "Auch Von music man" "Auch Von de music man" "The German Music Song" "Ach Von De Musica" "Ach Ven de Musica" | ||
== Словник == | == Словник == | ||
* зумба-за - Believed to be the sound a bass fiddle makes, not an actual German | * зумба-за - Believed to be the sound a bass fiddle makes, not an actual German word. This sound is used in the "English" versions of the song, including those used in America ([http://dragon.sleepdeprived.ca/songbook/songs4/S4_14.htm source]) and by British officers in Canada (U-Boat Killer - Donald MacIntyre - Chapter 10): | ||
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Revision as of 21:45, 2 October 2021
Історія
Other song names: "The German Doctor" "Auch Von music man" "Auch Von de music man" "The German Music Song" "Ach Von De Musica" "Ach Ven de Musica"
Словник
- зумба-за - Believed to be the sound a bass fiddle makes, not an actual German word. This sound is used in the "English" versions of the song, including those used in America (source) and by British officers in Canada (U-Boat Killer - Donald MacIntyre - Chapter 10):
Argentia, [a Canadian seaport in Newfoundland,] so far as we were concerned was an all male society and life often took a fairly noisy and riotous form. [...] Hesperus parties invariably included the singing of a song we had adopted as our own - Lord knows where it originated - known as Zumba Za. It was sung entirely in German and represented a party of people each of whom in turn claimed to be able to play some musical instrument which he proceeded to do in mime, making the appropriate noises and gestures which were then taken up by the assembled party.
It started and ended with a double-bass whose notes were represented by Zumba Zumba Za - hence the name of the song. Somehow this apparently very childish entertainment always succeeded in being in an enormous success, and it was invariably called for when the Hesperus officers were out "on the tiles."