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- Wild_Mountain_Thyme abstract ""Wild Mountain Thyme" (also known as "Purple Heather" and "Will Ye Go, Lassie, Go") is a folk song written by Francis McPeake, a member of a well known musical family in Belfast, Ireland, and of Scottish origin. McPeake's lyrics are a variant of the song "The Braes of Balquhither" by Scottish poet Robert Tannahill (1774–1810), a contemporary of Robert Burns. Tannahill's original song, first published in Robert Archibald Smith's Scottish Minstrel (1821–24), is about the hills (braes) around Balquhidder near Lochearnhead. Like Burns, Tannahill collected and adapted traditional songs, and "The Braes of Balquhither" may have been based on the traditional song "The Braes o' Bowhether".McPeake's tune is significantly different from Tannahill's, which was most likely based on a traditional air. In an 1850 publication, Scottish Songs, edited by George Farquhar Graham, notes indicate that Tannahill's song was set to music by R. A. Smith himself. Others scholars suggest the melody is based on an old Scottish traditional tune "The Three Carls o' Buchanan".McPeake dedicated "Wild Mountain Thyme" to his first wife. Many years after she died, McPeake remarried, and his son, Francis McPeake II, wrote an extra verse to celebrate the marriage. "Wild Mountain Thyme" was first recorded by McPeake's nephew, also named Francis McPeake, in 1957 for the BBC series As I Roved Out.".
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme wikiPageExternalLink blsongs_thyme.htm.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme wikiPageID "7567437".
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme wikiPageRevisionID "593314412".
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme description "The song performed by Christoph Nolte.".
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme filename "Christoph Nolte - The Rocky Road - The Wild Mountain Thyme.ogg".
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme hasPhotoCollection Wild_Mountain_Thyme.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme title "The Wild Mountain Thyme".
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme subject Category:1957_songs.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme subject Category:Irish_folk_songs.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme subject Category:Scotland_national_football_team_songs.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme subject Category:The_Byrds_songs.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme subject Category:Van_Morrison_songs.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme type 1957Songs.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme type Abstraction100002137.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme type AuditoryCommunication107109019.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme type Communication100033020.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme type ExpressiveStyle107066659.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme type FolkMusic107060167.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme type FolkSong107050952.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme type IrishFolkSongs.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme type Music107020895.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme type MusicGenre107071942.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme type MusicalComposition107037465.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme type PopularMusic107059255.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme type Song107048000.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme type TheByrdsSongs.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme type VanMorrisonSongs.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme comment ""Wild Mountain Thyme" (also known as "Purple Heather" and "Will Ye Go, Lassie, Go") is a folk song written by Francis McPeake, a member of a well known musical family in Belfast, Ireland, and of Scottish origin. McPeake's lyrics are a variant of the song "The Braes of Balquhither" by Scottish poet Robert Tannahill (1774–1810), a contemporary of Robert Burns.".
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme label "Wild Mountain Thyme".
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme label "Wild Mountain Thyme".
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme sameAs The_Wild_Mountain_Thyme.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme sameAs Wild_Mountain_Thyme.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme sameAs Wild_Mountain_Thyme.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme sameAs m.0265k1r.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme sameAs Q877453.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme sameAs Q877453.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme sameAs Wild_Mountain_Thyme.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme wasDerivedFrom Wild_Mountain_Thyme?oldid=593314412.
- Wild_Mountain_Thyme isPrimaryTopicOf Wild_Mountain_Thyme.