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Dirty Old Town: Folk anthem's lost verse to be revealed (2024)

Paul Burnell,BBC News, Salford

Dirty Old Town: Folk anthem's lost verse to be revealed (1)Dirty Old Town: Folk anthem's lost verse to be revealed (2)Getty Images

A long-lost verse of one of folk music's most famous songs is to be unveiled by the widow of its creator nearly 75 years after it was first sung.

Dirty Old Town was written by Salford-born folk legend Ewan MacColl for Landscape With Chimneys, his 1949 play about his home city.

Since then, the song has taken on a life of its own, being covered by everyone from rockers Black Rebel Motorcycle Club and Frank Black to country stars Steve Earle and Townes Van Zandt and has even formed the basis of a terrace chant about Liverpool defender Virgil van Dijk.

But it will be given a new lease of life by American singer Peggy Seeger, who married MacColl in 1977, when she reveals a new verse in a one-off performance at Salford’s We Invented the Weekend festival 15-16 June.

'Much loved'

She said it would be great for people who knew the song well to hear the verse, which MacColl abandoned in 1951, but admitted it "isn't that good".

"The words are fine, but they just don't scan if you sing it," she said.

"It was written as part of the play, but like a lot of art, if it doesn't work, you drop it."

Dirty Old Town: Folk anthem's lost verse to be revealed (3)Dirty Old Town: Folk anthem's lost verse to be revealed (4)Getty Images

Nevertheless, it will give a new lease of life to a song which has long since become part of the public consciousness, thanks to a pair of covers released by Irish bands almost two decades apart.

All ready much-loved by folk devotees, the song was given an overhaul by The Dubliners in 1968, before being reworked again by The Pogues in 1985.

However, Seeger said she was not impressed with their versions.

"I don’t like what The Dubliners did to it, I don’t like what The Pogues did to it – I think they have lost the loneliness," she said.

"I think they have lost the confusion of a young person walking through it.

"To me, Ewan was reliving his 20s and his late teens so I think it is harder to change."

Such was the success of both versions however that many now assume the song is about Dublin.

Seeger said that while it was firmly about the city in which MacColl grew up, she could understand how it fitted other cities.

"It speaks to everybody from a dirty old broken down industrial city," she said.

"I have no doubt if a Scots band had recorded it, Glasgow people would say it is theirs.

"But Salford was in Ewan MacColl’s bones.

"He took me to his dirty old town within a week of our three-decade partnership."

She said 75 years after it was first written to accompany set changes in MacColl's play, it remained "a perfect song".

"It's a beautiful melody, just four economical verses, and it has been covered by hundreds of singers each in their own way," she said.

There are personal memories too of the song for Seeger.

"It's special because as part of his courtship ritual Ewan McColl brought me to Salford to show what the Dirty Old Town was, because up to that time the only slums I had ever been were the black slums in Washington DC except in DC we already had a throwaway society," she said.

"The streets of Salford were spotless maybe because the women scrubbed their steps in the morning."

She said part of its appeal lay in its language, which was at times unlike what most folk music was offering at the time.

But as he had been an ardent left wing activist since joining in a mass trespass on Kinder Scout to claim the right to roam on private land in 1932, MacColl was not the average folk musician.

"The words 'I'm going to get me a big sharp axe' aren't very folk music, but they speak to his concerns about the struggle of working class people," she said.

Dirty Old Town: Folk anthem's lost verse to be revealed (7)Dirty Old Town: Folk anthem's lost verse to be revealed (8)

She added that the continued appeal of the song would have delighted her late husband.

"I think he would be very surprised and very pleased," she said.

Seeger, an accomplished performer and songwriter in her own right, said she was delighted to be revisiting a song "Ewan and I sang together for decades" at the Salford festival.

A new orchestral version of the song, created by Seeger with her son Neill MacColl and the BBC Philharmonic documentary, will also feature in a BBC Radio 4 Archive on 4 episode.

The radio documentary, which is presented by BBC Radio Manchester presenter and fellow Salford musician Mike Sweeney, will be broadcast on 6 July.

Listen to the best of BBC Radio Manchester on Sounds and follow BBC Manchester on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas to northwest.newsonline@bbc.co.uk

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Music

Dirty Old Town: Folk anthem's lost verse to be revealed (2024)

FAQs

What was "Dirty Old Town" written about? ›

History. The song was written about Salford, then in Lancashire, England, the area where MacColl was born and brought up.

Is Dirty Old Town an IRA song? ›

The song was originally written about Salford in 1949 by Salford-born James Henry Miller, better known by his stage name – Ewan MacColl, and sung by his American wife Peggy Seeger. The original version of the song had no connection to Ireland at all and the instruments used in the song have no Irish relations at all.

Who wrote "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face"? ›

"The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" is a 1957 folk song written by British political singer-songwriter Ewan MacColl for Peggy Seeger, who later became his wife.

Is Ewan MacColl related to Kirsty MacColl? ›

Early life and career. Kirsty MacColl was born in Croydon, Surrey (now in South London), the daughter of folk singer Ewan MacColl (1915–1989) and dancer Jean Newlove (1923–2017). Her father was born in England of Scottish parents.

Is Dirty Old Town a Celtic song? ›

It's about an English town, written by a Scottish man ... but became an Irish classic.

What is the plot of the old town? ›

The morning after a party he cannot remember, a high school senior wakes up on a bench in the city, where he sets out to find answers to questions of identity, love, and the night before.

Why is the song Old Town Road so popular? ›

The song gained traction in late December 2018 after becoming the "Yeehaw Challenge" meme on TikTok, where users created short videos set to the song. The challenge is credited with launching the song to enter the Billboard Hot 100 at number 83, the chart on which the song has since peaked at number one.

Who wrote Whiskey in the Jar? ›

In the book The Folk Songs of North America, folk music historian Alan Lomax suggests that the song originated in the 17th century, and (based on plot similarities) that John Gay's 1728 The Beggar's Opera was inspired by Gay hearing an Irish ballad-monger singing "Whiskey in the Jar".

Did Freddie Mercury write Face It Alone? ›

Written by Brian May, John Deacon, Roger Taylor and Freddie Mercury (credited as Queen) and produced by David Richards, Kris Fredriksson and Justin Shirley-Smith, recorded over thirty years prior to its eventual release, and originally thought "unsalvageable" by May and Taylor, it was released on 13 October 2022 as a ...

Who wrote Eyes Without a Face by Billy Idol? ›

Who first wrote can't take my eyes off you? ›

“Can't Take My Eyes Off You” was written in 1967 by lyricist and producer Bob Crewe and Four Seasons keyboards player Bob Gaudio for Frankie Valli, the group's singer.

Which city is Dirty Old Town about? ›

The song was written about Salford, Lancashire, England, the city where Ewan MacColl, who wrote it, was born and brought up.

What was the tragic death of Kirsty MacColl? ›

Sadly, the boat struck and ran over heroic Kirsty, leaving her with severe chest injuries that killed her instantly. The power boat was owned by wealthy businessman Guillermo Gonzalez Nova, who was on board at the time of the horror accident. A crew member by the name of Jose Cen Yam ended up taking the blame.

Who is the woman in the Pogues? ›

Caitlín O'Riordan (born 4 January 1965) is a British musician. She played bass guitar for the Irish punk/folk band the Pogues from 1983 to 1986. She later played with Elvis Costello as well as Bush Tetras and several other projects.

What is the Old Town Road controversy? ›

Billboard's official statement, repeated across the media, was that the song “incorporates references to country and cowboy imagery [but] does not embrace enough elements of today's country music to chart in its current version.” Billboard added that its “decision to take the song off of the country chart had ...

What does Trent Reznor think of Old Town Road? ›

The 50 Worst Decisions in Movie History

Reznor calls “Old Town Road” “undeniably hooky,” but once it exploded, he took a back seat to the phenomenon. “The reason I haven't stepped in to comment anything about it is, I don't feel it's my place to play any kind of social critic to that,” he says.

Are The Pogues an Irish band? ›

The Pogues were an English or Anglo-Irish Celtic punk band fronted by Shane MacGowan and others, founded in King's Cross, London, in 1982, as Pogue Mahone—an anglicisation by James Joyce of the Irish phrase póg mo thóin, meaning "kiss my arse".

What songs did Ewan MacColl write? ›

MacColl's song "The Shoals of Herring", based on the life of Norfolk fisherman and folk singer Sam Larner was recorded by the Dubliners, the Clancy Brothers, the Corries and more. Other popular songs written and performed by MacColl include "The Manchester Rambler", "The Moving-On Song" and "The Joy of Living".

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