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Waltzing Matilda

"Waltzing Matilda" is a song developed in the Australian style of poetry and folk music called a bush ballad. It has been described as the country's "unofficial national anthem".[1]

For other uses, see Waltzing Matilda (disambiguation).

"Waltzing Matilda"

1895

1903

The title was Australian slang for travelling on foot (waltzing) with one's belongings in a "matilda" (swag) slung over one's back.[2] The song narrates the story of an itinerant worker, or "swagman", making a drink of billy tea at a bush camp and capturing a stray jumbuck (sheep) to eat. When the jumbuck's owner, a squatter (grazier), and three troopers (mounted policemen) pursue the swagman for theft, he declares "You'll never catch me alive!" and commits suicide by drowning himself in a nearby billabong (watering hole), after which his ghost haunts the site.


The original lyrics were composed in 1895 by Australian poet Banjo Paterson, to a tune played by Christina MacPherson. The first published setting of "Waltzing Matilda" was Harry Nathan's on 20 December 1902. Nathan wrote a new variation of Christina MacPherson's melody and changed some of the words.[3] Sydney tea merchant, James Inglis, wanted to use "Waltzing Matilda" as an advertising jingle for Billy Tea. In early 1903, Inglis purchased the rights to 'Waltzing Matilda' and asked Marie Cowan, the wife of one of his managers, to try her hand at turning it into an advertising jingle.[4] Cowan made some more changes to the words and some very minor changes to Nathan's melody and gave the song a simple, brisk, harmonious accompaniment which made it very catchy.[5] Her song, published in 1903, grew in popularity, and Cowan's arrangement remains the best-known version of "Waltzing Matilda".[6][7]


Extensive folklore surrounds the song and the process of its creation, to the extent that it has its own museum, the Waltzing Matilda Centre in Winton, in the Queensland outback, where Paterson wrote the lyrics.[8] In 2012, to remind Australians of the song's significance, Winton organised the inaugural Waltzing Matilda Day to be held on 6 April,[9][10] wrongly thought at the time to be the anniversary of its first performance.[11]


The song was first recorded in 1926 as performed by John Collinson and Russell Callow.[12] In 2008, this recording of "Waltzing Matilda" was added to the Sounds of Australia registry in the National Film and Sound Archive, which says that there are more recordings of "Waltzing Matilda" than any other Australian song.[9]

Lyrics[edit]

Typical lyrics[edit]

There are no "official" lyrics to "Waltzing Matilda" and slight variations can be found in different sources.[92] The following lyrics are the Cowan version published as sheet music in early 1903.[93]

During the 1950s, a parody of the original entitled "Once a Learned Doctor" gained some currency in Australian university circles. It featured lyrics rewritten with reference to the split in the in the period 1954 to 1957.[136]

Australian Labor Party

In 1961, Australian songwriter provided new lyrics to the traditional tune, titled "God Bless Australia" (see that article for its lyrics), which he hoped would become the Australian national anthem.[137]

Jack O'Hagan

's 1971 song "And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda" relates the story of a former swagman whose comrades got killed in the Gallipoli campaign and who himself lost his legs. The end of the song includes a fragment of "Waltzing Matilda".[138]

Eric Bogle

(played by Kenneth Williams) in the late 1960s BBC radio programme Round the Horne did a parody of "Waltzing Matilda" beginning "Once long ago in the shade of a goolie bush..."[139]

Rambling Syd Rumpo

The Family Car Songbook (1983) presents a "translation" of the song into an "American" version, using the same tune.

[140]

' 1976 song "Tom Traubert's Blues" incorporates elements of "Waltzing Matilda".[141]

Tom Waits

Australian composer Harry Sdraulig's "Fantasia on Waltzing Matilda" (2020) was composed for and Kathryn Stott.[142]

Yo-Yo Ma

Australian violinist 's album The Golden Age, nominated for an ARIA Music Award, concludes with an arrangement for string quartet by fellow "Made in Berlin" quartet member Stephan Koncz.[143][144]

Ray Chen

O'Keeffe, Dennis (2012). Waltzing Matilda: The secret history of Australia's favourite song. Crows Nest, NSW: Allen & Unwin.  978-1-74237-706-3. OCLC 780413544.

ISBN

Waltzing Matilda – Australia's Favourite Song

online exhibition from the National Library of Australia

Who'll come a Waltzing Matilda with me?

the official website of the Waltzing Matilda Centre, an exhibit in the Qantilda Museum in Winton, Queensland

Matildacentre.com.au

digitised and held by the National Library of Australia

Papers of Christina McPherson relating to the song "Waltzing Matilda"

musically correct transcription of the Christina Macpherson version

Waltzing Matilda – The Musical

australianscreen online

First recording of the song "Waltzing Matilda"

on YouTube, Slim Dusty

"Waltzing Matilda"

'Craigielee', arranged by English-born Australian Thomas Bulch in 1892.

‘Bonnie Wood of Craigielee’ in ‘Lyric Gems of Scotland’ 1850.

'The Lyric Gems of Scotland', page 65

'Bonnie Wood of Craigielea' arranged by T S Gleadhill in ‘Kyles Scottish Lyric Gems’ 1880.

'Kyles Scottish Lyric Gems', pages 244, 245

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