Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Fiddler's Green

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Fiddler's Green httpsd26horl2n8pviucloudfrontnetpicturesima

Fiddler s green medley


Fiddler's Green is a legendary supposed afterlife, where there is perpetual mirth, a fiddle that never stops playing, and dancers who never tire. In 19th-century maritime folklore it was a kind of afterlife for sailors who have served at least 50 years at sea.

Contents

Turtle slow up sessions fiddler s green


Literature

Fiddler's Green appears in Frederick Marryat's novel The Dog Fiend; Or, Snarleyyow, published in 1856, as lyrics to a sailors' song:

Herman Melville describes a Fiddler’s Green as a sailors’ term for the place on land “providentially set apart for dance-houses, doxies, and tapsters” in his novella Billy Budd, Sailor (published posthumously in 1924).

The author Richard McKenna wrote a story, first published in 1967, entitled "Fiddler's Green", in which he considers the power of the mind to create a reality of its own choosing, especially when a number of people consent to it. The main characters in this story are also sailors, and have known of the legend of Fiddler's Green for many years.

Fiddler's Green is an extrasolar colony mentioned in Robert A. Heinlein's novels The Cat Who Walks Through Walls and Friday.

In Neil Gaiman's The Sandman comic book series, Fiddler's Green is a place located inside of the Dreaming, a place that sailors have dreamed of for centuries. Fiddler's Green is also personified as a character as well as a location in the fictional world; the former largely based upon casual associations of G. K. Chesterton. From November 12 to 14, 2004, a comic book convention promoted as "Fiddler's Green, A Sandman Convention" was held at the Millennium Hotel in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Author Neil Gaiman and several Sandman series artists and others involved in the series' publication participated in the convention, with profits benefiting the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund.

In George Romero's 2005 film Land of the Dead, the safe, upper-class high-rise condo building is called "Fiddler's Green."

Song lyrics

  • A song based on Fiddler's Green, called Fiddler's Green or more often Fo'c'sle Song, was written and copyrighted by John Conolly, a Lincolnshire (English) songwriter. The song was recorded by The Dubliners' 1973 Plain and Simple album. It was also recorded by Tim Hart and Maddy Prior in their 1976 album, "Folk Songs of Olde England Vol. 2." The song is sung worldwide in nautical and Irish traditional circles, and is often mistakenly thought to be a traditional song. A version of the Conolly song was recorded by Un-Reconstructed on their 2011 CD We Dare Sing Dixie.
  • Fiddler's Green appears as a destination in Archie Fisher's Final Trawl.
  • Fiddler's Green appears in Hans Zimmer's "Hoist the Colours" from Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End. in the verse "With the keys to the cage and the devil to pay/We lay to Fiddler's Green"
  • "Fiddler's Green" is a song by the Canadian rock group The Tragically Hip.
  • "Fiddler's Green" is a song by Marley's Ghost, a band out of Northern California.
  • "Fiddler on the Green" is a song by the German power metal Demons and Wizards (a side-project group of the metal bands Blind Guardian and Iced Earth).
  • "Fiddler's Green" is a song by Grimsby (UK) folksinger John Conolly, widely recorded by such artists as Liam Clancy, Irish folk group The Dubliners, and the American sailor band Schooner Fare; Schooner Fare credits the song for bringing together their band.
  • "Fiddler's Green" is a song by the Welsh band The Stereophonics
  • In the traditional shanty "New York Girls," as recorded by Tom Lewis on 1995's Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Singer!, the last line sung by the sailor is, "Commend our bones to Davy Jones, our souls to Fiddler's Green."
  • "Fiddler's Green" is the name of the 2005 Grammy Award-winning album by folk artist Tim O'Brien and the title track of that album.
  • "Fiddler's Green" is the name of an instrumental theme composed by Yoko Kanno, included on her album Uncharted Waters II.
  • U.S. military

    The Cavalrymen's Poem, also entitled "Fiddlers' Green" was published in the U.S. Army's Cavalry Journal in 1923 and became associated with the 1st Cavalry Division.

    The name has had other military uses. Many places associated with the U.S. Military have been named Fiddler's Green:

  • The U.S. Marine Corps operates Firebase Fiddler's Green in the heart of the Helmand River Valley, in Helmand Province, Afghanistan.
  • An artillery Fire Support Base in Military Region III in Vietnam in 1972, occupied principally by elements of 2nd Squadron, 11th Armored Cavalry
  • The U.S. Navy's enlisted men's club in Sasebo, Japan from 1952 to 1976
  • The cavalryman's poem about Fiddler's Green is the regimental poem of the US 2nd Cavalry Regiment.
  • The enlisted men's club at Bainbridge Naval Training Center
  • An informal bar at the Fort Sill Officers' Open Mess
  • The stable and pasture used by Parsons Mounted Cavalry, a cadet group at Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas
  • A bar at the Saber & Quill in Fort Knox, Kentucky
  • The larger of the two bars at the Leader's Club at Fort Benning, Georgia
  • Building 2805 at Fort Hood, Texas, the former Officers Club
  • A small E-club on the U.S. Marine Corps' Camp Pendleton in area 43 (Las Pulgas)
  • The base pub at the Joint Forces Training Base, Los Alamitos, CA
  • Former dining facility used by 2nd Cavalry Regiment at Fort Polk, LA
  • An artillery only pub for the 10th Marine Regiment, Camp Lejeune, NC
  • References

    Fiddler's Green Wikipedia