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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Four_Loom_Weaver
rdf:type
yago:Music107020895 yago:MusicalComposition107037465 yago:Wikicat19th-centurySongs yago:Song107048000 yago:AuditoryCommunication107109019 yago:Communication100033020 yago:Abstraction100002137 dbo:MusicalWork
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Four Loom Weaver
rdfs:comment
Four Loom Weaver (Roud 1460), probably derived from "The Poor Cotton Weaver" is a 19th-century English lament on starvation. One source also names it Jone o Grinfilt though this title usually refers to different lyrics and score, which is about the naiveté of country folk. Actually, it is very similar to which can be found in John Harland's Ballads and Songs of Lancashire (1875 pp. 169–171). Jone o Grinfilt is believed to have been written by Joseph Lees of Glodwick, near Oldham in the 1790s.
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dbr:Power_loom dbr:John_Harland dbr:Mrs_Gaskell dbr:Howard_&_Bullough dbc:Year_of_song_unknown dbr:Lancashire_Loom dbr:Jone_o'Grinfilt_Junior dbr:Queen_Street_Mill dbr:Napoleonic_Wars dbr:More_looms dbr:Folk_revival dbr:Broadside_(music) dbr:Jone_o_Grinfilt dbr:American_Civil_War dbr:Glodwick dbr:Bancroft_Shed dbc:19th-century_songs dbr:Mary_Barton dbr:Manchester dbr:Oldham dbc:Songwriter_unknown dbr:Unto_Ashes dbr:Lancashire_Cotton_Famine dbr:Ewan_MacColl dbr:Silly_Sisters_(band) dbr:Cotton_mill dbr:Jez_Lowe dbr:Urtica_dioica dbr:Handloom_weaver
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dbo:abstract
Four Loom Weaver (Roud 1460), probably derived from "The Poor Cotton Weaver" is a 19th-century English lament on starvation. One source also names it Jone o Grinfilt though this title usually refers to different lyrics and score, which is about the naiveté of country folk. Actually, it is very similar to which can be found in John Harland's Ballads and Songs of Lancashire (1875 pp. 169–171). Jone o Grinfilt is believed to have been written by Joseph Lees of Glodwick, near Oldham in the 1790s. The earlier version, the Poor Cotton Weaver, was probably written before 1800, after the Napoleonic wars it was revived or re-written, due to economic hard times, when weavers were reduced to eating nettles. This could refer to the war itself any of the periodic economic downturns in the cotton industry. It was featured in Mary Barton published in 1848, then later referred to the Lancashire Cotton Famine of 1862. It is found on broadsides in Manchester up to the 1880s, it did not survive into the 20th century. In the folk revival it reappeared. The version by Ewan MacColl probably influenced the version by Silly Sisters and by Unto Ashes. Jez Lowe wrote his song "Nearer to Nettles", after an old woman approached his band's vocalist, who'd just sung The "Four-Loom Weaver", remarking she'd never been nearer to eating nettles at that time (late 80s/early 90s) than during any other period of her life.
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