˘ ˇ ˆ ˙ ˇ ˆ - alan murray

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Page 1: ˘ ˇ ˆ ˙ ˇ ˆ - Alan Murray

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Page 2: ˘ ˇ ˆ ˙ ˇ ˆ - Alan Murray

2

����Reading#1 (for Sleep, Laddie, Sleep) ........................................................................................................................................3

Alternative Reading#1 (for The Secret Roads) ..........................................................................................................................3

Reading#2 (for Carpenter’s Boy) ..............................................................................................................................................3

Reading #3 (for What Can the Boy be Thinking of?).................................................................................................................4

Reading#4 (for The Traveller)...................................................................................................................................................4

Reading#5 (for Wine for the Wedding)......................................................................................................................................4

Reading #6 (for The Girl with the Twinkle in Her Eye) ............................................................................................................5

Reading #7 (for Peter’s Early Bath and Through the Roof)......................................................................................................5

Reading#8 (for What’s He Saying Now?) .................................................................................................................................5

Reading#9 (for Slow Down, Martha) ........................................................................................................................................6

Reading#10 (for Medicine Man) ...............................................................................................................................................6

Reading#11 (for Get Out!) ........................................................................................................................................................6

Reading#12 (for In the Garden) ................................................................................................................................................7

Reading#13 (for Nothing to Do With Me) .................................................................................................................................7

Reading#14 (for They Broke My Heart) ....................................................................................................................................7

Reading#15 (for Man on the Shore) ..........................................................................................................................................8

Reading#16 (for Jesus Lives) ....................................................................................................................................................8

Song - The Man : A Calling-On Song......................................................................................................................................10

Song - Sleep, Laddie, Sleep .....................................................................................................................................................11

Alternative Song - The Secret Roads .......................................................................................................................................12

Song - Carpenter’s Boyl ..........................................................................................................................................................13

Song - What Can the Boy be Thinking of?...............................................................................................................................14

Song - The Traveller................................................................................................................................................................15

Tune - Wine for the Wedding...................................................................................................................................................16

Song - The Girl with the Twinkle in Her Eye...........................................................................................................................17

Tune - Peter’s Early Bath.......................................................................................................................................................18

Tune - Through the Roof..........................................................................................................................................................18

Song - What’s He Saying Now?...............................................................................................................................................19

Song - Slow Down, Martha......................................................................................................................................................21

Song - Medicine Man...............................................................................................................................................................22

Song - Get Out!........................................................................................................................................................................23

Tune - In the Garden ...............................................................................................................................................................24

Song - Nothing to do with Me..................................................................................................................................................25

Song - They Broke my Heart....................................................................................................................................................26

Song - The Man on the Shore ..................................................................................................................................................27

Song - Jesus Lives! ..................................................................................................................................................................28

Page 3: ˘ ˇ ˆ ˙ ˇ ˆ - Alan Murray

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Reading#1 (for Sleep, Laddie, Sleep)

This set of songs, tunes and readings tells some of the stories of a baby, who became a boy and then a man ... The Man, some 2000 years ago. The beginning of the story is the best-known bit. Christians, non-Christians and even many from totally different religions celebrate Christmas and know all about the star, the lack of room at the inn, the Wise Men, the shepherds - all the Christmas-card images. Let’s not dwell on all of that, however evocative and moving it may be. Instead, let’s suppose that Mary, the baby’s mother, did what most mothers do after counting the baby’s toes and checking it for dents and scratches. Let’s suppose that Mary began to wonder what the future held for this baby. She had been given some rather unusual warnings of the baby’s coming and all those angels flapping around must have been rather disconcerting! Just suppose that she began to wonder if this baby would follow the same modest and ordinary path of life that she and Joseph had done so far .....

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Alternative Reading#1 (for The Secret Roads)

This set of songs, tunes and readings tells some of the stories of a baby, who became a boy and then a man ... The Man, some 2000 years ago. The beginning of the story is the best-known bit. Christians, non-Christians and even many from totally different religions celebrate Christmas and know all about the star, the lack of room at the inn, the Wise Men, the shepherds - all the Christmas-card images. Let’s look at things from Mary’s perspective, after all the fuss had died down and she and Joseph were heading for home. It must have been quite overwhelming and worrying – why should all these people, including a King, be taking such a keen interest in her little boy?

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Reading#2 (for Carpenter’s Boy)

So the Man was born - an ordinary boy, with ordinary parents and an ordinary home. It has to be said that some of the circumstances of his birth were a little extraordinary. Some of the visitors that came to inspect him were rather unusual, as were some of the presents. Nevertheless, his family was ordinary, and so was he - to begin with. His father was not wealthy, but he got by. He was a carpenter by trade, so he was seldom without work, as wooden tools, furniture and miscellaneous wooden things were always in demand. Naturally, the boy watched his father, as boys tend to do. He was a strong and intelligent lad, and he soon began to pick up some of his father’s skills.

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Page 4: ˘ ˇ ˆ ˙ ˇ ˆ - Alan Murray

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Reading #3 (for What Can the Boy be Thinking of?)

When the boy was 12, his mother and father went to the Festival in the big city, as they did every year. They spent the day, as they did every year, joining in the festivities and meeting old friends. The boy seemed to be up to all his usual ploys with the other lads of his age - full of adventure, rowdiness and nonsense, getting dirty and sweaty in the dust and grime of the city. At the end of the day, however, as Mary and Joseph packed up to go home, they were both annoyed and alarmed to find that the boy was nowhere to be seen. Despite all their warnings about the dangers of wandering away, he was alone, somewhere, in a huge city full of strangers, with darkness beginning to fall..

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Reading#4 (for The Traveller)

The Man spent most of his life working with his father - the humdrum life of a small town carpenter and joiner. When he was about 30, however, he got itchy feet and he went walkabout. His wanderings led him towards a strange character whose appearance and ways had made him unpopular with the authorities. His left-wing political views didn’t help. Now he’d be called a New Age Traveller (or a latter-day hippie) - loud, strident, hairy, bearded, scruffy and unwashed. When he was asked what he was up to, he did not make matters easier. “I am the voice shouting in the desert”. “Every valley must be filled up” “The winding roads must be made straight” This is hardly the sort of thing that endears one to a rather twitchy establishment!

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Reading#5 (for Wine for the Wedding)

Soon, the Man also became known for causing unusual things to happen. Mostly, these were cures, and he found himself pursued by the sick, the lame, and the mentally ill. Only once did he put his inexplicable skills to frivolous use. He and his friends were guests at a wedding - a fairly posh wedding. All was going swimmingly, when the unthinkable happened. The wine ran out. The host was mortified by his dreadful social gaffe in not buying enough - and Oddbins was closed. The next tune is called simply “Wine for the Wedding”. Try to imagine, while the sober guitarist plays the tune, the festivities at the wedding proceeding in blissful ignorance of the awful calamity in store when the wine runs out. What happened next is well known. The Man called for barrels of water to be brought in - and the bar staff thought he was simply hoping that the guests would all be so blotto that they wouldn’t notice that it was not wine. They were flabbergasted when the Man simply turned it into wine - fine wine without the lengthy fermentation process, and

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much, much better than the mediocre plonk that had been served up earlier. The entrance of the drunken fiddler in the reprise signals the entry of the better wine, as the dancing gets wilder, and the wedding guests really let their hair down!

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Reading #6 (for The Girl with the Twinkle in Her Eye)

Bigotry is an ugly word. Sadly, it is also an old, and well- established one. The Man lived in a society where differences in skin colour, religion and nationality were a constant cause of unpleasantness and an excuse for ridicule and the making of bad jokes. Not much has changed since then. For example - by the time the Man started to travel and teach, he had gathered a motley group of followers and helpers around him. To be honest, they were a pretty unimpressive shower - if he had set his mind to it, he could have chosen a much more attractive and charismatic team. They showed their true colours very clearly when, after a long day in the sun, they arrived at a watering-hole where the refreshments were being served by a lady who was not quite their idea of an ideal woman. Her colour, her nationality, and her religion were all wrong. She had a bit of a reputation and there was no way they were taking a drink from HER!

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Reading #7 (for Peter’s Early Bath and Through the Roof)

Faith was and is behind most of The Man’s teaching, miracles and cures. This pair of fiddle tunes celebrates two such occasions - the first when faith was in short supply and the second when it was present by the vanload! On the first occasion celebrated here, dear old Peter decided to try the walking-on-water trick after he had seen The Man do it. Sadly, Peter’s faith was not strong enough then - or later, when it mattered a lot more - but we’ll come back to that sad incident shortly. This time, Peter simply got an unscheduled bath as his faith failed to render him buoyant. In the second miracle celebrated, a poor, disabled man was bed-bound and unable to move from his house. His mates were so confident of Jesus’ ability to cure him that they removed the roof of a house to get their friend close enough to The Man for a cure to be possible. They were not disappointed.

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Reading#8 (for What’s He Saying Now?)

The Man didn’t mince His words. When He thought the law was right, he said so. When He thought the law was an ass, He disregarded it. To those whose job it was to uphold the law, this was a challenge to their authority and to their livelihood. The Man suggested that perhaps, just perhaps, the strongest and most powerful people might not be the ones to come out best in the end. Perhaps there

Page 6: ˘ ˇ ˆ ˙ ˇ ˆ - Alan Murray

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was a place in the world for losers? Perhaps the downtrodden would be lifted up in the end? Perhaps the mightiest warriors are not the models to which we should all aspire? What is this stuff? Is it optimistic, compassionate and uplifting? Is it guaranteed to give hope to the weary, the sad and the desparate? Or is it dangerous, subversive, revolutionary political nonsense that aims to bring down respected leaders, replace them with wishy-washy liberals and bring law and order crashing about our ears? The Man clearly has ambitions to be a king. Who wants a king who thinks that love is more important than power, wealth, fame and influence? What on earth will He say next?

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Reading#9 (for Slow Down, Martha)

I’ve always felt rather sorry for poor Martha. She was the epitome of the good housewife, the diligent hostess and the industrious worker. Her sister Mary seemed to be a lazy good-for-nothing, swooning over The Man and making eyes at Him. When The Man visited this ill-matched pair, Martha was thoroughly cheesed off by her sister’s dreamy attitude, lack of a good work-ethic and goofy hero-worship. The Man surprised her by chastising Martha, not Mary, for working too hard and trying too hard. Sometimes, perhaps, we try too hard to analyse, intellectualise and organise The Man’s words and teachings. Perhaps we should sometimes just relax and let them wash over us - reacting with our hearts, rather than our over-heated brains?

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Reading#10 (for Medicine Man)

Meanwhile, back with those miraculous cures. These got a very mixed reception. Naturally, the sick people were delighted to be cured, and their friends and relatives were also elated. The authorities and in particular the local doctors were less pleased. They regarded the Man as a dangerous and subversive quack, indulging in trickery to make a name for himself. Just for a change, let’s try to look at the quack doctor - the Medicine Man - from that point of view.

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Reading#11 (for Get Out!)

So far, the Man has come over as a real Mr. Clean .... never angry, always calm - spreading goodwill and healing wherever he went. There seems no way he would ever lose his cool, or behave unreasonably - no way he would ever be violent, get into a brawl, or cause any form of disorder. Is there? The scene is the big city. The Man returns to his father’s house, looking forward to a peaceful visit talking things over and recharging his batteries. However, he

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finds that his father’s house has been taken over by some unsavoury characters. It is full of rogue traders, loan sharks and wide boys. His father has been pushed into the background, while they carry on their dishonest and sleazy business. The Man is seriously brassed off.

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Reading#12 (for In the Garden)

Eventually, and inevitably in retrospect, the Man’s outrageous behaviour caught up with him. After all, you can’t expect to achieve superstar status without making some powerful enemies. Frightened by the Man’s ability to draw people to him and the potential threat to their political power that it implied, the establishment acted swiftly. Governments have always been good at undermining the credibility and destroying the character of anyone who looks like a rival. Despite the Man’s repeated assurances that he had no aspiration to political power, he got the treatment. Although not a political animal, the Man was no fool, and he saw the danger well in advance. He knew he was in for trouble, and he knew he couldn’t duck it. He was pretty resigned to his fate, really - he’d spent the 33 years of his life knowing that this was what would happen. However, he was human, and one night, waiting in a garden near the big city with his followers, he had a crisis. Rather than trying to put his thoughts on the imminence of his own unfair and brutal end into words, this tune, called simply “Walking in the Garden”, tries to evoke the mood of despair that came upon him as he contemplated his death.

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Reading#13 (for Nothing to Do With Me)

Things went from bad to worse. The Man was roughed up by his captors, accused of crimes that were wild distortions of his actual deeds, and separated from his friends, followers and loved ones. One of his followers turned out to be a bit of a rat - he betrayed the Man for a bag of money ... paid the price ‘though - he committed suicide afterwards. The Man was sentenced to death, and his followers were rounded up and questioned. The authorities would have liked to execute the lot - just to tidy up all the loose ends. They couldn’t really be convicted of anything, though - all they’d done was to follow the Man around and help out. The Man was the only one they really had a case against. They did try pretty hard with the Man’s best friend, Peter - and he didn’t exactly come up smelling of roses ...

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Reading#14 (for They Broke My Heart)

All of the Man’s followers were men - that was just the way things were in that place and at that time. There were always women around ‘though - his mother, and others drawn to him by need, love, and who-knows-what mixed emotions.

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They saw a Man with power, understanding and compassion. They saw a Man who had no wife, and yet welcomed the company of women. They saw a healer and peacemaker, but a strong, vigorous Man with real charisma. Who knows what mixed reaction this powerful cocktail of characteristics provoked? Who knows how they felt when the Man was whipped, stripped and slaughtered for crimes they neither understood nor believed in?

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Reading#15 (for Man on the Shore)

So the story reached its end ... except that he’s been seen since. It would take a long, long time to catalogue the various sightings, but only one gets a mention here. Why this one? Well, it was soon after his death, and it also formed the basis of a rather nice legend. In turn, the legend was the seed that sowed the seeds of all of the songs that you’ve just heard. Rather then re-word the legend, we’ll simply read it to you, from the book “Lark Rise to Candleford”. It’s a lovely book - read it if you haven’t already. The book is set in turn-of-the-century Oxfordshire, and the occasion is a visit from the local fruit and fish merchant, with his cart. Jerry’s cart had a great attraction for Laura. At the sound of his wheels she would run out to feast her eyes on the lovely rich colours of grapes and pears and peaches. She loved to see the fish, too, with their cool colours and queer shapes, and would imagine them swimming about in the sea or resting among the seaweed. “What is that one called?”, she asked one day, pointing to a particularly queer-looking one. ”That’s a John Dory, me dear. See them black marks? Look like finger-marks, don’t they? And they do say that they be fingermarks. HE made them, that night, you know ... when they was fishing, you know, and HE took some and cooked them all ready for ‘em, an ever since, they say, every John Dory as comes out of the sea have got HIS fingermarks on it. Laura was puzzled, for Jerry had mentioned no name, and he was, moreover, a drinking, swearing old man - little likely, as she thought, to repeat a sacred legend. ”Do you mean the sea of Galilee?” she asked, timidly. ”That’s it my dear. That’s what they say ... whether true or not, of course, I don’t know - but there be the finger marks, right enough, and that’s what they say in our trade.”

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Reading#16 (for Jesus Lives)

So what do we want to to take away from “The Man?”. We hope you’ve enjoyed the songs and images, obviously. We also hope that the long tradition that links folk music and art with Christianity has not been dented too badly by our efforts. We hope that those of you who are familiar with the stories recognised them, and didn’t mind too much what we’d done with them. Finally, if any of you didn’t know

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the stories, we’d encourage you to buy the book and read it - it’s been a best-seller for ages, and it’s full of cracking good reading.

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Page 10: ˘ ˇ ˆ ˙ ˇ ˆ - Alan Murray

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Song - The Man : A Calling-On Song

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Song - Sleep, Laddie, Sleep

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1 Alternative Song - The Secret Roads

1 Note – “Secret Roads” is an alternative to “Sleep, Laddie, Sleep” – either one or the other should be used.

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Song - What Can the Boy be Thinking of?

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Song - The Traveller

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Tune - Wine for the Wedding

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Song - The Girl with the Twinkle in Her Eye

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Tune - Through the Roof

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Song - What’s He Saying Now?

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Song - Slow Down, Martha

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Song - Medicine Man

Page 23: ˘ ˇ ˆ ˙ ˇ ˆ - Alan Murray

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Song - Get Out!

Page 24: ˘ ˇ ˆ ˙ ˇ ˆ - Alan Murray

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Tune - In the Garden

Page 25: ˘ ˇ ˆ ˙ ˇ ˆ - Alan Murray

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Song - Nothing to do with Me

Page 26: ˘ ˇ ˆ ˙ ˇ ˆ - Alan Murray

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Song - They Broke my Heart

Page 27: ˘ ˇ ˆ ˙ ˇ ˆ - Alan Murray

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Song - The Man on the Shore

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Song - Jesus Lives!

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