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Author Dolph, Edward Arthur, 1896-1982, editor.

Title "Sound off!" : Soldier songs from Yankee Doodle to Parley voo [compiled by] Edward Arthur Dolph; music arranged by Philip Egner; illustrated by Lawrence Schick; foreword by Peter B. Kyne.

Publication Info. New York : Cosmopolitan book corporation, 1929.

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 Bristol, Main Library - Non Fiction  784.3 D59    Check Shelf
Description xv, 621 pages : frontispiece, illustrations ; 27 cm
Bibliography Bibliography: pages 613-615.
Contents Songs with hash-stripes : current section. The bugle-calls. Fatigue call ; Mess call ; Reveille ; Sick call ; Stable call ; Taps -- The caisson song -- Captain Jinks -- The cavalry remount -- The cavalry song -- The coast artilleryman -- Drill, ye engineers, drill -- The drinking fusileers -- Fiddlers' green -- For her lover who was far away -- For seven long years -- I don't want no more army -- The infantry song -- In the good old target time -- It's a way we have in the army -- It was not like this in the old armee -- Keep them rolling -- The monkeys have no tails in Zamboanga -- The mountain battery -- Old King Cole -- O'Reilly's gone to hell -- The raw recruit -- The red guidon -- The regular army, oh! -- Rogues' marches -- Stand, army, to the bar -- There is no work in the army -- With the dirt behind their ears -- You're in the army now.
Hinky-dinky, parley-voo? : World War section. Army beans -- Après la guerre fini -- The Battle of Bill Run -- The Battle of Paris -- Bill, old dog, we're going to do yah, Bombed -- The brave grenadier -- Bring back my kitchen to me -- The busted king of England -- Carry on -- Coast artillery song -- The corporal gives me hell -- Darling, I am coming back -- The engineer train -- Get out that old broken tibia -- Give me a discharge / [words] by Walter Scott -- Give me some hardtack -- Good morning, Mr. Zip-Zip-Zip -- The guts of the army -- Hail, hail, the gang's all here -- A handsome young airman -- Have you forgot us? / [words] by Walter Scott -- A helluva engineer -- Hinky-dinky, parley-voo? -- Hold your head down, fusileer -- A hot time in Berlin -- I ain't got weary yet / [words] by Howard Johnson and Percy Wenrich -- I'd hate to be a Hun -- If you don't like beans and hardtack -- I'll tell you where they were -- I'm a-rarin' to go -- In the base at Savenay -- It's the syme the whole world over -- I want to go home -- Just behind the battle, Mother -- K-K-K-Katy -- Keep your eye on General Wingate's brigade / [words] by Walter Scott -- Keep your head down, Fritzie boy -- Kelly field air service song -- Kussing the kaiser -- Look at the ears on him -- Mademoiselle soixante-quinze -- Medical officers' training camp song -- The M.P.'s -- Oh, how I hate to go into the mess hall -- Oh, it's a lovely war -- The old gray hearse -- One of the yankee division's marching songs -- Our wild Irish rows -- Over there -- Parodies on The Darktown strutters' ball. Air service version : Kelly field ; Where do you get that stuff? ; Version of battery C, 21st F.A., division ; Version of the twenty-seventh division ; Version of the twenty-eighth division ; Version of unknown origin -- Parodies on K-K-K-Katy. K-K-K-P ; C-C-C-Cootie -- Parodies on Liberty bell. Company A, 121st M.G.Bn. ; Old General Bell -- Parodies on A long, long trail. A Camp Travis parody ; The red leg rookie's lament ; There's a long, long nail a-grinding -- Parodies on Over there. After all ; The 360th infantry parody -- Parodies on The old gray mare. The kaiser ain't what he used to be ; Pay-day song ; Signal corps song ; We're in the Q.M.C. -- Parody on Tramp, tramp, tramp -- Parodies on Where do we go from here? Bon soir, mademoiselle ; Mother, take in your service flag ; Mother, put out your serivce star ; Parody of 310th engineers ; Slip a pill to Kaiser Bill -- The passing pilot -- Post-war stanzas of Hinky-dinky, parley-voo? -- The private's song -- Roarious : coast artillery marching song -- Scratch, scratch, scratch -- Second field volunteers / [words] by Walter Scott -- She is a lulu -- Slum and beans -- Song from the 109th field artillery -- That's the wrong way to tickle Marie -- There are ships -- The twenty-eighth division -- We're all going calling on the kaiser -- We're through -- We saw the damn thing through -- We've got a dinky stove n'everything -- When evening cooties crawl -- When I get to New York / [words] by Walter Scott -- When the guns are rolling yonder -- When we step up old fifth avenue.
In the days of the empire : Spanish-American War section. At Naic : no. 1 -- At Naic : no. 2 -- Bacon on the rind -- By old Fort San Felipe -- The carabao -- Down by Old Manila Bay -- A dream -- El Soldado Americano -- The emancipated race -- The Filipino hombre -- The governor general's song -- If a lady's wearin' pantaloons -- In Mindanao -- Little brown brothers -- On Datu Ali's trail -- On the road to Old Luzon -- A rookie -- The soldiers' song -- Transport song.
The blue and the gray : Civil War section. Abraham's daughter -- All quiet along the Potomac tonight -- The army bean -- The army bugs -- Army graybacks -- Army grub -- The battle-cry of freedom : battle song -- The battle-cry of freedom : rallying song -- Battle hymn of the republic -- The bonnie blue flag -- The bowld soger boy -- The cavaliers of Dixie -- Co-ca-che-lunk -- Colored soldiers at Honey Hill -- Confederate parody on Just before the battle, Mother -- Corporal Schnaps -- Dixie -- Do they miss me in the trenches? -- Down in Charleston jail -- Eating goober peas -- For bales -- Grafted into the army -- Hard crackers -- Hardtack -- Here's your mule -- I'll be a sergeant -- The infantry -- Joe Bowers -- John Brown's body -- Just before the battle, Mother -- Kingdom coming -- Libby Prison song -- A life in the soldiers' camp -- The life of a soldier -- A life on the Vicksburg bluff -- Lorena -- Marching along -- Marching through Georgia -- Mary had a little lamb -- Maryland, my Maryland -- Not the infantry, but the cavalry -- Oh, I'm a good old rebel -- Since I've been in the army -- Song from 107th colored troops -- Song of the dude -- Stonewall Jackson's way -- Tenting on the old camp-ground -- Touch the elbow -- Tramp, tramp, tramp, the boys are marching -- 'T was at the siege of Vicksburg -- Upi dei di -- We are the boys of Potomac's ranks -- We've drunk from the same canteen -- When Johnny comes marching home -- When Sherman marched down to the sea -- When this cruel war is over -- Winning them back -- Would you be a soldier, laddy?
On to Mexico : Mexican War section. The battle call -- The bayonet boys -- Buck and gag him -- Buena vista -- Come raise aloft the red, white, and blue -- The death of Crockett -- The fair land of Texas -- Femal volunteer for Mexico -- Fire away -- Join the hickory blues -- The leg I left behind me -- Love and battle -- My daddy to my mammy said -- New York volunteers' camp song -- Point Isabel chant -- Remember the Alamo -- Rio Bravo -- Song of the Memphis volunteers -- The song of Texas -- Strike for your rights, avenge your wrongs -- Taylor, the fine old southern gentleman -- Texan rangers' song -- The Texas war cry -- To arms -- Uncle Sam and Mexico -- Uncle Sam and Texas -- The union call -- 'Way down in Mexico -- We are coming home -- We're the boys for Mexico -- Will you come to the bower -- With these we'll bivouac -- Zachary Taylor.
From the Wabash to the Everglades : War of 1812 section. The American star -- The Battle of Stonington -- Benjamin Beall -- The boys of Ohio -- Frontier man's call -- The dragoon bold -- Hey Betty Martin -- The hunters of Kentucky -- The Indian yell -- New yankee doodle dandy -- Parliament of England -- Patriotic diggers -- Pauvre Madelon -- The star-spangled banner -- The yankee girls -- The yankee volunteers.
In the days of Yankee Doodle : Revolutionary War section. The Battle of the Kegs -- The blue bird -- Brave Paulding and the spy -- The British light infantry -- Chester -- Come out, ye continentalers -- Come swallow your bumpers, ye tories -- Follow Washington -- Free America -- How happy the soldier -- How stands the glass around -- The Irishman's epistle to the troops in Boston -- Mad Anthony Wayne -- Old soldiers of the king -- Parody on The banks of the Dee -- The progress of Sir Jack Bragg -- The Saratoga song -- Sergeant Champe -- The Swamp Fox -- The volunteer boys -- Yankee doodle.
Songs from the regiments. Fifty-first coast artillery song -- Fourteenth infantry song -- Garryowen : 7th cavalry -- The girl I left behind me : 7th infantry -- Hiking song of the eighth infantry -- In the second cavalry -- Mexican border medley -- Ninth cavalry anthem : The monkey married the baboon's sister -- Old Arizona again : 4th cavalry -- The old ninth infantry -- Only one more jungle season : 11th engineers -- Seventy-sixth field artillery song / words & music by Edith H. Ward -- Sixth field artillery song -- A son of a muskateer : 7th N.Y. -- Tenth U.S. infantry song -- Third coast artillery march -- To the eighteenth : 18th infantry -- We lead the way : 29th infantry -- We're the boys of the thirsty [i.e. thirty]-first infantry -- The young dragoon : 5th cavalry.
West Point songs. Alma mater -- Army, army, you're a wonder -- Army blue -- Army blue of 1859 -- Army, o army -- The army's coming down the river -- Benny Havens, oh! -- Cadets' graduating song for 1848 -- Chevrons -- Dashing white sergeant -- Down in Maryland -- Fight away -- Furlo' moon -- Furlo' song of 1829 -- He done his level best -- Hike song of 1917 -- How well I remember -- Missouri national -- Official West Point march -- Oh, me, oh, my -- Slum and gravy -- The yearling.
Subject War songs, American.
Ballads, English -- United States.
Songs, English.
Added Author Egner, Philip, 1870-1956.
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