Product Details
Roast Beef of Old England

Roast Beef of Old England
Jerry Bryant & Starboard Mess

Price: CDN$ 19.26 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $39. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 11 to 14 days
Ships from and sold by Amazon.ca

10 new or used available from CDN$ 14.99

Average customer review:
(2 )

Track Listing

  1. Spanish Ladies
  2. A Jolly Sailor's True Description Of A Man-Of-War
  3. Adieu, Sweet Lovely Nancy
  4. St. Patrick's Day
  5. Warlike Seamen
  6. The First Of June
  7. Drops Of Brandy
  8. Roast Beef Of Old England
  9. Heart Of Oak
  10. Nancy Dawson
  11. Ben Backstay
  12. Sailors' Hornpipe/Rickett's Hornpipe
  13. Bay Of Biscay-o
  14. The Battle Of The Nile
  15. Nelson's Victory/Hull's Victory
  16. The Banks Of The Nile/Sailor's Cravat
  17. A New Sea Song (Sweethearts And Wives)
  18. Pleasant And Delightful
  19. Captain Barton's Distress On The Lichfield
  20. Chevy Chase
  21. The Shannon And The Chesapeake
  22. Distressed Men-Of-War
  23. Sailor's Jacket
  24. Don't Forget Your Old Shipmate

Product Details

  • Released on: 2000-08-15
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Import
  • Dimensions: .21 pounds

Editorial Reviews

From Amazon.com
If Roast Beef of Old England isn't enough to spawn a dose of contact scurvy, many other of these two dozen salty tunes will set the boat a-rocking. Treasures such as "A Jolly Sailor's True Description of a Man-of-War" and "Drops of Brandy" detail life among British seamen of the early 1800s without dredging up too much of the usual pirates, shipwrecks, or mutiny. It's an historical document of the regular life at sea, inspired by the British Navy novels of Patrick O'Brian, with intentions to anchor the writing in the ordinary sounds and stories of those fictionalized seafaring times. Glad fiddle, fife, and Jerry Bryant's humble six-man choral crew Starboard Mess spill the beans in suitable fashion without a sailor's colorful vocabulary. They supply the "yo ho ho" and annotations, you bring the rum and black powder. --Ian Christe