Bazsites.com Shanties And Sailor Songs
Directory Topics
On the Web
- Sailor Songs - Sea shanties, whaling songs, sailor songs, songs of the sea, maritime music, forebitters, lyrics, history, CD orderform, good links to other sites. chanteys. Music by Roger Chartier
- Shanties and Sea Songs - Sea shanties are the work songs used on ships during the Age of Sail.
- Shanties and Sea Songs - Lyrics to songs and shanties from the days of tall ships.
- Songs of the Sea - Sea Shanties and other Songs of the Sea: Midis, Lyrics and Information on the songs and the history behind them.
- 250 Songs of the Sea - 10,000 Folksongs from around the world
Wikipedia Articles
- Super Moonies - Super Moonies was a German pop group created in 1998 to provide the soundtrack for the successful Sailor Moon anime series, particularly the German-dubbed version. Their songs included "Kämpfe Sailor Moon" and "Macht des Mondes", and sold on compilation CDs with unrelated songs by artists such as Jasmin Wagner and Aaron Carter.
- Wood's Tea Company - Wood's Tea Company is an acclaimed American folk music group based in Vermont. They perform a wide variety of songs, including sea shanties, folk songs, Irish drinking songs, and Celtic music.
- Banana Boat - Banana Boat is a Polish male vocal quintet, specializing in contemporary songs of the sea as well as in close-harmony interpretations of classical sea shanties, and recently (as of 2005) also experimenting with other genres of music (Christmas carols, popular songs, jazz compositions).
- Papillon Rose - is an anime which parodies the magical girl genre, particularly Sailor Moon and Cutie Honey. Created by dojinshi group ECHIGOYA, Papillon Rose started out as a metafiction joke on a website, and the official website only had a few pictures of characters (which were usually copied from scenes in Sailor Moon, with the artwork changed) and a few lyrics to opening and ending theme songs.
- Sea shanty - Sea shanties (singular "shanty", also spelled "chantey"; derived from the French word "chanter", 'to sing') were shipboard working songs. Shanties flourished from at least the 15th century through the days of steam ships in the first half of the 20th century.