Sea Shanties & Maritime Music

An encyclopedic reference of 434 sea shanties and maritime songs, with full lyrics, history, and playable melodies.

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I remembered that sailors still sing in chorus while they work, and even sing different songs according to what part of their work they are doing... And I suddenly wondered why if this were so it should be quite unknown, for any modern trade to have a ritual poetry... I had really got no further than the sub-conscious feeling of my friend the bank-clerk—that there is something spiritually suffocating about our life; not about our laws merely, but about our life. Bank-clerks are without songs, not because they are poor, but because they are sad. Sailors are much poorer.

G. K. Chesterton, Tremendous Trifles: The Little Birds Who Won't Sing, 1909
Jun
21

A. L. Lloyd identifies The Eclipse as a “Stonehaven steamer” that left for the Arctic during the 1887 whaling season. Gavin Sutherland, in writing for the Centre for Scottish Studies at the University of Aberdeen, provides more information:

Launched from Hall’s yard, Aberdeen, on 3rd January 1867 the ‘Eclipse’ cost almost £12,000, carried eight whale boats and a crew of 55 men. After a famous career at Peterhead the ship was sold to Dundee in 1893 and later on to Norway. Renamed ‘Lomonosov’, the old ship ended her ocean going days as a research vessel under the Russian flag based in Murmansk.

The ship is memorialized in The Eclipse, which opens with a line about the twenty-first of June, when the crew spotted a whale and “lowered all hands away.”

The Eclipse’s famous captain David Gray enlisted the help of Australian photographer Walter Livingstone-Learmonth during the 1888 season. The Eclipse can be seen flenching a whale (stripping the blubber) in the photograph here.

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