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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:The_Banks_of_Newfoundland
rdf:type
yago:WikicatMilitaryMarches dbo:MusicalWork yago:Music107020895 yago:ExpressiveStyle107066659 yago:MarchingMusic107058296 yago:MilitaryMarch107058468 yago:AuditoryCommunication107109019 yago:Communication100033020 yago:Song107048000 yago:Abstraction100002137 yago:MusicalComposition107037465 yago:MusicGenre107071942 owl:Thing yago:Wikicat1820Songs yago:WikicatCanadianPatrioticSongs
rdfs:label
The Banks of Newfoundland
rdfs:comment
"The Banks Of Newfoundland" is the earliest Newfoundland composition set down in music notation. It was composed by Chief Justice Francis Forbes in 1820 and published in a piano arrangement by Oliver Ditson of Boston. Originally composed as a dance, it was treated as a march by the soldiers of Royal Newfoundland Regiment during World War I; it later became the Regiment's authorized march.
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dbc:1820_songs dbc:Canadian_military_marches dbc:Canadian_folk_songs dbc:Newfoundland_and_Labrador_folk_songs
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dbo:abstract
"The Banks Of Newfoundland" is the earliest Newfoundland composition set down in music notation. It was composed by Chief Justice Francis Forbes in 1820 and published in a piano arrangement by Oliver Ditson of Boston. Originally composed as a dance, it was treated as a march by the soldiers of Royal Newfoundland Regiment during World War I; it later became the Regiment's authorized march. It has also been associated with the Royal St. John's Regatta since its early days. As a Regatta tune it is more popularly known as "Up The Pond", and is traditionally played as the crews pass the bandstand on their return to the stakes. It was later made the official tune of the Regatta. An entirely different "The Banks of Newfoundland" is a song in ballad form, created as a parody of "Van Dieman's Land." It voices the lament of a sailor on a voyage from Liverpool to New York, on which one must pass the cold Grand Banks.
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