Strolling round the town; or The Rickety Rackety Crew

AKAA birthday song
First Published1893

Writer/composerHarry CastlingRoudRN13322

Music Hall PerformersCharles Deane
Folk performancesCollected from the singing of:
Neal, Jesse; England : Gloucestershire : 1960
Belton, George; England : Sussex : 1971
Poacher, Cyril England : Suffolk : 1972
The refrain quoted in 1894:
Strolling round the town.
Knocking people down,
Tasting every kind of wet,
Having a rare old time you bet, 
Mashing all the girls,
Having a row or two
We're the rare old, fair old, Rickety Rackety Crew.

From the 1893 Sheet Music in the British Library
A birthday comes but once a year
Then its everyone's delight to keep it up_ To keep it up 
We start it getting down the wet and finish with a fight,
And then there's always half a dozen run in for the night.
It was just the same boys yesterday with me,
Twas my birthday you know, and how the wine did flow;
We all got jolly then full of devilment.
We left our darling wives at home, then arm in arm we went... 

Strolling round the town, rolling up and down,
Tasting every kind of wet, having a fine old night you bet, 
Treating all the Boys, we didn't care a sou,
A fair old,rare old, rickety rackety Crew.

We started drinking champagne, 
But the money wouldn't last to keep it up_ To keep it up
The fifty bob I started with was withering too fast,
And just as I was counting up, two charming ladies passed.
They called me Charley (that's not my proper name)
But still I gave a wink, then shouted have a drink,
They both said yes and soon "full up" they got,
We made them both as bad as us, then all the blessed lot... 

At three this morn we all were leaning 
Up against a wall to keep it up_ To keep it up.
Surrounded by a dozen police who'd come at "Duty's" call,
And when they shouted "Move on", Straight, we couldn't move at all.
From every station round about the town,
An ambulance was fetched, then on them we were stretched.
Before his nibbs next morning we were sent
Who fined us forty bob a piece just because we went...

A big hit for comic Charles Deane (see brief biography below)) in the mid-1890s. It was written by Harry Castling and a hit throughout the English-speaking world. It was remembered by traditional singers in the UK in the 1960s/70s and a song of a very similar title was collected in Canada by Edith Fowke from the singing of LaRena Clark

Charles Morton, veteran manager of the Palace Theatre was one of many who saw drinking songs of this type as being exactly the sort of thing which gave modern Music Hall (i.e. in the 1890s) a bad name.

There are hints that the published sheet music may have been slightly politer than the version sung in the Halls. In the interview Morton suggested the chorus quoted above, which involved “knocking people down” rather than “rolling up and down”. As far as I can ascertain all 20th century renditions of the song use “knocking people down”

The Era – Saturday 02 September 1893

The song inspired this cartoon of street singers produced by Phil May for Punch magazine.

Cartoon by Phil May, Punch, 21 September 1895

Charles Deane (1866-1910) was a Jewish comedian and songwriter who started his working life as a porter in Billingsgate Fish Market and according to his obituary remained popular with the porters throughout his stage career. He was best known as a comic singer and “teller of amusing Jewish stories”. By all accounts he was extremely successful, but he died in relative poverty at the age of 44, leaving behind a wife and four daughters “totally unprovided for”. He was unable to join a benefit society as he had been diagnosed with consumption (tuberculosis) – he spent the last 18 months of his life unable to work.

Here’s a version of The Rickety Rackety Crew sung by traditional singer Cyril Poacher in 1972:

Cyril Poacher sings it on  Musical Traditions MT CD 303 (‘Plenty of Thyme’)

Sources:

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