Won’t Go!
AKA | Father got a job |
First Published | 1925 |
Writer/composer | Harry Castling / JA Tunbridge | Roud | RN13703 |
Music Hall Performers | SW Wyndham |
Folk performances | Collected from the singing of: Palmer, Freda ; England : Oxfordshire ; 1978 |
From Feldman's Sheet Music (personal copy) WON'T GO Words by Harry Castling. Music by JA Tunbridge. A year ago our homestead was busy as a hive, Everybody was alive, And went off to work at five; But now nobody seems to want to earn their daily bread, And when it's time to go work They all go up to bed. Father's got a job and he won't go, Maria won't go, and the fire won't go; On our divan, he came there in a van, Is a six-foot broker's man, and he won't go. The hens won't lay, the cocks won't crow, The lodger in the attic and the clock won't go; And mother's got a pimple on the tip her nose, Oh, Jerusalem, and that won't go. The only one who tries now is our little servant Jane She gets up in a hail or rain. Then goes back to bed again; Our yellow Persian cat he used to wander miles and miles But he's too lazy now to go Gamboling on the tiles To mention work to father now, he says it makes him ill, Its the same with uncle Will, Down his spine it sends a chill; Once Ma was so industrious and round the house she'd buzz, But poulticing the pimples now is The only work she does!
Won’t Go! was a hit in the Halls of 1925 for former blackface minstrel SW Wyndham.
The song was published by Feldman’s, who advertised it as a follow up to Turned Up, an earlier song also co-authored by Harry Castling. Feldman’s also promoted it for use in the coming pantomime season (1925/26).
It featured in the repertoire of Freda Palmer of Leafield who learnt many of her songs whilst working as a child glove-maker.(She remembered the chorus)
Sources:
- Entries in the Roud Indexes at the Vaughn Williams Memorial Library: https://archives.vwml.org/search/all:single[folksong-broadside-books]/0_50/all/score_desc/extended-roudNo_tr%3A13703
- King Panto Back Again: The songs that everyone will soon be singing, Sunday Post, 29 Nov 1925
- Feldmanism Ad 25 June 125
- Sheet Music: personal copy
- Alison McMorland (1975) notes for MTCD3756 Leafield Lass