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Sovay: Difference between revisions

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* [[The Kipper Family]]
* [[The Kipper Family]]
* [[Méav Ní Mhaolchatha]]
* [[Méav Ní Mhaolchatha]]

Sovay is also NS's best friend


== Adaptations in other media ==
== Adaptations in other media ==

Revision as of 17:56, 14 September 2015

Sovay is a traditional English folk song (Roud # 7, Laws N21) about a young woman who dresses and arms herself as a highwayman in order to test her suitor. In disguise she robs her suitor of nearly all his possessions, but even under threat of death he refuses to give up the gold ring given by Sovay, thus proving his devotion. Sovay subsequently confesses the ruse to her lover and returns his various possessions, admonishing him only that had he indeed given up the ring, she would have killed him. The name 'Sovay' is probably a corruption of 'Sophie' or 'Sylvie' - both of which appear instead in some versions of the song.[1]

Versions of the song have been recorded by:

Adaptations in other media

In the mid-80s, the song was used as the theme to Isla St Clair's factual children's TV programme The Song and the Story, which examined the tales behind popular folk songs.

In 1993 Charles Vess and Charles de Lint created a short comic book adaptation of the song, originally published in Dark Horse Presents #75.[2] It was reprinted in The Book of Ballads and Sagas #2 in 1995, which in turn was collected in Ballads in 1997.[3][4]

In 2008 Celia Rees published 'Sovay', a young adult novel which follows a young lady during the time of the French Revolution. She initially becomes a highwayman to test the depth of her fiance's love for her, then to save her father and finally because she enjoys the power and freedom provided by her male attire.[5] [6]

The first vocal track—after a brief instrumental intro track—on Andrew Bird's 2005 album, Andrew Bird & the Mysterious Production of Eggs, is entitled Sovay. The song uses an adapted form of the original's main melody, but Bird's lyric has little-to-no relation, appearing to be a rhapsody on the spiritual fight against socio-political backsliding.

References

  1. ^ Peter Kennedy, Folksongs of Britain and Ireland, pp. 722 and 734.
  2. ^ Comics.org
  3. ^ The Book of Ballads and Sagas #2
  4. ^ Ballads
  5. ^ Sovay
  6. ^ Publishers Weekly