Cover Versions and Recordings
The song (as "The Green Fields of France") was a huge success for The Furey Brothers and Davey Arthur in the 1980s in Ireland and beyond. The melody and words vary somewhat from the Eric Bogle original with some of the Scots phrases replaced (e.g. Did the rifle fire o'er ye? is often replaced by Did they play the death march?). It was also recorded by Dropkick Murphys, who changed the lyrics only slightly. Eric Bogle has repeatedly stated that his own favourite recording of the song is by John McDermott.
Film maker Pete Robertson used the Dropkick Murphys version in his 2008 short film The Green Fields of France.
Cover versions include:
- Alex Beaton (1995), on the album The Water Is Wide
- Angelic Upstarts (1986), on the album Power Of The Press
- Asonance (2000), in a Czech version "Zelené francouzské pláně" ("The Green Fields of France"), on the album Alison Gross
- Attila the Stockbroker (1987)
- Bob Dylan
- Bok, Muir & Trickett (1978)
- Celtic Tenors (2002), on the album So Strong
- Celtic Thunder (2009), as "The Green Fields of France", on the album Take Me Home
- Charlie Zahm (1997), on the album Festival Favorites
- Clare Bowditch, Tim Rogers and Gotye (2007)
- Damh the Bard (2009), as "The Green Fields of France", on the album Tales from the Crow Man
- Donovan (1980), on the album Neutronica
- Dramtreeo (1992), as a duet on the album Dramtreeo
- Dropkick Murphys (2005), as "The Green Fields of France", on the album The Warrior's Code
- Eric Fish, in the German version by Hannes Wader
- Fist Of Steel, as "Green Fields Of France"
- Hannes Wader (1980), in a German version "Es ist an der Zeit" (1980)
- Iain MacKintosh (1976), on the album Live in Glasgow
- Jake Burns, on his album Drinkin' Again
- John Schumann and the Vagabond Crew (2008), on the album Behind the Lines
- June Tabor (1977), as 'No Mans Land', on the album Ashes and Diamonds and on Folk Anthology
- Kevin McKrell (1989), as "Greenfields of France", on the album Bound For Boston
- Liam Clancy
- Moke (2011), on the album Till death do us part theatre tour
- North Sea Gas (2010), on the album Spirit Of The Banished
- Off Kilter (2005), on the album Kick It!
- Peter, Paul and Mary (1990), as "No Man's Land", on the album Flowers and Stones
- Plethyn in a Welsh translation: "Gwaed ar eu Dwylo" (Blood on their Hands)
- Priscilla Herdman (1982), on the album Forgotten Dreams
- Prussian Blue (2005), as "Green Fields Of France", on the album The Path We Chose
- Saga
- Shilelagh Law, on the album Good Intentions
- Skrewdriver (1988), as "Green Fields of France"
- Sons of Maxwell (1996), as "The Green Fields of France"
- Stage Bottles, as "Green Fields Of France"
- Stiff Little Fingers
- Stockton's Wing (1978), as "No Man's Land" on the album Stockton's Wing
- The Chieftains
- The Clancy Brothers
- The Corries
- The Fureys
- The High Kings (2010) on the album "Memory Lane" as "Green Fields of France"
- The Irish Tenors on "Ellis Island" as "The Green Fields of France"
- The Men They Couldn't Hang (1984), as "The Green Fields of France"
- The Merry Wives of Windsor (2007), on the album Tales from Windsor's Tavern, as "Green Fields of France"
- Tommy Fleming
- The Fenians (1999), on their album Band Of Rogues
- Alaskan song writer 907Britt (2010), as "William McBride"
- Chris A Butler (English Singer/Songwriter) as "The Green Fields of France"
- Cobbers (Australian folk band), (1979) live on the album "Bushland Dreaming"
- French singer Renaud (2009), in a French version "Willie McBride", on the album Molly Malone
- Robert Marr (2011) as "No Man's Land", on the album "Celticism"
- The Band, Bugles, Pipes & Drums of the Royal Irish Regiment (2001), as "Green Fields of France," on the album Last of the Great Whales
- Swedish band Euskefeurat interestingly can be said to have made two covers, one borrowing the melody but changing the lyrics, the other borrowing the theme but changing the tune and most details. The song borrowing the tune, "Tankar på nattgammal is", instead focuses on a man suffering the pains from a short but hard life as a miner in northern Sweden. The other song, "Till Elias", borrow the theme of sitting by a grave thinking about the young man buried below, the young man in this song does not, however, have much in common with William McBride, having been born in 1919 in Sweden, having been named Elias and having died 1939 in his mother's arms from an unnamed fever rather than dying in the first world war.
Read more about this topic: No Man's Land (Eric Bogle Song)
Famous quotes containing the words cover, versions and/or recordings:
“There is reason in the distinction of civil and uncivil. The manners are sometimes so rough a rind that we doubt whether they cover any core or sap-wood at all.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“The assumption must be that those who can see value only in tradition, or versions of it, deny mans ability to adapt to changing circumstances.”
—Stephen Bayley (b. 1951)
“All radio is dead. Which means that these tape recordings Im making are for the sake of future history. If any.”
—Barré Lyndon (18961972)