Captain Tractor is a Canadian folk rock band, based in Edmonton, Alberta. They play a punk-influenced variant of Celtic folk music, similar to such bands as Great Big Sea, The Pogues or Spirit of the West.
The band's most famous songs have been renditions of the folk music classics "The Log Driver's Waltz" and "Drunken Sailor", as well as a cover of the Arrogant Worms' "The Last Saskatchewan Pirate". This song has become so popular that many fans believe, wrongly, that is of their own creation.
Quatro anos de trabalho duro!Neste mês de maio fizemos quatro anos no ar. Continuamos trabalhando na divulgação deste maravilhoso instrumento, obrigado por participar da nossa história!
#----------------------------------PLEASE NOTE---------------------------------# #This file is the author's own work and represents their interpretation of the # #song. You may only use this file for private study, scholarship, or research. # #------------------------------------------------------------------------------## Date: Fri, 29 Dec 1995 23:06:41 -0700 From: [email protected] (Tim Campbell) Subject: CAPTAIN TRACTOR: "The Last Saskatchewan Pirate"
This is the corrections to my file that I sent a while back. Thanks to Fazoo ([email protected]) for sending it to me!
>I'm not a Captain Tractor fan, but I know my Arrogant Worms. Here's the >lyrics as off of the Worms's first album (Hope they help): > > > > >VERSE 1: > CFGC >Well I used to be a farmer and I made a living fine > FCG >I had a little stretch of land along the CP line > CFGC >But the times went by and though I tried the money wasn't there > FCGC >And bankers came and took my land and told me fair is fair > AmD >I looked for every kind of job the answer always no, >AmG >"Hire you now" they'd always laugh, "we just let twenty go" > AmD >The government, they promised me a measly little sum > AmG >But I've got too much pride to end up just another bum > >BRIDGE: > FC > Then I thought "who gives a damn if all the jobs are gone, > DG > I'm gonna be a pirate on the River Saskatchewan..." (Arrrrrgh!) > >CHORUS: > CCFGC >'cause it's a Heave! Ho! High! Ho! Coming down the plains >FCG >Stealing wheat and barley and all the other grains > CCFGC >And it's a Ho! Hey! High! Hey! Farmers bar your doors > FCGC >When you see the Jolly Rancher on Regina's mighty shores > > >VERSE 2: >Well you'd think the local farmers would know that I'm at large >But just the other day I found an unprotected barge >I snuck up right behind them and they were none the wiser >I rammed the ship and sank it, and I stole their fertilizer >A bridge outside of Moose Jaw spans the mighty river >Farmers cross in so much fear their stomachs are a quiver >'Cause they know that Tractor Jack is hiding in the bay >I'll jump the bridge and knock 'em cold and sail off with the hay > >CHORUS > >VERSE 3: >Well Mounty Bob, he chased me, he was always at my throat >He'd follow on the shore line but he didn't own a boat >But cutbacks were a comin' so the Mountie lost his job >So now he's sailin' with me and we call him "Salty Bob" >A swinging sword a scum 'n bones and pleasant company >I never pay my income tax, and screw the GST -- "Screw It!" >Prince Albert down to Saskatoon, the terror of the sea, >If you want to reach the Co-Op boy, you gotta get by me > >CHORUS > >VERSE 4: >Well pirate life's appealing, but you don't just find me here >I've heard that in Alberta there's a band of buckeneers >They roam the Athabasca, from Smith to Fort McKay >And you're gonna loose your Stetson and if you have to pass their way >Well winter is a comin' and the chill is in the breeze >My pirate days are over once the river starts to freeze >I'll be back in springtime, but now I have to go >I hear there's lots of plundering down in New Mexico > >CHORUS X3 > >Also in the middle they do a cool play on words: >Arrrrrgh...Matey! Get it? Metis? >Hey thats Rielly funny, you know, like Louis Riel? > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > -- Timothy J. Campbell 3rd year Civil Engineering Student University of Alberta Internet: [email protected] Edmonton, Alberta WWW: http://www.ualberta.ca/~tcampbel/homepage.html