Hurry Up, Harry

"Hurry Up, Harry" is a traditional Canadian folk song c. 1849 - 1900) capturing life in an Ontario lumber camp. As sung by LaRena Clark and collected by Edith Fowke.

Hurry Up, Harry

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HURRY UP HARRY (audio recording)
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To sing with the recording above in GCEA tuning, you'd have to put your capo on the 7th fret. LaRena is singing it in Em.

"Hurry Up, Harry" is a traditional Ontario Canada song collected by Edith Fowke as sung by LaRena Clark. It reflects life in an Ontario lumber camp with lyrics that describe the hard work working in the woods. It's part of LaRena Clark's extensive repertoire, which includes many traditional Canadian folk songs. She knew some Canadian songs previously unreported, and she wrote songs with a strong Canadian flavour.

LaRena LeBarr Clark (1904–1991) was a Canadian traditional singer and folksinger, born near Pefferlaw, Ontario, Canada in 1904 near Lake Simcoe. Her father and grandfather were hunters and guides. Her mother, Mary Frances Watson was also a singer. She frequently identified herself as a "ninth generation Canadian". Clark became involved in the folk music circuit in Canada and the United States in the 1960s and recorded an album in 1968. She performed at the Mariposa Folk Festival in 1965 and 1966. She also performed at the Madoc Music Festival, the Philadelphia Folk Festival, and others in Canada and the United States in the late 1960s. In 1967 she and her husband built a model Canadian pioneer farmstead and toured it around the province as part of Canada's centennial celebrations in 1967. In the late 1970s she set out to record 25 albums of traditional Canadian folk and popular songs, working with a local radio station CHAY-FM, as well as recording half hour television programming in Owen Sound. Clark was married three times and during her first two marriages she bore six children. During World War II she worked as a cook in a mess hall for the Canadian Armed Forces at Camp Borden. While working there, she met Gordon Clark, a veteran, and the two married in 1947. The couple were living in Ottawa in 1961 when she met folklorist Edith Fowke, who collected and recorded her songs. LaRena died in 1991.

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