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00:00We've got a handful of songs to sing you. Can't stop my voice when it longs to sing you.
00:14New songs and blues songs and songs to bring you happiness. No more, no less.
00:22Hello again everybody. Hello and how are you Maria?
00:25Oh, I'm very well, thank you. But I don't like this cold weather much, do you?
00:30It isn't very nice, is it? We need lots of nice woolly clothes to keep us warm on days like today.
00:36Well, we've got just the right song to start off with then. It's all about great big bags of wool.
00:41So it is, because it's Bar Bar Black Sheep. And our first picture is from Lisa Edwards, who is six.
00:48Those bags look as if they're bulging with wool, don't they?
00:51Hmm, yes. And so do these from Nicola Wynne. But her sheep has still got a lot of wool left on him. And he's very big and black.
01:00Ooh, now you make him sound like that spider that we were talking about the other week.
01:04Oh, don't mention him. I get shivers down my spine. Let's get on with the sheep.
01:10Okay, now this sheep is really woolly. Sarah Beck has sent us this one and she stuck black wool on him to make him look ever so neat.
01:18And what lovely pictures of flowers too. That's very well done, Sarah.
01:23And I'd love to have a jumper made from wool from that sheep, wouldn't you?
01:26Well, I always thought you must be the black sheep of your family.
01:31Yes. Anyway, back to the pictures. Charlotte Simpson has drawn us the master, the dame and the little boy, as well as the sheep.
01:39And here we have another picture of the master in Louise Fay's drawing. He looks very happy, doesn't he?
01:46Well, that's because those bags are so full of wool. And finally, we have this one from Tracy Jones. There's the sheep standing outside his house.
01:56Sheep don't live in houses, silly.
01:58Well, this one might. After all, horses do.
02:02Horses?
02:03Clothes horses.
02:04Oh, go on. Get on and sing the song.
02:07Baa, baa, black sheep, have you any wool? Yes, sir, yes, sir, three bags full. One for my master and one for my dame. And one for the little boy who lives down the lane.
02:23Thank you, Keith. That's an old favourite, you know.
02:27Oh, come on. I'm not as old as all that.
02:29No, not you. The song.
02:31Oh.
02:32And we've got another one coming up. Hey, Diddle Diddle.
02:35And some super pictures, too.
02:36Mm.
02:37Look at this one from Louise Halliwell, who's four. Now, isn't that splendid?
02:42What a lovely big orange cow.
02:44Mm.
02:45He must have jumped very high to get over the moon.
02:47Well, you'd have to, wouldn't you? I mean, it's very high up, that moon, you know.
02:51Mm. Must be a very special cow.
02:53Right.
02:54And we've got another one here from Philippa Morton. A very special cat, too, by the looks of it. Can you see him playing away on the fiddle?
03:02Oh, yes. And there's the little dog laughing. Have you ever seen the little dog laughing, Maria?
03:07No, but I've never seen a dish run away with a spoon, either. They must be all very special.
03:13Yes.
03:15Hey, Diddle Diddle, the cat and the fiddle, the cow jumped over the moon. The little dog laughed to see such fun, and the dish ran away with the spoon.
03:31Hmm. Well, that cow went to the moon. Mm-hmm.
03:34But we're not going as far as that now. We're going to Amsterdam.
03:38But who's going to do the rest of the programme?
03:40It's only in a song, silly.
03:42Oh.
03:42Catherine Kempster and Alison Kempster have asked us to sing it for them. That's a very big mouse, Catherine.
03:49I don't think he'll fit in that windmill. He needs a bigger one.
03:52Yes.
03:53Like this one from Diane Wenham. That's more his size.
03:57Mm. And this windmill, drawn by Dipak Mohandas, is even bigger. You could get a very tall mouse in there.
04:05Dipak has sent us a picture of a tulip, too. A tulip? Oh, yes, I know. When it's spring again, it's spring again. No, no, no. That's the wrong song.
04:15Oh. It's a windmill in old Amsterdam. Remember? Got it.
04:23A mouse lived in a windmill in old Amsterdam. A windmill with a mouse in and he wasn't grousing. He sang every morning. How lucky I am living in a windmill in old Amsterdam.
04:39I saw a mouse. I saw a mouse. Where? There on the stair. Where on the stair? Right there. A little mouse with clogs on.
04:51Well, I dig, leg, a wink, lip, clip, a dee, clop on the stair. Oh, yeah.
04:58The mouse, he got lonesome. He took in a wife. A windmill with my sin is hardly surprising.
05:06She sang every morning. How lucky I am living in a windmill in old Amsterdam.
05:14I saw a mouse. Where? There on the stair.
05:19Where on the stair?
05:21Right there, little mouse with clogs on
05:25Well, I declare going clip-clip-a-dee-clop on the stair
05:30Oh yeah
05:32First they had triplets and then they had quins
05:37A windmill with quins in, triplets and twins in
05:41They sang every morning how lucky we are
05:44Living in a windmill in Amsterdam
05:47Yeah, I saw a mouse
05:50Where?
05:52There on the stair
05:53Where on the stair?
05:55Oh, right there, little mouse with clogs on
05:59Well, I declare going clip-clip-a-dee-clop on the stair
06:04Oh yeah
06:06The daughters got married and so did the sons
06:10The windmill had Christmas when no one was listening
06:14They sang in chorus how lucky we am
06:18Living in a windmill in old Amsterdam
06:21I saw a mouse
06:24Where?
06:25There on the stair
06:27Where on the stair?
06:28Oh, right there
06:29Little mouse with clogs on
06:32Well, I declare going clip-clip-a-dee-clop on the stair
06:37Oh yeah
06:39A mouse lived in a windmill
06:43So snug and so nice
06:46There's nobody there now
06:49But a whole lot of mice
06:52Oh, I know just the song to sing next
06:55It's the North Wind Doth Blow
06:57Just the thing for making windmills work
07:00Oh, I see
07:01The North Wind Doth Blow
07:05And we shall have snow
07:08And what will poor Robin do then?
07:12Poor thing
07:13He'll sit in a barn
07:16And keep himself warm
07:18And hide himself under his wing
07:22Poor thing
07:23Makes you feel quite chilly, that song, doesn't it?
07:26Hmm, not the sort of weather to go courting in
07:29Certainly not
07:29Why, it's not what you're thinking you're doing, is it?
07:32Not me, a frog
07:33Oh, the froggy, yes
07:34Why don't you sing us the song and tell us all about it?
07:36Right-o
07:37A froggy went according and he did right, ah-ha
07:42A froggy went according and he did right
07:45With a sword and a pistol by his side, ah-ha
07:48Ah-ha
07:50He roved up to Missy Mouse's door, ah-ha
07:55He rolled up to Missy Mouse's door where he had been many times before, ah-ha
08:01Ah-ha
08:03He took Missy Mouse upon his knee, ah-ha
08:07He took Missy Mouse upon his knee, he said, Missy Mouse, will you marry me, ah-ha
08:14Ah-ha
08:16Without my Uncle Rat's consent, ah-ha
08:20Without my Uncle Rat's consent, I wouldn't marry the president, ah-ha
08:26Ah-ha
08:28Where will the wedding breakfast be, ah-ha
08:33Where will the wedding breakfast be, way down yonder in a hollow tree, ah-ha
08:39Ah-ha
08:41The owl did hood and the birds, they sang, ah-ha
08:45The owl did hood and the birds, they sang, and through the woods the music rang, ah-ha
08:52Ah-ha
08:53There's bread and cheese upon the shelf, ah-ha
08:58There's bread and cheese upon the shelf, if you want any more you can sing it yourself, ah-ha
09:04Ah-ha
09:06Ah, that was nice, I always say there's nothing like a good love song
09:13I'm glad you like them, because we've got another one here
09:16Louise Bluck has asked us to sing Lavender Blue for her
09:20And there's the king and queen singing the song together, shall we sing it together too?
09:26Good idea
09:26Lavender blue, dilly dilly, lavender green
09:34When I am king, dilly dilly, you will be queen
09:39Call up your men, dilly dilly, set them to work
09:44Some to the plough, dilly dilly, some to the court
09:50Some to make hay, dilly dilly, some to thresh corn
09:55While you and I, dilly dilly, keep ourselves warm
10:01I enjoyed that. Time for any more, Keith?
10:05Well, I think we might squeeze one more in
10:07Oh, good
10:08How about this one from Julia Armstrong?
10:10Looks a bit crooked to me
10:11It's meant to. She's asked us to sing There Was a Crooked Man
10:15And who better to sing it than you? So off you go
10:18Was a crooked man, walked a crooked mile
10:23He found a crooked sixpence upon a crooked stile
10:27He bought a crooked cat, caught a crooked mouse
10:30And they all lived together in a crooked little house
10:35Well, that's it for another week, I'm afraid
10:38We'll see you next time for another handful of songs
10:40Don't forget, will you? Bye
10:42Bye-bye
10:42We've got a handful of songs to sing you
10:46Can't stop my voice when it longs to sing you
10:49New songs and blues songs and songs to bring you
10:52Happiness, no more, no less
10:55Moreover, wherever we may roam to
10:59Or ain't you sure that we may be blown to
11:02We know that we're gonna feel at home too
11:05La Bella Musica
11:08Jeff, you shall come
11:10Thank you
11:11Fantastic
11:11Thank you
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