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AUD LANG SYNE NOTES

ôld laNG ˈzīn,ˈsīn/


noun
times long past.
This tradition is mostly thanks to Guy Lombardo and the Royal Canadian Band. While
their work is largely unknown to those born in the last few decades, the band has sold
over 300 million records to date. Guy Lombardo himself has three stars on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame, and he was once the “Dick Clark” of New Years before Clark
and his “New Year’s Rockin’ Eve,” attempting to appeal to younger audiences, started
supplanting “Mr. New Year’s Eve,” Guy Lombardo.
It was in 1929 that Guy Lombardo and his band took the stage at the Roosevelt Hotel in
New York City on New Year’s Eve. Their performance that night was being broadcast
on the radio, before midnight Eastern-time on CBS, then after on NBC radio.
At midnight, as a transition between the broadcasts, the song they chose to play was an
old Scottish folk song Lombardo had first heard from Scottish immigrants in Ontario.
The song was Auld Lang Syne.
Previous to this, there are several documented instances of others singing this song on
New Year’s Eve, going all the way back to the mid-nineteenth century, but it wasn’t
anywhere close to the staple it would soon be after Lombardo’s performance.
Bonus Fact:
It is often said that the song, Auld Lang Syne, was written by famed eighteenth century
poet/songwriter, “Scotland’s Favorite Son” -Robert Burns. However, Burns never
claimed to have written the song -in fact, quite the opposite. When he submitted it to the
Scots Musical Museum, he included a note stating:
The following song, an old song, of the olden times, and which has never been in print, nor even
in manuscript until I took it down from an old man’s singing, is enough to recommend any air.
The song was first published in 1788, and later a slightly modified version was
published in Thomson’s Select Songs of Scotland in 1799, three years after Burns’
death.
The title, roughly translated to modern English, literally means “old long since,” but more
figuratively means, “Times Gone By” or “Times Long Past.” It is simply a song about
remembering old friends and the times spent with them. Burns set the lyrics to a
traditional Scottish ditty called Can Ye Labour Lea.

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