- "On
Ilkla Mooar Baht 'at" (Standard English: On
Ilkley Moor
without a hat) is a folk song from Yorkshire, England. It is sung in the
Yorkshire dialect...
- did Ken Morley, who gave a tribute. The
unofficial Yorkshire anthem "On
Ilkla Moor Baht 'at" was sung at the service. René and Me: An Autobiography, co-written...
- to
parody a rock song,
arranging the
traditional Yorkshire folk song "On
Ilkla Moor Baht'at" in the
style of Joe ****er's hit
rendition of the Beatles'...
- is well
known as the
inspiration for the
Yorkshire "county anthem" On
Ilkla Moor Baht 'at (dialect for 'on
Ilkley Moor
without a hat').
During the Carboniferous...
- Canterbury, and is best
known as the tune to the
Yorkshire "national anthem" "On
Ilkla Moor Baht 'at". The tune was
originally published in A Sett of
Psalm & Hymn...
-
Where most
rural the land
crops up in the such
rhymes and
folklore as On
Ilkla Moor Baht 'at, date unknown, the
early 19th
century novels and
poems of...
- the Long
Sword dance. The most
famous traditional song of
Yorkshire is On
Ilkla Moor Baht 'at ("On
Ilkley Moor
without a hat"), it is
considered the unofficial...
-
expense of more "serious" works, such as Eric Fenby's
overture Rossini on
Ilkla Moor or
Arthur Wilkinson's
Beatlecracker Suite,
which arranges songs by...
- by
Philip Doddridge but is now
better known in the UK as the tune of On
Ilkla Moor Baht 'at.
Another po****r tune for the hymn from
around that time is...
- slit-scan
techniques and
accompanied by an
orchestral version of the tune "On
Ilkla Moor Baht 'at", a
famous Yorkshire folk song. This
music was
later to become...