The Wild Mt. Thymne

 

YouTube by Louisiana State University A Capella Choir
Listen to the Eastern Washington University Concert Choir

SATB divisi unaccompanied
Difficulty rating: Moderately difficult
Duration: 4'
score button
published by Walton Music


Program Notes:

 

This song, in its various evolving forms, has been a staple of folk singers for hundreds of years. This arrangement takes the ending in a different direction than what we have come to expect in recent years. I treat these three verses as three phases in a life-long true love. We start with that
first thrill of discovery, move to the deeper joy of creating a life together, then face the inevitability of loss. Like the life of a flower, we have that first, tenuous, bright burst of color and fragrance, growinginto the opulence of the full bloom. At the last, the withered petals fadeand drop.

 

 

Notes on preparation and performance:

 

The humming drone that that underlies the other parts should be very soft, almost imperceptable.

 

Each verse has it's own particular attitude and color, make them quite distinct from each other.

 

A case can be made for singing it in an Irish accent, but it is not necessary.

 

 

Text

 

Oh, the summer time is coming, 
And the hills are sweetly bloomin', 
And the wild mountain thyme 
Grows around the blooming heather.

Will ye go, lassie, go? 
And we'll all go together 
To pull wild mountain thyme 
All around, the blooming heather, 
Will ye go, lassie, go?


I will build my love a bower 
By yon clear crystal fountain, 
And on it, I will pile
All the flowers of the mountain.


Will ye go, lassie, go? 
And we'll all go together 
To pull wild mountain thyme 
All around, the blooming heather, 
Will ye go, lassie, go?


If my true love, she must leave me, 
I will never find another 
No more wild mountain thyme 
grows where she lies below the heather.

 

Must ye go, must ye go?

Will ye go? Will ye go?