Category:Humorous Songs
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Humorous songs enjoy a long history of popularity with choirs and audiences. Humor might be in lyrics, in musical elements, or in combination. Humorous texts can include: parodies, nursery rhymes, fables, jokes, riddles, word-play, witty rhymes, charming verse, nonsense, etc. Lyrics might be original by the composer, or by other authors. Many texts are traditional, such as nursery rhymes. These traditional texts are often appear as variant versions, depending on year and locale.
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Pages in this category
The following 95 pages are in this category, out of 95 total.
A
B
C
D
F
G
H
J
L
- Laugh and get fat (Theodore F. Seward)
- Laughing song (George Frederick Root)
- Little Bo-Peep (Charles King Hall)
- Little Bo-Peep (Henry Dancey)
- The Little Girl and her Dolly (Arthur F. M. Custance)
- Little Jack Horner (Albert Ham)
- Little Jack Horner (Alfred James Caldicott)
- Little Jack Horner (Charles King Hall)
- Little Miss Muffet (Arthur E. Fisher)
- Little Miss Muffet (John Winans Shryock)
- A little old man (Henry Walford Davies)
- Lullaby Up to Date (Adam Geibel)
M
O
P
S
- Simon the Cellarer (John Liptrot Hatton)
- Sing a song of sixpence (Bertram Luard-Selby)
- Sing a song of sixpence (Channon Cornwall)
- Sing a song of sixpence (George Alexander Macfarren)
- The sobbing quartett (Alfred James Caldicott)
- A song of dynamics (Theodore F. Seward)
- The Spider and the Fly (Alfred James Caldicott)
- The spider and the fly (George Frederick Root)
T
- There was a man of Edmonton (George Alexander Macfarren)
- Thomas and Annis (Henry Walford Davies)
- Three Doughtie Men (William Webster Pearson)
- Tom, Tom, the piper’s son (Alfred Ben Allen)
- Tom, Tom, the Piper’s Son (Frederic Scholes)
- Too late for the train (William C. Filby)
- The Traction Engine (Stanley Marchant)
- A Tragedy (Henry Walford Davies)
- T’other little tune (Henry Walford Davies)