• The tune was used (as "My Lady Greensleeves") as the slow march of the London
Trained Bands in the 16th and 17th centuries. Later the
7th (City of London) Battalion London Regiment, which claimed descent from the Yellow Regiment of London Trained Bands, adopted the tune as its quick march during
World War I, replacing "Austria" (to the same tune as the
Imperial Austria Anthem), which had been used until then. • Greensleeves is the tune for the classic Christmas carol "
What Child Is This?". • The 17th century English ballad,
Old England Grown New is a version of "Greensleeves", also sometimes known as 'The Blacksmith' after another broadside ballad of the time. •
Ralph Vaughan Williams incorporated
Greensleeves as the song
Alas, My Love, You Do Me Wrong for Mistress Ford in Act III of his 1928 opera
Sir John in Love. Its contrasting middle section is founded on another folk tune:
Lovely Joan. In 1934 the song was arranged for strings and harp, with Vaughan Williams's blessing, by Ralph Greaves (1889–1966); this is the familiar
Fantasia on Greensleeves. •
Gustav Holst incorporated the tune into the final movement of his
Second Suite in F for Military Band, interwoven with the primary theme, "Dargason". He later adapted the movement for strings, still using both folk tunes, in his ''
St Paul's Suite''. • The tune was the basis for "Home in the Meadow", a recurring song throughout the 1962 epic film
How the West Was Won. • The song is traditionally played by
ice cream vans in the United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand. It is also played by ice cream trucks in the United States, albeit rarely. • Belgian singer
Jacques Brel used the tune for the basis of his 1964 song "
Amsterdam". • Instrumental versions of "Greensleeves" were used in the long-running original
Lassie television series, both in a seven-part 1966 story and as the show's theme song for its last three seasons (1970–1973). • Canadian singer-songwriter
Leonard Cohen includes an adaptation of the song, titled "Leaving Green Sleeves" in his 1974 album
New Skin for the Old Ceremony, in which the chord progression and lyrical content of the first two verses are retained. • The melody of "Greensleeves" is used repeatedly as a motif in
SIX, a musical about the
wives of Henry VIII. • In Hong Kong,
Ralph Vaughan Williams' "Fantasia on Greensleeves" is used as background music in the listening tests of the city's university entrance exams, the
Hong Kong Diploma of Secondary Education Examination, and upon the opening of the
MTR's
Tuen Ma line in 2021, a video of a young rail enthusiast singing the lyrics "
I'm really excited about the opening of Tuen Ma line" to the tune of "Greensleeves" became a viral internet meme. • The tune has been covered by the
London Vegetable Orchestra. == References ==