Traditional Recordings Folk song collector
James Madison Carpenter recorded several versions in the early 1930s, mainly in
Scotland and presumably from seamen. Stanley Slade of
Bristol,
England, known as 'The Last Shantyman', sang a version to folklorist
Peter Kennedy in 1943, and the recording is available online via the
Vaughan Williams Memorial Library. Kennedy also recorded fishermen at
Cadgwith,
Cornwall,
England, singing a version. Both versions can be heard on the
British Library Sound Archive website.
Alan Lomax recorded two versions of the song in the
United States, one from Charles J Finger of
Washington D.C. in 1937, and another from Captain Richard Maitland in Sailor's Snug Harbor retirement home in
Staten Island,
New York in 1939.
Helen Creighton recorded two versions in
Nova Scotia,
Canada in the 1940s.
Popular Recordings The song has been recorded by various artists, such as operatic baritone
Leonard Warren, the
Robert Shaw Chorale and
Paul Clayton. It was featured on the ending credits of episode two of the 1950s television show
The Buccaneers and also as background music on various episodes. It is the 2nd track of the soundtrack of the video game ''
Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag'', and the song can be heard when the main character is sailing the ship. Further a version of it is sung by the sailors in the 1979 TV-movie
Mayflower: The Pilgrims' Adventure, as well as by the whalers in the opening of the 1956 film version of
Moby Dick.
Philip Seymour Hoffman gives an informal performance of the song in the 2012 film
The Master. It also featured in the medley of music that was played daily on the commencement of programmes on Westward Television. == Other Recordings ==