Songs from
A Yang for Every Yin: Dramatizations of Korean Classics
Here you can listen to the songs from the plays in our book. They are arranged in the order in which they occur in each play. For Gary Rector's compositions, two versions of each song are presented: melody and with voice. For Bill Cleary's compositions, a few (recorded by the composer Cleary or from a performance) have voice accompaniment; others have only instrumental accompaniment. Compositions of John Holstein have only melody. After the audio files, dowloadable sheet music is provided.
Please keep in mind that, except for Gary Rector's songs, and seven songs from Chun Hyang Song which were recorded from a live performance, what you hear are mp3 files based on MIDI files; they are not analog recordings and strictly follow the digital instructions in the file, so they will sound quite mechanical; MIDI files do not attempt to musical expression, and are only approximations of what the composer intended. The music director and actors should develop their own interpretations.
In the Palace of the East Sea the ten-thousand-year-old Dragon King is dying from a disease which can be cured only with the liver of a hare. The King's faithful thousand-year-old Chief Minister Tortoise makes the difficult and dangerous journey to land, where he succeeds (by playing on Rabbit's vanity) in luring her to the Sea Kingdom. When Rabbit discovers they want her liver she claims that she took it out that morning and hid it away for safekeeping. Tortoise reluctantly brings her back to land to get the liver, but Rabbit escapes and then, mischievously adding salt to Tortoise's wound, gets him to accept three of her foul-smelling "instant concentrated rabbit liver tablets" as a substitute for her liver. She bounces off into the forest laughing, leaving Tortoise to return to the Dragon King empty-handed. But hers is not the last laugh.
The so-called wonder workers inform the king that he is doomed to die of a combination of incurable conditions and they are at a loss to do anything to save him.
Lyrics
(Worker 1:) Too much fun between the sheets.
Loads of alcoholic treats.
And your willfulness defeats the treatment.
You should have taken better care of yourself.
(Ministers:) Just what we said!
(Worker 2:) I'm afraid your liver's shot,
And your stomach's gone to pot.
Magic cures I haven't got. So sorry!
You should have exercised a little self-control.
(Ministers:) Some self-control!
(Worker 3:) Yes, the party's over now for you, Sire.
Your case is dire. You're about to expire.
(Worker 1:) Blood count's at an all-time low.
(Worker 2:) And your heart's about to blow.
(Ministers:) Hate to say we told you so, but now you know.
(All:) You should have taken better care of yourself.
The
Wonder Workers' Song, melody
words and music by Gary Rector
(copyright 1989 Gary Rector)
The
Wonder Workers' Song, with voice
words and music by Gary Rector,
sung by Gary Rector (copyright 1989 Gary Rector)
The Wonder Workers' Song, sheet music
Godess of Godliness
, the Queen of the West,
appears before
the king to tell him that he is
not doomed to die after all, but can be cured
by eating the liver of a hare.
Lyrics
(Goddess:) Though these guys may say you're done,
They just want to spoil your fun.
There's a cure, and I'm the one who knows it.
You shouldn't ever give up on yourself.
(Ministers and workers:) No, don't give up!
(Goddess:) Though it's quite a fix you're in,
There's a thick for every thin.
There's a yang for every yin, believe me.
No, never ever give up on yourself.
(Ministers and workers:) Things aren't so bad!
(Goddess:) And just when you think the tunnel's darkest,
You can depend on that light at the end.
So I tell you, don't despair.
Wipe away that frown you wear,
For the liver of a hare can save you.
You shouldn't ever give up on yourself.
The
Goddess's Song, melody
words and music by Gary Rector
(copyright 1989 Gary Rector)
The
Goddess's Song, with voice
words and music by Gary Rector,
sung by Gary Rector (copyright 1989 Gary Rector)
The Goddess's Song, sheet music
Old Tortoise has been sent up to the land to find and bring back a hare. He has just arrived on land and finds that it's not so easy to find anything because the land is overgrown with long grass, underbrush, and trees that he can't see over.
Lyrics
Green, far as can be seen.
The visibility's low everywhere I go.
All I see is green.
Slow, plodding to and fro.
All these rocks and trees make me puff and wheeze.
Gee, the going's slow.
My favorite mode of locomotion
Is paddling freely in the ocean.
I was never very good at the dry-land crawl,
And though I'm supposed to be the oldest and wisest of all,
At times like this, I'd rather be tall!
Where can I find a hare?
The only thing that'll save the king
Is a hare who'll share
His liver -- not his heart or his spleen.
But how can I find one when all I can see is green?
How can I find one when all I can see is green?
Green
(Tortoise's Song), melody
words and music by Gary Rector
(copyright 1989 Gary Rector)
Green
(Tortoise's Song), with voice
words and music by Gary Rector,
sung by Gary Rector (copyright 1989 Gary Rector)
Green (Tortoise's Song), sheet music
Hare (who, by the way, insists that she is a rabbit) comes to the royal court under the impression that she is to serve as a sort of "minister of health." Here she has just realized that they actually just want to cut her open to get her liver.
Lyrics
(Spoken:) I didn't eat all those vegetables
just to wind up in a pharmaceutical concoction!
(Sung:) Oh, the fate of us rabbits!
This is the thanks we get for setting the world a good example
Of healthful eating habits.
Shouldn't have listened to what that old tortoise said.
They'll make an organ donor before I'm even dead.
I thought I'd give some good advice, get kisses and hugs.
Instead I wind up sliced up, substituting for drugs.
Nobody loves me! They just want to get in.
I thought I'd serve the king until my final day,
And when I breathed my last my epitaph would say,
"Here lies the Special Royal Health-Advice Giver."
But it'll really just say, "Chopped Liver"!
Nobody appreciates me for me. They just want to get in.
They
Just Want to Get In, melody
words and music by Gary Rector
(copyright 1989 Gary Rector)
They
Just Want to Get In, with voice
words and music by Gary Rector,
sung by Gary Rector (copyright 1989 Gary Rector)
They Just Want to Get In, sheet music
In this finale, the king sings of his appreciation of Tortoise and Hare, and the whole cast joins in the chorus, praising the curative value of a combination of wisdom and humor.
Lyrics
(King:) Thanks to the tortoise and the hare
-- what a pair! -- I'm okay.
They combine the best of youth and age.
Clown and sage saved the day.
They showed us even good plans go amiss.
The lesson we can learn from them is this.
(All:) Temper every wise remark with wisdom.
Soften up your wisdom with some wit.
You are truly wise when you realize
Humor takes the edge off all the blunders we commit.
When your brain is slow and problems leave you
Fumbling for solutions in the dark,
Things will brighten up if you lighten up.
A little bit of laughter helps make ideas spark.
So we would like to leave you with this message.
It's one with which we know you will agree.
When life treats you to a dish too tough to chew,
Wisdom plus good humor is the perfect recipe!
RX:
Wisdom and Good Humor, melody
words and music by Gary Rector
(copyright 1989 Gary Rector)
RX:
Wisdom and Good Humor, with voice
words and music by Gary Rector,
sung by Gary Rector (copyright 1989 Gary Rector)
RX: Wisdom and Good Humor, sheet music
Gradpa Lopside has a great singing voice, and some gobblins take it from him, in return for a bag of gold coins. Masong Grandpa, who also has a wen, tries to get the gobblins to take his wen in return for a bag of gold, but they give him Grandpa Lopside's wen and he ends up with two wens, one on each cheek.
Firewood
This is the song that Grandpa Lopside sings when he sells the wood that he has cut in the mountains.
Lyrics
(Grandpa:) Firewood! Firewood!
Lucky you, come and get your firewood!
Firewood! Firewood!
Don't be shy. Come and buy firewood!
(Grandpa continues over Okie and Dokie:)
Firewood! Works just fine!
Lights so quick you'll wonder what's the trick.
Firewood! Firewood!
Burns so hot, melts your pot.
Firewood!
(Okie and Dokie:) Firewood! Grandpa Lopside!
What's your trick? Hi, Grandpa!
Firewood! Firewood!
Burns so hot, melts your pot.
Firewood!
Firewood,
melody
arrangement by Lee Sae-rang;
melody by Lee Mun-hui and John Holstein, lyrics by John Holstein (copyright
1993 John Holstein)
Grandpa Lopside tells his young friends Okie and Dokie how he got his wen.
Lyrics
(Grandpa:) Way, way
back when,
Way back in them good old days,
Got me my brother's tooth,
Put it under my pillow.
"Tooth Fairy, come pick up your tooth,
And by the way, bring a nice taffy
For this nice young fellow."
(Okie:) Grandpa told a lie, bold and blatant lie.
(Grandpa:) No! No! No! It was just a joke!
(Dokie:) Lie, fib, trick, jest or joke--
(Kids:) Gramps' fairy got provoked.
(Fairy:) Shame on you, Grandpa!
(Goblin:) Hee-hee! Hoo-hoo!
(Fairy:) Now you're gonna pay like all your type will pay.
(Goblin:) Naa-naa! Yaa-yaa!
(All:) Me oh my oh, what a sorry guy, oh!
Try to trick the fairy? Well!
Bettor eat your taffy fast!
(Grandpa:) What could I do?
I was asleep when that goblin came,
Sent by my fairy to Teach me a little lesson.
Planted this bag
And gave me my claim to fame.
Left me a sausage from Baek's delicatessen.
(Dokie:) Soon the word got out, round and round about.
Grandpa's wen got famous far and wide.
So he got appellafied
(All:) Old Grandpa Lopside.
(Fairy:) Gramps learned his lesson.
(Goblin:) Oh-ho! Yo-ho!
(Fairy:) Straight from out of a delicatessen yet!
(Goblin:) Hee-dee-haw! Yaw-haw!
(All:) Oh me oh my, what a way to beautify!
But that's just why we all LOVE Grandpa Lopside.
Way
Back Wen, melody
melody from three Korean
taryeong, adaptation by John Holstein; piano arrangement by
Lee Sae-rang; (copyright 1992 John Holstein)
A terrible storm has forced Grandpa Lopside to take shelter overnight in a deserted, dilapidated cabin. He starts this song to calm his fears, and ends it in a joyful threesome with a gang of goblins.
Lyrics
(Grandpa) When I was a little boy,
Nights like this were scary.
It seemed the stormy darkness had no end.
Then I figured out a way
To get me through the bad times,
And it's proved to be an everlasting friend.
I finally cheered up when I began to sing.
Songs soon banished my gloomy ways.
I never gave up once I began to sing.
Music's with me for all of my days.
Life's bright and happy when you begin to sing.
Songs will banish every care and woe.
Music will bless you if you begin to sing.
Joy will follow wherever you go.
(Bass goblin:) Boom, biddy ding dong.
Scatty wack shack bing bong. (Repeats beneath rest of song.)
(Grandpa, over bass scat:) I never gave up once I began to sing.
Music's with me for all of my days.
(Treble goblin:) Beskattle lee dot doo loppa deeta.
Petittle teetle locka diddle-um beeta.
Scootely doopee dooey doppy diddledy dum.
Shoobedy boobedy bambalom beedle-um bum. (Repeats beneath rest of song.)
(Grandpa, over scat:) You'll find you cheer up when you begin to sing.
Songs will banish every care and woe.
Music will bless you if you begin to sing.
Joy will follow wherever you go.
When
You Begin to Sing, melody
words and music by Gary Rector
(copyright 1989 Gary Rector)
When
You Begin to Sing, with voice
words and music by Gary Rector,
sung by Gary Rector (copyright 1989 Gary Rector)
When You Begin to Sing, sheet music
Grandpa Lobside's wife is not happy with Grandpa Lopside's refusal to put on the airs that his newly found wealth require.
Lyrics
(Wife:) Before we chose to join the best,
Before we rose us over the rest.
Slop, spit, slurp, then grunt, snort, burp!
How unexaltedly low can you go!
A beggar could . . . Oh, what's that word!
(Grandpa:) Usurp?
(Wife:) Right! Your place for all the couth that you show.
Born poor and raised
poor, you and me
But stuck in
it, you—I’m pullin’ free.
It’s Mother got me to marry you.
"He’s got the world’s most beautiful song!"
But she never saw how you eat your stew.
She’d have tired of your song before long.
Before she did, though,
she was gone,
sick at night and gone by dawn.
Now I’m stuck with this primitive,
who can’t tell his sleeve from a napkin.
With all of your money you still only live
like an unreformed country bumpkin.
An
Unreformed Country Bumpkin, melody
words and music by John Holstein;
piano arrangement by Lee Sae-rang; (copyright 1990 John Holstein)
An Unreformed Country Bumpkin, sheet music
This is the play's finale. Masong Grandpa has just got his second wen. Grandpa Lopside and the cast join him in a philosophical acceptance of the vicissitudes of life.
Lyrics
(Masong:) Cheeky they called me when I was a kid,
Then Lopside they changed it to, Heaven forbid!
But whatever they called me it all meant the same--
A rose is a rose by any damned name.
(All:) A song bag he's had most all of his days,
But sing it did not so he tried many ways
To rid himself of his cumbersome weight,
But it just hung around and refused to vacate.
(Grandpa:) His fate drove him to it,
He cheated and lied.
We know it's not right, but we know why he tried
To cheat the goblins and get ahead,
And how he got stuck with TWO songbags instead.
So I've got the money and you've got the fun.
(Masong:) That's true my friend, but what's done is done.
(Grandpa:) I'll give you my gold if you sing all day.
(Masong:) Keep all your gold, I'll sing anyway.
(Wife does cadenza adlib.)
(All:) Life is bleak when things go wrong,
But it looks much better when you've got a song.
A bag on the left or a bag on the right,
A song bag will chase your woes right out of sight.
(Masong:) And a song bag on each cheek . . .
(All:) Life's just one big delight!
With
a Song on Your Cheek, melody
lyrics by John Holstein and
Jim Cunningham, music by Gary Rector (copyright 1990 John Holstein)
With a Song on Your Cheek, sheet music
Wealthy Father has died, and first son Nolbu has control of the entire inheritance. This mean and greedy Nolbu can't stand the idea of sharing the inheritance with his virtuous younger brother Hungbu. So he kicks Hungbu and Hungbu's whole family out of the house. They barely survive a year of hand-to-mouth existence. Then a swallow whose broken leg Hungbu has fixed returns the next spring with a reward of magic pumpkin seeds, and when Hungbu harvests them in the autumn they yield a cornucopia which makes Hungbu even richer than Nolbu. Nolbu and his wife hear about this and hunt down a swallow, then break its leg and fix it so they can reap the same reward. The reward they finally get, though, is not exactly what they had in mind. Virtuous Hungbu, of course, comes to the rescue, and Nolbu turns over a new leaf - in his own way.
Nolbu's wife complains about the heavy responsibilities involved in being rich, and Nolbu complains about the noble responsibilities of being eldest son and eldest brother. And both of them complain about Nolbu's younger brother, Hungbu.
Lyrics
(Nolbu's wife:) Oh me, oh my! Oh my, oh me!
Days like this make me forget
How pleasant being rich can be.
This big old place,
With all its slaves and space.
Don't know where I am
Or who I'm talking to.
Mama said he'd care for me.
That just ain't so.
Body and soul do crave him,
But he doesn't even know,
Or his libido is awfully low.
His empty heart, oh Lord,
My empty arms a-waiting
For him to come and fill them.
Oh me, oh my!
(Nolbu:) Blue, so blue you sky, you,
But no bluer than this heart of mine.
They say we gentry
Are rich and carefree,
Lazy, greedy, serpentine.
Ha! Ever hear about noblesse oblige?
And then I'm the eldest son,
And male, too.
Add a sense of duty and what have you,
Me forever blue.
Daddy told me, "You're the boss now,
You're eldest son and a man, Boy.
Your brother's counting on you."
Ha! Little did my daddy know
How much Hungbu and his family eat.
And then there's the wife--oh Lord!--
Utterly dependent on me.
All alone with my responsibilities.
But that's the way life is
And how it's gonna be.
(Nolbu:) Independence,
That's the difference
Between a man and his wife.
(Wife:) Fourteen and going on fifteen!
He could use a heavy dose of whatever you've got.
(Nolbu:) Yes, he's got to learn self-control!
(Wife:) Got to learn some independence.
(Both:) And we're the ones to teach it.
Hungbu, out you go!
And take your family with you!
Bbongjak
Blues, melody
words and melody by John
Holstein, piano arrangement
by Kim Sae-rang (copyright
1993 John Holstein)
Poor Hungbu has lost the chance to earn some money for his starving family, and protests the cruel ironies that life has dumped on him.
Lyrics
(Hungbu:) So even the king, in all his generosity,
Sends me this sting to add to my adversity.
No way to fight it, no way to win.
Why not just give in?
No one to turn to--their charity does not include me.
What, oh what did I do? Where have I gone wrong?
In this kind of world I do not belong.
This world's not for me.
How alone can one be!
Where's that rainbow they promise after the storm?
Where's that sun to warm cold hopes
Whose embers died so long ago?
Don't know, don't know, don't know.
What, oh what did I do?
Where have I gone wrong?
In this kind of world I do not belong.
This world's not for me.
How absolutely alone can one be?
In
This Kind of World, melody
words and music by John Holstein;
piana arrangement by Lee Sae-rang; (copyright 1990 John Holstein)
In This Kind of World, sheet music
Righteous Hungbu has told his wife not to be greedy with the reward that Heaven has sent them, but his wife views their reward from a different perspective.
Lyrics
(Hungbu's wife:) Husband says enough's enough.
Confucius says enough's too much.
Jesus tells you it's all up there,
And Buddha claims it's not anywhere.
So what are you supposed to do
With all that life offers you
If it's too much, up there, or only hearsay?
I mean, why bother showing it anyway?
I say enough's never enough!
I'll take as much as life offers,
Good with the bad, the happy and the sad.
Life's here to live.
All we see is to be had.
And I'm going to have it all!
Even if you live like others tell you to,
You won't end up like they want you to,
Much less live your life your way.
While you've got the sun, you'd better make hay-yay-yay!
Enough's never enough!
I'm takng all that life offers,
Good with the bad, the happy and the sad.
Life's here to live.
All we see is to be had.
And I'm going to have it all!
I'm going to have it all!
Enough's
Never Enough, melody
words and music by John Holstein;
piana arrangement by Lee Sae-rang; (copyright 1990 John Holstein)
Enough's Never Enough, sheet music
Nolbu and his wife discover that, after all, they haven't lost everything. They find comfort in realization of the love that they have for each other.
Lyrics
(Nolbu and Nolbu's wife, alternating lines, Nolbu starting:)
The more I see of you, dear,
The longer I'm with you,
The very less I could do
Without us two.
Whatever could we do?
Things can go terribly wrong, dear,
But not for awfully long,
'Cause you and I got a song
Of two great friends
Who'll keep each other strong.
(Wife:) Without us two, me and you,
(Together:) Whatever could we do?
(This verse, added at the last minute, follows the same melody.)
NOLBU: We’ll
find a way to enjoy life
like never before,
WIFE: ‘cause it is you I adore,
And with just you,
I’m blessed forever more.
TOGETHER: Without us two, me and you,
whatever could we do?
Without
Us Two, melody
words and music by John Holstein;
piano arrangement byLee Sae-rang; (copyright 1990 John Holstein)
And they all lived happily ever. Or. . .?
Lyrics
(Narrator:) Well, what do you think of that?
Don't it take the hat!
From bad to good to mischievous as he could,
Nolbu's idea of brotherhood.
(All joining in:) Bu-u-u-u-ut
(All:) Nolbu finally came to see
That money's not the only thing.
And he and his kin are happy as can be,
And so this happy song we sing.
Let's never forget what Nolbu learned:
In the end the greedy get burned . . . and how!
And he who grabs for the best gets the worst.
The golden rule is to put others first.
So Nolbu's kin--who could forget them!
Their place in history's permanent.
Each one of them's a real gem,
Not one excep--
(Nolbu's wife:) Except my pendant!
Finale
Fallace, melody
words and music by John Holstein;
piano arrangement by Lee Sae-rang; (copyright 1990 John Holstein)
And they all lived happily ever after. And you will too if you take this advice offered by the whole cast.
Lyrics
(Nolbu's wife:) Blue, so blue, you sky, you!
Haven't seen a nicer hue hitherto.
(Nolbu:) Twice as nice as gold!
(Nolbu and wife:) You've been up there all this time
While I've been down here
Looking for a pot of gold
And never even saw a rainbow.
(Narrator:) But now blue skies are overhead,
(All:) And sunny weather's predicted
For the rest of our days,
Give or take a day of haze.
(Hungbu:) But don't you know fair weather never stays?
Life's capricious, things can turn grim.
(All:) All one's hopes can dim.
Older or younger, male or not,
Gloom can be your lot.
(Hungbu's wife:) But then when things get their worst,
And worst can't get any worser,
What you have to do is
(All:) Show your stuff and try once more.
So much is out there just waiting for your call,
And you can have it all. (Hungbu:) Not all!
(All:) Yes, you can have it all!
(Nolbu:) But all I want is you, dear.
(Nolbu and wife:) All I need is right here.
(All:) A friend like you, tried and true.
With me and you there's nothing we can't do.
(Narrator:) So now at last they've got things straight
And know what's what.
(All:) It's not too late to like
To a golden age that's happy and as full as life can be.
(Narrator:) We hope as much for all of you,
(All:) Even more if it could possibly come true.
So please remember Hungbu's and Nolbu's gourds,,
And when you act consider those gourds' rewards.
Finale,
melody
words and music by John Holstein;
piano arrangement by Lee Sae-rang; (copyright 1989 John Holstein)
When Mong Yong, the son of an aristocrat, falls into true love with Chun Hyang, the daughter of a gisaeng, there is no way that trouble is not going to happen. And it does. Chun Hyang's mother allows the two lovers to marry. Too soon, though, Mong Yong has to leave for Seoul to take the higher civil service exam. He vows his undying love and loyalty. When the unprincipled local magistrate Byon Satdo sets eyes on Chun Hyang, the term undying love takes on special meaning: she has to choose between Mong Yong and life.
Lyrics
If I look once, I see my love.
If I look ten times, I see my love.
A thousand times that I see my love,
She will always be my love.
Overture:
If I Look Once, melody
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Overture: If I Look Once, sheet music
Lyrics
Spring! the time when my heart is swinging.
Spring! that flings my heart in the air.
Birds and mountains sing to me and bring to me
New songs from everywhere.
Spring! when skies are blue and inviting.
Spring! I fly with nothing to fear.
How could I refuse to sing
The news that spring is here!
Spring
Song for Dano, melody
words and music
by Wm. H. Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Spring
Song, Bill Cleary
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Spring
Song, performance
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Lyrics
Butterflies go flip, flip, flip!
Catching flowers every trip.
Flowers wait and hum, hum, hum!
Hoping butterflies will come.
(repeat as canon)
Butterflies,
melody
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Butterflies,
sung by Bill Cleary
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Lyrics
Love has stopped my education.
It's a hopeless situation.
She's not here or there,
She's everywhere.
Every book that I try reading,
It's her name I keep repeating.
She's not here or there,
She's everywhere.
Here's my "Universal Mirror."
(How I wish that she were nearer.)
Here, instead of wise Confucius,
Stands my darling, young and beauteous.
I can't study. I'm in trouble.
I'm in love. I'm seeing double.
She's not here or there.
She's everywhere.
She's
Everywhere, melody
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Lyrics
For only a hundred years,
To want to belong to you?
Far more than a hundred years
of time I could spend,
time without end.
For only a hundred years?
That's only a touch of love.
That's not very much of love for me.
Only while birds still sing?
Only while sugar's sweet?
Only as long as flowers rise
To greet the springtime?
For only a hundred years?
That's only a touch of love.
That's not very much of love for me.
For
Only a Hundred Years, melody
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
For
Only a Hundred Years / Only for a Hundred Years, Bill Cleary
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
For
Only a Hundred Years / Only for a Hundred Years, performance
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
For Only a Hundred Years / Only for a Hundred Years, sheet music
Lyrics
Only for a hundred years,
Only till our life is through,
Only while the sky's above you,
I'll love you, love you.
Only for a hundred years,
Only while the world goes on,
Only while the stars sing of you,
I'll love you, Chun Hyang.
Only while dawns still come,
Only while winter's cold,
Only as long as harvest fields
Turn gold in summer.
Only for a hundred years,
Only while the world goes on,
Only while the stars sing of you,
I'll love you, Chun Hyang.
Only
For a Hundred Years, melody
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Only
For a Hundred Years, Bill Cleary
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Only For a Hundred Years, sheet music
Lyrics
(CH) For only a hundred years,
(MY) Only for a hundred years,
(CH) To want to belong to you?
(MY) Only till our life is through
(CH) Far more than a hundred years
(MY) Only while the sky's above you
(CH) of time I could spend,
(MY) I'll love you,
(CH) time without end.
(MY) love you.
(CH) For only a hundred years?
(MY) Only for a hundred years.
(CH) That's only a touch of love.
(MY) Only while the world goes on.
(CH) That's not very much of love for me.
(MY) Only while the stars sing of you, I'll love you, Chun Hyang.
(CH) Only while birds still sing?
(MY) Only while dawns still come?
(CH) Only while sugar's sweet?
(MY) Only as long as flowers rise
To greet the springtime?
For only a hundred years?
That's only a touch of love.
That's not very much of love for me.
For
Only a Hundred Years DUET, melody
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
For Only a Hundred Years DUET, sheet music
Lyrics
When skies are dark
And heaven's far away,
I've learned to look at heaven
In my own special way.
Something almost holy
Happens when I do.
I let you look at heaven,
Then I look at you!
Stars in your eyes,
Moon on your face.
I never will forget
This time or place.
Ten thousand words you'd say
Would lack this thrill,
To see your face this way!
My heart stands still.
Up to those stars
Take me away.
I never care to see
Another day.
The candles in your eyes
The whole night through.
If moonlight ever fades,
My stars fade, too.
Stars
in Your Eyes, melody
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Stars
in Your Eyes, Bill Cleary
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Stars
in Your Eyes, performance
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Stars in Your Eyes, sheet music
Lyrics
Sobahngnim, my love, my own.
Sobahngnim, where have you gone?
I ask the sky to find you,
Far or near.
May summer winds remind you
I am here, waiting.
Sobahngnim, my love, my own.
Sobahngnim, come home, come home.
Though the night may hide you,
I pray the stars may guide you home.
Sobangnim,
melody
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Sobangnim,
Bill Cleary
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Sobangnim,
performance
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Lyrics
They say that when the world was made,
It all was made for men,
And women have the destiny
To keep it nice for them.
(Refrain:)
Ridiculous! Ridiculous!
That women have to crawl,
While menfolk get the best of it!
Oh, typhoid on them all!
Oh, typhoid on them all!
They say men give us leadership,
The hardest job to do,
While women do the heavy work,
And carry Baby, too!
(Refrain)
They say men should take the womenfolk
As one of heaven's joys,
While women should pray night and day
That babies all be boys!
(Refrain)
I say men should serve womenfolk,
Cook food and carry pails.
While women raise the daughters,
Let men raise the baby males!
Wolmae's
Song, melody
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Wolmae's
Song, Bill Cleary
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Wolmae's
Song, performance
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Lyrics
From the Yellow Sea to Pusan,
From Cheju-do to Seoul,
There's no finer ruler
Than Pyun Satdo.
We don't want a prince from Pusan.
We don't want a sage from Seoul.
There's no finer ruler
Than Pyun Satdo.
No finer ruler
Than Pyun Satdo.
No
Finer Ruler, melody
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
No
Finer Ruler, Bill Cleary
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Lyrics
(Spring)
I remember well. I remember well.
Late spring evening, weeding all day.
Home at last, we sing to the moon.
Wine is sweet and I hear farmers say,
"Weeding's finished soon!"
I remember well.
(Summer)
I remember well. I remember well.
Rain comes warm, the hoeing is done.
I lay down where the grass is deep.
Comes a youngster leading his cow.
Wakes me from my sleep.
I remember well.
(Fall)
I remember well. I remember well.
Chestnuts falling, harvest is through.
Crabs are crawling where the rice grew.
Food is sweet, the wine is new.
Hearts are warm and glad.
I remember well.
(Winter)
I remember well. I remember well.
Winter midnight, dogs far away
Bark to see the moonlight fade.
At my gate I wonder and say:
Why are dogs afraid?
I remember well.
(Spring)
I remember well. I remember well.
Melting snow half covers the hills.
Plum trees bud along the slope.
Bamboo's green, the wine cup fills.
Spring, there is new hope.
I remember well.
I
Remember Well, melody
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
I
Remember Well, performance
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Lyrics
(Chorus:)
Oh-wa-oh-yo-ru! Sang-sa-dui-ya!
Oh-wa-oh-yo-ru! Sang-sa-dui-ya!
Farmer, farmer, why so tired?
Why such a tired old face do I see?
I've been pushing a plow all morning.
My wife has to pull. She's more tired than me!
(Chorus)
Farmer, farmer, why so skinny?
You are the skinniest man in the group!
My mother-in-law came to visit.
She eats the rice and I just get the soup.
(Chorus)
Farmer, farmer, why so gloomy?
Such a sad face I would hate to see twice!
Governor Pyun is a savage tiger.
How we would love to poison his rice.
(Chorus)
Traveler, traveler, give us wisdom.
How can we get Tiger Pyun into jail?
Ah, just pull out his teeth and his claws.
Tie a gag in his mouth and a knot in his tail.
(Chorus)
Traveler, traveler, you're a drunkard.
You drink enough wine for almost ten men!
Oh, my worms are all alcoholic!
Every few miles they are thirsty again.
Nongbu-ga,
melody
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Nongbu-ga,
performance
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Lyrics
(Chorus:) Poor men, poor men.
It takes blood to fill a wine cup.
It takes bones to make a stew.
Blood of poor men. Bones of poor men.
Hear them singing, cursing you.
Wine cries out, "They have no water!"
Stew cries out, "They have no rice!"
Drink your wine. Eat your stew.
Hear them singing, cursing you.
Poor
Men, melody
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Poor
Men, Bill Cleary
words and music by Wm. H.
Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)
Finale
Finale,
melody
words and music by Wm. H. Cleary (copyright 1965 Wm. H. Cleary)