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Dirty Old Town

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"Dirty Old Town"
File:Dirty Old Town Dubliners.jpg
Single by The Dubliners
B-side"Peggy Gordon"
Released1968
GenreFolk, Irish, Pop
Length2:53
LabelMajor Minor
Songwriter(s)Ewan MacColl
Producer(s)Tommy Scott
The Dubliners singles chronology
"Maids When You're Young Never Wed An Old Man"
(1967)
"Dirty Old Town"
(1968)
"Hand Me Down My Bible"
(1971)

"Dirty Old Town" is a song written by Ewan MacColl in 1949 that was made popular by the Dubliners and has been recorded by many others.

History

The song was written about Salford, Lancashire, England, in the city where MacColl was born and brought up. It was originally composed for an interlude to cover an awkward scene change in his 1949 play Landscape with Chimneys, set in a North of England industrial town,[1] but with the growing popularity of folk music the song became a standard. The first verse refers to the gasworks croft, which was a piece of open land adjacent to the gasworks 53°28′50″N 2°16′36″W / 53.4806°N 2.2768°W / 53.4806; -2.2768, and then speaks of the old canal, which was the Manchester, Bolton & Bury Canal. The line in the original version about smelling a spring on “the Salford wind” is sometimes sung as “the sulphured wind”. But in any case, most singers tend to drop the Salford reference altogether, in favour of calling the wind “smoky”.

A portion of the canal referenced by the song
Salford Docks, another place mentioned in the song

The Pogues' version of the song is played during walkout of the teams at Salford City FC.

The Dubliners

Chart (1968) Peak
position
Ireland (IRMA)[2] 10
UK Singles (OCC)[3] 43

Recordings and performances

Notable renditions of the song include:

References