Jump to content

Examine individual changes

This page allows you to examine the variables generated by the Edit Filter for an individual change.

Variables generated for this change

VariableValue
Edit count of the user (user_editcount)
null
Name of the user account (user_name)
'121.209.46.116'
Age of the user account (user_age)
0
Groups (including implicit) the user is in (user_groups)
[ 0 => '*' ]
Global groups that the user is in (global_user_groups)
[]
Whether or not a user is editing through the mobile interface (user_mobile)
false
user_wpzero
false
Page ID (page_id)
5703476
Page namespace (page_namespace)
0
Page title without namespace (page_title)
'A Pub with No Beer'
Full page title (page_prefixedtitle)
'A Pub with No Beer'
Last ten users to contribute to the page (page_recent_contributors)
[ 0 => 'TAnthony', 1 => 'Boleyn', 2 => 'Smogling', 3 => 'Icuraj', 4 => 'Richhoncho', 5 => 'Rothorpe', 6 => 'TJ1964', 7 => '2A02:1812:2094:5B00:A9FC:AD02:200F:2252', 8 => 'Eric444', 9 => '88.115.68.39' ]
First user to contribute to the page (page_first_contributor)
'Peeper'
Action (action)
'edit'
Edit summary/reason (summary)
''
Whether or not the edit is marked as minor (no longer in use) (minor_edit)
false
Old page wikitext, before the edit (old_wikitext)
'{{Infobox song <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Songs --> | Name = A Pub with No Beer | Type = single | Artist = [[Slim Dusty]] | alt Artist = [[Bobbejaan Schoepen]]<br>[[The Dubliners]] | Album = | Recorded = 1957 | Released = 1957 | Published = | Genre = [[country music|Country]] | Language = | Length = | Writer = Gordon Parsons, Dan Sheahan, Chad Morgan | Composer =Adapted to the American composer Stephen Foster and his tune 'Beautiful Dreamer' . | Label = | Producer = | Tracks = | prev = | prev_no = | track_no = | next = | next_no = | Misc = }} [[File:Pub-with-no-beer.JPG|thumb|Pub with No Beer sign in Ingham Australia]] '''A Pub With No Beer''' is the title of a [[humour|humorous]] [[country & western|country]] [[song]] made famous by country [[singers]] [[Slim Dusty]] (in Australia and the United States) and [[Bobbejaan Schoepen]] (in Belgium, the [[Netherlands]], Germany and Austria). The song was adapted by [[Gordon Parsons (song-writer)|Gordon Parsons]] from the original poem "[[A Pub Without Beer]]" by [[Dan Sheahan]] of [[Ingham, Queensland|Ingham, North Queensland]] (originally from Newmarket, Ireland) in the Day Dawn Hotel, now known as [[Lees Hotel, Ingham, Queensland]]. It's believed the song was 1st performed in public by Gordon Parsons in 1954 at the 50th birthday of George Thomas, a resident of Creek Ridge Road, Glossodia (near Windsor in Sydney). That version was performed with an extra verse that was dropped from Slim Dusty's recorded version because it contained elements of blue humour. In [[1957 in music|1957]], "A Pub With No Beer" became the first Australian [[single (music)|single]] to go [[gold disc|gold]] and was the biggest-selling [[sound recording and reproduction|record]] by an Australian at that time. It was the first single by an Australian artist to make the British charts (#03).<ref>{{cite book | author= [[Tracee Hutchison]] |title=Your Name's On The Door|page=1|year=1992 |publisher=''ABC Enterprises'' |location=[[Sydney, New South Wales]] |isbn=0-7333-0115-0}}</ref> In 1959, Dusty wrote and recorded a sequel "The Answer To A Pub With No Beer", explaining the reason for the beer delivery truck's failure to arrive and describing the townsmen's efforts to solve the problem. Another sequel, "The Sequel To A Pub With No Beer", shows that the town now has a guaranteed delivery, thanks to [[Cargo airline|air freight.]] In May 2001, [[Australasian Performing Rights Association]] (APRA) celebrated its 75th anniversary by naming the [[APRA Top 30 Australian songs|Best Australian Songs]] of all time. As decided by a 100 strong industry panel, "A Pub With No Beer" was ranked fifth on the list.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.apra.com.au/awards/music/2001_topten.asp |title=The final list: APRA'S Ten best Australian Songs |publisher=[[Australasian Performing Rights Association|APRA]] |date=2001-05-28 |accessdate=2008-05-08 |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20080308150930/http://www.apra.com.au/awards/music/2001_topten.asp <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archivedate = 2008-03-08}}</ref> In June 2008, the song was included in the [[National Film and Sound Archive]]'s [[Sounds of Australia]] registry.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.abc.net.au/am/content/2008/s2279253.htm |title=Aussie sounds protected forever |accessdate=2008-06-20 |last=Edwards |first=Michael |date=2008-06-19 |work= |publisher=ABC Radio AM Program}}</ref> ==Europe== [[Flemish people|Belgian]] [[entertainer]] [[Bobbejaan Schoepen]] recorded the song in several languages. His Dutch version ("Café zonder bier") debuted in 1959 and his German version ("Ich steh an der Bar und ich habe kein Geld") in 1960. Both became [[Chart-topper|number one]] hits in Belgium and in Austria. The song remained in the [[Germany|German]] charts for 30 weeks and reached #6. "A Pub With No Beer" is also the [[theme song]] and title of a 1962 Belgian-British [[film]] starring Bobbejaan Schoepen, also known as ''De Ordonnans'' and ''At the Drop of a Head''.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0220684/ |title= De Ordonnans (Café zonder bier/A Pub With No Beer)|accessdate=2008-12-08 |publisher=IMDB}}</ref> In 1999, the alternative rock band [[Dead Man Ray]] wrote (partly) a new soundtrack for the film and went on tour with it in the [[Low Countries]]. The band also covered the song and released it on one of their albums. ==Canada== This song was very popular in Ontario, Canada for a period following August 7, 1958 when a strike involving 1200 Brewers Warehousing employees stopped the flow of beer from various breweries for 48 days. Hard liquor sales increased 25%. Non Unionized Formosa Spring operated at full capacity until it ran out of beer August 29, 1958. Many people purchased beer smuggled in from USA and Quebec with bootleggers collecting up to C$20.00 for a case of 24 pints (previously sold at C$4.25). This song could be heard daily on most radio stations during the beer strike. Aug 7, 1958 - The first hint of things to come arose as a result of Ontario's major beer strike. Starting on Thursday August 7, 1958 when 1200 Brewers Warehousing Ltd. (Brewers Retail) employees walked off their jobs over pay, layoffs became industry wide as retail beer was no longer available. Originally aimed at Brewers Warehousing, the dispute quickly spread as contracts at various breweries across Ontario came up for renewal.<ref>{{cite book |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=AYgndCyYwR0C&pg=PA62/ |title= Brewing in Formosa: 125 years of tradition|accessdate= 30 Mar 2011 | publisher=General Store Publishing House}}</ref> ==United States of America== In 1960, Benny Barnes from Beaumont, Texas [[Americanization|Americanized]] the lyrics to "A Pub With No Beer" and titled it "Bar With No Beer." The song became a regional hit on the Hall-Way label. The melody of the song is almost identical to [[Stephen Foster]]'s "[[Beautiful Dreamer]]." "Bar with No Beer" was recorded by [[Tom T. Hall]] in 1985 on the album ''[[Song in a Seashell]]''. [[Johnny Cash]], who also performed the song, advised him to record it.{{Citation needed|date=May 2011}} ==List of releases/artists== Anne Kirkpatrick & [[Slim Dusty]], [[Bobbejaan Schoepen]] ([[Benelux]], Germany, Austria, 1959/1960), [[Johnny Cash]], Bluey Francis, Errol Gray, Foster & Allen, [[Gordon Parsons (song-writer)|Gordon Parsons]], [[The Irish Rovers]], Johnny Greenwood, John Williamson (performed a parody version of the song called "A Dog With No Hair"), Nokturnl, Richard Clayderman, Rodney Vincent, The Singing Kettles, Stewart Peters and The Ten Tenors. Other sources mention versions by [[Johnny Ashcroft]], [[The Pogues]], Danny O'Flaherty, Patsy Watchorn, The Clancy Brothers, Merv Allen & The Jimmy Johnston Showband and Wilson Cole, Rolf Harris (UK, 1963), Hamish Imlach (UK, 1995), [[The Dubliners]] (1967), Adge Cutler & [[The Wurzels]] (UK, 1968), [[Midnight Oil]] (Australia, 1998), [[Dead Man Ray]] (Belgium, 2001), Donut Kings (2009). ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== *[http://www.slimdusty.com.au/ Slim Dusty's official website] *[http://bobbejaanschoepen.be/index.php?pagina=home&lang=eng/ Bobbejaan Schoepen's official website] *[http://www.deadmanray.com/ Dead Man Ray] * Listen to a clip from Slim Dusty singing [http://aso.gov.au/titles/music/a-pub-with-no-beer/ 'Pub With No Beer'] and read more about it on [http://aso.gov.au/ australianscreen online] * 'Pub With No Beer' was added to the [[National Film and Sound Archive]]'s [[Sounds of Australia]] registry in 2008 {{DEFAULTSORT:Pub With No Beer, A}} [[Category:Australian songs]] [[Category:Slim Dusty songs]] [[Category:Number-one singles in Australia]] [[Category:Australian country music songs]] [[Category:Tom T. Hall songs]] [[Category:1957 songs]]'
New page wikitext, after the edit (new_wikitext)
'{{Infobox song <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Songs --> | Name = A Pub with No Beer | Type = single | Artist = <nowiki>[[Slim Dusty aka avid Gordon Kirkpatrick</nowiki> | alt Artist = [[Bobbejaan Schoepen]]<br>[[The Dubliners]] | Album = | Recorded = 1957 | Released = 1957 | Published = | Genre = [[country music|Country]] | Language = | Length = | Writer = Gordon Parsons, Dan Sheahan, Chad Morgan | Composer =Adapted to the American composer Stephen Foster and his tune 'Beautiful Dreamer' . | Label = | Producer = | Tracks = | prev = | prev_no = | track_no = | next = | next_no = | Misc = }} [[File:Pub-with-no-beer.JPG|thumb|Pub with No Beer sign in Ingham Australia]] '''A Pub With No Beer''' '''''is an amazing song and is written by JOHN CENA... dandadadan''''' the title of a [[humour|humorous]] [[country & western|country]] [[song]] made famous by country [[singers]] [[Slim Dusty]] (in Australia and the United States) and [[Bobbejaan Schoepen]] (in Belgium, the [[Netherlands]], Germany and Austria). The song was adapted by [[Gordon Parsons (song-writer)|Gordon Parsons]] from the original poem "[[A Pub Without Beer]]" by [[Dan Sheahan]] of [[Ingham, Queensland|Ingham, North Queensland]] (originally from Newmarket, Ireland) in the Day Dawn Hotel, now known as [[Lees Hotel, Ingham, Queensland]]. It's believed the song was 1st performed in public by Gordon Parsons in 1954 at the 50th birthday of George Thomas, a resident of Creek Ridge Road, Glossodia (near Windsor in Sydney). That version was performed with an extra verse that was dropped from Slim Dusty's recorded version because it contained elements of blue humour. In [[1957 in music|1957]], "A Pub With No Beer" became the first Australian [[single (music)|single]] to go [[gold disc|gold]] and was the biggest-selling [[sound recording and reproduction|record]] by an Australian at that time. It was the first single by an Australian artist to make the British charts (#03).<ref>{{cite book | author= [[Tracee Hutchison]] |title=Your Name's On The Door|page=1|year=1992 |publisher=''ABC Enterprises'' |location=[[Sydney, New South Wales]] |isbn=0-7333-0115-0}}</ref> In 1959, Dusty wrote and recorded a sequel "The Answer To A Pub With No Beer", explaining the reason for the beer delivery truck's failure to arrive and describing the townsmen's efforts to solve the problem. Another sequel, "The Sequel To A Pub With No Beer", shows that the town now has a guaranteed delivery, thanks to [[Cargo airline|air freight.]] In May 2001, [[Australasian Performing Rights Association]] (APRA) celebrated its 75th anniversary by naming the [[APRA Top 30 Australian songs|Best Australian Songs]] of all time. As decided by a 100 strong industry panel, "A Pub With No Beer" was ranked fifth on the list.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.apra.com.au/awards/music/2001_topten.asp |title=The final list: APRA'S Ten best Australian Songs |publisher=[[Australasian Performing Rights Association|APRA]] |date=2001-05-28 |accessdate=2008-05-08 |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20080308150930/http://www.apra.com.au/awards/music/2001_topten.asp <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archivedate = 2008-03-08}}</ref> In June 2008, the song was included in the [[National Film and Sound Archive]]'s [[Sounds of Australia]] registry.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.abc.net.au/am/content/2008/s2279253.htm |title=Aussie sounds protected forever |accessdate=2008-06-20 |last=Edwards |first=Michael |date=2008-06-19 |work= |publisher=ABC Radio AM Program}}</ref> ==Europe== [[Flemish people|Belgian]] [[entertainer]] [[Bobbejaan Schoepen]] recorded the song in several languages. His Dutch version ("Café zonder bier") debuted in 1959 and his German version ("Ich steh an der Bar und ich habe kein Geld") in 1960. Both became [[Chart-topper|number one]] hits in Belgium and in Austria. The song remained in the [[Germany|German]] charts for 30 weeks and reached #6. "A Pub With No Beer" is also the [[theme song]] and title of a 1962 Belgian-British [[film]] starring Bobbejaan Schoepen, also known as ''De Ordonnans'' and ''At the Drop of a Head''.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0220684/ |title= De Ordonnans (Café zonder bier/A Pub With No Beer)|accessdate=2008-12-08 |publisher=IMDB}}</ref> In 1999, the alternative rock band [[Dead Man Ray]] wrote (partly) a new soundtrack for the film and went on tour with it in the [[Low Countries]]. The band also covered the song and released it on one of their albums. ==Canada== This song was very popular in Ontario, Canada for a period following August 7, 1958 when a strike involving 1200 Brewers Warehousing employees stopped the flow of beer from various breweries for 48 days. Hard liquor sales increased 25%. Non Unionized Formosa Spring operated at full capacity until it ran out of beer August 29, 1958. Many people purchased beer smuggled in from USA and Quebec with bootleggers collecting up to C$20.00 for a case of 24 pints (previously sold at C$4.25). This song could be heard daily on most radio stations during the beer strike. Aug 7, 1958 - The first hint of things to come arose as a result of Ontario's major beer strike. Starting on Thursday August 7, 1958 when 1200 Brewers Warehousing Ltd. (Brewers Retail) employees walked off their jobs over pay, layoffs became industry wide as retail beer was no longer available. Originally aimed at Brewers Warehousing, the dispute quickly spread as contracts at various breweries across Ontario came up for renewal.<ref>{{cite book |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=AYgndCyYwR0C&pg=PA62/ |title= Brewing in Formosa: 125 years of tradition|accessdate= 30 Mar 2011 | publisher=General Store Publishing House}}</ref> ==United States of America== In 1960, Benny Barnes from Beaumont, Texas [[Americanization|Americanized]] the lyrics to "A Pub With No Beer" and titled it "Bar With No Beer." The song became a regional hit on the Hall-Way label. The melody of the song is almost identical to [[Stephen Foster]]'s "[[Beautiful Dreamer]]." "Bar with No Beer" was recorded by [[Tom T. Hall]] in 1985 on the album ''[[Song in a Seashell]]''. [[Johnny Cash]], who also performed the song, advised him to record it.{{Citation needed|date=May 2011}} ==List of releases/artists== Anne Kirkpatrick & [[Slim Dusty]], [[Bobbejaan Schoepen]] ([[Benelux]], Germany, Austria, 1959/1960), [[Johnny Cash]], Bluey Francis, Errol Gray, Foster & Allen, [[Gordon Parsons (song-writer)|Gordon Parsons]], [[The Irish Rovers]], Johnny Greenwood, John Williamson (performed a parody version of the song called "A Dog With No Hair"), Nokturnl, Richard Clayderman, Rodney Vincent, The Singing Kettles, Stewart Peters and The Ten Tenors. Other sources mention versions by [[Johnny Ashcroft]], [[The Pogues]], Danny O'Flaherty, Patsy Watchorn, The Clancy Brothers, Merv Allen & The Jimmy Johnston Showband and Wilson Cole, Rolf Harris (UK, 1963), Hamish Imlach (UK, 1995), [[The Dubliners]] (1967), Adge Cutler & [[The Wurzels]] (UK, 1968), [[Midnight Oil]] (Australia, 1998), [[Dead Man Ray]] (Belgium, 2001), Donut Kings (2009). ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== *[http://www.slimdusty.com.au/ Slim Dusty's official website] *[http://bobbejaanschoepen.be/index.php?pagina=home&lang=eng/ Bobbejaan Schoepen's official website] *[http://www.deadmanray.com/ Dead Man Ray] * Listen to a clip from Slim Dusty singing [http://aso.gov.au/titles/music/a-pub-with-no-beer/ 'Pub With No Beer'] and read more about it on [http://aso.gov.au/ australianscreen online] * 'Pub With No Beer' was added to the [[National Film and Sound Archive]]'s [[Sounds of Australia]] registry in 2008 {{DEFAULTSORT:Pub With No Beer, A}} [[Category:Australian songs]] [[Category:Slim Dusty songs]] [[Category:Number-one singles in Australia]] [[Category:Australian country music songs]] [[Category:Tom T. Hall songs]] [[Category:1957 songs]]'
Unified diff of changes made by edit (edit_diff)
'@@ -2,5 +2,5 @@ | Name = A Pub with No Beer | Type = single -| Artist = [[Slim Dusty]] +| Artist = <nowiki>[[Slim Dusty aka avid Gordon Kirkpatrick</nowiki> | alt Artist = [[Bobbejaan Schoepen]]<br>[[The Dubliners]] | Album = @@ -25,5 +25,5 @@ }} [[File:Pub-with-no-beer.JPG|thumb|Pub with No Beer sign in Ingham Australia]] -'''A Pub With No Beer''' is the title of a [[humour|humorous]] [[country & western|country]] [[song]] made famous by country [[singers]] [[Slim Dusty]] (in Australia and the United States) and [[Bobbejaan Schoepen]] (in Belgium, the [[Netherlands]], Germany and Austria). +'''A Pub With No Beer''' '''''is an amazing song and is written by JOHN CENA... dandadadan''''' the title of a [[humour|humorous]] [[country & western|country]] [[song]] made famous by country [[singers]] [[Slim Dusty]] (in Australia and the United States) and [[Bobbejaan Schoepen]] (in Belgium, the [[Netherlands]], Germany and Austria). The song was adapted by [[Gordon Parsons (song-writer)|Gordon Parsons]] from the original poem "[[A Pub Without Beer]]" by [[Dan Sheahan]] of [[Ingham, Queensland|Ingham, North Queensland]] (originally from Newmarket, Ireland) in the Day Dawn Hotel, now known as [[Lees Hotel, Ingham, Queensland]]. It's believed the song was 1st performed in public by Gordon Parsons in 1954 at the 50th birthday of George Thomas, a resident of Creek Ridge Road, Glossodia (near Windsor in Sydney). That version was performed with an extra verse that was dropped from Slim Dusty's recorded version because it contained elements of blue humour. In [[1957 in music|1957]], "A Pub With No Beer" became the first Australian [[single (music)|single]] to go [[gold disc|gold]] and was the biggest-selling [[sound recording and reproduction|record]] by an Australian at that time. It was the first single by an Australian artist to make the British charts (#03).<ref>{{cite book | author= [[Tracee Hutchison]] |title=Your Name's On The Door|page=1|year=1992 '
New page size (new_size)
8070
Old page size (old_size)
7959
Size change in edit (edit_delta)
111
Lines added in edit (added_lines)
[ 0 => '| Artist = <nowiki>[[Slim Dusty aka avid Gordon Kirkpatrick</nowiki>', 1 => ''''A Pub With No Beer''' '''''is an amazing song and is written by JOHN CENA... dandadadan''''' the title of a [[humour|humorous]] [[country & western|country]] [[song]] made famous by country [[singers]] [[Slim Dusty]] (in Australia and the United States) and [[Bobbejaan Schoepen]] (in Belgium, the [[Netherlands]], Germany and Austria).' ]
Lines removed in edit (removed_lines)
[ 0 => '| Artist = [[Slim Dusty]]', 1 => ''''A Pub With No Beer''' is the title of a [[humour|humorous]] [[country & western|country]] [[song]] made famous by country [[singers]] [[Slim Dusty]] (in Australia and the United States) and [[Bobbejaan Schoepen]] (in Belgium, the [[Netherlands]], Germany and Austria).' ]
Whether or not the change was made through a Tor exit node (tor_exit_node)
0
Unix timestamp of change (timestamp)
1466214678