By continuing to use the site, you agree to our use of cookies and to abide by our Terms and Conditions. We in turn value your personal details in accordance with our Privacy Policy.
Please log in or register. Registered visitors get fewer ads.
From Wikipedia: Released in 1967 this song has been adopted by the supporters of football clubs such as Scunthorpe United, Stockport County, Queens Park Rangers, Aston Villa, Sheffield Wednesday and Wolverhampton Wanderers. The song is played before matches on the loudspeaker system so that the fans can sing along to the chorus with the lyrics adapted to include a reference to their club (e.g., 'Hi Ho Queens Park Rangers'. 'Hi Ho Aston Villa', 'Hi Ho Sheffield Wednesday' or 'Hi Ho, Wolverhampton'
Any specific Rangers connection?
from Yahoo answers The term, "Hi-ho Silver, and away!" was used in an old (black & white) television series called, "The Lone Ranger" (by The Ranger himself). It was his call to his horse Silver to get going, and he said it (shouted it) as he left.
[Post edited 28 May 2014 9:09]
'I'm 18 with a bullet.Got my finger on the trigger,I'm gonna pull it.."
Love,Peace and Fook Chelski!
More like 20StoneOfHoop now.
Let's face it I'm not getting any thinner.
Pass the cake and pies please.
0
How did this song come to be associated with QPR? on 09:08 - May 28 with 14185 views
I read Ronnie Woods autobiography and he mentions the song in there,but I can't remember the reasons behind him writing the song now.It does fit queens park rangers better than it does Wolverhampton though.
0
How did this song come to be associated with QPR? on 09:27 - May 28 with 14121 views
From Wikipedia: Released in 1967 this song has been adopted by the supporters of football clubs such as Scunthorpe United, Stockport County, Queens Park Rangers, Aston Villa, Sheffield Wednesday and Wolverhampton Wanderers. The song is played before matches on the loudspeaker system so that the fans can sing along to the chorus with the lyrics adapted to include a reference to their club (e.g., 'Hi Ho Queens Park Rangers'. 'Hi Ho Aston Villa', 'Hi Ho Sheffield Wednesday' or 'Hi Ho, Wolverhampton'
Any specific Rangers connection?
from Yahoo answers The term, "Hi-ho Silver, and away!" was used in an old (black & white) television series called, "The Lone Ranger" (by The Ranger himself). It was his call to his horse Silver to get going, and he said it (shouted it) as he left.
[Post edited 28 May 2014 9:09]
Always thought it was Hiyo Silver?To the William Tell overture music.
I think it's the only record Jeff sings on.Still gets played at every goddam party.
When the song was originally in the charts, (1968) JB performed it on ToTP and gave a big "QPR!" shout out at the beginning. We were a very cool club to be associated with then – league cup win, exciting young team, Rodney's attitude etc. It's possible that was part of the reason we adopted it.
1
How did this song come to be associated with QPR? on 13:54 - May 28 with 13761 views