George is the only one I've ever been able to sing that with as a duet/dialog. There was a guy in Denver who tried to learn it. We performed it a couple times and each time I had to coach him thru parts of it. Kinda ruined the effect.
By the way, a little-known fact about that song: on The Kingston Trio's "String Along" album (and I assume also on "By Special Request"), Bob Gibson is credited as writer, despite the fact that he never claimed to have written the song. However, he did copyright it under his name, as the original copyright had expired.
Bob learned the song from a guy named Bob Black, but it was originally written and copyrighted in 1898, by a humor-song writer of the day named Lew Sully. His version is slightly different lyrically from the Trio's version, which I think is a definite improvement over the original.
But if you think that "To Morrow" is a hard one to memorize you should try learning all 6 verses of American Pie. Better yet - the whole 5-hour story of the sinking of The Edmond Fitzgerald by Gordon Lightfoot. Someone once asked me to play that and in retaliation I went home and wrote a parody called "The Wreck Of The Elephant Gerald." It's a cautionary tale of wanton drunkedness of elephantine proportions.
When I finished my saga I counted up the couplets in my parody compared to those in the Lightfoot tune and mine actually came 4 (as I recall) couplets longer than the original. I almost have my parody memorized. I have to use character voices in this one too. There's the Elephant Gerald, his buddy, a clown named Harold and a cop. Plus I have to be the narrator in my straight voice.
Another good one to learn (I used to know it - I'd have to relearn it since I haven't sung it in years) is "I've Been Everywhere" by Hank Snow.
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