Frances Stewart, youngest sister of Elizabeth, gave children's rhymes to Goldstein. Hear them HERE.
Elizabeth wrote that Frances 'wis a beautiful singer an musician tae', but 'The cruelty at school by the scaldies did something tae Frances' confidence, an she niver carried on with the music side o it in public, although she could have done so'.

Elizabeth said about Robert, the youngest of Jean's four children ‘Robert wis extremely musical. He won prizes as a seven an eight year auld, singing songs like Singing The Blues, an others he could shake his hips to. He adored the traditional ballads an I learned a few ballads fae him. He wis so proud o me and always looked up to me as a mentor for his musical ability. He was killed tragically in a motor accident, only a few miles fae my hoose.’

Other Fetterangus Stewarts

I have not been able to identify Johnnie Stewart, also of Fetterangus, who was recorded by Goldstein and by Henderson.
Johnnie told Goldstein about when he was stationed in Naples. When going off duty he saw a vision in a cemetery of a man in an old-fashioned suit and lum [top] hat. It passed him and disappeared in mid air. Johnny sang Grannie's Heiland Hame for Goldstein, and in September 1960 Johnnie sang fragments only of three World War Two soldiers songs to Henderson.

Elizabeth and her younger sister Jane developed an exciting way of combining old Buchan songs with syncopated bounce , ad dubbed it Bennachie Rock. Hear them sing and play HERE .

‘Jane an me often sang thegither as kids, an then as teenagers we sang wi the band. Oftern I wid play piano an sing harmony tae Jane’s melody. She wis a guid singer, an oor voices blended well an we sang well thegither. We sang a mixture o the pop songs at the time, an of course, the auld sangs Lucy learned us, like, Twa Recruitin Sergeants… MacPhersons’s Rant, Hish-ee-ba, The Barnyards O Delgaty and Bonny Lass of Fyvie. We liket tae sing the bothy ballads because we could alter the tempo for dancing, such as the Boston-2-Step or the Gay Gordons. We would sing these songs in my mither’s dance band when we were teenagers.‘

Visiting singer and writer Ewan MacColl heard Jane and Elizabeth singing The Hill Of Bennachie this way, and wrote a new lyric, Come Aa Ye Fisher Lassies, for the approach, and the two girls sang the new song as part of the award-winning BBC Radio programme Singing The Fishing.