Patriotic
Music: Surprising Secrets About Those Flag-Waving
Sounds
By
Scott G
Whether
played by a marching band, an orchestra, or a rock
group, there are patriotic tunes that everyone in
America finds familiar, exciting and uplifting. But
how much do you know about how these songs were created?
And what do you know about the people who wrote them?
There
are some surprising facts behind all of this glorious
music.
So,
fire up the barbecue grill, look up at the fireworks,
and strike up the band as we reveal the secrets behind
the most influential nationalistic musical moments
of all time.
"Star
Spangled Banner," Francis Scott Key, 1814.
Schoolchildren in America all learn how Key watched
the British bombardment of Fort McHenry during the
War of 1812 and so admired the courage of the beleaguered
American forces that he wrote four stanzas of "The
Star Spangled Banner" (only the first is usually
performed). Key based the melody on an English drinking
song called "To Anacreon in Heaven." The
song has only been the national anthem since 1931,
and there was a strong movement to replace it with
one of the other songs on this list.
"America
(My Country 'Tis of Thee)," Samuel F. Smith,
1832.
The music was composed in the 1700s, sometimes attributed
to Henry Cary. First popular in Great Britain as "God
Save the King (Queen)," the song became bi-continental
in 1832. Modern audiences have been greatly moved
by the R&B version by Ray Charles, a truly wonderful
blending of emotion with what musicians call "the
groove."
"Rally
'Round the Flag," George F. Root, 1862.
Written for the Union army and its supporters during
the Civil War, the song was hugely popular in the
North. This didn't prevent Confederate troops from
writing their own lyrics and singing the song throughout
the South.
"When
Johnny Comes Marching Home," Louis Lambert, c.
1863.
Lambert was a pseudonym for Union Army Bandmaster
Patrick S. Gilmore. His lyrics, set to an old Irish
folk song, were popular through the whole Reconstruction
Era (1865-1896). It appears in an extended instrumental
version on the soundtrack of Stanley Kubrick's film
"Dr. Strangelove."
"Battle
Hymn of the Republic," Julia W. Howe, 1861.
Howe is another lyricist who succeeded by utilizing
a pre-existing piece of music, in this case a camp
meeting tune of the 19th century (which also became
"John Brown's Body"). The profound power
of the words combined with the compelling melody cannot
be denied, and it was sung at the funerals of Winston
Churchill, Robert Kennedy, and Ronald Reagan.
"Overture:
1812," Petr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, 1880.
Patriotic music doesn’t always revolve around
the July 4th celebration, or even refer to the USA.
Tchaikovsky got Russian hearts a-pounding with his
"1812 Overture in E Flat Major Op. 49,"
written to celebrate the 70th anniversary of his country's
victory battle during the Napoleonic Wars.
"Semper
Fidelis," John Philip Sousa, 1889.
Popular ever since it was first performed, the effective
and spirited tune takes its name from the U.S. Marine
Corps motto meaning "always faithful" and
is dedicated to the Marines.
"America
the Beautiful," Katharine Lee Bates, 1895, 1904,
1913.
Originally a poem that Bates twice revised after its
first publication in 1885, "America the Beautiful"
was sung to several different melodies. The song associated
with it today is "Materna," composed by
Samuel A. Ward in 1882, but it was also often performed
to the tune of "Auld Lang Syne."
"Stars
and Stripes Forever," John Philip Sousa, 1896.
Composed on Christmas Day, "The Stars and Stripes
Forever" has become the country's official march
(US Code, Title 36 Chapter 10). Sousa wrote lyrics
to the song, but they are little known today (sample:
"Let martial note in triumph float / And liberty
extend its mighty hand / A flag appears 'mid thunderous
cheers, / The banner of the Western land.)"
"Yankee
Doodle Boy," George M. Cohan, 1904.
"You're A Grand Old Flag," George M. Cohan,
1906.
"Over There," George M. Cohan, 1917.
Known as "the man who owned Broadway," Cohan
was a superstar before the term was coined. While
his film biography is called "Yankee Doodle Dandy,"
the title of his first big tribute to America is actually
"The Yankee Doodle Boy." Cohan excited U.S.
audiences again in 1906 with "You're a Grand
Old Flag," although the original line was "You're
a Grand Old Rag." It was America's entrance into
World War I in 1917 that inspired Cohan to write "Over
There," for which he received a congressional
medal.
"God
Bless America," Irving Berlin, 1938.
The prolific Berlin (900+ songs despite being unable
to read music) originally wrote this song right after
the first World War, but did not complete it until
just before World War II. Kate Smith first performed
it during her radio show on Armistice Day, 1938. An
immediate sensation, the song was often suggested
to replace the "Star Spangled Banner" as
the national anthem.
"Star
Spangled Banner," Jimi Hendrix, 1969.
The legendary guitarist took the stage near dawn on
the final day of the Woodstock Music and Art Fair.
The 13th song in his hour-long set was an incendiary
rendition of the venerable tune. In a performance
that was somehow savage and grand at the same time,
Hendrix wrestled new levels of emotion from the song
and generations have never heard it quite the same
way again.
"Apocalypse
Now," Francis Ford Coppola, 1979.
The music in question is "Ride of the Valkyries,"
from Richard Wagner's opera, "Die Walkure"
(1854-56). The composition fit perfectly into director
Coppola's nightmarish vision of the Vietnam War. The
sequence, featuring a helicopter attack at dawn, never
fails to raise the emotions of viewers.
Scott
G owns G-Man Marketing (http://www.gmanmarketing.com)
where he makes radio commercials and creates advertising
in all media. He is also recording artist The G-Man,
with albums on iTunes and Rhapsody via Delvian Records.
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