- Ballad For Americans
"Ballad For Americans" (1939) is an American patriotic
cantata with lyrics byJohn La Touche and music byEarl Robinson . Originally titled "The Ballad forUncle Sam ", it was originally written for a WPA theatre project called "Sing for Your Supper ". [Online notes from 2005 [http://www.lafayette.edu/webdata/robeson/audio.html Paul Robeson Conference] at Lafayette College. Accessed31 January 2006 . ]The "Ballad" was performed on the
CBS radio network byPaul Robeson , accompanied by chorus and orchestra. Both Robeson andBing Crosby had commercially successful recordings of the piece. In the 1940 presidential campaign it was played at both theRepublican National Convention and that of the Communist Party. Its popularity continued through the period ofWorld War II Dreier & Flacks] — in autumn 1943, 200African American soldiers performed the piece in a benefit concert atLondon 'sRoyal Albert Hall [" [http://www.time.com/time/archive/preview/0,10987,774677,00.html Ballad for Britons] ", "Time",11 October 1943 ] — but because of Robinson and Robeson's left-wing politics, it largely fell out of the general repertoire of American popular music during theSecond Red Scare of the late 1940s and early 1950s. It has, nonetheless, been periodically revived, notably during theUnited States Bicentennial (1976). There is also a well-known recording byOdetta , recorded atCarnegie Hall in 1960.Invoking the
American Revolution (it names several prominent revolutionary patriots and quotes the preamble of the Declaration of Independence), and the freeing of the slaves in theAmerican Civil War (there is a brief lyrical and musical quotation of the spiritual "Go Down Moses "), as well asLewis and Clark , theKlondike Gold Rush , andSusan B. Anthony , the piece draws an inclusive picture of America: "I'm just anIrish American , Negro, Jewish American, Italian, French and English, Spanish, Russian, Chinese, Polish, Scotch, Hungarian, Litwak, Swedish, Finnish American, Canadian, Greek and Turk and Czech and double-check American — I was baptizedBaptist , Methodist, Congregationalist, Lutheran, Atheist, Roman Catholic — [etc.] "The lyrics periodically point at elite skepticism toward its inclusive American vision ("Nobody who was anybody believed it") before coming back to its refrain:
:For I have always believed it, :And I believe it now,:And now you know who I am.:(Who are you?):America! America!
Many performers of the "Ballad" have made minor changes in the lyrics. For example, in the passage quoted above, the NYC Labor Chorus make several changes, including changing "
Negro " to "African" and substituting "Jamaica n" for "Litvak". Similarly, they add "Moslem" to the list of religions."Ballad For Americans" lyrics as given on the site of the NYC Labor Chorus.] In a passage near the end that begins "Out of the cheating, out of the shouting," Robeson in his 1940 recording adds "lynching s" to the list [Paul Robeson recording, accessed on the Lafayette College site] ; the NYC Labor Chorus attempt to bring the piece up to date with::Out of the greed and polluting,:Out of the massacre at Wounded Knee,:Out of the lies of McCarthy,:Out of the murders of Martin and John…
Notes
References
* Peter Dreier & Dick Flacks, " [http://www.thenation.com/doc/20020603/dreier Patriotism's Secret History] ". "
The Nation ",June 3 2002 issue. Accessed31 January 2006 .
* [http://www.lafayette.edu/webdata/robeson/audio.html Paul Robeson Conference]April 7 -9, 2005 atLafeyette College . Page includes a link to Robeson's 1945 recording of "Ballad for Americans" in WMA format. Accessed31 January 2006 .
* "Ballad For Americans" lyrics byJohn La Touche (1939).
* [http://www.cpsr.cs.uchicago.edu/robeson/links/NYlabor.ballad.lyrics.html "Ballad For Americans" lyrics as given on the site of the NYC Labor Chorus] . Accessed31 January 2006 .
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