I found it interestin tat th musicians were on strike durin ww2
Country Music at War
09/27/2001
Since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on America, several patriotic songs
have appeared on the country music charts.
Alongside Cyndi Thomson's "What I Really Meant to Say," country fans are
hearing a newly recorded song by Aaron Tippin, a rendition of "The
Star-Spangled Banner" by Faith Hill and a group-sing of "America the
Beautiful" featuring Toby Keith, the Oak Ridge Boys and Lyle Lovett,
among others.
This latest wave of nationalistic fervor from the country side will come
as no surprise to longtime observers of the genre. Country artists and
country songwriters have a long tradition of weighing in when the U.S.
finds itself at war.
The Early Years
Commercial country music was born in the early 1920s, in the aftermath
of World War I, 1914-1918. Reflecting a nation determined to return to
peacetime normalcy, country recordings of the 1920s and 1930s had little
to say about war in general or America's past wars.
For every song recorded about the Spanish American War ("Filipino Baby,"
"The Battleship Maine" among the handful) or the Great War ("The Kaiser
and Uncle Sam," "The Rainbow Division" and even one side of Jimmie
Rodgers' first recording, "Soldier's Sweetheart," which recalls "that
awful German war"), there were several about the great conflict fought
two generations earlier on American soil, the War Between the States
("Memories of the South Before the War," "Dixie" and many others),
usually told from the Southern point of view.
World War II
In 1939-1941, America for the second time in a generation found itself
surrounded by a world at war. The fight to stay neutral failed when
Japan attacked the U.S. fleet in Pearl Harbor. That "date which will
live in infamy" was recounted by Denver Darling in "Cowards Over Pearl
Harbor."
Prolific songwriter and recording artist Carson Robison, always fond of
the event ballad, became almost the muse of the Second World War,
penning and recording such efforts as "Here We Go to Tokio, Said
Barnacle Bill the Sailor," "We're Gonna Have to Slap the Dirty Little
Jap" and the double-sided "Hitler's Letter to Hirohito" and "Hirohito's
Letter to Hitler."
The runaway patriotic hit of the war's first year was by another New
York-based recording artist, Elton Britt. The unforgettable "There's a
Star-Spangled Banner Waving Somewhere," told the mythical tale of a
crippled mountain boy who wants to "help to bring the Axis down a peg."
Largely a Southern regional music before World War II, country music
entered the national consciousness as never before, as Southerners sent
to the far-flung battlefronts and those migrating to domestic war
industry jobs in Detroit, Chicago, California and elsewhere took their
music with them.
Many songs celebrated the war effort, and plenty more no doubt would
have but for the timing and duration of the long musicians' union
strike: a ban on new recordings began Aug. 1, 1942, (eight months into
the war) and lasted for some major recording companies over two years.
When the strike finally ended, the war was still being fought, and
country artists had lost none of their patriotic fervor, as evidenced by
Tex Ritter's "There's a Gold Star in Her Window," Eddy Arnold's
"Mother's Prayer" and "Did You See My Daddy Over There," Ernest Tubb's
"Soldier's Last Letter," Gene Autry's (himself a pilot in the Asian
theater) "At Mail Call Today" and Bob Wills' "White Cross on Okinawa"
and "Stars and Stripes on Iwo Jima."
Korea
Anti-communism was the theme as America found itself fighting communist
aggression in Korea (1950-1953). Lulu Belle and Scotty added big
government, inflation and taking the Fifth Amendment as domestic
co-evils to the foreign Communist menace in the wonderful "I'm No
Communist" in 1952. Little Jimmy Dickens and others sang "They Locked
God Outside the Iron Curtain," and Terry Preston (Ferlin Husky) was just
as intent on his own kind of lockout, "Let's Keep the Communists Out."
Red River Dave McEnery, ever the topical balladeer, reworked T. Texas
Tyler's 1948 hit "Deck of Cards" into "The Red Deck of Cards," a
description of Communist attempts at brainwashing, while Eddie Hill's
"I've Changed My Mind" told of a brainwashed American prisoner of war
who came to his senses and came home.
The special conditions of Korea found ample expression in country songs
of the period. Tubb sang of "A Heartsick Soldier on Heartbreak Ridge"
and hit big with Arthur Q. Smith's beautiful "Missing in Action." Britt
and Bill Monroe each recorded "Rotation Blues," with Britt adding his
description of "Korean Mud." The Louvin Brothers, though not yet the
stars they would become, sang from experience of going "From Mother's
Arms to Korea." Jimmie Osborne celebrated the 1953 armistice
(optimistically, some would say) with "Thank God for Victory in Korea."
Vietnam
America's next war found G.I.'s in the jungles of Vietnam. American
involvement there would be longer (1965-1973) and costlier than in
Korea, and the war proved far more divisive at home for a variety of
reasons. Dozens of record labels, major and independent, released
literally hundreds of songs and recitations about the war in Vietnam.
The first major hit came from Johnny Wright, whose version of Tom T.
Hall's "Hello Viet Nam" (1965) topped the country chart. Kris
Kristofferson penned "Viet Nam Blues" for Dave Dudley, in which the
speaker is sickened by an encounter with an antiwar protester. Stonewall
Jackson, also in the war's second year, shamed protesters as "these men
who'd rather live as slaves" in "The Minute Men Are Turning in Their
Graves."
Nagging questions about America's war aims in Vietnam are reflected in
the country songs of the time. As early as 1966, Charlie Moore and Bill
Napier sang "Is This a Useless War?," and the same year Dave Dudley's
recording of "What We're Fighting For" found a ready audience. Perennial
war commentator Tubb recorded Red River Dave's answer to the war aims
question in its first year (1965), "It's for God, Country and You, Mom
(That's Why I'm Fighting in Viet Nam)." This triad has been invoked in
every American war -- witness Artemus Ward's complaint from the days of
the Civil War: "the song writers air doin' the Mother bisness rayther
too muchly."
Few doubted the heroism and bravery of the men serving in Vietnam, and
one of them, Barry Sadler, immortalized his own service branch with the
biggest hit to come out of the war, "The Ballad of the Green Berets."
Country music's hero of this war would not be a general like MacArthur
in Korea, but a lieutenant -- court-martialed for his part in the My Lai
Massacre -- William Calley, who was lionized in more than one country
recitation at the time of his 1971 conviction.
Loretta Lynn sounded one of the first negative notes in her poignant
"Dear Uncle Sam" (1966), in which she informs her government "You don't
need him like I do." Her mentors and benefactors, the Wilburn Brothers,
later weighed in with "Little Johnny From Down the Street" (who "died in
a foreign land all alone") and "The War Keeps Dragging On."
Even Merle Haggard's immortal anthems, "Okie From Muskogee" and "The
Fightin' Side of Me" from 1969-1970, were more anti-protester and
pro-America than in any sense pro-Vietnam War. Walter Bailes and the
Sullivans were among those who tired of the indecisive fighting, and
they voiced these sentiments in the beautiful but unheralded "Bring the
Boys Home." President Nixon did just that between 1969-1973.
Middle Eastern Crises
The Iranian hostage crisis (1979-1981) never flared into actual war but
generated a great deal more country music commentary than would the Gulf
War 10 years later. Among the memorable tunes: "Take Your Oil and Shove
It," "A Message to Khomieni" and "Ring the Bells of Freedom." The
prolonged crisis, which ended with the release of American hostages on
the day Ronald Reagan was inaugurated (Jan. 20, 1981), spawned a
patriotic furor that was perhaps best captured on the Charlie Daniels
Band's memorable "In America."
Iran's longtime enemy, Iraq, became America's enemy when Saddam Hussein
invaded Kuwaiti oil fields in 1990. Hank Williams Jr.'s "Don't Give Us a
Reason" pointedly warned Hussein of an American response. Tippin's
"You've Got to Stand for Something" was one of the few chart hits
dealing with the brief conflict, along with Bill Anderson's reworking of
the aforementioned T. Texas Tyler's "Deck of Cards." Donna Fargo
recorded "Soldier Boy," and Jerry Martin's "Letter to Saddam Hussein"
peaked after the war was fought.
Operation Enduring Freedom
In the early days following the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001,
Tippin has recorded a new version of "You've Got to Stand for
Something." He also has hauled out a song he wrote with Kenny Beard and
Casey Beathard 2œ years ago, "Where the Stars and Stripes and the
Eagle Fly, " and will release it Oct. 2 as a commercial single with all
proceeds going to the American Red Cross.
Martina McBride has stepped up in a variety of situations to sing "The
Star-Spangled Banner" and a chorus of her hit "Independence Day," given
new meaning in light of events. Greenwood's "God Bless the USA" is at
No. 16 on the country and pop charts, and Greenwood has jetted around
the country to sing his song at memorials and large gatherings. Faith
Hill, the Dixie Chicks and Willie Nelson all performed Sept. 21 in the
nationally televised special America: A Tribute to Heroes.
Country songwriters -- no doubt stirred by the violent attacks, the loss
of life, the swelling of pride in country and anxiety about what might
come in the future - are probably setting about the task of turning
their feelings into songs.
"This song is an opportunity to speak to people," Tippin says of his new
recording. "I hope it will be an inspiration to the soldiers, the men
and women about to be [soldiers] and the Americans at home. And I hope
it will help our country heal."
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