[On July
22, 1893, Wellesley Professor Katharine
Lee Bates first composed the words to what would become “America the
Beautiful.” So this week I’ve AmericanStudied “America” and other national
songs, leading up to this special weekend post on 21C nominees for new
anthems!]
Five recent
songs that I would nominate as new national anthems (with a bit on why if I
haven’t already written about them at length in hyperlinked posts):
1)
Gary
Clark Jr., “This Land” (2019)
2)
The
Killers, “Land of the Free” (2019)
3)
Halsey, “New Americana”
(2015): The song that launched Halsey’s
evolving career offers only a couple specific case studies in the “we” it
defines as “the new Americana,” and they’re interesting if a bit obvious (a self-loathing
young socialite, a gay football player). Instead, it’s the two lines in the
chorus (along with that titular identification) that I find most interesting as
a succinct representation of a 21st century national identity: “High
on legal marijuana/Raised on Biggie and Nirvana.” Not sure exactly what that
adds up to, but like all anthems, it’s a powerfully symbolic statement of who
we are.
4)
John Legend and Common, “Glory”
(2015): Even if this song were just what it seems to be, the musical accompaniment
to Ava DuVernay’s wonderful film
Selma, that would be enough to
merit inclusion on this list: Black
History is American History, as a certain AmericanStudier has been known to
argue. But I’m not sure any lines better sum up where we are and where we’re
trying to get, and what role music itself can play, more than these in Common’s
second verse: “We sing, our music is the cuts that we bleed through/Somewhere
in the dream we had an epiphany/Now we right the wrongs in history/No
one can win the war individually/It takes the wisdom of the elders and
young people's energy/Welcome to the story we call victory/The
comin' of the Lord, my eyes have seen the glory.”
5)
Steve Earle, “Amerika v. 6.0
(The Best We Can Do) (2008): It will surprise precisely no one who knows me
that most of this list has been pretty optimistic, or at least represent
expressions of a critical optimism that envisions a more perfect union. That seems
to me to be a pretty good goal for a national anthem; but at the same time, I’d
have to have been born yesterday not to recognize the concurrent need for some
cynicism and more overt critique of our present moment. Well, Earle’s pissed-off
anthem delivers those in spades, from its biting opening lines (“Look at ya/Yeah,
take a look in the mirror now tell me what you see/Another satisfied customer
in the front of the line for the American dream”) to its titular definition (“Four
score and a hundred and fifty years ago/Our forefathers made us equal as long
as we can pay/Yeah, well maybe that wasn't exactly what they was thinkin'/Version
six-point-oh of the American way”). So let’s sing songs of hope, but
ones of righteous anger too, as we seek new anthems for our 21st
century American moment.
Next series
starts Monday,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other national songs you’d highlight?
PPS. After I had scheduled this, I got the excellent suggestion on Twitter to include Ada Limon's poem "A New National Anthem"!
PPS. After I had scheduled this, I got the excellent suggestion on Twitter to include Ada Limon's poem "A New National Anthem"!
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