Ebooks for PCs, Macs, Sony Readers, mobile phones ...
A vast range of ebooks from the world's leading academic, popular and professional publishers

Search options

Academic Ebooks
Alerts

Most Popular Subjects

Business
History
Computers
Religion
Health & Fitness
Science
Body Mind Spirit

Fiction

Crime Fiction
Literary Fiction
Romance
Science Fiction
Suspense/Thrillers

Non-Fiction

Archaeology
Architecture
Art
Biography & Autobiography
Body Mind Spirit
Business & Economics
Crafts & Hobbies
Computers
Current Events
Drama
Education
Family & Relationships
Folklore & Mythology
Food and Wine
Foreign Language Books
Foreign Language Study
Health & Fitness
History
Humor
Games
Gardening
House & Home
Juvenile Nonfiction
Language Arts
Law
Literary Collections
Literary Criticism
Mathematics
Media
Medical
Music
Nature
Performing Arts
Pets
Philosophy
Photography
Poetry
Political Science
Psychology & Psychiatry
Reference
Religion
Science
Self-Help
Sex
Social Science
Sports & Recreation
Study Aids
Technology
Transportation
Travel
True Crime

Reviewed by TRUSTe

Book Details

Songs Sung Red, White, and Blue

Songs Sung Red, White, and Blue

By: Collins, Ace
Published By: HarperCollins
ePub for Digital Editions Price: $11.99
PDF for Digital Editions Price: $11.99
Mobipocket Reader Price: $11.99
Microsoft Reader Price: $11.99
 
EBOOK OPTIONS
ADD TO CART
ADD TO WISHLIST
TELL A FRIEND
RECEIVE ALERTS





Throughout our nation's history, patriotic songs have lifted our spirits during hard times and brought us closer to our heritage and to each other. Behind these "songs sung red, white, and blue" are unforgettable stories that will enrich your appreciation of their unique power.

It's hard to imagine a single American who hasn't been touched deeply at one time or another by the songs in these pages. From the soaring chorus of "God Bless America" to the quiet poetry of "America the Beautiful," historian Ace Collins takes you inside the creation of thirty-two classic songs spanning two centuries. Military anthems like "The Marine's Hymn" and "Anchors Aweigh" share pages with other songs of war, such as the War of 1812's "The Star-Spangled Banner" and the Civil War's "Battle Hymn of the Republic." Popular tunes dating back to the earliest days of our nation, such as "Yankee Doodle," are included alongside contemporary hits like "God Bless the U.S.A." Other favorites like "This Land Is Your Land" and "This Is My Country" reflect on our nation in times of peace.

You'll meet a surprising and diverse cast of behind-the-scenes characters, which includes both everyday Americans -- teachers, preachers, and soldiers -- as well as celebrated songwriters like Irving Berlin and George M. Cohan. Here are songs that are as close to our hearts as any ever written -- songs that form a rousing soundtrack to America's story.

Excerpt

Chapter One


Abraham, Martin and John

If there was one event that seemed to signify just how tragic the Civil War had been, it was when the president was killed at Ford's Theatre. This action plunged a nation into deep despair and widened the gap between the victor and the loser. This death struck such a deep chord that in the months after Abraham Lincoln was assassinated by John Wilkes Booth, more than fifty songs were penned trying to capture the incredible sadness that had enveloped the war-scarred country. Yet while scores of these compositions were played in concert halls, churches, and theaters and around the fireplaces of common people, none managed to paint the graphic pain of the moment well enough to become a well-known American folk song or anthem.

It is doubtful that Dick Holler had ever heard any of the songs written about Lincoln's life and death. Yet in the wake of the assassination of another president, John F. Kennedy, Holler, like millions of other Americans, must have relived the details of the tragic deaths of both Lincoln and Kennedy. The parallels seemed uncanny, but in truth the deaths were most closely related by the fact that two men who seemed to have been the moral voices of the moment, men who were strongly loved and deeply hated for firing up incredible passions in their followers, had been struck down in what should have been the greatest moments of their lives.

Holler was not a historian, though he had a love of history. The man's claim to fame would come from writing about an American hero, though the star of his song was a hero of the fictional variety. In 1966, the rock group the Royal Guardsmen took Holler's "Snoopy vs. the Red Baron" to the top of the charts. This novelty number, inspired by Charles Schulz's classic comic-strip beagle, was equally enjoyed by old and young alike. If possible, it made Snoopy an even larger star than his bigheaded owner, Charlie Brown. Even as America laughed at his work and Holler deposited royalty checks from record sales, the man and the nation were still troubled by a host of problems plaguing the country -- problems that a humorous song simply could not erase.

Much as Lincoln's death had scarred the United States for more than two decades, when Lee Harvey Oswald shot JFK, the wound festered in every facet of American society for years. Kennedy's loss left millions questioning every aspect of their lives, right down to the core of their beliefs. The death of the young president was even cited as a factor in the heated debates over integration and civil rights, the rapidly growing division between those who argued over the reasons for American involvement in Vietnam, and the accelerated experimentation with illegal drugs. Americans could not escape the bleakness of the times. The nightly news became a nightmare of disappointment and violence. just when many felt that things could get no worse, another death brought the shocked nation to its knees again.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was at the very least a controversial leader. As the man who jump-started the American civil rights movement, King was also a dynamic speaker whose ideas stirred up deep devotion, as well as deeply rooted fear. While millions of African Americans lined up to support his peaceful marches and demonstrations, the whites who clung to segregation saw him as the most dangerous man in the country. On a bright evening in Memphis, Tennessee, not long after making one of the most famous speeches of his life, King was gunned down on his hotel's balcony. It was April 4, 1968. King's death divided the nation much more deeply than had his life. In many parts of the country, violence erupted, and some areas began to take on the look of a war zone.

Like his older brother, the recently slain president, Robert Kennedy felt a calling to lead his nation. When Lyndon Johnson opted not to run for reelection in 1968, the younger Kennedy stepped in to try to win the role as the leader of the Democrats. When he won the California primary on June 4, 1968, he seemed well on his way to his party's nomination. After a rousing victory speech, he started to leave his hotel headquarters through the kitchen. Amid dirty dishes and late-night workers, the unthinkable happened when another assassin ended the life of the man millions called Bobby. A nation that had once felt so secure now shook and asked, "Who's next?"

In the wake of King's and the younger Kennedy's deaths, Americans began to wonder if every facet of a society that just a decade before had seemed so stable was now falling completely apart. Dick Holler was one of those who were horrified. The songwriter sensed the national mood and saw a bridge that linked the deaths of three recent leaders to Lincoln's. That bridge was the mass of grief and questions that accompanied each death and the fact that the murders

were fueled by each of the men's strong and courageous ideas and stands. With these thoughts fresh in his mind, Holler created a song that was uniquely American. It defied description -- if the subject had not been so serious, this song might have been considered a novelty number. It wasn't a protest song, it wasn't an anthem, it wasn't a flag-waving ballad or a gospel standard, yet it contained elements of each of these styles. In just four verses and a chorus, it became much more than just another folk-pop standard.

What Holler's "Abraham, Martin and John" accomplished was to voice the pain and anguish of millions and ask the questions that haunted people all over the world. The song did not give answers, but rather pointed out that the ones who might have had those answers had been needlessly killed ...



Related eBooks


eBooks by this author More eBooks in this subject


Related Subjects


Latest Release Alerts

Stay ahead of the game! Register your subject interests to receive an email alert when we release new ebooks in your field of interest. There are over 50 subjects to choose from.

Receive occasional email alerts when we receive new eBooks on the site.

Register »


eBook Formats

The eBook you are interested in is available for purchase in the following formats:

Buy this format +

Price $11.99
ISBN 0061825999
Published Date 2/1/2009
File Size 243K
Security Settings listed below
Printing Off
Copying Off
Expiration Off
Lending Off
Read Aloud Off
Minimum Software Version Adobe Digital Editions 1.7
Suitable Devices Windows, Mac, Sony Reader, Cool-er Reader
History Best Sellers


Special Offers
First time to eBooks.com?
Easy steps to using eBooks

Sign up for Email Alerts
Receive an email alert when we release new books in your field.

New York Times Bestsellers - $9.99
eBook versions of the New York Times Best Sellers - at just $9.99

Best Selling Fiction Titles
Books that are definitely worth a read - our Best Selling Fiction

Free Excerpts
Free excerpts for titles which are new, noteworthy or strongly in demand this month.

Just Arrived!
We're adding hundreds of great titles each month.

Recently Reduced Titles
On Sale - Our favorite and most popular ebooks!

Featured Authors
20% off titles by our favorite authors!

Maintain Your Brain
Is your grey matter in need of a tune up??? Take a look at some of these excellent titles, to stimulate your synapses!

Visit the Cambridge University Press eBook Store
Cambridge University Press, the oldest university press in the world, has just launched its own eBook Store, powered by eBooks.com.

Wealth Building
Be inspired to gain control of your financial future with titles that give you the motivation and information necessary to create abundance.

John Wiley Bestsellers
Bestsellers from John Wiley

Gift Certificates
Give the gift of reading with an eBooks.com Gift Certificate