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Songs About Snow

Winter isn’t done with us yet! Here are some songs to play as you wait for, watch or clean up after winter’s gifts.

  1. Great Big Sled, A Killers featuring Toni Halliday; A Great Big Sled (Island)
  2. In This White World Bob Gibson; Ski Songs (Rhino)
  3. Roll On (Eighteen Wheeler) Alabama; Roll On (RCA)
  4. Six Feet Of Snow Little Feat; Down On The Farm (Warner Bros.)
  5. Snowbound Genesis; And Then There Three (Atlantic)
  6. White Is The Winter Night Enya; And Winter Came (Reprise)

 For more songs on this subject, see GreenBookofSongs.com® categories Seasons: Winter, Snow and Cold.

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Songs About Summer Vacation

Whether you get a summer vacation or not, it’s time to relax! Here’s a playlist for your summertime dreaming.

  1. Island In The Sun Weezer; Weezer 2001 (Geffen)
  2. No Shoes, No Shirt, No Problems Kenny Chesney; No Shoes, No Shirt, No Problems (BNA)
  3. Summer’s Comin’ Clint Black; One Emotion (RCA)
  4. Summertime Thing Chuck Prophet; No Other Love (New West/Red Ink)
  5. Sweet Vacation Lionel Richie; Coming Home (Island Def Jam)
  6. Toes Zac Brown Ban; The Foundation (Home Grown/Atlantic/Big Picture)

Find more songs on this subject in GreenBookofSongs.com® categories Relax and Seasons: Summer.

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Best Songs About Love And War For Memorial Day

On Memorial Day, we honor those who have died for our country. We also think about the sacrifice of the loved ones left behind.

In their honor, the GreenBookofSongs.com® has compiled a playlist from its category of songs about Love: Love & War. Each is a story of love cut short. They are described below but not ranked — there is no way to compare the stories of soldiers who do not come home.

Three of these songs take the soldier’s point of view, in varying stages of their exit from life. The soldier in Tracy Lawrence’s “If I Don’t Make It Back” hasn’t yet gone to war, but he knows he may not return. On his last night out with friends, he tells them to  ”find someone good enough for Amy / Who will love her like I would have / If I don’t make it back.” His would-be best man is left to honor those last wishes.

Tim McGraw’s “If You’re Reading This” is the voice from beyond the grave; a soldier has left a letter to be opened by his pregnant wife and his parents  in the event of his death. He hopes to comfort them with his faith that in his mission and his God, and frees his wife to find love again: “There’s gonna come a day / When you move on and find someone else, and that’s okay…Know my soul is where my momma always prayed that it would go.”

It takes a close reading of David Gray’s “You’re The One I Love” (and a look at Gray’s own discussion of the song) to see the war theme, but this is a soldier’s prayer of love. As he lies dying on the battlefield, no sound other than “the bullets whispering gentle /  ’mongst the new green leaves,” he thinks of his girlfriend and sends out his love: “As the tracer glides / In its graceful arc / Send a little prayer out to ya / Cross the falling dark…You’re the one I love.”

Another three songs take a woman’s point of view. In Carrie Underwood’s “Just A Dream”, a bride arrives at church not for the wedding she has dreamed of, but for the funeral of her soldier, who is not coming home. “..They handed her a folded-up flag / And she held on to all she had left of him.” She is left wishing that this nightmare were only a dream.

The song “Travelin’ Soldier”, by the Dixie Chicks, tells a story of young love, forever unfulfilled. A lonely young man on his way to Vietnam asks a waitress if he can write to her, because he has no one else. And when he falls, she alone is left to mourn his loss: “And one name read, but nobody really cared / But a pretty little girl with a bow in her hair.”

Finally, in “Silver Wings & Sweet Memories”, performed by the Statler Brothers, a woman raises a child alone, remembering throughout her life the young solider who died in battle. “To this day on her top shelf / There’s a flag folded three-cornered layin’ all by itself.” For her, as for all the families of fallen heroes, the war will never end.

We salute all the soldiers who will not come home from war, and the families who mourn them.

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Songs for Read Me Week

Read Me Week is an effort sponsored by the Tennessee non-profit Book ‘Em. The group’s goal is to provide books to lower-income children and teens and promote the joy of reading. You can learn more about the group and Read Me Week here.

In support of Read Me Week, GreenBookofSongs.com® selected the following songs from a list of 200 in our category Storybook Characters. Each song refers to a book or story young people may enjoy reading! Get them ready for book time with one of these:

  • Beauty And The Beast Celine Dion & Peabo Bryson; ST/Beauty And The Beast (Disney)
  • Hey Nancy Drew L Price; ST/Nancy Drew-Music From The Motion Picture (Bulletproof)
  • I’ve Gotta Crow Original Cast/Mary Martin; Peter Pan-The 1954 Broadway Production (RCA Victor)
  • House At Pooh Corner Loggins & Messina; The Best Of Friends (Columbia)
  • Love Story Taylor Swift; Fearless (Big Machine)
  • Next Harry Potter Tommy Gardner; Kangaroo Waffles & Other Treasure (Blackwater)
  • We’re Off To See The Wizard Original Cast; The Wizard Of Oz (TVT)  

You’ll find more songs about stories and characters in our categories Books, Books: Story Songs and Cartoon Characters.

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Songs for Teaching Arithmetic

One of our subscribers, teacher Jo-Ann Trifiro of Millstone Twp. Elementary School, just told us how she used the GreenBookofSongs.com® database to focus her Fourth Grade students’ attention for a lesson on division with remainders.

Here’s what she said:

I wanted the kids to carefully examine each division number story to understand how to use (or not to use) the remainders. I started by making “spy glasses” out of tin foil; this got them motivated to zoom in, and when I added the “Theme To ‘Mission Impossible’”, it really got them moving as detectives!

That ran into some working songs as they circled around the room: “Across the Great Divide” [by The Band] and “Biggest Part of Me” [by Ambrosia].

Next, I just continued some fun music as they completed their carousel: “ABC” and “Enjoy Yourself” [by the Jacksons]. My Fourth Graders also love “Shakable You”, by Imagination Movers.  This song directs the kids to shake certain parts of their bodies, and it’s just long enough for them to loosen up and get some movement. 

Here are two more ideas for activity songs:

  • “Shout”, by the Isley Brothers.  There’s a point in the song where the volume is dropped to a whisper, which offers a good way to ease into quiet time.
  • “Peanut Butter Jelly Time”, by the Buckwheat Boys, is a silly song that’s great for letting energy loose!

Ms. Trifiro also suggested the following for class dismissal:

  • “Who Let The Dogs Out”, by the Baha Men
  • “Saved By The Bell”, the television theme song 

Here are some other songs to help illustrate division with remainders:

  • “One”, by Three Dog Night. With its well-known line, “One is the loneliest number that you’ll ever do,” it’s a great match for problems with a remainder of one.
  • “Sole Survivor”, by Asia, is another good choice for remainders of one.  
  • “I’m Henry VIII, I Am”, by Herman’s Hermits, helps illustrate eighths specifically, and fractions generally.
  • “Two Divided By Love”, by the Grass Roots, has hooks that can help demonstrate the division process.

For more songs for teaching math and science, check out the GreenBookofSongs.com® category Science & Math. For activity songs, try our categories Carefree, Dance, Fun and Party.

Are you using songs to teach science or math? Please add your comments!

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Together for the Holidays

It’s all about being with the ones you love! Here are a few songs from our List of the Week about being together for the holidays.

SONGS FOR CHRISTMAS:  Together for the Holidays

Candle In The Window Alabama; Alabama-Christmas (RCA)

Coming Home For Christmas Jim Brickman; Homecoming (Savoy Jazz)

Home On Christmas Day Cyndi Lauper; Merry Christmas…Have A Nice Life (BMG Spec. Prod.)

Merry Christmas, Here’s To Many More Relient K; Let It Snow Baby, Let It Reindeer (Capitol)

To Someone That I Love B.B. King; A Christmas Celebration Of Hope (MCA)

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Top Five Songs For Hispanic Heritage Month

For Hispanic Heritage Month, which begins annually on September 15, GreenBookofSongs.com ® has selected five songs about famous Hispanics in history. While there are numerous leaders to choose from — elected officials, scientists, social activists, actors and musicians – we focused on heroes whose stories translate well into song.

Pancho Villa Billy Walker

Villa may have been a bandit before becoming a revolutionary leader, but Walker’s song sees him through the eyes of the Mexican villagers whose cause he championed: “He put down gold and silver, and food for us to eat / Said, ‘I didn’t come to harm you,’ and our hearts fell at his feet.”

Viva Zapata! Andy Irvine

You might not expect a Celtic folk singer to write a song of praise for a Mexican revolutionary, but Zapata’s commitment to the poor transcends such divisions. Using Zapata’s famous saying, Irvine captures his heroism well: “Isn’t it better to die on your feet than live upon your knees? / 400 years of bondage, that’s enough.”

Manos, Huesos Y Sang / Hands, Bones And Blood (Waltz For Frida Kahlo) Tish Hinojosa

Kahlo expressed through her brilliant art the tragedy of her life, marked by physical pain and heartbreak. Hinojosa portrays both the beauty and sorrow in this haunting song: “Thousand words painted by love’s broken stroke…Women would dream by your name.”

Picasso And Me Gretchen Peters

Picasso’s life included not just groundbreaking art but also many romantic partners, so it is fitting that Peters tells his story from a lover’s point of view. She watches him struggle with the conventional art world, which can’t yet grasp his genius: “Who made this game, who made these rules?…They’ll never understand him, they don’t know what I know.”

Roberto Clemente Phil Coley

The first Latin American elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame, Clemente was also a humanitarian. He died tragically in a plane crash while delivering relief supplies to earthquake victims in Nicaragua. This story song asks us to recognize both aspects of Clemente’s heroism: “He threw out runners from the outfield while on his knees / Though his right arm was great, honor all of him, please.”

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New Filtering Tools at GreenBookofSongs.com®

We’re excited about two new additions to the GreenBookofSongs.com® songs-by-subject search tools. In response to popular demand, we’ve now made it possible to sort search results by one or more popular genres and/or by “hit” status as well.

Users can now choose to see all songs about a particular subject, or select Pop, Rock, Country, R&B or Hip Hop songs. Subscribers may also choose to see only songs that were hits, based on widely used standards of national popularity. 

For now, these tools are in ”beta” because tagging of the database is not yet complete. This means that filtered results will reflect only a portion of what’s available by searching the full category.

Still, Green Book users will now be able to get lists of songs matching specific needs even more quickly. For example, are you looking for songs for the Fourth of July? In addition to 109 songs in our category Holidays: Fourth Of July, you can instantly find 82 Country songs about America in Countries: America, or 60 Rock songs in the category Freedom.

We are continually tagging more data to improve filter search results, and we plan to feature filtering by more of the 31 genres included in the GreenBookofSongs.com® database. Stay tuned as we add new features and new categories to make searching for songs by subject even easier!

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Songs about taxes

In honor of the upcoming income tax deadline, here are a few songs from our categories “Money” and “Politics:  Politics & Government”:

Death And Taxes TR Ritchie
I’m Payin’ Taxes, What Am I Buyin’ JB’s
Paycheck Man Randy Houser
Sales Tax On The Women New Lost City Ramblers
Strawman Lou Reed
Taxes On The Farmer Feeds Us All Ry Cooder
Taxman Beatles
Taxes, Taxes Hank Penny

Complaints about taxes seem to be ageless. In this list, we have songs from the Great Depression (“Sales Tax On The Women”), songs spurred by high tax rates in the second half of the 20th century (“Taxman”) and more recent complaints about working overtime just to pay Uncle Sam (“Paycheck Man”).  On the political side, there are concerns not only about paying taxes, but also what the government does with our money (“”I’m Payin’ Taxes, What Am I Buyin’”). Only TR Ritchie has a positive spin: His woman can count on his love as surely as she can count on death and taxes!

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Welcome to our blog!

All of us at GreenBookofSongs.com® are pleased to announce this addition to our family: the Green Book Of Songs Blog. Whether you’re already or a subscriber or you’re new to the Green Book of Songs By Subject, we’ll have content you can use.

We’ll have  lists of songs about a wide variety of topics – for example, current events or holidays. We’ll also be talking about song topics generally — what’s being written about in popular music and how that’s changing over time.

For those of you not familiar with us, the Green Book of Songs By Subject is the world leader in classifying popular music by theme. We provide lists of songs about more than 2,000 topics and concepts — love, politics, nature, emotions, social problems…you name it, it’s in here! All genres and eras of popular music are included.

In book form for 30 years, the Green Book database is now also online as a subscription service. Click here to visit our website and find out more.

Check back frequently, sign up for automatic alerts, or follow us on Twitter at songsabout. We’ll let you know when a new list of songs is available.

Last but most important: We really want to hear from you, so please, leave us a comment!

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