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Songs About 9/11 Nine Years Later

We add here to other lists we’ve posted in previous years, in remembrance of 9/11 and all that was lost.

  1. God Bless This Mess Sheryl Crow; Detours (A&M/Interscope)
  2. Have You Forgotten? Darryl Worley; Have You Forgotten? (DreamWorks/SKG)
  3. Him Lily Allen; It’s Not Me, It’s You (Capitol)
  4. If I Had A Time Machine, That Would Be Fresh MC Lars; The Graduate (Horris)
  5. You’re Missing Bruce Springsteen; The Rising (Columbia)

For more songs on this topic, see the GreenBookofSongs.com® categories Danger & Disaster: 9/11/2001 and War: Middle East.

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Songs for Teaching About The Reconstruction Era

A 5th Grade teacher whose school subscribes to GreenBookofSongs.com® asked us to suggest songs she could use when teaching about the post-Civil War period of Reconstruction. Her syllabus included the following discussion points:

  1. Devastation in the South after the war, from different viewpoints
  2. Government plans for Reconstruction
  3. Segregation and discrimination (e.g., “Jim Crow” laws)
  4. Sharecropping

This is not one of our easier assignments! But we were able to find a good selection of songs. See the Amazon.com widget at the end of this post to listen to audio clips.

Devastation in the South after the war, from different viewpoints

  • An Old Unreconstructed Waylon Jennings. This folk tune vehemently expresses a Rebel soldier’s resentment of the side that defeated him.
  • Hard Times Come Again No More Kate and Anna McGarrigle. Though written by Stephen Foster prior to the Civil War, the song provides an effective backdrop for a discussion of the poverty and loss experienced throughout the South at the war’s end.
  • No More Auction Block For Me Sweet Honey In The Rock. This spiritual captures both the pain of the past and the hope for the future.

All three songs can be found on the album Songs Of The Civil War (Columbia).

Government plans for Reconstruction

Many teachers will enjoy Oscar Brand’s album Presidential Campaign Songs, 1789-1996 (Smithsonian Folkways). Songs relevant to a discussion of Reconstruction include:

  • If The Johnnies Get Into Power. Northern suspicion of Southern politics is clear in this James Garfield campaign song.
  • For Hayes And Wheeler, Too. Here too, Southern candidates are portrayed as hostile to the values of the Union.

Segregation and discrimination (e.g., “Jim Crow” laws)

Some songs in the GreenBookofSongs.com® category Prejudice may be too graphic or intense for younger grade levels. We suggested the following songs as appropriate for 5th Grade students.

  • When Will I Get To Be Called A Man Big Bill Broonzy. This WW II-era song conveys the frustration of being a second-class citizen.
  • I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free Nina Simone. Simone’s rendition of this emotionally powerful song is positive and Gospel-oriented.
  • Alabama Blues JB Lenoir. This classic blues song describes how murderers of Black victims were set free by the state.
  • Jim Crow Blues Leadbelly This is a general but age-appropriate protest of Jim Crow laws.

Sharecropping

  • Pick A Bale Of Cotton Leadbelly. This staple of American folk music has a long history. It provides a musical backdrop for discussions of the sharecropping life.

Finally, here are two lesson plans on the Reconstruction period that teachers may find helpful:

Please share with us any songs you’ve used when teaching about this important period in American history!

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Songs About Hurricane Katrina, Five Years Later

Five years ago, Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans and surrounding areas. The images of Americans calling for help from rooftops and flooded streets will stay with us forever.

In our post on this topic last year, we looked at songs from the personal, the political and the practical perspectives. This year, we list songs of rebuilding and renewal, of strength and hope. New Orleans — indeed, the entire Gulf Coast – will not be washed away.

  1. How’s Your House Ian Hunter; ReDefine 8/29-C (NOMRF.org)
  2. Let Your Light Shine R. Kelly; Single-Let Your Light Shine (Jive)
  3. Poor Man’s Paradise Subdudes; Street Symphony (Narada)
  4. Washed By The Water Will Hoge; Draw The Curtains (Rykodisc)
  5. We Got Each Other (The Evacuation Song) Imagination Movers; Eight Feet (Walt Disney)

For all 64 songs on this topic, see GreenBookOfSongs.com® category Danger & Disaster: Hurricane Katrina.

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Green Book Of Songs By Subject Lists Songs About Oil Spills

A sad entry into the GreenBookofSongs.com® catalog is its newest category, Danger & Disaster: Oil Spills. Spurred by the ongoing tragedy of the Gulf oil spill, the Green Book has now begun collecting songs about this and other oil-related disasters.

The Green Book Of Songs By Subject has a long history of cataloging songs about disasters, both man-made and natural. Examples include songs about shipwrecks, road accidents and train disasters; floods, hurricanes and ecological woes; and more recent categories devoted to songs about 9/11 and Hurricane Katrina. In addition, two rich categories for Protest and Politics: Social Injustice contain numerous songs decrying war, poverty and prejudice.

This new list differs from most Green Book categories in that it contains several grassroots contributions, including several homemade videos. Many of the songs we’ve gathered so far have been donated in order to raise money for the human and animal victims of the Deepwater spill. In keeping with that spirit, we are printing here the entire initial list of 14 songs, with links where available to a source where you can purchase and contribute.  Your suggestions for additions to this category are welcome.

  1. Black Gold Dr. John; Video-Black Gold (DirtyCajuns.com)
  2. BP Blues dirtycajuns; Video-BP Blues (DirtyCajuns.com)
  3. Cry For The Fishermen Acoustic Fusion; Gulf Coast Relief-C (Global Green USA)
  4. Don’t Go/BP Amoco Pearl Jam; Video-Don’t Go/BP Amoco (YouTube.com)
  5. Drill Baby Drill Gil; Gulf Coast Relief-C (Global Green USA)
  6. F.BP Revolving EffeX; Video-F.BP (YouTube.com)
  7. Great Santa Barbara Oil Slick John Fahel; The Great Santa Barbara Oil Slick (Water)
  8. Hole In The Ocean, A Joe Monto; Video-A Hole In The Ocean (AHoleInTheOcean.com)
  9. It Ain’t My Fault Gulf Aid All Stars featuring The Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Mos Def, Lenny Kravitz, Tim robbins and Trombone Shorty; Video-It Ain’t My Fault (Gulf Aid)
  10. Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology) Marvin Gaye; What’s Going On (Motown)
  11. Oil Is Blood Anfo Merc; Road Rage (Aluminum Legion)
  12. Oil Song Steve Forbert; Best Of Steve Forbert-What Kinda Guy? (Nemperor)
  13. Our World (Gulf Spill Awareness Version) Buckcherry; Video-Our World (Gulf Spill Awareness Version) (Geffen)
  14. Sex Kills Joni Mitchell; The Beginning Of Survival (Geffen)
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Teaching “To Kill A Mockingbird” Through Music

Widely considered the most frequently taught whole-length text in schools across America, Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird and its central characters, Scout, Jem, and Atticus, create a fascinating story that continues to grip the hearts and minds of readers young and old.  Employing the resources of The Green Book of Songs by SubjectLitTunes‘ Chris Goering has written this flexible lesson plan. It identifies songs that are useful in illustrating and teaching universal themes of justice, character, and coming of age. The plan features four pedagogical approaches that incorporate American popular music as a bridge between students and their music and between literary themes and lyrics.

Here are some samples of the songs used in the lesson plan to exemplify each of this timeless novel’s themes. See the complete lesson plan for a full description of themes, and the many GreenBookOfSongs.com® categories with relevant songs.

  1. Social Inequality: Baloney Again Mark Knopfler
  2. Political Inequality: The Lonesome Death Of Hattie Carroll Bob Dylan
  3. Moral Character: Atticus Taught Me Cary Cooper
  4. Coming of Age: Walk Tall John Mellencamp

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Songs About Gulf Coast Oil Disaster

It has become clear that the BP oil spill is an ecological disaster. The following songs — all released prior to the current spill — warn of the crisis to come. This list is, literally, for the birds, as we watch them die.

  1. Do You Want My Job Little Village; Little Village (Reprise)
  2. Earth Imogen Heap; Ellipse (RCA)
  3. Gasoline Sheryl Crow; Detours (A&M/Interscope)
  4. Millenium Theater Ani DiFranco; Reprieve (Righteous Babe)
  5. Only So Much Oil In The Ground Tower Of Power; Very Best Of Tower Of Power-The Warner Years (Rhino/WEA)
  6. Price Of Gas Bloc Party; Silent Alarm (Vice)

For more songs on this topic, see GreenBookofSongs.com® categories Danger & Disaster, Gas Stations and Nature: Ecology.

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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 Earth Day

2010 marks the 40th anniversary of Earth Day. Here’s a playlist for earth-lovers of all ages!

  1. Be The Rain Neil Young; Greendale (Reprise)
  2. Big Yellow Taxi Joni Mitchell; Ladies Of The Canyon (Reprise)
  3. Energy Blues Biz Markie; ST/Schoolhouse Rock! Rocks (Atlantic)
  4. Jars Chevelle; Sci-Fi Crimes (Epic)
  5. Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology) Marvin Gaye; What’s Going On (Motown)
  6. Mother Earth Tom Rush; Best Of Tom Rush: No Regrets (Legacy)

Find more songs on this topic in GreenBookofSongs.com® categories Earth, Energy, Nature and Nature: Ecology.

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Songs About Mining Disasters

Months ago, we posted a song list in support of the families of coal miners. We’re reprinting it now, as mining families face another deadly accident, with hope that their loved ones will be brought home safely.

  1. Aberfan Coal Tip Tragedy Thom Parrott; Neon Princess (Folkways)
  2. Big Bad John Jimmy Dean; Greatest Hits (Columbia)
  3. Dark As A Dungeon Johnny Cash; Essential Johnny Cash (Columbia)
  4. Dying Miner Woody Guthrie; Struggle (Smithsonian Folkways)
  5. Hard Working Miner Sarah Ogan Gunning; Harlan County USA-Songs Of The Coal Miner’s Struggle (Rounder)
  6. Miner’s Life Weavers; Reunion-At Carnegie Hall-1963-#2 (Vanguard)
  7. New York Mining Disaster 1941 (Have You Seen My Wife, Mr. Jones) Bee Gees; Gold (Polydor)
  8. You’ll Never Leave Harlan Alive Patty Loveless; Mountain Soul (Epic)

Find more songs about miners in the GreenBookofSongs.com® category Mining.

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Songs about Female Heroes

Music hasn’t caught up with women’s equality, at least if you measure that by songs about famous and inspiring women. So GreenBookofSongs.com® has compiled this list of songs for Women’s History Month, representing the stories of five great women who deserve to be heralded in song.

  • Clara Barton Country Joe McDonald; Thank The Nurse (Rag Baby).  Country Joe left politics out of this song about the famous Civil War nurse and humanitarian. He lets her heroism shine — whether reuniting families torn by the war, or in her later years, when she helped establish the American Red Cross. Click here to listen to a sample on Amazon.com.
  • Eleanor Jonathan Sprout; More American Heroes (Sprout).  Sprout has written many children’s songs about American heroes, none better than this tribute to First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, who worked tirelessly to help others. Click here to listen to a sample on Amazon.com.
  • Song For Rachel Walkin’ Jim Stoltz; Little Piece Of Earth (Wild Wind).  Folk singer Stoltz dedicated this song to Rachel Carson, an environmentalist whose book “Silent Spring” warned of the dangers of pesticides to the birds that herald spring. Click here to listen to a sample on Stoltz’s website
  • True Story Of Amelia Earhart Plainsong; Plainsong (Water).  This aviation pioneer logged a lifetime of firsts. She was, for example, the first person to fly solo across the Atlantic and the Pacific Oceans. Both her courageous life and her tragic death are captured in this song. Click here to listen to a sample on Amazon.com.
  • Who’s The Best Female Pitcher Phil Coley; Sports Songs And Beyond (King Of The Road Music).  Did you know that a 17-year-old female pitcher named Jackie Mitchell struck out the mighty Babe Ruth? AND the great Lou Gehrig? This little-known athlete will be an inspiration to anyone who’s ever thrown a ball. Click here to listen to a sample on Amazon.com.

See the GreenBookofSongs.com® category Feminism for more songs about women heroes!

 

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