*** see below ***
On Tue, 30 Apr 2002 09:27:20 -0400 Diana Bennett <[log in to unmask]>
writes:
> 2. Songs: It is said that the North and South used each other's
melodies but changed the words. Any examples?
*** Here's a description from "Songs of the Civil War" by Charles Hamm,
Recorded Anthology of American Music, Inc., (C) 1976 ***
Fraternization of soldiers between battles was a curious phenomenon of
this bloody war that extended to music. In 1863, Lt. W.J. Kinchelos of
the 49th Virginia regiment wrote to his father of one such episode: "We
are on one side of the Rappahannock, the enemy on the other . . . Our
boys will sing a Southern song, the Yankees will reply by singing the
same tune to Yankee words."
*** Hamm's article doesn't describe which songs might have been sung.
Here's an example I found of rival USA and CSA lyrics, set to the same
tune, an old Irish melody also known as "The Crimson Flag of Derry." ***
CSA: "The Bonnie Blue Flag"
We are a band of brothers and native to the soil
Fighting for the property we earned by honest toil,
But when our rights were threatened the cry rose near and far:
Hurrah for the Bonnie Blue Flag that bears a single star
Hurrah! Hurrah! For Southern rights Hurrah!
Hurrah for the Bonnie Blue Flag that bears a single star
USA: "The Irish Volunteer"
Now when the traitors of the South commenced their warlike raid
I quickly lay down my hod, to the devil went me spade!
And to a recruitin' office I went, that happened to be near,
and joined the good old sixty-ninth like an Irish volunteer.
Then fill the ranks, and march away, no traitors do we fear.
We'll drive them all to blazes says the Irish volunteer . . .
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