The Volokh Conspiracy
Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent
Songs of the War
I haven't generally been blogging the news of the war in Ukraine, nor any analysis: I have no real knowledge of the subject, and others can do much more, and much better. But I have been trying to blog about songs related to the war, mostly ones written in the last month but also some from the first war, in 2014 (Crimea/Donbass), plus some performances of older songs on occasion of this war. This is not because I think songs are more important than political, military, or economic analysis; it's just that this is one thing that I thought I could contribute.
Those who know me know I'm not a particularly aesthetically minded man, or one who cares much for the arts. But poetry, especially in the form of songwriting, has always spoken to me, and I have felt that reading a poem might give one a sense of people's feelings that prose does not. (Of course, prose has the same property with respect to poetry, and on most subjects to a much larger degree ….) To offer a non-war-related example I mentioned before, I think Sons of Martha conveys something to us about the soul of infrastructure engineers that a description or an interview or even a novel likely will not.
One problem, of course, is that rhymed and metered poetry derives so much of its impact from its rhyme and meter, which a translation generally cannot effectively reproduce (except in the hands of an extraordinarily talented translator, such as James Falen). Worse than that: The words in a translated poem will often come across not just as less effective but as outright inapt, precisely because what made the poet choose them for the original—their sound—is lost in translation. I don't know Ukrainian, but at least I can understand enough of the words that, armed with a translation (preferably a translation into Russian) I think I can experience the poem as an effective poem. I can't expect our English readers to get the same effect.
Still, at least I hope that some can appreciate them, and if one of you does happen to be a gifted translator, I'd love to see your interpretations. And if you have Russian-speaking friends who you think would appreciate the originals (or, in some instances, Ukrainian-speaking friends), please do pass them along.
(Note that, for many of the translations, I take the shortcut of adapting other translations I find online, of course giving credit where the translator is noted. But I do confirm them against my own sense of the words, and generally modify them where I think that's needed.)
In any event, you can find all the items (current and future) under the Ukraine-War-Music tag. Here is what I have so far; I particularly recommend, especially to Russian speakers, the top one below ("Will this letter some day arrive / To Kiev from Moscow? / Will the brother's letter reach his brother / Or at least his widow?"):
- Black Sun: A Letter to a Brother
- "We Will, We Will Rock You" Comes to the Russia-Ukraine War
- A Song for the Ukrainians, in English -- from the Estonians, Naturally
- From One View of Soldiering to Another
- For a Less Pessimistic Take from a Russian Singer
- Everything Old Is New Again, Ukraine War Edition
- "We'll Withstand the Horde"
- "Together We Christened Our Children"
- "We Will Never Be Brothers"
- Bayraktar
- Three Russian War Songs in Honor of the Ukrainians (not songs written or performed for this war, but ones that I was reminded of when I first heard the news of the Ukrainian resistance)
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I generally avoid literary reviews and such, primarily because of an atrocious high school teacher who insisted on analyzing poems to death, taking all the fun out of them, demanding that only her interpretation was valid, not wanting to hear ours, not even wanting us to think up our own before she dumped hers on us. I remember especially Robert Frost's poem about miles to go before he sleeps, and how I had naturally, instinctively, and immediately come up with my own thoughts on it, admiring how someone skilled in words could convey such meaning so indirectly .... and minutes later, she ruined all that with her preachy lecturing which replaced all the subtlety and cleverness with one-thought-for-all demands. Tale of Two Cities was similarly ruined, and many others.
An entire year of that really turned me off from the received wisdom of literary experts and their reviews. When I read fiction now, I make a point to skip anything whose reviews even hint at a deep literary review.
Had more good teachers than bad, but that one was extraordinarily bad.
Eugene. Not much expertise needed to condemn the shelling of apartment buildings.
The terrorists hid weapons in apartment buildings. The Israeli Air Force texted the tenants to get out an hour before bombing them. That is the standard of practice if weapons are alleged to be hidden.
even ones with Snipers? Armchair General Much?
What are you saying, Frank? That shelling apartments with sleeping tenants is a complicated military question, a decision requiring expertise?
not complicated at all. You think our Nuke-ular Missiles are targeted at 100% Military Targets? Did Sherman only burn down the Military buildings in Atlanta?
Not really sure the music matters that much. Who remembers any songs of the Roman Legions? of the Visigoths? And even the cool tunes don't have a winning history, "Dixie's" way better than the "Battle Hymn of the Repubic" even The old Rail Splitter thought so. "Horst Wessel Lied's better than "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" (well maybe not) And who jams to some NVA "Deep Tracks" Battle might not always go to the strongest, but it's the way to bet.
"Dixie's" way better than the "Battle Hymn of the Repubic"
Only for parody...
"Away down South in the land of traitors,
Skunks and snakes and alligators,
Right away! Come away!
Right away! Come away!
Where cotton's king and men are chattels,
Union boys will win the battles,
Right away! Come away!
Right away! Come away."
Chorus
"Then we'll all go down to Dixie,
Away! Away!
Each Dixie lad must understand,
That he must mind his Uncle Sam,
Away, Away,
And we'll all go down to Dixie,
Away, Away,
And we'll all go down to Dixie."
"I wish I was in Baltimore,
I'd make Secession traitors roar,
Right away! Come away!
Right away! Come away!
We'll put the traitors all to rout,
I'll bet my boots we'll whip them out,
Right away! Come away!
Right away! Come away."
(Chorus)
Oh, may our Stars and Stripes still wave
Forever o'er the free and brave,
Right away, come away, right away, come away.
And let our motto ever be --
"For Union and for Liberty!"
Right away, come away, right away, come away.
(Chorus)
well it was the Great "Emancipators"(except in Union Slave States) favorite tune, so stick that up your (redacted) Hole and smoke it!
Your lyrics suck BTW. And have you ever heard a cool "Battle Hymn" Car horn? of course not.
OTOH I did like the Israels using "Grapes of Wrath" as name for one of their deserved invasions of Lebanon.
"Remember the war against Franco
That's the kind where each of us belongs
Though he may have won all the battles
we had all the good songs"
Tom Lehrer, "The Folk Song Army"
On the other hand, though it's not quite so long ago, Irish rebel songs remain popular to this day. They inspired me (a mid-20s American of distant Scottish heritage) to do my own research on both the Irish War of Independence and the later Troubles. This was shortly after the terrorist attacks of 9/11 and I wished to better grok the differences between mere terrorism and unconventional freedom fighting.
Songs don't win wars, but they can act as positive propaganda for your own side, bolstering morale and generating foreign goodwill.
There is an old anecdote about Anna Akhmatova, repeated by Isaiah Berlin, among others. She was standing in a line, waiting to buy food, in the dark of winter, and an old woman walked up to her and asked her if she would be able to describe their situation in a poem. Akhmatova thought for a minute, and then in reply invaded Ukraine.
Or perhaps I'm misremembering that.
Mr. D.
The remaining members of The Clash have given their blessing to this adaption of "London Calling":
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AjrbC7h3wHk&ab_channel=VariousArtists-Topic
Hey Perfesser!(Volokh, any of them) That musical number at the beginning of "Alexander Nevsky's" pretty stirring, how about a link? Got the Sleepy Joe disease, blanking on it (will Alzheimer's be known as "Joe Biden's Disease" to future generations?, seriously, he's like watching "the Iron Horse" in 1939)
"Arise Russian People!" thanks wikipedia!
Are you seeing what they're doing to this chess champion? Have you seen people calling for treason charges for some at Fox? That they be silenced?
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