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This Land That I Love
Irving Berlin, Woody Guthrie, and the Story of Two American Anthems
Author: John Shaw
Narrator: Traber Burns
Unabridged: 7 hr 20 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: AudioGO
Published: 11/05/2013
Includes: Bonus Material
Synopsis
A narrative history of the writing of This Land Is Your Land and God Bless America that uncovers the conflicts and common ground between two classic patriotic songs
February, 1940. After a decade of worldwide depression, World War II had begun in Europe and Asia. With Germany on the march and Japan at war with China, the global crisis was in a crescendo. Americas top songwriter, Irving Berlin, had captured the nations mood a little more than a year before with his patriotic hymn God Bless America.
Woody Guthrie was having none of it. Near-starving and penniless, he was traveling from Texas to New York to make a new start. As he eked his way across the country by bus and by thumb, he couldnt avoid Berlins song. Some people say that it was when he was freezing by the side of the road in a Pennsylvania snowstorm that he conceived of a rebuttal. It would encompass the dark realities of the Dust Bowl and Great Depression, and it would begin with the lines This land is your land, this land is my land.
In This Land That I Love, John Shaw writes the dual biography of these beloved American songs. Examining the lives of their authors, he finds that Guthrie and Berlin had more in common than either could have guessed. Though Guthries image was defined by train-hopping, Irving Berlin had also risen from homelessness, having worked his way up from the streets of New York.
At the same time, This Land That I Love sheds new light on our patriotic musical heritage, from Yankee Doodle and The Star-Spangled Banner to Martin Luther Kings recitation from My Country Tis of Thee on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in August 1963. Delving into the deeper history of war songs, minstrelsy, ragtime, country music, folk music, and African American spirituals, Shaw unearths a rich vein of half-forgotten musical traditions. With the aid of archival research, he uncovers new details about the songs, including a never-before-printed verse for This Land Is Your Land. The result is a fascinating narrative that refracts and reenvisions Americas tumultuous history through the prism of two unforgettable anthems.