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- <text id=90TT0379>
- <title>
- Feb. 12, 1990: Oh Say, Can You Sing It?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Feb. 12, 1990 Scaling Down Defense
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 27
- Oh Say, Can You Sing It?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>No, but this is the home of the brave try
- </p>
- <p>By Margaret Carlson
- </p>
- <p> Just before Muhammad Ali and Sonny Liston fought for the
- heavyweight boxing crown in 1965, baritone Robert Goulet lost
- his preliminary bout with The Star-Spangled Banner. He made it
- flawlessly through the first several lines before losing his
- grip on the lyrics. He later blamed his Canadian upbringing for
- having to hum the remainder before thousands of fight fans and
- a closed-circuit television audience.
- </p>
- <p> Though it is blared, crooned, strummed, tooted and mumbled
- thousands of times a year, The Star-Spangled Banner is a song
- almost no one gets exactly right. A few musicians, historians
- and public officials would like to replace it. Indiana
- Congressman Andrew Jacobs has reintroduced a bill that would
- change the national anthem to the more easily warbled America,
- the Beautiful.
- </p>
- <p> Critics deride the Banner's lyrics, written by Francis Scott
- Key after the British assault on Baltimore in 1814, as
- difficult to memorize, warmongering, and insulting to America's
- staunchest ally. They also claim that the music is derived from
- a drinking song popularized at London's Crown and Anchor
- Tavern. The tune's highs and lows are, well, too high and low.
- Bass-baritone George London contends the Banner is "impossible
- to sing if you're sober." Opera singers have the best chance
- to cover the octave plus a fifth. But the soprano who starts
- a half-note too high will shatter glass and her hopes of
- auditioning for the Met by the time she gets to the "land of the
- free." She can forget getting deep enough for the "twilight's
- last gleaming."
- </p>
- <p> Not many Americans agree with the critics: 53% of those
- polled by TIME/CNN last week feel the anthem is easy to sing;
- only 28% think it should be replaced by America, the Beautiful;
- 64% claim to know all the words.
- </p>
- <p> The anthem runs deep in American life, a fixture wherever
- fireworks explode or a ball is tossed. Although Congress did
- not make the Banner the nation's official anthem until 1931,
- the military began playing it at ceremonies as far back as
- 1898. It made its major league baseball debut in Chicago during
- the 1918 World Series, when the band struck it up for no
- apparent reason and Babe Ruth and the crowd stood at attention.
- Now it is played before everything from Pee Wee hockey to the
- Super Bowl.
- </p>
- <p> To put audiences out of their pregame misery many stadiums
- resort to canned versions of error-free performances by the
- Mormon Tabernacle Choir, Robert Merrill (called the
- "Star-Spangled Baritone" for his ubiquity on the anthem-singing
- circuit) and the Johnny Mann Singers. But a taped version takes
- away the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat inherent in
- every live performance, as well as the singers' inalienable
- right to get it wrong. Country-and-western star Johnny
- Paycheck, crooning before Atlanta Falcons fans, faked his way
- through several lines: "Oh, say can you see, it's cloudy at
- night/ What so loudly we sang as the daylight's last cleaning."
- An immigrant Hungarian opera singer performing at a benefit
- showed Yankee ingenuity when he drew on the cliches of his
- adopted land, belting out, "Bombs bursting in air, George
- Washington was there." A former Miss Bloomington, Minn., blew
- her chance to break into the big time when she sang the anthem
- before a Minnesota Twins game. By the time she got to the "land
- of the free," she was in the land of the hopelessly confused.
- </p>
- <p> Live performances also provide the chance to make musical
- history. Singer Jose Feliciano ensured his place in the anthem
- hall of fame after his bluesy Latin interpretation at the 1968
- World Series in Detroit, ending the song with "Oh, yeah." RCA
- Records pressed a single of it the next day. After that,
- performers strained to put their personal stamp on the anthem:
- Lou Rawls (languorous jazz), Aretha Franklin (Motown), Al Hirt
- (Dixieland) and Frank Sinatra (moody lounge lizard). The prize
- for the most ear-bending version goes to Jimi Hendrix's
- screeching finale at Woodstock.
- </p>
- <p> Molto allegro is the desired pace for most performances, to
- cut down on fan fidgeting and player awkwardness, especially
- if the game is televised. In 1977 Fenway Park organist John
- Kiley became an anthem legend for coming in at a snappy 51
- seconds. That is still not fast enough for ABC Sports. "The
- goal," says former producer Dorrance Smith, "is to cut away to
- a commercial." Luckily, he was not broadcasting the 1978 World
- Series in Yankee Stadium when Pearl Bailey dragged out the song
- to a record-breaking 2:28.
- </p>
- <p> Like democracy, the Banner looks best when compared with its
- alternatives. "Amber waves of grain" may be more peaceable than
- "bombs bursting in air," but America, the Beautiful lacks
- drama. My Country 'Tis of Thee was stolen, note for note, from
- the British national anthem, God Save the Queen. And God Bless
- America has obvious problems with the separation of church and
- state, but it has de facto status as the anthem of the
- Philadelphia Flyers, who won the Stanley Cup in 1974 after Kate
- Smith inspired them with the ode to the land that she loved.
- Still trotted out for big games courtesy of videotape, the late
- Kate has compiled an enviable lifetime (and thereafter) record
- with the Flyers of 58 wins, 12 losses, 3 ties.
- </p>
- <p> If winning were everything, God Bless America might carry
- the day. Anyone can belt out a respectable version. America,
- the Beautiful is not much challenge either. But Americans have
- been gamely trying to master The Star-Spangled Banner without
- quite overcoming it for 175 years. In a world that changes
- every day, that's worth more than lovable lyrics and a
- manageable melody.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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