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The Band - The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down
YouTube | Donald Jennings

Posted on 04/04/2018 7:33:54 PM PDT by donaldo

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To: Eccl 10:2

Her’s was the only one I heard on the radio. I always thought it was a “Joan Baez song.”


41 posted on 04/05/2018 3:56:28 AM PDT by miss marmelstein
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To: FreedomPoster

I saw one of those neckties at the Gone with the Wind museum in Jonesboro, Georgia. If more people studied that terrible war, we Americans would be in a different place today.


42 posted on 04/05/2018 4:04:09 AM PDT by miss marmelstein
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To: yesthatjallen

For another historically informed song that is somewhat similar in conveying the reality of war (and totalitarianism), listen closely to Al Stewart’s Roads to Moscow.

https://youtu.be/N_ZG6tRGMYk


43 posted on 04/05/2018 4:24:21 AM PDT by FreedomPoster (Islam delenda est)
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To: Terry Mross

Great story. Thanks for sharing. For some reason, I love stories of the old radio business.

I grew up in the Detroit suburbs just after the heyday of CKLW radio. It was an absolute powerhouse. Based in Windsor, Ontario. At one point it was the highest rated station in 5 or 6 states plus 1 or 2 provinces.

It was a white station that played white and black music, in many ways bringing the races together.

Of course, being the same time as Motown Heyday didn’t hurt.

Side story. I was talking with a friend the other day. He’s black, I’m white. We were talking about growing up and I brought up I Wish by Stevie Wonder. I said I grew up in the suburbs, not the ghetto and outside of not being a “nappy headed boy” I could relate with almost everything in that song. I thought my friend was going to die he was laughing so hard.


44 posted on 04/05/2018 5:29:46 AM PDT by cyclotic (Trump tweets are the only news source you can trust.)
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To: Terry Mross

Interesting note - RC Cola, haven’t seen that in years.


45 posted on 04/05/2018 5:32:22 AM PDT by 11th_VA
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To: Terry Mross

you are correct “The Robert E. Lee” steamship.


46 posted on 04/05/2018 5:40:24 AM PDT by fatboy
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To: Robert A Cook PE

River boat ?


47 posted on 04/05/2018 5:46:04 AM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks (Baseball players, gangsters and musicians are remembered. But journalists are forgotten.)
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To: Federal46

“Chest Fever” was a real killer for me the first time I heard it on KPRI-FM in San Diego in 1968.


48 posted on 04/05/2018 5:50:19 AM PDT by VietVet876
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To: mikeandike; SpinnerWebb
My favorite version

Martin Scorsese's The Last Waltz is epic ... the best concert movie ever.

49 posted on 04/05/2018 6:54:32 AM PDT by tx_eggman (Liberalism is only possible in that moment when a man chooses Barabas over Christ.)
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To: Bodleian_Girl; yesthatjallen

Well, the song is just tremendous, almost regardless of the vocalist-—this from a northland Scandanavian boy who can’t carry a tune alone in the car with the stereo cranked.

I know Levon Helm has the bonafides, and legions of fans of the song to back him up, but the recording...it’s like the equipment is second-rate. Levon sounds to me like they put a sack over his head.

Joan Baez was and is a not-so-poor little leftist (bet she wouldn’t touch the tune these days with a 20-pounder Parrott rifle) but her glorious voice so carries the profoundly womanly pain in the song—the unbent, steely southern wife or mother kept from the battle (lucky for the Northern aggressors) but cursed with first-hand grief and loss...it underscores for me everything that a northerner can’t and never quite will understand about the South, to this day.

Robert E. Lee supposedly said that “without music, there would have been no army.” Not to be flip, or ‘appropriative,’ as they say these days, but I’ve always thought that if General Lee had ridden into battle with the Allman Brothers playing “Jessica” as his fight song, we’d all be speaking Confederate today.

Add Joan Baez’s “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down,” and we’d all be singing Confederate too. Which would beat the hell out of what we got.


50 posted on 04/05/2018 7:05:31 AM PDT by Fightin Whitey
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To: FirstFlaBn
Wouldn’t the ring of truth require getting the month of Richmond’s fall correct? And wouldn’t it include Lee having actually gone to Tennessee during the war?

Historical fiction, OK; history, no

From Songfacts.com .. Richmond fell in early April ... but by May 10 it had fallen. May 10th is the day that Jefferson Davis was captured in Georgia and the Confererate government ceased to exist ... so the verse is not false.

As for the lyric "back with my wife in Tennessee" ...

In 1870, the "Robert E. Lee" raced the "Natchez" (another steamboat) from New Orleans to St. Louis. (The "Robert E. Lee" won the contest.) This race would have taken the Robert E. Lee along the Mississippi on the western border of Tennessee, where Virgil's wife might have seen the steamboat. Virgil tells the story of his involvement in the Civil War in the first two references, and then quips "back with my wife in Tennessee", obviously following the events described earlier in the song. The logical conclusion is that Virgil's wife saw the "Robert E. Lee" sometime between April 1865 and 1870

Historical fiction? Maybe not

51 posted on 04/05/2018 7:06:36 AM PDT by tx_eggman (Liberalism is only possible in that moment when a man chooses Barabas over Christ.)
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To: cyclotic

I worked with a black guy in Helena back in the 70s and one day we were talking about growing up. I told him we had a wood stove and an out house and would sometimes go to be hungry, etc. He said “Hell, you’re a n****r, too!”


52 posted on 04/05/2018 7:09:19 AM PDT by Terry Mross (Liver spots And blood thinners..)
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To: donaldo

One of my all-time faves. Love how they got the history right with General Stoneman’s raiding cavalry. They could have been closer to the actual date Richmond fell - April 3.


53 posted on 04/05/2018 7:27:09 AM PDT by Buckeye Battle Cry (Progressivism is socialism. Venezuela is how it ends.)
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To: Fightin Whitey

That was so beautifully stated that I’m going to finally forgive you for not liking Levon’s version the best.


54 posted on 04/05/2018 9:11:04 AM PDT by Bodleian_Girl
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To: yesthatjallen
"...I remember hearing this song when I was very young and having a sense of overwhelming sadness and grief...."

The song reminds that the North is guilty of genocide against my people, lest I ever forget.

55 posted on 04/05/2018 10:38:11 AM PDT by T-Bone Texan
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To: xkaydet65
"But I always wondered why a progressive pacifist like Baez would sing a song that celebrates the Confederacy."

At that time in our country, the confederacy was looked upon kindly by the left because it represented "resistance" to the Federal Government. The Federal Government was sending boys to Vietnam, therefore the Federal Government was unpopular.

56 posted on 04/05/2018 8:01:58 PM PDT by Enterprise
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To: donaldo

It’s absolutely a great song!
My feelings on it exactly mirror yours.


57 posted on 04/05/2018 8:04:04 PM PDT by Reily
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To: Robert A Cook PE

I think in the song they’re talking about a steamboat.


58 posted on 04/05/2018 8:06:53 PM PDT by Reily
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To: Reily

That was always my impression ...

But then again, there’s that third bathroom on the right.


59 posted on 04/05/2018 8:15:40 PM PDT by Robert A Cook PE
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To: Enterprise

I went to a college in NYC. I saw a lot of demonstrations. I saw vietcong flags, north viet flags, upside down American Flags. I never saw a Confederate Battle Flag. The Confederacy was personified by George Wallace. Not really a hero of the Left.


60 posted on 04/05/2018 10:42:41 PM PDT by xkaydet65
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