Re: Patriotic Songs.
"Patriotic" is an extremely sensitive term in the U.S., weighted with a LOT of political and cultural baggage. We're a young country and an ethnic/religious patchwork with a lot of rivalries, so there isn't as much of a culturally hallowed common history we can draw on. And although we were founded on noble principles, admired and imitated around the world, we also have the ugly legacy of slavery and how we treated the Native Americans. And we have a long tradition of dissent, free speech, and social criticism.
So there's some cognitive dissonance going on. On the one hand, you have country music singer Lee Greenwood's absolutely sincere
"I'm Proud to Be an American" (which makes me gag, although many people love it). On the other hand, Bruce Springsteen's
"Born in the USA." (Stephen Sondheim's musical "Assassins" is a full-length examination of the dark side of the American Dream -- it's about the people who killed, or tried to kill, a President.
"Another National Anthem" is their complaint about being left out of the good deal they think is their right as Americans: "Where's my prize?" The show is extremely creepy, but wonderful.)
On top of all that, we take pride in a sassy, irreverent sense of humor. Bugs Bunny is a typical American! So no wonder one of our first patriotic songs,
"Yankee Doodle," originated as a British mockery of the unsophisticated colonial rubes, who thought sticking a feather in their caps would make them elegant like the fops of the Macaroni Club in England. The Yanks cheerfully pleaded guilty as charged.
And now Q&As:
Is American National Anthem usually sung without background music? In Finland we usually have background music even in small events such as school events. And do people sing together it even if it's hard or there one artist or choir in events where the anthem is sung?
Usually there's music for "The Star-Spangled Banner." But sometimes it's omitted if you want people to either hear the singer clearly or sing along, since the tune is so familiar. And generally, when it's played, citizens ARE supposed to sing along -- unless it's clearly presented as a concert piece.
All in all American patriotic songs are lot more upbeat than Finnish ones. For example, the most known march song, Jääkärimarssi, has this line in it:
"Deep is our blow, our wrath invincible, we have no mercy, no homeland. "
Haha, I stumbled across the Jaegermarch earlier, when I was looking for other Finnish music for this Forum! My comment at the time: "That is certainly rated M for Manly!"
We have a lot of military songs too, like the
Marines' Hymn, but those are a whole other topic.