Guest poem submitted by Mac Robb:
(Poem #1676) The Fiddle and the Drum And so once again My dear Johnny my dear friend And so once again you are fightin' us all And when I ask you why You raise your sticks and cry, and I fall Oh, my friend How did you come To trade the fiddle for the drum You say I have turned Like the enemies you've earned But I can remember All the good things you are And so I ask you please Can I help you find the peace and the star Oh, my friend What time is this To trade the handshake for the fist And so once again Oh, America my friend And so once again You are fighting us all And when we ask you why You raise your sticks and cry and we fall Oh, my friend How did you come To trade the fiddle for the drum You say we have turned Like the enemies you've earned But we can remember All the good things you are And so we ask you please Can we help you find the peace and the star Oh my friend We have all come To fear the beating of your drum |
The posting of Ogden Nash's "Custard the Dragon" took me back for the first time in many years to the grade 3 classroom at Queen Elizabeth II public school in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, where I first heard that delightful doggerel. And that recollection in turn sent me searching in the Minstrels archive for songs by that famous alumna of my school, Joni Mitchell (Joan Anderson, as she was in Saskatoon). "Both Sides Now," I discover, was posted on 5 November 2004 and is Poem #1556 in the archive but other songs from "Clouds" (1969) haven't yet made it. "The Fiddle and the Drum" jumps out as being, alas, again very timely. Joni Mitchell arrived on the American -- and international -- music scene at the height of the Vietnam war; this song takes us back to that politics-charged era and the mutual perplexity of those who were pro- and anti-war. (That War in particular, at least.) Then as now hawks perceived both domestic and foreign opposition as betrayal: criticism was met with belligerance; foreign friends of America found it a tricky business affirming their continuing admiration for the fiddle while tactfully disdaining the drum. The song, like many of Joni Mitchell's (and of her co-nationals Ian Tyson, Gordon Lightfood and kd lang) is not unmistakably in any one contemporary genre -- it is neither folk nor rock nor country-and-western. Perhaps actually it's a little old fashioned and hearkens back to the roots of country-and-western music in the Scottish and Scotch-Irish secular folk music and Protestant hymnody of both Appalachia and rural Canada. Think of the Scotch-Gaelic Ceilidh, the plangent part-sung hymn sung by Donald Sutherland's congregation in the movie "Cold Mountain" and the Scotch-Gaelic Christmas carol "Child in the manger" popularised on the hit parade some years ago by Cat Stevens to the words of the Eleanor Farjeon's Congregationalist hymn "Morning has broken." Mac Robb Brisbane, Australia
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