Where Have All the Flowers Gone?
Where Have All the Flowers Gone? (‘Quo abierunt flores omnes?’) est carmen modo musicae vulgaris compositum. Melodia et primi versus tres a Petro Seeger anno 1955 excogitati in Sing Out! magazina editi sunt.[1] Plures versus a Iosepho Hickerson Maio 1960 additi sunt, qui rem in carmen rotundum convertit.[2] Carminis ubi, quaestio rhetorica, atque eius meditatio mortis, rem in traditionem generis "ubi sunt" digerunt.[3] Anno 2010, New Statesman periodicum carmen perscripsit unum ex "Viginti Optimis Carminibus Politicis."[4] Editio carminis anno 1964 (singulus 45, Columbia Records 13-33088), a Petro Seeger canta, in Aulam Famae Grammophonicam anno 2002 in categoria vulgari inducta est.
Compositio
[recensere | fontem recensere]Seeger inspiratus est Octobri 1955 cum ad Collegium Oberlinense volaret, unum ex paucis locis qui eum aetate McCarthiana conducerent.[5] Librum notarum legens, locum vidit quod dixit: "Ubi sunt flores, puellae eos carpserunt. Ubi sunt puellae, maritis nupserunt. Ubi sunt homines, in exercitu merent omnes."[6][7] Hi versus ex "Koloda-Duda," traditionali carmine vulgari Cosacico, capti sunt, qui in Tanais Tranquillus, mythistoria Michaelis Šolochov (1934), commemorantur. Seeger librum saltem "anno vel duos ante" legerat.[8][3]
Nexus interni
Notae
[recensere | fontem recensere]- ↑ Seeger, Pete. "Where Have All the Flowers Gone". Sing Out! 11 (5).
- ↑ Hickerson, Joe (2009–2010). "The Songfinder". Sing Out! 53 (2): 76.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Joe Hickerson. "Where Have All the Flowers Gone?". presentation to SEM (Society for Ethnomusicology), 50th Annual Meeting in Atlanta (citatus). Mudcat.org.
- ↑ Smith, Ian K (25 Martii 2010). "Top 20 Political Songs: Where Have All the Flowers Gone". New Statesman.
- ↑ "A Folk Legend's Fertile Ground," Oberlin Alumni Magazine, aestate 2014.
- ↑ Anglice: "Where are the flowers, the girls have plucked them. Where are the girls, they've all taken husbands. Where are the men, they're all in the army."
- ↑ Notae in Where Have All the Flowers Gone: The Songs of Pete Seeger.
- ↑ Anglice: "at least a year or two before."
Bibliographia
[recensere | fontem recensere]- Dunaway, David King. 2008. How Can I Keep From Singing? The Ballad of Pete Seeger. Novi Eboraci: Random House. ISBN 0345506081.
- Seeger, Pete, et Peter Blood. 1993. Where have all the flowers gone: a singer's stories, songs, seeds, robberies. Bethlehem Pennsylvaniae: Sing Out! ISBN 9781881322016. OCLC 28150656.