首页 | 新闻中心 | 报班指南 | 名师风采 | 社会关注 | 少儿部 | 中学部 | 成人部 | 小写手露台 | 英语乐园 | 翻译服务 | 咨询留言 | 招贤纳士 | 加盟我们
  英语沙龙>> 英语新闻 | 双语导读 | 英语歌曲 | 英语广播 | 英语电影
 
Songs from the American labor movement

Download

VOICE ONE:

Welcome to THIS IS AMERICA in VOA Special English. I'm Steve Ember.

VOICE TWO:

And I'm Barbara Klein. Most of the world observes Labor Day on May 1. But the United States has its workers holiday on the first Monday in September. Today on our program, we have a few songs from the history of the American labor movement.

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

Labor songs are traditionally stories of struggle and pride, of timeless demands for respect and the hope for a better life.

Sometimes they represent old songs with new words. One example is "We Shall Not Be Moved." It uses the music and many of the same words of an old religious song.

Here is folksinger Pete Seeger with "We Shall Not Be Moved."

(MUSIC)

VOICE TWO:

Many classic American labor songs came from workers in the coal mines of the South. Mine owners bitterly opposed unions. In some cases, there was open war between labor activists and coal mine operators.

VOICE ONE:

Once, in Harlan County, Kentucky, company police searched for union leaders. They went to one man's home but could not find him there. So they waited outside for several days.

The coal miner's wife, Florence Reece, remained inside with her children. She wrote this song, "Which Side Are You On?"

Again, here is Pete Seeger.

(MUSIC)

VOICE TWO:

Probably the most famous labor songwriter in America was Joe Hill. He was born in Sweden and came to the United States in the early 1900s. He worked as an unskilled laborer.

Joe Hill joined the Industrial Workers of the World, known as the Wobblies. More than any other union, they used music in their campaigns, urging members to "sing and fight."

VOICE ONE:

One of Joe Hill's best-known songs is "Casey Jones." It uses the music from a song about a train engineer. In the old song, Casey Jones is a hero. He bravely keeps his train running in very difficult conditions.

In Joe Hill's version, Casey Jones is no hero. His train is unsafe. Yet he stays on the job after other workers have called a strike against the railroad company.

Pete Seeger and the Song Swappers sing "Casey Jones (The Union Scab)."

(MUSIC)

VOICE TWO:

Another American labor song is called "Bread and Roses." That term was connected with the women's labor movement.

The song was based on a poem called "Bread and Roses" by James Oppenheim. The poem was published in The American Magazine in December of nineteen eleven.

The following month there was a famous strike by textile workers in Lawrence, Massachusetts. They won higher pay and better working conditions. Oppenheim's poem gained more attention.

At that time, conditions in factories were already a national issue. In nineteen eleven, a fire at a clothing factory in New York had taken the lives of 146 people. The victims were mostly immigrant women.

Here is Pat Humphries with "Bread and Roses."

(MUSIC)

VOICE ONE:

9 7 3 1 2 4 8 :
 
 
 

热门文章

投稿意见反馈  电话:0754-88785231 电子邮件:bob@Bobenglish.org  欢迎批评指正
设为首页 | 关于我们 | 联系我们 | 招聘信息 | 友情链接 | 会员注册 | 加入收藏
Copyright © 2001-2008 bobEnglish.org All Rights Reserved.
BOB国际英语 版权所有 ICP许可证:粤ICP备08026071号