Role of music in World War II
was the first conflict to take place in the age of electronically mass distributed music.
Many people in the war had a pressing need to be able to listen to radio and 78-rpm shellac records en masse. Although vinyl for record pressing had been pioneered in 1930 and used for a few RCA 33 1/3 rpm transcription discs, by and large long playing records for the consumer market wouldn't be released until several years after the war had been won.
By 1940, 96.2% of Northeastern American urban households had radio. The lowest American demographic to embrace mass distributed music, Southern rural families, still had 1 radio for every two households.
Similar adoption rates of electronically mass distributed music occurred in Europe. During the Nazi rule, radio ownership in Germany rose from 4 to 16 million households. As the major powers entered the war, millions of citizens had home radio devices that did not exist in the First World War. Also during the pre-war period, sound was introduced to cinema and musicals were very popular.
Therefore, World War II was a unique situation for music and its relationship to warfare. Never before was it possible for not only single songs, but also single recordings of songs to be so widely distributed to the population. Never before had the number of listeners to a single performance been so high. Also, never before had states had so much power to determine not only what songs were performed and listened to, but to control the recordings not allowing local people to alter the songs in their own performances. Though local people still sang and produced songs, this form of music faced serious new competition from centralized electronic distributed music.
German English song
"Lili Marlene" was the most popular song of World War II with both German and British forces. Based on a German poem, the song was recorded in both English and German versions. The poem was set to music in 1938 and was a hit with troops in the Afrika Korps. Mobile desert combat required a large number of radio units and the British troops in the North African Campaign started to enjoy the song so much that it was quickly translated into English. The song was used throughout the war as not only a popular song, but a propaganda tool.American songs
American troops had regular access to radio in all but the most difficult combat situations, and not only did soldiers know specific songs, but specific recordings. This gave a nature to American troops music during WWII, not as much songs sung around a fire or while marching, but listened to between combat on Armed Forces Radio.- "Amor" - Andy Russell with Al Sack & His Orchestra
- "Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The Positive" - Johnny Mercer
- "Bésame Mucho" - Andy Russell with Al Sack & His Orchestra
- "Be Careful, It's My Heart" - Composer: Irving Berlin - From: Movie Holiday Inn
- "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" - Andrews Sisters "
- "Comin' In On A Wing And A Prayer" - The Song Spinners
- "Der Fuehrer's Face" - Spike Jones and his City Slickers
- "Remember Pearl Harbor" - Sammy Kaye
- "Don't Fence Me In" - Bing Crosby and The Andrews Sisters
- "Don't Get Around Much Anymore " - Duke Ellington & His Orchestra
- "Don't Sit Under The Apple Tree " - Composer: Lew Brown, Sam H. Stept, and Charlie Tobias
- "Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye" - Composer: Cole Porter - From: musical Seven Lively Arts
- "G.I. Jive" - Johnny Mercer
- "I Don't Want To Walk Without You" - Harry James & His Orchestra Composer: Frank Loesser and Jule Styne - From: Movie Sweater Girl, performed by Betty Jane Rhodes
- "I Wonder" - Louis Armstrong
- I'll Be Seeing You - The Ink Spots/Bing Crosby Words by Irving Kahal, music by Sammy Fain
- "I'll Get By " - Ink Spots
- "I'll Walk Alone" - Martha Tilton
- "It's Been A Long, Long Time" - Harry James & His Orchestra
- "Long Ago " - Jo Stafford Composer: Ira Gershwin and Jerome Kern - From: Musical "Cover Girl"
- "Kiss The Boys Goodbye" - Composer: Frank Loesser and Victor Schertzinger - From: Movie "Kiss The Boys Goodbye"
- "Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition" - Composer: Frank Loesser
- "Sentimental Journey" - Les Brown & His Orchestra; Composer: Bud Green, Les Brown, and Ben Homer –
- " The White Cliffs of Dover" - Jimmy Dorsey & His Orchestra
- "Till Then" - Mills Brothers
- "Waitin' For The Train To Come In" - Peggy Lee
- "What a Diff'rence a Day Made" - Andy Russell with Paul Weston & His Orchestra
- "When The Lights Go On Again " - Vaughn Monroe & His Orchestra
- You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To - Composer: Cole Porter - From: Musical "Something To Shout About" –
- "Yours" - Jimmy Dorsey & His Orchestra
As the United States was able to utilize the exponential growth of the technological age to compose music for various reasons, in , it is made clear that music composed had various purposes, but more importantly it mentions the tension that grew between institutions in order to find the right way to use music for U.S overall interest. Examples can be seen throughout the different types of songs being produced and publicized during this time. Songs like I'll Be Seeing You and Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition were songs that kept the citizens back in the U.S calm and hopeful for the return of their loved ones. On the other hand, these songs had other effects on the soldiers fighting abroad. For them songs like these brought nostalgia and homesickness.
With the war brewing through the 1940s, other initiatives to help the soldiers continue fighting arose. With drafting numbers reaching close to 500,000, the Army along with other Defense institutions began to make military bands which would serve the purpose of boosting morale in the home front, while at the same time keeping patriotism and nationalism at an all-time high. The first patriotic war song of WWII in the U.S. was "God Bless America," written by Irving Berlin for a World War I wartime revue, but was withheld and later revised and used in World War II. There were many other popular patriotic wartime songs during this time such as, "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square" by Glenn Miller and "Arms for the Love of America" by once again Irving Berlin in 1941.
After successful incorporation of music into the war efforts, more was needed in order to keep hopes alive and stable both back in the U.S and in the Home Front. Various times music was used as a tool for battle in the war, whether it was to entertain or to recuperate the soldiers during the war. More importantly was the impact that the music during the 1940s had on the people then and the effect that it continues to have now. Sounds of War: Music in the United States during World War II argues that music composed during the 1940s was unlike any other time of music because of its emphasis on making the listener feel like they are part of the war or if they are somewhere else. It adds that songs from World War II continue to be used today in order to remember those harsh times of war and to remind everyone of what the cost of liberty and freedom was. Some examples of this would include Aaron Copland's "Fanfare for the Common Man" and "Lincoln's Portrait". These are still being played for presidential inaugurations and continue to have the effect of "loss for freedom".
During the 1940s the United States State Department also encouraged the mutual exchange of music on the radio with the neutral countries of Latin America in order to promote President Franklin Roosevelt's Good Neighbor policy and Pan-Americanism. Through the establishment of the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs, President Roosevelt utilized music as a form of cultural diplomacy in order to improve international relations with Latin America and forestall the spread of military hostilities throughout the Americas. Professional musicians and composers from both North and South America were invited to concertize together on radio shows such as Viva América in support of these efforts. Included among these musicians were: Alfredo Antonini, Juan Arvizu, Nestor Mesta Chayres, Eva Garza, Elsa Miranda, Miguel Sandoval, John Serry Sr. and Terig Tucci.
In the years immediately after World War II, the United States Army continued to utilize music as form of cultural diplomacy amidst the ruins of western Europe. In 1952, the Seventh Army Symphony Orchestra was established under the musical direction of the composer Samuel Adler in an effort to demonstrate the shared musical heritage of the United States and the vanquished nations of Europe. Through a series of live musical performances and broadcasts over the Armed Forces Radio Services network, the orchestra successfully promoted mutual understanding and peace between the German and American people for a decade until 1962.
Although music was made popular because of the widely distributed radio, the number of concerts skyrocketed along with the incorporation of women and African American musicians into military bands and groups. Whether women were incorporated because of sexual attraction or actual acceptance by the institutions is still not very clear, what is clear is that groups were now mixed sexes and some even mixed races in an era of sexism and racism. This goes to show that the role of music not only had effects in the international sphere, but in the domestic as well.
Japanese songs
- Nikudan san'yūshi
- Aikoku Kōshinkyoku
- Hawaii kaisen
- Taiheiyō Kōshinkyoku
- Hinomaru kōshinkyoku
- Roei no Uta
- Shingun-swingu
- Aiba shingunka
- Aikoku no hana
- Kōgun banzai
- Moshi, moshi, kame-yo
- Manshū-gurashi
- Wakare no burūsu
- Ajia burūsu
- Shanhai burūsu
- Manshū musume
- Umi Yukaba
- Asa
- Tonarigumi
- Nan'yō kōro
- Parao koishi-ya
- Ume no burūsu
- Soshū yakyoku
- Chaina Tango
- Shina no yoru
- Gunkoku komori-uta
- Nyan-nyan matsuri
- Kigen' nisenrop'yaku-nen
- Shussei Heishi o Okuru Uta
- Manira no machikado-de
- Batabiya no yoru wa fukete
- Ashita wa otochi-ka
- Chichi yo, anata wa tsuyokatta
- Bakudan gurai wa te de uke-yo''
Music in the Democratic Allies
This unity of private and state desire likely gave the UK and the USA a degree of energy that allowed the nations to accomplish a great deal more at less human cost than the other major powers in the war. The mass suffering at the hands of the governments was not necessary as it was in Germany.
British popular music and the BBC
Before the war, BBC radio had had quite an elitist approach to popular music. Jazz, swing or big band music for dancing was relegated to a few late night spots. During the war, the BBC was obliged to adapt, if only because British soldiers were listening to German radio stations to hear their dance music favourites.This adaptation was not without conflict. The BBC establishment reluctantly increased the amount of dance music played, but censorship was severe. The American hit "Coming in on a Wing and a Prayer" for example was censored because of its almost blasphemous mix of religious words and a foxtrot melody. BBC heads were also worried about American-style crooners undermining the virility of British men.
The BBC establishment tried hard to stick to the jaunty tone which they felt had helped to win the first world war - so George Formby and Gracie Fields were very much played on the radio. Indeed, these two stars were undoubtedly more heroes to working-class people in Britain than was Winston Churchill, since they were seen to "come from the ordinary people."
The United States did not need a forward Propaganda Minister; it could count on big bands producing music that reflected the government's primary interests because those were the interests of the population.
Britain did have a mass media which played popular music, much enjoyed by the Germans stationed in France and the Low Countries or flying over Britain. The most famous single performer was Vera Lynn who became known as "the forces' sweetheart".
Popular concert songs in Britain during the war included:
- Run Rabbit Run - Sung by Flanagan and Allen Words by Noel Gay & Ralph Butler. Music by Noel Gay.
- There'll Always Be An England Words by Hughie Charles. Music by Ross Parker. Sung by Vera Lynn.
- We'll Meet Again Words and Music by Ross Parker and Hughie Charles
- Kiss Me Goodnight, Sergeant-Major, words by Don Pelosi, music by Art Noel
- We're Going to Hang out the Washing on the Siegfried Line, words by Jimmy Kennedy, music by Michael Carr
- The White Cliffs of Dover Words by Nat Burton and Music by Walter Kent
- When the Lights Go on Again Written by Eddie Seller, Sol Marcus, and Bennie Benjamin
Russian songs
- "Katyusha"
- "Blue Kerchief"
- "The Sacred War"
- "Dark Is the Night"
- "Farewell of Slavianka"
- "March of the Soviet Tankmen"
- "March of Stalin's Artillery"
- "Ogoniok"
- "Oy, Tumany"
- "V lesu prifrontovom"
- "Ždi Menia"
- :ru:Категория:Песни Великой Отечественной войны|Category:World War II songs
- :ru:Категория:Песни о Великой Отечественной войне|Category:Songs about World War II
German songs
In art, this attack came after expressionism, impressionism, and all forms of modernism. Forms of music targeted included jazz as well as the music of many of the more dissonant modern classical composers, including that of Igor Stravinsky, Paul Hindemith, and Arnold Schoenberg. Hindemith was one of many composers who fled the Third Reich as a result of musical persecution. Modern composers who took a more conventional approach to music, however, were welcomed by the Third Reich; Carl Orff and Richard Strauss, for example, were able to stay in the country during the Nazi period.
Also a subtle factor of history makes gaining a reliable picture of the music of Germany more difficult than among the Allies. World War II in the English speaking world is usually remembered as a great triumph and the music is often performed with a sense of pride. Therefore, over time the collective consciousness of this period's music has become stronger. In Germany, World War II is generally seen as a shameful period; it would be difficult to imagine a band playing 'all the old favorites' of World War II in a public place.
Popular music is tied with nostalgia and collective memory. Though a historian can find samples of music that were played in radio, or can collect soldiers' songs from a period, ranking the subjective meaning and value assigned to a song by the people of that period will be greatly impacted by those subjects' later opinion of that music.
For example, it is known that many Germans enjoyed American jazz music, it is also known that Germans sang songs in Nazi sponsored events; but it would be difficult to determine the relative popularity of this music in the current context of shame concerning the war.
Therefore, the best that can be understood about German Music during the war is the official Nazi government policy, the level of enforcement, and some notion of the diversity of other music listened to, but as the losers in the war German Music and Nazi songs from World War II has not been assigned the high heroic status of American and British popular music. As the music itself goes, however, it is considered by many as being above the level of the latter, which is also true of Fascist Italian music of the time.
Approved and unapproved German music
The Nazis were dedicated to the concept that German Culture was the greatest in history, but, as with all parts of art, Hitler took an interest in suppressing the work of all those he considered "unfit" while promoting certain composers as proper Germans. All musicians were required to join the Reichsmusikkammer, or "Reich Music Chamber", part of the Reich Chamber of Culture founded by Joseph Goebbels in 1933. Membership required a so-called Aryan certificate, meaning that Jewish musicians could no longer work.Along with exhibitions of "degenerate art" the Nazi government identified certain music, composers and performers as entartete Musik. Designation into this category was based upon the race, ethnicity, and political orientation of the composers and performers in question. The works of Jewish composers were banned, including those of Mahler, Mendelssohn, Schoenberg and Debussy.
In 1938 Nazi Germany passed an official law on Jazz music. Not surprisingly it deals with the racial nature of the music and makes law based on racial theories. Jazz was "Negroid"; It posed a threat to European higher culture, and was therefore forbidden except in the case of scientific study.
Music permitted under the Nazis
The Reichsmusikkammer promoted classical music by German composers such as Beethoven and Wagner, as well as Austrians such as Mozart. Military music was also promoted, but lighter, non-political music was a source of escapism for many. The , or "Request Concert for the Armed Forces", was a popular radio program broadcast from Berlin. The subject of a 1940 film, it consisted of live music requested by soldiers. By connecting the military to the home front and vice versa, it contributed to the Volksgemeinschaft, the Nazi concept of a "people's community".Degrees of censorship varied, and the Germans were likely more concerned with the war than styles of music. But as the war went poorly the objectives of the government moved from building a perfect German state to keeping the population in line, and the relative importance of morale-raising songs would have increased.
Popular songs were officially encouraged during the war including:
- "Berlin bleibt doch Berlin!" was popular with Joseph Goebbels near the fall of Berlin.
- "Erika", a marching song about a soldier who misses his fiancée, does not have political lyrics, but its composer, Herms Niel, had joined the Nazi Party in 1934.
Polish songs
There were specific songs of Polish resistance, Polish Armed Forces in the West and Polish Armed Forces in the East. Notable ones included Siekiera, motyka, the most popular song in occupied Poland; Rozszumiały się wierzby płaczące - the most popular song of the Polish partisans; Czerwone maki na Monte Cassino - the most popular song of the Polish Armed Forces in the West;Oka, the most popular song of the Polish Armed Forces in the East and Marsz Gwardii Ludowej - popular song also known as Partisans' Song anthem of GL.Propaganda against the enemy
They played a few American records first. I don't remember everything she said. She said, "Your wives and girlfriends are probably home in a nice warm building, dancing with some other men. You're over here in the cold." It was cold and it was snowing.Dent Wheeler on Axis Sally during the battle of the Bulge
"There is no 'Tokyo Rose'; the name is strictly a GI invention. The name has been applied to at least two lilting Japanese voices on the Japanese radio. ... Government monitors listening in 24 hours a day have never heard the words 'Tokyo Rose' over a Japanese-controlled Far Eastern radio."
During World War II often cut off troops or isolated outposts found themselves exposed in the radio range of the enemy, which used popular music as a means to attract listeners and then provide propaganda messages.
This type of propaganda was performed by both sides and is some of the earliest mass psych-ops. Often the propagandist became popular with the other sides, and there is little evidence that these had any impact, except that the Axis participants were often detained and if originally from allied countries prosecuted, while Allied broadcasters were seen as legitimate. Again it shows the way music is understood in the context of World War II is from the winners point of view, whereas Tokyo Rose and Axis Sally faced years of persecution after the war.
England executed Lord Haw Haw for treason, in 1946. Again there can really be little in the way of an objective history of music in World War II. The historical context since the war, the revelations of the evils of the Axis regimes, and the ultimate victory of the consumer society foretold in the songs of the allies impose a context upon the events like viewing a star through the lens of a telescope.
Songs, compositions and others written after the war
- Threnody to the Victims of Hiroshima, by Krzysztof Penderecki in 1960
- From Here to Eternity by George Duning and Morris Stoloff was nominated for an Academy Award for best musical score.
- The Hiroshima Symphony, by Erkki Aaltonen in 1949
- A Survivor from Warsaw, by Arnold Schoenberg describes the horrors of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising.
- On The Nameless Height
- Sink the Bismark, a 1960 song by Johnny Horton about the sinking of that battleship in 1941.
- Cabaret - Musical produced and directed by Hal Prince in 1966, narrates the Nazi Party ascent to power, featuring a song expressing Nazi ideology "Tomorrow Belongs to Me".
- Mel Brooks' The Producers is famous for perhaps the strangest song about World War II, "Springtime for Hitler".
- Den Pobedy
- Last King Tiger by Ignitor is about the Russian invasion to Berlin and the fall of the Reich.
- When the Tigers Broke Free, Bring the Boys Back Home and other songs by Pink Floyd.
- Uprising, which is about Warsaw Uprising, the song Bismarck is about the last battle of the Germany's largest battleship Bismarck and other songs of world war 2 from Sabaton.