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Note: Tomorrow is the 4th of July and Independence Day holiday here in the U.S. I post this every year, hoping it’ll become a tradition, and it is routinely among the worst performing articles I write. But I think it’s mesage is one of the most important I share—doubly so in this election year and charged political climate—and I’m stubborn.
So here we are.
Whether it sticks the landing this time around or becomes the On Repeat version of “trying to make ‘fetch’ work” remains to be seen. And while I’d like to think my writing style has changed since I first wrote this, the message behind it has not.
Either way, I hope you take something away from it
If you’re off tomorrow, enjoy! If you’re working like me, I hope your shift goes smoothly.
KA—
Happy 4th of July! I know it doesn’t feel like America deserves a birthday party this year.
If you’re feeling disillusioned, worried, or a furnace-like fury, trust your gut—I’m there with you.
But I also believe that there’s nothing wrong with America that can’t be fixed with what’s right about America. Everyone has their own idea of that recipe. For me, its: Community Ingenuity, Imagination, and Aspiration.
That’s what this song represents to me. It’s the romantic notion of things like small-town America, hard work, looking out for one another, and coming together for a common cause.
August traditions and new horizons. It’s a hagiography of the grand experiment that is the United States.
Hurrah for the flag of the free!
May it wave as our standard forever.
The gem of the land and the sea, The banner of the right!
Let tyrants remember the day When our fathers, with mighty endeavor, Proclaimed as they marched to the fray
That by their might and by their right
It waves forever!
Americans love traditions. Name a holiday, and we have a bazillion for each. The 4th of July is no exception. Some people like to go to parades, some people grill out, and some spend the weekend living as if they’re in a beer commercial.
There are fireworks displays, large & small. And, of course, year after year, people either set their yard on fire or blow off one of their fingers.
It happens every year like clockwork. You can set your watch to it.
As for me? I play this song. Sometimes in the morning, sometimes at night. It doesn’t matter when so much as long as it happens.
The march came together in Sousa’s head as he sailed home from Europe
“I was in Europe and I got a cablegram that my manager was dead. I was in Italy and I wished to get home as soon as possible. I rushed to Genoa, then to Paris and to England, and sailed for America. Onboard the steamer as I walked miles up and down the deck, back and forth, a mental band was playing ‘Stars and Stripes Forever.’ Day after day as I walked it persisted in crashing into my very soul. I wrote it on Christmas Day, 1896.”
In his 1993 inauguration speech, Bill Clinton said:
“There is nothing wrong with America that cannot be cured by what is right with America.”
And that’s what this song represents to me. It’s the romantic notion of things like small-town America, hard work, looking out for one another, and coming together for a common cause.
August traditions and new horizons. It’s a hagiography of the grand experiment that is the United States.
Sousa noted that the three parts of the final trio were meant to signify three sections of the country; the main theme represents the North, the piccolos the South, and the trombones the West.
To be sure, 2021 America is a fractured nation recovering from the pandemic, the last administration, and working through our tortured past. We have a lot of work to do.
That’s where we’re at.
To me, Stars and Stripes Forever represents where we can go.
The number one way my newsletter finds new readers is when people share it. So, feel free to spam share it with everyone. If you’re Substack Notes, hit that Restack button.
How are you planning to spend today? Do you have any 4th of July traditions? Are you working? Share your thoughts below!
Thanks for being here,
Kevin—
P.P.S. This article originally appeared here.
As a 4 year varsity letterman of marching band, that song is emblazoned in my memory forever. We always played it for the local Memorial Day parade; at least a dozen times over the 5 mile parade route not to mention the hundreds of rehearsal takes; every spring for 4 years.
Its catchy AF. I love the middle bridge when the low brass takes the wheel. So dramatic, such a statement.
America(ns) are really pissing me off right now, maybe this will help.
Peace
A lot of people have forgotten Sousa…he was a great composer and a huge patriot…Thanks for including him this 4th of July…where most parades are playing his music…HAPPY 4th!!