I’ve chosen this song from their band because I’ve heard it before and I love their music. In fact, this is the only song I know from them. By simply looking at the YouTube comments, I learned that this is one of the “British invasion” bands. From what we’ve learned in class, Britain didn’t have the best weather, so the people would often stay inside. This allowed musicians to work on their music, thus frequently making these masterpieces. Looking on Wikipedia, they took a traditional folk song and combined it with electric rock, making it the "first folk rock hit" as it was a number one hit on many charts. As I was looking for this song, I saw another artist, Leadbelly, in other searches. I guess this is where the other name, "Rising Sun Blues", for the song came from. After some research, it was actually Clarence Ashley …show more content…
By imagery, I mean the pictures used in a video, which I watched on YouTube, for this song. As we went over in class, the Vietnam War was used as material by musicians who were living through it. This material was for protests, to bring back the peace. This 1968 song refers to a military chaplain who blesses a body of troops before they head off to raid and that they're "soldiers of God", which one of the soldiers realize that it contradicts with the commandment "Thou shalt not kill" from the bible at the end of the song. They used gunfire, airplanes, and bagpipes as special effects for fighting. Their pipe music was a tune called "All The Bluebonnet's Are Over The Border," which prompted the British government to complain as it was a classic Scottish anti-war epic during the Vietnam War. Due to the length of the song, over 7 minutes, it was split into two parts to be aired on the radio station 45, which, in my opinion, is ridiculous because if I were there that time, I would want to listen to the whole