Song picture
Silent Sam
Comment Share
acoustic folk social commentary political satire western massachusetts oil coal climate change fracking incineration music for social change nuclear energy
Folk singer, social commentary, satire, people's stories, children's music
Hi Folks, The Bard Insurgent here. My comrade D.O. (the Poet Roofer) and I got that handle (The Bard Insurgents) from traveling town to town performing songs and poetry about people's lives. I've been performing since I was 3 years old, cutting my vocal chords on liturgical and classical music. I was a concert soloist as a child, when I wasn't herding cows, throwing hay and shoveling manure. During the Civil Rights movement and the Vietnam war, I began writing songs about social change. I left the country in 1970 and my dozen years in other countries, mostly in Africa & South America, have provided a global perspective to my music. My travels helped me realize that people all around the world are essentially the same in their basic life needs and their desires to live peacefully in their communities. These experiences have informed my commitment to working for international understanding as I organize at home. A powerful way to educate and inspire is with music. I tell people's stories, do social commentary with a touch of satire that I hope you enjoy and share with your friends, as well as sing together in the streets and in your living rooms. I also have children's music written for the children in my life with Jacob and Kayla as primary muses. Looking forward to seeing you on the road, Tom
Song Info
Charts
#128 in subgenre Peak #1
Charts
Peak #117
Author
Tom Neilson
Rights
Tom Neilson 2018
Uploaded
July 11, 2020
Track Files
MP3
MP3 3.2 MB 320 kbps 1:24
Story behind the song
The Daughters Of the Confederacy gave a statue of a confederate soldier, called "Silent Sam" to UNC. After requests to remove the statue were denied, the statue was toppled.
Lyrics
The Daughters of the Confederacy Gave silent Sam to UNC For ancestors fallen long ago And the robes and hoods of ole Jim Crow. Governor Cooper, I heard him say That Silent Sam should be taken away This symbol of white supremacy Has no place at UNC But the school has no authority To relocate unilaterally So at 9:20 pm on a Monday night Sam was toppled from the site. Now the governor said the approach was wrong Maybe should have sung a protest song Well, it was wrong to cross Edmund Pettis Bridge It was wrong to march every time we did It was wrong to vote and go to school It was wrong to question whitey rule It was wrong to sit at the five and dime It is wrong every time we cross their line. Yeh, maybe the school, after all was right We shouldnt have toppled Sam that night Cause hes a symbol of Carolina ancestry And that brings back a memory Ahmemory, less time forgot Some swung while others tied the knot
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