Updated
Updated · The Advocate · Jun 25
Baton Rouge Musicians Pick 10 Patriotic Songs, Reflecting America’s 250-Year Musical Divide
Updated
Updated · The Advocate · Jun 25

Baton Rouge Musicians Pick 10 Patriotic Songs, Reflecting America’s 250-Year Musical Divide

3 articles · Updated · The Advocate · Jun 25

Summary

  • Ten Baton Rouge-area musicians and music figures named favorite American or patriotic songs, producing a list that ranged from “America the Beautiful” and “This Land Is Your Land” to Sufjan Stevens, John Prine and William Billings’ “Chester.”
  • The selections underscored how differently artists define patriotism: Peter Simon called Paul Simon’s “American Tune” an immigrant’s song, while Quiana Lynell chose James Brown’s “The Payback” as a statement of Black pride and equal respect.
  • Several picks tied patriotism to personal memory rather than national consensus — Noah James cited Toby Keith’s “American Soldier” because of relatives and friends who served, and Chase Tyler said Ray Charles’ “America the Beautiful” evokes unity.
  • Other musicians favored songs that challenge the country as much as celebrate it, including Bruce Springsteen’s version of Woody Guthrie’s 1940 “This Land Is Your Land,” Neil Young’s “Rockin’ in the Free World” and Prine’s satirical flag song.
  • The feature’s broader point was that after 250 years of American democracy, no single anthem captures the country; the range of answers is itself the story.

Insights

As America’s 250th anniversary arrives, can a song of protest also be considered a truly patriotic anthem?
How does music from immigrant communities continue to redefine what an 'American song' sounds like today?
If America's identity is a chorus of diverse voices, which forgotten genres should join its national soundtrack?