We will welcome to our numbers the loyal, true and brave, Shouting the battle cry of freedom! And although he may be poor, he shall never be a slave, Shouting the battle cry of freedom!
@@LowlyMountainBanjos The tune is probably best known today as "Glory, Glory, Hallelujah", or "Battle Hymn of the Republic", though other settings of the Civil War era tune include "Say Brother, Will You Meet Us", "John Brown's Body" (which popularized the tune), and the "Song of the First of Arkansas". There's a lot of great history behind the songs.
Another one that stuck with me from studying the Civil war that the soldiers would sing while marching is "Weeping, Sad and Lonely" or also known as "When this Cruel War is Over"
@@Quantrills.RaidersAmerica's darkest day was still more glorious than the confederacy's best day. I am a southern man with southern pride, and I'm here to say you and the confederacy are the embodiment of shame. The true flag of the South has always been this 🇺🇸
The confederacy only lasted four years before it was absolutely crushed, I've seen a McDonalds cheeseburger left out in the sun last longer. Stop worshipping the nations of losers.
We will welcome to our numbers the loyal, true and brave,
Shouting the battle cry of freedom!
And although he may be poor, he shall never be a slave,
Shouting the battle cry of freedom!
Heck yeah!
Do solidarity forever next!
Don’t know that one. At least not by that name. Thanks for the suggestion. I’m always looking for new tunes.
@@LowlyMountainBanjos The tune is probably best known today as "Glory, Glory, Hallelujah", or "Battle Hymn of the Republic", though other settings of the Civil War era tune include "Say Brother, Will You Meet Us", "John Brown's Body" (which popularized the tune), and the "Song of the First of Arkansas". There's a lot of great history behind the songs.
i feel like im bout to get told to "not ger wondrin' roun' in those yonder woods"
Awesome!!!
Another one that stuck with me from studying the Civil war that the soldiers would sing while marching is "Weeping, Sad and Lonely" or also known as "When this Cruel War is Over"
Thanks for those.
Nice!😎👍
Sounds beautiful, thanks for sharing
Thank you! If your dislike button wasn't disabled, I'd click the Like button!
Boy, you picked a bad day to get lost.
wrong song
I bet the cannibals would appreciate a dude that could pick a mean banjo
@@brewmastermonk9356 the haitans?
the ironly of having the union flag in the background while playing this is not lost upon me.
This tune was popular in the Confederate States as well as the United States and there were lyrics written promoting and supporting both causes.
This a union song now because little Johnny Rebel took the fat L
@@UnionForever look at the state of America today, not sure they're the ones that lost
@@Quantrills.RaidersAmerica's darkest day was still more glorious than the confederacy's best day. I am a southern man with southern pride, and I'm here to say you and the confederacy are the embodiment of shame. The true flag of the South has always been this 🇺🇸
Not sure what's ironly about this. There's a whole heaping load of irony that you think this was originally a confederate song.
"freedom"
It's a union song you dope
long live the confederacy
The confederacy only lasted four years before it was absolutely crushed, I've seen a McDonalds cheeseburger left out in the sun last longer. Stop worshipping the nations of losers.
Only one side fought for freedom. Hint: it was the one without the slaves
Couldn't hear you over Sherman's March.