Daniel Patrick Welch: People's Hurricane (Song)
People's Hurricane
a song by Daniel Patrick Welch
The rebel tradition has a long history of borrowing from gospel and popular songs, from the Wobblies' Amazing Boss to Get on Board of the Civil Rights movement. Don't you weep after me is an old gospel song that has been well used, the most poignant version of which I found to be one sung during the Logan County miners' strike of 1921.
Every little river
must go down to the sea
All the slaving miners in our
union will be free
Goin' down to Blair Mountain, gonna
whoop the company
My darling don't you weep after
me
Inspired by that verse, I composed this song and put it to a chorus I had kicking around for awhile. I kind of like how the two sound together. There is a strong tradition in radical folk in almost every culture of drawing comparisons between the 'power of the people' and nature: unstoppable, stronger than their opponents, and so on… "If the boss is in the way we're gonna roll right over him." This was especially important in the struggle for oppressed groups to feel proud of their progress in the face of overwhelming opposition, and also in control of their destiny. I think we actually need to believe that el pueblo unido jamas sera vencido, but these are times which test my populist roots. Anyway, enjoy:
People's Hurricane
There came a
mighty hurricane that flooded New Orleans
They said help
couldn't get there—that they didn't have the means
We
watched whole families swallowed up in television
scenes
My darling don't you weep after me
We are a
people angry
A people proud, a people free
A mighty
river flowing
From the mountains to the sea
Bush went
to the levee but the Devil met him there
Took 200 billion
and he vanished in thin air
Now there are thousands
drowning but ol' Georgie doesn't care
My darling don't
you weep after me
We are a people angry...
Boats came to
the rescue but FEMA sent them back
The troops that could
have helped them were all over in Iraq
Do people even
matter—-or was it just 'cuz they were black?
My darling
don't you weep after me
We are a people angry..
GW sent
the army in to calm the people's fears
They needed food
and water, but they brought more blood and tears
In the
name of "law and order," they shot the engineers!
My
darling don't you weep after me
We are a people angry...
The people wanted answers but the government
gives us lies
The anger's deep and rising—-got no time to
dry our eyes
Mother Jones was right: she said 'Don't
mourn-—but organize!'
My darling don't you weep after
me
We are a people angry...
Impeach this sorry
government and put in one that cares
That takes care of
its people and won't pollute the air
Enough of loot and
plunder-—revolution's in the air
My darling don't you
weep after me
We are a people angry...
So don't believe
the lies—-you know the truth will set you free
The winds
of change are blowing and it starts with you and me
We'll
build a people's hurricane from sea to shining sea
My
darling don't you weep after me
We are a people angry...
© 2005 Daniel Patrick Welch. Reprint
permission granted with credit and link to
http://danielpwelch.com. Writer, singer, linguist and
activist Daniel Patrick Welch lives and writes in Salem,
Massachusetts, with his wife, Julia Nambalirwa-Lugudde.
Together they run The Greenhouse School [
www.greenhouseschool.org]. Translations of articles are
available in up to 20 languages. Links to the website are
appreciated at
danielpwelch.com.