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This song is Copyrighted in U.S., under Seal of Copyright # 154085, for a period of 28 years, and anybody caught singin it without our permission, will be mighty good friends of ourn, cause we dont give a dern. Publish it. Write it. Sing it. Swing to it. Yodel it. We wrote it, thats all we wanted to do.
The sad thing about this Woody Guthrie story is according to the NPR story on "This Land is Your Land," Guthrie himself lifted the music from a 1930 gospel song by the Carter Family called "When the World's on Fire." Pete Seeger talked about Guthrie's musical composition style: "He tended to write words first, and later on picked out a tune. Woody once said, 'When I'm writing a song and I get the words, I look around for some tune that has proved its popularity with the people.'"
It is pretty ironic that Guthrie liked to use tunes that had proven popular, but when the JibJab people try to do the same, they get into trouble.
Guthrie wrote the song in 1940, first recorded it in 1951, but did not copyright it until 1956. I wonder if the sheet music was ever publically distributed prior to 1956, thus placing it in the public domain? The NPR story says that the song was "sung at rallies, around campfires and in progressive schools" even though a recording had not been released, suggesting the music was in wide distribution.
It's obvious satire on the political practices of two who want mindless partisan nationalistic patriotism using a song that promotes unity to all, not just those who call themselves Americans, but to all over the world. And the tune was admittedly blantantly lifted from another's work. I guess Guthrie would support file-sharing, too. I hate frivolous lawsuits.
The Carter Family used the tune (When The
World's On Fire -- presumably a traditional religious song copyrighted in A.P. Carter's
name) also for their "Little Darling, Pal
Of Mine".
There have been previous parodies of
"This Land Is Your Land"(I remember quite a
few printed in "Folksinger's Wordbook").
1. Peter on July 27, 2004 6:21 PM writes...
The sad thing about this Woody Guthrie story is according to the NPR story on "This Land is Your Land," Guthrie himself lifted the music from a 1930 gospel song by the Carter Family called "When the World's on Fire." Pete Seeger talked about Guthrie's musical composition style: "He tended to write words first, and later on picked out a tune. Woody once said, 'When I'm writing a song and I get the words, I look around for some tune that has proved its popularity with the people.'"
It is pretty ironic that Guthrie liked to use tunes that had proven popular, but when the JibJab people try to do the same, they get into trouble.
Guthrie wrote the song in 1940, first recorded it in 1951, but did not copyright it until 1956. I wonder if the sheet music was ever publically distributed prior to 1956, thus placing it in the public domain? The NPR story says that the song was "sung at rallies, around campfires and in progressive schools" even though a recording had not been released, suggesting the music was in wide distribution.
Permalink to Comment2. Prince on August 1, 2004 8:50 AM writes...
It's obvious satire on the political practices of two who want mindless partisan nationalistic patriotism using a song that promotes unity to all, not just those who call themselves Americans, but to all over the world. And the tune was admittedly blantantly lifted from another's work. I guess Guthrie would support file-sharing, too. I hate frivolous lawsuits.
Permalink to Comment3. Manfred Helfert on August 3, 2004 4:07 AM writes...
The Carter Family used the tune (When The
World's On Fire -- presumably a traditional religious song copyrighted in A.P. Carter's
name) also for their "Little Darling, Pal
Of Mine".
There have been previous parodies of
"This Land Is Your Land"(I remember quite a
few printed in "Folksinger's Wordbook").
The lawsuit is IMO ridiculous and frivolous.
Permalink to Comment