Subject: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: JohnnyBGoode Date: 26 Aug 02 - 07:57 PM Wondering about versions of "Which Side are You On?" by Florence Reese/Reece, especially it being adapted to various circumstances... |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: Janice in NJ Date: 26 Aug 02 - 09:15 PM Way down in Hinds County, No neutrals have I met, You either are a freedom man, Or a Tom for Ross Barnett. --- Mississippi, early 1960s Ross Barnett was the state governor who, among other things, tried to halt the desegregation of Ole Miss. That incident inspired Bob Dylan's Oxford Town. Today Ross Barnett has a reservoir named after him. |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: GUEST Date: 26 Aug 02 - 09:20 PM The Boston area folk-punk band The Dropkick Murphys did an excellent cover of "Which Side Are You On?" on their album "Sing Loud...Sing Proud". |
Subject: Lyr Add: WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON? (James Farmer) From: masato sakurai Date: 27 Aug 02 - 12:24 AM As a Civil Rights movement song (a stanza being quoted by Janice in NJ above) from Guy & Candie Carawan, Sing for Freedom (Sing Out, 1990, p. 45). Recording is on Sing For Freedom: The Story of the Civil Rights Movement Through Its Songs (Smithsonian Folkways 40032).
WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON? (James Farmer)
"I rewrote the old labor song by Florence Reece 'Which Side Are You On?' on the spur of the moment in the Hinds County Jail, after the Freedom Riders who were imprisoned there had been discussing and speculating about the attitude of local Negroes regarding the freedom Riders. We had learned through trustees in the jail that most local Negroes were with u, but afraid to do anything because of fear of reprisals. They told us that, of course, there were a lot of Uncle Toms around and it was hard to tell who was and who was not." -- James Farmer
Come all you freedom lovers, and listen while I tell
CHORUS:
My daddy was a freedom fighter and I'm a freedom son
Don't 'tom for Uncle Charlie', don't listen to his lies
They say in Hinds County, no neutrals have they met
Oh people can you stand it, tell me how you can
Captain Ray will holler 'move on', but the Freedom Riders won't budge ~Masato |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: Joe_F Date: 27 Aug 02 - 06:58 PM In _The Bosses Songbook_, which I believe is available on the Web, there is a parody, "Which Side Are We On?", which begins My father is a member Of the bourgeoisie, And I will talk for freedom While he's supporting me. He's a bourgeois slob, But I don't have a job. |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: Mark Ross Date: 27 Aug 02 - 09:47 PM Where on the web is the BOSSES SONGBOOK available? Mark Ross |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: Joe_F Date: 28 Aug 02 - 06:54 PM Mark: I could have sworn I saw it somewhere, but Google only brings up mentions (including one or two by me). That is a shame. I have a copy that I bought in 1958. What would be a good place to harbor it if I got it scanned? |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: JohnnyBGoode Date: 28 Aug 02 - 07:44 PM Thanks for the excellent posts. Any more versions? |
Subject: Lyr Add: I AM A UNION WOMAN From: Bennet Zurofsky Date: 28 Aug 02 - 11:50 PM Aunt Molly Jackson, who was, I believe Florence Reese's sister-in-law (?), had her own radical song to the same tune. Its title is "I AM A UNION WOMAN": I am a union woman Just as Brave as I can be I do not like the bosses And the bosses don't like me. Join the CIO, Join the CIO I was raised in Old Kentucky Kentucky born and bred, But when I joined the union, They called me a Russian Red. Join the CIO... This is the worst time on earth That I have ever saw, To get killed out by gun thugs And framed up by the law. Join the CIO... If you want to join a union, As strong as one can be Join the dear old CIO And come along with me. Join the CIO... We are many thousand strong, And I am glad to say We are getting stronger And stronger every day. Join the CIO... The bosses ride fine horses While we walk in the mud, Their banner is the dollar sign, Ours is striped with blood. Join the CIO... Those lyrics come from "Carry It On," a fine songbook of working people's songs edited by Pete Seeger and others. As I recollect the version that appears on Aunt Molly Jackson's Library of Congress Recordings (Rounder LP in my collection, I don't know if its on CD), the refrain is "Join the NMU" instead of CIO. I believe that stands for the National Miners Union, which may have been a communist-led union. As I heard the story, there was quite a bit of family rivalry between Aunt Molly Jackson and Florence Reese about which one of them really deserved the credit for turning this particular hymn tune into a union organizing song. History seems to have awarded the prize to Reese. It was quite a musical family. If I'm not mistaken, Jim Garland, another fine singer and composer of radical songs, was also part of the family (Aunt Molly's brother?) Whoever had this particular idea first, I have to say that I enjoy Aunt Molly Jackson's singing and fighting lyrics. It is really a pity that she is all but forgotten today. She wrote and sang some of the most powerful labor songs ever composed in the US and she also knew how to sing traditional songs and ballads with the best. I am pretty much writing from dim memory here, although I did refer to a personal songbook I have handy for the lyrics above. If someone knows something about Aunt Molly and her kin, I would certainly appreciate their sharing it here. Including any checks on the accuracy of what little I have written here. |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: GUEST,Pat Darlington Date: 29 Aug 02 - 03:15 AM Dick Gaughan does a (then British topical) version on his album "Live in Edinburgh" with references to the Thatcher government (unfavourable references, natch) |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: Paddy Plastique Date: 29 Aug 02 - 04:48 AM There's a version by Billy Bragg from the mid-80s - again, like Gaughan, it talks of the Thatcher regime. Here's the lyrics from his site: Bragg - Side |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: Bennet Zurofsky Date: 30 Aug 02 - 05:23 PM In my earlier entry I wrote that I thought that Florence Reese and Aunt Molly Jackson were related either by blood or marriage. That still may be correct, but it is also possible that I was confusing Florence Reese with Sarah Ogan Gunning, another fine Kentucky singer of traditional and radical songs who I believe was Aunt Molly's sister. I seem to have been correct in my belief that Jim Garland was Aunt Molly's brother. If anyone knows Aunt Molly Jackson's family tree and the relationships, if any, among these four fine singers, I would appreciate a posting here. Upon reflection, I am going to start a new thread on the subject. |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: musicmick Date: 31 Aug 02 - 12:05 AM Looking through my neglected songbook collection, I discovered a Xeroxed copy of the Boss's Songbook. I can, thus, confirm the parody words but there was more. Instead of the "Which side are you on" refrain, they sang, " Join the YSL/ See you first in Hell" For the benefit of those Mudcatters who are not, yet, geriatric, YSL was the Young Socialists League, a slinter group who had left the YPSL, the Young People's Socialist League. (We pronounced it yips'l. Ah, sweet youth.) I have played at many solidarity meetings and strike rallies and I always use Which Side Are You On to rouse the crowd. I change the words to fit the occasion. I also use We're Gonna Roll The Union On and We Shall Not Be Moved, adding the names of the "heros" and "villains". |
Subject: Lyr Add: WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON? (updated) From: masato sakurai Date: 31 Aug 02 - 02:52 AM An updated version:
WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON? (updated)
Which side are you on, now?
The miners on the picket line
The miners down at Brookside
Duke Power thought they'd win this strike
Which side are you on, now?
From: Guy and Candie Carawan, Voices from the Mountains (1975; University of Illinois Press, 1982, p. 203). ~Masato |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: masato sakurai Date: 31 Aug 02 - 03:08 AM This may not be a version. From HERE.
"Which side r U on?" [realaudio]
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Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: Nigel Parsons Date: 31 Aug 02 - 10:11 AM Of course, when Godiva made her famous ride through Coventry, she rode side-saddle. Hence the expression "Hurrah for our side!" Nigel |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: Charley Noble Date: 31 Aug 02 - 02:23 PM One of my verses, composed back in the 1970's, which unfortunately is not obsolete runs: We've fought in many a battle, We're not done fighting yet; As long as injustice roams this land, We never shall forget! Cheerily, Charley Noble |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: Venthony Date: 01 Sep 02 - 02:36 AM A little something from a capitalist perspective: They call in sick on Monday. They're always late for work. If it wasn't for the shareholders, I'd fire the lazy jerks. CHORUS: I'm paying for their bass boats. I'm paying for their 'Vettes; And if I die a-tryin', I'll break their union yet. Bosses, can you stand it? How can these things be? I just want to hire a working man Who can type on a PC. Been working 80 hours a week, But I took an evening off And dreamed of new robotics So I can lay the bastards off. I've seen the bottom line, boys. Let the union do its will; But if they vote to strike, They'll be picketing in Brazil. I've got bright, young workers I really should promote; But if I buck seniority, They'll sink my corporate boat. LOL, Tony |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: Charley Noble Date: 01 Sep 02 - 11:50 AM A breath of fresh air, Tony, or shall we say put it on the ground, spread it all around, did it with a toe, it will make your flowers grow? Charley Noble |
Subject: Lyr Add: WHICH SIDE ARE WE ON? From: masato sakurai Date: 01 Sep 02 - 01:20 PM From The Socialist Songbook:
WHICH SIDE ARE WE ON?
My father is a member
Time was when people thought,
We always thought that Stalin
Now come you Village loafers ~Masato
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Subject: Lyr Add: WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON (Ali Hughes) From: masato sakurai Date: 02 Sep 02 - 03:06 AM From: EAST LOTHIAN SCOTTISH SOCIALIST PARTY site.
WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON
New words by Ali Hughes.
AM...................DM
AM.................G
They say in UK, PLC.
We wont to scrap the council tax.
We wont to get rid of trident.
We give millions to the railways.
How come every winter.
So who'll stand up for working people. ~Masato
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Subject: Lyr Add: WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON? (a strike song) From: masato sakurai Date: 02 Sep 02 - 03:22 AM As a strike song, from HERE.
CHORUS:
Come all Memorial workers, good news to you I bring,
My parents had commitment, they never were outdone,
They say that at Memorial, there can't be neutrals there,
Oh workers can you stand it? They play us as their fools;
Don't settle with the bosses and leave your friends alone,
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Subject: Lyr Add: JOIN THE MUA From: masato sakurai Date: 02 Sep 02 - 03:44 AM From: Union Songs:
JOIN THE MUA
Come all of you good wharfies
Chorus:
My daddy was a wharfie
On wharves around Australia
Oh, workers can you stand it?
When Patrick sacked the wharfies
Don't scab for the bosses
Notes
MUA is the Maritime Union of Australia, an amalgamation of the old Waterside Workers Federation and the Seamen's Union of Australia.
The NFF is the National Farmers Federation, representing the large agribusiness interests. The present Federal Government of Australia (1998) is politically and financially linked to the NFF, and together they have organised an onslaught on the unionism in Australia, most spectacularly attacking union rights on the waterfront, with the forced removal of 1400 workers (April 9th 1998) from Patrick docks and their replacement with scabs "trained" by NFF, the government acting as cheerleader.
Industrial Relations Minister Peter Reith, both designed the new laws to curtail workers rights and advised Patrick on ways to circumvent the little worker protection remaining in those laws.
The sackings have led to 2 weeks of picketting at Patrick docks around Australia, with the whole community joining in, and even police ignoring demands by Prime Minister John Howard to break up picket lines.
Internationally dockers in Japan, South Africa, United States are refusing to unload Patrick cargo, and there is a growing boycott of Australia farm produce (April 23rd 1998) in a number of countries.
I [the editor] have taken 2 songs for this one, "Which Side Are You On?" by Florence Reece and "Join the NMU" by Aunt Molly Jackson.
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Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: Charley Noble Date: 02 Sep 02 - 09:16 AM Amazing! |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: Wolfgang Date: 02 Sep 02 - 10:01 AM The song seems to be very alive with so many new versions. May I add part of a German version from environmentalists' fight against the nuclear power plant in Wyhl:
Im Elsaß und in Baden Wolfgang |
Subject: Lyr Add: WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON From: masato sakurai Date: 02 Sep 02 - 12:18 PM From HERE:
WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON?
February 23, 2002 Victoria rally song
Come all you BC People,
Chorus:
The Liberals got elected.
The Liberals and their bankers
They say that in old Lotusland
Now Christy Clark's got child care
The Liberals are like Wal-Mart
Oh people can you stand it? ~Masato
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Subject: Lyr Add: WTO From: masato sakurai Date: 03 Sep 02 - 02:20 AM A New Green Alliance song, from: HERE
"WTO"
Refrain:
Come all you good people
The business people gather
We will not be subservient
Universal education
You who say that there is nothing
You who call yourselves progressive
Democracy's a fire
We will stand and face the tear gas
From the battle of Seattle
We will burn down your McDonalds' ~Masato |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: masato sakurai Date: 03 Sep 02 - 02:46 AM DISTECT SONG (from HERE):
This is a song of the underground Distect.
Come all you Gens and renSimes,
CHORUS:
My daddy was in Rior,
They say in border country
Oh channel can you stand it?
Don't donate through the channels,
As singer and transit rider Stephen Aberle put it so melodiously (with apologies to the author of the tune Which Side are You On): "They have to cut a leg off/It simply must be done/And since they love democracy/They'll let us pick which one."
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Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: sledge Date: 17 Oct 03 - 03:25 PM Just discovered this song for myself, Listening to Natalie Merchant's version on her new CD The house carpenters daughter. Looking at the version in the Digital tradition thats the version she's singing word for word. Good solid song. Cheers Sledge |
Subject: Join the NMU / Union Woman From: GUEST,Rick Lee Date: 13 Jun 08 - 10:41 AM Thanks to you all on this thread over the years, especially Bennet Zurofsky for the lyric closest to what I remember from hearing a recording of Aunt Molly Jackson singing her earlier version. There was a verse, I believe, something like: My husband asked the boss for a job These were the words he said: "Bill Jackson, I can't work you sir, "Your wife's a Russian (Rooshin) Red." And the repeating chorus was: Join the NMU. Come and join the NMU Also, the last verse as I remember it was stronger: The bosses ride the big fine white horse While we step in the mud. Their flag's the old Red White and Blue And ours is dipped in blood. Has anyone a complete transcription of these early lyrics? I wonder what I may have misremembered or forgotten. Thanks, Rick ricklee@pobox.com .......... Subject: Lyr Add: I AM A UNION WOMAN From: Bennet Zurofsky Date: 28 Aug 02 - 11:50 PM Aunt Molly Jackson, who was, I believe Florence Reese's sister-in-law (?), had her own radical song to the same tune. Its title is "I AM A UNION WOMAN": I am a union woman Just as Brave as I can be I do not like the bosses And the bosses don't like me. Join the CIO, Join the CIO I was raised in Old Kentucky Kentucky born and bred, But when I joined the union, They called me a Russian Red. Join the CIO... This is the worst time on earth That I have ever saw, To get killed out by gun thugs And framed up by the law. Join the CIO... If you want to join a union, As strong as one can be Join the dear old CIO And come along with me. Join the CIO... We are many thousand strong, And I am glad to say We are getting stronger And stronger every day. Join the CIO... The bosses ride fine horses While we walk in the mud, Their banner is the dollar sign, Ours is striped with blood. Join the CIO... |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: Effsee Date: 13 Jun 08 - 11:28 AM Peggy Seeger sang this on "The Angry Muse" LP Argo, ZDA 83. Lyrics from the booklet with the album:- 1. I am a union woman, as brave as I can be, I do not like the bosses, and the bosses don't like me. Refrain: Join the N.M.U. Come and join the N.M.U. 2. I was born in old Kentucky, in Kentucky born and bred, And when I joined the union, they called me a Rooshian red. (ref.) 3. My husband asked the boss for a job, this is what he said: "Bill Jackson, I can't work you, sir, your wife's a Rooshian Red." (ref) 4. These is about the worst times that I have ever saw, To get shot down by gun thugs or framed up by the law. (ref) 5. Now if you want a union as fine as one can be, Just join the dear old N.M.U., and come along with me. (ref) 6. We are many thousand strong, I am glad to say, We are getting stronger and stronger every day. (ref) 7. The bosses ride fine horse, while we step in the mud, Their banner is the dollar sign, while ours is striped with blood. (ref) |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: GUEST,Tinker in Chicago Date: 13 Jun 08 - 12:31 PM Well, I just have to add that the recently and dearly departed Utah Phillips was the only guy I ever worked with who told Unitarian jokes. And he told one of Unitarians singing, "Which side am I on, boys, which side am I on?" |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: GUEST,Michele Callaghan Date: 13 Jun 08 - 04:50 PM The Weavers have an excellent version on their Carnegie Hall record, now available on CD. Michele C. |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: mark gregory Date: 14 Jun 08 - 12:13 AM I'm interested (and honoured) to see that Masato Sakurai has included my 1998 version titled JOIN THE MUA! It was one of 30 or more songs and poems written and performed during the Howard government attempt the destroy the Maritime Union of Australia (MUA) by bankrolling a lockout of MUA members by the employer Patrick beginning on the Easter holiday weekend ten years ago. Back in the early 1970s I wrote a version that was in a Cinema Action documentary in London one of the I wrote verses was The bosses down in Fleet Street We gave them a surprise Our brothers pulled the switches there And stopped they bleeding lies Florence Reece was the wife of a union organiser who was so angered that the sheriff J.H. Blair and his pose of hired gun thugs were out to kill her husband she tore an old calendar off the wall and wrote the song. She sang the song in her 80s over 60 years later in the famous 1976 Barbara Kopple documentary Harlan County, U.S.A. Just over 10 years ago I got an email from Florence Reece's granddaughter who was asking about where she could get a copy of the film as a birthday present for her father! I was able to find the address and phone number of a US company that sold video copies of the film. More recently (2006) I sang the original song on a picket line in Japan ... the picket of Tetsuro Tanaka who writes his own songs and tunes to sing and play to the arriving workers each morning at the gate of the factory that sacked him over a quarter of a century ago! I was sure Florence Reece would have been amazed that her song had travelled so far. see also http://tanakasanwillnotdocallisthenics.com/ cheers Mark |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: masato sakurai Date: 14 Jun 08 - 01:49 PM Mark, thank you for the additional info. ~Masato |
Subject: ADD Version: Which Side Are You On (Billy Bragg) From: Joe Offer Date: 25 Nov 15 - 11:04 PM WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON? (Florence Reece, adapted by Billy Bragg) This government had an idea And parliament made it law It seems like it's illegal To fight for the union any more Which side are you on, boys Which side are you on Which side are you on, boys Which side are you on We went out to join the picket line For together we cannot fail We got stopped by police at the county line They said, "Go home boys or you're going to jail" Which side are you on, boys Which side are you on Which side are you on, boys Which side are you on It's hard to explain to a crying child Why her Daddy can't go back So the family suffer But it hurts me more To hear a scab say Sod you Jack Which side are you on, boys Which side are you on Which side are you on, boys Which side are you on I'm bound to follow my conscience And do whatever I can But it'll take much more than the union law To knock the fight out of a working man Which side are you on, boys Which side are you on Which side are you on, boys Which side are you on WORDS & MUSIC – Florence Reece Adapted 1984 by Billy Bragg © 1946 Stormking Music Inc assigned to Harmony Music Ltd Reproduced by kind permission of Harmony Music Ltd (lyrics taken from Billy Bragg Website) I first heard this version on Billy Bragg's Back to Basics album in the 1980s. Note that the melody is somewhat different from the usual way of singing this song. |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' From: Joe Offer Date: 25 Nov 15 - 11:48 PM I think it's clear that the spelling of the songwriter's name is Florence Reece. Here's a video of Florence Reece singing "Which Side Are You On?": Wikipedia says:
Here are the Digital Tradition lyrics: WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON? (Florence Reese, 1946) Come all of you good workers, Good news to you I'll tell, Of how that good old union Has come in here to dwell. cho: Which side are you on? Which side are you on? Which side are you on? Which side are you on? My daddy was a miner, And I'm a miner's son, And I'll stick with the union, Till every battle's won. They say in Harlan County, There are no neutrals there. You'll either be a union man, Or a thug for J.H. Blair. Oh, workers can you stand it? Oh, tell me how you can. Will you be a lousy scab, Or will you be a man ? Don't scab for the bosses, Don't listen to their lies. Us poor folks haven't got a chance, Unless we organize. Copyright Stormking Music, Inc. @mining @union filename[ WHCHSIDE TUNE FILE: WHCHSIDE CLICK TO PLAY RG
Here is the Traditional Ballad Index entry for this song: Which Side Are You On?DESCRIPTION: The Union comes to town to protect the miners from boss J.H. Blair. The workers are told "In Harlan County, there are no neutrals there," and asked, "Which side are you on (x4)." They are reminded "Us poor folks haven't got a chance unless we organize."AUTHOR: Words: Florence Reece / Music: Traditional EARLIEST DATE: 1941 (recording, Almanac Singers) (reportedly composed 1931) KEYWORDS: mining labor-movement nonballad boss FOUND IN: US REFERENCES (6 citations): Scott-BoA, pp. 342-343, "Which Side Are You On?" (1 text, 1 tune) PSeeger-AFB, p. 94, "Which Side Are You On?" (1 text, 1 tune) Greenway-AFP, pp. 170-171, "Which Side Are You On?" (1 text, 1 tune) Cohen-AFS1, pp. 263-264, "Which Side Are You On?" (1 text) Silber-FSWB, p. 134, "Which Side Are You On?" (1 text) DT, WHCHSIDE* Roud #15159 RECORDINGS: Almanac Singers , "Which Side Are You On?" (on Almanac04, PeteSeeger1, PeteSeeger48) (on Selma) CROSS-REFERENCES: cf. "I Am a Union Woman" (tune) SAME TUNE: I Am a Union Woman (by Aunt Molly Jackson) (File: Arn174) Which Side Are You On [II] (Recordings, Charles Neblett, Rutha Harris & Cordell Reagon, on SingFreeCD; SNCC Freedom Singers, on VoicesCiv) NOTES [54 words]: The radical National Miners' Union (N.M.U.) attempted to organize miners in the 1930s, but were defeated by the mine owners after bitter and bloody conflicts. The United Mine Workers of America (U.M.W.), part of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (C.I.O.) succeeded a few years later, again after terrible struggle. - PJS Last updated in version 3.5 File: SBoA342 Go to the Ballad Search form Go to the Ballad Index Instructions The Ballad Index Copyright 2018 by Robert B. Waltz and David G. Engle. |
Subject: Version:Which Side Are You On?' (Reece)-Almanac From: Joe Offer Date: 18 Feb 19 - 11:50 PM I came across some interesting notes on the song in the liner notes from Smithsonian/Folkways album Number FW05285 )click) titled The Original Talking Union and other Union Songs, by the Almanac Singers with Pete Seeger and chorus: "Which Side Are You On?" is a miner's song written in 1932 in the midst of the bitter struggles of the miners in Harlan County, Kentucky. The mine owners, unyielding in their opposition to any unionization of the workers, carried on a campaign of violence and terror to smash the union. At least a dozen miners were killed by deputies hired by the operators. but none of the deputies were indicted. "Which Side Are You On" was written during one of the many terroristic raids by the sheriff and his deputies on the miners' homes. They came to the home of Sam Reece, one of the leaders of the National Miners' Union, but he had been warned in time and escaped. They poked their shotguns everywhere, under the beds and into the closets, even into the piles of dirty linen, searching for the miners' leader. When Reece's young daughters, aged 8 and 11, started crying, one of the deputies laughed and said: "What are you crying for? We don't want you . We're after your old man." After the deputies had left, Mrs. Florence Reece, wife of the rank and file leader, was seething with indignation. She tore an old calendar off the wall, and on the back side wrote the verses of the great labor song, which she put to the tune of an old Baptist hymn she had known from childhood, The song was immediately picked up by the striking miners after it had been sung at the union hall by Mrs. Reece's two little girls. From Harlan County, it spread throughout the entire labor movement. A few of the verses of the song were slightly changed later by the Almanac Singers:
And I'll stick with the union until the battle's won."
He'll be with you. fellow workers, until this battle's won. Here are the lyrics, as performed by the Almanac Singers: WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON (Florence Reece) Come all you good worken, Good news to you I'll tell Of how the good old union Has come in here to dwell.
Which side are you on? My daddy was a miner* And I'm a miner's son. And I'll stick with the union 'Til every battle's won. They say In Harlan County There are no neutrals there; You'll either be a union man Or a thug for J.H. Blair. Oh workers can you stand it? Oh tell me how you can. Will you be a lousy scab Or will you be a man? Don't scab lor the bosses, Don't listen to their lies. Us poor folks haven't got a chance Unless we organize. *originally read:
He'll be with you. fellow workers, until this battle's won. |
Subject: ADD: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' (Reece) From: Joe Offer Date: 19 Feb 19 - 12:25 AM Here are the lyrics from Norm Cohen's -American Folk Songs, Volume 1, pp. 263-264 WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON? (Florence Reese) Come all of you poor (?) workers, Good news to you I'll tell; Of how that good old union Has come in here to dwell. CHORUS Which side are you on? Which side are you on? We've started our good battle, We know we're sure to win; Because we've got the gun-thugs A-lookin' very thin. They say they have to guard us, To educate their child; Their children live in luxury, Our children's almost wild. With pistols and with rifles, They take away our bread; And if you miners hinted it, They'd sock you on the head. They say in Harlan County, There are no neutrals there. You either are a union man, Or a thug for J.H. Blair. Oh, workers can you stand it? Oh, tell me how you can; Will you be a lousy scab, Or will you be a man? My daddy was a miner, He is now in the air and sun*; He'll be with you fellow workers, Until the battle's won. Cohen's notes (part): In 1931, Florence Reece, wife of Sam Reece, a Harlan union organizer, wrote "Which Side Are You On?" to the tune of the Baptist hymn "Lay the Lily Low" after Sheriff J.H. Blair and his deputies broke into the Reece cabin and ransacked it, looking for Sam. It became one of the best-known songs to come out of Harlan's labor conflicts. *Blacklisted and without a job. There are almost identical lyrics (with fewer typos) on pp. 170-171 of John Greenway's American Folksongs of Protest (1953, University of Pennsylvania Press - 1960 Perpetua reprint). There is one major difference: the lyrics in Greenway begin:
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Subject: ADD:Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' (Reece) From: Joe Offer Date: 19 Feb 19 - 12:56 AM The song is on page 58 of Songs to Fan the Flames of Discontent: The Little Red Songbook (36th edition, 1995), published by the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) - with enough verses to keep the miners going to the end of a strike. WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON? (Florence Reese) Come all of you good workers, good news to you I’ll tell, Of how the good old Union has come in here to dwell. Which side are you on? Which side are you on? (repeat) My daddy was a miner, and I’m a miner’s son. I’ll stick with my fellow workers till every battle’s won. Which side are you on? Which side are you on? (repeat) They say in Harlan county, there are no neutrals there: You’re either with the union, or a thug for J.H. Blair. Which side are you on? Which side are you on? (repeat) O workers can you stand it? O tell me how you can? Will you be a crummy scab or lend us all a hand? Which side are you on? Which side are you on? (repeat) Don’t scab for the bosses, don’t listen to their lies. Us working folk don’t have a chance, unless we organize. Which side are you on? Which side are you on? (repeat) My mother was a miner, and I’m a miner’s daughter. I’ll stand with this old union, come hell or come high water. Which side are you on? Which side are you on? (repeat) So shoulder to shoulder, in union we shall stand. We’ll beat the bosses and the scabs, so come and lend a hand. Which side are you on? Which side are you on? (repeat) Come all of you good people, you women and you men. Once more our backs are to the wall, under attack again. Which side are you on? Which side are you on? (repeat) * We’ve fought a million battles, to defend our hard won rights. We’re goin to have to fight again, and I ask you here tonight: Which side are you on? Which side are you on? (repeat).* It’s time for a decision and you really have to choose -- Support the One Big Union or the next in line is you. Which side are you on? Which side are you on? (repeat) * Reese wrote the first five verses of this song in 1931 about the struggles of United Mine Workers to organize coal miners in Harlan County, Kentucky. *verse by Scottish singer Dick Gaughan |
Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' (Reece) From: GUEST,Dave D Date: 19 Feb 19 - 11:12 AM Here is the Dick Gaughan version, words from the archive.org version of his website. It's on two of (in my option) his very best albums, if you can get hold of them - "Live in Edinburgh" and "True and Bold: Songs of the Scottish Miners". (I bought my first Gaughan album, True and Bold, on the basis of this song - naively, my 16 year old self thought it was a Bragg cover! I was utterly hooked from the opening bars of Miners Life is Like a Sailor, the first song, and have been ever since.)
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Subject: RE: Versions of 'Which Side Are You On?' (Reece) From: Stewie Date: 19 Feb 19 - 05:53 PM Here's a link to Natalie Merchant's fine rendition. Lyics are those posted above by Joe re Almanac Singers. Click --Stewie. |
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