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John Gorka- Take Down Your Flag.......




Recorded by John Gorka,
July 5, 2015





Take Down Your Flag
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Peter Mulvey has started a very good thing with his song "Take Down Your Flag" on YouTube. He asked other singer songwriters to write a new verse to the song and post a video of that performance on YouTube. You can see mine here:

 

2nd verse by John Gorka

 



 

     

Peter Mulvey wrote on his youtube page:

I wrote this on the evening of 19 June 2015 and sang it that night at the Calvin Theater in Northampton, opening a show for Ani Difranco.

Every flag over Charleston is at half-mast today except one. Except one.
Every flag over Charleston is at half-mast today except one. You know which one.

Take down your flag to half-mast.
Take down your flag to half-mast.
Take down your flag to half mast.

She is survived by her children and her grandchildren. Her name is Susie Jackson.
She was eighty-seven years old.
She is survived by her children and her grandchildren. Her name is Susie Jackson.
She was eighty-seven years old.

Take down your flag to half-mast.
Take down your flag to half-mast.
Take down your flag to half mast.

It will take all of the love in all of our hearts, and it will also take something more.
It will take all of the love in all of our hearts, and it will also take something more.

Take down your flag to half-mast.
Take down your flag to half-mast.
Take down your flag to half mast
And then take it down for good.
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Click here to hear Peter Mulvey's mp3 versionown your flag to half mast And then take it down for good.

 

 

 

Why the 'Take Down Your Flag' songwriter was willing to be rude after Charleston shooting.
By Brendan Hornbostel
 


June 30, 2015

     

After the killings of nine black church members by a white gunman in Charleston, S.C., folk singer-songwriter Peter Mulvey tried to make sense of the massacre by talking about the event with other musicians..

Two days after the shooting at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Mulvey penned a simple, three-chord tribute, “Take Down Your Flag,” and performed it that night, opening for folk rocker Ani DiFranco in Northampton, Mass. The song’s second verse focused on Susie Jackson, the eldest of the victims.


Folk singer-songwriter Peter Mulvey performs his response to the shootings in Charleston, S.C.

“I wasn’t trying to do anything different with this song than I do with any song,” Mulvey said, speaking by phone from his home in Milwaukee. “I was just trying to figure something out and write a song, but this one got away from me real quick.”

When Mulvey posted the video to YouTube and received a comment asking about the song's eight missing verses (one for each life that was lost), he began requesting other folk artists – some of whom had already expressed interest in recording covers – to write their own versions.

“My phone rang and my pal Ralston [Bowles] asked if he could cover the tune and I just said, ‘Only if you please write a verse for someone else,’” Mulvey said.

Ten days after the song was written, “Take Down Your Flag” has inspired more than 100 versions uploaded to YouTube, including those by Bowles, DiFranco, Anais Mitchell and dozens of amateur artists. Each recording features a newly written verse, highlighting one of the nine victims, the AME Church or whatever that singer chooses. A video posted last week by Mulvey gives a workshop on how musicians can learn the song and add their own second verse.

As more than a dozen of Mulvey’s friends published their versions, including Pamela Means’ tribute to South Carolina state Sen. Clementa Pinckney, folk singer Vance Gilbert chose to write his second verse about the shooter,

Dylan Roof. “Dylan, his guns and his sad, sick disposition all given permission to shoot everyone dead, by some stars and some bars that are all wrong and dated,” Gilbert sings in his video.

Gilbert said he was home at 1 a.m. when Mulvey reached out to him about contributing to the song. Gilbert stayed up thinking about what could have led Roof to commit the massacre.

“I was in bed and I just couldn’t have slept,” he told the Times. “I needed to get it done. ... If you’re moved by something, you have to listen. You have to heed that call.”

 
 

Anais Mitchell: This is a song by my friend Peter Mulvey i wrote a verse for DePayne Middleton-Doctor, one of the Charleston Nine.

 

  Mark Erelli: Peter Mulvey wrote this song and asked some friends to record their own versions, writing a different 2nd verse to honor each of the Charleston Nine. I would like to dedicate my version to the memory of Cynthia Hurd, who was known by her friends and family as a tireless public servant and a librarian for 31 years. .

When Mulvey told Gilbert that he felt his verse had expressed forgiveness, Gilbert corrected him. “No, this is a verse for a song,” he said. “Forgiveness is a process, and I’m working on it.” As the song gathers more grass-roots support in the folk community, Mulvey said his hope is for it to be picked up by a commercial country singer because of the genre’s historic roots in Southern states.

“I didn’t call this song, ‘Take Down the Flag,’” Mulvey said. “I said, ‘Take Down Your Flag,’ because it’s a very impolite suggestion. I’m talking directly to the people who view that as a symbol of their heritage. . . I’m willing to be rude because right now, human beings are burying their families and that flag is flying over it.”

On Saturday, when activist Bree Newsome climbed the flagpole in front of the South Carolina Statehouse and temporarily removed the Confederate flag, Mulvey took to the song again, this time dedicating the second verse to Newsome for her actions. ADVERTISEMENT “All of this is just a song,” Mulvey said. “The main thing is action.”

Mulvey is also organizing a benefit concert on July 12 using Concert Window, a service that streams musicians live to connect with their fans. Mulvey said he wants to give any musician the opportunity to join their concurrent streaming concerts by performing their versions of “Take Down Your Flag.” All the donations received from this online music festival will go to the AME Church and the Mother Emanuel Hope Fund to assist relatives of the victims.

Gilbert, who said he will be performing during the benefit, said the most important effect the song can have is to inspire conversation. “At some point you have to start asking the questions to why something like this would happen,” Gilbert said. “I hope people both heal and then start asking questions.”

Copyright © 2015, Los Angeles Times .

 
Vance Gilbert: I got a note from Peter Mulvey at 1 am, asking to add a verse to his new epic TakeDown Your Flag. Honestly, I was folding up for the night. By 2:45 I had the song video you see here. As per usual me, I went in a slightly other direction, but Peter’s important, perfect, brilliant, song core is here,  

Ani DiFranco: A song by peter mulvey and many others

 

 


 
Meg Hutchinson This is a song by Peter Mulvey. He asked fellow songwriters to add a middle verse. My verse is for Rev. Sharonda Coleman-Singleton and her son Chris. It is a direct quote from Chris. I added "Lord I wish I was closer to her now."  

Patty Larkin: I got Peter's email while out in a dune shack with my family. Here are some thoughts and images from that week. Thank you, Peter, for allowing us to travel with you via this song. The time I spent thinking and reading about Myra Thompson, mother, grandmother, pastor, educator, was a time to meditate on the deep loss of her presence. Love and healing to her family, friends and congregation.

 

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