The American Songbag
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''The American Songbag'' is an anthology of American folksongs compiled by the American poetry, poet Carl Sandburg and published by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Harcourt, Brace and Company in 1927. It was enormously popular and was in print continuously for more than seventy years. Melodies from it were used in Alex Wilder' ''Names from the War'' (1961). According to the musicology, musicologist Judith Tick:
As a populist poet, Sandburg bestowed a powerful dignity on what the ’20s called the "American scene" in a book he called a "ragbag of stripes and streaks of color from nearly all ends of the earth ... rich with the diversity of the United States." Reviewed widely in journals ranging from the ''New Masses'' to ''Modern Music'', ''The American Songbag'' influenced a number of musicians. Pete Seeger, who calls it a "landmark", saw it "almost as soon as it came out." The composer Elie Siegmeister took it to Paris with him in 1927, and he and his wife Hannah "were always singing these songs. That was home. That was where we belonged."


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''The American Songbag''
at Archive.org Music anthologies American folk music Works by Carl Sandburg Harcourt (publisher) books {{music-publication-stub