#10 National Anthem
Starting Point. Discuss the questions below.
What are the opening lines of your national anthem?
How many verses of the song do you know and what is the tune?
In what situation are you most likely to hear it? Do you enjoy singing it?
Which country was the first in the world to create a national anthem? And the second?
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USA | France | UK | Netherlands | Nepal | Spain |
When do you think national anthems became a requirement for a state?
Focus on Vocabulary. Match the words with the correct meaning.
Focus on Listening. Listen to the audio. Read the transcript below if necessary.
Transcript
Every country has one, sometimes bellicose, sometimes wistful, occasionally jaunty, and usually intensely patriotic, but what makes a good one, a good national anthem? The journalist Alex Marshall has written a book on the subject called Republic or Death, Travels in Search of National Anthems, and he spoke to Nick Higham about some of the world’s best-known anthems, some of them more unexpected and why he dislikes our own quite so intensely.
The French Marseillaise by common consent, says Alex Marshall, the world’s most powerful national anthem.
It’s this ludicrously over-the-top, bellicose, rambunctious tune and once you’ve heard it once you literally can’t get it out of your system.
But it’s also flawed. Listen to the words.
I think a lot of French people today are more than embarrassed by it. Look at what happened after the Charlie Hebdo tragedy recently, people were singing it, and most of them were doing so with a look of great discomfort knowing this is a song that’s unifying at that moment, but whose chorus is, let impure blood water our fields, it’s hardly the message you want to send out to the Islamic world at that time.
Many national anthems are like that, and the surprising thing is how few countries feel they are inappropriate now and should be changed and more reflective of our values today.
But some countries have changed their anthems. Nepal’s national anthem used to sound like this, but then the monarchy was overthrown and now they sing this.
The Nepalese anthem is probably the world’s bizarrest by quite some way because it sounds like the sort of song you would hear in a south Asian takeaway. It’s this joyous folk tune about how all the different ethnicities in Nepal should unite together as one garland.
And it’s a very gentle song, yet it was born of the Maoist Revolution?
Yes, which is something you wouldn’t expect.
The title of Alex Marshall’s book comes from the words to the Paraguayan anthem, written as it happens by a chap from Uruguay during the struggle for independence from Spain. There’s a paradox about many anthems, today they are prized by patriots and conservatives, but often they were written by radicals and revolutionaries to boost morale among underdogs. Even Islamic State, Alex Marshall maintains, has a national anthem.
There is one song called My Ummah, Dawn Has Appeared, which is all about establishing, you know, the Islamic State has arisen by the blood of the Martyrs, Islamic State has arisen by the jihad of the pious. Its leaders clearly recognise there is power in music and in a song to unite and to inspire and to drive people to achieve its goals. Now that’s incredibly uncomfortable, it shows that ISIS is trying to create a state, it’s trying to unify people, it’s trying to make people identify with it, and that makes it all the more dangerous and all the more harder to combat.
One chapter of his book is about Lichtenstein’s national anthem which to British ears sounds eerily familiar. It seems lots of countries in the 19th century borrowed God Save The Queen, only, Lichtenstein has kept it. Alex hates it.
If I was trying to be political I’d say the reason I don’t like God Save The Queen is just because of overuse and because of its slightly plodding melody. I mean, when people bellow it, it really does sound like a dirge. To me it just says nothing about Britain, about England, about my experience today. Those words, they say nothing about our characters, they don’t even say anything about our landscape. I mean, most anthems at the very least say we’ve got nice hills. It’s an appalling song.
Focus on Comprehension. Answer the questions below about the audio.
Listen to an interview with the journalist Alex Marshall, who has written a book about national anthems, and answer the questions.
1 Which country’s national anthem is, by common consent, the world’s most powerful?
2 Why do you think some French people are embarrassed by some of the words in their national anthem?
3 What event in Nepal led to the change of the national anthem?
4 What is Nepal’s new national anthem about and which revolution was it born of?
5 The Paraguayan anthem was written during the struggle for independence from which country?
6 What is the paradox with many anthems?
7 Even Islamic State has a national anthem. What does it talk about and what is it trying to do?
8 Lots of countries in the 19th century borrowed Britain’s God Save The Queen. Which European country is the only one that has kept it?
9 The journalist Alex Marshall has written a book about national anthems. Why do you think he hates his own country’s anthem, God Save The Queen, so much?
Focus on Speaking.Â
What makes a good national anthem in your opinion? What should the song be about?
Who composed your national anthem and were they paid well or did they do it for the honour?
Should children sing the national anthem at school events?
Hints
The first recognisable national anthem was composed in the Netherlands when the country was under Spanish rule, which is why the Dutch anthem still pledges loyalty to the King of Spain. The national anthem of the Netherlands, “Wilhelmus”, adopted as national anthem in 1932, originates in the 16th century: It was written between 1568 and 1572 during the Dutch Revolt and its current melody variant was composed shortly before 1626, and was a popular orangist march during the 17th century.
The first national anthem to be officially adopted was La Marseillaise, for the First French Republic. Composed in 1792, it was officially adopted by the French National Convention in 1795.