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After the War (song) After the War Is Over; After the War Is Over Will There Be Any "Home Sweet Home"? All Aboard for Home Sweet Home; Allegiance: Patriotic Song; America, Here's My Boy; America! My Home-Land; America's the Word for You and Me; American Patrol; The Americans Come (An Episode in France in the Year 1918) An Eala Bhàn; And He'd ...
Leo Feist, Inc. Songs the Soldiers and Sailors Sing!: A Collection of Favorite Songs As Sung by the Soldiers and Sailors - "Over Here" and "Over There," Including Complete Choruses (Words and Music) of 36 of the Most Popular and Most Sung "Newer" Songs. New York, N.Y.: Leo. Feist, 1918. OCLC 24169456; MacQuaile, Brendan.
Pages in category "Songs about World War I" The following 17 pages are in this category, out of 17 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Pages in category "German patriotic songs" The following 71 pages are in this category, out of 71 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
The title song, "Great War", was released as a single on 27 June. [7] A music video for the track "82nd All the Way" was released on 20 July. [8] A music video for "Seven Pillars of Wisdom", in which Indy Neidell plays the role of T. E. Lawrence, was filmed in the Tunisian desert in early September, [9] and was released on 21 December. [10]
"Over There" is a 1917 war song written by George M. Cohan that was popular with the United States military and the American public during World War I and World War II.Written shortly after the American entry into World War I, "Over There" is a patriotic propaganda song intended to galvanize American men to enlist in the American Expeditionary Forces and fight the Central Powers.
The song was featured as one of the songs in the 1951 film On Moonlight Bay, the 1960s stage musical and film Oh! What a Lovely War , and the 1970 musical Darling Lili , sung by Julie Andrews . It was also sung by the prisoners of war in Jean Renoir 's film La Grande Illusion (1937) and as background music in The Russians Are Coming, the ...
Extolling the First Brigade of the Polish Legions, the song is considered an important emblem of the early-20th-century struggle for Polish independence. It is also now an official anthem of the Polish Army. [1] The song melody was borrowed from Kielce March #10 in the songbook of the Kielce Fire Department band. It had probably been composed ...