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Thread: WWII Songs

  1. #1
    Bartender Andykev's Avatar
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    WWII Songs

    This was a great song: Vera Lynn


    WHITE CLIFFS OF DOVER
    words: Nat Burton Music: Walter Kent

    I'll Never forget the people I met,
    braving those angry skies.
    I remember well as the shadows fell,
    the light of hope in their eyes,
    but though i'm far away,
    I still can hear them say.
    Thumbs up for when the dawn comes up:

    There'll be bluebirds over,
    The white cliffs of Dover,
    Tomorrow, just you wait and see.
    There'll be love and laughter,
    And peace ever after,
    Tomorrow when the world is free.

    The shepherd will tend his sheep,
    The valley will bloom again.
    And Jimmy will go to sleep,
    In his own little room again.

    There'll be bluebirds over,
    The white cliffs of Dover,
    Tomorrow, just you wait and see.
    "Wadda ya hear, wadda ya say?"
    9 years, 4 months, 8 days.
    Only 234 days!

  2. #2
    New In Town obxgyrene's Avatar
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    Although this post is ancient, I think the music of the era was an important part of the lives of the guys and gals who served during WW-II.

    The White Cliffs of Dover is in my top-80 favorite list. Here are some others that were popular and are on my personal playlist:

    A String Of Pearls - Glenn Miller
    Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The Positive - Bing Crosby & the Andrews Sisters
    As Time Goes By - Rudy Vallee
    Auld Lang Syne - Guy Lombardo
    Beat Me Daddy, Eight To The Bar - Andrews Sisters
    Besame Mucho - Andy Russell
    Bless Em' All - Bing Crosby
    Blue Moon - Jo Stafford
    Blues In The Night - Jo Stafford, Johnny Mercer & The Pied Pipers
    Boogie Woogie - Tommy Dorsey
    Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy Andrews Sisters
    Candy - Jo Stafford, Johnny Mercer & The Pied Pipers
    Cattle Call - Eddy Arnold
    Chattanooga Choo-Choo - Glenn Miller
    Chickery Chick - Sammy Kaye
    Deep Purple - Artie Shaw
    Did You See My Daddy Over There? - Eddy Arnold
    Don't Fence Me In - Bing Crosby
    Don't Sit Under The Apple Tree - Andrews Sisters
    Dream - The Pied Pipers
    Goodbye Mama (I'm Off To Yokohama) - J. Fred Coots
    Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas - Judy Garland
    I Don't Want To Set The World On Fire - Ink Spots
    I Don't Want To Walk Without You - Harry James & Helen Forrest
    I Left My Heart At The Stagedoor Canteen - Bob Crosby Orchestra
    I'll Be Home For Christmas - Bing Crosby
    I'll Be Seeing You - Bing Crosby
    I'll Never Smile Again - Tommy Dorsey, Frank Sinatra & The Pied Pipers
    I'll Walk Alone - Dinah Shore
    I'm Making Believe - Les Paul & Doris Day
    I'm Sitting On Top Of The World - Al Jolson
    In The Mood - Glenn Miller
    Into Each Life Some Rain Must Fall - Ella Fitzgerald & The Ink Spots
    It Could Happen To You - Jo Stafford
    It Had To Be You - Artie Shaw
    It's Been A Long, Long Time - Bing Crosby & Les Paul
    I've Got A Gal In Kalamazoo - Glenn Miller
    I've Heard That Song Before - Harry James & Helen Forrest
    Jingle, Jangle, Jingle - Kay Kyser
    Let's Get Away From It All - Tommy Dorsey & Jo Stafford
    Lili Marlene - Anne Shelton
    Long Ago (And Far Away) - Jo Stafford
    Mairzy Doats - Merry Macs
    Manhattan Serenade - Tommy Dorsey & Jo Stafford
    Moonglow - Benny Goodman
    Moonlight Becomes You - Bing Crosby
    Moonlight Serenade - Glenn Miller
    Mother's Prayers - Eddy Arnold
    My Dreams Are Getting Better All The Time - Doris Day
    On The Atchison, Topeka, And The Santa Fe - Johnny Mercer
    Opus One - Tommy Dorsey & His Orchestra
    Over The Rainbow - Judy Garland
    Paper Doll - Mills Brothers
    Rum And Coca Cola - Andrews Sisters
    San Fernando Valley - Bing Crosby
    Saturday Night (Is The Lonliest Night Of The Week) - Frank Sinatra
    Sentimental Journey - Doris Day
    Sing, Sing, Sing (With A Swing) - Benny Goodman
    Stardust - Tommy Dorsey & Frank Sinatra
    Stars And Stripes On Iwo Jima - Sons Of The Pioneers
    Stormy Weather - Lena Horne
    Sunday, Monday Or Always - Frank Sinatra
    Sunrise Serenade - Tommy Dorsey
    Swinging On A Star - Bing Crosby
    Taking A Chance On Love - Benny Goodman & Helen Forrest
    The Trolley Song - Judy Garland
    The White Cliffs Of Dover - Vera Lynn
    Till The End Of Time - Perry Como
    Till Then - Mills Brothers
    Twilight Time - Les Brown
    Vict'ry Polka - Bing Crosby
    We'll Meet Again - Peggy Lee
    What Is This Thing Called Love? - Artie Shaw
    White Christmas - Bing Crosby
    You Always Hurt The One You Love - Mills Brothers
    You'll Never Know - Dick Hamyes
    You'll Never Walk Alone - Frank Sinatra
    Zing! Went The Strings Of My Heart - Judy Garland
    Last edited by obxgyrene; 05-20-2011 at 11:55 AM.

  3. #3
    My Mail is Forwarded Here AmateisGal's Avatar
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    I love the songs from the war. Bing Crosby's "Buy Buy Bonds" is good and we can't forget "Remember Pearl Harbor!".
    Melissa
    *************************
    Writing with Style
    World War 2 Reviews

  4. #4
    I'll Lock Up dhermann1's Avatar
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    Some specifically war related songs:

    I Don't Want to Walk Without You
    It's Been a Long Long Time
    Don't Sit Under the Apple Tree
    Any Bonds Today
    Keep 'Em Flyin'
    Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition
    Coming in On a Wing and a Prayer
    Home For a Little While
    Ven der Fuhrer Says Ve Iss der Master Race
    Johnny Got a Zero
    American Patrol
    Let's Hit Hitler Where He Lives (OK, I just stuck that in to see if you were paying attention. That was written by Felix Unger )

    Many others.
    "Hello. I'm Mr. Hardy, and this is my friend, Mr. Laurel."

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  6. #6
    I'll Lock Up V.C. Brunswick's Avatar
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    George Formby -- Out In The Middle East

    A fellow in the Forces was writing a letter
    From somewhere in the East, talk of a blinkin' feast
    He said it's just like Blackpool Sands, we play with hand grenades
    If we had known we would have brought along our buckets and spades

    Out in the Middle East
    You can have a lot of fun
    Out in the Middle East
    By the Mediterranean
    Join the Forces they used to say
    And see the world, it sounds okay
    But you see nowt but sun all day
    Out in the Middle East

    And when you're honed to it
    They never serve you wholesome hotpot
    You never get a gentle breeze
    A blowing round your topknot
    On your head your hat's like saucepan lids
    And you take off your well-I-never-dids
    It gets a bit hot round the pyramids
    Out in the Middle East

    Out in the Middle East
    You can have a lot of fun
    Out in the Middle East
    By the Mediterranean
    The ladies don't wear too much gear
    It's much too hot for that I fear
    You ought to see what we see here
    Out in the Middle East

    And our old Sergeant, a little lad who comes from Preston
    We hear him singing "Bless 'Em All" with nothing but his vest on
    Our fat old cookie Corporal Platt, he's now as thin as a cricket bat
    The sun got at his lump of fat
    Out in the Middle East
    Last edited by V.C. Brunswick; 05-20-2011 at 02:27 PM.

  7. #7
    One of the Regulars Italian-wiseguy's Avatar
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    Well, a sad one from Italy:
    Sul ponte di Perati
    (on the bridge of Perati, between Albania and Greece)

    On the bridge of Perati, a black flag:
    the mourning of the Alpini that are going to war
    the mourning of the Alpini that are going to war
    the best youth is going six feet under

    in the last car of the train there was my beloved
    she greeted my goodbye with her handkerchief
    she waved me with her handkerchief
    and sent me kisses with her mouth

    she sent me kisses with her mouth
    and the train kept going slower
    those who went, are not returned;
    they stayed on the mountains of Greece

    between Greece's mountains, there's the Voiussa
    she's became red with Alpini's blood
    a chorus of ghosts comes down the mountains
    is the chorus of the Alpini who are died

    Alpini of the Iulia division, lift your hearts
    our flag stays on the mountains of Greece
    the Alpini are writing history, but a real one,
    writing with their blood and their black feathers

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JTZwa...eature=related

    sorry for the bad translation!
    Last edited by Italian-wiseguy; 05-21-2011 at 01:32 AM.

  8. #8
    I'll Lock Up dhermann1's Avatar
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    Sung by both sides during the Battle of El Alamein: Lili Marlene.
    "Hello. I'm Mr. Hardy, and this is my friend, Mr. Laurel."

  9. #9
    Practically Family Phantomfixer's Avatar
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    [IMG][/IMG]

    I have this in 45!!! found it at a flea market. now I need to buy the cd version found here...

    http://www.amazon.com/Best-Army-Air-...ef=pd_sim_m_18

    awesome set can't go wrong folks

    BTW a nice set of tunes posted earlier.
    "It is better to be down here, wishing you were up there, than up here wishing you were down there."

  10. #10
    I'll Lock Up V.C. Brunswick's Avatar
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    Vera Lynn -- There'll Always Be An England

    Even though I'm not a Brit, of all the songs from the war, I've always found this one to be the most moving and poignant.


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