The Minstrel Boy

The first verse of The Minstrel Boy may be too nationalistic for some libertarians. But the second verse is a beautiful tribute to an unconquered spirit. There’s also a third verse (see recording #4) about peace.

I’ve gathered ten versions of The Minstrel Boy for your St. Patrick’s Day enjoyment:

1. Sung by one of my favorite singers, Paul Robeson, from whose recording I first learned it:

2. And here is a rather different version by another of my favorite singers, Roger Whittaker:

3. And here’s a very different version. Am I including it only because it comes with a Firefly video? Maybe.

4. Another well-sung version, with a drum as lone accompaniment. This one has a third verse different in spirit from the rest of the song.

5. An instrumental version that may water the eyes.

6. A high-energy take by Danny Quinn to bring you back from that.

7. I went looking for a version with an actual harp. Here’s one on just a harp (followed by Sally Gardens):

8. And here’s one with harp and vocal — and the singer’s a woman, unlike the overwhelming majority of solo singers in videos I’ve found of this song. (Never mind her politics!)

9. And finally, Enter the Haggis, for those who prefer electric guitar — or who, like me, enjoy seeing people take ownership of a familiar song by adapting it to their own style:

10. Wait, that wasn’t final. I found accordions!

Flying from Arcadia

So the government is after you, trying to wreck your life in order to intimidate others into accepting a novel theory of tax law.

You jump into an airplane and fly right out of the IRS’s grasp.

Here’s the music for that: Flying from Arcadia, by the Objectivist composer Michael Gordon Shapiro, from the movie The F-Zone.

Warning: The F-Zone contains very bad constitutional theory. But that doesn’t affect its score.

Do You Hear the People Sing?

Boublil, Schoenberg & Kretzmer, Do You Hear the People Sing? from Les Miserables (Tenth Anniversary Concert)

“The emphasis [Victor Hugo] projects is not: ‘What great values men are fighting for!’ but: ‘What greatness men are capable of, when they fight for their values!” –Ayn Rand, “Introduction to Ninety-Three.”

The heroes of Les Miserables — and most of the characters are heroes, even Javert — strive for such different values that one of its overarching themes is simply heroism. It affirms that one can pursue values and try to live up to principles under any circumstances, and it honors those who do. Les Miserables is for everyone who recognizes that there is evil in the world and wants to fight it. That’s why it was my favorite musical and one of my favorite novels before I became a libertarian — and that’s why it still is.

One of the things I like about this particular video is the combination of anger and joy on Enjolras’s face. He is doing the work he loves — the work of (on his misunderstanding of freedom) freeing his country. We should all be so angry at what’s wrong, and take such joy in trying to make it right.