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From The Land of Sky-Blue Water
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    From The Land of Sky-Blue Water

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    "From the Land of the Sky-Blue Water"
    SkyBlueWater1909.jpeg
    Sheet music cover, 1909
    Song
    Published 1909
    Composer(s) Charles Wakefield Cadman
    Lyricist(s) Nelle Richmond Eberhart

    "From the Land of the Sky-Blue Water" (1909) is a popular song composed by Charles Wakefield Cadman. He based it on an Omaha love song collected by Alice C. Fletcher. "Sky-blue water" or "clear blue water" is one possible translation of "Mnisota," the name for the Minnesota River in the Dakota language.

    Composition

    Cadman's collaborator, Nelle Richmond Eberhart, wrote a poem as the lyrics:

    From the Land of Sky-blue Water,
    They brought a captive maid,
    And her eyes they are lit with lightnings,
    Her heart is not afraid!

    But I steal to her lodge at dawning,
    I woo her with my flute;
    She is sick for the Sky-blue Water,
    The captive maid is mute.

    The song became widely popular after noted American soprano Lillian Nordica performed it in concert in 1909.

    Representation in other media

    • An arrangement of the song for harp and flute is performed by Harpo Marx in the 1940 Marx Bros. film, Go West.
    • Blanche DuBois in A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams sings a part of the song in Scene Two while she is in the bathroom.
    • The first line, "From the Land of Sky-blue Water", is sung by the Three Stooges in the film The Three Stooges In Orbit (1962), at about the three-quarter point in the film, before they launch into space for the first time.
    • The Hamm's Brewery used a version of the lyrics- "From the land of sky blue waters/ comes the beer refreshing" - as an advertising jingle through the mid-twentieth century, accompanied by pseudo-Native American drumming.

    Bibliography

    External links




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