Livin’ In America by James Brown. Saw him do that a few years before he died, and he had a couple of red, white, and blue bikini clad dancers gyrating on stage behind him. I’ve never felt more patriotic in my whole life.
Because the difference between the lowest notes and the highest notes is a wider stretch than in most popularly sung songs. Many people don’t have a vocal range that stretches up and down enough to include both extremes. Especially when everyone has to sing together in the same key, a key which may well cut even more useful range out of some people’s voices that aren’t suited to that key.
Any particular reason why everybody has to sing it in the same key? I’ve got some musical education, but it was in the marching band, where the important lesson was “Throw enough instruments at it, and skills matters not as much”
It’s not “God shared his grace with thee”. It’s “God shed his grace on thee”. You’re asking for divine blessing on the land, not claiming that it’s under divine protection.
I made a pick but I would almost prefer either “Bonnie Blue Flag”, “Fish Cheer” or Charlie Daniels “In America”. Let’s face it, we’re the United States of America. We’re going to piss off a big part of the world and large parts of our own population whatever we do. So lets do it with a catchy tune to march by.
Sounds like the concept behind the Portsmouth Sinfonia.
To answer your question: Because if people sing the same thing in various random keys at the same time, it majorly sounds like crap. The same goes for singing off key. It’s just something that nobody wants to have happen. Unless your name is Lucille Ball and you’re making comedy out of singing off key. And even then, she used that shtick sparingly.
The reason it’s called hard to sing isn’t because the melody is hard to learn–it’s because it doesn’t fit in a lot of people range. The average untrained voice range is just a hair over an octave, and expands to about two octaves with minimal voice training. I’m unaware of any other types of music lessons that would help with range.
So obviously what they would need is voice lessons, so that’s what I assumed you meant. And, while I can respect the idea that said lessons should be universal, until they are, I can’t in good conscience tell people they have to have them to sing the anthem.