Russian: Красная Армия всех сильней | |
English Title: | The Red Army Is the Strongest |
Composer: | Samuel Pokrass |
Sound Title: | Vocal |
"The Red Army Is the Strongest", popularly known by its incipit "White Army, Black Baron", is a Soviet march song written by and composed by Samuel Pokrass. Written in 1920, during the Russian Civil War, the song was meant as a combat anthem for the Red Army.
The immediate context of the song is the final Crimean offensive in the Russian Civil War by Pyotr Wrangel's troops in July 1920. The second verse refers to the call to a final effort in the Crimea published by the Revolutionary Military Council in Pravda on 10 July.
While the song has a separate refrain, the verses repeat the claim that "The Red Army is stronger than all", which came to be the song's conventional title.The first verse of the song reads as follows:
"Black Baron" was a nickname of Wrangel's, from his alleged penchant for wearing (and dressing some of his elite units in) black uniforms. Wrangel's offensive was indeed halted by the Red Army, and Wrangel and his troops were forced to retreat to Crimea in November 1920, pursued by both Red and Black cavalry and infantry. Wrangel and the remains of his army were evacuated from Crimea to Constantinople on 14 November 1920.
The song's melody is possibly inspired by Eastern European Jewish folk-music, as one passage is also heard in the Yiddish song "The Little Sack of Coal", whose opening bars possibly also inspire those of the Italian protest song Bella Ciao.[1] [2]
The song became popular in the early Soviet Union. It was sung in 1923 at the rally in Leningrad against the Curzon Line, the "British seas" acquiring new significance in view of Lord Curzon's ultimatum. In a letter to a school for blind students in the Vologda region, Nadezhda Krupskaya, wife of Vladimir Lenin, named it as her favourite songs alongside The Internationale. The phrase "from the taiga to the British Seas" became something of an idiomatic expression used by other authors, e.g. by V. A. Lugovsky in his poem Песни о ветре ("Song of the Wind", 1926).
In its early oral transmission during 1920 - 1925, the song underwent some variation.Gorinshtejn later recalled that his original lyrics had four or five verses, and that his original refrain was slightly different from the received version (reading Russian: Пусть воин красный / Сжимает властно /Свой штык упорною рукой. / Ведь все должны мы / Неудержимо /Идти в последний, смертный бой).
The song was first printed in 1925, and subsequently published under the titles of Russian: От тайги до британских морей ("From the Taiga to the British Seas"), Russian: Красная Армия ("Red Army") and Russian: Красноармейская ("[Song] of the Red Army"). It was not until 1937 that the conventional title had settled on Russian: Красная Армия всех сильней ("The Red Army is the Strongest"). During the 1920s to 1940s, the song was reproduced without indication of its authors. It was only in the 1950s that musicologist A. Shilov established the authorship of Gorinshtejn and Pokrass.
The Russian song was adopted by the Chapaev Battalion of the International Brigades in the Spanish Civil War, and it was allegedly sung in a Nazi torture chamber by Czech communist Julius Fučík. Alternative Russian lyrics were set to the tune during World War II, e.g. Russian: Всем нам свобода и честь дорога (Pyotr Belyi 1941).[3]
In Red Vienna, the tune was used for the song "Die Arbeiter von Wien" (The Workers of Vienna) highlighting those fighting for a bright future of the proletariat.
The tune was also used for communist songs in other languages, including Weimar Germany in the 1920s by German Communists. An early German version with the incipit German: Weißes Gesindel und adlige Brut ("White riffraff, noble scum") was a free translation of the original lyrics:[4]
A popular variant of the song, "Die Arbeiter von Wien" was written by in 1927, following the July Revolt. It became popular through its use by Austrian socialists (see also Republikanischer Schutzbund) who fought the Dollfuss regime in the short-lived Austrian Civil War in February 1934.[5] The first verse of Brügel's version reads:
The German version was further adapted in Turkish, as Avusturya İşçi Marşı ("Austrian Workers' March"). The first verse of Turkish version reads: