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Signals, calls and marches: Surveying the songs at Hands Off!

The music and the words.

Throngs of protesters clogged Tremont Street in Boston, which meant it was hard to walk away from the guy singing “We Shall Overcome” into a megaphone. He was earnest and tuneless and no one joined him in his borrowed aural glory. We were walking from Boston Common toward the plaza at City Hall and while spirits were high the soundtrack was lacking. “We need a marching band, to give people rhythm” the person next to me said, thinking of the street bands that play Honk! Fest in neighboring Somerville every year. Somerville, where Rümeysa Öztürk was kidnapped by ICE Gestapo two weeks ago, one of the many injustices we were protesting at the Hands Off! gathering on Saturday.

But when we got to the plaza, lo and behold: a marching band! Or rather the Good Trouble Brass Band, warming up the stage before the speeches and absolutely ripping through “Which Side Are You On?” I am a naysayer by nature and find a lot of protesting chants corny or, worse, pointless but this is mostly my problem. What is important is a mass of people finding a voice and creating momentum, because force doesn’t care if it’s corny. And a good song can channel and enhance that force. The rising and falling chorus of “Which Side Are You On?”, refusing to find resolution, always gets me pumped even when it is purely musical and without words.

The words that followed were not always as inspiring. The worldwide rallying cry of “Hands Off!” is great, simple to shout and aggressive as hell — not a plea but a demand. Activist and politician speakers used it as a call and response and the catharsis of yelling in unison with tens of thousands of people works just as well for political rallies as it does for concerts. But while many speakers had the rhythm, their tone was off. Elected officials talked about how the people need to lead and vote and show their energy, and I haven’t been to a lot of protests but I have been to a lot of campaign events and I know the fundraising tone when I hear it — an exhortation for support and an emphasis on platitudes and promises more than direct action.

There was another musical performance halfway through the rally, a good idea to energize the crowd through participation. Unfortunately, the choral group BVOCAL didn’t have the greatest sound support or set list. “We Shall Not Be Moved” was reworded into “We Shall Not Be Ruled,” an easy enough substitution that didn’t account for the audience not knowing half the lyrics even as the tune was simple enough to hum. The second song … I have no idea what it was and no one around me did either; the conductor was attempting to teach a small city’s worth of people an entire chorus of lyrics and melody that they’d never heard before and you could see everyone regretfully tuning out. It’s hard to be in harmony when you don’t know the words. In a cold drizzle the choir sang forcefully, but by themselves.

The megaphone guy had earlier called for us to speak out “in the name of humanity,” but I’ve never met humanity, at least not on the streets of Boston. I did see a ton of people, though, more than nearly any concert I’ve been to. The best speeches returned again and again to the (anti-)royal we, embodying a city and an attitude for all and rousing the spirit behind this rally, to be visible in resistance and in that visibility give yourself and others the strength to keep fighting. But though the crowd cheered for “igniting energy” and “telling Washington” and all the other abstract encouragements from the stage, to me this felt like the other side of the choir’s missed connection — here I was all too familiar with the words and wasn’t moved by the tune. “You know who’s going to make our country better? All of you,” another elected official told the crowd, and that sounds inspirational and evasive at the same time. I wanted to ask the politicians who were so eager to solicit our support, where are you in us? Where are you in the halls of power, where we put you to make a difference? Which side are you on?

Like any big show, the headliner was teased throughout the undercard acts. We know you’ll stick around, the Dropkick Murphys are here! And as the rain really started to come down the band came out on stage, with singer Ken Casey maintaining a proud Boston tradition of cursing in public as he described how the huge turnout “warms our fuckin’ heart.” And like any big show, the headliner made sure to play the new song before the hits, but the melody of “Who’ll Stand With Us?” was easier to pick up than other vocals of the day. They closed with their classic “Worker’s Song” but also, in a shoutout to the Good Trouble Brass Band earlier, played their own version of “Which Side Are You On.” It’d be great to say everyone sang along, it wouldn’t be true. But a lot of us did, belting out the chorus when Casey thrust the mic out at the audience, and if you listen you can hear us in a clip filmed from the front of the stage. You don’t have to listen hard at all to hear the roar of approval at the end of the song.

It is easier for me to feel the value of community in a song instead of a speech. You can only listen to the latter but the former is open, the way a rally is open to any and all signs no matter how cheesy they may be. It’s the combination that counts — here is my voice, here is yours, let’s put them together to feel their strength and break out of our feelings of powerlessness. They got the guns but we got the numbers, as another song says. There was no encore at the end of Saturday’s show, but the tune stayed in my head. I’m ready to sing it again.