“Waiting for the Robert E. Lee” is an American folk song, ragtime, and popular song written by Lewis F. Muir and L. Wolfe Gilbert in 1912. Music by the Stardust Voices
@@HawaiianBall Oh Susanna does sound like a folk song, but you're right, by the usual definition it isn't one. (I'll copy wikipedia here and ask: widely accepted *by whom*?) And Waiting for the Robert E Lee sounds no more like a folk song than Alexander's Ragtime Band or Carolina in the Morning or the Oceana Roll--by a looser definition, all the pop songs of yesterday will be "folk songs" tomorrow.
@@Christopher-hb1wxAccording to Wikipedia, many minstrel songs (“Oh! Susanna” was one) have become folk songs, most having removed the original minstrel dialect. Other well known folk songs are Camptown Races, Old Folks at Home, and Old Kentucky Home. Note: I acknowledge my mistake for mislabeling “Waiting for the Robert E. Lee” as a folk song
@@HawaiianBall Great, but what makes these Stephen Foster songs "folk" songs? Why not just call them what the are, Stephen Foster songs? "Folk" makes them sound anonymous.
I'm related to Robert E LEE on my mom's side 🇺🇸
I love this song, we don't have those one in France.
I love this song. I never heard it before now, but I love it.
Me too! 😊
My daddy sang this to me and my brothers back when we were little ❤❤
Прекрасная песня старой доброй Америки!
This kind of seems like… *Wilsonian.*
Roosevelt 1912
@@tophatgaming1873 Onboard with you on that.
I'm a Taft man, myself.
A song written by specific people in a specific year is not a "folk" song.
By that definition “Oh Susanna” is not a folk song. (which it is widely accepted as). But I’ll change the title anyways.
@@HawaiianBall Oh Susanna does sound like a folk song, but you're right, by the usual definition it isn't one. (I'll copy wikipedia here and ask: widely accepted *by whom*?) And Waiting for the Robert E Lee sounds no more like a folk song than Alexander's Ragtime Band or Carolina in the Morning or the Oceana Roll--by a looser definition, all the pop songs of yesterday will be "folk songs" tomorrow.
@@Christopher-hb1wxAccording to Wikipedia, many minstrel songs (“Oh! Susanna” was one) have become folk songs, most having removed the original minstrel dialect. Other well known folk songs are Camptown Races, Old Folks at Home, and Old Kentucky Home. Note: I acknowledge my mistake for mislabeling “Waiting for the Robert E. Lee” as a folk song
@@HawaiianBall Great, but what makes these Stephen Foster songs "folk" songs? Why not just call them what the are, Stephen Foster songs? "Folk" makes them sound anonymous.