National Anthem/Awesome Music

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  • Everything listed at Ear Worm/Music/National Anthems.
  • The national anthem of Mexico. Perhaps it's because it oozes nationalism without the lyrics.
  • "Indonesia Raya a.k.a. Great Indonesia". A truly majestic anthem, especially when played by an orchestra.
  • "Rule Britannia/Britannia rules the waaaaaaves/Britons never, never, never shall be slaaaaaves!" Even if it isn't technically the national anthem, it's lively, stirring, and patriotic to wake up to in the morning.
    • Additional heights of awesome are reached when Jeremiah Clarke's "Prince of Denmark's March" is overlaid onto it, as was the case with the now-defunct BBC Radio 4 Theme.
    • The actual anthem for Britain, "God Save the Queen" is awesome on its own, as is England's, "Land of Hope and Glory".
      • "Jerusalem", used by some English sporting teams, was composed by Hubert Parry and orchestrated by Edward Elgar. How can it not be awesome? It was adapted from William Blake's poetry during World War I and the King himself said he preferred it! A demonstration of how good it is? Hearing it being sung by 5 000 people.
      • The tune of "God Save the Queen" was used as the national anthem of a number of countries, including Liechtenstein and (formerly) Switzerland. It was also, in the form of "Heil dir im Siegerskranz" the Royal Anthem of the Kingdom of Prussia.
    • Just the two or so lines that John Lennon sings in Help! is enough to get it lodged in your head. Amazingly catchy national song.
  • The Ankh-Morpork National anthem (the only written anthem which includes muttering, since no one ever remembers the second verse).
  • In the land of Everything Trying to Kill You, it has to be "I Am Australian".
    • Tragically, the actual Australian anthem, "Advance Australia Fair" is probably one of the most boring, uninspiring anthems around. But sung by Adam Hills and set to the tune of "Working Class Man" by Jimmy Barnes? Very awesome.
    • "Waltzing Matilda" is often referred to as the the unofficial national anthem of Australia and with good reason.
  • Canada may not be the first country that comes to mind when it comes to kick-ass music, but its national anthem can be quite majestic. .
  • The Greek National Anthem is pretty good too. Defines Greece and the people. The original one is over 100 verses long!
  • The Israeli national anthem "Hatikvah". Most national anthems sound good when sung aloud, possibly with a backing orchestra. How many sound just as awesome when sung quietly?
    • While we're on Israeli music, "Kan Noladti" has got to be the sweetest little song: "Here, you're with me as well and here are all my thousand friends. And after 2000 years, an end to my wandering!"
    • Israel's unofficial anthem, "Yerushalaim Shel Zahav", in English "Jerusalem of Gold". Best known for its treatment at the end of Schindler's List, but this performance by Ofra Haza is simply beautiful.
  • "Das Deutschlandlied", out of all currently used national anthems, though the original form of "Gott erhalte Franz den Kaiser" is better. It is also the only national anthem with a tune by a composer of the first rank, Joseph Haydn.
    • Which is a bit funny, as Haydn was an Austrian who spent most of his life working for Hungarians...
    • The East German anthem also qualifies as crowning music.
  • "The Star-Spangled Banner". Unfortunately it gets stretched beyond all recognition when rendered into pop form.
    • How about Jimi Hendrix's version? If that ain't Crowning Music of Awesome...
    • Sung a cappella by a choir can make your spine tingle. Something spine-tingling about it without backing. When you take into account the lyrics - the anxiety of not knowing if your country and your fellow men have survived through the night, and then that sight of seeing your flag rising higher and flying and realizing that yes, everything is alright... it's pretty chilling stuff.
    • Fun fact: The tune comes from the drinking song for the Anacreontic Society, an upper-crust British society carried forward into the U.S. colonies. The lyrics to the Anacreontic Song are couched in imagery from Classical Mythology, but the gist basically boils down to "I'll show you how to get laid by getting women drunk."
    • Speaking of performances of the Star-Spangled Banner, many have butchered it but there are few that are just exemplary. The first is Marvin Gaye's soulful performance at the 1983 NBA All-Star Game, backed with only a drum machine, the second being Whitney Houston's showstopper at Super Bowl XXV which became a nationwide hit single and the Dixie Chicks glorious three-piece harmony at Super Bowl XXXVII.
    • Here is a heavenly performance of The Star-Spangled Banner by the Massachusetts All-State Choir. Choir members were crying while singing.
    • This is how it was meant to be heard, sung by the choirs of the US Servce Academies. Absolutely beautiful.
  • The Polish national anthem "Mazurek Dąbrowskiego" is really, really awesome.
    • Here is a version with English subtitles. It's already awesome if you don't know what the words mean, even more so if you do.
  • "La Marseillaise". Don't believe me? Just look.
  • The Soviet National anthem. Defines epic. One of the few things Russia kept after The Great Politics Mess-Up. Regarded as the best national anthem, ever.
    • That tune has had no less than 4 sets of official lyrics[1]. The fact that the tune remained unchanged each time attests to its awesomeness:
    1. It was the Bolshevik Party anthem in the 1930s.
    2. Stalin adopted it as the official Soviet National Anthem in 1944, with lyrics praising him.
    3. Breznev did away with all references to Stalin, and all references to World War II, in 1977.
    4. After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the Russian Federation got rid of the anthem altogether, but public sentiment pressured Vladimir Putin to reinstate it (with a completely Communism-free set of lyrics) in 2000.

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  1. most of which, regrettably, had all the poetry of the section on tractor production from the last Five-Year Plan, making it a rare case where not understanding the language actually added to the experience