The Universal Soldier

Buffy wrote this great song about the fact that soldiers come from all walks of life and that without them we would have no wars.  I liked it enough to put it here for you to listen to either with her singing it or with Donovan or a slightly newer version with another artist.  Also there is an explanation written below that you might want to read.

Here are the two YouTube links:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?list=SRbuffy+sainte-marie+universal+soldier&v=zYEsFQ_gt7c 
– By Buffy Sainte Marie (who wrote it)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A50lVLtSQik 
– By Donovan 

Here\'s an MP3  by a group called First Aid Kit

Listen Here:  (download as mp3)

Buffy Sainte Marie wrote this song in the basement of The Purple Onion coffee house in Toronto in 1963 after witnessing wounded soldiers returning from Vietnam. She has described the song as being “About individual responsibility for war and how the old feudal thinking kills us all.”

Though not a hit for her, it was covered by British folk singer Donovan in 1965 on an EP titled The Universal Soldier, which was a success and bought attention to the song.  In the US it was released as a single peaking at #53. The song became an anthem of the Vietnam Peace movement.

Sainte-Marie naively sold the publishing rights to this song for a dollar to a man she met one night at the Gaslight Café in Greenwich Village who wrote a contract on a napkin. She recalled to The Guardian July 31, 2009: “Ten years later I bought it back for 25,000 bucks – the good news is that I had 25,000 bucks.”

Speaking to Bruce Pollock about this song, Sainte-Marie said: “I wanted it to get people out of their classrooms and onto their feet. But certain things I have to say are pitched at too high a level to bring any lasting benefit to as many people as I would like to bring it to. If I have something of myself that gets me off, that’s brought me through hard times and that refreshes and nourishes me, what good does it do if I’m not smart enough to get it to the people?  And I don’t mean only the people who are like me, I mean all the people. That’s communication. There’s no sense being a closet genius. It doesn’t do me any good to keep the medicine in the bottle.”

Folk singer Donovan covered this song in 1965 for his Universal Soldier EP and included it on his second album, Fairytale