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In the Midwest, the Gales of November Keep Singin’

Every region has its folk-rock anthem, a song for a season and a certain feeling on the wind. If you’ve lived in Alabama, as I once did, you’ve heard Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Sweet Home Alabama” blasted at everything from football games to cotillions. Similarly, if you’ve spent time in the Peach State, you’ve swayed and sung and probably shed a tear to Ray Charles’ syrupy yet soulful version of “Georgia on My Mind.” And if you grew up on the Left Coast, the sunny sound of the Beach Boys’ “Good Vibrations” is likely as familiar to you as the peel of a perfect wave.

Regional anthems get murky, however, when one reaches the middle of the country, where I live. A good case can always be made for John Mellencamp’s “Jack and Diane”—that little ditty penned by a Hoosier balladeer about two kids growing up in the heartland—or Don McLean’s “American Pie,” an epic story-song about good old boys drinking whiskey and rye, but written by a suburban New Yorker. Travel northward to the upper Midwest and the Great Lakes, where Rust Belt factories give way to dark forests and cornfields yield to deep inland seas and abandoned iron mines, and Mellencamp’s rhymes about backseat debutantes and future football stars can begin to seem a little tame, and McLean’s allegorical references to jesters and crowns begin to sound a bit too arthouse.  

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