Christina Aguilera national anthem: why she flubbed it
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Christina Aguilera made some star-spangled flubs singing America's national anthem at the Super Bowl. Did you catch her performance, or is that when you raced to the kitchen to replenish the guacamole? She mumbled some lines and moved others around to places in the song where they shouldn鈥檛 be.
One thing is sure: She was no Whitney Houston.
Remember Ms. Houston鈥檚 performance of "The Star-Spangled Banner" at the Super Bowl in 1991? Back then, the US armed forces had not participated in major combat for many years 鈥 but the air-assault portion of the Gulf War had just started. The nation was in a highly patriotic mood. Houston, who has had her own challenges since then, gave an emotional rendition of the song, and it remains one of her career highlights.
So why didn鈥檛 the Christina Aguilera national anthem match Houston's? We鈥檝e got two personal opinions as to what happened.
First, she was trying too hard. Way too hard. She appeared to be auditioning for the part of Aretha Franklin in a biopic. She was all gesture and tremolo, like an R & B diva. Which she isn鈥檛.
Second, those lyrics are among the most difficult things any performer ever has to sing. 鈥淥鈥檈r the ramparts we watched ...鈥? Why are they singing about people looking at Dodge pickup accessories? (OK, that鈥檚 over the top, but you get our point.) Francis Scott Key was not exactly William Wordsworth. In the third stanza, he rhymed 鈥渂attle鈥檚 confusion鈥 with 鈥渇oul footsteps鈥 pollution,鈥 for instance. We figure he was running out of ideas at that point.
Aguilera鈥檚 mistakes may produce some good, however, if they bring more attention to "The Star-Spangled Banner" and the fact that 2014 marks the bicentennial of its writing during the War of 1812.
In fact, on March 3 of this year, the National Park Service will open a brand-new visitor center 鈥 just in time for the undoubted flood of tourists the bicentennial will bring. (Maybe they can get you-know-who to sing you-know-what at the opening! She could make up for the Super Bowl performance that way.)
Down the Patapsco River from Fort McHenry, out toward the entrance to the Chesapeake Bay, there is a star-spangled buoy that marks the place where Key was interned on a British ship and watched the rockets bursting in air that inspired the national anthem in the first place. It鈥檚 one of the least-visited historic sites in America, mostly because you have to hire a boat to get there.
It鈥檚 just under a bridge that carries an interstate highway over the river. That bridge is officially known as the Francis Scott Key Bridge. But locals call it The Car-Strangled Spanner.
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