A Walk in the Light Green

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A Walk in the Light Green is the most widely recognised song produced by Australian folk group Redgum. The song was released in 1983 on the live album Caught on the Act (Warner Bros label), which hit the number one in Australia, and the album then stayed in the top forty for four months. John Schumann wrote the song based on experiences he heard from veterans.

The song is sung as a first person account of a typical Australian infantry soldier's experience in the Vietnam War, from training in Australia to first hand exposure to military operations and combat, and ultimately his return home disillusioned, psychologically scarred and possibly suffering from the effects of agent orange.

As the title does not feature in the lyrics the song is much better known as I was only Nineteen, or I was only Nineteen (A Walk in the Light Green).

[edit] Lyrics

The lyrics include words, terms and placenames particular to Australia and Vietnam.

Pedants may have issues with the line Townsville lined the footpath as we marched down to the quay. The Australian Army flew to Vietnam, although this could be paying homage to Eric Bogle's And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda. Also the lyrics Frankie kicked a mine the day mankind kicked the moon, God help me, he was going home in June perhaps gives the wrong impression about Frankie's movements, as Neil Armstrong landed on the moon in July.

[edit] Covers

When the song was first released Rick Melbourne, a breakfast radio announcer, produced a parody version of the song, with the lyrics God help me, she told me she was sixteen.

In 2005 a hip hop version of the song (called I was only Nineteen) was produced by The Herd, voted in at #18 in the 2005 Triple J Hottest 100 playlist.

[edit] See also