Phil Ochs
Phil Ochs
Phil Ochs
Phil Ochs
Phil Ochs
Phil Ochs
Phil Ochs
Phil Ochs
Phil Ochs
Phil Ochs
Phil Ochs
Phil Ochs
Phil Ochs
Phil Ochs
Phil Ochs
“Too Many Martyrs' also known as "The Ballad of Medgar Evers” is a track on Phil Ochs debut album “All the News that’s Fit to Sing” released in 1964.
The song is lamenting the loss of thousands of people of color in the United States. Ochs was one of several artists speaking out about civil rights...
[Verse 1]
In the state of Mississippi many years ago
A boy of fourteen years got a taste of Southern law
He saw his friend a-hangin', his color was his crime
And the blood upon his jacket put a brand upon his mind
[Chorus]
Too many martyrs and too many dead
Too many lies, too many empty words were said
Too many times for too many angry men
Oh, let it never be again
[Verse 2]
His name was Medgar Evers and he walked his road alone
Like Emmett Till and thousands more whose names we'll never know
They tried to burn his home and they beat him to the ground
But deep inside they both knew what it took to bring him down
[Chorus]
Too many martyrs and too many dead
Too many lies, too many empty words were said
Too many times for too many angry men
Oh, let it never be again
[Verse 3]
The killer waited by his home hidden by the night
As Evers stepped out from his car into the rifle sight
He slowly squeezed the trigger, the bullet left his side
It struck the heart of every man when Evers fell and died
[Chorus]
Too many martyrs and too many dead
Too many lies, too many empty words were said
Too many times for too many angry men
Oh, let it never be again
[Verse 4]
And they laid him in his grave while the bugle sounded clear
Laid him in his grave when the victory was near
While we waited for the future for freedom through the land
The country gained a killer and the country lost a man
[Chorus]
Too many martyrs and too many dead
Too many lies, too many empty words were said
Too many times for too many angry men
Oh, let it never be again
Oh, let it never be again
Too Many Martyrs was written by Phil Ochs & Bob Gibson.
Too Many Martyrs was produced by Jac Holzman & Paul A. Rothchild.