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Jan 02, 2026

“Your Voice Saves Us” — Joan Baez and Bruce Springsteen’s Soul-Shaking Duet of The Ghost of Tom Joad and We Shall Overcome at the Lincoln Memorial Ignites 50,000 Candlelit Voices, A Defiant Cry for Unity, Justice, and Hope in a Fractured America

In a fractured world, their voices remind us of what  music can still mean—truth, resistance, and the heartbeat of a people.

Two Icons, Two Lifetimes of Music and Protest

When Joan Baez and Bruce Springsteen appear together, it’s never just another moment in music history—it’s a reckoning. Two artists forged by fire, shaped by unrest, and sustained by conviction, they have spent decades using song not just as art but as action.

Baez, the clear-voiced conscience of the 1960s folk movement, sang at civil rights marches and antiwar rallies, her  guitar echoing through generations who learned that nonviolence could carry a melody. Springsteen, the gravel-throated bard of working-class America, built anthems out of sweat, sorrow, and dreams deferred.

Together, they don’t just represent different eras. They embody a single thread that runs through American resistance—from Selma to Standing Rock, from Kent State to Uvalde.


A Moment Bigger Than Music

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