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"A Song for The Heartland©"
Lyrics by M.S. McKenzie | Performed by American Storyteller Music & is Protected by Copyright

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Sample Track ( KEY: | BPM: ): A Song for The Heartland (Country Version I)

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Sample Track ( KEY: | BPM: ): A Song for The Heartland (Country Version II)

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Sample Track ( KEY: | BPM: ): A Song for The Heartland (Bluegrass Indie Rock Version III)

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Sample Track ( KEY: | BPM: ): A Song for The Heartland (Indie Rock Version Version IV)

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Sample Track ( KEY: | BPM: ): A Song for The Heartland (Indie Rock Version V)

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Sample Track ( KEY: | BPM: ): A Song for The Heartland (Love Ballad Version VI)

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Sample Track ( KEY: | BPM: ): A Song for The Heartland (Adult Contemporary Version VII)

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Original Song Lyrics: Written by M. S. McKenzie, All Rights Reserved

"A Song for The Heartland"

[Duet]
[Intro: Soft Acoustic Intro: gentle strumming, birdsong in background]
[female voice]
Out where the La Crosse bends and the geese take flight
Where red barns and silos rust under the golden light
We built our life in such a simple place
But now it’s just work....
...and now it's time we have to chase

[Verse 1: male voice ]
I wake to the clash of steel and the oil rig’s thrum
My Wisconsin home is gone: no more morning sun
I thumb through pictures of home on my phone in my hand
Dreamin’ of our farmer’s porch and the smell of fertile land
[female voice]
You’re so far away my love: and the corn can’t wait
I plant the grain and pray for rain: I navigate our fate

[Chorus: male and female voices harmonize]
This is a song for the heartland, where our roots run deep
Where our love is sown in silence while the rivers weep
We hold on through the distance: through the sweat and the strain
For the promise of what spring may bring: an end to our pain

[Verse 2: female voice]
The kids all ask where Daddy’s gone this week
I tell them “He’s chasing after gold in Alberta’s heat”
But all I can see is your smile in the evening sun
And wished to god I could kiss your lips…
…before this day was done

[Instrumental Break: Fiddle and Harmonica interlude with soft ambient Mississippi River sounds]

[Verse 3: male voice]
I sent off my pay, sealed with a note filled with love
I tell the kids that I’m counting the days and the stars above
A bright harvest moon lights up the whole countryside
I sang our song today, but the words felt hollow inside

[Bridge: both male and female voices in harmony]
We are but distant hearts, yet bound together like vines
Through the rains of spring and lonely winter time
Out here where the blue herons call, and bald eagles soar
Sometimes I wonder if our love is strong enough to endure

[Verse 4: male voice]
I’m keeping strong, though the silence is so loud
My body aches for your love, but the heart is proud
Hold on tight to our dreams, my love, just a little bit more
Before long, my boots will find our old front door

[Chorus: both voices harmonize]
This is a song for the heartland, where our roots run deep
Where our love is sown in silence while the rivers weep
We hold on through distance: through the sweat and the strain
For the promise of what spring may bring: an end to our pain

[Outro: male voice]
When tundra swans return and the skies turn blue
I’ll be back home again in the heartland...
...I’ll be back home to you
[Fading harmonies with soft piano and acoustic guitar]

Song Description

Duet: Country-folk ballad with Americana tones
BPM: 70-80
Style: Acoustic country-folk, heartfelt and narrative-driven, with layered harmonies and natural sound textures
"Song for the Heartland" is a tender, emotionally rich duet that captures the trials and quiet strength of a long-distance love shaped by rural life, seasonal labor, and deep Midwestern roots. Set between the farmland of western Wisconsin and the distant oilfields of Alberta, the song unfolds like a heartfelt letter between two lovers separated by necessity but bound by enduring devotion.

The intro begins with soft acoustic guitar strumming, laced with birdsong and ambient outdoor sounds that place the listener in the rolling hills near the La Crosse River. A female voice opens the song, painting a picture of pastoral life: red barns, geese in flight, and days now governed more by duty than by dreams.

In the first verse, the male voice enters from afar, bringing the stark contrast of industrial labor camps and homesickness into focus. Through alternating verses, both voices share intimate perspectives: she speaks of tending fields and raising children alone, while he expresses yearning and fatigue from life on the road. Their emotional worlds are bridged by shared memories and a mutual longing for reunion.

The chorus is a heartfelt harmony: an ode to the resilience of rural families and the love that endures between the rows of corn and across state lines. It’s a tribute to the silent sacrifices made in the name of hope, family, and a better future.

A fiddle and harmonica interlude, enriched with the ambient sounds of the Mississippi River, serves as a musical reflection, carrying the listener through the emotional current of longing and waiting.

In the later verses and the bridge, the song digs deeper into the strain of absence: missed milestones, unanswered questions from children, the weariness of distance: but always returns to the unshakable foundation of love. Even as doubts flicker in the lyrics ("I wonder if our love is strong enough to endure"), there’s a profound sense of loyalty and faith.

The final verse brings a message of hope and reunion: he promises his return, and the listener can feel the approach of spring: both literally and metaphorically. The outro, led by the male voice, gently lands the song back home, invoking the migratory return of tundra swans as a symbol of coming renewal and reconnection.

Themes:

  • Rural perseverance and the dignity of labor
  • Long-distance love and emotional sacrifice
  • The unbreakable bond between land, family, and heart
  • Nature as both a setting and emotional metaphor (e.g., swans, rivers, seasons)

Ideal instrumentation:

  • Acoustic guitar, upright bass
  • Fiddle, harmonica, soft piano accents
  • Subtle field recordings: birdsong, wind, distant river sounds
  • Gentle layered vocal harmonies in choruses and bridge