Songs from the Dead: 10-Minute Histories of Legendary Songs

Susanna Meets Venus: The Uncomfortable History Behind a Ridiculously Catchy Hook

May 25, 2026·8 min
Episode Description from the Publisher

Oh! Susanna is one of the most famous American songs ever written. It is also one of the strangest.Written by Stephen Foster in 1847 and published in 1848, the song began in the blackface minstrel tradition, with racist language that cannot be brushed aside. Yet over time it was copied, pirated, cleaned up, rewritten, taught to children, sung by folk revivalists, and separated from the uglier parts of its own history.This episode follows that uncomfortable journey: from minstrel song to campfire standard, from Pete Seeger and James Taylor to The Big Three’s The Banjo Song, and then into Shocking Blue’s global hit Venus. From there, the melody keeps mutating: Tom Jones, Moog instrumentals, Bananarama, club remixes, razor commercials, Eurovision, and rock covers.Along the way, the episode asks what happens when a song with a cruel origin becomes irresistibly catchy, endlessly reusable, and almost impossible to kill.

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