Music Woman: Hartselle teacher's composition selected for Auburn halftime show

Aug. 21—For years Stephanie Porter mulled over the right words to memorialize and honor veterans who served the country. Last year, the song, "So We Can Be Free," debuted at F.E. Burleson Elementary School's Veterans Day program.

This year, the song will be performed in front of tens of thousands of fans at Auburn University's Jordan-Hare Stadium.

"It's a little bit surreal to think a crowd of that size will be hearing a song that I wrote," said Porter, who is in her 21st year of education and her eighth year of teaching music at Hartselle's F.E. Burleson.

The 380-member Auburn University Marching Band, under the direction of Corey Spurlin, marching band director and associate director of bands at Auburn, will feature "So We Can Be Free" during the Veterans Day-themed halftime show on Nov. 12.

Singing Porter's lyrics will be the Lee County All-Star Elementary Choir composed of elementary school students.

Porter dedicated the song in memory and honor of relatives and a close friend who served in the military.

"I'd been thinking about a song for Veterans Day for several years. We had gone through a lot of the patriotic music out there, and I wanted to do something special and something different," Porter said. "I wanted the song to not only thank the veterans who enlisted, I wanted the song also to recognize the veterans who were forced into the service through the draft."

During the halftime show, the Lee County All-Star Elementary Choir will sing these lyrics to the abridged song, "It all started with a call, a call to serve our country. We children sing to you today and we thank you for your service so we can be free. We pray for peace. We wish you hope. We may never really understand what you've done. With all our hearts, we wish you love and we thank you for being brave so we can be free."

To write the song, Porter sifted through a file on her phone containing an ongoing list of possible lyrics. After penning the words, which took 2 1/2 months, she composed the melody and handed the song off to her husband, Shane Porter, who created the backing track.

"My husband is the one who made it sound really good. He added bagpipes and all that stuff," Porter said.

A professional musician, Shane Porter has written music for jazz, concert and marching bands and performed with Wycliffe Gordon, Wynton Marsalis, Dizzy Gillespie, Stevie Wonder, Kenny Rogers, The Temptations and Four Tops.

Ever since the couple married in 2015, Shane Porter has encouraged his wife to create and compose music.