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Iraq is the new Vietnam as pop protest returns to the airwaves

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acmavm Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-08-04 11:40 AM
Original message
Iraq is the new Vietnam as pop protest returns to the airwaves
http://www.sundayherald.com/43981

Rock’s conscience awakens for the first time in 30 years and Bush is the alarm clock
By Torcuil Crichton

<snip>
For the first time since the Vietnam war the protest song is back. But this time it’s personal. Whereas protest songs of the Vietnam era were broadly anti-war in their message, the new batch of political tunes rising up the American Billboard chart are focused directly on Iraq and aimed at getting George Bush out of office.

“For better or worse, Bush has stirred up a lot of vitriol in the music community,” said David Browne, the head music critic for Entertainment Weekly.

“There’s always been protest songs against presidents, but they have never been near to the level of venom you’re seeing now.”

<snip>
Ahead of the October tour, anti-war protest music has already broken through to mainstream America despite the reluctance of radio stations to promote hard-hitting material, and a diverse range of musicians are slipping into an anti-war mood.

<snip>

It will, of course, be attacked by the Republicans as another liberal circus showing how out of touch John Kerry is with mainstream America. With Bruce Springsteen onside, a performer whose songs and persona embody earthy, home town America, making that charge stick won’t be that easy.

-MORE-

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efhmc Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-08-04 11:46 AM
Response to Original message
1. Art is always first to reveal the thoughts of the masses.
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rainy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-08-04 11:59 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. Awesome article posted here at DU months ago about art
Artistic Sign Language: Symbols of the Coming Bush Fall
By Bernard Weiner
The Crisis Papers

Feb. 14, 2003 - LOS ANGELES (crisispapers.org) -- Sign is symbol, symbol is sign. Consider:

Colin Powell goes to the United Nations so that the missile attacks on Baghdad and Basra can begin -- and, in the lobby of that grand building, Picasso's "Guernica" painting, which depicts the horrific results of the Nazi bombing of that Spanish town, is covered over prior to Powell's arrival. No use embarrassing the US by reminding folks of what's in store for Iraqi civilians.
John Ashcroft, in his police-state zeal, begins shredding the Constitution's Bill of Rights with its guarantees of due-process of law, and, early on, has the huge lobby statue of the Goddess of Justice draped and covered over because of its exposed breast. How appropriate to shroud Justice so that she can't see what's being done in her name.
First Lady Laura Bush cancels a poetry workshop at the White House because she suspects that a number of America's high-profile poets, in the sacred grounds of that seat of power, will raise the issue of the coming war with Iraq.
Did you notice the thread that unites these events? In all three cases, symbolic shrouds are placed over art, so that nobody will notice the bad things that are being done in American citizens' names.

But art knows. Art sees beyond, often before the general public is aware of what's going on. (Often before the artists themselves are conscious of what they're revealing.) Art points us in new directions that make us think and question.

To those inclined more to rigid-order mentality, art is a virus that needs to be stamped out, or, at the least, tightly controlled. ("When I hear the word culture," said Nazi leader Goebbels, "I reach for my revolver.")

It's all part of the so-called "cultural civil war."

Those who control the signs and symbols control the polity. Thus, minions are trotted out to denounce artists and their tendency to look for complexity, ironies, hypocrisies, hidden humor. To incipient fascists, the world is a Manichean one, divided into black and white, those who are Good and those who are Evil ("You're either for us or against us").

And since they are certain that God obviously favors their side, it follows that those in opposition -- or even (or especially) those who point the way to other visions of complex reality -- are part of the enemy forces and must be dealt with.

One problem with authoritarianism, whatever brand comes along -- Stalin's communism, or Hitler's fascism, or Islamic Talibanism, or whatever we're moving into in America right now -- is that it makes art more delicious and tempting. The public is not dumb and eventually comes to figure out that the "truth" being propounded by the frightened rulers does not match the world most citizens actually live in. And so they begin to seek out and support art and artists and, most of all, comedians -- those sly artisans, those holy fools, that can shake the foundations of power with a well-aimed dart.

Musicians, playwrights, poets, painters, sculptors, dancers, novelists, filmmakers, online satirists, comics -- everything these artists do in an authoritarian society comes to be seen by the public in the light of the repression visited from above.

Art has power. Art unmasks. Art tells lies in the service of truth. (Whereas governments lie in order to conceal truth.)

The more lies authoritarian governments tell their citizens, the more a sub rosa consciousness bubbles up from the culture's artists and then from its ordinary citizens. It's a slow-growing and, at times, dangerous movement -- which is why the forces of reaction try so hard to stomp on it -- but it is an amazingly strong and vital and resilient force.

Because totalitarian governments rest on fake foundations, when those regimes fall, they fall with amazing quickness and ferocity. One day there's a wall, the next day it's torn down and the celebrations begin. One day there is officially sanctioned art, the next day those huge statues are toppled. One day, the culture arbiters and censors are in control, the next day they are in disgrace -- or in jail.

Americans, still gripped by fear from 9/11/01, have tended to be in a state of animated numbness, putting up little resistance to the machinations of the authoritarian rulers. Similarly, out of great sympathy for the post-9/11/01 United States, various nations around the world bowed to the wishes of the Bush government.

Bush&Co., meeting little resistance, interpreted this relative lack of opposition as full support for their programs, foreign and domestic. And so they've continued to want more, tighten the screws more, reach and then over-reach for more. Their motto and guiding principle seems to be: "We can't be stopped, so let's just go take it all."

Suddenly, though, Bush&Co. are running into overt opposition. Their allies abroad are telling them -- to their face -- that current American policies are mad, wrong, dangerous. More and more conservative allies at home are warning the Bush Administration that their dash toward imperial rule abroad and draconian Constitution-shredding at home is a violation of what America stands for, and will bring the United States (and, given the economic interweavings between nations, much of the world as well) nothing but disaster.

The current US rulers will not alter their course. It's war with Iraq, full speed ahead and to hell with the rest of you -- especially ignorant "old Europe," and American dissidents at home. It's a proposed extension of the so-called USA Patriot Act, to give the federal government even more martial-law-like police powers in controlling the society -- the "cover" is hunting for terrorists, of course -- and to hell with the protections guaranteed by the Bill of Rights.

These Bush&Co. leaders are so arrogant, so rude, so greedy and power-hungry, so taken with themselves as God's messengers and as the world's only Superpower, so convinced they are right in the tunnel-vision black-and-white world they inhabit, that it's clear their days are numbered. It may take a bit longer to build to critical mass -- and there is going to be death and destruction and persecution while that momentum is being built up -- but when the time for their fall arrives, it's going to be quick and nasty. And we'll finally all wake up from this nightmare that has crushed our economy, diminished our moral light in the world, disgraced our beloved Constitution and country.

And at the vanguard of this movement away from the shadow America and back into the light will be our poets, our comedians, our painters, our playwrights, our novelists, and so on -- "dangerous" artists all, even when they're not political. They simply see too much, too clearly.

A toast to their hungry vision.

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Eloriel Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-08-04 12:39 PM
Response to Reply #2
7. LINK, PLEASE!!!!!
Please.
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rainy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-08-04 01:32 PM
Response to Reply #7
10. I don't know how to link, sorry
are directions on DU web site?
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Cha Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-08-04 01:43 PM
Response to Reply #10
11. You link by copying the address and pasting it
on the message board..you copy by clicking on the right hand side of the mouse. And the "paste" is on the right side, too.

If you need anymore directions, please let me know.

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calimary Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-08-04 01:00 PM
Response to Reply #2
8. Yes, please! Link to this, and a link to the Herald article at the top-
that one doesn't work for me.
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Cha Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-08-04 01:11 PM
Response to Reply #2
9. Thank you for this article...I kinda remember reading
it way back then. It's so good to read it again when "the fall" is so imminent.

I wrote to Dr Bernard Weiner just now and thanked him for the article and asked if there was a link because I couldn't find the archimves on The Crisis Papers.
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Cha Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-08-04 05:08 PM
Response to Reply #2
13. Here is the link to that article...I just got an e-mail
from the author..woohoo! :)

http://crisispapers.org/Editorials/sign-language.htm
From Bernard Weiner..
Thanks for writing. Keep on keepin' on. -- Bernard Weiner, Co-Editor (www.crisispapers.org)
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Dancing_Dave Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-08-04 12:02 PM
Response to Original message
3. Bush Dynasty Blues
In 2001, I started a station at mp3.com called Bush Dynasty Blues. At first, it was mainly just blues-based Texas musicians who had already realized how much shrub Bush sucks back he was their Governor. As time went by, it diversified all the way out to Electronic and Urban and even some Classical music and became more popular and reached millions of people by the time the whole mp3.com system was closed down in December, 2003.

Now I'm rebuilding it at Artist Launch, and I could still use some more musicians contributing songs! Musicians who want to be on the station need to upload a song or two at Artist Launch, which makes their songs available to all Artist Launch DJ's.

Give it a listen! http://www.artistlaunch.com/artist8.asp?artistid=6312

I also have one called New Eternal Summer of Psychedelic Love:
http://www.artistlaunch.com/artist8.asp?artistid=6815

Get into the ever-lovin' groove!
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nostamj Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-08-04 12:09 PM
Response to Original message
4. "political" songs ??? that will NEVER work!
"...WILDLY FUNNY and irreverent. It is an outrageous musical satire that rips into today's headlines and take the audience into an off-the-wall 'no sin zone.' ... No one connected with the current administration or media is safe from attack in this clever show... sure to be one of the most talked about revues of the year. You may not agree, but you'll have a ball."
- John Hoglund, BACK STAGE

"...SURPRISINGLY ENTERTAINING, with parody lyrics that will have lovers of democracy–and those who are scared to death of 'Dubya'–applauding loudly in both recognition of and disgust for the current administration's blunders and policies...Crowe and Matsuki make a modern-day Hope & Crosby with sharp comic timing while Langeder and Phillips wield their Broadway-sized voices with power and confidence. Together they sound terrific in the group numbers and Rogers wisely kept the staging simple, breezy and smart."
- David Hurst, SHOW BUSINESS

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Cha Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-08-04 12:17 PM
Response to Original message
5. Finally! This is certainly music to
my ears! We've got just a little time left before this lame duck gets the hell outta here. But I realize he will do a lot of damage from Nov to Jan!
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et in Arcadia ego... Donating Member (124 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-08-04 12:37 PM
Response to Original message
6. John Fogerty has "nailed" the Iraq/Vietnam comparison...
with his outstanding new song "Deja Vu (All Over Again), which has just recently been released. It has a "Who'll Stop The Rain" vibe from his Creedence days.

http://www.johnfogerty.com/main.php


DEJA VU (ALL OVER AGAIN)

Did you hear 'em talkin' 'bout it on the radio
Did you try to read the writing on the wall
Did that voice inside you say I've heard it all before
It's like Deja Vu all over again

Day by day I hear the voices rising
Started with a whisper like it did before
Day by day we count the dead and dying
Ship the bodies home while the networks all keep score

Did you hear 'em talkin' 'bout it on the radio
Could your eyes believe the writing on the wall
Did that voice inside you say I've heard it all before
It's like Deja Vu all over again

One by one I see the old ghosts rising
Stumblin' 'cross Big Muddy
Where the light gets dim
Day after day another Momma's crying
She's lost her precious child
To a war that has no end

Did you hear 'em talkin' 'bout it on the radio
Did you stop to read the writing at The Wall
Did that voice inside you say
I've seen this all before
It's like Deja Vu all over again
It's like Deja Vu all over again

John Fogerty
©2004 Cody River Music / ASCAP





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Cha Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Aug-08-04 01:46 PM
Response to Reply #6
12. That's good, thank you and thank John Fogerty!
Bruce Springsteen wrote an editorial in the NYT Friday..

snip~
People have different notions of these values, and they live them out in different ways. I've tried to sing about some of them in my songs. But I have my own ideas about what they mean, too. That is why I plan to join with many fellow artists, including the Dave Matthews Band, Pearl Jam, R.E.M., the Dixie Chicks, Jurassic 5, James Taylor and Jackson Browne, in touring the country this October. We will be performing under the umbrella of a new group called Vote for Change. Our goal is to change the direction of the government and change the current administration come November.

More by Bruce..
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/08/05/opinion/05bruce.html
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