With the spate of recent attempts on Black men's lives by police officers, I thought I'd post a few songs on the subject.
Thursday, January 8, 2009
Police Executions
Posted by
pauly
at
11:00 AM
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Labels: music, Police brutality, Racism
Monday, December 22, 2008
Monday, December 15, 2008
Bruce
Just in case there are any doubters out there.
Posted by
pauly
at
7:13 PM
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Labels: music, springsteen
Thursday, November 20, 2008
An Anthem for the Crisis
Gang of Four - Capital (It Fails Us Now)
Lyrics:
The moment I was born I opened my eyes
I reached out for my credit card
Oh no! I left it in my other suit!
capital it fails us now comrades let us seize the time
capital it fails us now comrades let us seize the time
on the first day of my life I opened my eyes
guess where!? in a superstore.
surrounded by luxury goods
I need a visa. I need a hi-fi.
no credit no goods
come on back I say
they say we're bankrupt
capital it fails us now comrades let us seize the time
capital it fails us now comrades let us seize the time
Capital it fails us now
Scientists blame it on pollution
People are not very happy
This is caused by alienation
oh no! I left it in my other suit!
one day old and I'm living on credit
[bankrupt]
one day all will be living on credit
Saturday, November 8, 2008
Friday, October 17, 2008
RIP Levi Stubbs
Not that political of a post, but Levi Stubbs' passing deserves homage where homage is due, especially since the Four Tops are one of my favorite Motown acts.
Hopefully there will be a better obituary out than CNN's. I'll post it when I find it.
Update: Here's the New York Times obit. It's much more informative.
Thursday, September 4, 2008
Slingshot Hip Hop: Free the P
This is my attempt to bust pauly's musical trust on the Tank. While awaiting the arrival of my copy of the new Son of Nun album, here's an excellent sampling of Pro-Palestinian hip hop.
The Arab Summit:
The Philistines:
And Son of Nun w/ the Welfare Poets:
Courtney Love
While it's quite hip (and cliche) these days to make Courtney Love the butt of various jokes, in their heyday Hole rocked like Nirvana wished they could.
Exhibit A:
Exhibit B:
Exhibit C:
Posted by
pauly
at
9:23 PM
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Labels: courtney love, music
Thursday, August 21, 2008
Saturday, August 2, 2008
Thursday, July 10, 2008
A Little Soul for Y'All
Let it Be - Carol Woods and Timothy T. Mitchum
American Skin (41 Shots) - Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band
Blowin' in the Wind - Sam Cooke
Monday, June 30, 2008
Something Worse: My 4th of July Mix
While driving home from Milwaukee, Wisconsin last Friday after talking to people outside of the food pantry where the near food riot occurred and some antiwar students, I was appalled to stumble upon the local oldies radio station's "4th of July Request Hour". Expecting to be bombarded by jingoistic drivel a la 'Proud to Be An American' (which was eventually requested), I was more pissed to hear a proud request for Springsteen's 'Born in the U.S.A.'. Now, any person who has actually read the lyrics to the song can readily tell that the Boss is not lavishing Uncle Sam with praise, but railing against a country that sends its poor and dispossessed to die in foreign wars and then kicks them when they return (prison, no jobs, no healthcare, etc). Given that Springsteen has been probably the only artist to consistently take up the issue of war vets in the US (from Vietnam to Iraq) throughout his entire career ('Lost in the Flood', 'Highway Patrolman', 'Nothing Man', 'Devils and Dust' and most of Magic) this misconception from the Right–and more frustratingly from the Left–really pisses me off. So, I was inspired to create a mix that helps to musically undercut the flag waiving nonsense and ideological underpinnings of the 4th and the American Dream.
I'm not going to comment on all of my selections, but the first warrants it:
Born in the U.S.A. - Bruce Springsteen (Original recording - found on Tracks)
So, part of the misconception of this tune, in my opinion, revolves around the instrumental/synth/foot pounding rock affirmation of the popularized version. However, this song was oringally recorded during the Nebraska sessions. It has a haunting, acoustic, desperate feel to it like the rest of that album and really drips with a palatable disgust and rejection of what it means to be born in the USA. Especially given the nature of the rest of the material that made it on to Nebraska - songs dealing with people pushed to desperate actions or completely crushed by a system that has forgotten them - it is impossible to miss Springsteen's intentions. So, I highly recommend getting a copy of the song.
Inner City Blues (Makes Me Wanna Holler) - Marvin Gaye
Today's Empires, Tomorrow's Ashes - Propagandhi
Crushed Again - Son of Nun
Pusherman - Curtis Mayfield
I Should Be Proud - Martha Reeves and the Vandellas (great, fairly obscure antiwar song about a woman who loses her partner in Vietnam)
The Inquisition - The N.O.M.A.D.S. Vs the Philistines (two great Palestinian American hip hop groups. Props for a brilliant sampling of Mel Brooks' History of the World)
Strange Fruit - Billie Holiday
Fortunate Son - Creedence Clearwater Revival
The Bourgeois Blues - Leadbelly
Revolution (feat. Busta Rhymes) - 2pac (The interviews with Pac on this track are DEVASTATING!)
Underdogs - The Coup
The Backlash Blues - Nina Simone
Welcome to the Terrordome - Pharaohe Monch
Living for the City - Stevie Wonder
Talkin' 'Bout a Revolution - Tracy Chapman
Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos - Public Enemy
Down in Mississippi - Mavis Staples
Tomorrow's Justice - The Arab Summit (This hip hop act's album is entitled "Fear of an Arab Planet". Nuff said).
Maria - Rage Against the Machine
The River - Bruce Springsteen
With the utter meltdown of the American Dream that's taken place over the last 30 years, Bruce's question posed in The River - and one which must be considered by all the 47 million uninsured Americans, thousands of downtrodden vets, 12 million undocumented immigrants and millions of struggling working families every day - and especially on the 4th - must be answered: Is a dream a lie if it don't come true or is it something worse? It's worse. Much worse.
**** Please post your suggestions to add to the list/comments/criticisms. Many more warrant a place. This is the link to download a copy of the mix. I apologize in advance for all of the sexist advertising on the upload site.
Posted by
jesseray
at
6:01 PM
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Labels: 4th of July, American Dream, jingoism, music