Monday, 14 June 2010
Let's kick against the Eighties revival
In a lot of respects, I had a great time under Thatcher. Under her rule, I became a music journalist; DJed at the Wag; met James Brown (the soul Godfather, not the Loaded founder); most of all I shook off the apparently dying rhythm of rock'n'roll and made a part-time passion for black music into a full-blown obsession.
But having also endured a period of homelessness back then and watched yuppies taking over areas of London I loved, the last thing I would like to see under the Tory-led coalition is an Eighties revival, musical or otherwise.
For left-leaning musicians, Thatcher should have been a gift, a ready-made enemy arriving hot on the heels of punk. At first, there were musical protests: The Pop Group's "We Are All Prostitutes", The Beat's "Stand Down Margaret" ("Stand Down Margaret, stand down pleeeease" – as if) and any number of gigs in support of the striking miners; I played some on a bill that included the punk poet Attila the Stockbroker. But the musical dissent didn't last and somehow Thatcher managed to cling on to power despite the efforts of Red Wedge – a leading light of which was a reformed Paul Weller, who had supported the Tories in 1979. For many people, myself included, it a case of "dance before the police come" as Shut Up and Dance succinctly put it, at warehouse parties where you and your awful pleated trousers could forget the brave new Tory world.
There were few reminders of politics on the mid-1980s dance floor and soul music did not try to address society's ills in the mid-Eighties. Tony Blackburn was a top soul DJ, along with the now-forgotten Steve Walsh, who was big in every sense, and the pirate jocks were mostly about having it large like their fans. Chants of "woh-oh" to Maze classics, fine; chanting down the Falklands War, forget it. Amid all this, Paul Hardcastle's "19", released just 10 years too late for the Vietnam War, which was its subject matter, came across like the era's "We Shall Overcome" – for about two months. Meanwhile, reggae's protest era had been abandoned at the end of the 1970s, with occasional exceptions and rap's rebellion was more musical than verbal back then.
As for pop's protests at the new Tory era, it is hard to see where they might emanate from. The Beat were a major chart act when they implored "Stand Down Margaret". Would Keane or Florence and the Machine do the same? I can't see it happening: much of current pop is musical conservatism. For Madge, read Lady Gaga, for Rick Astley we have Justin Bieber. For The Specials, we have ... The Specials, which is perhaps the saddest indictment of all. But there are some loosely politicised potential stars on the horizon. The hip-hopper Akala, recognised with a Mobo in 2006, is realising his potential as a thoughtful observer of, uh, Broken Britain on his Double Think album. The Supernovas' "Slaughter in the Gaza" proves that an outfit of mixed heritage that is every bit as pretty as any contrived boy band can rock with intelligence. Their label mates Krakatoa are aiming to change their industry with "Rock'n'Roll Revolution", which moans "They're singing about nothing when there's so much you can say". Whether their 1960s-mod inflected sound can be described as revolutionary is a moot point, but if anyone is going to put the desert boot into the Coalition, it's them.
Paul Weller, too, hasn't forgotten social comment. A couple of songs on his latest album lament the growth of computer-mediated personal interaction. And there's "history" between him and David Cameron. When the PM declared "The Eton Rifles" one of his favourite songs, Weller sniped: "Which part of it didn't he get? It wasn't intended as a jolly drinking song for the cadet corps."
So from me, a cautious welcome for a new musical era; art changes when society changes. I'll be pressing my pleated pants anew – back in fashion just in time, I'm told.
Ian McCann @'The Independent'
(Thanx SJX!)
I too was homeless in London for a while back then - grim times indeed!
Well...
...I have to say on that display (and without TimmyC in the next game) I really do fear that it is Germany and Ghana going thru to the next round from this group unfortunately.
Loved to be proved wrong but...
HerrB/
Well I said it could be 3-0 to Germany but I am not sure that the score (so far) is really the score that it should be...
Let me update that!!!
*sigh*
(Australia ARE a better team on their day than this display)
Let me update that!!!
*sigh*
(Australia ARE a better team on their day than this display)
Right-Wingers Have Nothing Better to Do Than Be Pissed Off About the World Cup
Much like the Olympics, the Right Wing Noise Machine sees the FIFA World Cup in South Africa as something to despise, hate, and otherwise ignore as an event “Real Americans” don’t tolerate. Glennsanity:
But that’s how it works. Constantly redefine what’s allowable and what’s not, separate us from the rest of the world through the rah-rah protectionist policies of “American exceptionalism” and declare since the USA have never won the World Cup, it simply doesn’t matter. It’s a sport played by Socialist weirdos, third-world hellholes and Evil Brown People, so into the Other pile you World Cup fans go.
Sports is just American dominance waged on a different battlefield to them. Except for the sports that don’t matter, like soccer. I mean North Korea and Mexico are in it. It must be eeeeeeeeevil New World Order stuff, right?
“It doesn’t matter how you try to sell it to us, it doesn’t matter how many celebrities you get, it doesn’t matter how many bars open early, it doesn’t matter how many beer commercials they run, we don’t want the World Cup, we don’t like the World Cup, we don’t like soccer, we want nothing to do with it.”G. Gordon Liddy throws in too:
Whatever happened to American exceptionalism?” Liddy noted that “this game … originated with the South American Indians and instead of a ball, they used to use the head, the decapitated head, of an enemy warrior.”Which is funny, because I hear that whole decapitated head thing is how basketball got started, not soccer. Oh wait, that’s increasingly becoming a “not a Real American” sport either, along with football and baseball. Add World Cup soccer fans to the growing list of people who aren’t Real Americans. Funny how that list keeps growing larger and larger seemingly every day as those team sports become more and more racially and ethnically diverse…increasingly at the ownership level, and that’s really got the Wingers pissed off.
But that’s how it works. Constantly redefine what’s allowable and what’s not, separate us from the rest of the world through the rah-rah protectionist policies of “American exceptionalism” and declare since the USA have never won the World Cup, it simply doesn’t matter. It’s a sport played by Socialist weirdos, third-world hellholes and Evil Brown People, so into the Other pile you World Cup fans go.
Sports is just American dominance waged on a different battlefield to them. Except for the sports that don’t matter, like soccer. I mean North Korea and Mexico are in it. It must be eeeeeeeeevil New World Order stuff, right?
zandar @'AlterNet'
Very true!
LuckenbachTX
I know if #aus
were playing #eng
, they wouldn't be 2-0 down, like they are against #ger
I know if #aus
were playing #eng
, they wouldn't be 2-0 down, like they are against #ger
#WorldCup
A high scoring game maybe? #Ger
less than 5 seconds ago via web
#WorldCup
less than 5 seconds ago via web
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