Songs of
Protest
Editorial
The Nation
There may never be another Bob Dylan. But there will always be protest
music of the sort that first endeared Dylan to a mass audience, and
that confirmed the power of song to move not just a generation but a
nation. Dylan was not the first protest singer; indeed, a good deal
of his early Dust Bowl-poet persona derived from Woody Guthrie. And
as his more overtly political compatriot Phil Ochs noted in the mid-1960s,
Dylan was never comfortable in any movement, a fact that eventually
led him to shed his topical-songwriter trappings to become the mythical
character that Richard Goldstein examines on page 11. But the artful
approach to political songwriting that Dylan pioneered remains an inspiration
to today's musicians. And what they sing and say still matters, as the
first skirmish of the Iraq War--the frontal assault on the dissenting
Dixie Chicks after their lead singer criticized George W. Bush--confirmed.
As the devastation escalated, so did the music. Green Day's album American
Idiot, a roaring pop-punk assault on the "redneck agenda"
and the warped discourse of post-9/11 America, went to Number 1 on the
charts, won a Grammy in 2005 for Best Rock Album and has sold more than
5 million copies. Hip-hop star Kanye West telescoped frustration with
the White House's dawdling response to Hurricane Katrina when he told
a national television audience, "George Bush doesn't care about
black people." On his CDs West has been equally fierce, sarcastically
suggesting on his 2005 song "Crack Music" that if anyone's
still got questions about Saddam Hussein's supposed chemical weapons
stash, "George Bush got the answer."
Now, as Bush's chart position sinks, he's getting even worse reviews.
Pearl Jam's new single, "World Wide Suicide," the story of
a mother mourning a son killed in battle because his was a life "the
President took for granted," tops Billboard's Modern Rock chart.
Bruce Springsteen has recorded a rollicking tribute to protest songs
by the country's most famous folk singer in a new album, The Seeger
Sessions: We Shall Overcome. Moby and REM's Michael Stipe just headlined
an antiwar "Bring 'Em Home Now" concert, and the Dixie Chicks
are letting Bush know they're not backing down, with their new single,
"Not Ready to Make Nice." The extent to which Bush's fortunes
have turned may be summed up by the news that pop singer Pink, who began
the Bush era promising to "Get the Party Started," is ending
it with a sobering lament, "Dear Mr. President," that savages
Bush's stances on gay rights, the minimum wage and the war. Hitting
even harder is veteran rocker Neil Young, whose post-9/11 song "Let's
Roll" was heard by some as a call for war. Young clarifies things
on his new CD, Living With War. With a track titled "Let's Impeach
the President," it won't feature on George Bush's iPod.
But others in Washington are hearing the power chords. For years,
Justin Sane, lead singer of the political punk band Anti-Flag, said
it was "left to artists to make the statements that should be getting
put into the public discourse." But Anti-Flag is no longer shouting
from the sidelines. The band's new CD, For Blood and Empire, features
the song "Depleted Uranium Is a War Crime." It was inspired
by an appearance at a 2004 Punk Voter rally in Seattle with Representative
Jim McDermott, a Vietnam-era vet who has introduced legislation calling
for an investigation of the military's use of DU. McDermott is on the
CD, and the band is spearheading a drive to get Congress to act on the
bill.
Come to think of it, if a 69-year-old Congressman is heeding the call
of a punk band, maybe it's time to recognize that, with prodding from
outspoken and courageous musicians, the Bush order is rapidly fading
and the times, again, are a-changin'.
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