Posted on 01/11/2010 8:47:20 PM PST by southern rock
W.A.S.P. mainman Blackie Lawless gained notoriety in the 1980s for throwing raw meat at his suitably rabid fans, and for stage shows featuring semi-naked women on torture racks.
His best-known songs include F**k Like A Beast, Wild Child and L.O.V.E. Machine. But overtly sexist topics have been on the back-burner for a number of years now, as Blackie increasingly explores a socio-political agenda.
W.A.S.P.s upcoming new album, Babylon, is themed around biblical visions of the Four Horsemen Of The Apocalypse because Blackie reckons our so-called world leaders are on a mission to march people straight into hell.
Highlights from an interview with Classic Rocks Geoff Barton follow
GB: You wrote the songs on Babylon while the world was experiencing a global financial meltdown.
BL: Its no secret that I wasnt Bush fan, neither Bush No.1 nor Bush No.2. In general, I dont trust politicians. But when this supposed global meltdown was happening a year ago and I saw all these world leaders calling for a one-world government, a one-world system and a one-world currency, I thought to myself: They gotta be kidding. I mean, do these guys understand what theyre talking about? I dont think that they do.
GB: Weve got a taste that over in the UK already. A lot of our important political decisions are made by bureaucrats in Brussels.
BL: For somebody whos been an honorary Brit now for 25-plus years, it breaks my heart, honestly, to watch whats going on over there. I was thinking this morning about The Kinks song [Living On A Thin Line] where the lyrics go: All the stories have been told/Of kings and days of old/But theres no England now. And I thought to myself: Where was the precise moment when it took that turn? Its not how it used to be. When did it become so socialised? Its unrecognisable.
GB: You could say its been years of attrition.
BL: It certainly would have been. And that pains me because Ive always had a real fondness for your place. You look at some of the stuff that comes out of your country now and I grit my teeth.
GB: What sort of stuff makes you grit your teeth?
BL: The whole Lockerbie situation. Freeing that Libyan bomber was a despicable act. Plus, as I say, you look at how its been socialised. I was watching a TV programme the other day. It was a British kid here in the US. The interviewer asked him: What did you come here for? The kid said: I wanted to start a small business and I couldnt do that in the UK. Theres no help from the government. You cant get a bank loan. Theres no incentive to get anything done. Those days are gone. I thought to myself: Is this where Americas going? It really hurts me to watch your country go that way. The pride factor has gone.
GB: You were a supporter of John McCain during the US presidential election campaign.
BL: By default.
GB: So, how are you finding life under Barack Obama?
BL: I was very, very critical of Obama during the campaign. I wrote a long letter and I sent it out to all the press the night before the election. I pulled no punches with this guy because I had really done quite a bit of research on him while the election was going on. Hes one of these old-time 60s radicals from way back. He thinks hes going to change the world and hes hell-bent on doing that. When he stood there the night of the nomination and he said that he intended on fundamentally changing America a chill ran down my back. Thousands of people were just standing there, wildly applauding, and it reminded me of Hitler standing on the steps of the Reichstag. I thought: These people dont understand what this man is talking about, what his true intentions are, and how he is going to go about doing this. This man, like I said, is straight out of the 60s school of radicalism where he thinks hes going to be Robin Hood and rob from the rich to give to the poor. I subscribe to the theory: if you work, you eat. And if you dont, you dont. Its really no more complicated than that. Do we want to be compassionate? Yes. Do we want to help each other as best we can? Yes. But that doesnt mean that I bust my hump to create something and somebody comes along and decides that I cant keep that anymore. Thats not what either one of our countries was really built on.
* Babylon, the new album from W.A.S.P., is released on October 12.
ping
W.A.S.P.'s upcoming new album, Babylon, is themed around biblical visions of the Four Horsemen Of The Apocalypse -- because Blackie reckons "our so-called world leaders are on a mission to march people straight into hell"... "It's no secret that I wasn't Bush fan, neither Bush No.1 nor Bush No.2. In general, I don't trust politicians. But when this supposed global meltdown was happening a year ago and I saw all these world leaders calling for a one-world government, a one-world system and a one-world currency, I thought to myself: "They gotta be kidding." I mean, do these guys understand what they're talking about? I don't think that they do... Freeing that Libyan bomber was a despicable act." ... "You were a supporter of John McCain during the US presidential election campaign." "By default... I was very, very critical of Obama during the campaign. I wrote a long letter and I sent it out to all the press the night before the election. I pulled no punches with this guy because I had really done quite a bit of research on him while the election was going on. He's one of these old-time 60s radicals from way back. He thinks he's going to change the world and he's hell-bent on doing that. When he stood there the night of the nomination and he said that he intended on "fundamentally changing" America -- a chill ran down my back. Thousands of people were just standing there, wildly applauding, and it reminded me of Hitler standing on the steps of the Reichstag."Still, showbiz folks need to shut up more.
Although not pure metalheads, Alice Cooper, Ted Nugent, Gene Simmons, Johnny Ramone, Dee Dee Ramone, Marky Ramone...
He comes off pretty impressive here, as well.
Yep many of the rockers from the 80’s had to deal with what Tipper Gore decided was her rigth to do and it left many lke the rest of us, lifelong Conservatives with a libertarian leaning. If it isn’t in the Constitution it is none of the governement’s buisness!
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