Posted on 10/28/2010 2:12:18 PM PDT by HorowitzianConservative
What albums might Leon Trotsky have done some head-banging to if Josef Stalin hadn't sent an assassin to shove an icepick through his skull?
Answer: the 10 Neo-Communist (and some flat-out communist) titles on our list. We count them down from the more benign Democrat-supporters to outright totalitarian radicals.
Included in this collection are alternative, rock, rap, folk, and hip-hop titles. We've also done our best not to be too obvious with our choices -- you won't find Greenday's "American Idiot" on this list, for example. We also made the choice to select albums that despite being nauseating in their politics can actually be enjoyable to listen to -- hence the decision to include a video with each. That's your cookie for having to endure the next ten pages of anti-Americanism as we expose some of music's most politicized albums.
10."Hail to the Thief" by Radiohead
(Excerpt) Read more at newsrealblog.com ...
I’m probably older...I knew about DK from my younger brother.
A lot of those early punk/hard core bands were lefty anarchy types but some were nationalistic proto fascist...ironic huh?
both rebelling against the same thing
Conservative Gay Band.....Joy Division..lol...I still listen to them but of course some claim they were closet Nazis
But in my teenaged days it was Almost Cut My Hair and Ohio and Volunteers and What’s Going On....and I ate it up I confess...hard to imagine now
but one note in my defense...being a left leaning libertarian then had nothing to do with all the hot topic PC issues today...now way would I have stomached that then if times were identical...especially the assault on God in public and the demonization of being a Southerner....so much of the knee jerk stuff today was un thought of then...homosexual marriage...who would have ever believed?
OTOH, some hundreds of years ago, the king actually rode into battle, and the sons of the nobility were expected to be officers in the army.
At its core a lot of punk was a fight against power, knowing that it invariably infringes on freedom. To a large measure conservatism is a fight against excessive government power, so there is a place where punk and conservative ideologies meet to some extent.
Unless the messages are uniquely subtle, I don’t see anything particularly leftist about the songs on “Deja Vú.” Maybe “Almost Cut My Hair,” but, really, that’s about fashion, not politics. What songs one might mistake to have a political message—for instance, “Teach Your Children” or “Woodstock”—are vague at best.
Not denying that individual members were leftists. Nor that the general vibe was unmistakably “hippy.” However, nothing on this particular album is like “For What It’s Worth,” “The Cost of Freedom,” or “American Dream.”
“OTOH, some hundreds of years ago, the king actually rode into battle, and the sons of the nobility were expected to be officers in the army.”
Heck, only some 200 years ago President Washington led troops into battle against his own people.
Your threshold for what makes a leftist album are a mite higher than mine.
Almost Cut My Hair was a lot more than a fashion statement...read the lyrics if you’re weren’t around then to remember. It was an ode to the dope and yippie feeling of being persecuted by the man.
Woodstock...an homage to the hippie and anti-war and anti-capitalism mood of the freaks?...please...I still remember the lyrics in my head....”And I dreamed I saw the bomber jet planes
Riding shotgun in the sky,
Turning into butterflies
Above our nation”
I was a part of that time and a believer...young dumb and full of ____, and believe me that album really crystalized that us versus them feeling....idealistic long haired pot smoking semi yippies versus the staid establishment
Teach Your Children was a lecture to about don’t let your kids be squares like the parents.
that was my take anyhow
Didn’t really listen to more than the chorus of that song did you?
Really missed my point, did you?
Interpret how you wish, but the lyrics are the lyrics.
Feel free to support the most anti-right band in history.
Good job.
the pop artist pink should have landed on that list.
I remember a local DJ commenting once after the end of that song that, “nobody sent anyone, it’s a volunteer military. Next we have....”
CSNY...Deja Vu...absolutely the best!
I still have their 33 rpm album, their CD, and it’s on my iPod touch. lol
AND...I saw the CSNY2K concert at the Rose Garden. We were offered suite tickets, but asked to have concert tickets. We had great seats! They being older than I am...lol...were fantastic, and had more energy than I ever thought they could possibly have. They made me tired! lol
Glad to know that a young ‘un such as yersef would appreciate such good music.
Oh, yeah...you got the lyrics right. However, to me it’s a feeling. I remember those times very well. Even little ole me was antsey.
However, little ole me wasn’t in the mood for what would happen to “our nation”. That is so Obamaesque.
What is your take on “Our House”?
“Your threshold for what makes a leftist album are a mite higher than mine.”
I guess so. Because to me, although hippies definitely were leftists (or at least most of them; I’m sure there were a few honest libertarians), and CSNY were hippies, there has to be an explicit political message for an album to be leftist. It’s tempting to treat it all as one big ball, determining any paean to youth, drugs, sex, peace, or whatever, is implicitly political. Especially as how the Sixties generation thought that way. “The personal is political.” Indeed, *everything* was political, from music you to food to how you styled your hair. That’s why it’s so damn annoying to read, watch, or listen to anything from that era if you’re not in the mood to condemn Amerika and dream of utopia.
However, before we go too far, we ought to realize there’re still degrees or polititude (if you will). Implicit politicism is and always will be less political than more explicit kinds. “Ohio” is clearly more political, and therefore more leftist, than “Woodstock.” You and I know the lyrics
“And I dreamed I saw the bomber jet planes
Riding shotgun in the sky,
Turning into butterflies
Above our nation
is supposed to be contra-Vietnam and contra-military-industrial-complex. But grant me that it’s pretty vague (at least compared to “For What It’s Worth,” “Born in the USA,” or that Country Joe and the Fish song) and stated in such a way as to be considerably less tendentious than various other rockin’ antiwar statements. And though like other tired-old Sixties statements it may be hopelessly utopian, unlike “imagine no possessions,” it’s utopian in a way that’s not immediately offensive.
As for “Almost Cut My Hair,” okay, it’s a little more than fashion. It’s the whole “Damn the Man, I’m gonna be me” hippy feel. But still, is that political? It leads to politics, yes. Just like, for instance, we all know rainbows and speedos play some part in the leftist gay lobby’s political ambitions. But neither are themselves political. Merely part of the larger “lifestyle” of certain politically-inclined sub-cultures.
“Teach Your Children,” if you pay close attention, also advises children not to despise parents for squarness, as it’s not their fault (it’s the 50s fault, I guess). Definitely bent in the children’s favor, but not so one-sided as you might think.
By the way, even assuming the above songs are inarguably leftist, that’s only 3 of the ten tracks. You have to dig an awful lot deeper to find messages in “Carry On,” (a call for the perpetuation of serial sexual relationships?) “Helpless,” (a call for nanny-state protection?) “Our House” (a call for cohabitation without marriage?).
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