Posted on 03/24/2014 9:41:41 AM PDT by Kaslin
Growing up in the 60s, my older brother, Wayne, made certain that I was properly schooled in the fine art of psychedelic rock. He was generous with his sophisticated collection of vinyl and kindly tolerated my tagging along to live concerts by The Who, Blues Magoos, and Fever Tree. We even saw Sam the Sham & the Pharaohs once.
My friends and I followed musicians like baseball card athletes as they migrated between The Yardbirds, Led Zeppelin, Cream, Buffalo Springfield, and Blind Faith. I came to understand that Frank Zappa was equal parts profound & bananas and that the best version of Summertime Blues was recorded by Blue Cheer. In that explosively creative era, popular music evolved rapidly in the wake of the innovative leadership of the Beatles.
But as the decade was wrapping up, the Vietnam War was escalating. I remember how depressing CBS News sounded every evening, a nightly drumbeat of American casualty numbers accompanied by unsettling images from the front lines. The closest that my friends and I approached an understanding of the war was that it was morose, no end in sight, and that we were approaching draft age.
Even our favorite bands felt the impact. A local group known as The Moving Sidewalks lost their keyboard and bass players to the U.S. Army. The two remaining members added another talent and reorganized the band as ZZ Top.
In time, musicians began to unify the nations growing discontent with Washington by producing a list of protest songs initiated by Stephen Stills very civil For What Its Worth. The cleverness of pop lyrics increasingly focused on poking Congress and President Nixon in the eye, leading up to the Woodstock music festival in August of 1969. The most undisguised slight came from Country Joe & The Fish singing their original rag with a chorus ending in, Whoopee! Were all going to die.
Counterculture suddenly became serious business in 1970 when members of the Ohio National Guard overreacted to a student protest on the Kent State University campus. Skittish guardsmen fired 67 rounds into the crowd, killing four students and injuring nine others. Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young immediately released a responsive song with the lyrics, Tin soldiers and Nixon coming, We're finally on our own. This summer I hear the drumming,Four dead in Ohio.
America matured immensely in the decade that followed. The war was brought to a terrifically awkward end, Richard Nixon resigned the presidency, and the United States military transitioned into a respected volunteer profession. While much was gained in the transformation, the musical voice of antiestablishment was somehow lost.
Out of curiosity, I read the lyrics to all the songs on the current American Top 40 this week. Most are readily forgettable complaints about dysfunctional relationships. There are a few unique and thoughtful scripts, two brief and repetitive ditties, and one libretto with a contrived reference to Jeffrey Dahmer. I believe that we can surmise the reason that the weapons of sheet music have gone silent is that the worldview of Washington leadership is now in synch with the majority of traditions-rejecting songwriters. Nowadays Clancy cant even sing a protest song.
It is often said that suffering emotes the most powerful music. And while there is certainly no shortage of performing talent in America, there is no Vietnam provoking their collective objection. Rather, there is a gradual social seduction being masterfully orchestrated directly from the White House. Even 70s folk rocker James Taylor recently threw in all his chips with the surrendering statement, we need to make some sacrifices to our freedoms.
Dissent from younger, creative folks does exist. It is simply not concentrated in response to a single threat. When clever videographer Caleb Bonham recently interviewed college students at George Mason University, he received the following prioritization of political issues that are on the minds of students: (1) Benghazi?(2) Obamas If you like your plan, you can keep your plan promise?(3) DOJ spying on AP reporters?(4) The Fast and Furious gun-running scandal?(5) IRS targeting conservative groups?(6) The botched rollout of Healthcare.gov?(7) Obama bypassing Congress to delay elements of Obamacare, and?(8) NSA collection of citizens email and phone data. Encouraging.
Millions of American left brains have been exercising the OODA process for a long time; Observe, Orient, Decide, Act. It is time for a complementary renaissance from those whose gifts lie in the right brain. We need bigger music and meaningful words, someone who can call out the statists and sound a call to action for citizens. Where are those artists who will renew the soul of the nation in song? Where have all the flowers gone?
Merle Hazzard.
This is the result. It has 4 mommies. Alas, it's mommies split and regrouped resulting in 2 mommies and 2 step mommies.
Sanity finally prevailed and it was voted off American Idol
How ironic; it was from Howard Cosell on Monday Night Football I learned he had been killed.
The Beatle, the Governor, and the Washington Redskins
http://adamunderhill.wordpress.com/2010/12/08/the-beatle-the-governor-and-the-washington-redskins/
And this is why music is crap. This creature should not even be considered as “talent” on a TV show.
On the other hand, I hear he’s signed a record contract. For 99 cents, he gets 10 records...
bttt
That is no he.
In theory, before getting lost on the transgender journey, the creature was a she. Hence the pronoun it.
That is no he.
In theory, before getting lost on the transgender journey, the creature was a she. Hence the pronoun it.
It it is; I wasn’t sure what it was so I went with he by default based on superficial appearance. As you can tell, I don’t exactly follow the ups and downs of American Idol.
Not when there’s hockey on TV.
I under stand. I selected the most ambiguous photo for the post.
But, the individual is totally screwed if it tries to live away from it’s San Francisco home and 4 mothers
Well maybe he did become a Reagan fan. Dutch has a way with people, and that personal touch was something. Lennon may have come away from meeting him with the same impression as many others:
“I don’t know why people malign him so much; he seems like a decent guy.”
Despite the fact that Lennon had lived in the United States a number of years, it was necessary for Reagan to explain American football to him. That's because Lennon had been living in New York in the mid-1970s watching the Jets and Giants. With that kind of exposure, it's easy to see why he didn't understand football. Jets and Giants fans were convinced their teams didn't understand football either.
I knew I’d get the answer here!
Citation?
To be fair, Nixon started the downhill roll. LBJ left him a mess, but the commies handed us the massive victory of Tet. Had Nixon been able to capitalize on that victory in 1968 General Creighton Abrams would have won the war. He was very supportive of what the Marines were doing in their sector.
Abrams was going to win and his strategy was sound. Even if Vietnamization had gone forward as quickly, the war wasn’t lost. If the AVRN had had US air and artillery support for their ground operations they would have whomped the NVA going forward. They were increasingly more effective and once their incompetent general was fired they would have just gotten better.
That doesn’t excuse Frank Church who essentially handed victory to the commies.
Col. Boyd ping.
IIRC the Clash are a bit more conservative than the average band. When it comes to taxes they’re all conservatives.
Cronkite ensured that would never happen with his now infamous broadcast.
http://nationalinterest.org/commentary/cronkites-vietnam-blunder-7185
Snip-
Don Oberdorfer, in his book TET! The turning Pont in the Vietnam War, called the battle a "historical anomaly: a battlefield defeat that ultimately yielded victory." But he doesnt blame the American media. "Unquestionably," he wrote, "there was misreporting of Tet, especially in the confusing and uncertain days following the attacks." But he denied that press reports contributed significantly to the loss of domestic support.
The late Peter Braestrup, Oberdorfers Washington Post colleague from those Vietnam days, disagrees in his 1977 book, Big Story. "Rarely," he wrote, "has contemporary crisis-journalism turned out, in retrospect, to have veered so widely from reality." To have such a defeat for the enemy portrayed also as a major defeat for America, he added, "cannot be counted as a triumph for American journalism." It simply isnt logically consistent.
I was a very young kid in the 60s, but I know the 'hippy' minority was simply the part that received the most media attention. The media had been leftist for decades by then and the movement was a tool they used to push their leftwing agenda forward.
The vast majority of 60s youth were very normal, and very conservative by today's standards.
But things did begin accelerating leftward in the late 60s, thats true.
He must've grown up in the Houston area.
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