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The Music World Explodes in Anger
By Shadi Hamid
Music and politics - They just don't mix, the critics say.
David Segal, the Washington Post pop music critic, summed up the conventional wisdom when he said that
the "history of rock and politics could be summarized in an hour or two, because pop stars - or their
handlers - are typically smart enough to stick to their strengths, namely selling music and piercing
their extremities. Many performers are simply apolitical or indifferent, and the few who dare to
approach the podium tend to tiptoe." Unfortunately for Segal, but fortunately for us, this statement is
simply wrong. It may have made sense to say that three years ago. But, things have changed.
We live in a world of chaos and confusion. The threat of terrorism, however vague, remains very real.
America has decided to become an imperial power. Bush, Ashcroft, and the Department of Justice have
decided to attack the constitution, waging war on the liberties and freedoms that so many of us hold
dear. Not to mention that we have an exploding deficit and 40 million Americans without insurance. It
would be tough for artists to stay quiet in such a destructive atmosphere. And, indeed, a wide array of
musicians have taken on political causes, including that most celebrated (and worthy) cause of all -
unseating Dubya in 2004.
This is a time of strangeness. But it is a strangeness to be embraced. Shakira seems like a ditz but
apparently she has a side job as a budding foreign policy analyst: "New leaders have to emerge, leaders
who talk about love. Like Ghandi and Martin Luther King, Jr. Where are they? The thinkers, the
journalists, the artists of this generation are the ones who determine the thoughts of a generation,
and we have to pronounce those thoughts so people wake up, so we prevent future disasters." Not bad.
Shakira also came up with this little quotable gem: "The leaders are lacking love, and love is lacking
leaders." Sounds like a mixture of Kennedy and a 7th grade student. Nevertheless, it sounds almost
original and I'll give her props for saying something even remotely meaningful.
Yes, it all seems somehow surreal. We live in a time where Bono gets shortlisted for Nobel Peace Prizes
for fighting third world debt. Even Jay-Z, who usually prefers to sing about copulating with hot girls,
is getting in on the action - but this time the political kind. ³We have a voice and a responsibility to
speak out," Jay-Z declares. Not exactly a rousing call-to-arms but it's still rather impressive coming
from one of most popular rappers in hip-hop history.
Dave Matthews is a good songwriter and performer but did I expect him to rail and ravage Bush in his
recent Rolling Stone cover story/interview - "I'd drink with George W. just to get him out of the White
House," says Dave. Sounds like a plan, I guess. But he doesn't stop there: "I am way more American than
George Bush and Dick Cheney. They have no fucking idea what it is to be American. They are fucking
idiots who are programmed to everything in the hands of the few."
In the midst of the vitriol and profanity of the Rolling Stone interview, there is actually an
interesting and seldom-used line of critique against Bush. "He represents the tiniest, tiniest
percentage. He got here on the shoulders of giants. I think the Christian world feels an obligation to
support him, because he claims to be a Christian. I don't see much of a Christian in him. I think there
should be a long line of nuns ready to smack the crap out of him," says Matthews. Bush is often seen as
an intensely religious man steeped in the virtues of ³moral clarity." Matthews isnıt having any of that.
Coming from a South African background, Matthews has perhaps a better sense of those founding ideals of
Christianity that are so often neglected, if not altogether forgotten - love, compassion, and
forgiveness.
Matthews wasn't always this angry. The fact of the matter is that the events of the last two years have
made him and so many others reassess their roles as musicians and social critics. Bruce Springsteen is
another striking case in point. Although his left-leaning political outlook is rather obvious,
Springsteen has always been respected by both liberals and conservatives for his emotive depictions of
working-class America. Yet was this Springsteen the same one who, on October 4th, told a 50,000-strong
crowd in New York to "shout a little louder if you want the president impeached..."
One could argue that it's all just meaningless rhetoric without any action to back it up. Musicians,
though, are doing so much more than just talking. They are organizing multi-band tours, such as Tom
Morello's "Tell us the Truth Tour" which takes aim at the at corporate greed and media consolidation.
Through Punkvoter.com, bands such as Green Day,
Offspring, and NOFX are organizing voter-registration drives, a Rock Against Bush Tour, and starting up
a political action committee. Russell Simmons' Hip-Hop Summit, of which Jay-Z is a participating member,
is aiming to register more than 4 million new voters before the elections. If successful, such an effort
could prove to be decisive in a close race.
Bush, through his polarizing and disturbingly partisan approach to governance, has galvanized the Left
and fueled the fire of what may become one of the strongest political currents in recent memory - the
"Anyone But Bush" movement. In the days of Clintonian peace and prosperity, the music world was rather
stale. Then along came Bush - the man who would end up bringing politics back into music, giving birth
to an unintended artistic renaissance.
Shadi Hamid is a Columnist at PopMatters.Com,
writing monthly on music, politics, and pop culture. He can be reached at sh75@georgetown.edu.
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