Friday, April 26, 2024

La Fin de La Semaine Essay Question: Special "The Times They Are A-Changin' -- Into What, I Have No Freaking Idea" Edition

A friend writes:

Wow.

So I went back and read the lyrics to "Dawn of Correction" - the answer record to Barry McGuire's Top Ten 1965 protest hit "Eve of Destruction." By a studio group called The Spokesmen.

"DOC" was seen at the time as the ultimate anti-hippie song.

But in light of where we are now...It's wild at how far the MAGA Goons have gone.

Complete verses here - check the underscored/bolded lyrics:

You tell me that marches won't bring integration
But look what it's done for the voter registration
Be thankful our country allows demonstrations

Instead of condemnin', make some recommendations
I don't understand the cause of your aggravation
You mean to tell me, boy, it's not a better situation?
So over and over again, you keep sayin' it's the end
But I say you're wrong, we're just on the dawn of correction

You missed all the good in your evaluation
What about the things that deserve commendation?
Where there once was no cure, there's vaccination
Where there once was a desert, there's vegetation
Self-government's replacing colonization
What about the Peace Corp. organization?
Don't forget the work of the United Nations


Whew.

Wow indeed.

I mean really -- I remembered "DOC" as a laughable right-wing unhip Archie Bunkerish piece of shit, but upon relistening it seems like...jeez, the voice of sensible reason, at least in the context of the times we're currently enduring/living in. Kind of a mind boggler, actually,

And speaking of mind bogglers, have I mentioned that "DOC" was written by -- wait for it -- the team of John Medara and David White, who earlier wrote Danny and the Juniors' immortal anthems "At the Hop" and "Rock-and-Roll is Here to Stay"(!) and (later) Lesley Gore's proto-feminist(!) classic "You Don't Own Me."

Have I said wow?

Okay, moving right along, and politics aside, I must confess that I wasn't a fan of the original Barry McGuire record.

I thought the lyrics were trite, McGuire's vocal an unintentional parody of earnest folkie bullshit, and that the instrumental backing (granted, by the incomparable Wrecking Crew) was vastly inferior to the kind of then current Dylan-inspired folk-rock I dug, i,e, The Byrds or The Turtles.

In fact, my old band The Floor Models used to do an obviously tongue-in-cheek live version of it back in the day -- courtesy of our twelve-string genius Andy Pasternack, who switched one of the lyrics to...

"You may leave here for four days in space/
But when you return you can't find a parking place."

Heh.

Bottom line is, I never took the original as anything more than borderline kitsch. Until, that is, this 1984 cover by New Orleans punksters Red Rockers showed up on my MTV..

...and blew me away. I mean -- that's just fucking great, on every level. And I remember thinking -- why didn't we have the smarts to do it like that first?

Oh well. C'est la vie.

Which leads us to the weekend's business. To wit:

(A)...and your favorite (or least favorite) post-Elvis protest song (or topical song in general) is...???

And (B)...as recorded by who???

My fave, in case you haven't guessed, is Pete Seeger's great anti-nuclear war song. In the version by some mook whose name rhymes with Sleeve Nimels.

Discuss.

And have a great weekend, everybody!!!

[h/t Roadmaster]

31 comments:

John K said...

I Ain't Marching Anymore by Phil Ochs.

Allan Rosenberg said...

Don't you mean The Byrds not Pete Seeger about "I Come & Stand"?

Captain Al

steve simels said...

Well yeah, but Seeger gets the writing credit. He adapted it from a poem by a famous Turkish poet.

Allan Rosenberg said...

Wow, I thought the writer was Japanese. What do I know. Either one would be stopped at the southern border for trying to sneak in over our borders and into our brains.

:-)

The Befuddled Captain

Gummo said...

I liked Eve of Destruction.

Of course, I was 9 at the time.

But even then, McGuire's voice was a bit over-the-top cringey for me.

But I think the most cringey topical song of all time was John Lennon's Woman Is the N****r of the World. Stupid, superficial lyrics, tuneless, and o-so-earnest. Like Patti Smith with Rock'n'Roll N****r, Lennon thought he could take ownership of the "n" word and turn it to 'good.' But that was not ever going to be something a privileged white person could do, artist or no. Even the attempt was the ultimate in appropriation, and that's exactly how it came off.

mistah charley, sb, ma, phd, jsps said...

i am very fond of "brothers in arms" - written in mark knopfler's dire strait days, here's a moving rendition by an old bald guy

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2R2Qtf3UeL0

in terms of unpacking it a bit,

And we have just one world
But we live in different ones


i understand this to refer to one of the most important reasons for the sorrow we humans bring each other

as Canadian ecologist william rees points out, our fellow animals live in the world they encounter - but we talking apes live in the world of our ideas

this gives us great power, but also makes us capable of great evil - accidentally and on purpose

groups of animals can have territorial wars with other groups of the same species, but only people have ideological/political/religious wars

another topical song that expresses my contemporary pessimism about the state of the world now and for the medium-range future is bruce cockburn's "the trouble with normal" - it always gets worse

but for as long as we've got, let's do our best to find love, peace and joy with those who are precious to us

Blue Ash Fan said...

Ignoreland - REM

An historically accurate description of the roots of the horror we're living through today.

BG said...

More Dylan than can possibly be listed, but I’ll go with “Masters of War” …

BG said...

Whooopee! "Feel like I'm Fixin' to Die Rag" by Country Joe and the Fish

Anonymous said...

https://youtu.be/X0y9CN_ta-A?si=rGqPXxGlP0V3TAkH

Roger said...

Sonny Bono - "Laugh at Me"
Extra credit for Mott's version

steve simels said...

I prefer the Skeletons version.😎

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=YuFlFwqFNDs&pp=ygUZdGhlIHNrZWxldG9ucyBsYXVnaCBhdCBtZQ%3D%3D

Alzo said...

Joe Grushecky: What Did You Do in the War, Daddy? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hh0wKXAT6XI

...which namechecks CCR: Fortunate Son

...and of course, Edwin Starr: War

..and any Phil Ochs.

Allan Rosenberg said...

Hard Rain is Gonna Fall

Morning Dew

Captain Al

edward said...

Any Phil Ochs covers it, but for true atrocity

Anita Bryant doing Phil Ochs Power and Glory

https://youtu.be/c2JvlFtnXuY?si=e8bqgnRdNg70R-tw

neal t said...

the hard to find"Stoned in Siagon by The? Fresh

MJConroy said...

Bob Marley And The Wailers - Get Up Stand Up
Marvin Gaye - What's Goin' On

Anonymous said...

Yep, good choice

getawaygoober said...


Well-Intentioned Blues · National Lampoon

Mark said...

Larry Norman's Nightmare #71. See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rD7YODSdmDo

BG said...

Leaving out Dylan, there are actually a ton of them. Funny that so many of them are from the same few years.

"Ohio" - C,S,N,&Y
"Volunteers" and "Rejoyce" - Jefferson Airplane
"For What It's Worth" - Springfield
"Revolution" - Beatles (John being cynical)
"Street Fighting Man" - Stones
"Won't Get Fooled Again" and "Baba O'Riley" - Who

And two slightly later ones, both a wee bit more apocalyptic:
"Life During Wartime" - Talking Heads
"London Calling" - Clash

danny1959 said...

"Whitey on the Moon" by Gil Scott-Heron

Keith Fellenstein said...

Monster by Steppenwolf
Song for America by Kansas

M_Sharp said...

"I'm Against It" - Ramones
"California Ãœber Alles" - The Dead Kennedys
"It Can't Happen Here" - The Mothers Of Invention
"Trouble Every Day" - The Mothers Of Invention
"My Beach" - Surf Punks
"Charlottesville" - Jesse Dayton
"Sold American" - Kinky Freidman

steve simels said...

As longtime readers are aware, I’m, er, not a Zappa fan😎

But “Trouble Comin” is freaking great.

Anonymous said...

Society's Child by Janis Ian
Silent Night/ Six O'Clock News by Simon &Garfunkel
rs

M_Sharp said...

"Taxman" - The Beatles ...keep an eye on those quiet ones...

Anonymous said...

On the other side -
Gallent Me - Sen Everett Dirkson ;-)
rob

Anonymous said...

99 Luftballons - Nena
The Wall Street Shuffle - 10cc
rob

JD Goldberg said...

Morning Dew - Jeff Beck Group
Belfast to Boston - James Taylor

Anonymous said...

Sometimes in considering today's historical events it pays to reflect on past history -
Al Stewart
The Palace of Versailles
Roads To Moscow
rob