Friday, August 02, 2024

La Fin de La Semaine Essay Question: Special "I Knew I Loved That Woman" Edition

What -- you mean she DIDN'T actually buy a copy of that Floor Models album?

Heh.

In any case, this leads us to the weekend's business. To wit:

...and your favorite (or least favorite) explicitly-or-implicitly politically themed post-Elvis pop/rock/soul/country/hip-hop song/record is...???

Yeah, yeah -- I know, I've posted something similar in years gone by (in 2015, actually) but I think that given the news of the last couple of weeks, you'll probably agree with me that it's newly pertinent.

In any event, no arbitrary rules; obviously there are going to be lotsa protest tunes getting the nod, but there are also scads of songs that are political in nature without being specifically about real individuals or actual events.

Oh, and in case you're wondering, here's MY all-time fave.

I mean, apart from just being a great piece of work on every musical level, that was also a Top 10 hit blasting out of radios everywhere within a couple of weeks of the outrage that inspired it.

Say what you will about CSNY, but I can't think of any artists in pop history who ever pulled off something similarly amazing.

So -- what would YOUR choices be?

And have a great weekend, everybody!!!

43 comments:

  1. Given current conditions, Elvis Costello and the Attractions: Night Rally, though for pure pop goodieness, Oliver's Army.

    Tom Waits Road To Peace still relevant.


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  2. Alice Cooper Elected

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  3. Give Peace a Chance - Plastic Ono Band

    Even as a young teen, I could hear the wistful sadness behind the bravado.

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  4. Society's Child by Janis Ian
    rs

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  5. Ian Hunter "When I'm President"

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  6. as mentioned in yesterday's clipping from yesteryear's papers -

    Monster, by Steppenwolf

    illustrated video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sk3sURDS4IA


    I used to think of myself as a citizen, and among other things gave generously to a candidate for the presidential nomination of a particular party in 2016 and 2020, in the hope that things might be made better through the political process

    now my view is that the only course that makes sense for me is to - as Voltaire metaphorically put it in Candide - to "cultivate my own garden"

    stuff will happen, and more stuff will happen - and techno-industrial civilization is heading for a brick wall at full speed - again, speaking metaphorically

    George Carlin said it best - enjoy what you got, it's not gonna get better

    great music of many kinds, delicious food, art and literature and the marvels of the natural world and scientific and technological achievements, amazing athletic and artistic feats, friendship and love - dig it - and recognize the universal applicability of George Harrison's "all things must pass"


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  7. Ohio is going to be tough to beat but I'll throw out Fortunate Son and Revolution.

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  8. Ooh -- I'd forgotten the Ian Hunter. Love that!!!

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  9. Love all these:
    "What's so Funny 'bout Peace, Love and Understanding?" -- any version
    "Sunday, Bloody Sunday" - U2
    "Feel Like I'm Fixin' to Die Rag" - Country Joe and the Fish
    "Give the People What They Want" - Kinks
    "Won't Get Fooled Again" - Who

    Too many Dylan songs to mention.

    HATE this:
    "I am Woman" - Helen Reddy

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  10. Human Condition - The Broadcasters
    Richard Nixon's Last Halloween - The Weasels

    Captain Al

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  11. Shipbuilding - Elvis Costello (h/t to the Robert Wyatt cover)
    Ball of Confusion - The Temptations
    Whats going on - Marvin Gaye
    Taxman - The Beatles
    Bring the Lucie (Freda People) - John Lennon (h/t to the recent Richard Ashcroft cover)

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  12. I can’t believe I forgot the Weasels.😎

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  13. Cap In Hand
    A Land Fit For Zeros
    SORRY
    The Long Haul
    all by The Proclaimers

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  14. London calling. The clash
    A town called malice. The jam

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  15. WORST: Jackson Browne - I am a Patriot

    The repetition in the lyrics drives me nuts!

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  16. Worst. "Ballad Of The Green Berets."

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  17. Rob B Mullen8/02/2024 3:10 PM

    Okie dokie - here goes
    Edwin Starr - War
    Eric Burden - Sky Pilot
    Al Stewart - Somewhere in England 1915
    Tom Waits. - Hell Broke Luce
    Barry McGuire - Eve of Destruction
    rob

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  18. Mike Curb Congregation: Nixon Now! More Than Ever.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KkJGW6WE5ig

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  19. I've always hated Eve of Destruction

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  20. Pete --

    I always hated Eve of Destruction too.

    And then I heard THIS remake. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gq5wo7jep04

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  21. Rob B Mullen8/02/2024 4:50 PM

    So I guess you gentlemen hate this as well
    Generals gathered in their masses
    Just like Witches at Black Masses
    rob. ;-)

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  22. I'd forgotten the Red Rockers version of Eve of Destruction.

    But if you really hate the song, try the Dickies:
    https://youtu.be/GLuCA2ZWJh8?si=GgYMWkIFpL9ggp_v

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  23. I guess *somebody* has to mention "The Funky Western Civilization" by Mr. K!

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  24. “Ohio”?? I can’t stand being preached at - growing up as a natural-born atheist in the Bible Belt will do that to you - and IMO that song is as preachy as it gets (which is why I despise Eve of Destruction in any form). But if you need a CSN(Y) song, I’d pick the only two David Crosby songs I like: Long Time Gone and Almost Cut My Hair; both powerful, thoughtful, not preachy, and they rock.

    Otherwise, you can’t ever go wrong with the brilliance that is Won’t Get Fooled Again, whether it’s the version on Who’s Next with its incredible intelligence, power, dynamics, and that hypnotic synth-processed organ track leading into Moon’s drum fill for the ages and the greatest scream in rock history, or the Pete Townshend and John Williams acoustic duet on the Secret Policeman’s Ball soundtrack, where the listener can appreciate the naked passion of this extraordinary song. I have been fortunate enough to hear PT perform a small theater solo acoustic show, and he played this one at the end of the night…one of those once-in-a-lifetime moments.

    A few others…
    Tonio K.’s Say Goodbye from his sophomore disc Amerika
    Fairport Convention, Sloth
    The Who again, with Another Tricky Day off of Face Dances; the breakdown on this one is fabulous, and Kenney Jones is more than adequate bashing the pagan skins
    Sam Cooke, Meet Me at Mary’s Place
    The Beatles, Revolution 1 (off the White Album)
    Nick Lowe’s What’s So Funny About Peace Love and Understanding, I prefer the Brinsley Schwarz version to the EC version

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  25. Tramp the Dirt Down - Elvis Costello
    Generals and Majors - XTC
    Flag Day - The Housemartins
    Exhuming McCarthy - REM

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  26. For the nature of the day performed, the setting of his set and the overall aim of the long weekend, one of my favorites is Richie Havens' "Freedom" at Woodstock, August 15, 1969.

    paulinca

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  27. "Whitey on the Moon" by Gil Scott-Heron

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  28. "Bring The Boys Home" - Freda Payne
    "Vietnam" - Jimmy Cliff
    "God Save The Queen" - Sex Pistols

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  29. Six o' my favorite songs fall into your ask:
    What's Going On and Mercy Mercy Me by Marvin Gaye
    Change Is Gonna Come by Sam Cooke
    Masters Of War by Dylan
    Shut Out The Light by Springsteen
    Ramble Tamble by CCR
    Others that I really really like:
    War Pigs by Sabbath
    Trump's Pilot by Father John Misty
    The Have Nots by X
    2+2 by Bob Seger System
    London Calling and Straight To Hell by the Clash
    Valley Of Hate by Just Luv
    Mideast Vacation by Neil Young
    Games Without Frontiers by Peter Gabriel
    For What It's Worth by Buffalo Springfield
    Bomb Shelter Pt 2 by Halo Benders
    Roland The Headless Thompson Gunner by Warren Zevon
    King Of The Hill by Minutemen

    C in California

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  30. I'd like to add "Taxman" by The Beatles to the great list here. Phil Cheese.

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  31. WURST OF THE WURST MIT UMLAUT

    The Battle Hymn of Lt. Calley – C Company featuring Terry Nelson (remember My Lai?) (Great times, right?)

    WURST MIT UMLAUT

    The Universal Coward – Jan & Dean (so bad it’s kinda good)
    The Ballad of the Yellow Beret – Beach Bums (Bob Seger)

    MAINSTREAM WURST

    Born in the USA – The Butt
    Imagine – Saint John
    Give Ireland Back to the Irish – Macca
    7 O’Clock News-Silent Night – Simon & Garfunkel
    Peace In L.A. – Tom Petty
    Sweet Neo Con – Rolling Stones (I hate neo con war mongers but this song sucks)
    I Am a Patriot – Steve Van Zandt (and most of his other political explorations)
    People Let’s Stop the War – Grand Funk Railroad
    One Guitar – Willie Nile
    Mid to Late Eighties Jackson Browne – no sense of humor – I liked his Redneck Friend when it was 11 on a scale of 10. When he was walking slow down the avenue in my old neighborhood. When he was Poor, Poor Pitiful Me. When these young girls just wouldn’t let him be. When he had lightning in his pocket and thunder in his shoes. When we toyed with his affection and then laughed at his erection. When he lightened up when he still could. When he opened up and climbed on in. When he gave it to me under the falling sky. And took it easy. And he loved the times I'd come.

    VR

    apologies in advance

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  32. BEST

    Gimme Shelter – Rolling Stones
    My Generation – The Who
    The Ostrich - Steppenwolf
    Alice’s Restaurant Massacree – Arlo Guthrie
    American Woman – Guess Who
    Machine Gun – Jimi Hendrix/Band of Gypsys
    Brown Shoes Don’t Make It – Zappa/Mothers of Invention
    Say It Loud I’m Black and I’m Proud – James Brown
    Something in the Air – Thunderclap Newman
    For What It’s Worth – Buffalo Springfield (the key is that it’s not self-righteous at all. Unlike CSNY’s later interpretation)
    Shades of Gray – Monkees
    Gates of Delirium - Yes
    Paradise – John Prine
    Ship of Fools – Grateful Dead
    You Don’t Own Me – Lesley Gore
    Children of the Grave – Black Sabbath
    I Unseen – The Misunderstood
    Changes – Moby Grape
    Jesus Thinks You’re a Jerk - Zappa
    The Southern Thing – Drive-by Truckers
    Morning Dew – Bonnie Dobson; Grateful Dead, Jeff Beck Group, Tim Rose, Lulu
    Jackson-Kent Blues – Steve Miller Band
    I’d Love To Change the World – Ten Years After
    Penny Evans – Steve Goodman
    No Man Can Find the War – Tim Budkley
    Rhymin’ Man - Zappa
    What About Me? - Quicksilver
    We Can Be Together – Jefferson Airplane
    Revolution – Mother Earth (from the soundtrack of Revolution)
    Hungry Freaks Daddy – Mothers of Invention
    A Change Is Gonna Come – Sam Cooke’s has already been picked. So, I’ll go with the Three Dog Night version, even though it skips a verse. Critics revile this version but, dare I say it, I like this arrangement better than Sam’s. Cory Wells was a damn fine white soul singer. TDN was a crack band.
    Sam Stone - John Prine
    Politician – Cream (sometimes all the politics you need is between your legs)
    Dickie’s Such An Asshole – Zappa
    Student Demonstration Time – Beach Boys
    On the Border - Eagles
    David Bowie – 1984/Big Brother
    Riot On Sunset Strip - Hypstrz
    Southern Man – Neil Young
    Sweet Home Alabama – Lynyrd Skynyrd
    Street Fighting Man – Rolling Stones
    Son of Orange County – Zappa/Mothers
    Sympathy For the Devil – Rolling Stones
    Safe In My Garden – Mamas and the Papas
    My Uncle – Flying Burrito Brothers
    Straight Ahead – Jimi Hendrix
    Daily Nightly - Monkees
    Throwing Stones (Ashes, Ashes, All Fall Down) – Grateful Dead
    Animals LP - Pink Floyd
    More Trouble Everyday – Frank Zappa-Mothers of Invention
    Wind-Up – Jethro Tull
    The Man with No Soul - Lucinda Williams
    It Better End Soon - Chicago
    Ain't Wastin' Time No More - Allman Brothers Band
    U.S. Blues - Grateful Dead
    Chained - Three Dog Night (from Brian Wilson's Favorite TDN LP "Seven Separate Fools")
    Black & White - Three Dog Night (hated it when it first came out. Seemed like something the Brady Bunch would do. Don't like it that much now either, but the band does some interesting things. Floyd Sneed was a mother of a drummer and pretty unique. The rest of the players are no slouches either. The interplay is muy groovy. I'd love to isolate the backing track from the vocals and play with the faders on the board. And its got cowbell.)

    VR

    all errors intact - gotta crash

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  33. I forgot Star Spangled Banner - Jimi Hendrix Woodstock version

    and the same song by Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir and Vince Welnick

    check it out https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e67T_kjc64A

    VR

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  34. VR


    I wouldn’t have thought of Safe in My Garden, but that’s a great choice……

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  35. Rob B Mullen8/03/2024 1:52 PM

    Let's not forget - Jefferson Airplane. . .
    We Can Be Together
    Volunteers
    And that offset - Hot Tuna
    Uncle Sams Blues
    Death Don't Have No Mercy
    rob

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  36. Hard day on the Planet - London Wainwright III

    41 Shots - Bruce

    Living in a Ghost Town - The Stones

    Vince

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  37. Gordon Lightfoot - Black Day In July (about the 1968 Detroit riots)

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  38. Fugazi live at the White House
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I0gs_FaNOD4

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  39. Rob B Mullen8/03/2024 7:02 PM

    Steve when a column is just "crickets"
    remember this one with now 40 replies
    Don't know if this is a record but it's up there.
    rob

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  40. A couple more favorites:

    Danny O'Keefe - So Long, Harry Truman
    Bob Dylan - Jokerman (edited single version)

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  41. Rockin' In the Free World - Neil Young
    Mr. You're a Better Man Than I - Yardbirds
    People Got to Be Free - Rascals
    Get Up, Stand Up - Bob Marley (and a good portion of his catalog)
    My City Was Gone - Pretenders
    Motor City Is Burning - MC5
    The American Ruse - MC5
    The Day John Kennedy Died - Lou Reed
    Citizenship - Patti Smith Group
    Five To One - The Doors
    Leaving On a Jet Plane - John Denver, Peter, Paul & Mary
    Last Train to Clarksville - Monkees
    Where Duty Calls - Patti Smith
    What Now America - Lee Michaels
    Abraham, Martin & John - Dion
    Only a Fool Would Say That - Steely Dan (for John Lennon)
    Royal Scam - Steely Dan
    Subterranean Homesick Blues - Dylan
    Run Through the Jungle - Creedence
    2112 - Rush
    The Laws Must Change - John Mayall
    Draft Morning - Byrds
    The Unknown Soldier - The Doors
    It's You - The Millennium
    Big Yellow Taxi - Joni Mitchell
    What Have They Done to the Rain - Searchers
    Sweet Cherry Wine - Tommy James & the Shondells
    Chicago/We Can Change the World - Graham Nash
    Military Madness - Graham Nash (just as stupid as the one above)
    Save the Country - Laura Nyro (annoying performance. 5th Dimension is slicker but better)
    Give a Damn - Spanky & Our Gang (cheez-ola)
    I Wanna Grow Up to Be a Poltician - Byrds
    Anthem - Rush

    VR

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  42. How Much is That Doggie in the Window?

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