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political music

Nov 5, 2004
207
46
hartlepool, uk
ok, im going to try and ship off my college work onto other people...
for my english language investigation, i have chose to analyse and compare political songs from the 1950 [1960's,70's,80's,90's] to the present day.
comparing lyrics, reasoning and issues.

i already have a wee list, but i need A LOT.

cheers,
lots of love,
paul
 

ummbikes

Don't mess with the Santas
Apr 16, 2002
1,794
0
Napavine, Warshington
I would dig into Country music. It can be very political.

The Dixie Chicks are politically active for the Democrats here in America, there newest album is very political, but you will really have to dig into the lyrics find the political context.

On the neo-con front Toby Keith is very political.

Both the 'Chicks and Keith have songs about soldiers, it would be fun to compare and contrast what messages they atempting to sell.
 

chamber_gurl

Chimp
Nov 20, 2004
8
0
bristol, England
the possibilty is endless!!! but dont jsut stick to the punk side of things cuz thats wot peole wud guess from u!! Politics rules everything!! (which is kinda sad in a way) and ur gunna find it anywhere really!!
try playing girls aloud "sound of the undergorund" backward-
revealing the subliminal msg of "sign up for the Labour party, it's free and we gunna DESTROY, sign up mother f*ckers"

i dnt thinkt his post was very helpful!
 
Nov 5, 2004
207
46
hartlepool, uk
i dont wanna play anything backwards...
its about simple analysis of grammer and lexis, syntax and all thats crazy stuff!

what makes you think i would just stick to the punk side too?

cheers though,
paul
 

TheInedibleHulk

Turbo Monkey
May 26, 2004
1,886
0
Colorado
Dylan, Cash, and Neil Young are all good choices for sure. Bob Marley, Bruce Springstien, Jackson Browne (Hardcore 80s), Tracy Chapman, U2, Pink Floyd, and Steve Earle all come to mind as well. Good luck.
 

TheInedibleHulk

Turbo Monkey
May 26, 2004
1,886
0
Colorado
U2- Mothers of the Dissapeared, Sunday Bloody Sunday, Bullet the Blue Sky
Tracy Chapman- Across the Lines
Marley- Buffalo Soldier, Exodus.... there's more, I dont have much Marley
Bruce Springstein- Born in the USA, My Hometown
Jackson Browne- Lives in the Balance
Pink Floyd- The Wall- whole album
Steve Earle- John Walker's Blues, Jerusalem, Amerika V6.0

If nothing else do steve earle, he's awesome.
 

ummbikes

Don't mess with the Santas
Apr 16, 2002
1,794
0
Napavine, Warshington
I would also pay close attention to songs that help shape, or reflect the attitudes of the people during a specific era. While most of these songs will not be overtly political they do play a role in determining where a society is headed, and where it is arriving from.

A few quick examples:

Hotel Califorina by the Eagles.
Material Girl by Madonna.
Hey Ya by Outkast.

These songs all were pop hits that really were much more than just a mere song. While not polemics like Dylan, Biaffra, and De la Racha pen they all are rather scathing observations about the society at that time.
 

JRogers

talks too much
Mar 19, 2002
3,785
1
Claremont, CA
Others have already mentioned most of what I would suggest- U2, Dylan, Rage Against the Machine.

Not sure what qualifies as "political" but you might want to look at The Beastie Boys (especially newer stuff) and the Dope Poets Society (Canadian rap group). Also, Metallica might work (For Whom the Bell Tolls, ...And Justice For All, Ride the Lightning, One and others).
 

stevew

resident influencer
Sep 21, 2001
41,382
10,316
minutemen "If Reagan played Disco"
minutemen "Joe McCarthy's Ghost"
minutemen "Vietnam"

Buy any minutemen record.
 

preppie

Monkey
Aug 30, 2002
379
0
Europe
Biafra was mentioned, so this came to mind :

- The dead kennedys
- Nomeansno
- Ministry
- LARD
- Johny Cash
- Talking heads
- Elliot Smith (some)
- ..
 

ska todd

Turbo Monkey
Oct 10, 2001
1,776
0
Aside from some of the obvious, I'll chuck in my suggestions here...

Since I am "ska todd"...
-The Specials..."Ghost Town", "Nelson Mandella"
-The Slackers..."War Criminal" EP

Also check out Conor Oberst. He fronts two bands; Desaparecidos & Bright Eyes. Desaparecidos' "Read Music, Speak Spanish" is pretty politically charged, especially in regards to American consumerism. Some of his Bright Eyes work is pretty political too.

Check out "Let's Not $hit Ourselves (To Love and To Be Loved)" on Bright Eyes' "Lifted (The Story is in the Soil Keep Your Ear to the Ground) disc. His song "One Foot in Front of the Other" from the Saddle Creek "50" comp was released right before the Iraq invasion and is overtly anti-war. It's a great piece to hear, even better hearing it performed live right before the invasion went down.

What else can I add? Ani DiFranco perhaps? Punk-folk often with a good political/feminist charge.

I'll try to think of more and maybe edit the post some.

-ska todd
 

syadasti

i heart mac
Apr 15, 2002
12,690
290
VT
Some modern industrial groups with political commentary - Front 242, Front Line Assembly, VNV Nation
 

narlus

Eastcoast Softcore
Staff member
Nov 7, 2001
24,658
65
behind the viewfinder
the clash "spanish bombs"
neil young "revolution blues" (great song, by the way)
mekons "never been in a riot" (a pisstake at the clashs's "white riot")
 

Fathead

Monkey
May 6, 2003
433
0
SE TX
Maybe a little late, but don't forget, and in no particular order:

Pete Tosh (anything - can't have reggae that's not about either politics or luvin')
Timbuk3 (at least half their songs)
Butthole Surfers (something about shooting the Pope?)
Black Sabbath (War Pigs)
Jimi Hendrix (like Tosh, any of the songs that weren't about gettin' it on)
 

Btyler311

Chimp
Aug 8, 2004
67
0
Just before the elections I saw Queen's Reich and they did the whole Op Mindcrime thing song for song with video and live actors in front of it (Very cool when a real actor put a gun in their mouth and the gore splattered all over the screen in video)and it all kept being brought back to the bush admin with Revolution etc. The Artists kept reitifying "its time for revolution" etc. We are being controlled blah blah...

Then a week later we saw Sting and he was much more subtle with the song Fragile the video in the background was a continuous slow mo photo neg of bombs dropping as if seen from the plane, then near the end the perspective swung away to show the planes flying over oil wells.

Thats a good topic, a lot of interesting imagery used but you might need to pick a genre to narrow it down or just compare the political ovetones in X's work then vrs Y's work now and show how each ties into current popular culture etc. If you let it stray to too broad an aea for each time period you'll never be able to pin it down and get it done.

G'Luck!

Ty
 

narlus

Eastcoast Softcore
Staff member
Nov 7, 2001
24,658
65
behind the viewfinder
Gate's _the dew line_ is a very political record, and it's an instrumental (i think; been a while since i listened to michael morley's sheets of guitar noise). he's got an lp called _amerika_ too.
 

narlus

Eastcoast Softcore
Staff member
Nov 7, 2001
24,658
65
behind the viewfinder
speaking of instrumental lps, frank zappas _jazz from hell_ earned a Parental Warning sticker, even though it was all instrumental. :rolleyes: i think that's one of the reasons he testified before congress @ the PRMC hearings.
 

Btyler311

Chimp
Aug 8, 2004
67
0
Silver,

I don't mean cool for the gore factor but in the way they tied the video so directly to the live actors.

I wonder if the music of the late 30's had any useable political overtones or if it was pretty much just big band stuff.

Ty
 

Fathead

Monkey
May 6, 2003
433
0
SE TX
narlus said:
speaking of instrumental lps, frank zappas _jazz from hell_ earned a Parental Warning sticker, even though it was all instrumental. :rolleyes: i think that's one of the reasons he testified before congress @ the PRMC hearings.
Btyler: even earlier than the early 30s, the "new music" (mostly jazz and be-bop) had political meaning. . . flappers, suffragettes, minorities, anti-prohibitionists. Of course, when women and booze are salient political issues, music will necessarily be political.

Narlus: Instrumental music can definitely make a political statement. Trace the "infiltration" of jazz through our culture: embraced by minorities, outlaws, and "beats"; shunned by religious conservatives and law enforcement. Even much of early rock was banned or discouraged because of its "suggestive" or "uncivilized" (read: we're scared of colored folks) instrumental content (the beat, the guitar emphasis), not just its lyrics.

Similarly, but centuries back, certain classical composers made political statements by defying convention in their music. Innovative form, novel instrumentation, opera in the "wrong" language (politically), were all used as statements. This was especially relevant when composers were government-supported.

Going from the subtle to the obvious, I don't think I've seen Public Enemy in this thread yet.
 

BigMike

BrokenbikeMike
Jul 29, 2003
8,931
0
Montgomery county MD
YOU MUST check out Immortal Technique. May I suggest the song "The Cause of Death"
Also, I dont know if it counts as music, its more spoken word, but "The poverty of philosophy"

(you can find most of his stuff @ suprnova.org)