Category Archives: Listening Post

In my ear

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I have been acquiring tons of new (and old) music lately. As usual my listening habits are quite catholic, but I’ve been dipping into New Orleans R&B consistently, the usual mix of “Americana/alt.country,” and lot’s of “alternative” as well as older blues and rock.

Here’s a list of albums that are in the super heavy rotation:

Ray DaviesOther People’s Lives
Doug Sahm & The Sir Douglas QuintetThe Complete Mercury Recordings [Box set]
Alejandro EscovedoThe Boxing Mirror
Destroyer—Destroyer’s Rubies
Neil Young—Living With War
SubdudesBehind the Levee
The MetersThe Very Best of The Meters
The Flaming LipsAt War With The Mystics [Check out the insane video for The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song]
Donald FagenMorph The Cat
Bill WithersBest of Bill Withers: Lean on Me
Neko CaseFox Confessor Brings the Flood
Ricky NelsonGreatest Hits
Robert PollardFrom a Compound Eye [Listen to the album streamed, free, over the internet by clicking here
Boozoo Bayou—Dust My Broom
Johnny AdamsThe Great Johnny Adams Blues Album
Various Artists—Crescent City Soul (4 cds)
Los Super SevenHeard It On the X
Los Lobos—Acoustic en Vivo

Some of the newest stuff I’ve picked up:
Teddy ThompsonSeparate Ways
Chris WhitleyReiter In
Garage A TroisOutre Mer (Soundtrack from the Motion Picture)
Alejandro Escovedo—the internet only Room of Songs
Bruce SpringsteenWe Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions
Pearl JamPearl Jam
The Flaming Lips—The Fearless Freaks: 20 Years of Weird, 1986-2006
Bela Fleck & The FlecktonesThe Hidden Land
Rosanne Cash—Black Cadillac
Various Artists—Searching for Soul

A few days in Bodega Bay yeilded lots of new, old music thanks to PMM (still making my way through all this and loving it all!):
The Who—Thirty Years of Maximum R&B [Box set]
Stevie Ray VaughanSRV [Box set]
Marvin GayeThe Master, 1961-1984 [Box set]
The Wood BrothersWays Not to Lose
Various Artists—Nuggets: Original Artyfacts From The First Psychedelic Era [Box set]
George Harrison—George Harrison
Hall & Oates—Abandoned Luncheonette
T. Rex—20th Century Boy
Various Artists—Enjoy Every Sandwich (Warren Zevon tribute)
Robert Earl KeenWhat I Really Mean
Neil Young—Greatest Hits, Everybody Knows This is Nowhere

And from RG a massive 8 cd collection with an emphasis on fast, loud and out of control rock and roll):
Various Artists—Gibson’s Greatest Rock n Roll

And now even more mix tape art…

Last summer, having been inspired by Thurston Moore’s book Mix Tape: The Art of Cassette Culture, I posted several entries on mix tapes/cds (here and here and here).

Looking over my blog I found a couple of entries on mix tapes I never uploaded…so thought I share them with you…

Okay, okay, I know I’m going off the deep end with the mix tape art stuff, but I feel a pressing need to share these images with the rest of world.

Here are a few images/playlists from my series of mix tapes (cds) for The Rouge Forum

Hag on the war, country music, and Bob Dylan

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Via RockRap.com–Hag shares his thoughts on his tour partner, Bob Dylan, as well as the “war on terror,” and country music…

“I don’t even consider myself country anymore. I identify more with what’s happening in rock and roll right now, and it’s the rock people who seem to identify with me the most, and treat me with some sort of respect. The country people are out to use my name for different things if they can, and the rock and roll people seem to just like me for who I am.”

‘To hell with country’

Our no-holds-barred interview with Merle Haggard

By Jim Reed

Since his earliest days as a rough and tumble juvenile delinquent, this
disturber of the peace has stood apart from the rest of the pack. A
sophisticated man who’s never shied away from being blunt if it suited his
purposes, he’s alternately a sensitive, emotional poet, and a plucky, gruff
curmudgeon.

As such, he’s come to personify the perfect distillation of the particular
brand of genius one might bestow upon the very greatest country and western
music stars.

As time moves on, and more and more of the genre’s legendary figures leave
this old wicked world, Haggard (an apropos surname if there ever was one)
trucks on, one of the last of a dying breed. After being essentially written
off by many of the power brokers of the very industry his hits helped create
and nurture, in 2003, he received no small amount of critical praise for
Unforgettable, an under-promoted disc that found him lending his own
inimitable style to a collection of American pop standards.

To those with only a cursory knowledge of his back catalog, this may have
seemed a crass attempt at cross-over success. However, those familiar with
his mercurial career recognized that CD as another in a long line of Haggard
releases (such as those devoted to tunes by Jimmie Rodgers or Bob Wills)
meant as love letters to artists whose work helped form Merle’s own unique
approach to songwriting.

Whether known as the protégé of (and sideman to) the late guitarist and
singer Buck Owens, or as the man who penned such timeless classics as
“Working Man Blues,” “I Threw Away The Rose,” “The Bottle Let Me Down,” and
the controversial “Okie From Muskogee,” or as an outspoken critic of the
Patriot Act, The Hag is one of a kind.

That’s probably why he was tapped by another one-of-a-kind superstar, Bob
Dylan, to share the bill with him on over 20 dates across the U.S.A.,
including this Sunday’s appearance at the Civic Center.

This is Merle’s second outing with Dylan (the first took place last spring),
and by all audience accounts, this pairing of crusty, idiosyncratic
songwriters is a match made in heaven.

Merle and I talked trash on the phone for what seemed like an hour, and it
was a real hoot. Here’s some of our chat.

Connect Savannah: Where are you at?

Merle Haggard: We’re in St. Louis tonight.

Connect Savannah: That must be a good town for you.

Merle Haggard: Well, it’s the middle of America! (laughs)

Connect Savannah: The posters for this tour read “all new show!” How much of
that is just a catchy slogan, and how much is real?

Merle Haggard: Well, I wing it every night. We’ve got no set list. It’s not
the same conversation or the same jokes, you know? I think Bob comes up with
a couple of different setlists for each tour, and I’m pretty sure the show
he’s doing is a little different from the one he did when we were together
last year. Basically, I just go out there and have fun, and so far it’s been
real, real good. Tickets are selling, and people are standing up on every
song.

Connect Savannah: During the first shows with Bob, a lot got made of the
tension between your two camps – Dylan being his inscrutable self, and you
perhaps rightfully expecting him to be a more gracious host. I got the
feeling that was blown out of proportion, and sure enough, you guys are back
out together. Has the ice thawed, or is he still unavailable for hang time?

Merle Haggard: Well, Bob’s a mysterious guy. He doesn’t really hang out with
anybody! That’s fine with me. I speak to him every once in a while. We
actually talked for about 20 or 30 minutes the other day, and that was the
first time that’s occurred. He’s very off to himself, you know. His persona
is rather serious, and I suppose it always has been. That hasn’t changed
just for me. I mean, he’s that way with everybody!

Connect Savannah: Many people see this tour as a celebration of two
counterculture icons. Yet if there’s a connection between you and Bob as
artists, I would think it has more to do with being your own men and
following your hearts. Does that assessment ring true, or do you feel
another type of bond with Dylan, or no bond at all?

Merle Haggard: Well, Bob and I are both songwriters. That’s where the bond
is. We admire each other’s work. He does a couple of my songs in his show
from time to time when I’m on tour with him. He does a rock version of “Mama
Tried,” and he does “Sing Me Back Home.” I’ve always found him and his music
to be interesting – as much as the public does. On tour he finds it
complimentary to have me share the bill with him and vice versa.

Connect Savannah: Both you and Dylan are known for not saying too much in
public about your political views, but, when you do take a stand, folks pay
attention. I know you haven’t been the most ardent supporter of our current
presidential administration in regards to the military action in the Middle
East. Do you get any feeling that more people are starting to question
authority, or do things still look pretty grim to you as far as free speech
is concerned?

Merle Haggard: It looks pretty grim, doesn’t it? I don’t see any chance for
the people who disagree to really change anything. I mean, we have chosen to
go to war to defend our freedom. Meanwhile, at the exact same time, our
freedom is being diminished in our own country by scare tactics that are
supposedly caused by terrorists – but we’re the ones running up the “terror
alert.” So, what does that makes us? If we’re gonna go all the way across
the world and fight for it, we should have the very best brand of it. But we
don’t have it anymore.

I really wonder sometimes how long the public will be so stupid as to allow
themselves to continue to be shortchanged. I just wish someone – anyone –
would take a minute and raise their head and look up to see what’s really
going away, what we’ve already lost. This Free Trade Agreement that we’re in
– we’re now on a level playing field with over a hundred other countries.
After all the scare tactics our government’s used on us since 9/11, we’ve
gone straight to hell in this country. We have no say whatsoever in much of
the way our government conducts its business, and the way they scapegoat
people. Look what they did to the Dixie Chicks, and Linda Ronstadt.

Connect Savannah: Well, that Linda Ronstadt business was so absurd that it
almost seemed like a Saturday Night Live sketch.

Merle Haggard: It seemed like something from 1942 Nazi Germany to me. I
don’t know why little by little people have allowed our country to change so
much over the last five years! What we’re fighting for doesn’t even exist
anymore.

Connect Savannah: When you see the crowds on these double-bills, how are
they different from the shows where you’re the headliner? Are they younger,
more diverse?

Merle Haggard: Well, I’ll tell you what. After touring for 40 years and
watching this country go away, the time of day seems to determine whether
you have an older crowd. If you want to draw anybody even remotely older,
you gotta play at noon! They’re not gonna come out in this country anymore!
They’re scared to death to come out after dark. That’s a fact. By and large
you just won’t see ladies with grey in their hair walking around after dark
in most cities. In this society, it’s the young folks who come out at night.
So, if you wanna draw kids, you play after dark. (laughs)

Connect Savannah: Well, these Dylan shows start in the early evening, so I
guess it’s the best of both worlds.

Merle Haggard: You’re right. We seem to draw a cross-section of both age
groups. For example, I played in Miami, Oklahoma last night. We had a full
house by ourselves. But the show started at 7:30 in the evening! Now, some
years ago, I’m here to tell you that nobody would have been at a show at
7:30 at night! But now, with the terror alerts and the lack of freedom and
the scare tactics they’re using… Then, you’ve got these people who won’t
come out on the weekends. They won’t even compete with the young people
anymore. It’s like they’ve given in and given up. It’s really become two
separate societies as far as the age difference is concerned.
I just celebrated my birthday. It was my 69th, so I didn’t celebrate it that
much (laughs), I just stayed at home. I don’t even go to the Quickie Stop
after dark. My family and everyone I know is the exact same way. After dark,
the streets seem like they belong to the gangs and the police. But, hell, by
9 p.m., the gangs and the police are even shut out! We played in Kansas
City, Kansas, the other night, and our hotel was way up high on a hill. You
could look out and see the whole town, and there was nothin’ goin’ on! The
place was totally shut down. America used to be a 24-hour country, and these
days it seems like it doesn’t do anything after 9 o’clock.

Connect Savannah: As an artist who’s crossed the U.S. for decades, you’ve
got a unique perspective on this changing climate. Do you feel any sort of
sea change in the works? Is there a backlash brewing?

Merle Haggard: I believe you and I will never see any different as long as
we live. We’re stuck with it. I feel like certain towns in America are
committed to entertainment. You have Myrtle Beach, New York City, Portland,
Seattle, San Francisco, Las Vegas, and after that you head toward the center
of the U.S., and there’s nothing. Nothing! If it’s happening, it better damn
well happen in the middle of the day, or it’ll be a failure.

I don’t know how America can work on only eight hours a day. People
shouldn’t forget – this used to be a 24-hour country. It used to be you
could go anywhere in Las Vegas and get steak and eggs at four in the
morning. ‘Round the clock. Now, you can’t get breakfast after 2 p.m. in Las
Vegas! If there’s anybody that doubts what I’m saying, they need to go out,
and ride across this country and see what I’m talking about. It’ll break
your heart.

Connect Savannah: When you returned to Capitol records, it made for great
PR. Did it feel at all like a real homecoming, or was that just a convenient
story?

Merle Haggard: Well, you know the Capitol records of ’65 and the Capitol
Records of now have no similarity whatsoever. It’s completely different
people with different ideas on how to run a business. I think one of the
main reasons they wanted me back was to get the digital rights on some of my
old material that they didn’t have. The majority of the music they had on me
was on old contracts, and they had no provisions in there for digital
rights.

I think they wanted my signature on that and that was the only reason they
ever signed me again. I don’t think they had any intention of trying to sell
my new stuff at all. They just wanted to get their hands back on the old
stuff. They don’t care about Unforgettable or (his latest LP) Chicago Wind.
Come to think of it, though, there’s one similarity between the new fellas
and the old ones: they both speak with the forked tongue! (laughs)

Connect Savannah: Has any of this turned into an ugly legal matter?

Merle Haggard: There’s not any young attorneys that wanna mess with me. See,
I have an attorney, and he’s a real one.

Connect Savannah: Many of your older LPs are getting the deluxe reissue
treatment by Capitol, and it’s shining a light on some of your most enduring
work – but it’s also adding to that legacy by including a lot of previously
unreleased tracks. Did you have any say in what stuff got tacked on to those
CDs, and how do you feel about that?

Merle Haggard: Well, you know, it’s entertaining to me and I’m sure it’s
entertaining to other people to hear mistakes and conversations that we
deemed unreleasable in the early days. But if you’re asking me whether or
not I had any say-so on how they put that stuff together? Of course not.
They didn’t ask me a damn thing. They just threw it on there. Some of those
songs they put out – like “Swinging Doors” – the copy they have out now is
not even the correct one! It’s the rehearsal take. We were exactly one take
away from the master. Now, I have no idea what happened to the master take
of that song, but see, what they’re selling’s not accurate. It’s that kind
of treatment that’s not fair to the artist.

Connect Savannah: How is it that someone of your stature in the music
business receives so little respect or courtesy from the company that has
made a small fortune off your work throughout the years?

Merle Haggard: What you’ve got is a bunch of kids workin’ there now and they
have absolutely no idea who Merle Haggard is or what he is, or what he was,
and what he stood for. What they do is this: Let’s take a scenario. A new
attorney, fresh out of school, barely 34, he’s never heard a single one of
my songs in his life. So, they wanna remix it, or whatever. Most of ’em
figure I’m dead! As crazy as that sounds, that’s the first thing they
assume.

So they just proceed to do whatever they feel like, until somebody says, oh
no! He’s still alive! So they say, well, let’s get him to sign something.
Let’s offer him a new deal. Then, once they’ve got your name on there, they
put it out regardless. They don’t care at all about your feelings or how
it’s gonna look to the fans. They have no intelligence. Kinda like our
government.

Connect Savannah: You received the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award a few
months ago. Does recognition of that sort mean much to you?

Merle Haggard: Well, lemme give you the real scoop on that. There was four
people that got that award at the same time: Richard Pryor, Robert Johnson,
David Bowie and me. Now, two of the others are dead. And they thought I was
dead at first!

So when I said, well, that’s great news, are you gonna let me walk out and
say thank you? They said, “Oh, no.” They told me I had to get my award the
day before the actual event, and then sit there in the audience while all
these rappers I don’t know get up and play, and they said, “then we’ll pan
across you one time with the camera.” I said, naw. No you won’t. (laughs)

I told ’em they could stick it where the sun don’t shine! I really don’t
care about such things enough to take part in all that mess. (laughs)

Connect Savannah: So you didn’t even pick up the award your label keeps
touting?

Merle Haggard: Naw, man. I didn’t go down there. They had to send it to me
in the mail. See, it’s shameful for an organization like that to use my name
and the names of Richard Pryor and Robert Johnson and David Bowie. Those are
great artists. But if you’re puttin’ the show together, you’re gonna throw
all those big names out there to try and get people to watch and get your
ratings up, but heaven forbid you let anybody actually see these old fellas!
Neither me nor David Bowie went down there, for the exact same reason.

Connect Savannah: Many were upset when Buck Owens recently died. Had the two
of you kept in touch?

Merle Haggard: We were such good friends. Since the time he passed I’ve
learned he wasn’t even sick. They said he was doin’ pretty well, in fact.
Seems he was tired and just went to sleep one morning. He came to see me in
Portland on that first tour with Bob and that was the last time I spoke to
him in person. It was a big shock. Buck was really influential to my life.

I’ll tell you something that a lot of folks may not agree with, but it’s
true. Buck was the epitome of rockabilly. He was half rock and roll and half
country. He came out of the bars of Southern California, and in deference to
a lot of country acts that came out of the Southern gospel tradition, he
came from the Bakersfield barrooms.

Connect Savannah: If there’s someone reading this who’s never considered
themselves a country fan, what’s the one album Merle Haggard would encourage
them to pick up that would serve as a great example of the very best country
that’s ever been recorded?

Merle Haggard: Well, I don’t know. I don’t even consider myself country
anymore. I identify more with what’s happening in rock and roll right now,
and it’s the rock people who seem to identify with me the most, and treat me
with some sort of respect. The country people are out to use my name for
different things if they can, and the rock and roll people seem to just like
me for who I am.

To hell with country! That’s the way I’m feelin’ about it.

Connect Savannah: Why do you think that is? I remember when Johnny Cash was
inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, Roseanne Cash said it meant much
more to him to be accepted as a peer by those folks than it ever did for him
to receive praise from the country music business.

Merle Haggard: Well, the rock people are coming from the heart and soul, and
country people are always tryin’ to use you.

Connect Savannah: That’s so strange: Rock and roll always gets tagged as the
shallow, callous genre, while country made a name for itself as being a more
traditional and spiritual form of music that’s linked to the heartland and
the whole compassionate conservative movement.

Merle Haggard: I think it went south along with our whole country. See, the
whole situation of life has changed. What they’re calling country is about
as country as downtown New York! It’s got nothin’ to do with actual country
music. Country’s supposed to be about people who find their way from the
soil to the microphone – instead of bein’ shaped into some kind of phony
perfection with computers like they do nowadays. I mean, who can sing and
who can’t? You really can’t tell anymore.

Connect Savannah: Who do you listen to for pleasure or inspiration these
days?

Merle Haggard: I wish I could give you a title of something. I don’t really
listen to much new music at all. It doesn’t speak to me. XM’s about the only
radio I listen to anymore. We listen on the bus to a satellite channel
called Hank’s Place. I listen to old pop and country, but I don’t pay any
attention to what’s goin’ down today. I don’t find any melodies at all that
I can sit down and whistle! I always thought music was lyrics and melody
together. Nowadays it’s just lyrics and the same melody over and over again.
There’s so little uniqueness, it really doesn’t turn me on.

Connect Savannah: My buddy Webb Wilder is fond of saying that real music is
out there and real people are making it. I figure that’s why you and the
Strangers have continued to do well on the road.

Merle Haggard: Well, I’ll tell you what – you’ve hit it on the head. That’s
the reason we’re drawin’ people. They’re starved to death for real music!
They sure can’t hear it on the radio anymore

www.rockrap.com

Music swappers turn to snail mail

Via RockRap.com:

Music CD swappers turn to snail mail

Start-up lala.com will help, for a fee

By Hiawatha Bray, Boston Globe Staff | May 5, 2006

It may be a crime to swap digital music over the Internet, but there’s no law against doing it through the Postal Service. That’s the theory behind La La Media Inc., an Internet start-up that encourages music lovers to trade tunes by mail.

”People just really love Lala because it helps them discover so much music,” said Bill Nguyen, founder of the Hillsborough, Calif., company.

There are none of those free but illegal Internet file downloads. Nguyen’s lala.com website charges its members a small fee to barter the actual music disks among themselves.

Members publish ”have” lists of the music CDs they own. Because so many music lovers copy their CDs to their computers, lala.com provides software that can generate a list of albums on a computer’s hard drive.

In addition, users can log into the Lala website and type in the names of the albums in their collections. Users also create ”want” lists of CDs they’d like to own. Lala members can then search each other’s lists.

Members also get postage-paid mailing envelopes suitable for shipping CDs.

When a member sees a desired disk, he puts in a request for it. The owner can say no. But if the owner is willing, he or she drops the disk into an envelope, addresses it to the other member, and mails it. The recipient pays Lala $1, plus 49 cents for postage. There is no annual membership fee.

In a pure barter system, each party must have something the other wants, and that doesn’t always happen here. So Lala.com gives each member a credit for every disk sent to another member. Members can save credits for later use, and use them to trade with any other Lala member.

Lala.com won’t open to the general public until summer. But thousands of users have signed up as part of a test of the system.

Scott Sanders, a 30-year-old marketing analyst in Cambridge, signed up in March. He has swapped more than 35 CDs. ”There was some crappy stuff that I’d had since I was 16,” said Sanders, ”and somebody them wanted for some reason.” For instance, Sanders rid himself of a CD featuring prank phone calls. ”I was shocked that anybody else wanted that,” he said.

Marketing manager John Kuch estimates Lala has ”tens of thousands” of users, but he isn’t sure, because members can invite their friends, and Lala is generous about giving memberships to people who send requests by e-mail. But Nguyen said Lala’s CD inventory is surging, with members adding 30,000 listings every day.

The music industry, which says Internet music swapping has cost it billions in profits, hasn’t taken a stand on the legality of Lala.com’s business model. A spokesman for the Recording Industry Association of America refused to comment.

But Jim Gibson, director of the Intellectual Property Institute at the University of Richmond Law School, said Lala.com is on the right side of the law.

”It seems to be perfectly legal,” Gibson said, for the same reason that retailers can buy and sell used books and CDs. ”If you are the owner of a particular physical copy of a CD or a book or anything that’s copyrighted, you have the right to dispose of that CD or book any way you wish.”

Of course, a Lala member could swap away his old CDs while keeping digital copies on his hard drive or portable music player — probably a violation of copyright law.

Lala can’t prevent people from doing this, but in a message on the website, Nguyen urges customers to delete their digital copies of the albums they’ve traded away. ”I ask you to do your part by doing the right thing: remove songs from your iPod or PC if you’ve agreed to send the CD to another member,” he writes.

But it’s not clear if Lala users will follow Nguyen’s advice. Asked whether he was deleting all copies of his swapped CDs, Sanders replied, ”It’s something I don’t really feel comfortable answering one way or the other.”

Lala is hardly a shoestring operation. It’s funded by $9 million in venture money from Boston-based Bain Capital LLC and Ignition Partners of Seattle. With a staff of just 17 workers and low start-up costs, Nguyen predicted that Lala would soon be profitable.

But he plans to cut into those profits by paying 20 percent of the company’s income to the recording artists. Used-music dealers aren’t required to do this. But Nguyen said musicians too often get a raw deal from the industry, and wants Lala to do better.

”We’re trying to lead by example,” he said.

www.rockrap.com

Springsteen expresses anger over Katrina in new version of classic song

I know I ripped his concert in Vancouver last summer pretty hard, but that doesn’t mean I don’t appreciate “The Boss.”

By way of the Rock and Rap Confidential listserv:

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New Bruce Springsteen Recording!

Click on the link below to hear Bruce Springsteen’s version of “How Can A Poor Man Stand Such Times And Live?” (New Orleans ’06). This version comes from one of the tour rehearsals with the Seeger Sessions Band in Asbury Park and is straight off of the soundboard.

QuickTime

Based on the response from the four Asbury Park shows, this is already emerging as a fan favorite.

———————————-

Read Bruce’s personal thoughts on the song below:

This song was written by Blind Alfred Reed and recorded a month after the crash of ’29 that heralded the Great Depression. I first heard it on Ry Cooder’s self – titled debut album (1970). To his arrangement we owe a debt. I kept the “doctor” first verse by Reed then wrote three others with a mind to the great trials the people of New Orleans have faced this year.

Here are the full lyrics:
Well, the doctor comes ’round here with his face all bright
And he says “in a little while you’ll be alright”
All he gives is a humbug pill, a dose of dope and a great big bill
Tell me, how can a poor man stand such times and live?
He says “me and my old school pals had some might high times down here
And what happened to you poor black folks, well it just ain’t fair”
He took a look around gave a little pep talk, said “I’m with you” then he took a little walk
Tell me, how can a poor man stand such times and live?
There’s bodies floatin’ on Canal and the levees gone to Hell
Martha, get me my sixteen gauge and some dry shells
Them who’s got got out of town
And them who ain’t got left to drown
Tell me, how can a poor man stand such times and live?
I got family scattered from Texas all the way to Baltimore
And I ain’t got no home in this world no more
Gonna be a judgment that’s a fact, a righteous train rollin’ down this track
Tell me, how can a poor man stand such times and live?

I am the egg head, I’m the Commander, I’m the Decider

Click to hear: I’m the Decider

I am me and Rummy’s he, Iraq is free and we are all together
See the world run when Dick shoots his gun, see how I lie
I’m Lying…

Sitting on my own brain, waiting for the end of days
Corporation profits, Bloody oil money
I’m above the law and I’ll decide what’s right or wrong

I am the egg head, I’m the Commander, I’m the Decider
Koo-Koo-Kachoo

Baghdad city policeman sitting pretty little targets in a row
See how they die when the shrapnel flies see mothers cry
I’m Lying…I’m Ly-ing…I’m Lying…I’m Ly-ing

Yellow cake uranium, imaginary WMD’s
Declassifying facts, exposing secret agents
Tax cuts for the wealthy leaving all the poor behind

CHORUS

Sitting in the White house garden talking to the Lord
My thoughts would be busy busy hatching If I only had a brain

CHORUS

Thanks to PMM for sending along this tune.

Computer-less Georgia family sued by record industry for file-sharing

The RIAA continues it’s attack on music lovers, this time suing a family in Georgia for file-sharing, even though they don’t own a computer. Hmmm…

From the Rockmart [GA] Journal
Local family sued by record companies

04/22/06
By LOWELL VICKERS

A Rockmart family is being sued for illegal music file sharing, despite the fact that they don’t even own a computer. A federal lawsuit filed this week in Rome by the Recording Industry Association of America alleges that Carma Walls, of 117 Morgan St., Rockmart, has infringed on copyrights for recorded music by sharing files over the Internet. The lawsuit seeks an injunction and requests unspecified monetary damages. The lawsuit states, “Plaintiffs are informed and believe that Defendant, without the permission or consent of Plaintiffs, has used, and continues to use, an online media distribution system to download the copyrighted recordings, to distribute the copyrighted recordings to the public, and/or to make the copyrighted recordings available for distribution to others.” This came as shocking news to the Walls family, who were notified of the lawsuit Friday afternoon by a newspaper reporter. James Walls, speaking on behalf of his wife and family, said they have not been served with legal papers and were unaware of the lawsuit. After being shown a copy of the court filing, Walls said he found the whole thing bewildering. “I don’t understand this,” Walls said. “How can they sue us when we don’t even have a computer?” Walls also noted that his family has only resided at their current address “for less than a year.” He wondered if a prior tenant of the home had Internet access, then moved, leaving his family to be targeted instead. However, the RIAA’s lawsuit maintains that Carma Walls, through the use of a file-sharing program, has infringed on the copyrights for the following songs: “Who Will Save Your Soul,” Jewel; “Far Behind,” Candlebox; “Still the Same,” Bob Seger; “I Won’t Forget You,” Poison; “Open Arms,” Journey; “Unpretty,” TLC; No Scrubs,” TLC; and “Saving All My Love for You,” Whitney Houston. The lawsuit follows similar wording as in some 3,500 other lawsuits filed by the RIAA in the United States since June 2003. Typically, the lawsuits have targeted users of Kazaa, Grokster and other peer-to-peer Internet services – most of which have since been shut down by RIAA lawsuits. With these services, users typically have an open folder on the computer that allows other users of the service access to any songs that have been saved in a digital format, such as MP3 files. The RIAA lawsuits have come under fire, with critics calling the effort a “scare tactic” meant to intimidate the public from file sharing activities. However, in a public statement defending the litigation, the RIAA says its efforts have been effective in dissuading illegal activity. “The industry’s anti-piracy efforts have deterred a sizeable number of would-be illegal downloaders,” the RIAA statement reads. “Although a significant online problem undoubtedly persists, particularly with hard-core, frequent peer-to-peer users, absent action by the industry, the illegal down-loading world would be exponentially worse.”

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Briton’s love of The Clash, Led Zeppelin sparks plane security alert

clashlcalt350.jpgVia Rock and Rap Confidential:

Briton’s love of The Clash, Led Zeppelin sparks plane security alert
Apr 05 12:29 PM US/Eastern

A love of punk and hard rock anthems by The Clash and Led Zeppelin led to a British man being hauled off a plane bound for London by police on terrorism fears, newspapers reported.

Indian-born Harraj Mann, 23, played “London’s Calling” by The Clash and Led Zeppelin’s “Immigrant Song” through the stereo of a taxi he caught to Durham and Tees Valley Airport in northern England.

The taxi driver, however, grew suspicious of his passenger after listening to the lyrics of his chosen songs and alerted the authorities after they reached the airport.

Two police officers boarded Mann’s flight to London’s Heathrow airport shortly before take-off last Thursday.

“I got frogmarched off the plane in front of everyone, got my bags searched, asked every question you can think of,” Mann, a mobile phone salesman, told his local newspaper, the Hartlepool Mail, on Monday — a story that was picked up by the national press on Wednesday.

“I was being held for questioning under the Terrorism Act,” he said.

By the time Mann was set free his plane had already departed.

The offending lyrics by The Clash include the lines: “London calling from the faraway towns, now war is declared and battle come down.

“London calling to the underworld, come out of the cupboard, you boys and girls.”

“Immigrant Song”, for its part, starts: “The hammer of the gods will drive our ships to new lands, to fight the horde singing and crying Valhalla, I’m coming!”

A spokeswoman for the Durham Police confirmed that a man was escorted from the London-bound flight, questioned by police and released without charge.

“Safety is paramount and we respond to concerns from members of the public in the way they would expect us to,” she said.

“In this case the report was made with the best of intentions and we would not want to discourage people from contacting us with genuine concerns regarding security.”

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American Sociological Association names “essential protest songs”

In the latest issue of the ASA sponsored journal Contexts, the editors compile a list of “essential protest songs.”

There are 14 songs on the list including standards as “We Shall Overcome,” Bob Dylan’s “The Times They Are A-Changin’ ” and the 1930s union anthem “Which Side Are You On?”

You can listen to a selection of essential protest song clips here

Here’s the full list of songs with commentary by the editors of Contexts:

“Lift Every Voice and Sing.”
Lyrics by James Weldon Johnson; music by J. Rosamand Johnson. Key lyric: “We have come over a way that with tears has been watered / We have come, treading our path through the blood of the slaughtered.” Known as the “Black National Anthem”—the antidote
to “America, the Beautiful.”

“Which Side Are You On?”
By Florence Reece. “Don’t scab for the bosses, don’t listen to their lies / Us poor folks haven’t
got a chance unless we organize.” Written during the labor struggles in Harlan County, Kentucky, in the 1930s, it was later adopted by the civil rights movement.

“Strange Fruit.”
Performed by Billie Holiday. By Abel Meeropol (who later adopted the children of Julius and Ethel
Rosenberg). “Pastoral scene of the gallant south / The bulging eyes and the twisted mouth.” A chilling protest against lynching. Maybe the greatest protest song of all time.

“Pastures of Plenty.”
By Woody Guthrie. “Every state in this union us migrants has been /‘Long the edge of your cities you’ll
see us, and then / We’ve come with the dust and we’re gone in the wind.” Guthrie’s ode to America’s migrant workers.

“The Times They Are A-Changin’.”
By Bob Dylan. “There’s a battle outside and it’s raging / It’ll soon shake your windows
and rattle your walls.” Tough call between this and Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind,” “Only a Pawn in Their Game,” “Masters of War,” “With God on Our Side,” etc., etc.

“We Shall Overcome.”
Adapted from a gospel song, the anthem of the civil rights movement. “Deep in my heart, I do
believe / We shall overcome some day.” Infinitely adaptable.

“Ain’t Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me ‘Round.”
Also adapted from a Negro spiritual. “I’m gonna keep on walkin’, keep on talkin’ / Fightin’ for my equal rights.” Another powerful civil rights anthem.

“I Ain’t Marching Anymore.”
By Phil Ochs. “It’s always the old to lead us to the war / It’s always the young to fall / Now
look at all we’ve won with the saber and the gun / Tell me is it worth it all?” An antiwar classic, complete with a revisionist history of American militarism.

“For What It’s Worth.”
Performed by Crosby, Stills, and Nash. By Stephen Stills. “There’s something happening here /
What it is ain’t exactly clear / There’s a man with a gun over there / Telling me I’ve got to beware.” Eerily foreboding.

“Say It Loud (I’m Black and I’m Proud).”
By James Brown. “Now we demand a chance to do things for ourself / We’re tired of beatin’ our head against the wall and workin’ for someone else.” A Black Power anthem by the Godfather of
Soul.

“Respect.”
Performed by Aretha Franklin. By Otis Redding. “I ain’t gonna do you wrong while you’re gone / Ain’t gonna do you wrong ‘cause I don’t wanna / All I’m askin’ is for a little respect when you come home.” The personal is political.

“Redemption Song.”
By Bob Marley. “Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery / None but ourselves can free our
minds.” Marley’s “Get Up, Stand Up” is also a contender.

“Imagine.”
By John Lennon. “Imagine no possessions / I wonder if you can / No need for greed or hunger / A brotherhood of man.” Lennon as utopian socialist.

“Fight the Power.”
By Public Enemy. “Got to give us what we want / Gotta give us what we need / Our freedom of
speech is freedom or death / We got to fight the powers that be.” An exuberant hip-hop call to arms.