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Where Have all the Protest Singers Gone?
One would think the time is ripe for an explosion of protest music.
Bruce Springsteen performs during a rally Sunday, Oct. 5, 2008, on the campus of Ohio State University, in Columbus, Ohio. Springsteen was in town to encourage Barack Obama supporters to register and take advantage of Ohio
(AP Photo/Terry Gilliam) We're
witnessing what pundits are calling a historic presidential race at a
time when even the party holding the Oval Office admits that a big dose
of change is needed. We've been at war on two fronts for years with no
end in sight, while there's less than a month to go in the election.
The economy appears to be in free fall. The race is close, and the
rhetoric is heating up fast as each side lobs verbal grenades at each
other almost daily.
So where are all the protest songs, calling for one brand of change over the other?
Protest music is rare from conservative artists, but even the liberals songwriters seem to be sitting this one out.
"People are overwhelmed by the corruption of our government," says Paul Kantner, a founding member of Jefferson Airplane and Jefferson Starship, who just released a new Starship record, "Jefferson's Tree of Liberty. "They don't think their vote counts "... people don't have enough faith."
In other words, even if we have two new candidates promising change from an outgoing and unpopular administration, it might just be that musicians aren't feeling they can make a difference, especially after the outpouring of activism in 2004.
That was the year John Kerry had the support of Bruce Springsteen, Pearl Jam and Dave Matthews, among other big-name artists, performing on the "Vote for Change" tour. Linda Ronstandt was grabbing headlines for speaking out in the face of open hostility at many of her shows. It was the year that gave us songs like Ani DiFranco's "Animal," the Beastie Boys' "It Takes Time to Build," and the Roots' "Why (What's Goin' On?)," among others.
Even two years later, just in time for midterm Congressional elections, there was still an echo of the outrage, most notably in Neil Young's "Living With War" record and his passionate summer tour with Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young.
Some of the stalwarts are still around, such as Bruce Springsteen, doing benefits for Barack Obama. And bands that are almost always political, like Bad Religion, are still addressing the issues. Punk singer-songwriter Ted Leo just wrote and recorded a four-song EP after witnessing the treatment of protesters at the Republican convention, the timing of which made it only available on his Web site. And people like John Legend and Billy Joel have also appeared at events.
But all in all, the desperation that was apparent among artists willing to sing protest songs four years ago is largely absent at this year's political crunch time.
"There's baggage to becoming a protest singer," says Chris Walla, guitarist for Death Cab For Cutie and an admitted political junkie, whose band has played Obama rallies. "Because of the media portrayal of the protests, nobody wants to be associated with it. I don't think it would work with our audience all that well."
Plus, Walla says, there's a strong perception that, unlike Kerry in 2004, Obama doesn't need the help. And there's no George W. Bush in the race to focus on.
"When your candidate is a rock star on his own, why does he need Death Cab for Cutie?" Walla says. "What Obama needs is 'Rednecks for Obama.'"
Nathan Berg, a professor of economics and sociology at the University of Texas at Dallas, is the singer for the Halliburtons, one of the few bands out there continuously making political music.
"It's noticeably more quiet regarding the musical discourse this year," he says. "I think there are those of us who thought 2004 was important and thought things would change. It's hard to see strong rebuttal for pessimism."
Berg speculates that Kerry's loss deflated musicians. They're getting change one way or another this year, which de-focuses years of targeting President George W. Bush.
"My band played at Dealey Plaza on the anniversary of the Iraq war, but I'm feeling my time is better spent speaking as an economist and social scientist," says Berg, whose band has toured Ireland and Germany. "There's actually much more of an anti-Bush and anti-war scene in Europe." There's also some low-level recorded activism, coming at a lower profile from groups like metal band Testament and bluegrass group the Del McCoury Band, an indication of big names laying low this year. McCoury's new record is called "Moneyland."
Kanter says that with each passing year, technological distractions and a corporate media unwilling to take chances make it more difficult for musicians to make a difference.
"People are overwhelmed by modern times," he says. "There's an overflow of information and they become confused. In the '60s we thought we could change the world - and we did change some of it," he says. "People today don't have that hope."

96 Comments so far
Show AllThe protest songs are out there if you listen. Waiting for the World to Change - John Mayer, City of Blinding Lights - U2, Join Together With the Band - The Who, My Way - Los Lonely Boys, Weapon of Choice - Fatboy Slim, Who Discovered America - Ozomatli, Satelite Radio - Steve Earle, Shakin the Tree - Peter Gabriel. The songs are out there you just have to listen for them...Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans ~ Unknown
"Life is what happens while you're busy making other plans" John Lennon
That is true. But, except for Seattle, it just doesn t seem to spur any action.
Of course, the "violence is deafening".
Colbert??
Reggae Artists have been singing against the Evil Ones for over thirty years.
Man, I MUST be geting TOO old. BUT, to pen an article like this with NO mention of Baez, Dylan, Seeger, Arlo et al. I'm too old, or Hicks is too young...whatever. Don't forget it wasn't that long ago that RZ had the balls to sing "Masters of War" at the Grammies. No one understood him, but he did sing it! And please never forget "Blowin in the Wind". Dylan may stopped protesting years and years ago, but he's had his artistry on the road now for 46 years. We at least owe these "old timers" a mention.
Didn't I read this article before? It seems familiar.
My this article is a tad rockist. Of course I'm a metalist, lol, so I suppose I shouldn't throw stones, being that we're the member of the family no one likes to talk about. I just like what I like and can't help it. Kudos for mentioning Testament though. I saw them live over the summer, but they're far from the only ones. Heavy metal was built on dissent, and there a list of anti-war songs as long as my arm. If Birmingham, England were Happy Valley, metal wouldn't exist.
I hear "War Pigs" on the radio more on the radio in the past few years more than I ever have. What does that tell you?
"Young hipsters seem to not identify with rap and to just focus on the irony of life."
Oh, around here they're into hip-hop, but like with metal and everything else aside from indie rock and electronic music, they just think it's amusing. Hipsters annoy me. :)
I think too many people listen to music either as background noise, or as a sedative, something to make them feel good. They just wanna hear cute little songs that they can dance to.
I agree with Turbokitty, you just have to look for it. It's there in hip-hop, metal, and pretty much every genre of music.
From another metal head (notice my nickname) . . .
Amen, brutha!
Let's not forget Iron Maiden's "Afraid to Shoot Strangers" from the FIRST Iraq War. If I may quote Bruce Dickinson when he introduced that song on its live version from "A Real Live One": "Here's a song about war, and just saying just to make a mental note that war is bullshit, and the people that make people go to war are usually politicians, and the people that get killed are usually ordinary people. This is a song about an ordinary person that doesn't want to kill anybody."
The ipod generation needs a wake up call. Perhaps a text message from their draft board, "Greetings..." Nothing like a cold draft to stoke the fires of protest. Of course, Nothing Exists.
Don't worry, they'll be getting a loud one, thanks to the fscked up world our generation is leaving them.
The protest singers have already done their job. And we should thank them for that. The problem is that we the public mostly only sing and buy the songs. The protest songs should generate dialog which generates action which generates change. Protest songs couldn’t become a genre if there was action following the lyrics. We’ve got a whole history of protest songs but as long as they remain only entertainment we will continue to add to the collection.
Hoa binh
I recently bought a few Peter Paul & Mary CDs - listen to them constantly. I feel sorry for the kids today - they're missing out on so much of value while they text and play with their gadgets.
Can't you stop and think for a moment that perhaps it's all been deliberate? The kids today have so many distractions while they're asked to give so little, who can blame them for their lack of attention? There's no draft, their only purpose in life is to shop and buy useless but expensive crap, and they're definitely discouraged from voting let alone paying attention to the issues.
Oh, the current hyper-accelerated commercialization of every single aspect of a young person's life, every waking thought, and probably even their dreams, is MOST DEFINITELY deliberate!
Dylan was accused of selling out when he went electric; Joan Baez talks about this in Scorsese's "No Direction Home," that Dylan never meant to continue with protest, but simply wrote what he felt like. The influence of protest music continued to be felt until the early '70s, but really ebbed the more troops were pulled out of Vietnam, especially after the POW's started coming home.
I'm not that old yet, but even I have to say that I've never in my life seen a society as hyper-sexualized as this one. I was young during the hey-day of the feminist movement and while I didn't always agree with the feminist tendency to take such easy offense at such meaningless humor, I always agreed with the equal rights agenda. Now, the agenda for young women is this notion of a a goofy sex kitten with no clue about anything other than tight clothes and alcohol.
It's very, very depressing.
So true! When I was in high school, fashion in the hallways was the unisex, farmer-hippie look. Oshkosh overalls, or ordinary blue jeans. Baggy t-shirt tops in warm weather, plaid flannel shirts in winter. In other words, almost like the boys dressed. Now, in my neighborhood, the girls go to school dressed like hookers looking for a trick.
And we wonder why people in Muslim countries react the way they do to "western" culture.
I also thinkit taht the "hyper-sexualization" of the young is media wrought, for profit. Some rap is great. Some of it just wreaks of sexism, but, most will not admit it, or shock it off to "street cred".
Some of the misogynistic lyrics I hear today, just rattle me! Young women seem to be buying into it. The media is taking away their childhood, which can onl y be appreciated, once it is gone.
One song, which my friend's niece was listening to, talked about , basically, snuff. I asked her about it, and she said, "Oh, he's just playin'".
NOT "sexy"--just sexist!~
The problem is that, in the old days before clear-channel and the corporate censorship of radio, and the relegation of protest music to obscure corners of the internet, protest music got broad exposure to the public.
Particularly since Sept 11, most protest songs past or current, are on forbidden-to-play-lists. Even as late as the late 80's, songs like Bruce Cockburn's ant-contra song "If I had a Rocket Launcher" got big-time play on the radio. If Cockburn wrote such lyrics today, not only would they not get radio play, but he would be arrested if he sung them at a rally.
This was the goal in abolishing ownership limits across media outlets. Reagan was stymied in many of his imperial goals because protest songs would quickly go out for broadcast; how would they have been able to get fodder for this current slaughter/occupation if MTV hadn't been turned into a recruiting tool with the attacks?
Yes. That is one reason it is important to make the FCC stop co-opting everything and selling it to Rupert Murdock. It is probably hard for most younger peope to imagine getting into your car, turning on your FM converter (LOL), and , hearing real, non-mainstream, music. AND , knowing that every person your age, in other cars out that night, was probably listetning to a similar or "same" song. You cannot "feel that way" about an iPod.Too individualistic.
"Please Come to Chicago" would never be allowed to be released "in time" today.
Cooptation is one thing corporatism is very good at.
I'm guessing that the choice of Bruce Springsteen for the photo accompanying this article wasn't intended ironically.
Not knocking The Boss, but whatever "protest singers" are, they don't include performers who join political campaigns. Or, for that matter, promote public service causes, e.g. "Rock the Vote" or whatever they're calling it this year. It's nice that they're Doing Their Bit or whatever, but it's hard to take anyone seriously as a protest singer when they're singing from inside a golden cage.
I don't mean to say that performers shouldn't publicly support whomever they like, and express political preferences and support like any other citizen-celebrity. After all, I'm gratified when performers like the Dixie Chicks oppose a criminal like President Unitard.
But "mature" and co-opted performers enthusiastically Working Within the System are no more "protest singers" than mummies are Pharaohs.
Protest music grew out of and into folk, blues and rock; lyrics about life and suffering and love.
Today's young and dispossessed listen to 'music' that venerates violence half the time, and idolizes wealth and 'bling' all the time.
Light-years far from protest music. The Scythe of Television Reaping Onward.
Destroying so many who thought they were Forever Young,
There are many, many artists out there who are spreading the message through their work, however for the most they are not A-listed by corporate TV/radio yet have a substantial following nevertheless, some even go huge, take System of a Down whose albums are all political yet became one of the biggest bands of recent years, the solo album by Serj Tanakan contains many a political track including The Unthinking Majority.
Try The Flaming Lips last album with The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song or The WAND both of which carry strong messages about society and the power we ourselves have.
New bands like MGMT have very strong messages in their songs too. I guess the writer of this is has only been listening to the moppets and poppets that have been spread onto the TV/radio by the corporations in their plan to keep us all dumb.
all is illusion...there is no government
Wanna hear a fantastic modern day protest singer? Look up Michael Franti. His music and his message are both fantastic. One title, for example, "You can bomb the world to pieces, but you can't bomb it into peace."
reefraff9
How about if someone put some music to the questions in this video, all of which never seem to make it into the Obama/McCain "debates":
#1: EXPERIENCE
Senator McCain, regarding our hostages in Guantanamo, in your opinion does their experience being tortured by us for the last five years prepare them to be presidents of their respective countries?
...more at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QuQDTjx-ygM
There are a lot of us protest singers out here, but it's awfully hard to get noticed beyond our local fan base.... Please visit my site: www.galemead.com and listen to "The War Goes On" and "Miguel" for examples....
Thanks! I'm going to put all these links on my DT and give them a listen tonight.
Hey, thank you very much for the link to your site! "The War Goes On" is an awesome song.
Blessings,
John
This cheeseball line from cheeseball Death Cab says it all:
"...I don't think it would work with our audience all that well."
effing cheeseball. There's commitment for you. Why is this cheeseball even in this article?
It probably reflects the white readership here, but no one has mentioned all the political hip-hop - most of which is incredible incisive and correct in it's analysis. And some of it does get airplay - Public Enemy and Mos Def come to mind...
While not exactly stylistically hip-hop check this Mos def vid:
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=E2FlcRVTuCA
Yaaaa! Mos Def! Public Enemy!
Hey, I'm white...
Thanks. Music can bring the pain to the surface, and, soothe, at the same time.
Walter Noons
One of the reasons why there may not be so many protest songs is that young folks are not being mobilized because there is no draft. I attended an anti-war protest on the Boston Common on October 11th and there was not even 2,000 persons there.
In 1969/70 I attended anti-war rallies on the Common that numbered 100,000.
At any rate....I wrote protest songs then and I write protest songs now. I have six such songs posted at www.myspace.com/walternoons.
Give a listen if you choose.
Yaaaa! More, more. Thanks
Loose Lips Lyrics by Kimya Dawson
Music code for this song: After making your selection, copy and paste the embed code above.
edit print
(lyrics are written by Juliet Gibson)
Loose lips might sink ships but loose gooses take trips
to San Francisco, double dutch disco,
tech. TV hottie, do it for scottie
do it for the living and do it for the dead
do it for the monsters under your bed
do it for the teenagers and do it for your mom
broken hearts hurt but they make us strong and
[we won't stop until somebody calls the cops
and even then we'll start again and just pretend that
nothing ever happened X2]
we're just dancing, we're just hugging,
singing, screaming, kissing, tugging
on the sleeve of how it used to be
how's it gonna be?
I'll drop kick Russell Stover, move into the starting over house
and know Matt Rouse and Jest are watching me achieve my dreams
and we'll pray, all damn day, every day,
that all this shit our president has got us in will go away
while we strive to figure out a way we can survive
these trying times without losing our minds
so if you wanna burn yourself remember that I love you
if you wanna cut yourself remember that I love you
if you wanna kill yourself remember that I love you
call me up before your dead, we can make some plans instead
send me an IM, I'll be your friend
shysters live from scheme to scheme and my 4th quarter pipe dreams
are seeming more and more worth fighting for
so I'll curate some situations, make my job a big vacation
and I'll say fuck Bush and fuck this war
my war paint is Sharpie ink and I'll show you how much my shit stinks
and ask you what you think because your thoughts and words are powerful
they think we're disposable, while both my thumbs opposable,
spelled out on a double word and triple letter score and
[we won't stop until somebody calls the cops
and even then we'll start again and just pretend that
nothing ever happened X4]
we're just dancing, we're just hugging,
singing, screaming, kissing, tugging
on the sleeve of how it used to be
I like the words. Very interesting. Thanks. Wish I could hear the music, but you didn't paste in the link.
http://www.4shared.com/file/35269676/9062fe50/08_Loose_Lips.html Enjoy! <3 -me
More like "Where have all the start-up grass-roots record labels and independent radio stations gone?"
More like "How have they managed to wrap you in an information coccoon that isolates you from the real songs being written?"
Clark Kent
You nailed it. The songs are being written but only independent/college stations play them.
Check out "Self Evident" by Ani Difranco:
http://www.last.fm/music/Ani+DiFranco/_/Self+Evident
I was blown away the first time I heard it on a local alternative station.
Yeah!! More free protest music! Thanks! Anybody else have any?
I guess this is sort of free. You can go to the download site eMusic and listen to your first 25 songs for free. Here's the link for my CD "STOP THE WAR!":
http://www.emusic.com/album/10895/10895743.html?fref=700329 (with 5 anti-war songs).
One of my favorite protest songs is "Wussies For War" (about the chickenhawks in the Bush Administration). You can access it on eMusic at: http://www.emusic.com/album/10918/10918059.html?fref=700329 (then go down to song #21). Although that's the only strictly anti-war song on the album, all the other songs on there detail the many ways the Busheviks have screwed up.
And in case you don't want to bother with downloading eMusic, here's a song (with video) that trashes McCain and his warrior ways:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3OxZVhVRHgY.
And, finally, here's a coming attraction: in just a few days the song "McCain In Hell" will be posted on YouTube. It's a song of mine with sound effects and video images that some guy in Oregon is adding. It's an appropriate song for Halloween. Just go to YouTube.com and in the search box type "eskit" (that's me) or "moonvie" (the guy from Oregon), and look for "McCain In Hell".
Walter Noons
Neil Young has a website called Living With War Today with 3,000 protest songs posted.
Two songs of mine are posted there as well. "Hey Mister" and "Cut It Loose"
Check it out!
and the message of we as Rastafari has been disregarded for so long, In my collection alone, there are over 200 songs about War, at least ten about our current mis-leader King George Wanker Bush, at least 100 dealing with the New World Order, over 600 dealing with the issue of the healing of the nations, HEMP and so many more issues..
I invite you all to listen to the Radio show that I host on Monday nights from 10pm-1am Mountain time where I play World Music and protest plenty..
Global Music Show
http://kunm.org
Yeah! Free protest music radio! Thanks! (Hope I can get it here on my old pc)
Barry McGuire is still touring the world at what, 72? Joan Baez, still around and singing. Pete Seeger, big phoney. He demanded orthodoxy from Dylan, went berserk with an axe when Bob wanted to step outside the lines. Lucky tasers weren't invented then. But there will never be protest songs like we had in the 1960's; that was the "greatest generation", musically.
Peter Seeger was the Johnny Appleseed of the folk movement. Blacklisted in the '50s, he went to camps all over the eastern seaboard teaching kids folk music; and these were the ones who came of age a decade later.
Pete Seeger has continued to live what he sang about; I love Dylan's body of work, but 'believe the tale, not the teller' has never had more apt application.
Respect to Seeger. Pete had said himself in an interview, that the reason he wanted to cut the cables is that there was a technical glitch and you could not hear Dylan's voice over the music. Believe it was in an interview with Amy. Seeger...at least 89.... is a stalwart of the protest movement and has never let up. Facts...amazing things!
Don't get me wrong, I love Pete Seeger and often sing and play out of the "Rise Up Singing" music book... BUT
The sooner all of us old farts stop overglorifying the fossilized NPR-and-PBS-Fundraising-Week 60's musicians and actually start listening to and committing a few of our scarce new brain cells to some new protest music that really is out there in spite of what NPR and other corporatized radio channels would have us believe, the better.
Remember-- The Beatles were just the first of many boy bands. Most of their songs aren't that much better than newer ones-- just more entrenched in our brain cells. They are classics, yes, but we have to get re-opened to the new and the now!
Jimmy Hendrix was great when he was new, but the "Experience Music Project" museum and the weird, pretentious techno-geek building it's in is just "FLACID ROCK" (yes, I'm coining that term).
How many ears must one man have before he can hear people cry? (tip 'o the hat to Bobby D.)