Musicians (Finally) Say No to Music Torture
As was reported widely yesterday, REM, Pearl Jam, Trent Reznor, Tom Morello, and other artists including Jackson Browne, Billy Bragg, Michelle Branch, T-Bone Burnett, David Byrne, Rosanne Cash, Marc Cohn, Steve Earle, the Entrance Band, Joe Henry, Bonnie Raitt, Rise Against, and The Roots launched a formal protest against the use of music as torture.
In a statement, Tom Morello said, “Guantánamo is known around the world as one of the places where human beings have been tortured — from water boarding, to stripping, hooding and forcing detainees into humiliating sexual acts — playing music for 72 hours in a row at volumes just below that to shatter the eardrums. Guantánamo may be Dick Cheney’s idea of America, but it’s not mine. The fact that music I helped create was used as a tactic against humanity sickens me — we need to end torture and close Guantánamo now.”
REM added, “We signed onto the campaign in complete support of President Obama and the military leaders who have called for an end to torture and to close Guantánamo. As long as Guantánamo stays open, America’s legacy around the world will continue to be the torture that went on there. We have spent the past 30 years supporting causes related to peace and justice — to now learn that some of our friends’ music may have been used as part of the torture tactics without their consent or knowledge, is horrific. It’s anti-American, period.”
In a phone call, Rosanne Cash told the Washington Post, “I think every musician should be involved. It seems so obvious. Music should never be used as torture.” Cash said she reacted with “absolute disgust” when she heard about it, adding, “It’s beyond the pale. It’s hard to even think about.”
The protest was timed to coincide with a Freedom of Information Act request filed by the National Security Archive, an independent research institute in Washington D.C., which is seeking the declassification of all records related to the use of music in interrogation practices. It also coincided with a recent call by veterans and retired Army generals to shut Guantánamo, and TV and radio ads, which were launched this week by the National Campaign to Close Guantánamo, led by Tom Andrews, a former congressman from Maine.
Nevertheless, with the exception of Tom Morello (of Rage Against The Machine), whose music was used for torture, and who has been complaining about it since 2004, and Trent Reznor (Nine Inch Nails), whose music was also used, and who expressed his outrage last year when he first heard about it, few musicians have taken the issue on board before now.
Last July, when David Gray spoke out about his disgust that his music was used for torture, and the British-based legal charity Reprieve began campaigning about it, there was little interest. Christopher Cerf, who wrote the music for Sesame Street, (a music torture favorite) complained, but last December, when I wrote a detailed article about it, “A History of Music Torture in the ‘War on Terror,’” I surveyed a generally indifferent industry, in which some of those whose music had been used were indifferent (Bob Singleton, for example, who wrote the theme tune to Barney the Purple Dinosaur, another music torture favorite), others (Metallica) were ambivalent, and others (Drowning Pool, for example) were positively gleeful about it.
From many others (including AC/DC, Aerosmith, Christina Aguilera, the Bee Gees, Neil Diamond, Don McLean, James Taylor, Limp Bizkit, Marilyn Manson, Meatloaf, Pink, Prince, Queen, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Britney Spears and Bruce Springsteen) there came nothing but an inappropriate silence, and even Eminem, whose anti-Bush credentials were clear from his songs “Mosh” and “White America,” remained quiet, even though, as the British torture victim Binyam Mohamed explained about his time in the CIA’s “Dark Prison” in Kabul in early 2004:
It was pitch black, and no lights on in the rooms for most of the time … They hung me up for two days. My legs had swollen. My wrists and hands had gone numb … There was loud music, Slim Shady and Dr. Dre for 20 days. I heard this non-stop over and over, I memorized the music, all of it, when they changed the sounds to horrible ghost laughter and Halloween sounds. It got really spooky in this black hole … Interrogation was right from the start, and went on until the day I left there. The CIA worked on people, including me, day and night. Plenty lost their minds. I could hear people knocking their heads against the walls and the doors, screaming their heads off … Throughout my time I had all kinds of music, and irritating sounds, mentally disturbing. I call it
brainwashing.
Don’t get me wrong: it’s good that so many diverse groups and individuals are now making their voices heard, as part of a push to close Guantánamo as soon as possible (and to try to hold President Obama to his promise to close the prison by January 22, 2010), but it would have had more impact before last November, when the torturers were still in the White House.
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19 Comments so far
Show AllWhile it is commendable to speak out against torture, the self-righteous tone of this article is disturbing, and misleading. If the author's beef is that these musicians didn't single out the abuse of music for objection, I question why this form of torture is any less acceptable than any other.
I'm not familiar with every musician named in the article, but some of them have been courageously speaking out against torture and for human rights for decades, contrary to what the article implies. As I read the article, I happened to be listening to Bruce Springsteen's "Long Walk Home":
The flag flying over the courthouse
Means certain things are set in stone
Who we are and what we'll do - and what we won't
It's gonna be a long walk home
He was singing that song, and much stronger ones about how far we strayed from our values as Americans, from the "Magic" album - banned by Fox's ClearChannel - in 2007. Other songs on the album, for those who listened to what he was saying, addressed the Orwellian aspects of the time of Bush ("Living in the Future", "Magic"), our apathy toward same ("Radio Nowhere"), and the human tragedy of Rumsfeldian war ("Gypsy Biker", "Last to Die" and "The Devil's Arcade"). At his concerts, Springsteen spoke out forcefully against Bush Administration abuses. "The Boss" certainly didn't need to risk losing fans and radio play to get attention. Some credit and respect should be given where it's due.
Likewise, I first learned the details (not just the generalities) of Bush Administration torture practices not from the mainstream media but from a link provided by Jackson Browne's website. Browne was hardly promoting himself by performing that service.
And oh yeah, I only found about about Common Dreams through a link provided on Bonnie Raitt's website. If you know the first thing about her, you know Raitt is a progressive saint who has been working hard for over 30 years to promote human rights, a safe environment and world peace - when she could have had a much more comfortable life if she chose.
ALL of us could undoubtedly do more than we have. In spite of having done a bit myself, in political office and as a private citizen, I could certainly look back and say I wish I had done far more.
A little humility and self-examination about our own shortcomings, and a lot of respect for the contributions of others, will do much more for the cause of humanity than snidely (and inaccurately) intimating that courageous patriots like these musicians have come too late to the cause. Thank you, Bruce, Jackson, Bonnie, and every human, famous or unknown, who speaks from conscience!
END THE ONGOING TORTURE OF THE USA AND THE CONTINUED RENDITION POLICIES IN THE PRESENT OBAMA ADMINISTRATION!!!!!!
PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA--STOP THESE BUSH ERA TORTURE & RENDITION POLICIES NOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
"it would have had more impact before last November, when the torturers were still in the White House."
That's debatable. Now the potential torture prosecutors are in the White House and there's at least the possibility that legal actions and public statements of these musicians can get some traction.
What kind of royalties did the record industry extract from the Pentagon? It's likely the RIAA worked out a "special deal" with the Pentagon for "special use" of its illegal perpetual copyrights for the purpose of torturing innocent brown people. How much did the entertainment lawyers make off with?
There is no political solution
To our troubled evolution
Have no faith in constitution
There is no bloody revolution
Our so-called leaders speak
With words they try to jail you
They subjugate the meek
But it's the rhetoric of failure
Props: Tom, Trent, Marilyn, Michael, Eddie, and David.
Ventura Sheehan Perot Paul Nader McKinney
Kucinich Kaptur Grayson Gravel
Gonzalez Clemente Choate
Carter Baldwin Anderson
At least we finally solved the mystery of who buys all that terrible American idol music.
The 'high-profile coalition of artists' who reacted with “absolute disgust” over their songs being used to coerce cooperation from Gitmo terrorists has no clue on what’s happening in the world outside their ivory towers.
The artist should be proud that maybe some of their music saved lives around the world.
One would think these enlightened artists could find some greater cause to be upset about such as if their music was ever played in an abortion clinic while babies were being murdered. What’s next for these sunshine patriots, objecting to our soldiers listening to their precious tunes fighting Obama’s war in Afghanistan?
These elitist, along with the President, are disgusting with their pious short-sightedness. I remember many of these same artists performing together after 9/11 to denounce the terrorists which they now champion.
you've watched way too much "24".
Thank heavens these musicians have both the money and the public recognition to persist, make noise, pay lawyers, grab the media spotlight, and really make a difference in our new history of torture, before the american public begins to think that torture is normal, that we have always done it, that it's natural and organic and good for you.
What about those of us who are tortured here everyday when forced to listen to what amounts to crap for music by these modern composers that are played far beyond reason by someone trying to indicate his like for the piece by forcing others to hear the crap?
Not every song ever written and played means it is worth a listen but the luxury of choice isn't much in america anymore, IS IT CLEARCHANNEL? Oh, the times I have wasted listening to the radio just to hear one song I liked or would like.
I remember hearing Nixon play the piano. That was torture. The Republicans are to politics what Lawrence Welk is to music.
"Turn on the Bubble Machine!"
dotcom bubble
housing bubble
intellectual property bubble
Anyone who would joke, IN ANY WAY, about torture is mentally twisted.
You and others who do what you do are horrid and inhuman; mean and cold-blooded and ruthless.
SHAME ON YOU
You seriously need a sense of humor.
Why is torture bad, but killing people from ten miles up is OK? If given a choice, I'd rather be tortured and live, than to be killed without torture.
The focus on ending torture is good, but may also serve to sanitize war. If you really want unnecessary misery to end, understand that poverty and war are the natural and predictable outcome of capitalism, and work primarily to kill that beast.
Study and you will find that the only acceptable and viable way to get there is through insurrection by the organized working class, led by Leninist communist parties, throughout the world. There is simply no doubt about this, and we need to get our heads out of the reformist sand. Capitalism will not, and can not even in theory, allow humanity to live in peace.
Killing people from 10 miles up is NOT okay.
The USA War machine has proved itself to be the best up to date torturers of history and the best at getting away with it...
But, they didn't know what they were doin by screwing with musicians and songwriters.
A very high percentage of my fellow Americans are
nothing better than rotten S.O.B.s
But there are still SOME decent, patriotic Americans who still believe in good values and obeying laws (and not committing WAR CRIMES).
These musicians are good people, good Americans.