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Tony
Stampley featured in the LA Times for "Takin My Country Back".
By Steve Hochman,
special thanks to the LA Times
It's
hard to predict the outcome of the Nov. 2 election. But the campaign
stances of people in the music world have seemed for the most part
all too predictable, with rockers and rappers by and large supporting
Sen. John F. Kerry and country figures behind President Bush. Even
the exceptions ? Kid Rock and Ted Nugent as conservative rockers,
the Dixie Chicks and Willie Nelson as liberal country representatives
? have been fairly predictable. Now, though, a rebel rapper and
an insurgent country collective are challenging those expectations.
Sage Francis, one of the top figures in a new wave of thoughtful
hip-hop, is releasing a song titled "Slow Down Gandhi,"
which takes young liberals to task for knee-jerk posturing and counterproductive
theatrics.
Meanwhile, a Nashville ensemble of country music sessioneers billing
themselves as Honky Tonkers for Truth have recorded "Takin'
My Country Back," heavily critical of the nation's direction
and calling for a change in the White House. "Political consciousness
seems to be at an all-time high," says Rhode Island native
Francis. "It leads to interesting conversations between people
who would not normally talk politics, including me. Political awareness
has been raised collectively, and with that comes some baggage ?
the fly-by-night activists that almost, from what I see, can really
hurt the cause they're fighting for."
"Slow Down Gandhi" is a centerpiece of Francis' upcoming
album, "A Healthy Distrust," his first for Los Angeles
label Epitaph Records and due in February. But he wanted the song
to be available before the election and has posted it for listening
on his website. "Gandhi" in particular targets young people
whom Francis believes come to their politics out of fashion and
convenience without really putting themselves on the line. He specifically
mentions "trustafundians," well-off young people who affect
working-class appearances and rhetoric before ultimately retreating
to a life of middle-class comforts. Lyrics include freewheeling
references to Neil Young's Vietnam-era protest song "Ohio,"
the West Memphis 3 (the celebrated case of three Goth kids convicted
in relation to a murder) and agro-punk band Suicidal Tendencies.
Francis in the past took similar aim at the other side of the coin
with his 2001 song "Makeshift Patriot," attacking some
of the post-9/11 posturing he saw.
"This is not pro or con," says Francis, who opposes Bush's
reelection. "It pokes at a lot of things and hopefully makes
people more proud of who they are." Honky Tonkers for Truth
came out of frustration over the country community being perceived
as monolithically conservative.
"The whole point behind this project is that Nashville isn't
a lock for the red-state people," says Paul Scholten, a Nashville
studio owner and producer who commissioned the song by writer David
Kent and oversaw the production with top session players and singer
Tony Stampley, son of Nashville veteran Joe Stampley.
The song attacks the war in Iraq and the national debt, with a chorus
that goes: I'm takin' my country back Son, you ain't been doin'
her right Oh I been watching you and I don't like How you've been
treatin' my Stars and Stripes It's country music, Michael Moore
style ? and in fact it was played and the lyrics projected for sing-along
at a recent Moore appearance in Nashville. Scholten says part of
the reason for doing the song is to encourage Nashville liberals
to speak out; he says there is a fear among many that being a vocal
Democrat can be harmful to a mainstream career.
"Singers who have performed at Kerry rallies in town have been
labeled as traitors," he says. Commercial radio play is pretty
much out of the question, so the song is being made available as
a free download via the website www.takinmycountryback.com, and
60-second commercial spots are being bought on several radio stations
to play a portion of the track. No one's expecting the song to pick
up any actual mainstream country-radio play, given the fallout after
the Dixie Chicks' criticism of the president last year, but some
believe that fear among programmers that such a thing could alienate
listeners is misguided.
"Corporate radio perceives the audience as monolithic, when
in fact it's just as divided as the rest of the nation," says
Nashville music journalist Robert Oermann, himself active in an
organization called Music Row Democrats. "It's not a matter
of what the audience wants, but what corporate radio gives them."
You are what you archive That supposed find of Beatles master tapes
in a suitcase in Australia proved to be a bust. But veteran rock
archivist and art director Geoff Gans' investigation of a storage
unit containing goods left by '60s culture vulture Alan Pariser
revealed some real lost treasure, including some unseen Beatles-related
film footage.
Last year, Gans was called by Barbara Pariser, a longtime family
friend and sister of Alan, who among other things was one of the
people behind the Monterey Pop Festival and produced the very '60s
film "You Are What You Eat." Her brother died in 2001,
and Barbara wanted Gans to go through some of his belongings and
see if there was anything of significance. Gans didn't expect to
find much, but his curiosity was piqued, especially upon learning
of Pariser's friendship with George Harrison and Beatles publicist
Derek Taylor and his role in promoting the duo Delaney & Bonnie
(a Gans favorite), including instigating the participation of both
Harrison and Eric Clapton in recordings and tours with that band.
What he found went way beyond his expectations.
"What was there was almost his entire archives, not just all
the Delaney & Bonnie tapes, every demo, master reels of entire
concerts with Clapton and Harrison, but also films," Gans says.
"Alan had the best cameras available at the time and always
had a camera with him. A lot of it was unlabeled and I had to do
research, but among other things was 30 minutes of home movies of
George Harrison from the '60s."
Other films include visuals from a Rolling Stones concert celebrating
Mick Jagger's birthday at Madison Square Garden in 1972 (degenerating
into a cake fight) and footage of Ringo Starr and T. Rex singer
Marc Bolan at the Beatles' Apple offices in London. Gans is nearly
finished cataloging the vast collection and he and Barbara Pariser
soon will decide what to do with it. Some items, including the Delaney
& Bonnie material and many hours of outtakes from the "You
Are What You Eat" production, are being evaluated for potential
release. Other things, including Monterey Pop collectibles and perhaps
the Harrison film footage, may be put up for auction.
"We hope to get some Harrison photos and material to his family
for use on one of their projects," Gans says. "It would
make great bonus material on reissues."
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