When one fan yelled out she learned to play guitar to this song, Paul Simon invited her to play on stage and she did and she was good. A lovely gesture that paid off for everybody, something nice to get you into the weekend.
Music
Glad to be Gay
What with Tory prominents like Chris Grayling making noises about understanding wanting to keep the poofters out of good Christian homes again, is there a better time to launch a site devoted to the first political gay pop song? As the site puts it
Glad To Be Gay is unusual for being a precise and prominent song about an issue that simply had no precedent. Apart from a few gay activists nobody had heard a gay song before, let alone one as militant and furious. Tom Robinson put one in the top 20 and into the mind of the straight public.
It had been written a year earlier, to be performed as a one-off at London’s 1976 Gay Pride rally. It was a bitter, snarling assault on the attitude of gay people who’d turn up to gay events wearing the ‘glad to be gay’ badges then in circulation, yet take them off in public, try to pass for straight at home and in the workplace. It accused them of tacitly accepting repression rife in the media, and out on the streets from thugs and the police.
Once it was played to a wider audience with punk pioneers the Tom Robinson Band, it became an anthem of combative pride. Audiences largely composed of straights would sing along in solidarity with gusto.
[…]
It’s hoped that this will balance the scales a little – a songwriter as socially aware and politically forthright as Robinson deserves to be remembered for more than 2-4-6-8 Motorway.
Beyond that, it’s not just about musical history and insight into the creative process. It’s social and political history too.
Glad To Be Gay was written in a world where people were routinely referred to as ‘self-confessed homosexuals’, the same way you’d talk about murderers and rapists.
Can you Handel this?
The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain: because it’s been too long since we’ve featured them on this blog. Palau discovered them yonks ago, with a great version of Outcast’s Hey-Ya; this is entirely different but just as good. Normally I dislike cutesy covers like lounge versions of Wonderwall, but the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain is good enough and has a good sense of humour to make their versions of songs into more than just “ironic” pieces of fluff.
Your Afternoon Isleys
Harvest For The World certainly seems to fit the zeitgeist:
as does Fight The Power:
Hope that one stiffens the backbone a bit for the political horrors ahead…
Morally Right != Musically Talented…
Like many staunch atheists the only thing that might ever make me revert to churchgoing youth is the beauty of sacred music. Nothing imparts a sense of the numinous like Mozart’s Requiem, for instance, whether you’re religious or not. So my fellow atheists are going to have to do a damned sight better than this atheist’s anthem if they want to persuade anyone of their rightness.
Cute, but it’s no Handel’s Messiah:
THE ATHEIST ANTHEM March Tempo
I AM AN A-THEISTS, FREE FROM MIND CON-TROL,
I HAVE NO GOD-S, DE-VILS OR A SOUL,
MY LIFE IS HAP-PY, AS PEO-PLE CAN SEE,
CAUSE I LOVE NA-TURE, AND HU-MAN-I-TY.ALL THROUGH THE A-GES, IG-NOR-ANCE PRE-VAILS,
RE-LIG-OUS LEAD-ERS, PREA-CHING FAIR-Y TALES,
STOP ALL YOUR RAV-ING, AND YOUR REH-TORIC,
YOUR RE-E-LIG-IONS, MAKE ME SICK.LOGIC AND SCI-ENCE, GOOD FOR YOU AND ME,
NOT A FOOL-ISH BI-BLE, OR A DE-I-TY,
I WANT REALITY, AS MY GOAL,
I AM AN A-THEIST, FREE FROM MIND CON-TROL,
I AM AN A-THEIST, FREE FROM MIND CONTROL,
I AM AN A-THEIST, FREE FROM MIND CONTROL,
FREE– ———- FROM MIND CON-TROL. YES!Lyrics & Music by: David M. Mandell O May 2002 Atheists of Silicon Valley, Mt. View, CA. www.godlessgeeks.com
Have a great grand goddamn good godless day!
Ow. My ears hurt.
(courtesy of Pharyngula commenter Moses)