Tuesday, June 16, 2020

"Murder Most Foul," by Bob Dylan

Perhaps no cultural icon had more influence on early baby boomers (those born, let's 
say, between 1946 and 1955) than poet/folk-rock singer Bob Dylan.  His first album, 
The Freewheeling' Bob Dylan, was released in 1963, when the oldest of us were 
about to head off to college.  Containing classics like "Blowin' in the Wind," "A Hard 
Rain's A-Gonna Fall," and "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right," most of our copies of this 
vinyl LP were worn out by the time we graduated from college.  (Unlike digital music,
analog LP's would eventual deteriorate from over use).

After 39 studio albums, 94 singles, and 12 live albums, his 40th studio album, his first
 in 8 years,  is being released June 19. The Album, Rough and Rowdy Ways includes 
a "somber 17-minute ballad that's eerily fitting for our current moment" according to 
Rolling Stone's review.  We are a generation that often wrapped it's collective head 
around social and political crises with help of the music we got from our rock gurus. 
 "Murder Most Foul" may well be a Dylan song we need right now. 

We older baby boomers all still carry deep and often traumatic memories of where we 
were when JFK was assassinated in November 1963, as we all do of when  the twin 
towers fell, or many of us do when Donald Trump was elected,  Perhaps we will also
retain deep memories of how we first dealt with Coronavirus outbreak.  In "Murder 
Most Foul" Dylan once again crystalizes in poetry how a generation dealt with perhaps
 the first widespread trauma of it's collective life.
Murder Most Foul
Twas a dark day in Dallas, November '63
A day that will live on in infamy
President Kennedy was a-ridin' high
Good day to be livin' and a good day to die
Being led to the slaughter like a sacrificial lamb
He said, "Wait a minute, boys, you know who I am?"
"Of course we do, we know who you are"
Then they blew off his head while he was still in the car
Shot down like a dog in broad daylight
Was a matter of timing and the timing was right
You gotta pay debts, we've come to collect
We're gonna kill you with hatred, without any respect
We'll mock you and shock you and we'll put it in your face
We've already got someone here to take your place
The day they blew out the brains of the king
Thousands were watching, no one saw a thing
It happened so quickly, so quick, by surprise
Right there in front of everyone's eyes
Greatest magic trick ever under the sun
Perfectly executed, skillfully done
Wolfman, oh wolfman, oh wolfman howl
Rub-a-dub-dub, it's a murder most foul
Hush, little children, you'll understand
The Beatles are comin', they're gonna hold your hand
Slide down the banister, go get your coat
Ferry 'cross the Mersey and go for the throat
There's three bums comin' all dressed in rags
Pick up the pieces and lower the flags
I'm going to Woodstock, it's the Aquarian Age
Then I'll go to Altamont and sit near the stage
Put your head out the window, let the good times roll
There's a party going on behind the Grassy Knoll
Stack up the bricks, pour the cement
Don't say Dallas don't love you, Mr. President
Put your foot in the tank and step on the gas
Try to make it to the triple underpass
Blackface singer, whiteface clown
Better not show your faces after the sun goes down
Up in the red light district, they've got cop on the beat
Living in a nightmare on Elm Street
When you're down in Deep Ellum, put your money in your shoe
Don't ask what your country can do for you
Cash on the ballot, money to burn
Dealey Plaza, make a left-hand turn
I'm going down to the crossroads, gonna flag a ride
The place where faith, hope, and charity died
Shoot him while he runs, boy
Shoot him while you can
See if you can shoot the invisible man
Goodbye, Charlie
Goodbye, Uncle Sam
Frankly, my Scarlet, I don't give a damn
What is the truth, and where did it go?
Ask Oswald and Ruby, they oughta know
"Shut your mouth, " said the wise old owl
Business is business, and it's a murder most foul
Tommy, can you hear me?
I'm the Acid Queen
I'm riding in a long, black Lincoln limousine
Riding in the backseat next to my wife
Heading straight on in to the afterlife
I'm leaning to the left, got my head in her lap
Hold on, I've been led into some kind of a trap
Where we ask no quarter, and no quarter do we give
We're right down the street from the street where you live
They mutilated his body, and they took out his brain
What more could they do?
They piled on the pain
But his soul's not there where it was supposed to be at
For the last fifty years they've been searchin' for that
Freedom, oh freedom
Freedom above me
I hate to tell you, mister, but only dead men are free
Send me some lovin', tell me no lies
Throw the gun in the gutter and walk on by
Wake up, little Suzie, let's go for a drive
Cross the Trinity River, let's keep hope alive
Turn the radio on, don't touch the dials
Parkland hospital, only six more miles
You got me dizzy, Miss Lizzy
You filled me with lead
That magic bullet of yours has gone to my head
I'm just a patsy like Patsy Cline
Never shot anyone from in front or behind
I've blood in my eye, got blood in my ear
I'm never gonna make it to the new frontier
Zapruder's film I've seen that before
Seen it 33 times, maybe more
It's vile and deceitful
It's cruel and it's mean
Ugliest thing that you ever have seen
They killed him once and they killed him twice
Killed him like a human sacrifice
The day that they killed him, someone said to me, "Son
The age of the Antichrist has just only begun"
Air Force One coming in through the gate
Johnson sworn in at 2:38
Let me know when you decide to thrown in the towel
It is what it is, and it's murder most foul
What's new, pussycat?
What'd I say?
I said the soul of a nation been torn away
And it's beginning to go into a slow decay
And that it's 36 hours past Judgment Day
Wolfman Jack, he's speaking in tongues
He's going on and on at the top of his lungs
Play me a song, Mr. Wolfman Jack
Play it for me in my long Cadillac
Play me that "Only the Good Die Young"
Take me to the place Tom Dooley was hung
Play "St. James Infirmary" and "The Port of King James"
If you want to remember, you better write down the names
Play Etta James, too
Play "I'd Rather Go Blind"
Play it for the man with the telepathic mind
Play John Lee Hooker
Play "Scratch My Back"
Play it for that strip club owner named Jack
Guitar Slim going down slow
Play it for me and for Marilyn Monroe
Play "Please Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood"
Play it for the First Lady, she ain't feeling any good
Play Don Henley
Play Glenn Frey
Take it to the limit and let it go by
Play it for Karl Wirsum, too
Looking far, far away at Down Gallow Avenue
Play tragedy, play "Twilight Time"
Take me back to Tulsa to the scene of the crime
Play another one and "Another One Bites the Dust"
Play "The Old Rugged Cross" and "In God We Trust"
Ride the pink horse down that long, lonesome road
Stand there and wait for his head to explode
Play "Mystery Train" for Mr. Mystery
The man who fell down dead like a rootless tree
Play it for the Reverend
Play it for the Pastor
Play it for the dog that got no master
Play Oscar Peterson
Play Stan Getz
Play "Blue Sky"
Play Dickey Betts
Play Hot Pepper, Thelonious Monk
Charlie Parker and all that junk
All that junk and "All That Jazz"
Play something for the Birdman of Alcatraz
Play Buster Keaton
Play Harold Lloyd
Play Bugsy Siegel
Play Pretty Boy Floyd
Play the numbers
Play the odds
Play "Cry Me A River" for the Lord of the gods
Play Number 9
Play Number 6
Play it for Lindsey and Stevie Nicks
Play Nat King Cole
Play "Nature Boy"
Play "Down In The Boondocks" for Terry Malloy
Play "It Happened One Night" and "One Night of Sin"
There's 12 Million souls that are listening in
Play "Merchant to Venice"
Play "Merchants of Death"
Play "Stella by Starlight" for Lady Macbeth
Don't worry, Mr. President
Help's on the way
Your brothers are coming, there'll be hell to pay
Brothers? What brothers? What's this about hell?
Tell them, "We're waiting, keep coming"
We'll get them as well
Love Field is where his plane touched down
But it never did get back up off the ground
Was a hard act to follow, second to none
They killed him on the altar of the rising sun
Play "Misty" for me and "That Old Devil Moon"
Play "Anything Goes" and "Memphis in June"
Play "Lonely At the Top" and "Lonely Are the Brave"
Play it for Houdini spinning around his grave
Play Jelly Roll Morton
Play "Lucille"
Play "Deep In a Dream"
And play "Driving Wheel"
Play "Moonlight Sonata" in F-sharp
And "A Key to the Highway" for the king on the harp
Play "Marching Through Georgia" and "Dumbaroton's Drums"
Play darkness and death will come when it comes
Play "Love Me Or Leave Me" by the great Bud Powell
Play "The Blood-stained Banner"
Play "Murder Most Foul"
Source: LyricFind
Songwriters: Bob Dylan
Murder Most Foul lyrics © Audiam, Inc

Monday, June 15, 2020

Review of Charles Reich, The Greening of America


Review of Charles Reich’s The Greening of America
When Random House first published Charles Reich’s The Greening of America in 1970,they thought so little of the radical manuscript that just 5,000 copies were printed. The New Yorker followed the book’s publication with the longest excerpt in the magazine’s history, prodding the publisher to issue a dozen reprints—eventually selling some 2 million copies.  The debate about American political culture the book unleashed has been compared to the impacts of Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring and the Kinsey Report upon environmental thinking and the sexual revolution, respectively.
Impact of Greening of America on Me
For me Greening had a substantial impact midway in my transition from a Goldwater conservative to a democratic socialist.  I first read the book in either 1970 or 1971 and I recall feeling that I shared Reich’s assessment of the principal strains of American political culture.  Re-reading it this fall, I discovered the book to be surprisingly, if simplistically, current. Popular American political culture today still resembles Reich’s Consciousness I—an expressed preference for small government, individual rights and free enterprise.  Like Reich, I believe this Jeffersonian consciousness might have been appropriate for a nineteenth century society of small towns, face-to-face relationships and individual economic enterprise; but even by 1970, this ideal had long since failed to fit the complex, interdependent, highly organized cultural and political landscape we actually lived in.
Greening of America Themes
By the second half of the 20th century, Reich concluded the beliefs of Consciousness I were drastically at variance with reality.  Virtually unfettered individual rights, small government and unregulated free enterprise had been increasingly restricted by the growth of cities, large corporations, and bureaucracies.  A new catechism had by then grown up around the organized technological and corporate society of the New Deal.  This Consciousness II underlay an America where organization predominates, and the individual must make his way through a world directed by others.  Consciousness II, according to Reich, “ultimately believes that individuals have no existence apart from their work [for an organization] and their relationship to society…The richness, the satisfactions, the joy of life are to be found in power, success, status, acceptance, popularity, achievements, rewards, excellence and the rational, competent mind.”  Consciousness I may have continued (and still continues) to describe our aspirations (just listen to the presentation of the most recent conservative nominee to the US Supreme Court), but the levers of power are wielded by elites with far different objectives than individual liberty, and maximum distribution of property.  The result, according to Reich, is a society guided by a consciousness that is far removed from the realities of human needs. 
This much of Reich’s analysis—that our nominal beliefs in free enterprise and individual liberty have been overwhelmed by the transfer of power from the man in the street to elites with degrees from Yale Law and Harvard Business School--could be a 2016 treatise emanating from “Occupy Wall Street” or the Bernie Sanders campaign. 
Greening of America Conclusion
But Reich’s conclusion—that a revolution led by the youth of the 1970’s was inextricably leading to the overturning of the no longer relevant Consciousness I and of the dehumanization of Consciousness II—was purely wishful thinking in 1970; and it is no less wishful in 2019.   Our hip generation (specifically led by the college Class of ’69) would preside, said Reich, over a revolutionary transition into a new age of American justice, fairness, ethical work.  Conscious III sees, “with an astounding clarity that no ideology could provide, a society that is unjust to its poor and its minorities, is run for the benefit of a privileged few, is lacking in its proclaimed democracy and liberty, is artificial, harmful to the environment and self, and, like the wars it spawns, unhealthy for children and other living things.”  Not only all this, but Reich asserted that nothing will stop the eventual ascension of this youth-led peaceful revolution; nothing will stop the power of this new consciousness.
Fifty Years After Greening of America
Fifty years later, there has been no such peaceful revolution in American political culture.   I am afraid the result of the deeply degrading dominance of Consciousness II  has been much more accurately foreshadowed by recent works by Madeleine Albright (Fascism: A Warning) and Timothy Snyder (The Road to Unfreedom).  But that’s a discussion for another day.

Saturday, June 13, 2020

Our Education Was So Deprived

I am an early baby boomer.  OK, more precisely, I am  one of the oldest baby boomers.  Born in 1946, I went to school in the Northeast US during the 1950's and 1960'.  I graduated from college in 1969--the infamous Class of '69.  The American education system of those decades had a number of blindspots and most of us boomers suffered from the lack of attention to a number of crucial social, economic, political and cultural biases.


American-centered.
In no particular order of importance, I wish I had been confronted during my education with a less ethno-centric understanding of the world.  It did not dawn on me until well after 1969 that US dominance in the 20th century (and before it, British) was an aberrant blip in the course of history.  We boomers were not  prepared either for the 21st century decline in Pax Americana, nor for the resurgence of a world-power in Asia in the 21st century.

Racist.
Secondly, our schools did not prepare most of us (at least most of us White kids) for the powerful grasp of institutional racism in the US.  That the nation was founded by men who either personally benefitted from slavery, or at least facilitated the perpetuation of slavery for many decades  after the American Revolution was not a part of the core curriculum were encouraged to study. 

Misogynistic.
Furthermore, at no time during our education was it made clear to us that we were part of a misogynistic culture, I didn’t take a single course, or even find a single reading on the topic in any of my syllabi.  Now 50 years later, the extent of gender discrimination and harassment is inescapable.  Only now so clearly recognized, can we look to the possibility of true gender and racial equality.

Environmentalism.
Lastly, even though I was a social science major in college, my education was remiss in not teaching me of the well-founded science of climate change, already clearly identifying by 1969 its anthropocentric roots.  I got all the way though obtaining a Ph. D. without a single assignment on the topic.



"Murder Most Foul," by Bob Dylan

Perhaps no cultural icon had more influence on early baby boomers (those born, let's  say, between 1946 and 1955) than poet/folk-r...