jackson weather: 37°f (3°c)


home > Music > Music Features

[Rob In Stereo] Heaven Help Us All


Courtesy Bob Dylan
Bob Dylan was the voice of a generation in the tumultuous 1960s. With a stagnating economy and a pending presidential election, who will be this generation’s freewheelin’ Dylan?

by Rob Hamilton
September 24, 2008

In post-World War II American history, 1968 was a seminal year. It began with a brutal awakening with the Tet Offensive in Vietnam and culminated in the election of President Richard Nixon. Between these benchmarks were the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy, a riotous Democratic convention in Chicago and the Soviet Union’s invasion of Czechoslovakia to put down a growing political liberation.

It was a momentous year in history, and the artists of the day delivered a comparable musical soundtrack. There were songs reflecting the fatigue overtaking the country providing the strength to endure (“Mrs. Robinson,” “Dock of the Bay”), and there were songs calling for unity (“People Got to Be Free,” “Everyday People”). Then there were songs that combined the mood and the message. The Rolling Stones’ “Gimme Shelter” is the best example. It pulls off both without resorting to heavy-handedness, a trait that enables it to live on through strife and prosperity.

In ’69 and ’70, conditions did not markedly improve abroad or on the homefront, and the music of the time reflected this impasse. “Fortunate Son” by Creedence Clearwater Revival and “Heaven Help Us All” by Stevie Wonder were two indispensable social-awareness songs released in those years. Both reached Top 10 status on the Billboard charts.

Marvin Gaye released his classic “What’s Going On” in 1973, and Stevie Wonder released a series of albums with recurring global- and domestic-conscious themes through the ’90s.

Yet singles and albums of this sort have all but disappeared. Why?

Say what you want about radio, but one thing has never changed: Top 40 stations have always tripped over their heels to play the newest single by the biggest artists. If you present the new Miley Cyrus song, it gets four plays an hour on the local station in 2008, just as the newest CCR song did in 1970.

But credit goes to record labels and artists who refused to let the non-threatening, asinine singles topping the charts intimidate them. (“Happy Together” and “I’m a Believer” were both Top 5 songs of 1967.) The increase in social awareness of the late ’60s was a result of their refusal. Labels and artists today have yet to take this step.

The vast majority of Americans agree that we’re headed in the wrong direction, and the country has never felt so divided. One feels a growing market for a song attempting to reduce this simmering acrimony. Where are the songs reminding us that a Republican family going through foreclosure in rural Texas is just as tragic as a Democratic father losing his job in urban Boston? A straightforward song reminding us of this could prove very profitable, and at the very least would be therapeutic for the nation’s battle-weary soul.

Instead, though, the music industry has ignored America’s growing quandary. We now find ourselves in the deepest depths of a post-Sept. 11 world, and the No. 1 song is about a girl enjoying kissing another girl. Even Kanye West, once so incensed about Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath, seems to have lost the fortitude to apply a catchy hook to a socially meaningful song.

The parallels between 1968 and 2008 continue to grow. However, artists’ gustiness of those days has been replaced by an apparent redoubled effort to keep the people apathetic.

Something needs to change.

When history is written on this era, will we be ashamed of the soundtrack?

 
posted by on 09/24/08 at 03:05 PM. [printer-friendly version]   

COMMENTS

 

You are not logged-in. To post a comment, you must be a registered user and logged in. Click here to register or click here to login.

:: recentcomments
Dec 04, 2008 | 09:12 PM
Crisler Garners Big-Name Support for Mayoral Race
Kamikaze: Indeed Daniel, The Jackson Progressives along with Yups, The Jackson Chamber of Commerce, and Leadership Greater Jackson have come together to organize what will ...
Dec 04, 2008 | 09:03 PM
Crisler Garners Big-Name Support for Mayoral Race
Tom Head: Much too early for me to back anybody, but if I had to pick now I'd go with Mary Coleman, John Horhn, or Leslie McLemore. I suspect Harvey Johnson was the best ...
Dec 04, 2008 | 08:37 PM
Crisler Garners Big-Name Support for Mayoral Race
daniel johnson: The Progressives have already begun to gear up for the Mayoral season by organizing some debates. Harvey Johnson impresses me as well. i like Crisler for many ...
Dec 04, 2008 | 08:35 PM
Dear Dog Owners: Your Pets Are in Danger
J.T.: Oops, I think I misspoke. I think the 2 focuses of Our Fondren are Quality of Life and Crime Prevention and Code Enforcement falls under Quality of Life. Anyway, reporting the ...
Dec 04, 2008 | 08:21 PM
Dear Dog Owners: Your Pets Are in Danger
J.T.: No animals are suppose to run loose, dogs or cats. Some cat owners let their cats run loose, also. Several big well fed cats love my back yard and sleep on my deck. I agree with ...
Dec 04, 2008 | 07:50 PM
Crisler Garners Big-Name Support for Mayoral Race
Hot Sauce: The problem with Harvey was that he allow his ego to get in the way of the truth. Harvey also took to much time to make decision and he also allowed his personnel ...
Dec 04, 2008 | 07:23 PM
City Employees Stealing Gas?
Hot Sauce: The stealing of gas is just the begining of a much larger problem that has been hidden from the taxpayers. Indicted for stealing lawnmowers by a Jackson firefighter still working for ...
Dec 04, 2008 | 06:10 PM
Dear Dog Owners: Your Pets Are in Danger
ladd: Truthfully, I'm not a big fan of the OurFondren group. Too much "I saw a black man in Fondren" for my taste. Although, some of them have assured me they're not doing that as ...
Dec 04, 2008 | 05:42 PM
LoungeList Photos: Vanilla Ice @ Fire
Walt: Come on now, you do "Ice Ice Baby" over and over again while dancing, grabbing yourself, et al. Don't hate the player, hate the game.
Dec 04, 2008 | 05:09 PM
Crisler Garners Big-Name Support for Mayoral Race
Walt: I'm going with Johnson too unless I run myself. Fat Harry and Lawclerk have been begging me to run and offering to give big money toward my campaign platform. I didn't ...
 

 

Guests online: 1
Logged-in members: 1
Anonymous members: 0
Elapsed time: 1.0148
The most number of visitors ever was 140 at once on 09/24/2008
currently online: thabian

 

© Jackson Free Press, Inc. - portions of code by CC with EE.
phone: 601-362-6121 (ext 1 sales, ext 2 editorial, ext 3 publisher)
fax: 601-510-9019 * P.O. Box 5067 * Jackson, MS * 39296