The Seafaring Gypsy

This is a playlist of songs dedicated to social and civil change. “Human salvation lies in the hands of the creative maladjusted.” Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

Jan 17
This Machine Kills Fascists - Protest Songs

Crafted with love like the songs themselves, this Ear Candy Update is dedicated to songs of social and civic change. Stream online here: Download for iTunes here: This Machine Kills Fascists.mp3 “Most songs are written for one of two reasons: love or protest. At its fundamental level, self-expression in music is all about raising awareness, the subject of which fluctuates between beauty and outrage—two kinds of passion that rouse people to song in equal measure. The protest song is not simply an idealist’s sing-along custom-made for populous sit-ins and social demonstrations; human protest is waged at every level of our existence, in private and in public, and transcends the picket line to include battles for gender rights, racial equality, and freedom from the tyranny of self-righteous authority figures. The very best protest songs are those that touch upon universal themes that can be reapplied to a multitude of struggles from decade to decade, whether or not they were originally written in response to a specific event. It makes sense that music—pop music, in particular, the readymade stuff of the masses—is used as a fundamental tool of dissent. Music speaks for us as individuals and groups, in eminently hummable phrases and cathartic dominion; its audience connects with its populist means of chorus and refrain; and its immediacy, its need to relay a message in mere minutes, is a most urgent sympathizer. Protest music’s tipping point in popular culture came in the 1960s, when songwriters like Bob Dylan redirected pop music’s focus to relevant real-time crises, such as the Civil Rights movement and the Vietnam War. It has continued to be a vital method of expression for years since, lending voice to fights for basic human rights and campaigns of logic against hollow governmental agencies, most notably during the tumultuous tenure of the latest Bush Administration and its ongoing quagmire in Iraq. This isn’t to say that protest songs are surefire ways to make a difference, because honestly, there’s very little a three-minute ditty can do to rid the world of all its evils. In fact, you could even say that putting one’s faith in a protest song is an act of futility or absurdity, and you’d probably be right. Still, we shouldn’t be stopped from dissenting, from stating truths or challenging wrongs, because if you don’t take a stand for something then you’ll be defined by anything. PopMatters has scoured the musical spectrum for the best examples of the protest song form, including anthems of great popularity and obscurity alike. May they inspire you to stand up and be heard in the midst of whatever dark hour you find yourself in.” —Zeth Lundy If you have any suggestions, bitches, gripes, complaints or praise, email Duke Wilbury right here: Dukewilbury@gmail.com The tracks: Strange Fruit - Billie Holiday The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll - Bob Dylan (What Did I Do To Be So) Black and Blue - Louis Armstrong This Land is Your Land - Woody Guthrie Eve of Destruction - Barry McGuire Redemption Song - Bob Marley & The Wailers Only Women Bleed - Alice Cooper War Pigs (Live) - Black Sabbath The Ghost of Tom Joad - Bruce Springsteen Ohio - Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young (Don’t Worry) If There’s A Hell Below We’re All Going to Go - Curtis Mayfield Trouble Every Day - The Mothers of Invention Kick Out the Jams - MC5  Fight the Power - Public Enemy Suspect Device - Stiff Little Fingers A Change is Gonna Come - Sam Cooke We Shall Overcome(Live) - Pete Seeger            Share (Source: gonzotrail.blogspot.com)

Jan 19
This Machine Kills Fascists
Aug 27

Storms of Troubled Times

As Hurricane Irene prepares to do her thing, I prepare to do mine. 

Featuring:

(Source: 8tracks.com)

Jan 28