Bread and Roses

I love protest songs, of all kinds, all eras, all genres, pretty much all the time. Like many here, I'm particularly fond of protest songs from the 60s & 70s; I'm such a folkie, it's embarrassing. I have no expertise but lots of enthusiasm, and I so hope you'd contribute some of your knowledge and experiences of the songs. First, what is a protest song? Phil Ochs has the best definition of them all. Please see below.

protest-song.jpg
That does get it said. Well, enough about academics, let's look at more closely at the protest song "Bread And Roses." I'd be surprised if JayRae hasn't covered this material long before, but I hope there's also some new stuff here.

Bread And Roses

More on the song itself below. Here's some popular versions:

Judy Collins

From her same-titled 1964 album
https://youtu.be/HKEr5U8ERgc

Joan Baez

With her sister Mimi Farina, who wrote the most popularly used score of the poem
https://youtu.be/LWkVcaAGCi0

Utah Phillips and Ani DiFranco

From their album Fellow Workers (Cooking Vinyl/Righteous Babe Records, 1999) with Utah's great introduction telling the story of the Bread and Roses strike.
https://youtu.be/VoEi_2N1TFk

Perhaps you have a favourite version? Or a memory of hearing it sung somewhere.

What lies behind this powerful song? What gave rise to it? It arose out of a huge strike in 1912 in Lawrence, MA, one that transformed the labour movement in the great textile region of New England. Hundreds of thousands of workers participated in the struggle in a powerful example of democratic mass mobilization. The textile strike also tied into the women's movement and their struggle for democratic and human rights. The phrase had been born as a political slogan from a line in a speech by Rose Schneiderman, a socialist, feminist, and labour leader of those times. She had said, "The worker must have bread, but she must have roses, too."

Rose-schneidermann-poster-pre-1920.jpg
Source: By http://www.nyu.edu/library/bobst/research/tam/women/manscrpt.html / http://www.nyu.edu/library/bobst/research/tam/women/schneid.jpg, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=1895945

You could read more about Rose Schneiderman's remarkable life and career at good old wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rose_Schneiderman
She touched so many aspects of American life during her 90 years. When you read about her, she sounds more like Bernie than Bernie :=) We see Bernie today as a heroic, but lonely, progressive leader, fighting for human rights, justice, democracy and the common good alone among today's wretched politicians. It is enlightening to read about the many heroic socialist leaders, such as Rose Schneiderman, of the post-Civil War to WW1 era. JayRae has done a remarkable job over a long time in collecting stories about these folks and their struggles, which are also our struggles today. We would do well to join Bernie's story to the old stories of The Hellraisers Journal, for they are the same story. So what was the Bread and Roses strike about?

Here's a 21-minute video about the 1912 Textile Strike.
https://youtu.be/RdbP67NWnLg

You can find a written history of the 1912 strike in Lawrence, MA here: http://www.folkarchive.de/breadrose.html

In 1912, in the great woolen center of Lawrence, Massachusetts, 20,000 workers walked out of the mills in spontaneous protest against a cut in their weekly pay. Workers had been averaging $8.76 for a 56-hour work week when a state law made 54 hours the maximum for women and for minors under 18. The companies reduced all hours to 54 but refused to raise wage rates to make up for the average loss of 31 cents per week suffered by each worker because of the reduction in hours.

This caused the walkout which rocked the great New England textile industry. Under the aggressive leadership of the Industrial Workers of the World the strike became front-page news throughout the country. This is how IWW leader Bill Haywood described the Lawrence strike in his autobiography, Bill Haywood's Book:

"It was a wonderful strike, the most significant strike, the greatest strike that has ever been carried on in this country or any other country. And the most significant part of that strike was that it was a democracy. The strikers had a committee of 56, representing 27 different languages. The boss would have to see all the committee to do any business with them. And immediately behind that committee was a substitute committee of another 56 prepared in the event of the original committee's being arrested. Every official in touch with affairs at Lawrence had a substitute selected to take his place in the event of being thrown in jail."

After ten weeks the strikers won important concessions from the woolen companies, not only for themselves but also for 250,000 textile workers throughout New England.

During one of the many parades conducted by the strikers some young girls carried a banner with the slogan: "We want bread and roses too." This inspired James Oppenheim to write his poem, "Bread and Roses," which was (first) set to music by Caroline Kohlsaat,

This information from the Union Song website was taken from a wonderful book called Songs of Work and Protest by Jay Glazer and Edith Fowkes, p.71

Songs Of Work And Protest.jpg

Here are the Oppenheim lyrics:

As we come marching, marching in the beauty of the day,
A million darkened kitchens, a thousand mill lofts gray,
Are touched with all the radiance that a sudden sun discloses,
For the people hear us singing: "Bread and roses! Bread and roses!"

As we come marching, marching, we battle too for men,
For they are women's children, and we mother them again.
Our lives shall not be sweated from birth until life closes;
Hearts starve as well as bodies; give us bread, but give us roses!

As we come marching, marching, unnumbered women dead
Go crying through our singing their ancient cry for bread.
Small art and love and beauty their drudging spirits knew.
Yes, it is bread we fight for -- but we fight for roses, too!

As we come marching, marching, we bring the greater days.
The rising of the women means the rising of the race.
No more the drudge and idler -- ten that toil where one reposes,
But a sharing of life's glories: Bread and roses! Bread and roses!

The two joined images summarize our longing for a world where our twin human needs of food and love would be met. We work for a society that would nourish our bodies and our spirits, meet both our biological and our cultural needs, feed both our hearts and minds.

Mimi Farina wrote the most commonly used music for the song. Here's Judy Collins reflecting on the origins of her version of "Bread and Roses."
http://breadandroses.org/blog/judy-collins-recalls-origin-of-bread-and-r...

In Singing Lessons: A Memoir of Love, Loss, Hope and Healing (c. 1998 p. 174) Judy Collins recalls looking for songs for an album project in 1976.

“After the death of her husband, Dick Fariña, Mimi Fariña, Joan Baez’s younger sister, had started a nonprofit organization in San Francisco called Bread & Roses, to provide free entertainment for people in homes, jails and hospitals in the Bay Area. She wrote the “Bread and Roses” melody to a poem by James Oppenheim and I recorded it, using a choir of voices in a church in New York.”

In her liner notes for the album, also titled Bread & Roses Judy said: “Songs come from many places, unexpectedly, amazingly.” She relayed how Mimi had sent her a copy of the “Bread and Roses” poem. She thought it so beautiful that she asked her to set it to music. Her sister Holly Ann then designed a Bread and Roses tapestry piece featuring a single rose and wove it using hand-dyed yarns which was then used as the art for the inside album cover.

You'll notice that the extract comes from the organization http://breadandroses.org/, which is all about hope and healing through live music.

What does "Bread and Roses" mean for you this Saturday morning?

Peace be with us, if we work for it with peaceful hearts,
gerrit

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janis b's picture

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Monster by Steppenwolf

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Miep's picture

As an early hippie. I grew up on this sort of music, in the 1960's and 70's.

She told me once that she thought "Do You Believe In Magic?" was a great protest song. Also "Suzanne."

Thank you for this essay.

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hecate's picture

is key. Kesey wrote a whole novel 'round it.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Szhdooptf7Q]

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Miep's picture

From Salvation Army counters

As I recall, Judy Collins left that verse out for some reason.

I am glad to hear this song resonates with you, as it does with me and my mom.

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Gerrit's picture

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Resilience: practical action to improve things we can control.
3D+: developing language for postmodern spirituality.

reminded me of one of my favorite Sandy Denny songs, "Been on the Road So Long"

I've been on the road, so long, been tired and broke, so long
I've been to the south where the winds they are warm,
traveling the road of no return, so long.
I've seen what is war, so long, the ruins and scars, so long,
the mansions of mud, the wounds and the blood,
and I've seen the dying of all that is good, so long.
This world's in a shroud, so long, of a mushrooming cloud, so long,
The lies and the greed of political men,
Those cheats who would take us to war again, so long.

But hope lives in me, so long, it is love that I see, so long,
the courage and strength of a young man's smile,
the faith that is in a little child, so long.
and I've been on the road so long, been tired and broke, so long,
I've been to the south, where the winds they are warm,
traveling the road of no return, so long.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RuweF_Iqbr8]
the bolding is my political philosophy in a nutshell, and why I feel this opportunity to elect Bernie president is such a rarity. Can't mess this up.

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Shaylors Provence

hecate's picture

favorite Sandy Denny songs, hear below. From out of the 5th Century. Fifth century, that is, B.C.E. Pure spell.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UumU9_20pVU]

I guess my own political philosophy, it would be more expressed, in this song:

and love
is lord of all

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NHstyoGkMIU]

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Those are two of my favs, too. The Quiet Joys lyrics always bring to mind "How Can I keep From Singing". Some say it is a Quaker (Friends) hymn, some dispute this, but a lovely song in any case. I'm of the "cheerful atheist" persuasion and don't take sides in sectarian squabbles Wink

My life goes on in endless song, above earth's lamentations.
I hear the real, though far-off hymn that hails the new creation
Through all the turmult and the strife, I hear that music ringing.
It sounds an echo in my life, how can I keep from singing.
What though the tempest loudly roars? I hear the truth, it liveth.
What though the darkness round me glowers? songs in the night it giveth.
No storm can shake my inmost calm while to that rock I'm clinging,
If love is lord of heaven and earth, how can I keep from singing?
When tyrants tremble, sick with fear, and hear their death-knells ringing;
When friends rejoice, both far and near, how can I keep from singing?
In prison cell, in dungeon vile, our thoughts to them are winging.
when friends by shame are undefiled, how can I keep from singing?

Many, many good recordings and variations of this song. Here's Pete:
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AH72dgNSAsw]
Bruce Springsteen does a lovely version, too.

Listening to everyone's songs is so much fun, but I've got to drop out now and will check this evening to listen to more stuff people post. Hoping to get to the big Sanders rally in Madison (WI) to day but still not sure if I can get away for the long time commitment.

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Shaylors Provence

Miep's picture

Called "Suzanne."

Edit: the image bug is fixed. Turned out that ipads don't name images, so they were all uploading with the same name. Now they will be automatically renamed with unique file names.

image_1.jpeg

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

I have ever seen... your mother was a true artist! Thank you for showing us that... lovely...just, lovely.

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Miep's picture

Here's her formal art blog

https://judywrossblog.wordpress.com

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

*scampers off to get lost in beauty* .....

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Miep's picture

I'll have to let her know Smile

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Bisbonian's picture

but I was also seeing a quilt image, but not this quilt. It was a quilt draped over a couch, with a big dog sprawled out on it. It was a nice enough quilt, a common "log cabin" pattern, nicely done, but not remarkable. And the dog hid most of it. And everybody was gushing over it. Now I see why. I heard about the bird sketch, but never saw it. Pretty odd that the image I was seeing did have a quilt in it!

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"I’m a human being, first and foremost, and as such I’m for whoever and whatever benefits humanity as a whole.” —Malcolm X

I followed your link. I am blown away. Does she sell them? I saw a price tag on a purse.

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

Miep's picture

She's not really a commercial quilter, no. She has sold a lot of her work locally, though, to help with the fundraising to build a new library for her community, that she started up.

Did I mention she's amazing?

I think she just doesn't want the hassle of dealing with a mail order business. I will mention to her that you asked, though.

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Miep's picture

I asked her and she does sell direct some times, she just doesn't want to hassle with an online store.

Her email address is judywross@gmail.com. I will pm you with this information as well.

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gulfgal98's picture

I love quilts and have seen many in exhibits, but the quilt your mother made is so exquisite that it takes my breath away.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Miep's picture

It's one of my favorites.

Here's another one I especially like:

image_2.jpeg

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Gerrit's picture

for posting it and also for your kind comments and your reflections. I'm going to show the quilt and your mother's site to my wife and daughters today. My wife loves fabric arts and we have a number of quilts made by her Nana and family, which are treasured here. But the Suzanne quilt is out of this world and she will so enjoy poring over the picture. Best wishes,

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Miep's picture

Always happy to give my mother's work a broader audience. She is just amazing.

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If so, can you comment on why I'm seeing a pen and ink drawing on paper, of a bird, and not the quilt? Others are clearly seeing the textile. (And I don't think this is a gold dress experience :-), but rather a tech thingie.) Do not want to do a help desk ticket for this as you've got plenty of big deals to work on...but if you are in this thread, please comment. Interesting that Miep says she's been having probs with images, yet for many readers the quilt is showing up just fine.
Thanks!

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PastorAgnostic's picture

I drew that of a thieving bird, one who would steal food off your plate, if you are not caregull. Full. Care-full.

I sketched that on an iPad, using my finger. One might say I gave the bird my middle finger.

the names must have been confused.

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thanks for the heads up. I'm seeing the bird sketch also. I checked out Miep's code she is using to embed the photos and it's incorrect, there is no image name in the code. She must be doing something wrong in the uploading process. If I knew what photo she was trying to point to I would fix it. I'll PM Miep about this. Thanks.

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I sort of figured you are here 24/7, not surprised to see you reply so quickly Wink Thank you!
I am puzzled that some readers are obviously able to see the quilt...

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Shaylors Provence

to read every thread but I saw my name in the subject line of your comment. For some reason the image name in Miep's code is just "image.jpeg", that's why it changes. It's either the way she is uploading the images or the device she is using is stripping the image name. I have PMed her.

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When I want your attention, I put your name in the subject line. You are always there when we need you. The front page is looking good. Wish you had more time to play with all of us.

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

PastorAgnostic's picture

Hmm.

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after further investigation I found that the image name of your bird sketch is "image.jpeg". I have a suspicion that Miep uploaded an image with the exact same name and that is causing the mix up. I have PMed her to find out if that's the case and am still waiting for her to respond.

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PastorAgnostic's picture

I have to change the parameters of my art I post up here, so no more confusion can occur.

Sorry it has caused trouble. Or Confucius. Batswanadanta? Thor?

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Miep's picture

Turns out ipads don't name images so they all upload with the same filename and it confuses the software. He added a line of code that renames the files with unique names, so this does not happen any more.

I edited my comment and re-added the quilt image, so it should stay there this time Smile

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Don't worry about it. I changed a configuration setting to automatically change the name of the file if an existing file already has that name. There should be no problems now.

This had never come up before so was not an issue until now.

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Miep's picture

Thanks!

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PastorAgnostic's picture

Smile

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Bisbonian's picture

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"I’m a human being, first and foremost, and as such I’m for whoever and whatever benefits humanity as a whole.” —Malcolm X

I might learn something Wink Thanks, JtC, for not only for fixing it, but explaining how/why.

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Shaylors Provence

mjsmeme's picture

I was the head registrar at the Museum of Arts & Design in NYC for over a decade and during that time I oversaw the mounting of more than a few quilt exhibitions that included the work of artists from around the world. I've just spent a few minutes over at your mom's site, and IMHO her Portrait quilts, and Abandoned Houses, can stand up against any one of them. I love the image of her in the studio surrounded by the things that inspire her, and her philosophical musings, and her choice of subjects (not too many political quilters out there), and that she is right about "Do You Believe in Magic".

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Miep's picture

I'm passing all your comments onto her.

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Deja's picture

Having taken a quilting class with nothing but seniors, and my then 30 something self, I have to say, this blows me away! She's truly gifted! My paternal grandmother and aunt used to quilt. They'd assemble them in the living room, somehow using dining room table chairs, and affording my 2 cousins and me an opportunity to be Indians in our teepee, all while watching Bonanza from under it.

Awww, thank you for reminding me of wonderful, innocent times, and the creativity of my lovely grandma who died when I was six.

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Miep's picture

Back in the early 1990's and before that, she was just doing patchwork. Amazing how a person's art can evolve over time.

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Deja's picture

Sorry, double post.

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John, Martin Bobby. Kent state. I could go on. For those of us born around 58 (1958 for me, surprise! Smile ) there was a lot of trauma in our early years. I've heard they call us Generation Jones. Hogwash. Generation PTSD would be much more appropriate.
Like you friend, the songs of that era have lasting affect. I lost my love of music for awhile. It all seemed so trivial, not at all like the meaningful, powerful songs of my youth. But I didn't lose the outrage. Fortunately, my son turned me on to some newer music that had me shouting 'Right On!' again. I guess you can't really lose a love of music, but I know you can misplace it for a time.
Thanks for the trip down memory lane. I actually own each of those songs on CD but it's nice not having to get up to hear them again Smile

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With their hearts they turned to each others heart for refuge
In troubled years that came before the deluge
*Jackson Browne, 1974, Before the Deluge https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SX-HFcSIoU

Miep's picture

I was eight and living in a nearby suburb of Los Angeles during the Watts riots. I remember my mother telling me that she surely hoped that black people would not arrive at our house in Culver City and kill us off, but that if they did, she wouldn't blame them for it.

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Miep's picture

I remember watching those with my mom, her talking to the television in outrage. I remember thinking, this will be the last one. This cannot possibly happen again. My generation will live in a world free of war, because who could possibly fall for this again? Why would people be so stupid?

I didn't understand evil, then. I still don't. Where does it come from? How did this start? How do we make it stop? Surely it's not all just physics?

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Alison Wunderland's picture

we had a few relatively quiet years, then Ronnie came along and it was "Dafuk are we going to do with the War Machine?" 'til we figured out we could use it anywhere we pleased.

Makes me sick that these monsters have, continue to have, sway on all the people who just want to live, feed their families and be left the fuck alone.

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Alison Wunderland's picture

...when Kent State happened. When I got back from Italy the whole "peace, love, and brotherhood" scene had changed. There was a darker element that hadn't been there when I left at the end of '69. For one thing, cocaine got big. It was non-existent in '69. The mood changed to more paranoid. Participating in ending the war may, in retrospect, be the only time I've, along with countless others, managed to have any effect on policy. Of course, then Hippies were trivialized, put on TV, and that was that. Co-opted, marginalized, and trying to stay afloat through the great recession.

Ah well, fuck it, man. It's Bernie or Armageddon. I'm past being abused anymore. I'm not voting for that cunt.

Baby percy 01.jpg

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I know I've posted this before here, it's just, it really seems to fit, right here, right now.
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKEZoY-TMG4 width:420 height:315]

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With their hearts they turned to each others heart for refuge
In troubled years that came before the deluge
*Jackson Browne, 1974, Before the Deluge https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SX-HFcSIoU

Gerrit's picture

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Resilience: practical action to improve things we can control.
3D+: developing language for postmodern spirituality.

Gerrit's picture

Man, you did live it, didn't you!

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3D+: developing language for postmodern spirituality.

Bisbonian's picture

I was younger, but they still had much impact.

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"I’m a human being, first and foremost, and as such I’m for whoever and whatever benefits humanity as a whole.” —Malcolm X

Daenerys's picture

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This shit is bananas.

Deja's picture

It's the one that came to mind. I have another, but will read the other comments and post if someone hasn't already posted it.

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hecate's picture

Mister Jones: I was looking through your lyrics. There aren't very many political songs in there.

Bob Dylan: I don't know which of my songs was ever political.

MJ: "Masters Of War" is.

BD: I don't know if even "Masters of War" is a political song. Politics of what? If there is such a thing as politics, what is it politics of? Is it spiritual politics? Automotive politics? Governmental politics? What kind of politics? Where does this word come from, politics? Is this a Greek word, or what? What does it actually mean? Everybody uses it all the time. I don't know what the fuck it means. Left, right, rebel. Some people are rebels. Let's see. Afghanistan are rebels, but they're OK. Nicaragua's got rebels and they're OK. Their rebels are all right. But in El Salvador the rebels are the bad guys. If you listen to that stuff you go crazy. You don't even know who you are any more.

MJ: We all have our favorite rebels I guess.

BD: Yeah! That must be it!

MJ: Who do you admire?

BD: Who is there to admire now? Some world leader? Who? I could probably think of many people actually that I admire. There's a guy who works in a gas station in LA—old guy. I truly admire that guy.

MJ: What's he done?

BD: What's he done? He helped me fix my carburetor once.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vHY0YxdswyY]

/

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SfPSCDu6NQ4]

At one point, some months back, I suggested this blog, be renamed Bread and Roses. Still think it a not unsane idea.

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Miep's picture

The ones who speak to our lives, somehow. Not always in ways that we can explain, but it doesn't really matter though, does it? If we can't quite explain what we hear? We still hear it, nonetheless.

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hecate's picture

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Gerrit's picture

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hecate's picture

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Miep's picture

Far as blog names go, I am currently in favor of "[Redacted] Spring."

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shaharazade's picture

took me awhile to understand and appreciate Bob Dylan's so called defection from politics as we know them.

'You don't even know who you are any more.'

Give me the guy who fixes my carburetor anytime over the powerful elected pols who want to kill and reek havoc o the world. Politics's as practiced globally these days is just a useless exercise of empowering the worst humanity has to offer.

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Alison Wunderland's picture

of influence in my youth, but I'm not an "idolator" so I tend to not remember their names until something brings them to mind.

Books had a lasting effect too, leaving their impressions in an empty mind. Silent Spring, Catch-22, A perfect day for bananafish, The Good Soldier Švejk, Hemingway, Stienbeck, and on and on... But I had, still have, a reading impediment. I can't speed read. But read voraciously anyway, even if slowly. Songs come and go but books last longer and sink deeper in the mind... for me. (Still have trouble remembering just who wrote what, lol, but it keeps the cobwebs away.)

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Miep's picture

I can cruise though fiction fast if I don't care whether I remember it. I go back to some, and I have gone back to Franny and Zooey more than once. It takes re-reading fiction for me to remember it. I read Catch-22 about eight times when I was a kid.

Nonfiction I read like poetry. Up and down, back and forth, scanning the page. Takes forever.

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Now that made me smile. A favorite of mine.

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

(If this isn't a protest song, then I don't know what it...)

Oh no cannonballs did fly
No rifles cut us down
No bombs fell from the sky
No blood soaked the ground
No powder flash blinded the eye
No deafening thunder sounded
But just as sure as the hand of god
They brought death to my hometown
They brought death to my hometown, boys

No shells ripped the evening sky
No cities burning down
No armies stormed the shores for which we'd die
No dictators were crowned
High off on a quiet night
I never heard a sound
The marauders raided in the dark and brought death to my hometown, boys
Death to my hometown

They destroyed our families' factories and they took our homes
They left our bodies on the plains
The vultures picked our bones

So listen up, my Sonny boy
Be ready for when they come
For they'll be returning sure as the rising sun

Now get yourself a song to sing and sing it 'til you're done
Yeah, sing it hard and sing it well
Send the robber barons straight to hell
The greedy thieves who came around
And ate the flesh of everything they've found
Whose crimes have gone unpunished now
Walk the streets as free men now

And they brought death to our hometown, boys
Death to our hometown, boys
Death to our hometown, boys
Death to our hometown

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Bisbonian's picture

But we still like to walk around amongst the bones. It's got good bones.

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"I’m a human being, first and foremost, and as such I’m for whoever and whatever benefits humanity as a whole.” —Malcolm X

Gerrit's picture

posting it. I was haunted by Springsteens' "My Hometown" when it first came out. It was deeply sentimental; a poignant, mournful ode to the death of a town. This one is about the same thing, but from another perspective: the perspective of what Paulo Freire called "conscientization." "My Hometown was about the pain of loss. "Death To My Hometown" is about now understanding that the death of the town came from a deliberate attack by modern-day brigands who destroyed and looted and left with impunity.

Thanks for your comment; have a great day, eh.

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

In my mind, Bruce is a Bard, cut from the same cloth of those of old...telling the tales of the common people... Better still,.....he is a Warrior Poet...like I speak of in my poem of the same name...

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I, a Warrior Poet, stand before you on this day,
The remnant of a dying breed and I have a lot to say.
I ask that you join we few to fulfill a lasting need.
We must not neglect, nor can we reject the world’s silent plea.

For song, and mirth, and for what it is worth,
Inspiring valiant lore, drama and comedy, and oh so much more!
For in every heart there lies the want for poetry and prose.
To hear of new inspiring love or the song of a single rose.
Of loss and death, and birth and worth, let everyone take heed!
But only through the telling can we fill this human need.

To all potential poets I only have this to say.
Listen well and learn until your souls you do fill and you find your way.
Learn well your craft and master it, and soon our ranks will swell.
And follow the barding way, filling long nights spun thick with dreams
And fueling the imaginations of the peasantry and of kings.

And to all my brethren poets I ask that you pay heed.
To show others the trail that you have sailed and to always plant the seed,
Of love of learning and of life, of meter and of rhyme
To teach the dance of poetry and to assist others in their climb.

A final thing, a warning, to all who would scoff and or deny,
The simple pleasure of telling a tale or the reading of a rhyme.
We the Warrior Poets, stand before you on this day,
We will not allow you to belittle our calling in any way.
Nor will we remember you when your deeds are called into account.
For with our pens we can render you as helpless as a babe
And remember not the things you do, nor even your scurrilous name.
And you will go unsung in into the quiet of the night,
With not a tear, and no one will hear,
Of your name, your deeds, or your might!

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Gerrit's picture

brilliant. Anyone who has ever taken up a pen to call out injustice and strengthen the struggle would enjoy the poem. Thanks.

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

Blush

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Miep's picture

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Stay on track. Stay in lane. Don't throw rocks.

Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

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JayRaye's picture

Off to work right now but will make for some good listening later.

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Never be deceived that the rich will allow you to vote away their wealth.-Lucy Parsons

Miep's picture

Together, we are an orchestra.

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Stay on track. Stay in lane. Don't throw rocks.

have been listening for the past couple of weeks:

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hecate's picture

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n/t

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hecate's picture

at the time got totally and completely and immediately tired of that song. She commanded that I either turn it off, or secure for her vast quantities of heroin. She pronounced it the most depressing thing she had ever heard, and demanded that those who recorded and released it be tried in The Hague, for crimes against humanity.

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Most of Dylan's songs look at the ........shall we say ...... not the bright side of life

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hecate's picture

he thought maybe he'd get, all the honestest and sunniest, after he'd already irretrievably destroyed, his one true union.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r2fE8TBZ48U]

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Bisbonian's picture

Over on TOP. I'll have to migrate it here, maybe today. This song is a close relative:

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3i8YZ5DoPvs]

I took up banjo in order to do protest songs. It hasn't really worked out that way, yet, but this is yet one more piece of inspiration to get on the ball and do it.

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Gerrit's picture

read it very much. BTW, maybe you and I could talk a bit? you say you took up the banjo and then faltered. I've gone through the same on the guitar. It's new and I'm too much of a 53-year old hacker to ever get anywhere. I use the acoustic guitar mainly for amateur songwriting. I haz PTSD and my therapist encouraged me to take up music as therapy. (There's a vet org here in Canada that helps vets learn and buy guitars.) Writing protest songs really helps me deal with stuff and get it out of me. I'm obviously too shy to put anything up here, but maybe if we could sorta learn together? I dunno. What would you think?

I've learned now that music really is therapy. I now know why I've always loved protest music. Like Phil Ochs says, you can't mistake it for bullshit!

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Bisbonian's picture

Yeah, I'd love to talk with you...looking at your profile, we have so much in common. Woodworking is a big part of it.

I didn't so much falter with the banjo, as just keep getting distracted from my primary mission. I play a lot, and I play well enough that people really like it (though I know how much better I need to be!). A huge key is playing with other people...I don't know if you have had the opportunity to do that, but seek it out. It accelerates your playing like noting else. The drawback is that sometimes it takes you off track, into the music they want to play. So, here in town, I wind up playing with an Irish group...which really is not my thing. In Tucson, I have many friends that mostly play old fiddle tunes...which is a lot of fun, but has pretty much defined my repertoire (and not the way I want). So I need to focus.

I have been diagnosed with PTSD. Music helps a lot. I don't seem to have ANY talent for writing songs, but I can play (and modify) the ones that have been written. Which is what the essay will be about...how folk/protest songs get modified and morph. Better get to work.

Drone Protester.jpg

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Gerrit's picture

seem to have a lot in common. Music therapy rocks! Golden Retriever therapy rocks! All the other therapies and pills help me deal, but don't move me beyond, eh.

I agree with you on how folk and protest songs can morph into new situations where they are needed. Pete Seeger was a genius. Well I should probably just shut up right there. But one part of his gift was how he took great songs that had fallen into obscurity and made them work their magic in new situations. So I look forward to your article.

So, I'm a hacker at playing, but seem to produce (at least) songs at will. You're a good player, but have trouble with songwriting. "Louis, I feel the start of a beautiful friendship!" I have a song I call "Hellfire Day" about the drone killings. It's for acoustic guitar in Bm (surprisingly easy chord adaptions in open position for stubby butter fingers in Bm :=) All I have is the melody line (although I have a wild amateur arrangement of it in Garage Band; I'm trying to learn arrangement and when I'm better, lookout Logic Pro.) If I could get it to you, maybe you could tell me if it has legs and improve it and you could play it and use it anyway you want? I have no pride; if it's rubbish, it's rubbish, on to the next one. They seem to fall into my head at will. What do you think?

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Bisbonian's picture

The photo might be too small to see the details...the poster to the left of the picture says, "Don't Steer the Reaper", with a picture of the Grim Dude himself. I am standing in front of the Northrop-Grumman offices outside of Fort Huachuca, where the Army has it's drone training school. I was NOT alone; we were most of the time on both sides of that side road, leading to the local Community College, where N-G was sponsoring a program to lead college students into the drone program in the Army. The other sign belonged to a friend name Joel, and I can't remember exactly what it said.

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"I’m a human being, first and foremost, and as such I’m for whoever and whatever benefits humanity as a whole.” —Malcolm X

Gerrit's picture

drone song "Hellfire Day" might be right up you alley. I tried to use only open base strings on the chorus to "drone" a bit. OK, now to get it to you. I'm gonna try to send it on the PM thing, see if I can. Back in a bit.

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Gerrit's picture

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[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bWXazVhlyxQ width:420 height:315]
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[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O1fHxPY3TJo width:420 height:315]

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Gerrit's picture

rock and metal, but I'm learning lots here on c99. detroitmechworks introduced us a week or so back to folk metal. That blew my socks off! Very cool. Now I'm learning form you that rock also has it's protest songs like every other genre. The only other metal protest song I knew was Sabbath's "War Pigs" and that in an acoustic version. The original is posted above in the threat and is awesome. Thanks for broadening my musical horizons! Best wishes,

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