Following up Thursday’s Madonna post, Matt Cogswell writes, “I love all things
Madonna, and I have always felt that people missed the points being made in ‘Like
A Prayer,’ especially in its video. Many fail to point out that the Jesus character
is the one to help a woman who has essentially
just been raped and stabbed. Then, because he is black, that man takes the fall
when he is completely innocent. It's also interesting to note that on the
original Like A Prayer album, that 'God?' line is not there.
That happens on the Immaculate
Collection album, inspired by
the Blond Ambition concert,
when she shouts out ‘God?’ after masturbating in ‘Like A Virgin,’ which makes
the song very much an appeal for salvation.”
Nancy Caronia
follows up Friday’s Bruce post, writing, “It’s so funny, that album is so
melancholy to me that it pushes past the outlaw romanticism to the
demise of the American Dream.”
Joshua Eyler highlights Elton
John’s “Goodbye Yellow
Brick Road” and Five For Fighting’s “Superman” as two songs
well worth AmericanStudying. He writes, “‘GYBR’
takes
Oz and turns it on its head a bit. Elton John is reflecting on fame, forcing us to
rethink our ‘destinations.’ If the Emerald City is fame (with accompanying
perils), then we need to leave the YBR to return to home/authenticity. ‘Superman,’
though recorded just before 9/11, ultimately became a sort of cultural touchstone
for that time/event. The great hero reflects his desire to be human, to be
vulnerable, to put down the heavy weight he carries, to rest. Given the events
of the time, it became a reflection on our collective vulnerability and equally
collective humanity.”
L.D. Burnett highlights
three folk classics: “John
Henry,” “Erie Canal,”
and “Dan Tucker,” the
kind of songs that both she and I connect to Bruce Springsteen’s Seeger Sessions.
Erin Kingsley highlights
Bob Seger’s “Like a Rock,”
a song whose ambiguities were flattened out a bit by the famous
Chevrolet ad campaign; absent that link, as Erin writes, “The song is about
the (illusory) promise of youth, one of the fundamental premises of Americana,
I think.” In response, Osvoldo
Oyola argues, “Seger is all about perpetuating myths; reminds me of a piece I
wrote a few years ago” on “Old Time Rock and Roll.”
Matt Loveland notes that
there are “so many to choose
from. Patsy Cline, Woody
Guthrie, Willie Nelson, John
Lee Hooker, Buddy Guy, Buddy
Holly, on and on and…” About Guy, he
adds, “he’s got an identifiable, mash up style. You’d have
to really delve into mid-century blues. The electric guitar story.” And he
adds, “Les Paul, Roy Acuff, Chet Atkins, Hendrix, Bonnie Raitt, Stevie Ray
Vaughn. This is a playlist begging to be made!”
Josh
White writes, “The
Ramones all day long. Punk has an
intellectual history.” Bryan Waterman
responds, “Fun read. Though I'd foreground Duchamp/Cage
-- at least as vital as Emersonian individualism.” And Josh adds, “Plenty of
crossover with New York art students and punk, particularly via Velvets and their fans...”
For more of their subsequent conversation, check out the retweets in my Twitter feed!
In response to a prompt about controversial and challenging songs and
videos:
Sarah
Purcell highlights the Dixie Chicks’ “Not Ready to Make Nice”
and “Fourth of July,”
by X.
Jason Parks mentions Metallica’
“One,” which is based
on this film.
James Owen Heath
highlights Mothers of Invention’s “Trouble Every Day.”
And Rob Gosselin mentions when Sinead O’Connor ripped up the
photo of the Pope on SNL. Shil
Sen adds that “she was singing ‘War,’ by Bob Marley, but
I gather that she
changed the lyrics a bit to more explicitly refer to child abuse in the
Catholic Church.”
Finally, Paul
Beaudoin makes a meta-argument about the week’s series, arguing that “In
American culture, I can’t think of too many places, outside of music, where
ambiguity is an essential element.” Paul also highlights, in response to a
Facebook conversation about more and less exemplary pop culture icons, Dreamworlds, a multi-part documentary by UMass
Comunications Professor Sut Jhally.
Next series starts Monday,
Ben
PS. What do you think?
Nancy adds, "I have an essay on Bruce in Essays on Italian American Literature and Culture. It's called, 'Meeting at Bruce's Place: Springsteen's Italian American Heritage and Global Notions of Family,' and has to do with his presence as the opening act of the 9/11 tribute. I place him within an IA political tradition akin to Mario Cuomo or Fiorella LaGuardia. Here's the link: http://www.bordigherapress.org/Saggistica.html"
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