In Search Of Protest Singers & Dorian Lynskey's 33 Revolutions Per Minute 
Reviewed      Jim Keoghan, March 1st, 2011 07:33

                                thequietus.com | Mar 1st 2011 7:33 AM           
                                                                                
                                                                         

Jim Keoghan asks Billy Bragg, John Robb and Dorian Lynskey whether the protest 
singer is becoming prevalent once more, while John Doran reviews the latter's 
new tome 33 Revolutions Per Minute

                                 

If the recent student protests have proved anything it's that people in their 
teens and twenties, long derided for their indifference, are far from 
apathetic. And yet, as they take to the streets in their thousands, where is 
their soundtrack?

For earlier generations social, cultural and economic upheaval was accompanied 
by artists who sought to reflect and channel the changing mood. But in recent 
years the relationship between music and protest seems to be in trouble, like a 
couple who have been married for decades but no longer have anything to talk 
about.

To find out why this has happened, we have to travel back 20 years to the last 
time that the two partners still vaguely fancied each other. 

"As recently as the early 90s there was still a strong connection between music 
and protest," says Dorian Lynskey, author of 33 Revolutions per Minute: A 
History of Protest Songs. "Although there have always been protest singers and 
protest songs, specifically on the folk scene, in Britain it was from punk 
onwards that music became more overtly political. From 1977 until probably Riot 
Grrrl in 1991/2, you had around a 15 year period when the relationship between 
music and politics was a particularly strong one."

The wider changes that had been taking place in the country were largely 
responsible for this; protest music has always emerged out of cultural, 
political or economic tension. Think of the folk revival in the US during the 
60s and the backdrop of civil rights, the rise of the counter-culture and the 
protests against Vietnam. The same is true of other scenes with a political 
bent, each one needing a wider tension in society to feed upon. 

"From the 70s up until the early 90s, Britain had all the ingredients to 
produce protest music to a greater level than was previously the case," 
continues Lynskey. "Massive social change, economic turmoil, a hugely polarised 
political environment; these are the factors that ensured that what began with 
punk continued long after that scene had fizzled out."

And this was assisted by the arrival of the independent music scene. Made up of 
bands drawn from working-class communities and anti-establishment by its very 
existence, the scene took the attitude and ethic of punk and carried it through 
to the years that followed. 

"Punk had been political and that influenced a generation of bands," says John 
Robb of The Membranes. "Indie became a musical and political subculture. 
Everyone was aware - some in good ways some in bad - that music should be 
political. Whether you did this through your songs or by playing benefits 
didn't matter. The important thing was to just do something."

It might sound surprising today, in an age when a mixture of indifference and 
PR-savvy ensures that few artists from any genre ever veer into the politically 
contentious, but there was a time when the music press actually expected bands 
to have opinions. 

"Music was the lingua-franca of resistance" says Billy Bragg. "Editors at 
publications like the NME and Sounds, and other magazines, thought that bands 
that were featured should have a radical edge, be aware of the political 
environment and have an opinion about it."

But from the early 90s onwards things began to change. All those factors that 
had coalesced to make the perfect environment for protest slowly started to 
disappear. No more Thatcher, then no more Tories. Totemic strikes, which had 
politicised and galvanised a generation became a thing of the past. And the 
economy calmed down too. The heady highs and abyssal lows that had blighted the 
country for years suddenly disappeared. Everything settled down to a gentle 
rhythm and as a country we became at best contented, at worst simply apathetic. 

"All this made politics bland," says Bragg. "The country turned into a 
different place. It didn't help that after the collapse of the Soviet Union 
people stopped talking about left and right and began to cling to the middle. I 
was no fan of Thatcher but at least you knew where she stood. I still have no 
idea what Tony Blair stood for. In the whole of society a culture of 
complacency set in. It's difficult for protest singers to make music in a 
vacuum and for most of the past twenty years that's what this country has been 
like. You had a generation of people who'd rather go shopping than engage 
politically. It's unsurprising that protest music fell out of fashion."

But with a new age of austerity bearing down upon us it looks like things might 
be beginning to change. Tension in society is starting to make a timely return. 
The question is, will protest music return with it?

"I had a moment of clarity a few years ago, when the credit crunch first hit. 
I'd been living in a bubble until then and suddenly it just hit me that people 
in this country, and others, are getting fucked over left, right and centre. 
After that I had to do something about it". 

The Agitator

Derek Meins, creative force behind The Agitator, is that rarest of things, a 
protest singer under the age of 25. With song titles such as 'Let's Get 
Marching', 'Get Ready' and 'No!' and lyrics that share the same sense of anger 
evident during the student protests, his band are providing the beginnings of a 
musical soundtrack sorely needed during these politically combustible times. 

"A radical message and a radical sound, that's what we're about," he says. "No 
guitars, just drums and message of resistance. The kind of music you would 
march to anywhere. Citizens are getting screwed but they can do something about 
it. You're seeing the beginnings of change on the streets. It's about saying no 
to both the way that things have been done and the way that the country is 
going now."

Encouraging stuff. During the 70s and 80s it was on the margins of the music 
industry and in pioneering scenes where most protest music tended to emanate 
from. In the US that meant hip-hop, in the UK scenes such as punk, post-punk 
and C86. And in this instance, with their uncompromising, aggressive and 
inventive sound, The Agitator adhere to that tradition. 

According to Lynskey, it's from these innovative and vibrant musical genres 
that we should look to for the protest music of the future. 

"I think if protest music starts to make a significant comeback, it's more 
likely to come from places like Urban or similar scenes. It's not impossible 
that something will emerge from more established genres like indie, but really 
that's no longer the beast that it was 20 or 30 years ago. The whole thing has 
become much more corporate, endemically middle-class and culturally 
introverted. Are we really likely to see Mumford & Sons releasing an album of 
biting social commentary? Look elsewhere; that would be my suggestion."

Even if as a country we do become more political and develop a desire for this 
to be reflected musically, according to the folk singer Robb Johnson, often 
regarded as one of the country's genuinely political songwriters, one 
development of the last twenty years that seems unlikely to change is the 
attitude of the popular media. 

"Years ago, there were opportunities for politically minded songwriters to 
occasionally reach a mass audience. For all its faults, even a show as populist 
as Top of the Pops still featured interesting artists now and then. What's left 
today? We've reached the point now where you've got things like Jools Holland - 
effectively just a cosy televised version of Mojo magazine - and the X-Factor, 
a show that is very unlikely to have a protest song week. Political or protest 
singers are going to have to work harder to get their music out-there."

What seems apparent is that the coming years are going to be different to the 
two decades that preceded them. As a country we're slowly emerging from our 
debt induced stupor and stumbling bleary-eyed around a very different landscape.

"The possibility is now becoming clear to a lot of people, specifically the 
young that living standards could fall in the future. In fact, this could be 
the first generation of young people who have lower living standards than their 
parents," says Billy Bragg. "It's going to make a lot of people want to 
challenge the system. That's what got me radicalised; the realisation that the 
things that I valued in life were under attack. In an age of fractured media, 
music might not be as important as it once was but it still has a role to play 
and now that resistance is back, don't be surprised if the music of resistance 
isn't far behind." Jim Keoghan

Given how good this voluminous book on popular recorded protest song is, it 
feels almost churlish to draw attention to the fact that John Lennon's 
sharp-featured profile takes up more space on the cover than Billie Holiday, 
Chuck D and James Brown in combination. But once you're past considerations of 
graphic design and marketing, this is an intensely satisfying read.

Lynskey, a Guardian music journalist, has put in the hours at his local library 
doing the kind of job which is all too rare in this age of cut-and-paste 
atrocities. (Leaving aside the fact that no one needs a book on MGMT — how good 
can one be anyway, if it's rushed out less than four months after an album?) 
The fact that the appendices, sources and epilogue run to 120 pages should 
speak volumes alone.

Any trepidation you have before diving in is forgotten almost immediately. (200 
pages on folk music? Sweet baby Jesus save me!) This reader probably enjoyed 
the sections on the singers and acts he cannot abide more than the rest. The 
author's trick is to convincingly win back important musical figures — some of 
them genuine revolutionaries —from jabbering talking-head, TV filler shows and 
their songs from the defanged and whimsical soundtracks in which they have been 
used as signifiers for years. His knowledgeable, hard-boiled prose is slashed 
through occasionally with fine razor cuts of vivid description which jolt you 
out of any reverie you may have slipped into: it's a good read but it's not an 
easy read.

The chapter on Nina Simone reveals how she was unable to keep on ignoring the 
burgeoning civil rights movement, after the KKK bombing of the 16th Street 
Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama that killed and injured 14 black kids. 
The author describes it: "As the bomb detonated and rafters buckled the teacher 
shrieked: ‘Lie on the floor! Lie on the floor!' [One of the children who died] 
Cynthia's father Claude would recall, ‘Even as she screamed, the faces of Jesus 
in the church's prized stained-glass window shattered into fragments.'"

And then we are left with Simone, who is almost tipped over the edge by the 
event, angrily trying to build a zip gun from household items so she can go 
into the street and kill a stranger. Instead we got the shocking ‘Mississippi 
Goddam'. And shocking it becomes again when rescued by the context. John Doran

The launch for 33 Revolutions Per Minute: A History Of Protest Songs will take 
place tonight at Waterstones, 82 Gower Street. A talk and Q & A session will 
take place at 6 30pm, with tickets costing £3 (and redeemable if you purchase 
the book that evening!). For more information and to get hold of tickets, call 
020 7636 1577 or email [email protected].

                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                                                
        

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