twc

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  • in reply to: Music #236800
    twc
    Participant

    Ha ha!

    in reply to: Music #236796
    twc
    Participant

    That’s all folks (from me)

    in reply to: Music #236793
    twc
    Participant

    Great Depression

    (1) Brother Can You Spare a Dime, Yip Harburg and Jay Gorney (1932)

    Anthem of the Great Depression.

    The unembellished singing of Al Jolson captures those desperate times.

    (Jolson’s once popular blackface performances are now deprecated for their perceived racism).

    (2) Hallelujah I’m a Bum — Theme and variations.

    Protest Scene from the movie Modern Times (Charles Chaplin, 1936)

    • This reply was modified 1 year, 12 months ago by twc.
    in reply to: Music #236781
    twc
    Participant

    Fifties & Sixties

    These songs are not socialist—very little music overtly is…

    (1) You’ve got to be Carefully Taught, Rogers and Hammerstein (South Pacific, 1949)

    From the 1958 movie of the Broadway musical.

    (2) The Times They Are a-Changin’, Bob Dylan (1964)

    Spirit of ’60s protest.

    (3) Where Have All the Flowers Gone?, Pete Seeger (1958-64)

    This version by Joan Baez — when will they ever learn?

    • This reply was modified 1 year, 12 months ago by twc.
    in reply to: Music #236765
    twc
    Participant

    Brass

    (1) Fanfare for the Common Man, Aaron Copland (1942)

    Fanfares are the preserve of the world’s rulers but in 1942 when Roosevelt’s vice-president Henry Wallace envisaged a post-War era of the “common man”, Aaron Copland wrote a fanfare for him, i.e., for the “common man”.

    As the New Deal morphed into the Cold War, Copland fell under attack, in particular for attending a disarmament conference in 1949, which was attended by Einstein, Thomas Mann, Charlie Chaplin, etc. Copland was singled out for befriending fellow composer, Dimitri Shostakovich (sent from USSR by Stalin), whose terrified humiliation at the event ever after haunted Arthur Miller.

    Copland’s fanfare is not socialist, but it’s intentionally anti-ruler. Its melody and rhythm re-emerge in Queen — We Will Rock You.

    (2) Concierto de Aranjuez, Joaquín Rodrigo (1939)

    The concerto was written in Francoist Spain, but its latter-day working-class appeal derives from its rehearsal by a colliery brass band in the movie Brassed Off where it is intercut with backroom conniving to shut the mine down.

    • This reply was modified 1 year, 12 months ago by twc.
    • This reply was modified 1 year, 12 months ago by twc.
    • This reply was modified 1 year, 12 months ago by twc.
    in reply to: Music #236763
    twc
    Participant

    Covid

    Lest we forget …

    • This reply was modified 2 years ago by twc.
    in reply to: Cost of living crisis #236752
    twc
    Participant

    “Do you honestly think I give a *** *** [about playing the government’s willing mule to the electricity company]?”

    1. Yes, otherwise you wouldn’t have lost your temper.
    2. Yes, otherwise you wouldn’t have kicked back “I have 66 quid to spend on something else”.

    The only question under capitalist conditions is “does anyone — yourself included — honestly think you’ll deliberately renege on the 66 quid (or whatever) you owe the electricity company?”

    Capitalism has many ways of making willing and unwilling mules pay up.

    • This reply was modified 2 years ago by twc.
    in reply to: Cost of living crisis #236749
    twc
    Participant

    Just received a further 66 quid [from the government] towards my monthly electricity bill.

    No you didn’t. The electricity company did. You were the government’s mule.

    in reply to: Front page not displaying correctly on mobile #236686
    twc
    Participant

    I have forwarded your post to the internet committee

    Actually, There is a quote link. I’m trying it out now.

    in reply to: Forum lacks a standard for quote and response #236642
    twc
    Participant

    Thanks. I trust that a simple solution can be found.

    in reply to: Music #236638
    twc
    Participant

    Bundeslied

    The Bundeslied, or “Federal Song”, was commissioned by Ferdinand Lassalle for the fledgling Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) in 1863. It is thus historically significant.

    Georg Herwegh wrote the words and Hans von Bülow composed four-part music for it. Hanns Eisler substituted Brechtian music for it in the 1920s.

    Incidentally, Hans von Bülow was acquainted with Max Stirner (“Saint Max”). Bülow was Franz Liszt’s son-in-law (until opera composer Richard Wagner ‘stole’ his wife). Richard Wagner bonded closely with Mikhail Bakunin in the 1849 Dresden revolt. Georg Herwegh tainted Richard Wagner’s later works with Schopenhauerianism. Hanns Eisler was deported from the USA in 1948 for un-American activities.

    “Bet und Arbeit” reminds us that capitalist time is money, and our bread. Our concerned capitalist lets us pray to our heavenly father after hours.

    • This reply was modified 2 years ago by twc.
    in reply to: Music #236618
    twc
    Participant

    Marx and Engels

    Engels called the 1720s satire The Vicar of Bray “the only political folk song remaining popular in England for more than a hundred and sixty years.
    https://wikirouge.net/texts/en/The_Vicar_of_Bray_(Engels,_1882)

    The Vicar of Bray. Arranged P. M. Adamson — selected for diction.

    The Vicar of Bray. John Potter and the Broadside Band — selected for 18th century period.

    * * *

    * See Mark Lindsey’s Marx and Engels on Music https://mronline.org/2010/08/18/marx-and-engels-on-music/

    • This reply was modified 2 years ago by twc.
    in reply to: Music #236612
    twc
    Participant

    Joe Hill

    Paul Robeson sings “Joe Hill” to Sydney Opera House construction workers in 1960 Alfred Hayes (1925). Music: Earl Robinson (1936)

    (2) The Preacher and the Slave Joe Hill (1911) — Utah Phillips

    in reply to: Music #236608
    twc
    Participant

    French Connection

    The Marriage of Figaro Mozart (1786). For Napoleon, the subversive play by Beaumarchais (1778) on which Mozart based his opera, triggered the French Revolution of 1789.

    https://youtu.be/z7XWxnacs0Y

    The Marseillaise theme can be heard in Mozart’s piano concerto 25 of the same year as his opera (1786).

    (2) La Marseillaise Rouget de Lisle (1792) — arranged by Hector Berlioz (1830).

    in reply to: Music #236506
    twc
    Participant

    We will all go together when we go Tom Lehrer (1967)

Viewing 15 posts - 76 through 90 (of 767 total)