Sunday, February 13, 2011

Success/Liberation Songs

Success *=potentially offensive.

Travie McCoy, "Billionaire," Pop, 2010*

MC Hammer, "U Can't Touch This," Rap/Hip Hop, 1990

Flobots, "Handlebars," Alternative, 2005

 

AC/DC, "TNT," Rock, 1975

The Presidents of the USA, "Naked and Famous," Post-Grunge, 1994

 

 


Liberation

Twisted Sister, "We're Not Gonna Take It," Rock, 1984

Audioslave, "Doesn't Remind Me," Alternative, 2005

Johnny Cash (version), "Highwayman," Folk, 1985

Men Without Hats, "Safety Dance," New Wave, 1982

Blind Melon, "No Rain," Alternative, 1993

 

 

 

As was expected, worldly success was a much easier theme to find in Western music than was liberation, in the religious sense of the word.  Success, as demonstrated by the songs I chose, comes in many forms, including most commonly fame and monetary gain. If you watch the video for Handlebars by the Flobots, you'll find that it depicts the typical ideal of worldly success (money, fame, power) and pits it against a different ideal of success: that of peace and prosperity for all. 

 However, I had a lot more fun choosing my liberation songs, because it was a more difficult theme and couldn't be taken quite as literally. In "popular" (I use quotes because my music choices for this assignment are anything but) Western music, liberation usually takes the form of liberation from others, such as in "We're Not Gonna Take It," showing a distinct difference in a Western perspective of liberation versus a Hindu perspective. The rest of the songs I chose fit a very abstract definition. "The Highwayman" (which can be attributed to many authors) talks about a man who is killed many times, but always seems to come back, so perhaps it speaks more toward reincarnation, but in the song he speaks from a place outside of that cycle, about how he may come back again or may find a place to rest his soul, which I thought spoke a little bit to a chance at liberation. "Doesn't Remind Me" fits again in a more Western way. He talks about doing various things because it doesn't remind him of anything, which I see as sort of a Western idea of liberation from others, and in less of a spiritual way. If you watch the video, there are some distinct parts of "No Rain" that speak to liberation. The lyrics don't make any direct references, but the video features a little girl in a bumblebee outfit who, after wandering for most of the song, opens a gate to a field of bumblebee girls who all play and dance together. This reminded me of the atman = Brahman lecture involving a drop of water splashing into an ocean that represented the divine. The difference between that and the video would be that all of the individuals in the video retained their individualism, and at no point did they merge into the same figure -- not that that would have helped in more than a representational way, because this ultimate divine reality cannot be qualified. So literally, it doesn't work, but figuratively I think that the song, in combination with the video, makes a good reference to the concept.

 When completing this assignment, I was surprised at how hard a time I had in defending my choices for songs for liberation. I felt it was necessary because without the defense, they may not have seemed to fit, but the "general feel" you get from a song can't really be used in this way, and that's what I went on for "No Rain" and "Doesn't Remind Me," along with a few more key details. 

1 comment:

  1. Holly,

    I definitely agree with you regarding how much more difficult it was trying to find songs related to liberation rather than worldly pleasure. Like you, I also agree that it was a bit more thrilling to have the challenge to find those kinds of songs.

    Your analyses of the songs and justifications for why you chose the songs you did for the liberation theme were truly very eye-opening. The connections you make to the reincarnation cycle and the analysis between the population of bumble bee girls and their interpretation in relationship to Brahman is truly very unique and very interesting. It definitely reveals your creative prowess.

    I would be interested to see how your creative side shines through while analyzing and observing other areas of the world as well. I would actually be curious to see how this is true in particular to your view in movies, such as which movies you find interesting and intriguing and why. Your view points are unique and I think they are certainly worthy of being shared and spread.

    Cheers,
    Kunal

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