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Steve Earle

 
 
Margin Walker
03:34 / 24.07.02
...is pissing people off (again).

"John Walker's Blues" Meets The Boos excerpt:

NEW YORK (CNN) -- A new song by the country singer-songwriter Steve Earle that offers an empathetic view of John Walker Lindh is drawing criticism days after the American Muslim convert pleaded guilty to aiding the Taliban regime in Afghanistan.

Taken from Earle's album "Jerusalem," due out in late September, "John Walker's Blues" is a stately ballad sung from Walker Lindh's perspective referring to his interest in music videos, boy bands and religious fanaticism.

It features Earle's recitation of an Arabic prayer and ends with mullahs reading from the Quran.

In one verse Earle sings, "I'm just an American boy, raised on MTV, And I've seen all the kids in the soda pop bands, but none of them look like me. So I started looking round, and I heard the word of God. And the first thing I heard that made sense was the word of Allah, Peace be upon him."

In exchange for Walker Lindh's plea, the government agreed to drop nine more serious counts, including conspiracy to murder U.S. nationals and providing material support to terrorist organizations. He is expected to be sentenced to 20 years in prison.


To quote someone (grant, was it you?) commenting on something similar w/ Springsteen's Diallo song: "It's good to see someone armed just with a guitar pissing off so many people." God bless Steve Earle and his little black, pissed-off fuckin' heart.
 
 
A
09:04 / 24.07.02
Hot damn. My hat goes off to the man. That takes a lot of guts in the current crazed patriotic mood the US seems to be in.
 
 
gridley
15:39 / 24.07.02
Yeah, and since Earle is a spiritual seeker and has done some time behind bars himself, you know he really means it.

I'll have to look for it....
 
 
grant
16:32 / 24.07.02
Gorgeous.
 
 
tSuibhne
20:29 / 24.07.02
I saw an article on that a couple of days ago. Finished reading it, and decided I was buying the album as soon as it came out, for no other reason then to support the guy. If it's a great album that'll just be a bonus.

Also been debating posting about it on a board I used to/sometimes frequent. There's a small group of people that like him on the board, that also happen to be kind of conservative in this area.* Be interesting to toss that nugget onto the board, and see how they deal with it.


* which basically means that I got hounded off the board because I dared to speak out against knee jerk military actions, and rampant racism, after 9/11.
 
 
Margin Walker
21:03 / 24.07.02
Taken from this AP article, here's the song lyrics:

Lyrics to "John Walker's Blues," by Steve Earle (supplied by Artemis Records):
"I'm just an American boy raised on MTV
And I've seen all those kids in the soda pop ads
But none of 'em looked like me
So I started lookin' around for a light out of the dim
And the first thing I heard that made sense was the word
Of Mohammed, peace be upon him
A shadu la ilaha illa Allah
There is no God but God
If my daddy could see me now -- chains around my feet
He don't understand that sometimes a man
Has to fight for what he believes
And I believe God is great all praise due to him
And if I should die I'll rise up to the sky
Just like Jesus, peace be upon him
We came to fight the Jihad and our hearts were pure and strong
As death filled the air we all offered up prayers
And prepared for our martyrdom
But Allah had some other plan some secret not revealed
Now they're draggin' me back with my head in a sack
To the land of the infidel"
 
 
Margin Walker
05:22 / 21.08.02
You can listen to 5 of the album tracks (including "John Walker's Blues") with the Flash 5 plug-in here: http://www.artemisrecords.com/ecards/earle/index.html. And here are the liner notes:

"Lately I feel like the loneliest man in America. Frankly, I've never worn red, white & blue that well. I grew up during the Vietnam War and whenever I see a flag decal I subconciously superimpose the caption: AMERICA--LOVE IT OR LEAVE IT across the bottom stripe. Back then, as now, it was suggested by some that second-guessing our leaders in a time of crisis was unpatriotic if not downright treasonous. We sent 55,000 of our sons to die far from home in the belief that if we didn't arrest what we perceived as an "evil empire" abroad that the last domino would ultimately fall at our own doorstep. When no enemy presented itself at the gate we began to turn on ourselves, subjecting our own citizens to clandestine scrutiny by our law enforcement agencies and persecution in our courts of law. Out newfound "unity" became increasingly exclusive and eventually divisive until we fought each other in the streets of Washington, Chicago, Newark, and Watts. Well, we survived all that --and I believe that we'll survive this, as well. We are a people perpetually balanced on a tightrope stretched between our history and our potential, one faltering step away from a headlong tumble from the most dizzying of heights. But fear not--we're working with a net.

In spite of our worst intentions and ignorance of our own history our Constitution has, thus far proven resilient enough to withstand anything that we throw at it including ourselves. For myself, my faith in this one institution of our all too human (and therefore imperfect) society is absolute but, I hope, not blind. It was built to last but only if properly maintained. Fierce vigilance against the erosion of its proven principles is the very heart of our peculiarly American brand of democracy. It was framed by men whose names we are taught to remember by rote: Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, Patrick Henry, Aaron Burr... the list is long and distinguished and we call these men patriots. In times like these it is also important to remember the names of John Reed, Emma Goldman, Abbie Hoffman, Bobby Seale, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King... those who defended those same principles by insisting on asking the hardest questions in our darkest hours.
God bless America, indeed.

Steve Earle
Fairview, Tennessee
July 4th, 2002"
 
 
Jack Fear
12:36 / 20.09.02
For another musical look at the Taliban, we hear from the mighty Richard Thompson: in this interview and performance that ran on NPR's Fresh Air, he debuted a new song, written from the viewpoint of an Al-Qaeda hijacker. Its essential theme: Two thousand years of Western culture—shit. Einstein—shit. Mozart—shit. Descartes—shit. If it's not to the glory of Allah, what good is it? None.

Which is interesting; the hardline Islamic fundamentalist view is really not much different from the hardline Christian fundamentalist view, is it?

NPR had the balls to air this on September 11; props.

Richard gave good interview, as always: but I was oddly disappointed—Thompson is himself a Sufi, a convert to Islam, and has occasionally found himself in the uncomfortable position of reconciling his faith and his bone-deep liberal humanism—most notably when the fatwa was called against Salman Rushdie—and I'd have been interested in what must be, at times, a precarious balancing act between being Western and being a Muslim.
 
 
bio k9
19:07 / 23.09.02
All of the albums lyrics can be found here.

John Walker's Blues and Jerusalem are, by far, my favorite tracks.

Jerusalem
(Steve Earle)

I woke up this mornin' and none of the news was good
And death machines were rumblin' 'cross the ground where Jesus stood
And the man on my TV told me that it had always been that way
And there was nothin' anyone could do or say
And I almost listened to him
Yeah, I almost lost my mind
Then I regained my senses again
And looked into my heart to find
That I believe that one fine day all the children of Abraham
Will lay down their swords forever in Jerusalem
Well maybe I'm only dreamin' and maybe I'm just a fool
But I don't remember learnin' how to hate in Sunday school
But somewhere along the way I strayed and I never looked back again
But I still find some comfort now and then
Then the storm comes rumblin' in
And I can't lay me down
And the drums are drummin' again
And I can't stand the sound
But I believe there'll come a day when the lion and the lamb
Will lie down in peace together in Jerusalem
And there'll be no barricades then
There'll be no wire or walls
And we can wash all this blood from our hands
And all this hatred from our souls
And I believe that on that day all the children of Abraham
Will lay down their swords forever in Jerusalem
 
  
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