Three Chords to Freedom

Musings on a precious commodity

JOHANNESBURG BLUES – From the 1980s

CHORUS:

You can tie my hands, you can shackle my feet
But you never can kill the beat
Of Freedom
You can jail my brothers and my sisters too
But you never can jail the truth
Of Freedom

So few of you have all the power
you seem so afraid of darkness
But you have to know it’s the eleventh hour
and recognize the real darkness
is in your hearts,
and in your minds,
and in your souls

CHORUS

The truth is something you fear most
you use your guns and jails to keep it quiet
You shoot the children, then you boast
that you have quelled a riot
It’s in your hearts,
and in your minds,
and in your souls

CHORUS

The day’s coming soon when you’ll have to run
and leave South Africa to its owners
You secret police will throw down their guns
and escape to different shores
you have no hearts,
y
ou have no minds,
you have no souls
you have no hearts,
you have no minds,
you have no souls

repeat til fade

Cry Freedom – 1987

Just watched this film last night. I saw it when it first came out as an experience with the Denver International Film festival, had forgotten what an incredibly moving experience this film was. Kevin Kline and Denzel Washington were both brilliant. The story of the courage of Steve Biko and Donald Wood’s against the rages of an oppressive regime is incredible. Anyway, I moved on the inspiration and did some more research… here are a couple of the more interesting links I found.

Amadla!

Talking Leaves

Freedom Blues: S.African Jazz Under Apartheid

for more interesting stuff, Google music apartheid

Over the next couple of days I’ll dig into my archives and post a couple of pieces from the past.

Quack

What a Magic Word, this Freedom

The freedom to believe… or not to believe
The freedom to speak… or to remain silent
The freedom to vote… or to abstain
Freedom (Paul McCartney – New York City 2001)
Freedom (Richie Havens – Woodstock 1969)
Chimes of Freedom (Bob Dylan 1964)
Songs of Freedom (Bob Marley 1992)
Songs of Freedom (Santana)
We Shall Overcome (Guy Carawan, Candy Carawan  from a piece by Charles Tindley)
Blowin’ in the Wind (Bob Dylan)

Your turn…..

Reggae Rules!

No appropriate discussion of political implications in music would be complete without the inclusion of Reggae. Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, Jimmy Cliff, Toots and the Maytalls… the list is endless.

Some of my favorites (in no particular order):

Reggae Down Babylon (Jimmy Cliff) — reggae down apartheid!

Buffalo Soldier (Bob Marley) — the US government using former slaves to fight indigenous Americans…

Downpressor Man (Peter Tosh) — the Jamaican police state.