Wednesday, 27 April 2016

Counterculture
Lyrics
sexual Expression
in an era of
ultra-pC conformity
(Just Dropped In)


Please note that the below music referencesare unsuited for under 16's – - but are ''the buzz'' for the BLACK youth culture generation of america TODAY(!)

[ I wrote this blog just before Christmas but with other things intervening, it sort of got left on the back burner.
He it finally is - the edited (censored) version at least (!) ]

After the 'heavy' politics of 'fatboy' Johnson (see my last blog!) I am now turning to the Black Music counterculture movement in America today.
Black music has been a seminal influence on all that we listen to in popular music today – from blues and soul to rock, hip-hop and rap - the impact is everywhere.

But where is music going? Who is influencing the Black music underground scene today?   You may be surprised to learn what genre is 'exciting' Black youth today.

In an era when artists can ditch the 'fatboy' labels and express themselves independently – selling digital takes and out-takes direct to their fans worldwide – without, as the artist formerly known as Prince might have said, being a 'Slave' to the record company, who or what is influencing the Black  music youth of today? 
Knowing this may give us an indication of the direction of underground (sadly to become, at a later time, 'mainstream') music of tomorrow.

I have drawn on my own (enduring) amateur interest in music and counterculture to try to identify just some of the more unique artists who are setting the music world ablaze with both their lyrics and visuals.
I can't say that I understand them but they are certainly interesting and xciting!;maybe not visually appealing to 'traditional' music lovers – but they are an expression of a generation tired as it is with politically correct Justin Bieber, Beyonce etc. 'soap' and 'bubble gum' music and want something more stimulating, more different and more erotic.

Is this the direction of future trends? Maybe not – but it's certainly the expression of an underground movement which has an amazingly large acolyte base not just in the States but in other parts of the world, such as Trans-Asia and South East Asia which are more open to this type of disco-dance clubbing music than, say, Western Europe which has, musically, in my opinion, entered 'The Dark Ages' (of non-creativity.)

[Some might say, perhaps as a result of those corrupt fatboy politicians pandering to extreme Islam and extremist 'voters' with their calls for bans on pork, alcohol drinking in public, 'Sharia' districts (in Europe) free of the 'contamination' of Western night entertainment and clubs, no nudity on beaches, bans on certain types of heavy metal, erotic music, etc. etc. etc etc. etc - the lists are endless.)
Perhaps, as one argument goes, this is just one peaceful counterculture Christian 'protest' reaction, in another sphere, to all those corrupt fatboy politicians who would seek to restrict all of our liberties with X and parental guidance labels on everything -  on the basis that 'Mother' (the 'Nanny State') always knows what's best for the 'children' (me and you) – and will legislate into law to enforce this compliance – by brute force where necessary.  Hence the rise of countercultures - some less peaceful and more (direct-action) militant than the one discussed here.]

If you do not know what a counterculture movement is, perhaps you might take a moment or two to find out?

The last counterculture artist I blogged ('Brother Ali') was likewise setting the underground scene in America ablaze with his lyrics and energy.  He just happened to be a 'White' artist but his themes as it happens, were discrimination and poverty – against working class Whites, Latinos and Blacks.
At a time when it was 'unfashionable he covered in his lyrics themes such as discrimination against Muslims, rendition, suicide bombers, the destruction of the American middle class and the outsourcing of jobs which have torn apart, devastated and made wastelands of local communities of all ethnic groups, across America.
I identified 'Brother Ali' as vibrant because I set myself the task to find the an artist whose politics and views were 'alternative' and someone who was echoing the despair of those dispossessed, those cast-offs by multinationals through self interest and avarice, by rich society blind as it is (in the main) to suffering and poverty - like they discard an empty tin can, and no empathy with those who are downtrodden, with little or no hope of redemption, living like caged animals in despair and darkness with no hope for the future, even though they are barely 20 years of age.  
If you treat people like animals for long enough, they will start to act like wild animals, likewise showing no mercy as they fight (kill or die) to survive in a jungle they have not created but are forced by birth to live in - and to respond to.

As with artists from my own generation, such as Bob Dylan (the early years!) through Brother Ali's lyrics, their pain and suffering is evident.
It is rare to find an artist with the courage to articulate what society fears most – radical change through social grass roots electorate (Town Hall) mobilization and action.


This Black music counterculture movement is very different.  It is, as I perceive it, a reaction against the conformity and puritanical values being 'imposed' on the youth of today by corrupt politicians, corrupt and hypocritical clergy, by other extremists - such as Muslims living in Christendom who want to change our ways of living and interacting and who use the ballot box to vote into office (mainly) Christian politicians who will, by stealth, impose 'Muslim values' – using our own democratic and open societies to create mirror images of the tyrannies in Muslim lands - in countries such as Turkey, the Middle East and in Africa - from whence they (or their parents or grand parents) once fled to Christendom searching for a better life and opportunities unavialable in their ancestral lands. 
Our own corrupt politicians lack the backbone to stand up for Christendom - hence, for better or worse, the rise of alternative politicians who will defend Christendom  and its values. 
Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders are the only the tip of  generational icebergs which will all become more apparent in the next 5-10 years - if existing policies on a wide range of issues - social, political, military and economic - are not reversed. 

I am only looking at one aspect of Black music counterculture here – but it certainly has just as vibrant a political stream as it does an overtly sexual dimension. I will not cover the political dimensions here but they are equally vibrant, dynamic and challenging to mainstream society and are influencing a sector of tomorrow's generation with their creative energy.

As with Jazz and Blues, it takes time for such 'expressions' to find themselves into mainstream culture but I am pretty sure the days of 'bubble-gum' music is nearing an end (at least for the present!) to make way for more explicit, more community-orientated, more social, more political and more militant expressions of frustration with the status quo.


Check out the references below for yourself ...….and find more alternative counterultural expressions where these came from............... with your own research!


©Patrick Emek, April 2016


Before you pass judgement and classify me as 'anti-'  this or 'anti-' that read my earlier blog about 'Brother Ali' (and listen to his lyrics as in the accompanying references)

Confused?  You shouldn't be (!)

If you want to re-visit the 'brother ali ' blog: you will find it at:

http://14wombat1.blogspot.co.uk/2014/04/brotherali-mourningin-america.html


































I could not resist throwing in one or two of my own generational favorites:














they say that imitation is the greatest form of flattery:



One particular comment at this website:
(Steve Gutfeld1 year ago)
''How did we go from 'this' to Justin Bieber in 40 short years. How sad.''