Heralding Bruce Springsteen's The Rising as the definitive
response to September 11th within popular music, critics would
have audiences believe The Rising accurately embodies the
emotions felt by survivors and witnesses to last year's tragedy.
Like near-sighted lemmings, the critics rushed to applaud The
Rising, giving little attention to the work of other artists
addressing 9/11, as if Springsteen ushered in a new era of
musical social criticism or a more valid musical witness to 9/11.
A form of cultural imperialism, this universal praise underlines
the serious lack of diversity within circles of popular music
critics. The manner in which critics praised The Rising serves
to grant popular music a deceiving sense of accomplishment
and dangerously conditions appropriate social responses to
9/11.
Symptomatic of America's deeply embedded cult of the hero
and cowboy tinged image of rugged individualism, the critic's
search for salvation in one man is counter to the spirit of artistic
expression within a greater framework and community of
musicians. To truly allow response to September 11th within
popular music to mirror our own emotions, audiences need to
listen to an array of artists, genres, and sounds. The words of
Paris or Sleater-Kinney's Corin Tucker are no less sincere and
compelling than Springsteen's, but in a media-saturated,
hyper-PC pre-war atmosphere, the "wrong" words are deemed
treasonous, as Steve Earle found out, and the experience of a
dynamic reflection upon the events of 9/11 within popular
music becomes a scattered hunt rather than a communal
moment.
To stand witness to 9/11 and its aftermath is the plight of Bruce
Springsteen's The Rising. Lauded by USA Today as "the most
powerful and least jingoistic statement on the terror attack to
date," according to The San Francisco Chronicle's Neva
Chonin, The Rising is "the first album by a major artist to fully
address the emotional fallout of the September attacks." Former
Spin Editor Alan Light pens for The New Yorker: "Springsteen
came up with something riskier and more surprising, something
more than the country's archetypal living rock star fulfilling his
obligation as America's rock-and-roll conscience" while Kurt
Loder writes The Rising is a "singular triumph [that]
transmute[s] the fiery horror of that day." From coast to coast,
most reviews of The Rising follow the lead of Chonin, Light,
and Loder and shamelessly shower the record with praise.
As a Bruce Springsteen album, The Rising is familiar. A solid
rock 'n'roll record, placed alongside the rest of Springsteen's
work, The Rising is the next logical step. In his trademark
Woody Guthrie-inspired narrative, Springsteen hauls his
listeners through those very ordinary lives caught in the
wreckage of 9/11. We rush up the stairs alongside FDNY on
"Into the Fire," awaken alone on "You're Missing," and watch
in wonder from a corner, a window, or in front of a television set
on "Lonesome Day." Brendan O'Brien's production serves to
update the E Street Band's classic sound. The guitars are bold
and up front, as on "The Rising," Max Weinberg's beats are
solid and steady, but Clarence Clemens' saxophone is buried.
Otherwise, The Rising's tone is familiar. Springsteen continues
to play with blues-based verses and gospel inspired choruses.
Treading the same path he and the E Street Band have for
years, New Jersey's First son pulls no musical punches.
But like the days and weeks that followed that infamous
Tuesday, that lonesome day as Bruce growls, The Rising starts
to drag and you wonder when it will end; because the
emotional guilt of turning it off without allowing the record to
finish naturally is there. Just like the impetus to turn off the
television in relief from revisiting that all-too-familiar slam of
steel, burst of flame, and purest black smoke; to cut The Rising
off somehow feels so very selfish. Selfish because the stories
presented here are not Bruce's, but taken from the lives of those
intimately tied to the disaster of 9/11. A sort of emotional
blackmail, the record does not belong to Bruce or the E Street
Band, it belongs to the wives, sons, daughters, brothers, friends,
and families of those who now celebrate an anniversary of loss
every September 11th. One doesn't find Bruce's voice on The
Rising. If you wanted to know what Springsteen was doing,
where he was, of how he felt on the morning of 9/11, you won't
find it here.
Springsteen's ability to lose himself and give voice to the
voiceless has always been his charm. For this reason alone,
critics continue to genuflect in the presence of Springsteen's
outdated reputation as rock 'n' roll's everyman. Many of
Bruce's adoring critics arrived from a culture that fetishized
Springsteen as a blue-collar boy from Jersey done right. They
come from a group of people that bought up millions of copies
of Born in the USA, and are a generation that looks back on
their twenties with comfortable space. Slate's A.O. Scott
captures popular music critic sentiment in writing The Rising is
"the first rock 'n' roll record in a very long time whose release
has seemed like a cultural event." But as a cultural event, with
who does this resonate? Simultaneous stories cum
advertisements in Rolling Stone and Time and back-to-back
performances on Late Night with David Letterman are pithy
manufactured cultural events. The uniform praise critics have
heaped upon The Rising becomes cultural imperialism masked
as a "cultural event," ultimately stemming from a clear lack of
diversity within the already shallow pool of popular culture
critics and writers. It is not without importance to recognize that
many of these critics are white. But such is the state of
professional journalism. While Bruce Springsteen's music
transcends decades, his experience and his songs don't
explicitly speak for or to all. The class, gender, and race
limitations inherent in his person are no different than that of his
critics. But Bruce never claimed to speak for all-Americans; that
was pinned to him by critics like Loder, Light, and Chonin.
The Rising is an attempted portrait of a defining moment in
American history. Critics would say it is the most true to life
portrait produced thus far. But to believe this one recording
captures that day is to be stuck in a vacuum, unable to turn off
the television, leave the room, peer out the window and see that
life goes on. Such acclaim further conditions acceptable
responses, reactions, and emotions. If The Rising is the defining
response to 9/11 within popular music, then there has been no
distance gained for reflection and dissent is something best not
discussed. Despite the critic's words, The Rising is merely a
good starting point in regards to responses within popular
music to 9/11. Think of it as another piece in a greater collage.
Before the first bombs even dropped in Afghanistan, responses
to 9/11 had already begun to echo within popular music.
Groups, like Flogging Molly, Rhett Miller, and Anti-Flag, were
in the recording studio at the time and their feelings from the
day are reflected in the voice of the recording or directly in
lyric. Others flocked to stages and studios with songs of relief,
fear, support, anger, and dissent. Individually, the songs are flat,
but examined within a quilt work of other musical responses, a
dynamic array of emotions in the aftermath of 9/11 becomes
present within popular music in a manner otherwise not found
within the media at large.
One of the first recordings was the forgettable cover of Marvin
Gaye's "What's Going On," led by Time's heralded savior of
the world, Bono, and Wyclef Jean. The cast of contributors
resembled an MTV list of who's who in pop music today.
Originally recorded as a fundraiser for AIDS victims the single
took on a mission to serve as an anthem of comfort post 9/11.
Well meant but uninspiring as a cover of one of the most
complex and beautiful recordings of the Vietnam era, "What's
Going On?" resonates within the initial feelings of confusion,
but its celebrity spectacle status overruns the intent and
ultimately rings hollow. The nine different mixes only furthered
the novelty and empty crassness of this recording.
One of the first original musical responses, Paul McCartney's
"Freedom" was less touted but equally forgotten. Lyrically,
"Freedom" wandered in circles: Talkin' 'bout Freedom/I'm
talkin' 'bout freedom/I will fight/for the right/to live in freedom.
Musically, the song is rushed and shallow. As a memorial to
9/11, it comes off the same as "What's Going On."
Though more focused, Neil Young's "Let's Roll" followed the
same fate but was one of the first pop music recordings to
mirror the angry sentiments and vindictive spirit that followed in
9/11's aftermath. Neil Young's take on the George W. Bush
proclaimed new American motto, "Let's Roll" is a clunky
tribute to Todd Beamer and the passengers of United Airlines
Flight 93. Based on a riff that, strangely, echoes Pink Floyd's
"Young Lust" and Aerosmith's "Last Child," the single opens
with a droning tone that emulates a plane engine followed by
the ring of a cell phone. Backed by Booker T. and the MG's,
the beat is slow, brooding, and moody. The chorus -- Time is
running out/Let's Roll -- is sung low, without certainty and
offers a "do whatcha' gotta' do" sentiment that reflects an angry,
hurt, and confused American public. Mirroring President
Bush's polemic axis of evil assessment, Young's high nasal
voice sings: No one has the answer/but one thing is
true/you've got the turn on evil/when it's coming after
you/You've gotta face it down/And when it tries to hide/You've
gotta go in after it/And never be denied/Time is runnin'
out/let's roll. Musically insignificant, the importance of "Let's
Roll" lies in the fact that it is one of the first original songs with
popular radio support that directly addressed 9/11.
Though less obvious than "Let's Roll," Outkast's "The Whole
World" previews a more vague, quiet, and introspective
response to 9/11 that could become commonplace within
popular music. An uptempo beat blending revival choruses, a
melancholy piano trill, a big band beat and Outkast's trademark
soul funk, Andre 3000 belts: Yeah I'm afraid/ like I'm scared
as a dog/ But I've got a new song/ and I want y'all to sing
aloooooong/Sing aloooooong/See this is the way/ that we walk
on sunny day/when it's raining inside/and you're all
aloooooone/all aloooooone- YEEAAH. A musical healing
serum of sorts, Dre and Big Boi extend an acknowledgment of
the pain and fear rippling through America without allowing
those feelings to overcome the song. Quick and low, Big Boi
raps: Looking on the TV/Everything is looking dismal. Like the
initial shock of witnessing the attacks, "The Whole World" is a
pure gut response, uncalculated, sincere, and real.
Pennsylvania's Anti-Flag "911 For Peace" acts similarly as a
responsive song, but in a more politicized manner. A departure
from their slogan-laden songwriting, "911 for Peace" is a
largely emotional release. The musical structure is simple; a few
distorted chords accented by a simple three-note theme not far
off from early '80s English punk ala Generation X. Asking
myself in vain/shaken by the shock, wails Anti-Flag's singer
Justine Sane. Offset by a reverse call and response, the chorus
barks: I don't want to die/I don't want to kill/I don't want to
kill/I don't want to die/We are all human/It's time to prove it. A
simple, personal reaction, "9/11 for Peace" nonetheless rings an
emotional chord that's accessible, political, and ever meaningful
as a musical response to 9/11.
The waves of pride and nationalism following 9/11 were to be
expected. Almost uncharacteristically, Jello Biafra warns on
The Big Ka-Boom, Part One to give the flag wavers space to
express themselves. Space they got -- in the streets, on the back
of car windows, and in the music of Alan Jackson and Toby
Keith. Largely apolitical, Jackson's more slick and somber
"Where Were You (When the World Stopped Turning)" walks
the line between personalizing the moment and verbalizing
others' experiences. Another hit to add to Jackson's stable, the
song's final verse, I'm just a singer of simple songs/I'm not a
real political man/I watch CNN but I'm not sure I can tell you/
the difference in Iraq and Iran rewards Americans, again, for
their lack of political awareness that is at this point intrinsic to
our national identity.
Then there's Toby Keith. The country singer's single,
"Courtesy of the Red, White, & Blue (The Angry American),"
proclaims And You'll be sorry you messed with the US of
A/'Cause we'll put a boot in you ass/It's the American way.
The third verse rides Now this nation that I love/Has fallen
under attack/A mighty sucker punch/ came flyin' in from
somewhere in the back/Soon as we could see clearly/through
our big black eye/man, we lit up your world/ like the 4th of
July. The musical equivalent of a Ford truck commercial,
Keith's single caused different reactions across the country,
from prideful support to face hiding embarrassment.
Nonetheless, "The Angry American" gives voice to retaliatory
American sentiment in light of 9/11.
Coming from a drastically different musical tradition, New
York's Wu-Tang Clan delivers similarly reactionary sentiment
with "Rules." Less publicized but nonetheless vitriolic, the first
verse of "Rules" finds Ghostface Killah blasting: Who the fuck
knocked our buildings down/who the man behind the world
trade massacres, step up now/where the four planes at, huh, is
you insane bitch/fly that shit over my hood and get blown to
bits/No disrespect, that's where I rest my head/I understand
you gotta' rest yours true, nigga, my people's dead/America,
together we stand divided we fall/Mr. Bush sit down, I'm in
charge of the war. It's doubtful Keith and Wu-Tang would
have ever placed themselves in the same light, but tragedy has a
strange way of bringing people together.
Anger, fear, and shock are well represented within pop music,
but as posed by within Josh Tryangiel's critique of The Rising,
the question remains: Where are the politics? Simply, the
politics are in the same places they've always been. There is a
politic to patriotism, to nationalism, and to silence. But the
politic of dissent and of protest has hardly been given its share
of airtime. Not surprising, Clear Channel Communications and
Music Television has never rushed to promote left-leaning
musicians unless a profit could clearly be made (Read: Rage
Against The Machine). The popularity of now-silent Rage
Against The Machine across the country is one of many signals
of dissent's commodification, but with Ari Fleischer's warning
to watch your speech, Ashcroft's Operation TIPS, and the beat
of the war drums becoming nearly deafening, dissent is not
particularly en vogue at the moment. But the sound is
nonetheless available.
So far, the most publicized "political" record is Steve Earle's
Jerusalem, released by Artemis records three weeks after
September 11, 2002. Continually cast as a country rebel,
somehow in the last six months Earle has become Malcom X to
Springsteen's Martin Luther King Jr., with much of his recent
criticism stemming from the song "John Walker's Blues."
Nashville radio talk-show host Steve Gill led the attack on
Earle, corralling the singer/songwriter into a crowd of folks who
"hate America," that includes Jane Fonda and John Walker.
The New York Post writes under the headline "Twisted Ballad
Honors Tali-Rat," American Taliban fighter John Walker Lindh
is glorified and called Jesus-like in a country rock song to be
released by maverick singer/songwriter Steve Earle.
"John Walker's Blues" opens with the flat-picking of an
acoustic guitar, backed by the sparse lonely beat of a trap kit. A
cymbal echoes eerily, taking the place of a metronome. Earle
mutters low through clenched teeth: I'm just an American boy/
Raised on MTV/And I've seen all the kids in the soda pop
ads/But none of 'em looked like me.
Earle says the song is an attempt to understand John Walker
Lindh. "I'm trying to make clear that wherever he got to, he
didn't arrive there in a vacuum. I don't condone what he did.
Still, he's a 20-year-old kid," said Earle in an early press
release.
The first verse concludes: 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. Less than
four minutes long, "John Walker's Blues" concludes with a
recorded recitation of Sura 47, Verse 19 of the Qu'ran. "The
controversial ballad called 'John Walker Blues' is backed by
the chanting of Arabic Prayers and praises Allah," writes Aly
Sujo, a correspondent for The New York Post.
Earle's record, like Walker's transformation, didn't occur in a
vacuum. Lyrically, Jerusalem examines contemporary
"progressive" causes from the inside out. On "The Truth," a
prisoner contemplates the moral righteousness of America's
burgeoning prison system. To the beat of a solitary drum kit
and awkwardly plucked banjo strings, the reality of
containment rather than rehabilitation is confronted. With
"What's a Simple Man to Do?," an unidentified man writes his
wife an apology and admits his status as a drug war casualty.
Juxtaposed by a sugary organ theme that tastes of a '60s surf
beat, the final verse airily glides: Tell my mother that I said I'm
sorry/I know she didn't bring me up this way/Ask if she could
light a candle for me/Pray that I'll com home someday/Oh
Graciela won't you please forgive me/I never meant to bring
this shame to you/I lost my job in the maquiladora/What's a
simple man to do? References to 9/11 pepper Jerusalem, but
unlike The Rising, Earle is not paralyzed by 9/11. Jerusalem
allows room to reflect upon concerns outside of the
media-hyped day that changed everything. As Earle smugly
sings: It's always best to keep it in mind/That every tower ever
built tumbles/No matter how strong/ Now matter how
tall/Someday even great walls will crumble/And every idol
ever raised falls, on Jerusalem's lead track "Ashes to Ashes,"
the listener is sardonically reminded life goes on.
Very likely, Steve Earle's Jerusalem will receive more
attention than any other "progressive" artists responding to
9/11. Nas' calls for peace on Stillmatic are overshadowed by
the media-hyped Nas/Jay-Z rivalry. KRS-One's "18-point
Hip-Hop Declaration of Peace," brought before the United
Nations on May 16, 2002, garnered little press. Not unlike his
"An 'I' On Terror," conference on the anniversary of 9/11,
which featured "discussions about hiphop's responsibility
toward the prevention of terror." Then again, despite near iconic
standing, KRS has never been afforded much publicity outside
hip hop publications.
Michael Franti's "Bomb Da World," which refrains
emphatically: We can bomb the world to pieces/but we can't
bomb it into peace, performed on the Late, Late Show with
Craig Killborn and in front of audiences across the country
hasn't even created a fraction of the stir of "John Walker's
Blues." With all the media's attention and praise of The Rising,
a pressroom lacking diversity becomes obvious again. For a
radical emcee like Paris to be forgotten, or just plain left out, is
indicative of a shortsighted pool of pop critics.
Currently available only on radio personality Davey D's
website, Paris' "What Would You Do" is continents apart from
Earle's "John Walker's Blues." Reminiscent of Dead Prez's
one-dimensional sound; looped bass and snare drum beats
accented by various keyboard runs, Paris' vocal delivery comes
across like a cooler Chuck D.
Now ask yourself who's the people with the most to
gain/Bush/'fore 911 motherfuckas couldn't stand his
name/Bush/Now even brotha's waivin' flags like they lost they
mind/everybody got opinions but don't know the time/'cause
Amerikkka's been took -- it's plain to see/ the oldest trick in the
book is make an enemy/of phony evil now the government can
do its dirt, spits Paris.
Despite Paris' talk of illuminati and a reference to the US
attorney general as Bin Ashcroft, "What Would You Do?"
stands as one of the most unflinchingly radical statements
within popular music to 9/11. Unwilling to join the praise of
Rudy Giuliani as Amadou Diallo's death didn't lose meaning
after 9/11, the chorus leads: What would you do if you/Knew
all of the things we know/Would you stand up for truth/Or
would you turn away too/And then what if you saw/all of the
things that's wrong/Would you stand tall and strong/Or would
you turn and walk away. To acknowledge Paris' statement
would recognize a divergent American audience. Maybe that's
too much to ask of critics who would lionize Bruce
Springsteen.
Released less than a month after The Rising, Sleater-Kinney's
One Beat entered the charts nowhere near Bruce's number
one. The sixth release from this Olympia, Wash. trio, of the fore
mentioned Springsteen critics only Neva Chonin reviewed
One Beat. Chonin's review for Rolling Stone buries mention of
Sleater-Kinney's response to 9/11, "Far Away" and "Combat
Rock," in the seventh of eight paragraphs. Sleater-Kinney's
"Far Away" and "Combat Rock" ring with anguish, fury, and
unbridled emotion, adding texture to an expanding web of
music addressing 9/11.
When Corin Tucker unleashes her soulful wail, enveloping and
heavy, on "Far Away," a familiar moment is captured: 7:30
am/Nurse the baby on the couch/then the phone rings/Turn on
the TV/Watch the world explode in flames/and don't leave the
house.
Hearing Tucker's words for the first time induces the physical
manifestations -- the entire body tense and attentive -- that
many American's experienced on the morning of 9/11. The
rhythm builds in waves, circular and elastic. Janet Weiss' drums
lead, reserved, like a march. The guitar interplay of Tucker and
Carrie Brownstein is sparse and repetitive. Not much is needed
to spark this memory: And the heart is hit/in a city far
away/but it feels so close, continues Tucker.
The music explodes, shrill and monotone, Brownstein sings:
and I'm standing here on one way road/And I fall down/And I
fall down/ No other direction for this to go/so we fall down/
and we fall down while Tucker wails like a Motown 45: Don't
breathe/ the air today/don't speak/of why you're afraid.
Crescendo, in unison, to create the chorus of WHY CAN'T I
GET ALONG/ WHY CAN'T I GET ALONG/WHY CAN'T I
GET ALONG/ WITH YOU.
Unwilling to dwell on the paralysis of witnessing the World
Trade Center collapse into pillars of smoke, debris, and dust,
four songs and less than fifteen minutes later the trio launches
into the musical clockwork of "Combat Rock." An ode of
dissatisfaction as powerful as "Far Away," Weiss' mechanical
beat anchors the quick guitar riffs that Tucker and Brownstein
release and spin back: They tell us there are only/ two sides/
to/ be on/If you are on our side/you're right/if not/you're
wrong/But are we innocent/paragons/ of good/Is our guilt
erased by the pain/ that we've endured/endured, chirps
Brownstein, words accented like those of a snottier Powerpuff
girl.
Tucker bellows back: Hey Look it's time to pledge allegiance/
I love my dirty uncle Sam/our country's marching to the beat
now/and we must learn to step in time.
Resonating contempt and mocking those cowering in
obedience to White House Press Secretary Ari Fleischer,
Browstein replies: Where is the questioning/Where is the
protest song/since when is skepticism/ un/Amer/ican/dissent's
not treason/but they talk/ like it's/ the same/those who disagree
are afraid/to show/their face/their face.
Given Sleater-Kinney's track record, it could be argued an
overtly political response to 9/11 is expected. Yet every song
has an underlying politic, whether it's of passivity,
consumerism, reactionary sentiment, or radical dissent, and if
not, it can be constructed as much. The question no longer
remains where is the politics, but are you willing to accept the
politics before you. If Bruce Springsteen can't deliver, as Time's
Triangiel hints, maybe you ought to find a voice that will.
The startling thing about The Rising's praise is not the
predictable and unanimous extolling, but the grounding in the
belief that this single recording sums up the moment of 9/11,
that Springsteen's music "transmutes" all the feelings from that
day. Not that Springsteen's record may not have done this for
some, but to make that assertion for all is ignorant. There can be
no definitive response to 9/11 within a single piece of recorded
popular music.
A few days before 9/11's first anniversary, Salon.com ran a
story by Damien Cave entitled "Forbidden Thought about
9/11." A rude awakening, Cave's thesis -- tested and proved
through responses from a reader survey -- finds that thoughts of
goodwill and support were not the only feelings from 9/11.
Cave writes: "Many of us didn't just feel sad or angry or proud
in the face of the day's horrors -- or when President Bush and
the media requested it. We also felt indifferent, confused, selfish,
annoyed and, in some cases, even happy or excited." He's right.
From the response Salon.com received to Cave's inquiry, it
becomes clear that American was no less unified in emotion or
thought that day than any other, before or after 9/11.
The praise of The Rising causes one to assume Springsteen's
musical summary and response to 9/11 is by far the most
important. The implications of this lead to cultural steam rolling,
the dismissal of other responses and the flattening of speech or
thought that strays from the strict parameter of predetermined
appropriate reactions to 9/11. Listening to the different voices
and responses that have emerged within popular music since
9/11, it becomes clear that there was no single overriding
emotion. Despite the multiple shortcomings of popular music
critics -- the most alarming being popular music criticism's
clear lack of diversity -- a dynamic range of original responses
to 9/11 reverberates within popular music. Critics jumped the
gun and for all we know the most universal response to 9/11
within popular music has yet to be recorded. Whether or not
The Rising is remembered as such is inconsequential to the fact
that out of 9/11's debris, a thundering response resounds within
popular music and each recording speaks to a listener who gave
little thought to the critic's chatter over somebody named
Bruce.