Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Protest Song Research Assignment
Single by John Lennon from the album Imagine
Released October 11 1971
Produced by John Lennon, Yoko Ono, Phil Specter
The song Imagine isn’t protesting any specific event or person. The song is protesting many different events, people and society as a whole. The song urges you to imagine a world without countries or religions and to give peace a chance. Deep down this song is “anti-religious, anti-nationalistic, anti-conventional and anti-capitalistic”.
There is a verse in the song with the lyrics “Imagine there’s no countries/…nothing to kill or die for/and no religion too”. These specific lyrics want the listener to imagine what good would come out of there being no countries or different nationalities or different religions. People would be viewed as people and “Nothing to kill or die for” suggests that by doing so unnecessary violence and war wouldn’t be present. The third verse is the verse that protests against society. We as a society base so much on possessions and material things. “No need for hunger and greed”. These lyrics are saying that if people weren’t so greedy that no-body would have to go without anything, whether it be food or clothes or shelter because it wouldn’t be about personal gratification. It would be about “Sharing all the world”. These lyrics are so simple yet so effective because they are simple. This song is about something that should be so simple and the songs lyrics reflect that.
This song is one of the most famous protest songs partly because of its commercial success. It reached number three on the Billboard Hot 100 and was named as one of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s 500 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll and is still wildly well known today. I think part of the legacy of the song has to do with its relevance. Back when this song was released, it was dealing with issues of the time and almost forty years later, we as a society are still dealing with these issues. Nationality and religion are still many factors in violence and war today just as they were in 1971. Greed and the selfish actions of others single handedly caused as recession of proportions almost as large as the Great Depression in the thirties. World hunger is a huge concern in developing countries and even still in developed nations such as Canada and the United States. This song is just as relevant now as it was then.
I picked this song because it’s a song I’ve always known (John Lennon is my cousins’ idol). I especially agree with the message of the song and the lyrics perfectly transcribe how I feel about the world today. I thought it was interesting that while I have a connection to this song, people a generation older than me also have a connection to this song (though maybe for different reasons).
I personally think it’s ingenious for artists to use music to comment on social problems because it’s easy for them to be heard. Musicians have influence on fashion, style and pop culture and it only makes sense for them to expand this influence to social issues. By drawing attention or giving their own opinion on a issue causes people who might not normally care or even notice for that matter to become interested. Any artist who does this I support because while many of may not have the influence to have our voice heard, these people do and I think its important for at one person to be hard because sometimes all it takes is one person.
Imagine there's no Heaven
It's easy if you try
No hell below us
Above us only sky
Imagine all the people
Living for today
Imagine there's no countries
It isn't hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no religion too
Imagine all the people
Living life in peace
You may say that I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join us
And the world will be as one
Imagine no possessions
I wonder if you can
No need for greed or hunger
A brotherhood of man
Imagine all the people
Sharing all the world
You may say that I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join us
And the world will live as one
Blog Post #3 - The Blockbuster Film
I went to go see X-Men Origins: Wolverine on a date this past summer and while I liked my date and I had fun, it was no thanks to this movie. The first X-Men (2003) was a fantastic movie and X2 was an example of the few times where a sequel surpasses the original. But this is where the problems start. X-Men became a “re-booted” franchise. You could see little Wolverine and Storm’s sunning around on Halloween and merchandise was everywhere. X-Men: The Last Stand, while a commercial hit (grossing $234,362,462) was a terribly reviewed and said to be the worst in the series, that is until Wolverine came along. All Wolverine managed to do was beat an already dying franchise into the ground. Wolverine relied solely on the audience already loving the series and little to no effort was put into the story line. Except for the a few scenes with “Team X” near the beginning of the movie, the acting is wooden, the storyline weak and the special effects mediocre at best. What should have been epic fight sequences were turned into special effect laden stretches of boredom. And after all of that the movie mind-f***** you even more by cramming as many character cameos into an extremely un-realistic mutant escape scene. Lame. And to top it all off they turned Wade Wilson (a.k.a. Deadpool) into a “Weapon XI”. Thank you Marvel, for totally screwing over canon. That was awesome. This movie was just…less than average. Nothing particularly awful, just really not good. Despite horrible critical reception, it did pretty well at the box office and X-Men Origins: Deadpool is currently in pre-production. That just really awesome. Keep beating this franchise into the ground Marvel, we really appreciate it.
What can I say about Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen that isn’t derogatory? I am not really a fan of this franchise in general (though the first movie isn’t that bad) but this movie is an atrocity. To sum it up it consists of four main elements: random explosions, senseless robot battles, Megan Fox’s ass, and two comic relief robots that are a complete insult to black people. That’s it (other than a gigantic super robot with balls. Yes you heard me, balls). The plot is weak and riddled with plot holes, the acting is non-existent (I imagine it would be extremely difficult to actually act while there are completely unnecessary explosions surrounding you). This movie is all about the CGI and the special effects and lame jokes aimed at hung-over frat boys. It is completely unintelligent and barley a form of entertainment. Even though this movie basically sucked, they’re making a third one. Why they’re making a new movie I will never know as all they need to do is splice together a couple of explosions and fight scenes from the first two movies, create a small segment of Optimus doing some deep and meaningful monologue, toss in some Fox cleavage and BAM you got yourself a hit. This whole franchise takes beloved toys from our childhood and totally messes with them and spawns copycats (G.I. Joe. ‘nuff said). I think it’s all
While yes, most summer blockbusters are pretty crappy films, every once in awhile you get a genuinely great film out of the summer movie rush. The Dark Knight is the perfect example. After completely re-booting the Batman franchise (which was massacred by Tim Burton, Bat-nipples!) director and screenwriter Christopher Nolan pops out this movie gem and the world is taken by storm. This film follows in the footsteps of other summer blockbusters (t-shirts, Halloween costumes, lunchboxes etc.) it was a legitimately good movie. It’s dark and gritty and twisted and clever. It was so “good” that it even won an Academy award (Best Actor in a Supporting Role awarded to Heath Ledger posthumously). Everybody and their mother has seen this movie and everyone of those people has loved it, turning it into a pop culture phenomenon. This is what summer blockbusters should be, engaging and smart instead of generic and senseless.