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US country singer Steve Earle subjected to witch-hunt
By Ian Bruce
7 August 2002
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Months before its commercial release, a song written from the
perspective of John Walker Lindhthe American youth captured
last November with Taliban forces in Afghanistanis already
being subjected to hysterical attacks in the mass media. John
Walkers Blues is written and performed by country-rock
singer Steve Earle and will be included on Earles latest
CD, Jerusalem, scheduled for release September 24.
The song presents Lindh as a young man drawn to Islamic fundamentalism
as a way out of the spiritual emptiness he feels growing up in
America:
Im just an American boy raised on MTV
And Ive 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
But Lindhs dreams are shattered and, with chains
around my feet, is returned to the country of his birth:
But Allah had some other plan, some secret not revealed
Now theyre draggin me back with my head in a sack
To the land of the infidel.
In a press release, Earle makes clear that the song is not
intended as an endorsement of Lindh or his cause: I dont
condone what he did. Still, hes a 20-year-old kid. My son
Justin is almost exactly Walkers age. Would I be upset if
he suddenly turned up fighting for the Islamic Jihad? Sure, absolutely.
Fundamentalism, as practiced by the Taliban, is the enemy of real
thought, and religion too. But there are circumstances.... He
didnt just sit on the couch and watch the box, get depressed
and complain. He was a smart kid, he graduated from high school
early, the culture here didnt impress him, so he went out
looking for something to believe in.
Such nuance is of little concern to those who have denounced
John Walkers Blues. Leading the attack, right-wing
talk radio host Steve Gill told his audience that the song celebrates
and glorifies a traitor to this country.... This puts [Earle]
in the same category as Jane Fonda and John Walker and all those
people who hate America.
Gill called on listeners to boycott stations that play or stores
that sell the CD, while cynically purporting to defend Earles
right to artistic expression. Im not calling for burning
CDs, said Gill, but people can vote with their wallets
as a counter-expression to the free expression Steves expressed
in his song.
Other media outlets, including Fox, CNN and the New York
Post, quickly took up Gills attack. In a July 21 story
headlined Twisted Ballad Honors Tali-Rat the Post
claimed that American Taliban fighter John Walker Lindh
is glorified and called Jesus-like in a country-rock song ...
by maverick singer-songwriter Steve Earle.
Two days later, the Wall Street Journal ran a piece
by columnist Collin Levey mocking the very notion of artistic
license (a watery line of defense) as justification
for writing a song from the perspective of a traitor.
According to Levey, Earle discredit[s] the honored tradition
of dissidence in popular songa tradition which for
Levey is exemplified by the insipid 1980s feel-good anthem We
are the World!
Other commentators have taken a more personal line of attack.
Former Wall Street Journal media critic and popular
music historian Martha Bayles condescendingly suggests that Earles
choice of Lindh as narrator reflects a psychological need
to repeat the good old days of the radical 60s, just like Mom
and Dad.... Never mind whether the cause makes any sensethe
point is to get on TV. It sounds as if Earle is singing to this
crowd.
The attacks on John Walkers Blues take place
against the backdrop of a continuing media campaign to vilify
John Walker Lindh and distort the facts of his case. From the
outset, the media has worked hand-in-glove with the Bush administration
to turn public opinion against Lindh, labeling him the American
Taliban, downplaying the blatant unconstitutionality of
his treatment and leading the call for his execution as a traitor.
Lindhs treatment by US authorities, however, has been
a legal and human rights travesty from the outset. After being
captured late last year by the US-backed Northern Alliance, Lindh
was imprisoned in Qala-i-Janghi prison fortress near Mazar-i-Sharif
and threatened with death by CIA interrogators. Wounded during
a US-North Alliance massacre of captives at the prison, the half-starved
and seriously shocked Lindh barely escaped with his life. US military
and FBI personnel refused to treat Lindhs wounds, interrogated
him for days on end and ignored his requests for a lawyer and
his right to remain silent. The first contact Lindh had with the
lawyer hired by his parents was on January 25, almost three months
after his initial capture.
The most serious charges against Lindhthat he attacked
Americans or played a significant role in either the Taliban or
Al Qaedawere so transparently false that the Justice Department
chose instead to proceed only on the lesser charges of providing
services to the Taliban and carrying weapons in that service,
for which Lindh was handed a punitive 20-year sentence. Yet the
media continue to portray him as a traitor, his fate a triumph
of the justice system. In this climate, even a remotely sympathetic
view of Lindh is sure to come under attack.
John Walkers Blues offers an encouraging
alternative to the responses to September 11 and its aftermath
that have so far distinguished popular music, and indeed popular
culture as a whole. To the extent that popular musicians have
addressed these events at all, the results have, for the most
part, been complacent, conformist and utterly forgettable. Typical
is Alan Jacksons Where Were You (When the World Stopped
Turning), a cloying ballad crammed with more images of an
idealized America than a 1950s State Department propaganda film,
or Paul McCartneys chest-thumping anthem, Freedom,
with a lyric so abstract (Everybodys talkin
bout freedom/Were talkin about freedom/We will fight
for the right to live in freedom) that it could have been
written about virtually any political cause, issue or event.
Far worse, however, is the jingoism typified by New Country
singer Toby Keiths current single Courtesy of the
Red, White and Blue (the Angry American). An enormous hit,
the song echoes the bellicose rhetoric of the Bush administrations
war on terrorism. (The big dog will fight/When
you rattle his cage/And youll be sorry that you messed with
the U.S. of A/Cause well put a boot in your ass/Its
the American way). Given the success of the record,
one can confidently expect the music industry to offer much more
of the same in the near future. Needless to say, Courtesy
of the Red, White and Blue has received far more favorable
treatment than John Walkers Blues in the mainstream
media.
Earle says the entire Jerusalem CD was conceived as
a response to September 11. In a press release, he describes it
as a political record, because there seems no other proper
response to the place were at now. In particular,
Earle says he wanted to voice his contempt for the Patriot Act,
an incredibly dangerous piece of legislation ... that has
to be opposed. In addition to the war in Afghanistan, the
album reportedly addresses subjects ranging from Bushs drug
enforcement policies to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Jerusalem
is Earles fifteenth album, and the sixth in as many years.
The son of an air traffic controller, Earle was born in Fort
Monroe, Virginia and raised near San Antonio, Texas. He showed
early promise as a musician but was often in trouble with the
law and dropped out of school after eighth grade. At 16, he left
home, eventually settling in Houston, where he came under the
influence of singer-songwriters Townes Van Zandt and Jerry Jeff
Walker.
At 19, Earle moved to Nashville, where he found some success
as a songwriter, and also had a small part in Robert Altmans
1975 film Nashville. After moving back to Texas he assembled
the first version of his backing band, the Dukes, and began playing
local clubs. He began recording in 1982 and was signed to Epic
Records the following year. The label did little to promote him,
however, and in 1985 he signed with MCA. His debut album, Guitar
Town, won the admiration of both rock and country fans and
the title track reached the Top 10.
Subsequent albums Exit O and Copperhead Road
were also commercially successful, but Earles increasingly
hard-edged sound and dark subject matter did not endear him to
the Nashville establishment. For much of the 1990s, his career
was derailed both by run-ins with record labels and deepening
personal problems. He became addicted to cocaine and heroin, and
in 1994 was arrested for heroin possession, for which he was sentenced
to a year in rehabilitation. He returned to the limelight with
the acclaimed 1995 acoustic album Train A Comin.
John Walkers Blues is typical both of Earles
subject matter and narrative style. His work often shows great
empathy for the oppressed, and he has written a number of remarkable
songs from the perspective of loners, drifters and others outside
the social mainstream. A vocal opponent of capital punishment,
Earle has explored the subject in several songs, including Ellis
Unit One and Over Yonder (Jonathans Song).
The latter work, from Transcendental Blues, one of Earles
recent albums, is told from the point of view of Jonathan Wayne
Nobles, the Texas death-row inmate whom Earle befriended in the
late 1980s. Earle was a witness at Nobles execution in 1998,
an experience he describes powerfully in a story reprinted in
the January 2001 edition of the Utne
Reader. Earles play Karla, based on the life
and death of Karla Faye Tucker, who was executed in Texas in 1998,
is scheduled to open in Nashville later this year.
The campaign against John Walkers Blues and
its author is sure to intensify greatly when Jerusalem
is released in a few weeks. Anticipating the response he expects
to see whipped up against him, Earle told an audience at the Mariposa
Folk Festival last month that the song may get him deported from
the US.
See Also:
Iris DeMent song provokes
intense debate
[12 March 1999]
Iris DeMent:
Songwriter steeped in the heritage of American country and traditional
music
[18 April 1998]
"The
poor are treated like enemies" - An interview with Iris DeMent
[18 April 1998]
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