Sunday, April 10, 2022

Ten Bold Cover Tunes Part XIII: Reggae Versions Of Classics

Reggae music, a genre inspired primarily by the rhythms of Africa, American rhythm and blues, and the traditional folk music of the Caribbean, never quite caught on in the United States. The late, great Bob Marley was a rare example of a reggae artist who had multiple hit albums in the States. British New Wave Bands of the 1980s like the Police and Punk band like the Clash were able to get reggae beats on American FM radio, but by and large the genre still remains obscure over here. 

There have been a number of great (or at least intriguing) reggae versions of classic songs. Below are 10 of them. I especially like it when rock bands adopt a reggae style when covering a tune, but I also appreciate it when reggae bands apply their style to a rock tune. The list below has both types represented. Here they are: 

#10 The Abyssinians cover of Bob Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind." Dylan's classic civil rights movement anthem always had a sermonic quality to it. The Abyssinans' roots reggae style is sermonic by design, and as such they end up with a powerful, beautiful version on the song. 

#9 Eric Clapton, Swing Low Sweet Chariot (Traditional hymn). In the early 1970s British rocker Eric Clapton had an international hit with his cover of Bob Marley's reggae classic "I Shot The Sheriff." In 1975 he recorded a version of the traditional Christian spiritual "Swing Low Sweet Chariot," demonstrating a mastery of the reggae genre in the same way he had mastered blues in the 1960s. (Note to people who cannot separate art and politics: yes, I know that Clapton has been a Covidiot the last few years.). 

#8 Frank Zappa, Ring of Fire. During a concert stop in Germany in 1988, Zappa and his band by chance were staying in the same hotel as Johnny Cash. Zappa got Cash to agree to perform on stage with his band, but apparently June Carter Cash got ill so Johnny could not attend. Instead, Frank's band did a reggae version of "Ring of Fire." It's pure Zappa in how it weds sublime musicianship with satire. 

#7 The Clash, "Junco Partner". As their music became more overtly political and international in the late 1970s and early 1980s, the Clash turned to reggae as a vehicle to express their views and emotions. Their cover of "Junco Partner," a classic New Orleans blues tune originally recorded by James Waynes, is a remarkable rendition of a song about a "worthless" man. 

#6 UB 40, Red, Red Wine. Neil Diamond's original recording of "Red, Red, Wine" from the 1960s is one of his most underrated songs. It's one of the great heartbreak songs of all time, evoking all the misery that anyone who's ever suffered through a breakup can immediately identify with. UB 40's upbeat reggae version in 1983 brought the tune back into the public consciousness. 

#5: Bob Dylan, Don't Think Twice, It's Alright. Bob Dylan's cover of his own classic folk song appeared as a reggae version in his "Live at Budokan" album of 1979. No doubt the Japanese audience must have been intrigued by the reggae treatment. This is not Dylan's best work by a longshot, but what I like about it is that he took a risk to do something radically different. There's nothing worse, IMHO, then a popular recording artist who performs the same songs in the same "safe" way year after year. 

#4 Devo, Satisfaction. The alternative 1970s/1980s band Devo were known and admired for the wackiness they brought to rock. I'm not really even sure if this version would be considered reggae by music purists, but it certainly has the same beat pattern. Devo claims that they actually met Mick Jagger in New York and played him the record before releasing it, and he allegedly claimed it was his favorite version. 


#3 Joss Stone, "Here Comes The Sun". British soul crooner Joss Stone is such a fantastic singer it is difficult to imagine her doing a poor cover of anything. Her version of the Beatles' classic "Here Comes the Sun" appeared on a reggae tribute album for Nina Simone. It's amazing and ends up honoring not just Nina, but also the Beatles and the reggae genre.  

 #2 Shaggy, "In The Summertime." People of a certain age will remember Mungo Jerry's 1970 "In the Summertime" as a kind of baby boomer anthem of carefree living. Jamaican-American artist Shaggy's 1995 cover  updated the tune for Generation X, keeping its humor intact while making it much more danceable. 

Shaggy, In the Summertime


#1 Soul Asylum, "I Can See Clearly Now". Here's an example of a rock and roll band trying to cover an actual reggae song. It ends up sounding like a rock band imitating a reggae band imitating a rock band playing reggae. Or something like that. I love it. 

Soul Asylum, I Can See Clearly Now 

Listen to Previous editions in the Ten Bold Cover Tunes Series: 

 

Friday, April 01, 2022

Russia/Ukraine: A Nuanced View With Dr. Michael Jasinski

Mainstream American media coverage of contemporary wars relies on a simplistic "good guys v. bad guys" framing. The lack of nuance in reporting leads to an Orwellian nightmare in which reporters and/or commentators caught deviating from the official narrative are marginalized, called traitors, and/or removed from digital platforms. Americans and western Europeans have no difficulty recognizing and--rightly--condemning censorship in Putin's Russia. Yet many so-called "liberals" will cheer as principled critics of American empire (e.g. Abby Martin, Lee Camp, Chris Hedges) have years worth of programming removed from digital platforms in an instant

Chris Hedges was part of a New York Times team that won a 2002 Pulitzer Prize for their explanatory reporting on global terrorism. He was forced to leave the paper because of its enabling of the Iraq war. Shunned from mainstream US media, Hedges produced a brilliant, Emmy nominated program called "On Contact" for RT. Recently YouTube deleted the entire archive of the show from its platform, even though Hedges is no more kind to Putin than he has been to American administrations. Hedges refers to having one's work deleted by digital censors as being "disappeared". He says: 

"The Ukraine war, which I denounced as a 'criminal war of aggression' when it began, is a sterling example. Any effort to put it into historical context, to suggest that the betrayal of agreements by the West with Moscow, which I covered as a reporter in Eastern Europe during the collapse of the Soviet Union, along with the expansion of NATO might have baited Russia into the conflict, is dismissed. Nuance. Complexity. Ambiguity. Historical context. Self-criticism. All are banished." 

To try to un-banish the nuance, complexity, ambiguity, and historical context from the public sphere discussion of Russia/Ukraine, I interacted via email with Dr. Michael Jasinski, an Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh. Dr. Jasinski grew up behind the Iron Curtain in Poland, so he does not have to be lectured by anyone about what it means to resist totalitarianism. When he was 13, his family fled to America as refugees. Before coming to Oshkosh, he served in the US Military as a Russian language specialist. He earned his Bachelor's degree from Towson University, Master's in Russian and East European Studies from the University of Kansas, and Ph.D in International Affairs from the University of Georgia. 

Dr. Michael Jasinski

Dr. Jasinski is the author of two books:  Examining Genocides: Means, Motive, and Opportunity. New York: Rowman and Littlefield International (2017) and Social Trust, Anarchy, and International Conflict. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. (2011). His personal experience and scholarship make him someone that the national mainstream media should seek out actively for insight on the conflict. 

I asked Dr. Jasinski five questions about Russia/Ukraine that I have not seen answered or even addressed seriously in most news about the conflict that I read, see, and listen to. He graciously responded to all the questions. Below are his unedited responses: 

Media Rants: Much of the mainstream media coverage of the war, to me, seems to be rooted in the old Cold War frame featuring lovers of democracy and freedom standing up to Russian hegemony. What's missing from that frame? 

Dr. Jasinski: This is more of a conflict between conflicting visions of Ukraine than between democracy vs. authoritarianism. Ukraine is a big country whose territories have, at different points in history, belonged to the Russian Empire, Austro-Hungarian Empire, the Commonwealth of Poland and Lithuania, the Ottoman Empire, and of course USSR which in the end gradually put together the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic which then became the independent Ukraine after USSR’s break-up in 1991. But whereas some parts of Ukrainian SSR were never part of anything but the Russian Empire until administrative boundaries placed them inside Ukrainian SSR, others became part of it only after 1945 and were never governed from Moscow before. This process made Ukraine a de-facto multi-lingual, multi-religious, multi-cultural country with competing ideas of national identity across those regions.

To oversimplify matters somewhat for the sake of brevity, the concept of Ukrainian national identity with strong support in the country’s eastern and southern regions might be fairly described as “neo-Soviet”, on account of a large number of self-identified Russians living there, Crimea’s and Sevastopol’s important role as a Russian and Soviet outpost and stronghold, and the Soviet-era heavy industries built in the eastern parts of the country. The separatist Donetsk and Lugansk People’s Republics formed in 2014 are a reflection of that identity. The opposing “nationalist” idea which has strong support in central and especially western Ukraine aims at creating Ukraine as a monolingual ethno-state, a “Ukraine for Ukrainians” to the detriment of non-Ukrainian minorities.

These two conceptions of Ukraine have uneasily coexisted ever since the country’s independence but erupted into open warfare after the 2014 “Maidan Revolution” which represented a bid by the nationalists to permanently dominate Ukraine’s politics. To make matters worse, US and EU waded into that conflict in 2014, backing the “nationalists” and lauding the ouster of Yanukovych on the grounds he was a “Kremlin stooge”. That in turn prompted Crimea’s secession and annexation by Russia, and the outbreak of a separatist insurrection in eastern Ukraine that prompted first a Ukrainian military retaliation and then a Russian military intervention that resulted in the battles of the summer of 2014 and winter of 2014/15, followed by 8 years of low-intensity warfare.

Viktor Yanukovych was denounced by Ukrainian nationalists as a "Kremlin Stooge" and deposed during the 2014 Maidan Revolution. 

To give an idea of the intensity of conflict, the “neo-Soviets” treat Lenin and Ukrainians who served in the Red Army during World War 2 as national heroes of Ukraine. The “nationalist” heroes, on the other hand, include Nazi collaborators like Stepan Bandera, Roman Shukhevych, the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, even the soldiers of the Waffen-SS Division Galizien. The depth of the 2014 political rupture is such that at the moment it is all but impossible to imagine Ukraine continue as a single sovereign state except by one of the two factions violently suppressing the other. 

2.  Russia's claim to be engaged in "denazification" of Ukraine is either marginalized or dismissed outright as Russian propaganda in most western media coverage of the conflict. Frequently we hear that Ukraine cannot harbor Nazis since President Zelensky himself is Jewish. Based on your knowledge of the region, how real is the Nazi presence in Ukraine? 

Ukraine definitely does have a “Nazi problem”, though at the same time it is not the Nazi Germany of the 1930s. There is no single “Fuehrer”, there is no totalitarian Nazi party of any note. There are, however, numerous civil society organizations and associated paramilitaries which have adopted elements of Nazi ideology and symbology, including the Azov Regiment (arguably the best known of them all, due to its Wolfsangel symbol and recruitment of foreign white supremacists), the Right Sector, the C14, and several others, who are not only tolerated but also trained and armed by Ukraine’s military and even foreign military instructors. Today’s Ukraine resembles the final years of Weimar Germany which retained the trappings of a parliamentary democracy but whose government made common cause with the NSDAP for the sake of combating Communists and Socialists. Likewise the post-2014 Ukraine governments made common cause with neo-Nazi entities for the sake of combating pro-Russia elements in Ukraine. Azov Regiment, in particular, was stationed in cities like Mariupol and Kharkiv explicitly to repress the ethnic Russian population of those cities.

In addition, official Ukrainian support for neo-Nazi paramilitaries meant that the ideology has spread into other parts of its national security establishment, including its armed forces, police, and intelligence services. The official Twitter feed of Ukraine’s National Guard, for example, posted a video of Azov Regiment soldiers greasing their ammunition with pork fat for use against Russia’s many Muslim soldiers, just to cite one of many similar examples. It’s easy to come across photos of ordinary Ukrainian soldiers wearing neo-Nazi or white supremacist badges, something unheard of prior to 2014. The official NATO Twitter feed had to pull down a post praising Ukraine’s female soldiers when someone pointed out one of the soldiers was clearly wearing a Black Sun badge on her uniform.

Therefore one should not dismiss these militias as being numerically or politically insignificant. It’s as if the US Army formed the KKK Brigade, the Proud Boys Brigade, the Aryan Nations Brigade, and several others along these lines, allowing them to propagate their respective ideologies and repress those opposed to them. One can readily imagine the chilling effect such formations would have on US politics and society. And let’s not forget that the “foreign volunteers” who have flocked to Ukraine to fight in these paramilitaries have big ideas for their own countries. They see Ukraine as a place to obtain training for what they view as an inevitable “racial holy war” back home.

Bringing up Zelensky’s Jewish ancestry as evidence Ukraine has no such problem makes about as much sense as saying that there is no problem with systemic racism in America, no need for BLM, after 8 years of Obama presidency. It’s worth noting that Israel has routinely condemned manifestations of neo-Nazism in Ukraine and has pointedly refused to send weapons to Ukraine or to impose economic sanctions on Russia. Zelensky’s appearance before the Knesset during which he appealed to them to protect Ukraine in the same way Ukrainians allegedly protected Jews during WW2 only led some of the Knesset deputies to note the large number of Ukrainian Nazi collaborators and participants in the Holocaust.

Ukraine President Zelensky addressing the Israeli Knesset. Some pundits have argued that because Zelensky is Jewish, Ukraine cannot be a safe zone for neo-Nazis

Zelensky certainly ran and won as a pro-peace candidate but that quickly changed after he was elected and made a visit to the front lines on the Donbass where he was insulted to his face by members of one of the neo-Nazi paramilitaries who made it clear they did not respect his authority. Worse, after that visit senior national security officials launched a public campaign arguing that any move in the direction of ending the war would be tantamount to capitulation and have dire consequences for anyone pursuing it. They succeeded in intimidating Zelensky who has not made any peace overtures since and even today adheres to a very hawkish line. I’m reminded of the fate of Anwar Sadat after the Camp David Accords and Yitzhak Rabin after Oslo Accords who were killed by their own side’s extremists because they “capitulated”. Should Zelensky sign a peace agreement on anything resembling Russia’s terms, he’ll likely suffer a similar fate at the hands of his own country’s nationalists. He seems to have been reduced to a figurehead, someone who rubber stamps decisions by Ukraine’s National Security and Defense Council which is dominated by nationalists.

3.  One thing that is almost impossible to learn from Western media is what the opposition to Mr. Putin within Russia actually stands for. From your knowledge of Russian politics, are the majority of Putin's opponents okay with a NATO presence in Ukraine? I personally support genuine "small-d democracy" movements in every country. What does that movement stand for in Russia? 

As in the case of Ukraine, it is also not an issue of democracy vs. autocracy. It’s an issue of Russia’s identity and role in the world. Vladimir Putin, other senior Russian government officials, and the political parties backing them, are broadly united in wanting a Russia that is a sovereign Great Power, not tolerating foreign interference in its domestic affairs and participating in international politics and the global economy on its own terms. Differences among parties and factions are over how to achieve that goal, not whether that goal ought to be pursued.

On the other hand, much of the so-called “non-systemic opposition”, people like Navalny, Sobchak, Kasyanov, Khodorkovsky, Kasparov, other people both in and out of Russia, favor a vision of the country as one integrated into the global economy even at the cost of its sovereignty and great power status. They argue Russia’s giving up on its great power ambitions would result in an improved standard of living for average Russians.  They are not opposed to NATO in Ukraine or anywhere else on the Soviet periphery, one prominent Russian blogger Ilya Varlamov even wrote an article titled “If we were defeated by NATO” which argued such defeat would be a blessing for Russia.

However, their popularity was low before the war and has now been diminished even further. First of all, “liberal” policies have been tried in the 1990s during the Yeltsin presidency, leading to the creation of the “oligarchs” and impoverishment of Russia’s urban, industrial middle classes. To this day, Yeltsin and every politician associated with him, including several of the oppositionists, remain very unpopular. Secondly, the freezes and arrests of Russian properties and assets in Western countries even when owned by private citizens, the calls to “permanently weaken” Russia, to try its leaders as war criminals, NATO’s supply of weapons to Ukraine in order to kill Russian soldiers, the presence of neo-Nazi paramilitaries who have committed atrocities both against the civilian population and Russian POWs, have rallied the Russian public around its government. Under current circumstances, arguing in favor of concessions to Ukraine or the West is not likely to be well received by a public whose sons and daughters are fighting a war against neo-Nazi-coddling Ukraine armed by NATO countries, by a public whose welfare is being threatened by Western sanctions, and might even result in criminal prosecution under laws adopted after February 24. After three decades of Russia’s gradual convergence with the West, we are now seeing a divergence that is unlikely to be reversed in the foreseeable future. I think it’s fair to say that Joe Biden not only “lost Ukraine”, he also lost Russia as a potential US partner, making it instead an increasingly close partner of China.

4.  As part of the fervor whipped up by the press, we are seeing a number of cases of Russian athletes, artists, and others threatened with losing their jobs if they do not sufficiently denounce Putin. To me, the Russophobia we've seen promoted in the press since 2016 has disturbing similarities to the Islamophobia we've seen since 2001. What's your take? 

Both 9/11 and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine showed the fragility and limitations of Western institutions. For all the claims of “universal values”, Western rule of law is not universal at all and does not apply to non-Westerners. 9/11 gave us widespread use of torture in places like Guantanamo, Bagram, Abu Ghraib, and CIA “black sites”, drone strikes, indefinite detentions, policies which likely would not have been adopted against terrorists who were white and Christian. After 2/24 we discovered that due process, presumption of innocence, property rights protections, the principle of individual rather than collective responsibility, may not apply if you are Russian. It turns out that you can be fired from your job, have your bank accounts frozen, properties confiscated, simply because you are Russian. The frenzy of Russophobic sentiment and policies, their speed and scope to the point of disqualifying Russian cat breeds from international competitions, have some disturbing similarities to the Kristallnacht and they set a precedent. Moreover, the current bout of Russophobia has inflicted tremendous reputational damage on US and European institutions. If you are a Latin American, an African, a Middle-Easterner, an Asian, would you be willing to trust Western banks, Western governments with your property, your livelihood, and even your personal safety knowing that all of that can be taken from you in the same way it was taken from so many Russians residing abroad? Do you really want to store your wealth in dollars and euros subject to the whims of Western politicians? I expect this will have long-term global economic consequences far greater than human rights abuses after 9/11.

5.  Finally, if someone is looking for nuanced views of Russia/Ukraine that do not feature simplistic "good v. evil" frames, where can they find it? 

There are several independent media outlets that have provided nuanced reporting of the sort wholly missing from mainstream media, including from NPR and PBS. For more in-depth reporting on the Russia-Ukraine conflict, I would recommend MintPress News which has run a large number of well researched stories, including one tracing the development of Zelensky’s relationship with neo-Nazi paramilitaries:

https://www.mintpressnews.com/ukraine-jewish-president-zelensky-made-peace-neo-nazi-paramilitaries/279862/

Another site I highly recommend is nakedcapitalism.com, particularly its daily Links and Water Cooler features that aggregate some of the most important stories of the day, and which also run feature articles on relevant Russia-related topics. For example on the effect of the Russia-Ukraine war on US-Mexico relations that shows the resentment felt in the “Global South” due to high-handed Western policies toward Russia:

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2022/03/us-mexico-relations-hit-new-low-over-russia-ukraine-conflict.html