Alice on anti-Bushies

Written by Marty Dodge
Published August 22, 2004

Alice Cooper is not impressed with anti-Bush musicians. Or rather with anti-Bush musicians who use their celebrity to oust the President.

"To me, that's treason. I call it treason against rock 'n' roll because rock is the antithesis of politics. Rock should never be in bed with politics," says the 56-year-old Cooper, who begins a 15-city Canadian tour on Aug. 20 in Thunder Bay, Ont.

Quite.

Marty's band, Growing Old Disgracefully, can be found at: Disgraceful Music. His Cthulhu tales can be found at Temple of Dagon.
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Alice on anti-Bushies
Published: August 22, 2004
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Section: Music
Filed Under: Music: News
Writer: Marty Dodge
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Comments

#1 — August 22, 2004 @ 13:46PM — Shark

What a blowhard motard.

This ignorant prick went off the Rock and Roll Artistic Roll Call when he took up golf.

Feh.

"rock and roll is the antithesis to politics..."

What fuckin' century did he grow up in?

#2 — August 22, 2004 @ 13:47PM — wesley

i thought using yourself and your songs to sell school supplies would be considered rock and roll treason. i guess not.

#3 — August 22, 2004 @ 13:49PM — Andrew Ian Dodge [URL]

So golf is somehow verbotten to rockers? Gee I wonder if all those who have benefited from the numerous rock & roll pro-am charity events would agree.

#4 — August 22, 2004 @ 13:51PM — Shark

Lyrics by

OPPORTUNISTIC HYPOCRITE


Well we got no choice
all the girls and boys
Makin' all that noise
cause they found new toys.
Well we can't salute ya
can't find a flag
If that don't suit ya
that's a drag.
School's out for summer
School's out forever
School's been blown to pieces.
No more pencils
No more books
No more teacher's dirty looks.
Well we got no class and we got no principles
And we got no innocence
We can't even think of a word that rhymes.
School's out for summer
school's out forever
My school's been blown to pieces.
No more pencils
No more books
No more teacher's dirty looks.
Out for summer
Out till fall
We might not come back at all.
School's out forever
School's out for summer
School's out with fever
School's out completely.

#5 — August 22, 2004 @ 13:53PM — Shark

Andrew, maybe it's a generational thing. I grew up in the sixties, and golf was for rich doughy cracker Republicans, and no self-respecting rebellious young rock and roller would be caught dead teeing up at the local cuntry club.

Times may have changed.

#6 — August 22, 2004 @ 13:59PM — Shark

I guess I'm just a traditionalist when it comes to my rock and roll heroes, and long for the days of:

"Hey, Johnny, What are you rebelling against?"

*"Whatta ya got?"



*The Wild One (1953)

#7 — August 22, 2004 @ 14:04PM — Andrew Ian Dodge [URL]

Well my rock & roll maturity (contradiction in terms?) came about in the 80s and its has always been rather common for hard rockers/metallers to play golf. That is why they manage to have quite an impressive gang show up to the several major charity matches that go on through-out the year. Long hairs on the golf course is not as unusual as you would think.

#8 — August 22, 2004 @ 16:17PM — Bryan McKay [URL]

I don't know, I've always thought of golf as a very un-rock thing to do. I've always sort of associated it in my mind with country clubs and silly clothing. Although many rock stars are already familiar with the silly clothing bit.

And as for Alice Cooper: what a fucking twit. Since when have rock and roll and politics been separate? Last time I checked, Cooper often played with the MC5, a decidely politcally-oriented band, back in his early days in Detroit. Not to mention he was given his first big break by Frank Zappa, who was extremely vocal about his politcal and social views.

Alice Cooper, who is now a Christian, says that rock and roll has no place in politics. I wonder what he would say to his fellow church-goers who adamantly support President Bush on religious grounds, or Bush himself, who often abuses peoples' religious beliefs to preach his brand of conservatism to the masses?

I'm seeing a lot of hypocrisy here.

#9 — August 22, 2004 @ 17:48PM — Jim Carruthers [URL]

To hell with the "politics", how pathetic is it that this old man is beginning his tour in Thunder Bay?

And he's given up the drink, so the poor bastard doesn't even have that as an excuse.

#10 — August 22, 2004 @ 18:04PM — Rodney Welch [URL]

Alice probably has a point. It's always a little eerie when artists of ANY kind start waxing political, because it smacks a little too much of groupthink and art is about individualism -- and rock, especially, is about anarchy, rebellion, opposition to authority, that kind of thing. You could, of course, respond by saying that Rock Against Bush falls directly into that line, but to use your art toward a political end is a little like selling your songs for a TV commercial -- you're bastardizing it somewhat, you know? It's like you're becoming part of the crowd rather than standing against it.

Sometimes I wish rock stars wore a bracelet that said WWTWD? (What would Tom Waits do? You don't see him signing up to get on the Bruce bus, do you?)

#11 — August 22, 2004 @ 20:45PM — Douglas Mays [URL]

hhhmmm...I thought rock was all about politics. Making a statement on the condition of society.

Look at the 60s which elevated rocknroll to such a major status of social change. That was the whole trip. The music gave the common man access to major media, strengthening our voice beyond just voting. The voice needed to influence the policy of those voted in!

I don't quite agree with you Alice. Is it the money that kinda screwed up your outlook?

peaceloveguidance

#12 — August 22, 2004 @ 23:13PM — Mike Kole [URL]

Shark- golf for Republican cracker types? Somehow missed out on Tiger Woods?

While I strongly disagree with Alice about rock & politics- they mix rather like gin & tonic as best I can tell- I think that Rock Against Bush is about as anit-establishment as We Are The World. It's the expected and the musician party line.

#13 — August 22, 2004 @ 23:16PM — Mike Kole [URL]

Jim: "how pathetic is it that this old man is beginning his tour in Thunder Bay?"

It's entirely pathetic! But not only have I been in North Bay, I've also been to Thunder Bay...

Maybe Alice could get those REO Speedwagon cover bands to open for him.

#14 — August 23, 2004 @ 08:38AM — Andrew Ian Dodge [URL]

Surely its a good thing that Alice and Co are heading to somewhere like Thunder Bay? As someone who has lived in Maine, I appreciate a band's effort to tour as wide as possible. He is obviously going because he has fans there. Why is this a bad thing?

#15 — August 23, 2004 @ 08:54AM — Shark

Mike Kole: "...golf for Republican cracker types? Somehow missed out on Tiger Woods?"

Um, you gotta name somebody who's black.

(And O.J. Simpson doesn't count either!)

ahahaha.

#16 — August 24, 2004 @ 02:16AM — godoggo

Golf: the thing that was offputting (no pun intended, really!) is not that he was playing it, but whom he was playing it with, e.g. if I recall correctly, Gerald Ford.

There's a way big diff betwixt the MC5's politics of "rock and roll, dope and fucking in the streets" and "Vote Kerry." Although polirical rockers tend to lean left (hence the disapproval of conservatives and libertarians), the politics of the Nuge, say, feel (and, therefore, are) more rock'n'roll than the (oh, cripes) "Boss"'s. More generally, rock'n'roll politics are extreme one way or another (by which logic, I guess Screwdriver outrocks Ted, by a little). Still, the best argument for accepting "Vote Kerry" as a rock'n'roll credo is the utilitarian one: the chimp simply must go, by hook or by crook.

#17 — August 24, 2004 @ 08:43AM — Eric Olsen

Paul Shaffer is from Thunder Bay and it wasn't golf that pushed Alice out of contention: it was Hollywood Squares. Vincent Furnier's father was a minister - he's come full circle.

#18 — August 28, 2004 @ 05:43AM — James North

An earlier comment stated

" Sometimes I wish rock stars wore a bracelet that said WWTWD? (What would Tom Waits do? You don't see him signing up to get on the Bruce bus, do you?)
"

No, but he has contributed to an anti-Bush compliation CD called "Future Soundtrack for America".

Some Waits fans seem to be upset by this, and I cannot understand why.

#19 — August 28, 2004 @ 08:32AM — HW Saxton

To nitpick just a bit: The MC5 were not
a political band. John Sinclair, the 5's
manager foisted his politics upon them.

He saw the band as a way of furthering
HIS own political agenda regarding "The
White Panther Party". Also a good way to
gain free publicity for his investment,
Hence the MC5's high profile gig at the
1968 DNC in Chicago.He was a businessman
after all despite his leftist posturing.

Not much of the 5's oeuvre delves into
politics.I mean,their biggest po-litical
statement on "Kick Out The Jams" is the
great John Lee Hooker tune "Motor City
Is Burning" written well before any of
the band members could probably even
spell politics.

A few of their tunes did touch on some
political issues but not much more than
any other group of the time. "Gotta Keep
Movin'" from the "High Time" LP springs
readily to mind as one example.

The group was much,much more concerned
with putting on a good show,scoring with
the ladies, driving around in their hot
rods,jamming and partying.Typical stuff
like that. Not any political posturing.

Having met Michael Davis(the ex-bassist
for the MC5 & Destroy All Monsters)on
several occasions and interviewing him
once for a punk type 'Zine back in the
early 90's,he confirmed all of this and
more for me.

In regards to this post: I realize that
music and politics have always been very
intertwined since the advent of recorded
sounds up to this very day. That is all
well and fine if that is what you like.
Some artists have even mixed up the two
quite well(DOA,Sex Pistols,Bob Marley,
The DK's,Clash,etc.)being both highly
entertaining & enlightening to various
degrees.

On a personal level however IMO,I truly
feel that entertainers should be just
entertainers and let the politicians be
politicians.I like to enjoy music as an
escape from the grim reality that is the
political arena & vice-versa.




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