Sunday, November 03, 2019

Do Endorsements From Musicians Mean Anything When It Comes To Voting?

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A reporter from Billboard called the other day to ask if association with musicians who endorse candidates is dangerous. I was right in the middle of putting together our next Blue America contest, which is a benefit for Pramila Jayapal (D-WA), the prize being an ultra-rare original Nirvana gold record (Nevermind) before they were really famous. Is the association with Nirvana going to help or hurt Jayapal, who has a strong presence of her own as the author of the new and improved Medicare-for-All bill and as the co-chair of the Congressional Progressive Congress. Nope, it won't mean much to voters, even if it gives them the idea that Jayapal is a hipster.

I was in the music business for a long time. Musicians' involvement with candidates is fun and may draw a crowd, but I can't imagine anyone votes for or against a candidate because of an endorsement by a musician-- or any other cultural figure. Can you? Same with political figures. Biden's endorsements by some of the most reactionary, foot-dragging Democrats in Congress might make discerning voters decide to not vote for him. The tune Dianne Feinstein (CA), Doug Jones (AL), Chris Coons (DE), Tom Carper (DE), Stephen Lynch (MA), Lou Correa (CA), Charlie Crist (FL), Vicente Gonzalez (TX), Filemon Vela (TX) is a cacophany of conservatism and corruption. Compare it to the sweet harmonies Bernie endorsers AOC, Ilhan Omar, Rashid Tlaib and Ro Khanna are singing.





Anyway, Annie Grayner, reporting for CNN, noted that all the coolest music energy is around Bernie (the coolest candidate): Ariana Grande, Cardi B, Jack White, New Power Generation (Prince's backing band), Killer Mike, Jason Mraz... On the other end of the spectrum, Mayo Pete has been endorsed by a mayonnaise sandwich on white bread and Mandy Moore.
But so far, Sanders is gaining traction in this musical primary.



On Wednesday, two members of indie band Dispatch joined the ranks. Brad Corrigan and Chad Stokes Urmston performed at Sanders' rally in New Hampshire and shared their support.

"It's a real honor to be here" Stokes Urmston told the crowd. "We've been Bernie fans for a long time now and really admire his courage to say what he believes all these years. It's the same thing from 30, 40 years ago, he's been saying the same thing and finally the world caught up to him."

"Let's get behind Bernie with all that we have" Corrigan added.

And ahead of Sanders' joint rally with Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar in Minneapolis on Sunday, New Power Generation, Prince's longtime backing band, announced its endorsement.

"We're really proud to stand with Sen. Bernie Sanders as he attempts to bring America back to the people. It's time for the people to take back the government," said Morris Hayes, the late star's musical director and longest standing band member. "Like the good Senator says, it's not me or him, it's us."

Such support has come as the campaign aims to make live music central to its events, Sanders deputy campaign manager Ari Rabin-Havt said.

"One of the questions Bernie always asks before an event is do we have a band. So we try to have a musical event at every rally because that's something he really believes in" Rabin-Havt told CNN. "For Bernie, political events should be fun, should be cultural and should be entertaining. And it's not just I'm about getting famous musicians to perform. We try to have local musicians of a variety of genres from rap to blue grass to reggae perform."

That was on display last weekend, when Jack White, of the former band White Stripes, opened at Sanders' rally in Detroit, where Democratic Rep. Rashida Tlaib offered her endorsement to the Vermont senator.

In the middle of his seven-song set, White, performing at his high school alma mater, told the crowd why he backed Sanders.

"Listen, I've never done a political rally before. I'm not really politically affiliated too much. I don't consider myself a member of any party or anything I just listen to the issues" White said. "I want to listen to someone and understand that they're telling me the truth if I trust them. Bernie Sanders is telling the truth, and I really do trust him."

White noted that Sanders' position on abolishing the electoral college is what drew him toward the senator's candidacy. That endorsement came just days after singer Jason Mraz also announced his support for Sanders.

"To me, he's the only candidate who can continue to drain the swamp," Mraz wrote on his website.

...The Sanders campaign, of course, has incorporated other celebrities into their campaign. Actress Susan Sarandon, who supported and campaigned for Sanders in 2016, joined the senator once more on the campaign trail in Iowa over the summer. Rapper Killer Mike and actor and activist Danny Glover, who both endorsed Sanders in 2016, have also repeatedly joined Sanders on the campaign trail this time around. Actor Danny DeVito and John Cusack have also made appearance in support of the senator.




But the sway he holds with musicians continues on. Many have not gone as far as formally endorsing Sanders, but still have suggested an affinity for the politician.

On the day she released a remix of "Good as Hell" with Lizzo, Ariana Grande tweeted the lyric, "baby how u feelin."

Sanders, unprompted and not opting for the obvious lyrical reply ("Good as hell"), said, "Ready to fight for Medicare for All."

Grande retweeted Sanders' response: "screaming."

Lizzo has also shown an appreciation for Sanders. Over the summer, the singer called on her followers not to focus on Sanders' age and think critically about the Democratic presidential candidates.

And of course, rapper Cardi B has continued to show her support for Sanders.

Cardi B filmed a video with Sanders in July to talk about how his agenda will address raising the minimum wage and unemployment. The rapper tweeted earlier that month: "I been reading about Bernie Sanders and I'm really sad how we let him down in 2016."

Sanders returned the compliment.

"What it means is, what Cardi B does, not only is she an enormously popular entertainer, what she is doing is speaking to young people about the important issues that are on their minds and I applaud that very much," Sanders told CNN in July.





In 2006, Blue America persuaded Rickie Lee Jones to join with a couple of the guys from the Squirrel Nut Zippers, Tom Maxwell and Ken Mosher, to record a song, "Have You Had Enough," that was easily turned into customized radio spots and online ads for Democratic challengers like Kirsten Gillibrand and Chris Murphy (both of whom ousted Republican House incumbents that year and are now senators).

It's a shame none of the presidential candidates have persuaded Max Frost to turn his "Adderall" smash into an anti-Trump campaign song. Or, maybe it already is. The video would just need a few image swaps.





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Wednesday, October 16, 2019

Stuff To Enjoy-- From Us To You: Mitt Romney And Max Frost

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First a Club for Growth video, an ad that will start running tomorrow on Fox News stations in Utah. The intent isn't so much to get Romney to do something-- Romney's immensely more popular in Utah than Trump-- but to warn other Republicans, especially vulnerable ones up for reelection, like Susan Collins (ME), Cory Gardner (CO), Thom Tillis (NC), Joni Ernst (IA), Martha McSally (AZ)... to not even think about breaking with Señor Trumpanzee. 





I have another couple of videos for you as well-- both songs by fantastic Texas musician Max Frost, a multi-instrumentalist blue-eyed soul singer, that I somehow missed when they were released in 2016. The one above, "President," came out about 6 months before the election. On the day he put it out, Frost wrote on his Facebook page that he was "releasing a new song called 'President' today that I've written in reaction to our current race for president in the US. While the song doesn’t have a specific political agenda, my aim is to show how disenfranchised my generation has become with our political system. It's become a TV show and we are merely the observers. Even the popular candidate's chances are dissolved by the convolution of a broken government that, even after it is exposed, continues to operate as a plutocracy. How are we suppose to care when all outcomes feel the same?"

The second one, "Adderall," came out a month after Trump was declared the winner of the election. Many people say the song, one of Frost's most popular, could be the personal theme song for the illegitimate president who happens to be severely addicted to the very deleterious drug. Listen to the infectious tune below, but these are the lyrics. Come on, remind you of anyone we all know and wish we didn't? [Contribute to Bernie's campaign here.]


I got a new disease

I saw it on TV

It's takin' hold of me

And I believe that I might be insane

My thoughts are incomplete
Up late, I don't get sleep
They say it's clear to see
That ADD is all there's left to blame

I can't get it together
I should know better
I got a mind like weather
That always seems to change

It's getting harder
So I need a doctor
He's gonna make me smarter
At least that's what they say

I've been bouncing off the walls
And shaking, the Adderall
Won't loosen the pressure
There's only so much I can take

Wake up, I need someone
To stop me, cause Adderall
Won't loosen the pressure
There's only so much I can take

Ooh ooh ooh, ooh
Ooh ooh ooh, ooh
Ooh ooh ooh, ooh
There's only so much I can take

I break into the scene
Buzz from a new vaccine
That's curing all my dreams
It's fine with me, as long as I get more

My doors left off the latch
And all my mirrors cracked
Now there's no turning back
So I just laugh and pass out on the floor

I can't get it together
I should know better
I got a mind like weather
That always seems to change

It's getting harder
So I need a doctor
He's gonna make me smarter
At least that's what they say

I've been bouncing off the walls
And shaking, the Adderall
Won't loosen the pressure
There's only so much I can take

Wake up, I need someone
To stop me, cause Adderall
Won't loosen the pressure
There's only so much I can take

Ooh ooh ooh, ooh
Ooh ooh ooh, ooh
Ooh ooh ooh, ooh
There's only so much I can take

I can't sleep cause I don't wanna
I don't want no marijuana
Tell my mom I tried to warn ya
Take one more and I'm a goner

I've been bouncing off the walls
And shaking, the Adderall
Won't loosen the pressure
There's only so much I can take

I've been bouncing off the walls
And shaking, the Adderall
Won't loosen the pressure
There's only so much I can take

Wake up, I need someone

To stop me, cause Adderall

Won't loosen the pressure

There's only so much I can take

Ooh ooh ooh, ooh
Ooh ooh ooh, ooh
Ooh ooh ooh, ooh
There's only so much I can take





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