Leon Rosselson – Palaces of Gold – Meaningful lyrics.

As the Tories busy themselves with laying waste to public services, privatising everything to put gold into the pockets of their chums and messing the country this song has never been more relevant.

I’d do away with private education and health so that the bastards funded it properly!!

Leon Rosselson – Palaces of Gold – Meaningful lyrics.

leonrosselson

I love Leon Rosselson. I think he is one of Britain’s greatest song writers, perceptive, astute and intelligent.
In this age where the Tories are intent on bringing their dogma to bear and using austerity as an excuse to slash public services (While giving tax hand-outs to the rich) we desperately need people like Leon to point out the inequality and what it means.
Leon and I stand for fairness.
I saw what the Tory cuts did to education first hand as both a teacher and Headteacher.
They are heartless and uncaring when it comes to ordinary people. As far as they are concerned the money could be better spent on larger profits for business.
Their own sons and daughters have the privilege of Public schools, private health-care and gated communities. They have no need for the public services and despise the majority who do. They resent every penny spent on them. If they had to use the same public services the rest of us do there would be a miraculous improvement.
Leon says it better in his song.

Palaces of Gold

If the sons of company directors,
And judges’ private daughters,
Had to got to school in a slum school,
Dumped by some joker in a damp back alley,
Had to herd into classrooms cramped with worry,
With a view onto slagheaps and stagnant pools,
Had to file through corridors grey with age,
And play in a crackpot concrete cage.
Chorus (after each verse):Buttons would be pressed,
Rules would be broken.
Strings would be pulled
And magic words spoken.
Invisible fingers would mould
Palaces of gold.
If prime ministers and advertising executives,
Royal personages and bank managers’ wives
Had to live out their lives in dank rooms,
Blinded by smoke and the foul air of sewers.
Rot on the walls and rats in the cellars,
In rows of dumb houses like mouldering tombs.
Had to bring up their children and watch them grow
In a wasteland of dead streets where nothing will grow.

I’m not suggesting any kind of a plot,
Everyone knows there’s not,
But you unborn millions might like to be warned
That if you don’t want to be buried alive by slagheaps,
Pit-falls and damp walls and rat-traps and dead streets,
Arrange to be democratically born
The son of a company director
Or a judge’s fine and private daughter.

Julie Felix at the Adelphi in Hull

I wasn’t quite sure what to expect. To start with Julie was seventy nine. Secondly I had this lightweight image of someone singing ‘I’m going to the Zoo’ (not my normal preference). But I was interested. She had been there through the good times of the Sixties.

I needn’t have worried. She was amazing – lithe, full of youthful energy and with some good tales and brilliant songs.

Julie told how she’d come across to Europe in the early sixties and ended up on the Greek island of Hydra with Leonard Cohen – playing the bars for small change.

She sang a few songs for Leonard – including Bird on a Wire and a touching tribute version of ‘Hey That’s No Way To Say Goodbye’. She did a couple of Dylan songs too including a great version of ‘Masters of War’ and then a few Woody Guthrie – the stand out being ‘Deportee’ which had great resonance due to her Mexican lineage.

This Land is your Land was also rather good.

Julie did a couple of Mexican songs and some of her own, she got people signing along and generated a great atmosphere.

I was glad I’d gone – even the couple of verses of ‘going to the zoo’, delivered with a wearisome apology – seemed OK.

Dez Allenby & Friends At the Adelphi Hull

A great set from Dez (of Forest fame) and a full range of incredible friends started the evening off! There was the fabulous Jeff Parsons on guitar, Cathy Allenby on vocals, Adrian Welham on vocals, Kelvin Baldwin on percussion. They did a great version of the song that should have been Hull City of Culture’s theme song – ‘We Sail Our Castles’ and ‘1968’.

Awesome!!

The Searchers at Skegness – Photos.

After the Beatles and Big Three the Searchers were probably the best band to have come out of the Mersey scene. They were different.

They started off with the standard R&B covers – Farmer John, Tricky Dicky, Love Potion No. 9, Sweets for my Sweet, Do Do Ron Ron, Money and Twist and Shout – all delivered at speed with a distinctive high pitched vocal. But they also covered Folk songs with songs like Where Have All The Flowers Gone and What Have They Done To the Rain.

Those Folk covers were really important because their developed that electric jangly guitar sound that was later developed by the Byrds. You could say that they were the band that created Folk Rock.

Their quality created a longer chart life than the other Mersey Bands. While Billy J, Gerry and Freddy were blasted out by the harder sound of the Stones, Kinks, Downliners Sect,  Pretty Things, Them, Yardbirds, Who and Animals, the Searchers persisted and further developed their sound.

Back in 1964, when I was fifteen, I thought they were quite cool. Like all those early 60s Beat Groups (apart from a few) they were blown away by the later sixties psychedelic Underground explosion.

If only they had developed the ability to write their own material they might have been as big as the Who.

This was the first time I had seen them (or at least two of the originals) and I enjoyed it. The only fault I can find is that they are frozen in time.

The Springfields at Skegness – Photos

In the early sixties there were a lot of popular Folk Groups – such as the Kingston Trio, Clancy Brothers, New Lost City Ramblers and Rooftop Singers. They followed on from the Almanac Singers and Weavers and gave rise to Peter, Paul and Mary.

In Britain we had our own version with the Springfields. The Springfields included Dusty Springfield with her brother Tom along with Tim Field and then Mike Hurst.

Dusty went on to have a sizeable career.

They were on at Skegness so I popped in. The group were Mike Hurst and two young newcomers. They seemed to be having a good time.

My Favourite Protest Songs – Billy Bragg – Between The Wars

I like my Billy Bragg with his raw guitar and idealistic lyrics. He aspires the politics I agree with. I want that vision of a fair and just society. This song sums it up for me and it got right up there in the Top Ten. Just shows there were a lot of people that fairness and justice resonates with.

Between the Wars
This song is by Billy Bragg and appears on the album Brewing Up With Billy Bragg (1984) and on the album The Peel Sessions Album (1991).

I was a miner, I was a docker
I was a railway man between the wars
I raised a family in times of austerity
With sweat at the foundry between the wars

I paid the union and as times got harder
I looked to the government to help the working man
But they brought prosperity down at the armoury
We’re arming for peace me boys, between the wars

I kept the faith and I kept voting
Not for the iron fist but for the helping hand
For theirs is a land with a wall around it
And mine is a faith in my fellow man

Theirs is a land of hope and glory
Mine is the green field and the factory floor
Theirs are the skies all dark with bombers
And mine is the peace we knew between the wars

Call up the craftsmen, bring me the draughtsmen
Build me a path from cradle to grave
And I’ll give my consent to any government
That does not deny a man a living wage

Go find the young men never to fight again
Bring up the banners from the days gone by
Sweet moderation, heart of this nation
Desert us not, we are between the wars

 

My Favourite Protest Songs – Ritchie Havens – What You Gonna Do About Me?

This is another one for the environmental vandal Trump.

This is a song off the great album The Blind Degree.  I used to play this a lot.

When things are wrong it is incumbent on all right minded people to stand up and protest. We cannot allow the greedy and selfish to trash the planet.

What you gonna do about us? We are gonna stick up for what we believe in and we’re prepared to be shot down.

What You Gonna Do About Me? Ritchie Havens

You poison my sweet waters; you chop down my green trees
And the food you feed my children is the cause of that ill disease
My world is slowly falling down and the air is not fit to breathe
And those of us who care enough, we have to do something
Oh, what you gonna do about me
Oh, what you gonna do about me

Your newspapers – they just put you on
They never tell you the whole story
They just put your young ideas down
I was wondering if this was the end of their pride and glory?
Oh, what you gonna do about me
Oh, what you gonna do about me

I work in your factories and I study in your schools
I fill your penitentiaries and your military too
I can feel the future trembling as the word is passed around
If you stick up for what you do believe in, be prepared to be shot down
Oh, what you gonna do about me
Oh, what you gonna do about me

I feel just like a stranger in the land where I was born
And I live just like an outlaw; I’m always on the run
Always on the run, they got me always on the run

Oh, your soldiers smoke marijuana, you can’t put them behind your walls
Because most of what you taught them to do is against most of your laws
We’re all fugitives from injustice now but we’re going to be free
Because your rules and regulations don’t do the things for me
Oh, what you gonna do about me
Oh, what you gonna do about me

You may be the stronger now, but my time will come around
You keep adding to my numbers as you shoot my people down
I can feel the future trembling as the word is passed around
We are going to stick up for what we do believe in, and we’re prepared to be shot down
Oh, what you gonna do about me
Oh, what you gonna do about me

I feel just like a stranger in the land where I was born
And I live just like an outlaw; I’m always on the run
Always on the run, they got me always on the run

My Favourite Protest Songs – Loudon Wainwright – A Hard Day On The Planet

In light of Trump’s proposed vandalism of the environment in Utah opening up National Parks to drilling and mining I thought this was relevant. The madman really doesn’t care about nature – just money. What with pulling out of the Paris agreement, shutting down environment monitoring, relaxing environmental legislation and opening up parks for plunder he is really going out of his way to trash the planet for short-term gain.

Well I care about animals and nature and I think the man is an abomination. The sooner he is got rid of the better! Impeach the piece of shit.

The dollar went down and the President said
“Who’s in charge, now?” I don’t know, take your pick.
A new disease every day and the old ones are coming back
Things are looking kind of gray, like they’re going to black
Don’t turn on the TV, don’t show me the paper
(I) don’t want to know he got kidnapped or why they all raped her
I want to go on vacation till the pressure lets up
But they keep hijacking airplanes and blowing them up

It’s been a hard day on the planet
How much is it all worth?
It’s getting harder to understand it
Things are tough all over on earth.

It’s hot in December and cold in July
When it rains it pours out of a poisonous sky
In California the body counts keep getting higher
It’s evil out there, man that state is always on fire.

Everyone has a system, but they can’t seem to win
Even Bob Geldorf looks alarmingly thin
I got to get on that shuttle get me out of this place
But there’s gonna be warfare up there in outer space

I’ve got clothes on my back and shoes on my feet
A roof over my head and something to eat
My kids are all healthy and my folks are alive
You know, it’s amazing but sometimes I think I’ll survive

I’ve got all of my fingers and all of my toes
I’m pretty well off I guess, I suppose
So how come I feel bad so much of the time?
A man aint an island John Dunn wasn’t lyin’

Its business as usual; some things never change
Its unfair, it’s tough, unkind and it’s strange
We don’t seem to learn; we can’t seem to stop
Maybe some explosions would close up the shop

You know, maybe that would be fine: we would be off the hook
We resolved all our problems, never mind what it took
And it all would be over, finito, the end
Until the survivers started up all over again
(Refrain)

Songwriters: LOUDON WAINWRIGHT

 

My Favourite Protest Songs – Pete Seeger – Which Side Are You On?

This harks from a time when politics was more simple. It was easy to see which side to be on. The lines were drawn.

That line is still there but it has been confused by lies and spin, by sellouts, by compromise and deceit.

This Pete Seeger classic never fails to send shivers through me. I’ve always been a union man.

Which Side Are You On?

Which side are you on boys?
Which side are you on?
Which side are you on boys?
Which side are you on?
They say in Harlan County
There are no neutrals there.
You’ll either be a union man
Or a thug for J. H. Blair.
Which side are you on boys?
Which side are you on?
Which side are you on boys?
Which side are you on?
My dady was a miner,
And I’m a miner’s son,
He’ll be with you fellow workers
Until this battle’s won.
Which side are you on?
Which side are you on?
Which side are you on?
Which side are you on?
Oh workers can you stand it?
Oh tell me how you can?
Will you be a lousy scab
Or will you be a man?
Which side

 

 

 

My Favourite Protest Songs – Tom Paxton – What did you learn in school today?

Tom Paxton was not always my cup of tea. But I liked a few of his stronger songs.

What are we indoctrinating our kids with? This song sums it up.

Religion, patriotism and blind belief. What a disgusting set of lies.

“What Did You Learn In School Today?”  – Tom Paxton

What did you learn in school today,
Dear little boy of mine?
What did you learn in school today,
Dear little boy of mine?

I learned that Washington never told a lie,
I learned that soldiers seldom die,
I learned that everybody’s free,
And that’s what the teacher said to me,
And that’s what I learned in school today,
that’s what I learned in school.

What did you learn in school today,
Dear little boy of mine?
What did you learn in school today,
Dear little boy of mine?

I learned the policemen are my friends,
I learned that justice never ends,
I learned that murderers pay for their crimes,
Even if we make a mistake sometimes,
And that’s what I learned in school today,
That’s what I learned in school

What did you learn in school today,
Dear little boy of mine?
What did you learn in school today,
Dear little boy of mine?

I learned that war is not so bad,
I learned about the great once we had had.
We fought in Germany and in France
And some day I might get my chance.
And that’s what I learned in school today,
That’s what I learned in school

What did you learn in school today,
Dear little boy of mine?
What did you learn in school today,
Dear little boy of mine?

I learned our government must be strong;
It’s always right and never wrong!
Our leaders are the finest men
And we elect them again and again,
And that’s what I learned in school today,
That’s what I learned in school