Find of the day: a website devoted to music about the bomb. From the site's self-description:
Bruce Conner
Every art form had to deal with the arrival of the atomic age in one manner or another. Some artists were reserved and intellectual in their approach, others less so. The world of popular music, for one, got an especially crazy kick out of the Bomb. Country, blues, jazz, gospel, rock and roll, rockabilly, Calypso, novelty and even polka musicians embraced atomic energy with wild-eyed, and some might argue, inappropriate enthusiasm. These musicians churned out a variety of truly memorable tunes featuring some of the most bizarre lyrics of the 20th century. If it weren't for Dr. Oppenheimer's creation, for example, would we have ever heard lines like "Nuclear baby, don't fission out on me!" or "Radioactive mama, we'll reach critical mass tonight!"?…
CONELRAD is primarily interested in presenting the "first generation" of songs that were written during this period - works that are less familiar to the public than the songs produced during the folk revival/folk-rock period of the sixties and after. The earlier songs are less self-conscious, more naive (in some cases to the point of downright wackiness) and therefore more intriguing. Needless to say, another reason why many of these songs were selected is—put simply—they swing! Pondering the cultural climate that encouraged songs like 1957's profoundly strange yet catchy Atom Bomb Baby is a lot more rewarding than, say, examining the obvious metaphors from a pre-electric Dylan protest song like "A Hard Rain's Gonna Fall." And Barry McGuire's Eve of Destruction is a memorable "important" song, but isn't the lesser known answer song by The Spokesmen, Dawn of Correction, a lot more interesting?
Indeed it is. I don't say this lightly: "Dawn of Correction" may be the most earnest song ever written. A sample from the lyrics:
You missed all the good in your evaluation What about the things that deserve commendation? Where there once was no cure, there's vaccination Where there once was a desert, there's vegetation Self-government's replacing colonization What about the Peace Corps organization? Don't forget the work of the United Nations
Hear it sung with a rasp that rivals Tom Waits':
I wish the site had more downloadable audio files -- more often we just get a song description and some lyrics. Then again, the curators have a product to sell: a mammoth, far too expensive, yet still very tempting box set.
[Hat tip: David Rice.]
Start your day with Reason. Get a daily brief of the most important stories and trends every weekday morning when you subscribe to Reason Roundup.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com
posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary
period.
Subscribe
here to preserve your ability to comment. Your
Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the
digital
edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do
not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments
do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and
ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Yeah, "Dawn of Correction" is cool, but I'm sorry it totally cannot out-earnest "Eve of Destruction" nor outrasp Barry McGuire.
"The eastern world, it is explodin'
Violence flarin', bullets loadin'
You're old enough to kill, but not for votin'
ETC. (I'm runnin' out o' apostrophes)
While it's not explicitly about nuclear war, I'd vote for "Atom Tan" by the Clash (and anyone who dismisses Combat Rock as a sell-out album can kiss my ass). I'll also give an honorary mention to Ween's "Buenos Tardes Amigos," which has nothing to do with the atomic bomb but does feature the sound of a bomb explosion at the end.
I didn't think Combat Rock was a sell out. I just thought it was mediocre, with a couple notable exceptions. If they'd put "Radio Clash" on that album, it would have been vastly improved.
I was thinking a Rob Schnieder comedy where he has ten days to sleep with the girl to win a million dollars or save his grandmother's house or something.
No, because it mentions Captain Kirk. Believe it or not they're all NPG guys around here. I know, I know the best Prince is the Revolution era bookended by 1999 and Sign O the Times (is Parade in that span?), but you tell them. They won't listen to me.
1999, by the way, is another great atomic song. Prince had lots.
Your love is like a nuclear waste.
Your body is a hazard to the human race.
They should slap "contaminated" right across your face.
Your love...is like a nuclear waste.
It's not specifically about nuclear weapons, but it does include a falling-and-exploding bomb effect.
"God Guide Our Leader's Hand" by Jimmy Martin. Doesn't have any "-tion" rhymes in it, but great bluegrass harmonies while contemplating nuclear eschatology.
No one likes us
I don' know why
We may not be perfect
But heaven knows we try
Yeah, "Dawn of Correction" is cool, but I'm sorry it totally cannot out-earnest "Eve of Destruction" nor outrasp Barry McGuire.
"The eastern world, it is explodin'
Violence flarin', bullets loadin'
You're old enough to kill, but not for votin'
ETC. (I'm runnin' out o' apostrophes)
Link to video some dude made with Barry on the soundtrack: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v.....xt_from=ML
Better version
While it's not explicitly about nuclear war, I'd vote for "Atom Tan" by the Clash (and anyone who dismisses Combat Rock as a sell-out album can kiss my ass). I'll also give an honorary mention to Ween's "Buenos Tardes Amigos," which has nothing to do with the atomic bomb but does feature the sound of a bomb explosion at the end.
I didn't think Combat Rock was a sell out. I just thought it was mediocre, with a couple notable exceptions. If they'd put "Radio Clash" on that album, it would have been vastly improved.
It doesn't include in its list "Ask" by the Smiths.
"If it's not love, then it's the bomb that will bring us together..."
Let's face it, "the atomic bomb" is a euphemism for masterbation...
Manhattan Project by Rush
Dancing with Tears in Eyes by Ultravox
Christmas at Ground Zero by Weird Al Yankovik
While we're here: anyone got a good link to any tunes from Ronnie James Dio's sizable rocakabilly career in the early 60s?
Dio and the Prophets, 1962-3.
Thanks!
Although "Ten Days to Brenda" sounds like a Matt Helm film.
I was thinking a Rob Schnieder comedy where he has ten days to sleep with the girl to win a million dollars or save his grandmother's house or something.
Your idea is much, much better.
"Ten Guys in Brenda" got two, er, thumbs up.
I know these don't quite fit with the concept of the post (neither are the least bit earnest), but
Fishbone had Party At Ground Zero.
And Timbuk 3 had The Future's So Bright, I Gotta Wear Shades.
Good choices.
Do you fear that man's invention that they call atomic power?
Pink Floyd's "Two Suns in the Sunset"
This album has a cool mushroom cloud on the cover
SCOTS
They ain't got Mojo Nixon so their site can use some fixin'
found a video
that guy sucks
Can you hear the sound of an enormous door slamming in the depths of hell?
This is the story behind Barry McGuire's recordingof Eve of Destruction:
http://barrymcguire.xanga.com/364332725/item/
No one mentions "99 Luftballons?"
No, because it mentions Captain Kirk. Believe it or not they're all NPG guys around here. I know, I know the best Prince is the Revolution era bookended by 1999 and Sign O the Times (is Parade in that span?), but you tell them. They won't listen to me.
1999, by the way, is another great atomic song. Prince had lots.
Know this one?
It's not specifically about nuclear weapons, but it does include a falling-and-exploding bomb effect.
Oh, it's by the Tuff Darts.
http://reason.com/blog/2010/05.....c#comments
doh try again
"Man at the C&A" by The Specials
(C&A was a department store in the UK)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oIYqGS3Rrss
World destruction by Time Zone
(Bill Laswell Afrika Bambatta and Johnny Rotten)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZuL2kvEaWrw
"God Guide Our Leader's Hand" by Jimmy Martin. Doesn't have any "-tion" rhymes in it, but great bluegrass harmonies while contemplating nuclear eschatology.
Hey don't forget this cold war classic:
http://www.amazon.com/Complete.....B000005GX2
Nobody does it better than Tom Lehrer. There's "We Will All Go Together When We Go."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=frAEmhqdLFs
And "Who's Next."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v.....re=related
Don't know if it's the links above, but there's "Enola Gay" by OMD, which was a fairly big "new wave" hit in 1980 or so.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r5NDqghNxqo