Previous Material Decries Drug War, Praises Psychedelics
When Sturgill Simpson took the stage on The Daily Show to debut his song Call To Arms to a national television audience, the message was clear Something new is happening in country music. In fact, it was clear that something is changing in music altogether. Simpson is not your average artist, much less your average country artist. From his very first album, Hightop Mountain and especially his second, Metamodern Sounds in Country Music, Simpson stayed far away from the sanitized hayseed bro-country of hardly believable pickup trucks, dirt roads, and fishin that Nashville pop country radio has shoved down the throats of listeners for years.
Simpsons album was outlaw country plain and simple both in the sound and the message. From the opening song of Metamodern Sounds In Country Music, Simpson decried the pitfalls of religion and the tyranny of the drug war while praising psychedelics at the same time. Along with his cryptic mention of reptile aliens, Simpson sings, Marijuana, LSD, psilocybin, and DMT they all changed the way I see/But loves the only thing that ever saved my life. Sturgill also points out the insanity of passing laws and throwing supposedly free people in cages for possessing plants and psychedelics. He asks, Tell me how you make illegal something that we all make in our brain?
In the song, Voices he described the hidden hand behind the direction in which society is heading, one in which humanitys future may very well be one of conflagration. Simpson sings Voices behind curtains forked tongues that have no name/They plot their wicked schemes setting fate for all mankind/With evil that can fill Gods pretty skies with clouds that burn and blind.
But it is the song Call To Arms off his new album A Sailors Guide To Earth, that is the most overtly political in Simpsons catalog (performed live on The Daily Showhere, and posted below from KCRW). A rousing anti-war song, Call To Arms goes beyond the general war sucks motif and shows an apparent knowledge of American foreign policy that goes beyond that which even many commentators possess.
The song itself begins with the lines, Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq and Iran/North Korea, tell me where does it end? The fact that the singer recognizes that the United States is indeed at war with Syria, Iran, and North Korea is a perceptive note, particularly in a time when most Americans couldnt find those countries on a map or somehow believe that war itself ended in 2008. Indeed, some reviewers have been confused as to what Simpson is trying to get across, asking the question, Are we really at war with North Korea or Iran? in a snarky way intended to point out what they perceive as Simpsons lack of political understanding. In reality, their comments and rhetorical questions only demonstrate their own ignorance.
Simpson also exposes the nature of the Afghan war or, at least one aspect of it. He sings, Well they sent their sons and daughters off to die/for some war to control the heroin. Again, Simpson is correct. But perhaps he should begin adding a bibliography along with his CDs so the incredibly ignorant commentators and reviewers who puzzle at his bizarre lyrics will be able to at least reference what he is referring to. After all, Afghanistan had nothing to do with heroin, it was 19 hijackers and Saddam Hussein, right?
Simpson, himself a Navy veteran, also lashes out against the idea that military service or blindly following orders is the measure of a true man. Well, son I hope you dont grow up/Believin that youve got to be a puppet to be a man, he sings.
Simpson also exposes the entertainment-obsessed culture, compulsively checking phones, social media, and television to feed their egos while war and the decay of their own culture is visible all around them. They serve up distractions and we eat them with fries/Until the bombs fall out of our fucking skies, says the song, pointing out the obvious that empire cannot help but one day come home and that, eventually, America may come to regret antagonizing the world with war and occupation.
Sturgill Simpson is a much needed breath of fresh air in not only the generally pro-war country scene but also in the music world in general. Unfortunately, at best, the general makeup of American music artists can only manage tired repetitive dissent during Republican administrations and times when the public are already inclined to agree with their positions. In other words, they are able to release these songs when it is artistically safe to do so.
Perhaps most importantly for the measurement of any artist, however, is that not only has Simpson shown a remarkable amount of courage for an artist in 2016, but his songs are actually good. For that reason alone, Simpson has set himself apart from the vast majority of his peers.
I dont place faith in ANYTHING a country singer says anymore. Not since Merle Haggard said in Okie from Muskogee that we dont smoke marijuana in Muskogee. Merle lied he did smoke marijuana. So much for that right-wing hero.
Now all we need to do is find out that this left-winger, Sturgill, is actually a closet neocon. Nothing stupid surprises me anymore especially anything I find in articles posted by Deckard.
Being anti-war doesn't mean he's a leftist you ignorant troll.
Not since Merle Haggard said in Okie from Muskogee that we dont smoke marijuana in Muskogee. Merle lied he did smoke marijuana. So much for that right-wing hero.
Yeah, I bet you cried your widdle eyes out when you found that out. Imagine - demolishing your stereotype that only liberals smoke pot.
Bet you hated the Dixie Chicks too.
Steve Earle, anyone who sings about things you disapprove of.
You really must have narrow taste in music.
What a judgemental (emphasis on "mental") bitter old man you must be.
Truth is treason in the empire of lies. - Ron Paul
Americans who have no experience with, or knowledge of, tyranny believe that only terrorists will experience the unchecked power of the state. They will believe this until it happens to them, or their children, or their friends.
Thank you, but I prefer to use the word: Despised.
Oh - that's right, they were mean to Bush.
You're a real hoot!
Hey, I bet you were one of those sheep who started calling French Fries "Freedom Fries" and thought you were a model American for doing so.
I laughed at idiots like that back then, much in the same way I continue to laugh at you every time you post.
Truth is treason in the empire of lies. - Ron Paul
Americans who have no experience with, or knowledge of, tyranny believe that only terrorists will experience the unchecked power of the state. They will believe this until it happens to them, or their children, or their friends.
Hey, I bet you were one of those sheep who started calling French Fries "Freedom Fries" and thought you were a model American for doing so.
I laughed at idiots like that back then, much in the same way I continue to laugh at you every time you post.
Nope, I have referred to those taters as pommes frites ever since I was stationed outside of Paris in the early fifties when I would sit at the sidewalk cafes on the Champs-Élysées and enjoy snacking.
There are ever so many different types of people who find humor in strange places and your is just a bit odd and extraordinary. Do you have a taste for a dark sense of humor, or maybe the sarcastic slightly offensive kind? Oh, I know you possible thoroughly enjoy the dirty sense of humor, or maybe even the dry humor. But then, you probably laugh at almost everything since you can never understand the normal things in life. But, hey, no one will ever call you boring even through they call you stupid.
As I posted above - I enjoy laughing at pompous authoritarians like you.
Truth is treason in the empire of lies. - Ron Paul
Americans who have no experience with, or knowledge of, tyranny believe that only terrorists will experience the unchecked power of the state. They will believe this until it happens to them, or their children, or their friends.