Libertarian Rock – If You Want Blood, You Got It!

The latest Libertarian Rock Spotify playlist is here! Featuring AC/DC, Aretha Franklin, Bob Dylan, Owen-Glass, Derek Webb, The Stooges, Against Me, Anti-Flag, Green Day, Muse and these:

ArtistSongDetails
PennywiseWTO“Freedom will prevail” – Some libertarians see the World Trade Organization (WTO) as an unnecessary governmental body and a potential threat to national sovereignty. 
Alter BridgeNative SonNative son in a foreign land
Killing JokeWar on FreedomNo more peaceful demonstrations, militarise the police force
Matt BankertSend In the TanksEverything in this song is a true story.

Perhaps most importantly for the metalheads, we have Havok‘s blistering new album “V” in it’s entirety on the playlist. Do you like the year 1986? Like thrash? You will be in heaven listening to “V”. They don’t win any awards for originality (see Slayer or Testament), but that’s ok – they shred faces to bits and do it as well as anyone ever has. Maybe better, because they are also shredding minds with their truth-telling, anti-establishment lyrics.

The Interrupters, TOOL, and Unpleasant Medical Procedures

Cover song: The Interrupters – Liberty

The Interrupters have a straight-forward pop-punk/ska sound with the novelty of a female vocalist and libertarian subject matter. Great things are happening for them, too: they are touring with a few semi-well-known bands called Green Day, Fall Out Boy, and Weezer.

Here is my “Johnny Cash” cover of their song, Liberty:

TOOL – Fear Inoculum

“Washington $%@& DC. This town needs a @#$% enema.” – Maynard James Keenan of Tool the other night before playing the song Ænema.

These TOOL fellows don’t mince words, and they chose their words provocatively. The experience of the TOOL performance recently in Washington DC on their Fear Inoculum tour was a sensory and mental assault of a prog-metal battering ram. The amazing stage effects, the cylindrical video screen that surrounded the performers, the multi-speaker surround-sound PA system distributed throughout the arena all contributed to the amazing night. The disturbing animations on the big screen were a nice compliment – my favorite part was when a flea (or louse?) had an eyeball with squid tentacles emerge from its thorax Alien-style. Of course, the center of it all was the band and their incredible music.

TOOL has something truly unique. There are plenty of other prog-metal bands, but there is only one TOOL. Adam Jones’ chunky, droning guitar riffs and haunting arpeggios and Justin Chancellor’s rhythmic bass riffs serve as the backbone gluing the songs together. Where in typical rock music, the drums serve as the rhythmic backbone, I wonder if this is reversed in TOOL. Though Jones and Chancellor are certainly not slouches in their musicianship, they tend to play simpler, understated, and repetitive progressions throughout the songs. You won’t find any John Petrucci guitar solos here. It is Danny Carey on drums that takes center stage literally as well as musically with his virtuosity and endless flow of improvisation. He is probably the member of the band that lets loose the most and is a constant fixture in the songs. Vocalist Maynard James Keenan is unparalleled for his distinctive, powerful voice, but because the songs tend to have extended instrumental parts, he is not present as often as Carey is.

Whoever the standout member may be, it is safe to say that each musician’s contributions are perfect for what the music needs. The marriage of vocals, bass, guitar and drums in TOOL is such that it doesn’t seem like it could be any other way. Adding another guitarist or keyboardist, or whatever, would actually take away from the musical chemistry they have.

Until the other night, I was only mildly impressed with TOOL’s latest album in about 14 years, Fear Inoculum. It is certainly a standard TOOL “style” and the songs are fine for what they are. However, there didn’t seem to be a stand out song on the album, like Schism or The Pot. The concert has changed my mind, though. Seeing the live performance of several of the tracks felt like that was how they are meant to be heard (and seen). Though I’m quite sure TOOL is anti-religion, I am a believer in Fear Inoculum now. I’d certainly recommend it, with the qualification that it may take you a few listens to really appreciate it.

Don’t forget:

Libertarian Rock – May 2019

It is here – my Libertarian Rock May 2019 playlist.

“Why do we let morons rule the world?”  That is the question starting off the playlist this month.  A very good question, asked by my newly discovered favorite band, Freak Kitchen.  A quirky, yet accessible band from Sweden that have been around since the 90s.  Super-heavy guitars and poppy choruses.  Vertigo-inducing guitar solos.

See below for the track list!

::Song::
::Artist::Album::
::Comments::
Morons
Freak Kitchen • Confusion to the Enemy
Send in the Tanks
Matt Bankert • Send in the Tanks
An underrated, good-looking singer
Mind Ain’t Free
The Last Internationale • Soul on Fire
Succexy
Metric • Old World Underground, Where Are You Now?
Invasion’s so succexy
The Dark Side
Muse • Simulation Theory
Set me free
The Man
The Killers • Wonderful Wonderful
The theme song of many heads of state I know
The Weapon
Rush • Signals
The Doomed
Perfect Circle • Eat The Elephant
Blessed are the gluttonous, may they feast us to famine and war
Take Me Higher
Prophets Of Rage • Prophets Of Rage
Drones!  The sickest funk groove I’ve heard in a while.
Be Chrool To Your Scuel
Twisted Sister • Come Out And Play
A cameo from Alice Cooper. A tribute to public schools.
Ivory Tower
Matthew Sweet • Modern Art
Come down from your ivory tower… a great one for technocrats and central planners
The Persecution of Schaeffer Cox
Jordan Page • The Persecution of Schaeffer Cox
A true, sad story
Zombie Bastards
Weezer • Weezer (Black Album)
We know what you want…sort of the undead zombie state, preying on the living.  A bit of a stretch?  Maybe.  But it’s my playlist.
Been Caught Stealing
Jane’s Addiction • Ritual De Lo Habitual
Taxation is theft, baby.
The Blackout
U2 • Songs Of Experience
Probably a reactionary song to Trump, Brexit, etc.  Without getting into whatever libertarian merits there may actually be to those, the song can be taken generally as giving hope when freedom’s light seems to go out.
Let’s Impeach the President – Live
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young • CSNY/Déjà Vu Live
Amen.  And don’t stop with the president.
It’s Money That I Love
Randy Newman • Born Again
Theme song of the Federal Reserve.
A Gallon of Gas
The Kinks • Low Budget
I Wanna Be Free
The Monkees • The Monkees
Highway 61 Revisited – Live with The Band, Isle Of Wight, 1969
Bob Dylan • Another Self Portrait (1969-1971): The Bootleg Series, Vol. 10
Cryptic poetry, with a theme of a place (Highway 61) where things are disposed of or sacrificed, and illicit actions take place – including the next world war.
Everybody’s Got Something To Hide Except Me And My Monkey
The Beatles • The Beatles (White Album)
As Ron Paul says, the people should have all the privacy and the government should have all the transparency.
You and All of Your Friends
Alice Cooper • Paranormal
Monkey Wrench
Foo Fighters • The Colour And The Shape
I’ll never be your monkey wrench
Slim Pickens Does The Right Thing And Rides The Bomb To Hell
The Offspring • Days Go By
Title Pending
Warehouse One • Light It Up
Please check out Warehouse One – an outstanding punk band with great libertarian themes.
Prisoner of Society
The Living End • The Living End
Not Personal
The Interrupters • Fight the Good Fight
Julie’s Been Working for the Drug Squad
The Clash • Give ‘Em Enough Rope
What’s Mine Is Yours
MxPx • Slowly Going The Way Of The Buffalo
You don’t own me, they’ve abolished slavery
Do The Paranoid Style
Bad Religion • Do The Paranoid Style
Back in the USSR
Dead Kennedys • Live At The Deaf Club
1 Trillion Dollar$
Anti-Flag • For Blood And Empire
Killing Is My Business…And Business Is Good!
Megadeth • Killing Is My Business…And Business Is Good – The Final Kill
Circling the Drain
Havok • Conformicide
Individualism
BackWordz • Veracity
War Princess
Devin Townsend Project • Z²
Please listen to the Z² album.  I think it is Devin’s masterpiece – one of ’em, anyway.
TOTAL STATE MACHINE
KMFDM • HELL YEAH
Ghost Upon a Throne
Leah • The Quest
Prison Song
System Of A Down • Toxicity

Do Russian bots eat salad? – LEAH

I want to take a moment and say thanks to all the new subscribers I have from SpicySallads.com, HeavyMetalTruckWorks.com, and FancyCarnavalMasks.com! These web domains may in fact rank pretty high on www.StopForumSpam.com, but hey, that’s ok. I am the most non-discriminatory guy you will meet. I’m totally fine if my fans are bots, malware, A.I., Spyware, whatever. Each person or virtual person matters to me.

And if you are indeed a Russian bot, please take advantage of my music deal: $5 for 11 songs!!

In the Earbuds: The Quest by LEAH

Leah is a remarkably unique artist in several ways, and not just in her Celtic folk metal sound. She exists entirely independent of the record industry, has enough business prowess to make a comfortable living off music from her home without touring, and still finding the time to be a married, home-schooling mother of five.

On her latest album, The Quest, the “Heavy Metal Enya” went in to the recording studio and cranked the “MAJESTY” knob on everything. It is vast, epic, experimental, and breath-taking. It’s a bit like if Iron Maiden got 8-string guitars and recorded the Lord of the Rings soundtrack with Arwen on lead vocals. This album has more of a symphonic feel then some of her prior work, if that’s possible. It seems that the heavy guitars are lower in the mix to give deference to the non-heavy metal instruments: pipes, flute, keyboards, saz, and oud. Leah’s characteristically gentle voice blends well with the array of instruments, and the melodies are among her best. But don’t worry metalheads: there are still some great scalp-igniting moments, such as the guitar solo on “The Edge of Your Sword”.

This is a beefy sound mix. The first song is called the Quest. It contains 131 instrument tracks, if that gives you an idea at how lush the aural assault is. More background on the recording can be found in the “making of” video.

I commend this album to you. If you like epic metal/rock and it doesn’t grab you right away, give it another listen. There is so much packed in here that it takes a while to absorb it all. You’ll be glad you did.

Things To Come

  • A Matt Bankert Christmas song??
  • A music video cover of the Interrupters
  • Two brand new studio songs that will be done sometime before the world ends! Unless that is next week

Sons With Guns

My acoustic demo of “I Don’t Care” is now on YouTube:

I’d love to hear what you think!

In the Earbuds: “The Similitude of a Dream” by Neal Morse Band

As I listened to the first album I’ve heard with Neal Morse (formerly of prog rock band Spock’s Beard) on it, I thought, What makes a good rock opera?

  • Gratuitous background vocals
  • Multiple lead vocalists
  • Borderless songs
  • An overture
  • Dream Theater cofounder Mike Portnoy on drums
  • Volcanic guitar solos
  • Two discs
  • Repeated musical themes and melodies
  • A concept from a centuries-old Christian novel

The Similitude of a Dream delivers all of those things and much more. Based on the story from John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress, it follows the protagonist Christian in his journey from the City of Destruction to the Celestial City. Along the way he meets several characters that encourage, mock, confront, betray, or battle him (a dragon!).

The lyrics are fine in most places, and weak in a few others (“Satan’s talking such smack”). The musical quality is off the charts. Organ-heavy prog rock with a lot of 70’s influence, which occasional chunky metal diversions. Each band member is a virtuoso in his own right, and often on more than one instrument. Highlights include “City of Destruction” (a killer Black Sabbath riff and soaring melody), “The Man in the Iron Cage” (sort of a Black Dog Jr. with a great hook), and “Draw the Line” (a smashing hard rock progression). The effort, imagination, and skill that went into this album bazookas your face. And it looks like more is around the corner in 2019 with their next double album, “The Great Adventure.”

I was going to add a few more things, but I just went on and on about Neal Morse. Next time!

Matt’s Museletter: Thrice is Nice

Recently, THRICE rocked the Fillmore in Silver Spring, MD. Man, these guys are pushing 40 and still brought the metal/rock/hardcore/indie/punk. It was a great set list, voted on by fans. It spanned their almost 20 year and 20 genre career.

Their new album “Palms” is a great follow-up to their prior “reunion” album, “To Be Everywhere Is To Be Nowhere.” A similar style with a baritone-tinged hard rock flavor (the Grey) while incorporating lighter, airy moments that would fit on an indie rock playlist (Just Breathe). Definitely worth a listen.

Have 5 Big Ones Burning a Hole in Your Pocket?

Don’t let your pants catch fire – my music is on sale!

Eleven songs at a low price!

Deep Thoughts

Mislabelled?

Bagels are to donuts what raisins are to chocolate chips.

https://Twitter.com/sonicbankert

The Top 10 Libertarian Rock Bands

Top 10 Lib Thumbnail[By the way, I have a NEW SONG out! If you like rock, I think you’ll like it. And like most normal people, you would probably like a free song.  To do so, subscribe to Matt’s Museletter below and get more great articles like this one.]

When one sets out to compile a list like the Top Ten Libertarian Rock Bands, one is faced with a few challenges:

  1. Rock purists will object and say, “Hey, they’re not libertarian!” because most rock purists balk at libertarian ideas.
  2. Libertarian purists will object and say, “Hey, they’re not libertarian!” because they refuse to touch with a ten-foot pole anything that could remotely violate the non-aggression principle.
  3. There simply aren’t many outspoken libertarians in mainstream rock today.

My response is that sometimes people are libertarian by accident.  Wasn’t rock n’ roll born in an anti-establishment, anti-authority environment?  Even many leftist rock bands (i.e., nearly all rock bands) produce a lot of individual songs that could be libertarian-sympathetic, whether they are anti-war or anti-authority.

With that said, these are the top 10 libertarian rock bands, in no particular order.

1. Rush

The classic case of a libertarian band is Rush, whose influence and popularity is hard to overstate.  Rush are prog-rock royalty.  It’s hard to believe that their immense, progressive sound and musical virtuosity is produced by a mere three men.

Not only has Rush’s 40 year career made them a highly venerated rock band in general, but the main lyricist and octopus drummer, Neil Peart, was often inspired by the great classical liberal novelist, philosopher, and left-wing punching bag Ayn Rand.  That fact is apparent on several Rush songs such as The Trees (an allegory of smaller trees complaining about larger trees simply for being larger and hogging all the light), A Farewell to Kings (fairly self-explanatory), 2112 (an epic story of a dystopian future of absolute rule), Anthem (the same title as a Rand novella), and the hit Tom Sawyer (paints a picture of a rugged, Randian individualist).

2. Muse

The British-born Muse is one of the freshest, most popular art rock bands making music today.  They share several things with Rush: the same band member count, a mono-syllabic quadruple character name, as well as an affinity for “progressive” song-writing.  In addition, Muse adds a healthy dose of piano, synthesizer, pop-style melodies, and Black Sabbath-esque metal/hard rock guitar riffs.

Muse lyrics tend to be highly skeptical and critical of the established powers.  Lead singer Matthew Bellamy likes Henry George (a sort of Marxist on land-ownership, but libertarian on everything else) and “left-libertarianism”.

Looking at their music catalog, a non-aggression principle fan could find plenty with which to identify.  The 2006 album “Black Holes and Revelations” opens with a not-so-subtle attack on a political figure entitled Take a Bow.  Others like Exo-Politics, Assassin, and Knights of Cydonia have subversive/individual liberty themes.

The political rebellion increases on subsequent albums the Resistance and the 2nd Law (see the Uprising, Resistance, and Supremacy).

When we finally come to the album Drones in 2015, the civil disobedience is at fever pitch.  The album’s theme “drones” applies not only to the controversial unmanned aircraft used by the US military, but also to the idea that the average citizen or soldier could become an unthinking shell, doing whatever they’re told.  See songs like Reapers and Psycho.

In 2022, Muse is putting out new music, and it seems that after the COVID pandemic, they are as ornery as ever, on songs like Compliance, and Will of the People.

3. The Kinks

You may be thinking, The Kinks?  The “You Really Got Me” band from the 60s?  That’s right, the Kinks.  It’s a little known fact that “You Really Got Me” is a subtle ode to overzealous police arrests.  While that is actually not true at all, there is a lot more to the Kinks than their biggest hit.

Much of the Kinks’ catalog is in fact dedicated to decrying the initiation of force, the welfare state, clandestine spying, or other big government woes.  There is perhaps no better example of this than “20th Century Man” on the 1971 album Muswell Hillbillies. Front-man and songwriter Ray Davies sings:

I was born in a welfare state fueled by bureaucracy

Controlled by civil servants and people dressed in grey

Got no privacy, got no liberty

‘Cause the 20th century people took it all away from me

And this was 1971.  Oh Ray, if you could see us now.  Actually, he can.  He is still living and still making music.  Hm, funny.  Anyway, there are some other libertarian gems on Muswell Hillbillies such as Acute Schizophrenia Paranoia Blues, where Ray’s paranoia causes him to worry greatly – about things that are kinda true; and Here Come the People In Grey, a tribute to intrusive government workers.

Some other standout tracks from the Kinks on this subject would be:

  • Brainwashed, sung to a retired World War I vet who has grown dependent on and trusting of the powers that be
  • Some Mother’s Son, a beautiful, tragic ballad about men dying in war
  • Live Life, an exhortation to keep cool and do your own thing in spite of political upheaval and media sensationalism
  • Got To Be Free, an expression of longing to, well, be free

4. BackWordz

Though BackWordz is the newest band on this list, they are probably also the most outspoken and plainly libertarian.  Their mission is a sort of libertarian evangelization through the vehicle of Linkin Park-esque metal drenched in hip hop.  They are no joke, as their debut album “Veracity” charted at number 2 on the Billboard Heatseekers chart.  This is remarkable for a couple reasons. The first is the fact they are an independent artist with no major label backing.  Another reason is that they are not the typical anger-infused, chest-beating hard rock band – as a sampling of their song titles shows:

  • Individualism, railing against collectivism and affirming the right of secession
  • Self-Ownership, criticizing the idea that the State can save us
  • Praxeology, a term developed by libertarian super-hero Ludwig von Mises, is the study of human action – has any rock band ever had Ludwig von Mises as the subject of a song?
  • Statism says: “I’m on a life mission to abolish all the government”
  • Democracy Sucks, the title says it all

One of the most radical bands to come out in a while, I look forward to seeing where BackWordz goes. In 2022, they are on the verge of releasing new material. Their front-man, Eric July, is a podcaster and political commentator on the Blaze.  They have potential to hugely expand their audience with their high-quality production and song-writing.  Let the songs get a listener’s blood pumping first and once the lyrics start the sink in, perhaps some minds can be changed.

 

5. Alice Cooper

Alice Cooper is the father (not mother) of shock rock.  As his band was developing in the late 60s, Alice says:

…it was quite obvious that rock was full of idols and heroes, but there were no villains. I couldn’t find a villain in the bunch. I thought, ‘If nobody wants to play Captain Hook, I do!’

Not only did Alice Cooper cause parents with conservative values heartburn about his affinity for rebellion, horror film lore, and a creepy stage show, he might well also cause statists alarm.

He has an anti-political streak and says

I hate politics with a passion…I know people incorporate politics into rock n’ roll – and I think that the antithesis of rock n’ roll is politics. That would be like me singing the Dow Jones report.

He elsewhere says:

“If you’re listening to a rock star in order to get your information on who to vote for, you’re a bigger moron than they are. Why are we rock stars? Because we’re morons. We sleep all day, we play music at night and very rarely do we sit around reading the Washington Journal.”

(Note: it’s a separate question whether or not the Washington Journal contains good ideas.)  Not only does he want his music free of politics, but he has several gems that outright attack and lampoon politicians and the whole process.  His latest album “Paranormal” especially has some politically skeptical tracks, something any libertarian could appreciate.  Some standout songs would be:

  • Elected, about a pompous spotlight-phile running for office
  • Rats, could be how the elites and rulers see the populace
  • Lock Me Up, a taunt to those who don’t like what Alice has to say: “You can take my head and cut it off but you ain’t gonna change my mind”
  • Freedom, an anti-authority anthem for freedom of expression
  • Private Public Breakdown, about a politician who has lost his grip of reality (soooo, all politicians; Alice possibly has Donald Trump in mind)

6. The Interrupters

Remember the late 90s?  The Mighty Mighty Bosstones were skanking all over the radio, welfare reform had been achieved, and the President of the US declared that the era of big government was over.  Congress actually passed a “balanced” budget. The correlation between ska/punk and smaller government is undeniable.  Now, that connection has reemerged in the form of the female-fronted punk band, the Interrupters.

There is a very real chance that the Interrupters have a Ron Paul sticker somewhere on their gear, because their front woman, Aimee Allen, actually wrote Ron Paul’s presidential campaign song.  As you’d expect from someone with such good taste in candidates, many of the Interrupters songs center on the ideas of liberty.

Not only are the lyrics libertarian-friendly, but the songs are just plain good songs.  Chuck Berry style guitar leads overlay no-frills punk rock songwriting with rich vocal harmonies.  The melodies and progressions are so catchy, the only way your foot won’t be tapping along is if it is tied down by some oppressive police state.  Some of my favorites are:

  • Liberty, a pretty straightforward lament about the rights we are losing
  • Babylon, uses biblical imagery, encouraging listeners to “rebel against the kings of Babylon” – even mentions money-printing to the delight of Austrians everywhere
  • Can’t Be Trusted, celebrating the reasons for us not to trust the authorities
  • Take Back the Power, a pretty transparent message
  • Outrage, about the tendency of people nowadays to be constantly outraged about something, anything

7. Megadeth

One of the “Big Four” in thrash metal, Megadeth are heavy metal titans who have been head-banging since 1983.  Heavy metal is a genre whose imagery is rife with libertarian sympathies: oppressive tyrants, bloody warfare, rebellion against the ruling powers, and on and on.  Megadeth takes the prize for anti-state themes in their songs, in spite of frontman and former Rick Santorum endorser Dave Mustaine being politically nonsensical sometimes. (They also take the prize for “Band Name Most Likely Created By A Middle Schooler.”)  If we can look past the Santorum misstep, Dave comes sort of close to embracing libertarianism: “I probably [am] a lot more along the lines of what a Libertarian is”.

The title track of “Peace Sells…But Who’s Buying?” is a metal classic, and although it comes short of chucking the whole state apparatus, it raises some pertinent questions:

What do you mean I couldn’t be the president of the United States of America?  Tell me something.  It’s still “We the people” RIGHT?

Holy Wars decries wars of religion in which “brother kills brother.”  Symphony of Destruction chillingly warns of giving a dictator absolute control:

Take a mortal man, put him in control.  Watch him become a god, watch peoples’ heads-a-roll.

Dave and co. have really nailed it, though, on their most recent Grammy-winning album, Dystopia.  Track after track describe a tyrannical government coupled with a decaying society.  In addition, it’s right up there with Megadeth’s best albums.  The title track is about what you’d think, and includes the line “What you don’t know, the legend goes, can’t hurt you.  If you only want to live and die in a cage.”  Perhaps my favorite is The Emperor, a snarling punk outcry against the man in charge, pointing out what should be obvious (no clothes).

8. NOFX

Finding a punk band that appreciates private property is tough.  There are many who are great on criticizing the U.S. war machine (Anti-Flag, Bad Religion) or presidents with the last name Bush (Green Day).  These are noble things to be sure.  Sadly, there just are not any major punk bands that haven’t drunk the socialist Kool Aid (red Kool Aid, presumably).  NOFX is not too different in that respect.  However, they are right on several key issues: foreign policy (see We March To The Beat Of Indifferent Drum), freedom of expression (see Separation of Church and Skate), and freedom of speech (see Freedumb).  What sets NOFX over the top is their tribute to actual real libertarianism, The Plan.  In it they sing:

Call us libertarian, cause we do as we please
Don’t need fear, or force, or farce to know morality
Morals aren’t a substance you can shove in someone’s ear
They’re basically a byproduct of, a mind thinking clear

Having come up in the 90s, it’s also refreshing that they don’t appear to buy into today’s identity politics.  Their songs are littered with rude, locker room humor, and they poke fun at all sorts of different demographics.  While this may cause some to take offense, at least NOFX do not advocate locking people in prison just for speaking.  Indeed, if the Social Justice Warriors ever take over (Lord, please no), expect to see NOFX albums at the top of the burn pile.

9. Thrice

Thrice has wandered the back alleys between the “metalcore”, “post-hardcore”, and “indie rock” sub-genres since 1998, and still going strong at the time of this writing. In a Thrice song, you can’t be sure if you might hear screaming, beautiful singing, acoustic guitar, keyboards, or face melting metal licks.  Themes of personal brokenness, relational challenges, theology, social evils, and distrust of the status quo fill lyricist/frontman Dustin Kensrue’s lyrics.  Kensrue doesn’t seem to embrace a particular political ideology, but admits “I would align with a fair amount of Libertarian stuff at times.

You may be able to guess this from songs like “Blood on the Sand“, a condemnation of the US wars in the Middle East or “Under a Killing Moon“, a song about totalitarian leadership in search of “witches to burn.”  “Doublespeak” examines the tendency of people to not want to know the truth about “who pulls the strings.”  “Black Honey” shows the folly and futility of wars in the Middle East, comparing the US government to someone slapping a swarm of bees and wondering why they get stung.  “The Earth Will Shake” is an awesome, skull-pounding chain-gang spiritual about prisoners longing for freedom – and if the earthquake doesn’t topple the prison walls, this song will.

10. Bob Dylan

It would probably be folly to label Bob Dylan “libertarian,” as he is generally impossible to label. Dylan has unquestionably shaped popular music since the 60s.  A few years after he started playing folk, he exchanged his acoustic guitar for an electric guitar and started accompanying his beautiful, poetic, cryptic lyrics with rock music.  Outrage from many of his folk fans followed.  However, having heard this new sound, it occurred to the Beatles and every other rock band at the time that their songs didn’t have to all be about puppy love.  Dylan has taken so many forked roads in his career that no one (and perhaps not even he) can guess where he will go next.

Maybe it’s that whole “I do what I want” attitude that contributes to the streaks of liberty found in many of his songs.  Though his protest songs from the 60s are usually associated with the left, which was doing most of the protesting, libertarians can still latch on to:

  • Masters of War, a bleak condemnation of war profiteers
  • With God on Our Side, exposes the inconsistency of how cultures justify war, and who we choose for enemies and allies
  • Blowin’ in the Wind, his classic, hit song that asks questions like “How many roads must a man walk down before you call him a man?” and “How many deaths will it take ’til he knows that too many people have died?”
  • Rainy Day Women #12 & 35, a lament about how people often want to “stone you” for minding your own business and doing your own thing
  • Man of Peace, a scathing blast at politicians and people in power: “Sometimes Satan comes as a man of peace.”
  • I Shall Be Released, a beautiful folk/gospel ballad of a prisoner looking forward in hope to his freedom

Honorable Mentions

It’s a good thing that not all of the contenders would fit in a group of 10 – we need more libertarian artists!  So here are some honorable mentions:

LEAH, an independent artist who plays fantasy/celtic influenced metal.  She has a few songs that hint at her own personal beliefs, which are libertarian.

Tatiana Moroz is a singer/songwriter with a beautiful voice who worked with the Ron Paul presidential campaigns and is active in the cryptocurrency community.

Jordan Page is a singer/songwriter who campaigned with Ron Paul.  A hard rock sound and solid, liberty-themed lyrics.

Anti-Flag is a politically radical punk band – great on anti-war and government oppression themes, but not so great on private property.  Check out “Die For Your Government” or “911 For Peace.”

Incubus is a massively popular alternative rock band who rose to fame in the 90s.  Song themes include hubris in political leaders and thinking for yourself.

Thrash metal is back, and Havok brings the liberty message along with copious amounts of hair banging around.  Give a listen to “Give Me Liberty…Or Give Me Death.”

My ego is not so great that I would dream of being near the top 10, but if you’d like to check out my own libertarian music, my song “In December” could be a good start.

 

Links – The Sound of Liberty

Want to sample these bands? Take a gander at this Spotify playlist: Top 10 Libertarian Rock Bands.

Or this visual, complimentary YouTube playlist:

Want more articles like this but probably shorter?  Subscribe to Matt’s Museletter and get regular updates!  You’ll also get a free song!

 
Facebook concert 6/2018

$5 for 5 Thousand Seconds of Rock – Russian Hacking Thwarted

For a limited time only (technically, all time is limited if you read Stephen Hawking – or the Bible), you can get all of my music for only $5!!

CLICK ON THIS TO SAVE

And full disclosure, the total runtime of the music is less than 5,000 seconds, but I needed that continuity for the subject line.

Facebook Live Concert – No Longer Live

If you for some reason missed my Facebook concert the other day, you’ll be pleased to know that you can still watch the video right here:

For those of you that watched, I really apologize for the technically difficulties!  The video stream froze up at various points and the video cut off when I was just beginning “Fight Your Programming.”  The Russian hackers might have thought they won, but little did they know I already recorded “Fight Your Programming” as a sound check earlier on!  You can watch that by clicking here! USA!!

And I still had more to do!  The last song, a No Picnic cover called “Last Year’s Girlfriend” can be seen here.

Much thanks to all who tuned in and to all who might take a gander at the above videos!

In the Eardrums and Eyeballs: U2 Experience + Innocence Tour

I had the pleasure of seeing U2 for the first time back on June 18 in Washington DC at the Capital One Arena. I thought I would wait until the band members were almost 60 and had been making music for nearly 40 years. But man, it was worth the wait. Touring off their latest album, a strong one, it was everything a concert goer might have hoped for and more: stunning special effects, fantastic performances, and a great setlist.

The concert rig included a standard looking stage connected to a smaller “B” stage by a long “catwalk.”  Suspended above and perpendicular to the catwalk was a double-pane projection screen, showing images to the audience on either side of the walk.  A few of the songs were performed by the band on the B stage in a closer-knit fashion than the main stage.  Then the concertgoers could realize the B stage itself lit to life as “screen,” displaying images and patterns underneath the band.

The performances were spot on: Bono’s voice was as strong as ever, the Edge ruled on his collection of axes, Adam Clayton coolly meandered through his bass lines, and Larry pounded his drum set mercilessly.  The sound mix was great and included some studio overdubs to fill out the sound, but not in a contrived way.  The band still rocked on the stripped-down songs sans overdubs.

They played with some of the arrangements of their songs, like a more skeletal version of Sunday, Bloody Sunday, where Larry Mullins played only a snare drum, walking around the catwalk in a sort of ominous marching fashion.  The performance of their new song, “You’re the Best Thing About Me,” was acoustic, and quite nice, along with “Staring at the Sun.”  Having just toured on a celebration of “The Joshua Tree,” where they played the album beginning to end, they played no songs from it.  That made me sad, but that only meant there was more room for other great songs, like “City of Blinding Lights” and “Until the End of The World”.

The rumors I’ve heard about U2 concerts are true.  Go see them if you get the chance.

What’s With These Homies Dissin’ My Girl?

In the Earbuds: the Blue Album by Weezer

A quintessential album from the 90s.  No discussion of 90’s alternative music could be complete if it doesn’t include Weezer’s self-titled mono-colored debut album from 1994.  Front man and lead songwriter Rivers Cuomo swirled together his loves for Kiss, Slayer, Nirvana’s Nevermind (1991), and apparently the Cars (producer Ric Ocasek’s band) to write these hard rocking gems with great pop hooks.

The single “Buddy Holly” sounds like a poseur using hip hop lingo with a 50’s bebop feel to tell the tale of a young man bemoaning how his girl is getting “dissed.” Here is my humble tribute:

The debut single “Undone (The Sweater Song)” uses grunge to chronicle a relationship unravelling – and Cuomo later admitted that he accidentally ripped off Metallica’s “Sanitarium”. The heavy-chorused “Say It Ain’t So” gets real, talking about the destruction of alcoholism in the family. One of my favorites, “Holiday,” has that classic 3/4 time doo-wop beat underneath an anthemic chorus and sings about getting away from it all, complete with a Jack Kerouac reference. “In the Garage” describes a late-adolescent inner sanctum where he can find refuge from teenage ills.

The influence this album had on a generation of shoe-gazing awkward teenagers (including those that would go on to form emo bands) is inestimable. Please do yourself a favor and get a copy of the Blue album. From there you can move on to the other colors of the Weezer rainbow: Green, Red, and White.

Matt’s Museletter: Now With 100% More FUN!

In the Earbuds: 100% Fun by Matthew Sweet

Rarely has there been an album title that better describes the contents. Matthew Sweet’s 100% Fun is a classic 90s guitar pop album, brimming over with head-bobbing catchiness.

There is something sublime to me about the lead track and radio hit, “Sick of Myself” – something about the catchy melody, bare-bones garage rock, and the grungy power chords perfectly aligns to make it one of my favorite songs ever. I can’t really explain it. The manic, zany guitar soloing causes facial ignition. The ending is really a pseudo-ending – just when you think it’s over (and maybe the band in the studio really thought it was over), Sweet starts it back up again. And again.

Here is my tribute to Sick of Myself:

Producer Brendan O’Brien brought some alternative rock heaviness to the album, especially on songs like Super Baby, Giving It Back, and Lost My Mind. While Sweet loves to rock, he primarily wants to craft personal, emotive songs, and this is apparent on the calmer ballads I Almost Forgot and Fog Moon. Sure, there’s a time to vent our angst and frustration with life as on O’Brien’s other producing work from that era: Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, Rage Against the Machine, etc. Thanks, though, to Matthew Sweet for having some fun. In the middle of the alternative/grunge age of despair, he found a moment of brightness.