POLLIN' for nothing and yer chicks for free - Dire Straits - BROTHERS IN ARMS

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There's a blank steel-y nothingness to "so far away" that I find vaguely conpelling

brimstead, Wednesday, 9 May 2018 19:38 (five years ago) link

compelling

brimstead, Wednesday, 9 May 2018 19:38 (five years ago) link

I have no fondness for "Walk of Life," though my sister's longtime hatred of it might have colored my reaction.

geoffreyess, Wednesday, 9 May 2018 20:57 (five years ago) link

There's a blank steel-y nothingness to "so far away" that I find vaguely conpelling

― brimstead,

otm

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 9 May 2018 21:02 (five years ago) link

Alfred's baseball theory checks out, this was a song that was used as bumper music back in the corny '80s and even into the '90s on the local Cubs broadcasts (along w/Centerfield and, uh, a Beach Boys re-recording):

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbara_Ann

In 1987, the group re-recorded the song as "Here Come the Cubs" with re-written lyrics about the Chicago Cubs.[3] It became the team's official theme that year, replacing "Go, Cubs, Go".[4]

omar little, Wednesday, 9 May 2018 21:15 (five years ago) link

Maybe not the best place to post this, but whatever. Heard this song on classic rock radio today at work, and noticed that they bleeped the word "faggot." My immediate reaction, at least after noticing it (as this is a song I would otherwise not notice), was "whatever, no one needs to hear that stupid fucking word." But then I started to think about what a hollow gesture it is for the station to censor a lyric in a song that literally every person has already heard a million times. I tried to imagine any kind of person I know--queer or otherwise--feeling better, or safer, hearing that word omitted, and I could not think of a single example. I imagine the sudden omission of the word after decades of hearing it on radio and MTV could potentially alienate and even incense the core classic rock radio demographic--and maybe that alone is a good thing, I dunno--but is there a brain on Earth that does not automatically mentally fill in the blank when that verse comes up?

Don't get me wrong: I am very happy we live during a time in which we are beginning to more carefully consider the way words like "faggot" are hurtful while at the same time no longer bleeping Tom Petty singing about "roll(ing) another joint" or Pink Floyd singing about "goody goody bullshit." But something about this gesture seemed insincere to me, like a pandering concession to something that has nothing to do with social justice (and not just because Knopfler is writing not as himself but "in character," which is a cop out defense I am tired of hearing).

Does the word "faggot" in "Money For Nothing" bother you? I ask about this song in particular simply because it is so ubiquitous, and I have literally never heard a person in real life question the use of the word in this song. (I believe there are other threads to discuss similar slurs in songs by X and The Fall and Patti Smith and...)

Paul Ponzi, Tuesday, 15 May 2018 20:54 (five years ago) link


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