TPMDC

Stop The Music! Artists Demand GOPers Quit Playing Their Hits


(Clockwise from top left) Former President Ronald Reagan, Bruce Springsteen, Rep. John Hall (D-NY), Sen. John McCain (R-AZ)

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If stereotypes held true, you would think that the Republicans would be the ones telling folks to turn that blasted music down. But this year -- and indeed in many past election cycles -- it's the GOP that has been attracting cease-and-desist letters for pilfering music against the artists' wishes. So let's take a look at some of the more notable GOP music fails from this cycle, and cycles past.

Senate candidate Chuck DeVore (R-CA) got burned for using for using altered-lyric version of Don Henley's "The Boys of Summer" and "All She Wants To Do Is Dance" for his campaign's Web ads. David Byrne is suing Gov. Charlie Crist (I-FL) for using "Road To Nowhere" in a Web ad during his previous Republican Senate primary fight, and of course, as we reported yesterday, Rush cut to the chase and told Senate nominee Rand Paul (R-KY) to stop playing "Tom Sawyer" and "The Spirit of Radio."

The Orleans song "Still The One" has a special place in politics as it has been used not once without the band's permission, but twice -- and the first instance contributed to its author's entrance into national politics. In 2004, the Bush campaign used the song at a rally. As the song's main author, John Hall, told MSNBC in 2008: "George Bush was busy campaigning on an 'ownership society,' yet never asked me, the band, or the publishers for permission." Hall and other stakeholders in the song quickly sent a cease-and-desist letter, and the Bush campaign dropped the song.

In 2006, Hall went on to be elected to Congress as a Democrat, defeating an incumbent Republican -- an event that was spurred in part by his experience from 2004. "It was one of the things that got him even madder," Hall press secretary Tom Staudter told TPMDC. And then in 2008, the Republicans used the song yet again, this time the ill-fated John McCain campaign. "This is yet another example of John McCain not learning anything from George Bush's mistakes," Hall told MSNBC, also adding: "The only one John McCain is Still the One for is George Bush."

But that was only the tip of the iceberg for the McCain campaign -- which was practically a walking Limewire setup. Jackson Browne also sued it for using his song "Running On Empty" in an ad, for which the two sides later reached an out-of-court settlement. Van Halen objected to McCain's use of their song "Right Now" at a rally. The Wilson sisters from Heart strenuously objected to his campaign's use of "Barracuda" to promote Sarah Palin. And finally, the McCain campaign used "Pink Houses" and "Our Country" by John Mellencamp, who sent a letter demanding that they stop.

Mellencamp had already been ripped off by the Bush campaign back in 2000, when they used "R.O.C.K. In The USA." He asked them to stop -- but that wasn't the end of it. "They said OK, and then used it anyway," Mellencamp told the Indianapolis Star, pointing out that the Bush campaign only stopped after the national media made fun of them for it. "I think they kind of said, 'Oh, this isn't playing the way we thought it would.' So I think they quit using it -- I think." (The Indianapolis Star, September 3, 2000, via Nexis.)

The Bush campaign also used the Tom Petty song "I Won't Back Down," and the Sting tune "Brand New Day" -- and was told in each case to stop. Randall Wixen, the publisher of "I Won't Back Down," told the Bush camp to stop after being asked to do so by Petty's management, saying that the use of the song "creates, either intentionally or unintentionally, the impression that ... [the Bush] campaign have been endorsed by Tom Petty, which is not true."

Four years earlier, the Bob Dole campaign was threatened with a lawsuit for its rewrite of the 1960s soul classic, "Soul Man," turning it into "Dole Man," much to the chagrin of the song's publishers at Rondor Music International. The campaign agreed to stop using the jingle, as the Chicago Tribune reported in September 1996: "Rondor announced on Tuesday that it had warned the Dole/Kemp campaign it could be held liable for damages of $100,000 for each unauthorized use of the song, plus legal costs, if a satisfactory settlement was not reached."

Perhaps the most famous music fail was President Ronald Reagan's invocation during his 1984 re-election campaign of Bruce Springsteen -- Reagan did not actually play Springsteen's music, but tied his brand to the Boss's in a speech. "America's future rests in a thousand dreams inside your hearts," Reagan said. "It rests in the message of hope in songs of a man so many young American's admire: New Jersey's own Bruce Springsteen. And helping you make those dreams come true is what this job of mine is all about."

Springsteen fired back by declaring at a concert that he doubted Reagan ever listened to the "Nebraska" album. Then the Democrats tried to claim Springsteen's support, only to have the Boss make it clear he was not endorsing anybody. (He later hit the campaign trail for John Kerry in 2004, and Barack Obama in 2008.)

Another music fail by the Reagan campaign involved their unsuccessful attempt to play John Mellencamp's "Pink Houses," with its seemingly patriotic refrain, "ain't that America" -- and which is actually a cry of protest against a world of haves and have-nots. The Reagan campaign never ended up playing it, though -- unlike the Bush and McCain campaigns, they dutifully sought Mellencamp's permission, which the left-wing rocker refused. Mellencamp commented on the event in 1986, telling Newsweek: "Ronald Reagan appeals to people's emotions, and not to logic. That's what a guy in a rock-and-roll band does. Besides, if a dumb kid from Indiana can come from nowhere and have a hit record, it can happen to anybody. Isn't that what America is all about? That's what Reagan wants to represent. But that's not logical. That's not real."

Comments (73) | Join the Conversation!

Recommend Recommend (2)

June 7, 2010 10:05 AM   

They can play all the Ted Nugent and Lee Greenwood tunes they want. You'd think they'd be happy with that.

They've even got Charlies Daniels and Wynonna Judd on their side. What more could they ask for?

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kp

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June 7, 2010 10:49 AM    in reply to FawkesFOX

Stranglehold does feel like a more appropriate soundtrack for Republican governance.

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June 7, 2010 12:29 PM    in reply to kp

Or perhaps "Stormtroopin'". Har!

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June 7, 2010 12:55 PM    in reply to miguelitoh2o

...if South Carolina is any example of the essence of real Republican politics, "The Call of the Wild" should be playing at every Party party.

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June 7, 2010 12:56 PM    in reply to JEP07

maybe the old MMS used it for their parties?

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June 7, 2010 5:55 PM    in reply to FawkesFOX

These days Charlie Daniels alters the lyrics to his ubiquitous "Long-Haired Country Boy" from "...but I will take another toke," to "but I will tell another joke."

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June 9, 2010 10:20 AM    in reply to Landru

Yeah Charlie has become a cartoon of the persona that made him rich and famous.

And his commercial showing him scratching his fiddle is truly sad - the man needs to retire.

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June 7, 2010 10:22 AM   

So what you're saying is that -- as with the military-record law Orrin Hatch proposed -- if the world were the way the GOP claims to want it, a lot of republicans would be in jail.

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June 7, 2010 12:43 PM    in reply to paulw

This yet another example of Reppublicans thinking that they are above the law, as do their lies.

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June 7, 2010 3:39 PM    in reply to paulw

You're forgetting, IOKIYAR.

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June 7, 2010 10:27 AM   

Quick edit notes:

"Springsteen," not "Springstein," and "All She Wants To Do Is Dance," not "She Just Wants To Dance."

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June 7, 2010 10:35 AM   

From a list of Republican Rock Stars I came across, it would seem Republicans don't have a lot of choices if they want to play music from musicians who are ideologically sympathetic to them.

Republicans can always use this nugget from one of their own if liberal musicians issue cease and desist letters:

"Well, you can yank me and you can crank me,
but don't you wake up and don't you try to thank me."

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June 7, 2010 10:41 AM   

Springsteen friggin' rules.

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June 7, 2010 1:57 PM    in reply to Hey Obama - Get in the Fight!!

Beck has no problem with the Republicans playing "Loser" during all their rallies.

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June 7, 2010 10:48 AM   

How dare you write a piece like this without a "both sides are equally wrong" narrative? I demand that you go back and manufacture some controversy where a Democratic candidate for city council used a Ted Nugent song.

If you can't get this fair and balanced thing down pat, I don't think TPM can ever be a respected member of the national media!

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June 7, 2010 11:17 AM   

Stop bellyaching, you "radical" rock-stars.

Take the bastards to court. Win some cash. Donate the cash to people who run against the bastards.

Rinse, repeat.

It will then stop. Trust me.

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June 7, 2010 11:19 AM   

All the great musicians are lefties. Who do the Republicans have to choose from on their side?

Ted Nugent?

Try using "Cat Scratch Fever" in a campaign!

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June 7, 2010 11:53 AM    in reply to alyoshakaramazov

They might have to alter the lyrics a bit to get it to work . . .
"Foot tap fever . . . "

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June 7, 2010 1:03 PM    in reply to mcrose68

...careful, those Mormons start tapping their feet, and it's a SIN!

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June 7, 2010 1:01 PM    in reply to alyoshakaramazov

...for the South Carolina governor's race, it might be appropriate...

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June 8, 2010 12:52 AM    in reply to alyoshakaramazov

You know better than that! Lots of them are right-handed. ;-)

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June 7, 2010 11:24 AM   

So much for private property rights as regards intellectual property. The Rs care deeply about private property rights as long as its their property, or that of their contributors. The rest of us can drop dead from oil spills and such.

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June 7, 2010 11:50 AM   

This illustrates perfectly how intellectually bankrupt the Rethuglicans are -- and have been for the past 30 years. Lie, steal, get 50.1 percent of the vote on election day and screw everybody but the top 1 percent the rest of the time.

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June 7, 2010 12:04 PM   

Really? Rand Paul was using The Spirit of Radio? Good for Rush, and the other artists, who say no. And btw, The Spirit of Radio is one of the most scathing anti-corporate music songs ever written. Why the self described libertarian like Paul would use it is beyond me...

Begin the day with a friendly voice
A companion unobtrusive
Plays the song that's so elusive
And the magic music makes your morning mood

Off on your way, hit the open road
There is magic at your fingers
For the Spirit ever lingers
Undemanding contact in your happy solitude

[Chorus:]
Invisible airwaves crackle with life
Bright antennae bristle with the energy
Emotional feedback on timeless wavelength
Bearing a gift beyond price, almost free

All this machinery making modern music
Can still be open hearted
Not so coldly charted
It's really just a question of your honesty, yeah
Your honesty
One likes to believe in the freedom of music
But glittering prizes and endless compromises
Shatter the illusion of integrity

[Chorus]

For the words of the profits were written on the studio wall
Concert hall
And echoes with the sounds of salesmen


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June 7, 2010 12:18 PM    in reply to Libertine

The Spirit of Radio

Yeah Rand...and you are just another salesman.

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June 7, 2010 2:39 PM    in reply to Libertine

@Libertine, Rush drummer Neil Peart is supposedly a self-described libertarian. There's a Rush tune called 'The Trees,' which has been interpreted as a Rand-ian (Ayn not Paul) fable about the strong being punished by the weak. ("Now there's no more oak oppression, for they cast a noble law, and the trees are all kept equal by hatchet, axe and saw.")

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June 7, 2010 4:59 PM    in reply to seanpicc

"The extent of my influence by the writings of Ayn Rand should not be overestimated -- I am no one's disciple." ~ Neil Peart

He himself has dismissed The Trees as just a piece of nonsense he tossed off after something got him to thinking, what if trees acted like people?

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June 7, 2010 5:01 PM    in reply to seanpicc

BTW, that'd be PASSED a noble law. Makes a lot more sense, huh?

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June 8, 2010 8:45 AM    in reply to lotl

Passed, not cast - I stand corrected, thanks.

I do remember Peart once calling 'The Trees' a piece of "doggerel" that he'd just sort of scribbled. But the offhandedness of the song's origins wouldn't make the moral of the lyric any less plain to somebody like, say, Rand Paul - who wouldn't necessarily know the backstory or have insights into Peart's thinking. That's all I meant in trying to answer Libertine's question - that it's possible Rand Paul is just a guy who likes Rush and has heard the drummer is into Ayn Rand and so he thought (mistakenly, as it turned out) it would be cool to use one of the band's songs. No diminishment of Peart intended. He's a great drummer and musician, and a good memoirist and travel writer, too.

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June 7, 2010 12:14 PM   

My memory is of Reagan referring to the phrase "Born in the USA", and I did hear Springsteen's song from their campaign. I believe that is the song Bruce referred to, saying Reagan never listened to it because, well, you know.

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June 7, 2010 1:30 PM    in reply to davcbr

Yeah, different age...

Bruce was never happy about Reagan's use of the song (to say nothing of a generation completely missing its point)... but with no internet and just 3 networks, there weren't a lot of people to complain to.

He had had enough by 1988 -- when, after doing something off that album -- he'd yell into the mic "Don't vote for that fucking Bush!" in concert.

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June 7, 2010 5:05 PM    in reply to zonk

I respect Bruce's politics, but can't stand his music.

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June 7, 2010 12:16 PM   

I understand that Mitt Romney's campaigh people are in the final stages of negotiating for rights to use some GWAR tunes in their 2012 campaign.

/snark

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June 7, 2010 12:29 PM    in reply to Signalman

LMFAO!!! Or maybe Kyuss...

:-P

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June 7, 2010 12:35 PM    in reply to Libertine

I, for one, would *love* to see footage of Fear performing "Let's Have a War" at a Rand Paul rally.

http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:b95a8qxtbtz4~T0

Personally, I don't think the Randroid would see anything wrong with it, and I'd dig seeing him headbashing in the mosh pit on the evening news.

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June 7, 2010 9:06 PM    in reply to Signalman

Or maybe the Repubs could try the DK's "Kill the Poor."

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June 8, 2010 2:35 PM    in reply to zoester

Who can forget the time Alan Keyes jumped into a mosh pit:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=8qwDBgNMD7c

Good times, good times.

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June 8, 2010 1:03 AM    in reply to Signalman

Well, in truth, we do need the space. :o)

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June 7, 2010 12:21 PM   

artists are liberal people. The Republicans should know by now that they don't want their music being used by GOPers.

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June 7, 2010 12:41 PM   

"This is a little more of "Do as I say, not as I do" which seems to be rampant in the GOP (see... Sex Scandals and Politics).
Commoners can now be forced to pay big bucks from obtaining music illegally (like making a copy) due to these same folks getting wined and dined by people who can afford to treat them the way they expect... IMHO

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June 7, 2010 1:12 PM    in reply to johnnydoughey

"Commoners can now be forced to pay big bucks.."

but the royals are exempt...

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June 7, 2010 12:43 PM   

I'm pretty sure the GOP campaign people know exactly what they're doing. You can't be that oblivious to copyright law. I think it's a case of "easier to ask forgiveness than get permission."

Sue the crap out of 'em.

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June 8, 2010 2:03 AM    in reply to FawkesFOX

Maybe it is the "intellectual" in "intellectual property rights" that confuses them.

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June 7, 2010 1:15 PM   

The worst, overplayed, effin' stupid song of all time: "Sweet Home, Alabama". They can use that for the slow, agonizing death spiral of the fat, white, jowly, homophobic racist "JW Peppers" out there. Their funeral dirge.

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June 7, 2010 1:23 PM    in reply to KingCool


Is this what the Republicans are turning into?

A bipolar mix of campy crazy and conservative uniformity?

Sweet home Alabama, ala the Russian Men's Choir and the Leningrad Cowboys;

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0lNFRLrP014

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June 7, 2010 1:33 PM    in reply to JEP07

...seriously, all snark aside, this looks and sounds like what the Republicans "are" these days; Ted Nugent on one end and Newt Gingrich on the other.

They both cut their teeth in their chosen professions by demeaning what the other essentially represents, but somehow they are now on the same "team?"

Strange bedfellows make for even stranger offspring.

What would a Gingrich/Nugent baby look like?

The 21st Century Republican Party!

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June 8, 2010 2:36 AM    in reply to JEP07

FYI: The very last part is a verse from The Song of the Volga Boatmen. In Russian. A very "menial labor" type song.

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June 7, 2010 6:03 PM    in reply to KingCool

Your comment reminded of one of my favorite pieces written in the last decade.

Terence Blanchard "Funeral Dirge"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vkt29-HfIZc

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June 7, 2010 1:17 PM   

They've been at it for a long time: Barry Goldwater tried to steal "Hello Dolly" as "Hello Barry" in 1964 and was stomped by the copyright owners who gave it to Johnson as "Hello Lyndon."

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June 7, 2010 1:34 PM   

i would think the gop would consider polka music and art linkletter the type music that would appeal to their constituents! lol or maybe even the andrew sisters, glen miller, mozart. didn't they say they wanted to take america back?

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June 7, 2010 2:47 PM    in reply to Denise

The goopers don't have the sophistication to dig Mozart and the three B's. I wish more Dems did.

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June 8, 2010 2:43 AM    in reply to Denise

This is the republican theme song:
I'm against it!

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June 8, 2010 6:51 PM    in reply to Denise

"and art linkletter the type music"

When did Art Linkletter ever record any music?

BTW, I somehow missed that he passed away two weeks ag0.

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Max

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June 7, 2010 2:09 PM   

The thing I find so bizarre about all of this is that it's not at ALL difficult to secure the rights to these songs. It's a two step process basically, outlined by an entertainment lawyer here:

http://weallmakemusic.com/running-on-empty-headed-john-mccain-charlie-crist-and-now-chuck-devore/

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June 7, 2010 2:34 PM    in reply to Max

What I find bizarre is that most of these songs are always contrary to the Republicans ideology. But I guess how else are they going to fool people into voting for them.

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June 7, 2010 6:11 PM   

I thought the Republicans common theme song was Steal Away and it looks like they are all using it. Of course if things go really bad in November they may change it to Steele Away.

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June 7, 2010 8:07 PM   

Makes you wonder why they don't use musicians who agree with their politics NOT! Nobody listens to Lee Greenwood, Ted(draft dodger)Nugent and Charlie Daniels.

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June 7, 2010 8:08 PM   

Makes you wonder why they don't use musicians who agree with their politics NOT! Nobody listens to Lee Greenwood, Ted(draft dodger)Nugent and Charlie Daniels.

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June 7, 2010 8:14 PM   

Obviously the liberal elite rockers are trying to subvert the FREE market.

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June 7, 2010 9:09 PM   

Charge a fee, call it a tax. Self explanatory.

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June 7, 2010 10:46 PM   

I'm showing my age but I remember the evening news broadcast of Reagan's rancid speech in which he tried with a tone deaf manner to claim Springsteen...the crowd did not buy it and Regan faltered for a second...the corporate media of course made nothing of it because they worked and currently work for the same people as Reagan did...on the other hand as much as I respect Springsteen it was a little hard to stomach watching him in a documentary about a relatively low key gig he did at a small club in NYC...when after the show he got into a monstrously large SUV...he doesn't need to prove anything by walking to work but on the other hand his pitch-perfect critique of the brutal American Corporate landscape would resonate more deeply and longer if not for such lapses in judgment...then again Hemingway did adds for beer and cars...

*sigh*

perhaps not having heroes is the answer...

which still, of course, does not excuse the blatant thievery of using an artist's material without permission...

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June 8, 2010 8:02 AM   

Well, apparently they can do anything they want with Elton John's music, if the price is right:

http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20391620,00.html

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June 8, 2010 10:44 AM   

LOL, like anyone actually cares what the GOP'ers demand. Too funny.

Lou
www.Anonymous-VPN.de.tc

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June 8, 2010 1:07 PM   

Come November elections , the DNC national tune will be singing "Help the Poor"

Everyone done it and no one can demand Obama deficit dollars for doing it.

The best part is its scathing requiem for the lost love for the lefturds, eh?

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June 8, 2010 2:14 PM   

Rock and Roll has a liberal bias.

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June 9, 2010 10:23 AM    in reply to magpie13

No- Rock and Roll has always been rebellious - not liberal. But given that it's so mainstream perhaps you're right - if by liberal you mean thinking, caring about others, not hating.....then yeah I guess it does have a liberal bias.

Of course "liberal bias" is the fall back position for all conservatives when someone disagrees with them and sees them for what they are - narrow-minded, bigoted, scared, intolerant, uninformed.......

The defense rests.

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June 9, 2010 10:33 AM    in reply to magpie13

Traditionally R&R was rebellious - but I think magpie may be right if by liberal they mean thinking, caring about others, appreciating the common good, not hating, open-minded, for the working man and woman - then yes. R&R is liberal.

It amuses me that Republican'ts think they will be "hip" and "cool" if they play some of the Rock and Roll music. It also adds to the long list of hypocrisy that they think they can co-opt R&R music and nobody will notice or care.

Of course Flight of the Valkerie and other Wagnerian tunes is a little harder to dance to - so they may be in a pinch when it comes to finding tunes that coincide with their beliefs and their audience.

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June 8, 2010 11:30 PM   

At this point ASCAP should just seek a general restraining order against the GOP.

It would save time.

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alx

user-pic

June 9, 2010 11:29 AM   

What a bunch of bleeding heart crybabies! So when are they gonna cut off the democrats and King Barry? Aren't they appalled at his lack of substance, leadership, progress? How well he's doing 'end the war' and 'stop the Gulf spill'?

And Bruce, I love most of your music, but come on "Ronnie never listened to Nebraska..." That's a little cruel, NO ONE ever listened to Nebraska, at least not more than once, and probably not all the way through...get over it.

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alx

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June 9, 2010 11:30 AM   

What a bunch of bleeding heart crybabies! So when are they gonna cut off the democrats and King Barry? Aren't they appalled at his lack of substance, leadership, progress? How well he's doing 'end the war' and 'stop the Gulf spill'?

And Bruce, I love most of your music, but come on "Ronnie never listened to Nebraska..." That's a little cruel, NO ONE ever listened to Nebraska, at least not more than once, and probably not all the way through...get over it.

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June 12, 2010 2:15 PM   

I do remember Peart once calling 'The Trees' a piece of "doggerel" that he'd just sort of scribbled. But the offhandedness of the song's origins wouldn't make the moral of the lyric any less plain to somebody like, say, Rand Paul - who wouldn't necessarily know the backstory or have insights into Peart's thinking. That's all I meant in trying to answer Libertine's question - that it's possible Rand Paul is just a guy who likes Rush and has heard the drummer is into Ayn Rand and so he thought (mistakenly, as it turned out) it would be cool to use one of the band's songs. No diminishment of Peart intended. He's a great drummer and musician, and a good memoirist and travel writer, too.

m65 kamagra

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January 26, 2011 11:51 PM   

I'm showing my age but I remember the evening news broadcast of Reagan's rancid speech in which he tried with a tone deaf manner to claim Springsteen...the crowd did not buy it and Regan faltered for a second...the corporate media of course made nothing of it because they worked and currently work for the same people as Reagan did...on the other hand as much as I respect Springsteen it was a little hard to stomach watching him in a documentary about a relatively low key gig he did at a small club in NYC...when after the show he got into a monstrously large SUV...he doesn't need to prove anything by walking to work but on the other hand his pitch-perfect critique of the brutal American Corporate landscape would resonate more deeply and longer if not for such lapses in judgment...then again Hemingway did adds for beer and cars...

*sigh*

perhaps not having heroes is the answer...

which still, of course, does not excuse the blatant thievery of using an artist's material without permission...

Phim

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