How does a fiercely anticorporate musician feel about participating in a corporate entertainment system? "Rage Against the Machine was able to deliver 15 million subversive pieces of plastic across the globe," responds former Rage guitarist Tom Morello, in the forum convened by rock critic Ann Powers that begins on page 11. The contradictions, tensions and political and artistic ferment that persist in today's popular music scene are the subject of this special issue, which observes the oft-surprising results when politics and music collide--whether in a mass of grooving Le Tigre fans, amid a tattooed throng of antiabortion Christian punks or in the gold-trimmed Manhattan suite of hip-hop-mogul-turned-reparations-activist Russell Simmons.
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Noted.
Civil liberties, at home and abroad; saving Jeff Wood from Texas's death row.
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Supreme Politics
The Supreme Court's final rulings remind us that civil rights and a sane vision of the Constitution rest with the next President's judicial appointments.
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Fizzling on FISA
Obama and other Senate Democrats should not let a lame-duck Administration compromise our liberties in the name of pursuing terrorists.
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Noted.
George Carlin knew words could never be as obscene as wars; Barack Obama goes for the money, but at what cost?
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A Subprime Bailout
Congress bails out the banks, but needs to do far more for homeowners devastated by the subprime crisis.
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Noted.
Katrina vanden Heuvel analyzes the shuttering of Moscow's English-language alternative newspaper, the eXile; John Cavanagh remembers Stewart Mott.
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The Audacity of Insiders
Barack Obama may yet become the reform President who rearranges power on behalf of the people. But he'll need to resist the brotherhood of cozy insiders.
That edgy, countercultural music continues to be made is testament to the spirit of the artists (and the appetite of the fans), who are often at odds with their industry patrons. Indeed, much of this music may never reach your ears. Radio today is more corporate, more conglomerated and more corrupt than at any time in history, as Jenny Toomey discusses on page 28. Waves of deregulation that started in the 1980s and accelerated with the passage of the 1996 Telecommunications Act have made it possible for one corporation to buy as many as eight radio stations in a single market. And in payola-like schemes, the "Big Five" music companies, through third-party promoters, shell out thousands of dollars per song to radio conglomerates in order to insure big hits. Instead of moving to right these wrongs, the FCC, under chairman Michael Powell, is looking for new ways to loosen the rules. But at least one member of Congress is fighting back: Senator Russ Feingold's Competition in Radio and Concert Industries Act would, among other things, crack down on pay-for-play deals and force an examination of the impact that consolidation of radio ownership has had on culture in America.
The effects of consolidation and deregulation in the music industry are invisible to many, but that's the point. Without our consent, choice--at the megastore, on the air, in the concert hall--is being dictated by the big companies that manage music. To be sure, they're still promoting a number of inspired, socially conscious artists--like Bruce Springsteen, Natalie Merchant and Mos Def, in addition to those featured here--and if you turn up the volume, you may hear the politics. With this issue, you'll know where to listen--inside and outside the industry.
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