Showing posts with label Iraqi Icicle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iraqi Icicle. Show all posts

Sunday, September 30, 2007

Top 10 greatest popular song lyrics of all time

I think they should be one or two lines rather than full stanzas, because brevity is the eternal soul of wit. But that's up to you.

1. Substitute you for my mom;
At least I'll get my washing done.
From Substitute by The Who.

2. Dialing for Dollars is waiting to find me.
I wait for delivery each day until 3.
From Mercedes Benz by Janis Joplin

3. An' tell me, over and over again, my friend,
You don't believe we're on the eve of destruction
From The Eve of Destruction by Barry McGuire.

4. And run, if you will, to the top of the hill, pretty Jean.
From Jean by Oliver.

5. Get up, stand up for your rights.
Don't give up the fight.
From Get Up, Stand Up by The (Original) Wailers.

6. Don't it always seem to go
You don't know what you got 'til it's gone.
From Big Yellow Taxi by Joni Mitchell.

7. There's room at the top, they're telling you sti-il
But first you got to learn how to smile as you ki-ill.
From Working Class Hero by John Lennon.

8. Say it in bro-oken English.
From Broken English by Marianne Faithful.

9. Wake me up when September's gone.
(It lacks timelessness but it's perfect for our times.)
From Wake Me Up When September's Gone by Green Day.

10. Watch the butcher shine his knives
And this town is full of battered wives.
From The Streets of Your Town by The Go-Betweens.

I've left out Dylan, Zappa, Eminem, Rodriguez, Patti Smith, Neil Young, Carole King, Billy Bragg, Paul Kelly, Eric Burdon, Iggy Pop, The Beatles, The Doors, The Rolling Stones, Steppenwolf, The Grateful Dead, Velvet Underground, Talking Heads, AC/DC, The Clash, Dire Straits, R.E.M., U2, Crowded House, NWA, Faith No More, Nirvana, and so many more. What have I done?
Spread the news,
Bernie

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Drugs 'n' sex `n' rock `n' roll

BLUES-rock diva Janis Joplin liked to shout at her concerts that drugs 'n' sex `n' rock `n' roll would get us well; would get the whole world well.
Joplin died of a heroin overdose at the age of 27.
Janis was not around Brisbane between 1986 and 1992, the setting and time frame of Queensland journalist Bernie Dowling's first novel Iraqi Icicle. But drugs `n' sex `n' rock roll certainly were. In spades. Along with war.
In October 1970, when Janis died, heroin was an international scourge and America and its allies were prosecuting the Vietnam War.
In January 1991, heroin was an internatonal scourge and America and its allies were prosecuting the first Iraq War, also called the Persian Gulf War.
Janis Joplin rates a passing reference in Iraqi Icicle, a private detective thriller with an unlikely sleuth, Steele Hill, an orphan who claims to be John Lennon's love child and lives for gambling and altrnative rock music.
``I am interested in how popular culture, such as music, film, television, theatre, the internet, gambling and even drug use, intersects with mega social events,'' Dowling says.
Brisbane rock band the Go-Betweens is a symbolic character with the novel asking why the Aussie alternative guitar popsters never gained the success of their American contemporaries R.E.M. or even Britband The Smiths.
A Go-Betweens gig at the University of Queensland is in the mix as well as the destruction of Brisbane's hilltop rock concert venue Cloudland where the Go-Betweens supported Brit ska band Madness in the early 1980s.
The novel questions whether rock music lived up to Joplin's boast of it changing the world.
Whenever he drives by, Steele Hill shakes his fist at the yuppie white apartments which replaced Cloudland and he says the Go-Betweens wrote a song about the ballroom's demolition.
He is referring to a few lines from the band's most successful single The Streets of Your Town.
Dowling's novel never leaves Greater Brisbane but it includes Steele Hill's take on the rock music mythology of the 1989 American invasion of Panama.
The pretext for the action was to bring Panamanian president Manuel Noriega to justice for drugs and arms trading.
The international media reported, with varying degrees of accuracy, how American troops blasted rock music at the Vatican embassy where Noriega had refuge before he surrendered.
Steele Hill calls it ``rock's part in Manny's downfall'' and suggests Noriega begged the invaders to stop the music. ``No more Twisted Sister; no more We're Not Gonna Take It,'' Steele Hill imagines Noriega pleading.
Iraqi Icicle is a darkly humorous novel of a period which saw the explosion of personal computers and mobile phones in Australia, and, in Queensland, the Fitzgerald Inquiry into police corruption which toppled the long-serving Joh Bjelke-Petersen government.
Iraqi Icicle is available from www.digitalprintaustralia.com www.amazon.com www.abebooks.com www.alibris.com www.lulu.com/uk and www.borders.com