In the wrongfooted-in-real-time category, this review for Rolling Stone of the debut Black Sabbath album is lacking clairvoyance. I don't have the whole thing unfortunately:
"Over across the tracks in the industrial side of Cream country lie unskilled laborers like Black Sabbath, which was hyped as a rockin' ritual celebration of the Satanic mass or some such claptrap, something like England's answer to Coven. Well, they're not that bad, but that's about all the credit you can give them. The whole album is a shuck – despite the murky song titles and some inane lyrics that sound like Vanilla Fudge paying doggerel tribute to Aleister Crowley, the album has nothing to do with spiritualism, the occult, or anything much except stiff recitations of Cream clichés that sound like the musicians learned them out of a book, grinding on and on with dogged persistence. Vocals are sparse, most of the album being filled with plodding bass lines over which the lead guitar dribbles wooden Claptonisms from the master's tiredest Cream days. They even have discordant jams with bass and guitar reeling like velocitized speedfreaks all over each other's musical perimeters yet never quite finding synch — just like Cream! But worse."
That's from September 17 1970. He really bangs away at the Cream connection. This might be where I got the Sabbath as "crude putsch" on Cream idea. Then again I don't remember reading this before...
However Bangs changed his tune / wised up / saw the light pretty quickly. Suddenly he's right-footed-in-real-time, especially as most rock critics continue to hate the Sabs.
Here's Bangs review of Master of Reality for Rolling Stone, November 25, 1971:
The second-generation rock audience (that is, those who went
steady to "I Wanna Hold Your Hand" and got serious with Highway 62
Revisited) suffer mightily wrestling with the phenomenon represented by Grank
Funk and Black Sabbath. If nothing else, though, both Funk and Sabbath are for
all their monotony at least supremely consistent — as opposed to schtick
collectors with no personal vision like Deep Purple. And since when is monotony
so taboo in rock & roll, anyway? Rock has been — some of the best of it too
in large part monotonous from the beginning, hypnotically so, as rightwingers
would say. As far apart as they are, Black Sabbath is only slightly more
monotonous than James Taylor or Joni Mitchell, and any Stooges or MC5 fan who
disdains Black Sabbath is just bigoted.
The thing is that, like all the best rock & rollers
since the Pleistocene era, Black Sabbath (and Grand Funk) have a vision that
informs their music with unity and direction and makes their simple structures
more than they might seem. Grand Funk's vision is one of universal brotherhood
(as when they have spoken of taking their millions to the White House with a
list of demands), but Black Sabbath's, until Master of Reality anyway, has
concentrated relentlessly on the self-immolating underside of all the beatific
Let's Get Together platitudes of the counter culture.
Their first album found them still locked lyrically into the
initial Spiritualist-Satanic hype and was filled out mostly with jamming, while
Paranoid reflected that theme only, in the great line in "War Pigs":
"Generals gathered in their masses Just like witches at black
masses." The rest of the album dealt mostly with social anomie in general,
from the title track's picture of total disjuncture (rendered with authentic
power too) to "Iron Man's" picture of an unloved Golem in a hostile
world, the stark picture of ultimate needle-freak breakdown painted in the
philippic "Hand of Doom," and finally the unique "Fairies Wear
Boots": "I went walkin' late last night Suddenly I got a fright/I
looked in the window, was surprised what I saw/Fairies in boots dancin' with
the broads!"
Not all of this, incidentally, was rendered in La Brea sinks
of lugubrious bass blasts — several of the songs had high wailing solos and
interesting changes of tempo, and "Paranoid" really moved. If you
took the trouble to listen to the album all the way through.
Master of Reality both extends and modifies the trends on
Paranoid. It has fewer songs, if you discount the two short instrumental
interludes, but it is not that the songs are longer than the first record — the
album is shorter. The sound, with a couple of exceptions, has evolved little if
at all. The thick, plodding, almost arrhythmic steel wool curtains of sound the
group is celebrated and reviled for only appear in their classical state of
excruciating slowness on two tracks, "Sweet Leaf" and "Lord of
This World," and both break into driving jams that are well worth the
wait. Which itself is no problem once you stop thinking about how bored you are
and just let it filter down your innards like a good bottle of Romilar. Rock
& roll has always been noise, and Black Sabbath have boiled that noise to
its resinous essence. Did you expect bones to be anything else but rigid?
The rest of the songs, while not exactly lilting, have all
the drive and frenzy you could wish for in this day and age. Thematically the
group has mellowed a bit, and although the morbidity still shines rankly in
almost every song, the group seems to have taken its popularity and position
seriously enough to begin offering some answers to the dark cul-de-sacs of
Paranoid. "Sweet Leaf," for instance, shows that Black Sabbath have
the balls to write a song celebrating grass this late date, and the double entendre,
if you can even call it that, is much less tortuous than it would have been in
1966, with an added touch of salvation from grosser potions: "My life was
empty forever on a down/Until you took me, showed me around ... Straight people
don't know what you're about..."
Unfortunately, the religious virus also rears its zealot
head, in "After Forever," which is a great Yardbirds-type arrangement
nevertheless and despite its drubbing us over the head with "God is the
only way to love" it does have the great line "Would you like to see
the Pope on the end of a rope?"
And besides, isn't all this Christian folderol just the flip
side of the Luciferian creed they commenced with and look back on balefully in
"Lord of This World"? And for those of us, like me, who prefer the
secular side of Black Sabbath, there's "Solitude," a ballad as lovely
as any out of England in the last year (with flute yet), and "Children of
the Grave": with "Revolution in their minds the children start to
march Against the world they have to live in Oh! The hate that's in their
hearts They're tired of being pushed around and told just what to do. They'll
fight the world until they've won and love comes flowing through."
I'm not saying that either that or the arrangement it's set
in is the new "My Generation," but it is a rocking, churning addition
to the long line of defiant, self-affirmative and certainly a little defensive
songs that goes right back to the earliest whap and wail of rock 'n' roll. It's
naive, simplistic, repetitive, absolute doggerel — but in the tradition. Chuck
Berry sang in more repressed times. "Don't bother us, leave us
'lone/Anyway we almost grown." The Who stuttered "hope I die before I
get old," but the MC5 wanted to "Kick Out the Jams" or at least
escape on a "Starship," and Black Sabbath have picked up the addled,
quasi-politicized desperation of growing up in these times exactly where they
left off: "Freedom fighters sent out to the sun Escape from brainwashed
minds and pollution/Leave the earth to all its sin and hate/Find another world
where freedom waits."
The question now is not whether we can accept lines as
obvious and juvenile as that from a rock & roll record. They should be as
palatable to anyone with a memory as the stereotypic two-and three-chord
structures of the songs. The only criterion is excitement, and Black Sabbath's
got it. The real question is whether Black Sabbath can grow and evolve, as a
band like the MC5 has, so that there is a bit more variation in their sound
from album to album. And that's a question this group hasn't answered yet.
And then continuing the Lester as headBangser trajectory, he wrote this high-flown appreciation in Creem, June 1972
I need someone to show me
The things in life that I can find
I can’t see the things
that make true happiness
I must be blind.
—Black Sabbath, "Paranoid"
"The world’s comin’ to an end."
—British bobby, interviewed on network
news in the first bloom of Beatlemania
We have met dark days; the catalog of present horrors and
dire morrows is so familiar there’s not even any point in running through it
again. It may be a copout, but people will do almost anything now to escape
from the pall. The (first) Age of Anxiety gave way to the clammy retreat of the
Fifties, when every citizen kept a tight bomb shelter, then to the sense of
massive change in the Sixties, but the passing of that agitated decade has
brought a new Age of Implosion, yesterday’s iconoclastic war babies siphoned
off en masse, stumbling and puking over each other at the festivals which were
celebrations such a short time ago. Tying off their potentials and shooting
them into the void in bleak rooms.
It’s a desperate time, in a "desperate land" as
Jim Morrison said just when things seemed brightest. If the terminal dramas of
the Doors and the Velvet Underground were prophetic, their "sordid"
plots have now become the banal stuff of everyday life, which certainly doesn’t
lessen the pervasive dread, but does imply a new music, a music which deals
with the breakdowns and psychic smog on another level and, hopefully, points
toward some positive resolution.
We have seen the Stooges take on the night ferociously and
go tumbling into its maw, and Alice Cooper is currently exploiting it for all
it’s worth, turning it into a circus. But there is only one band that has dealt
with it honestly on terms meaningful to vast portions of the audience, not only
grappling with it in a mythic structure that’s both personal and universal, but
actually managing to prosper as well. That band is Black Sabbath.
Naturally, you can’t pull off something as heavy as that
without creating a bit of controversy. Most people are familiar by now with the
great Sabbath-Grand Funk vs. rock press controversy (although the press has
begun a large-scale reroute in the last year). The band’s first album made the
top 20 in England, their second went to number one, the single of its title
song made number three on the British charts, and by the time they came to
America their record company was ready with a hype fronted by "LOUDER THAN
LED ZEPPELIN" banners, though, as lead singer Ozzy Osbourne says,
"They had to drop that fairly soon because we just told them not to ****
around." The company has never really known what it has in the group or
how to handle them. But it really didn’t matter at all, because Black Sabbath
wasted no time in repeating their English triumph in this country; all three of
their albums were on the charts at the same time for months on end.
The audience, searching endlessly both for bone-rattling
sound and someone to put the present social and psychic traumas in perspective,
found both in Black Sabbath. They were loud, perhaps, with Grand Funk, louder
than anything previously heard in human history; they possessed a dark vision
of society and the human soul borrowed from black magic and Christian myth;
they cut straight to the teen heart of darkness with obsessive, crushing blocks
of sound and "words that go right to your sorrow, words that go ‘Ain’t no
tomorrow,’ " as Ozzy sang in "Warning" on their first album.
The critics and others who just couldn’t hear it, whether
they were so far from it as to find their spokesman in a James Taylor or merely
felt that the riff’s essence had already been done much better by the Stooges
or MC5, responded almost as one by damning it as "downer music."
Since much of it did lack the unquenchable adrenaline imperatives of its
precedents and one look around a rock concert hall was enough to tell you where
the Psychedelic Revolution had led, the charge seemed worth considering.
Lots of Black Sabbath fans take downs, but there are
certainly many that don’t, and just as many barbiturate and heroin casualties
that have no truck at all with the group, including many of those devotees of
the mellow acoustic sound who are supposedly into healthier lifestyles than the
minions of the music of desperation; if the pop audience knew how many of the
heroes whose pockets they’ve filled were on smack right now, they... would
probably not be the least bit surprised. But somehow it’s easier to picture the
kid down the block, as fuckeded-up as we’ve watched him become, slumped in his
bedroom gorged on Tuinal, listening to Black Sabbath prate of the devil and
nuclear war and what a cruel kitchen the world is, nodding to himself as he
nods along anyway and finding justification for his cancerous apathy.
That’s the public myth. But it’s not exactly Black Sabbath’s
myth, not really, and a consideration of the true vision inherent in their
"downer rock" reveals that phrase for exactly what it is.
Come you masters of war
You that build the big guns
You that build the death planes
You that build all the bombs
You that hide behind walls
You that hide behind desks
I just want you to know
I can see through your masks.
You that never done nothin’
But build to destroy
You play with my world
Like it’s your little toy
You put a gun in my hand
And you hide from my eyes
Then you turn and run farther
when the fast bullets fly.
—Bob Dylan, "Masters of War"
Generals gathered in their masses
Just like witches at Black Masses
Evil minds that plot destruction
Sorcerer of death’s construction
In the fields the bodies burning
As the war machine keeps turning
Death and hatred to mankind
Poisoning their brainwashed minds.
Politicians hide themselves away
They only started the war
Why should they go out to fight?
They leave that all to the poor.
Now in darkness world stops turning
Ashes where the bodies burning
No more war pigs of the power
And as God has struck the hour
Day of judgment, God is calling
On their knees the war pigs crawling
Begging mercies for their sins
Satan laughing spreads his wings.
—Black Sabbath, "War Pigs"
Listen to my last words anywhere.
Listen to my last words any world.
Listen all you boards, syndicates and
governments of the earth. And you
powers behind what filth deals con-
summated in what lavatory to take
what is not yours. To sell the ground
from unborn feet forever . . . And
what does my program of total resis-
tance and total austerity offer you? I
offer you nothing. I am not a politician.
These are conditions of total
emergency. And these are my in-
structions for total emergency if
carried out now could avert the total
disaster now on tracks: Peoples of
the earth, you have all been poi-
soned . . . Any minute now fifty
million adolescent gooks will hit the
street with switch blades, bicycle
chains and cobblestones..."
—William S. Burroughs, "Last Words
[of Hassan I Sabbah]" Nova Express
Despite the blitzkrieg nature of their sound, Black Sabbath
are moralists. Like Bob Dylan, like William Burroughs, like most artists trying
to deal with a serious present situation in an honest way. They are not on the
same level of profundity, perhaps; they are certainly much less articulate,
subject to the ephemerality of rock, but they are a band with a conscience who
have looked around them and taken it upon themselves to reflect the chaos in a
way that they see as positive. By now they’ve taken some tentative steps toward
offering alternatives.
In his book The Making of a Counter Culture, Theodore Roszak
suggested that given the current paucity of social leaders worth investing even
a passing hope in, the coalition made up of the young and the free-form wing of
the Left should turn to the ancient notion of the shaman, the holy madman whose
prescriptions derived not from logic or think-tanks or even words sometimes,
but an extraordinarily acute perception of the flux of the universe. Well,
we’ve reaped Roszak’s script in spades by now, there’s a shaman slouching on
every corner and tinhorn messiahs are a dime a dozen. Some are
"political" and some are "mystical" and some are building
their kingdoms on a "cosmic" stew of both, and each seems to have his
little cadre of glaze-orbed acid casualties proselytizing for him.
Then there are also the cultural shamans, Dylan being the
supreme artifact. Burroughs too, of course, and his "Hassan i Sabbah"
is nothing more than a particularly malevolent form of shaman, while the
"Nova Police" are the benevolent regulation agency out to save the
universe from addiction and control. Burroughs has been one of the foremost
moralists in American literature; his work amounts to a demonology for our
times, portraying the forces currently threatening our planet’s survival as
evil gods operating from without.
Dylan, of course, has always been the moralist par
excellence, but his referents are more Biblical, more rooted in the soil and
tradition and his own Old Testament brand of conscience.
Where Black Sabbath fits into this seeming digression is
that they unite a demonology not far from Burroughs’ (if far more obvious) with
a Biblical moralism that makes Dylan’s look positively bland, although they can
be every bit as vindictive in their Jehovahn judgments as Dylan.
They are probably the first truly Catholic rock group, or
the first group to completely immerse themselves in the Fall and Redemption:
the traditional Christian dualism which asserts that if you don’t walk in the
light of the Lord then Satan is certainly pulling your strings, and a bad end
can be expected, is even imminent.
They may deny all this; Ozzy Osbourne responded to a
question about how the bands’ concept came about with a vague "I don’t
know. I met the guys, we got together and rehearsed for about two years,
starved, bummed around hoping for a break and it just happened. You relate to
me that it’s about doom or something, but I can’t relate it to you because I’m
in the middle of it."
It really doesn’t make any difference how conscious they may
be of that they’re saying, though. The message is there for anyone with ears,
and it’s unmistakeable. The themes are perdition, destruction and redemption,
and their basic search for justice and harmony in a nightworld becomes more
explicitly social all the time. On their first album the social quality only
appears in one song, "Wicked World" ("The world today is such a
wicked place/Fighting going on between the human race/People go to work just to
earn their bread/While people just across the sea are countin’ their
dead") and the prevailing mood is a medieval sense of supernatural powers
moving in to snatch the unwary soul and cast it into eternal bondage.
The band was named after an above-average British horror
flick from the Hammer company, starring Boris Karloff, and their namesake song
actually opens with rain sound effects and a tolling bell that’s echoed in the
slow, dolorous fuzz guitar that will set the pace for opening cuts of future
albums and do much to lend credence to the "downer rock" stigma.
Satan appears in their material in this song for the first, but hardly last,
time, leering and licking his lips as he tots up the fresh-caught souls. Though
"Warning" really seems to be his entry point, rounding off what
sounds at first like a rather Creamish love song and jam with a surprising
twist that make it into something entirely different from what you thought it
was:
Follow me now
and you will not regret
Leaving the life you led
before we met
You are the first
to have this love of mine
Forever with me
until the end of time...
Look into my eyes,
you will see who I am
My name is Lucifer,
please take my hand.
Since the band’s name is what it is and the thematic content
of this album, as well as its packaging, leaned so far towards this sort of
thing, it’s easy to see why people should stereotype the group as either
exploiting for profit or living and promulgating the form of pop Black Magic
which finds high school girls intently reading books on how to become a witch
and trying out spells on prospective boyfriends (and a sharpie like Anton La
Vey cleaning up) even as dead (literally)—serious organizations such as the
Process carry out their grim rites in Los Angeles, Mexico, New York and
elsewhere, promoting total nihilism and the end of the world, engaging in
incredible machinations to, yes, get people in their power (obtaining zombies
fit for any job they don’t want to soil their own hands with) even committing
murder in some instances with the ritualistic precision of absolute
psychopathy. There are scheming salamanders like Manson everywhere, finding
fantastic utility in this phase when it comes to their own less bizarrely
"religious" ends. What Black Magic is about is absolute control;
since rock ’n’ roll is power music with strange effects on people, sometimes,
with undercurrent themes of almost fascist dominance and subjection running
from the earliest blues through the Stones to Alice Cooper, there were bound to
be some psychic and subcultural connections made. No doubt there are Black
Sabbath fans who like the groups because it seems to reflect their own
preoccupation with hocus-pocus and supernatural manipulation, just as people
used the Velvet Underground once as soundtracks for the hard-drug movies
they’re living to the stone hilt.
But the band themselves will have no part of any of this,
according to Ozzy: "We never have been into Black Magic. But one time,
just to get a break, we decided to do a thing because it’s never been done
before—the crosses and all that, that black mass on the stage, but we didn’t
intend it to be a thing where you go onstage in a pair of horns, and yet even
now people come up and think we’re going to put a ****ing curse on them. Or if
they’re not afraid they think we’re heavy, heavy heads. For instance we did a
gig on one of the tours, and after the show we went back to the hotel, and I
could hear a lot of feet walking up and down the hall outside, so I went and
opened the ****ing door and there’s all these weird people with black candles
walking up and down and writing crosses on the doors and things, and they
****ing frightened me, I tell ya. We all blew the candles out and sang 'Happy
Birthday,'" he laughs. "They didn’t like that at all."
Not only that, but when you begin to listen to their music
with open ears, it quickly becomes apparent that rock ’n’ roll sorcery is only
a handle devised to make Black Sabbath into a concept more immediately
graspable. As much as Satan, the righteously vindictive Old Testament God and
spiritual-super-natural agonies recur in their music, they are almost
invariably used to make a moral point. "The Wizard" is a song of
reassurance for those nursing paranoias about neighborhood witches and warlocks
who might be nursing a grudge against them, painting a benevolent shaman:
Evil powers disappear
Demons worry
while the Wizard is near
Everyone’s happy
when the Wizard walks by
The Black Sabbath vision of life on earth and the machinery
of civilization becomes concrete in their second LP, Paranoid, whose very first
song takes the epithet applied so indiscriminately for the past half-decade to
anyone the speaker happens to be in disagreement with, and carries it to its
ultimate gross characterization in a vignette reminiscent in verbal content and
unbridled bitterness both of Dylan’s "Masters of War" and the
firebrand rhetoric of agit-prop pamphlets of the Socialist Workers and other
parties farther left since the time of the First World War. I remember seeing
old books with vitriolic cartoons of Capitalist Pigs (literally) strolling
along in tophats and waistcoats with buttons ready to pop from the accretions
of fat, lighting giant Havana stogies with $100 bills. Possibly the only
difference between that was conscious inflammatory propaganda and this is (you
can accept this to whatever degree you choose – I tend to take it all the way)
true folk culture, where the hatred is more organic and sensate, churning
straight up from the bowels in catharses of rage as apocalyptic as the End they
visualize in this song and "Electric Funeral," probably the two most
vicious statements we’re ever going to hear from this band. Even Dylan, after
finding it in himself to write "I hope that you die," realized that
there was nothing more he could say on the tip of that particular limb.
"War Pigs" ends up a fantasy of Judgment Day, the
sword of the Archangel cleaving the necks of those who have chosen to serve
Lucifer and now must follow him into Gehenna. You can laugh, but Black Sabbath
are something of the John Milton of rock ’n’ roll: "You turned to me with
all your worldly greed and pride/But will you turn to me when it’s your turn to
die?" The Christianity running consistently through their songs is cruel
and bloodthirsty in the way that only Christianity can be (which is to say,
lopping off heads with feverish pleasure, clad all the while in the raiment of
righteousness and moral rectitude). "Electric Funeral" is their
picture of atomic war as the Second Coming:
Dying world of radiation
Victims of mad frustration
Burning global box of fire
Like electric funeral pyre...
Supernatural king
Takes earth under his wing
Heaven’s golden chorus sings
Hell’s angels flap their wings
Evil souls fall to hell
Ever trapped in burning cells.
And the vengeance motif ain’t just limited to Biblical
referents, because "Iron Man," one of their greatest songs, is a
piece of almost pure program music utilizing lugubrious drums clomping like the
falls of Golem feet and a guitar riff that swoops recklessly like a Hulk arm
demolishing buildings, to depict a miscreant, much reminiscent of the Karloff
Frankenstein’s monster who really only wanted to play with the other children,
who finds himself ostracized as a total freak because of his size and lumbering
lack of grace (Hmmm, know some people like that myself; maybe Iron Man is
really a symbol and fantasy for every adolescent ever tortured by awkwardness
and "difference") and responds with understandable rage and a
havoc-wreaking rampage:
"Is he live or dead?"
"Has he thoughts within his head?"
"We’ll just pass him there
Why should we even care?"
Nobody wants him
He just stares at the world
Planning his vengeance
That he will soon unfurl
People are strange, when you’re a stranger. It’s a melodrama
of alienation, just as "Paranoid" is a terse, chillingly accurate
description of the real thing, when you suddenly find that you’ve somehow
skidded just a fraction out of the world as you have and other still do
perceive it. "Paranoid" renders perfectly the clammy feeling of
knowing that at this point there is absolutely no one on the planet to whom you
can make yourself understood or be helped by. All alone, like a real rolling
stone; it’s no wonder in such circumstances that the imagination might get a
little hairy, and turn to dreams of science-fiction revenge. I’ve felt the
arctic wedge of disjuncture myself at one time and another, stuck in the
painful place where you can only send frozen warnings cross the borderline and
those inevitably get distorted. Because they’ve captured it so well Black
Sabbath means a lot to me and a lot of my friends for "Paranoid"
alone. With the experience so common these years is it any wonder that this
group has conquered the world (so to speak)?
And now that they have conquered it by detailing several of
our most prevalent forms of malaise, what have they got to offer as curative?
Well, this is where their moralism begins to break down, for many of us at
least, because what else would an Old Testament group be offering but Jehovah?
Or, to slip across a few centuries into the Greek Scriptures, Jesus. It’s not
that they’re acting as sycophants for the virulent proliferation of hippie
fundamentalist sects. Master of Reality conveys the impression that with the
cloud of gloom hanging over their persona, and the "downer-rock"
label, they felt obliged to carry their moralism into outright proselytism,
suggested by "Lord of This World" and clinched in "After
Forever," which follows a paean to the joys of cannabis (see, kids, we
don’t take those horrible pills, we use and advocate this healthy stuff...)
called "Sweet Leaf" with:
Have you ever thought about
your soul—can it be saved?
Or perhaps you think
that when you’re dead
you just stay in your grave.
Is God just a thought in your head
or is he a part of you?
Is Christ just a name
that you read in a book
when you were in school?...
Well I have seen the truth.
Yes I have seen the light
and I’ve changed my ways.
And I’ll be prepared
when you’re lonely and scared
at the end of your days.
The song goes on to assert that "God... is the only one
who can save you now from all this sin and hate" and even includes a line
that goes, "Would you like to see the Pope on the end of a rope—do you
think he’s a fool?" Well, yes, and yes, as a matter of fact, because the
Pope is a War Pig if ever there was one, or at least an evil angel. Maybe I’m
making a fool of myself but I see this band making an attempt to provide
direction for a generation busy immolating itself as quickly as possible. Since
nobody else around that I can see seems to have any better advice for them than
Black Sabbath, it pains me perhaps unduly to see them suggesting the hoariest
copout conceived in 2,000 years. I mean, what’s the difference between a
vegetable babbling about how much crank he can hold and stay alive, and one
locked into repeating a zealot litany with mindless persistence to every
stranger coming down this side of the street?
But then, I suppose I shouldn’t expect Black Sabbath’s
answers to be sophisticated. Master of Reality has more than one alternative to
suggest anyway. "Into the Void" is a fantasy of escape from the dire
mess in this orbit via "Rocket engines burning fuel so fast/Up into the
night sky they blast... Freedom fighters sent out to the sun. Escape from
brainwashed minds and pollution" a la the reedy Starship recently promoted
by the Marin County Cocaine Casualty Musical Auxiliary. This version of the
fantasy at least has the advantage of some solid, pulverizing music behind it.
A much more interesting solution is drawn in "Children
of the Grave," a deep, gutty, driving piece that’s one of their finest and
one of the highlights of their current live show. It couches the expectable
hints of looming catastrophe ("Must the world live in the shadow of atomic
fear?") in a romanticized picture of the children born in the megaton
shadow standing their ground, insistent on the salvation of the planet, with an
uncharacteristic happy ending:
Revolution in their minds—
the children start to march
Against the world
they have to live in.
Oh! The hate that’s in their hearts!
They’re tired of being pushed around
and told just what to do.
They’ll fight the world
until they’ve won
and love comes flowing through
Which is fine with me. The cloudy romanticism of the song’s
social conception removes it from the limitations of any one faction’s Utopia,
making it much more palatable than the vested-interest jams of a group like the
Up (musical agitprop arm of the Ann Arbor Rainbow Peoples’ Party) or the
dilettantism of a Jefferson Airplane, even if it does bear about as much
dialectical meat as Grand Funk singing "People Let’s Stop the War."
^^^^^^^^^^^
I think there might also be some Sabbath Lester-love in this grubby little paperback called Rock Revolution that Creem published in '76, contents all written just on the eve of punk, a fascinating little document. Most of the contents are written by Lester and there's an appreciation of heavy metal by him in there. But it would be almost impossible to scan on account of being one of those cheap mass-market tight-paged glue-bound pocket-size paperbacks with the margins going right to the centrefold, almost to the point of being unreadable without breaking the spine.