This space is dedicated to the proposition that we need to know the history of the struggles on the left and of earlier progressive movements here and world-wide. If we can learn from the mistakes made in the past (as well as what went right) we can move forward in the future to create a more just and equitable society. We will be reviewing books, CDs, and movies we believe everyone needs to read, hear and look at as well as making commentary from time to time. Greg Green, site manager
Monday, September 18, 2017
Films To While The Class Struggle By- With Serge Eisenstein’s "Strike" (1925) In Mind
Films To While The Class Struggle By- With Serge Eisenstein’s "Strike" (1925) In Mind
DVD Review
By Frank Jackman
Strike, starring a cast of hundreds of working people and others, directed by Serge Eisenstein, 1925
No question, no question at all that some political films whether they were intended as propaganda for a certain viewpoint as with the film under review, Russian mad man filmmaker Serge Eisenstein’s 1925 Strike, or because as the story line developed everybody was compelled to think through the implications of the cover-up and preclude to figure out the coup in a film like Costa-Garvas’ Z. Here is the beauty of Eisenstein’s work whether with Strike or an effort like Potemkin, the one with the famous baby carriage scene on the Odessa Steps. The medium is the message to steal a phrase from an old-time social media commentator (okay, okay I will give the attribution-Marshall McLuhan). The whole thing is done, powerfully done, with nothing but absolutely stunning cinematography, a few signboards (in Russian with English subtitles), and some very interesting and varied mood music which if I am not mistaken included some jazz theme stuff from Duke Ellington, and if not him then definitely some jazz riffs along with that inevitable classic music that one would have expected from a Russian filmmaker who grabbed what he could from the Russian Five.
Now the question of who a film is directed at is usually pretty much just to lure in general audiences, maybe if it is cartoonish then kids but usually general audiences. Eisenstein in this film though is directing his efforts to working people in order for them to draw some important lessons about the class struggle. Of course Eisenstein was working shortly after the October Revolution of 1917 in his own country and so he probably was more or less committed to this type of film in the interests of the Soviet government and of the world revolution that was still formally what the Bolsheviks and their international allies, through the Communist International, were all about. (I might add though that a later film about Ivan the Terrible had the same fine cinematic qualities and that was not particularly directed at the world’s working classes but to ancient Russian patriotic fervor.) That drawing of lessons about what happened during the strike is what drives the force of the film.
Here is how this one played out in all its glory and infamy. The workers at a Russian factory of unknown location and for that matter of unknown production had been beaten down by the greedy capitalists and stockholders, had had no say in what they made and how much dough they made. (The scenes with the greedy capitalists are a treasure, something out of any leftist’s caricature of the old time robber barons complete with fat bellies, cigars and top hats). Like any situation where tensions are strung out to the limit it did not take a lot to produce a reason for a strike for a better shake in this wicked old world. Here it was an honest workman’s being accused of a theft which he couldn’t defend himself against and so in shame he committed suicide. After have previously spent several weeks talking about taking an action to better their conditions the leaders of the underground “strike committee” decided to have everybody “down tools.” (The scene of this action with a rolling shutdown as section after section left their benches was breathtaking.)
Of course in turn of the century (20th century) Russia (and elsewhere) the capitalists were as vicious as one would expect of a new class of exploiters dealing here with people, men and women, just off the farm and so in no mood to grant such things as an eight-hour day (a struggle that we in America are very familiar with from the Haymarket Martyrs whose chief demand a few decades before the time of this film was for that same eight hour day) and a big wage increase. So the committee of capitalists and their hangers-on gave a blanket “no.” Said the hell with you to the strikers.
The aftermath of this refusal is where the real lessons of this film are to drawn. Needless to say the capitalists were willing, more than willing to starve the workers into submission (the scenes of some workers pawning off their worldly possession for food for the kids, for themselves are quite moving).But not only were they willing to starve the mass of workers back to the factory but did everything in their power to break the strike by other means. First and foremost to send spies out to stir up trouble in order to get the class unity broken, then tried to get some weak-links to betray the movement from within, and if that didn’t work then try might and main to round up by any way possible the leaders of the strike in order to behead the movement. In the end though they were not above using their “Pharaohs,” their mounted cops and troops to suppress the whole thing. In the final scene after the cops and troops have done their murderous assaults on unarmed strikers the corpses spread out widely on the massacre field tell anybody who wasn’t sure about the role of the cops and troops all they need to know about the way the strike was defeated.
From what I could gather from the last signboard (one which mentioned the Lena gold strike which was I believe was suppressed in 1912) the time period of this strike was between the 1905 revolution that went down in flames and the victorious revolution in 1917. The implications of the failure of the strike, of the need to take the state power, were thus through Eisenstein’s big lenses there for all to see. Hey, even if you don’t draw any political conclusions from this film just watch to see what they mean when they say a picture sometimes is worth a thousand words. Eisenstein has a thousand such pictures that will fascinate and repel you.
The Hour Of The Wolf-With Mad Monk Bluesman Howlin’ Wolf In Mind
The Hour Of The Wolf-With Mad Monk
Bluesman Howlin’ Wolf In Mind
CD Review
By Zack James
Howlin’ Wolf, The Hour Of The Wolf,
Jack Callahan made his old high school
corner boy from in front of Jimmy Jack’s Diner in growing up town Riverdale west
of Boston Seth Garth laugh one night when they were tossing down a couple of
high shelf scotches, with water chasers after having just seen one James
Montgomery, the famous blues harmonica player who had learned his trade at the
feet of Little Walter and Junior Dean, perform at the Shell and prove once and
for all that he still had “it.” That “it” not just some far-fetched idea that
Seth had as an old-time music critic when he had first started out in
journalism, started first when he was still in college throwing small pieces
into the American Folk Gazette before
he got his big break with The Eye in
the days when guys like Trick Stearn and Bones Bennett made names for
themselves and dragged the newspaper along with them before the big ebb tide of
the 1970s washed away the glad tidings of the 1960s that everybody had pinned
their hopes on.
No this “it” had some spunk, some
substance to its core and Jack had gone along with Seth on this one. See one
night Jack and Seth had gone to a Big Bill Bloom concert at the Garden and had
come away angry, angry that they had spent their good money on expensive
tickets when Big Bill could no longer carry a tune, Back in the day that had
not mattered as much because the power of his lyrics carried the day. But that
night he was not producing new lyrics, hadn’t done so in ages and was living
off old time nostalgia from the AARP-worthy demographic that still followed him
essentially uncritically. And the fools had clapped their hands off giving him
yet another false life. Jesus. Seth had written a scathing article in the
prestigious American Folk Review
about the event and had hell rain down on him from the editor. (Old biddy
editors he had called them. After that blast Seth resolved to check out as many
of the old time folk and blues singers who were still standing to see if they
still had “it” and let people know what was what (he did not bother to check
out the old time rock and rollers that had started the great jail break-out of
the 1950s since all that were left except Jerry Lee were one hit wonders who
didn’t make the cut).
So James Montgomery got his thumbs up.
Funny some guys, guys like David Bromberg still had it, Jim Kweskin too but
before he passed away Utah Phillips was doddering and the late Etta James was in
different planet. Sad.
Now that you know the score, know what
the old corner boys were up to we can get back to what Jack said that made Seth
laugh. Simple. He just said, “You know as good as James is Howlin’ Wolf would
have had him for lunch and had time for a nap.” And of course Seth had to
agree. Agree for no other reason that he and Jack had been present in a little
side room in Newport, at the big Folk Festival back in 1965 when the Wolf
practically blew the walls of Jericho down when he played How Many More Years practically devouring the harmonica. Now the
Wolf always claimed that he was not a drinking man (had taken the legendary
country blues guys, guys like Son House, his “father,” to task for showing up
drunk and giving the race a bad name) and wasn’t a dope fiend (his term one
time when Seth interviewed him after he had come back from London after playing
on an album with the Stones and Seth had joked that he probably had been stoned
all the time and the Wolf looked at him with evil eyes like don’t go there
sonny boy). But Seth was convinced that that whiff he smelled was not from some
other workshop, the one with the white kids as Howlin’ Wolf put it. (Jim
Kweskin and his jug band as it turned out which was entirely possible as well).
But no way that a living breathing man, a big burly hunk of a man could put
that much energy, that much air, that much bloody sweat (wringing out his
handkerchief drawing torrents when he was done) without some “help.”
So while Seth and Jack would never know
for sure whether the Wolf man was high that famous Newport afternoon they knew
one thing, one laugh making thing, the Wolf would have had James Montgomery for
lunch. And James still had “it.” So you
can bet six two and even the Wolf had it at the end too. If you don’t believe
Seth then listen to this CD and weep for your not having been there back in the
day when the Wolf mopped up the blues floor, made his bones.
On The Wild Side Of Life Minute-With Mister Jerry Jeff Walker’s Music In Mind
On The Wild Side Of Life Minute-With Mister Jerry Jeff Walker’s Music In Mind
CD Review
By Zack James
Great Gonzos, Mister Jerry Jeff Walker,
The 1980s, the early 1980s, were a tough time to try and weather the financial doldrums of the alternative newspaper industry (much like today, in 2017, the whole print press and journal industry is going down with the ship in the digital age). That was the age of Ronald Reagan, a time when the night-takers took their revenge in big gobs, those bastards who almost got kicked in the ass for good back in the 1960s except we forget the first rule of a power struggle whether down on the corner boy block or in order to take state power-if you are going to take on the big guys you had better be ready to go all the way down and dirty or just back off. The blow-back for the past forty some years is graphic testament to that failure, to our defeat.
As if to put paid to that night-taker “victory” those who would in earlier times have come through and supported such ventures as truth-teller alternative media took a dive, waved the white flag and fell into line (a straight and narrow line that even the latest polls have shown they never have backed away from, have passed on that “keeping their heads down” to their kids, hell, their grandkids, Jesus) the money dried up and the publication that Seth Garth had been the film critic for in good times and bad for over a decade The Eye had put him on short rations, had almost reduced him to the free-lancer status he had started out in the business doing. To alleviate their dilemma, maybe to draw one last breathe would have been a better way to put it Benny Gold the long time editor had begged Seth to take a long swig at the then emerging outlaw country music scene that was starting to bust out of Nashville, started getting up a head of steam in Texas, Austin, really and places like Colorado, Iowa and the like.
Seth Garth, for those who don’t remember the name from when what he had to say about some song, album (tapes in those days really), or a performer carried weight via the distribution of The Eye on the coasts and with some strongholds in the center of the country too or were too young to know who he was could give, to use and expression from his corner boy days which he had really never given up, a rat’s ass about country music, the Nashville Grand Ole Opry stuff. Held his nose whenever anybody mentioned that George Jones had not shown up at a concert for the millionth time since he was in a drunken stupor out in Wyoming when he was supposed to be right there in Georgia or that Loretta Lynn, a coalminer’s daughter had the vapors or something and was a “no show” at one of her performances. Yeah Seth could give a rat’s ass about this incestuous country scene no question.
Moreover having just started the process of divorcing his third wife (three wives and a brood of kids, all young fueling up alimony, child support and future earnings college tuitions) he was in a sullen funk about starting all over like some rookie chasing ambulances and cop cars for a fucking story. Was trying, seriously trying, to decide whether he might link up with his old corner boy Johnny Blade who was now out of stir after doing a nickel for his last armed robbery and start pulling a few quick haul bank robberies. That larcenous heart of his that he had held in check for a number of years now was beginning to come to the fore. He after all was the guy back in the day who had perfected the “clip,” had designed the neighborhood midnight creep into Mayfair swell houses that kept the boys in clover through high school.
In the end though, at least for the public prints, Seth decided that he would give the outlaw country scene a quick run through to see if circulation would rise and The Eye would stop bleeding away financially. So he held his nose and headed to Austin (he refused to go to Nashville where some of the guys he was supposed to check out still had connections enough to draw work if the “outlaw” thing was running a little to the lean side). He first ran into a guy named Townes Van Zandt who was a true outlaw, could have given a fuck about Nashville and just wanted to write his lonesome life road lyrics, drown his sorrows in liquor and chase young honeys, the younger the better. But Townes with his downer lyrics, his lusts and his short-handed way of talking when he was not singing was not going to help Seth out of his miseries never mind a left-leaning newspaper in need of a big circulation jump.
So he pushed on, had a nice interview with Willie Nelson but the guy was almost too big by then, hell, he was playing Northern venues to sell-out crowds, radio stations were ready to switch formats if they could get a hook from him. Same with Kris Kristofferson who was getting acting jobs as well as drinking the state of California dry. Then Big Bill Bloom who had made a career out of big bang folk lyrics that everybody in the 1960s was chewing on (or chewing on partially because while everybody knew maybe three verses of his stuff they could not go the distance on the whole song, half the time Seth couldn’t either and he wrote about the whole scene) called Seth to tell him that he had heard that The Eye was on the ropes (The Eye always gave Big Bill great build-up reviews although a couple of times Seth had nixed his work but Benny had nixed his nix) and that he was working the outlaw country racket. Did Seth know about a guy, Jerry Jeff Walker, who just then was out of jail but who was a great performer, wrote great lyrics and had a pal, a guy named Guy Clark, who wrote stuff for him too?
Seth told Big Bill that he had never heard of the guy, was moreover worried about that “just out of jail” bit even if he was an outlaw but when Big Bill said he could make the connections Seth in desperation said he would go for it. And strangely enough they connected, connected when Seth was able to see that Jerry Jeff was just another larcenous corner boy except down Texas way and out West they called them good old boys instead of up North in growing up Riverdale. Seth was the guy who gave Jerry Jeff’s first concert out of jail a big play. Got him a connection to a big record producer and even got him his first gig north of the Mason-Dixon line. Got him into Harvard Square for crying out loud. The crowd almost all old folkies and raw college kids with dates went crazy for a real outlaw country singer. For a while, maybe a year, The Eye got by but the Reagan era was in deep throttle by then and once Jerry Jeff became old news everybody went back to keeping their heads down as the newspaper sank into its dreams. And Seth became once again a freaking free-lancer with no place to go but down.
The100thAnniversaryYearOfTheBolshevik-LedOctoberRevolution-LessonsForToday- The Russian Revolution and Black Liberation
The100thAnniversaryYearOfTheBolshevik-LedOctoberRevolution-LessonsForToday- The Russian Revolution and Black Liberation
The full text below the quote
The full text below the quote
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The Folkie Rank And File-An Interview With 1960s Folkie Loudon Wainwright
The Folkie Rank And
File-An Interview With 1960s Folkie Loudon Wainwright
Comment by Josh Breslin
I was somewhat of a late-comer to the folk
revival scene of the early 1960s having missed that early segment completely
while I was growing up in Olde Saco, Maine away from the big centers of the movement
like Harvard Square in Cambridge, The Village in NYC, Old Town in Chicago, and
North Beach in Frisco town. I did not pick up the folk habit until 1967, the
Summer of Love, when I went out to Frisco town to see what it was all about and
met fellow New Englander Peter Paul Markin, always called Scribe by his friends
on Russian Hill and he took me in on the Captain Crunch caravan that he was
part of. (I suppose it does not matter now but my introduction to the Scribe
was going up to this long-haired bearded guy and asking him for a joint. He
gave a huge one to me and the rest is history until his untimely early death
under mysterious circumstances.)
The Scribe had been a folkie fan since
his early high school days going over to Harvard Square and soaking in whatever
there was to soak in. Of course by 1967 the main stream of the revival had run
out of steam and so I got most of what I know second-hand. In the case of the
folkie that I am creating a link for here of an interview he did on the Terry Gross interview show Fresh Air of NPR discussing
his latest memoir it was really third-hand. The third-hand part is through a
discovery of the McGarrigle Sister, Anna and the late Kate, the latter who was married
to Wainwright for a time and had two children with him, one the well-known
Rufus Wainwright. As usual when I get into something I like to see where it
leads (a trait I picked up from the Scribe who really did try to learn every
possible fact of any possible use for any possible purpose). Knowing of the
McGarrigle-Wainwright connection I checked out his eclectic folk work. I can’t
say I was a strong supporter of his work but there were some interesting things
he did. Let him tell you via the interview some of the highlights.
http://www.npr.org/programs/fresh-air/2017/09/06/548788469/fresh-air-for-sept-6-2017-loudon-wainwright-iii
In Boston-Wednesday, September 20 Committee for International Labor Defense-The Life Of Nate Shaw
Educational/Presentation 7:00 – 8:00 PM
Wednesday, September 20
Committee for International Labor Defense
"All God’s Dangers: The Life of Nate Shaw” International Labor Defense's mass mobilizations in the 1930s, notably in defense of the Scottsboro Boys, also helped give birth to the Sharecroppers Union. Nate Shaw (Ned Cobb) was one of those who joined the Union. Shaw was targeted and imprisoned by the government. International Labor Defense gave him critical support. "All God's Dangers" are his memoirs. Presentation and discussion with Sandy Rosen of the CILD.
The Committee for International Labor Defense can be found on Facebook here: https://m.facebook.com/InternationalLaborDefense/
Eric Brooks
+1 317-796-1772
@ebrooks
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Stop Continuing To Let The Military Sneak Into The High Schools-Down With JROTC And Military Recruiter Access-What Every Young Woman Should Know
Stop Continuing To Let The Military Sneak Into The High Schools-Down With JROTC And Military Recruiter Access-What Every Young Woman Should Know
Frank Jackman comment:
One of the great struggles on college campuses during the height of the struggle against the Vietnam War back in the 1960s aside from trying to close down that war outright was the effort to get the various ROTC (Reserve Officer Training Corps, I think that is right way to say it) programs off campus. In a number of important campuses that effort was successful, although there has been back-sliding going on since the Vietnam War ended and like any successful anti-war or progressive action short of changing the way governments we could support do business is subject to constant attention or the bastards will sneak something in the back door.
To the extent that reintroduction of ROTC on college campuses has been thwarted, a very good anti-war action indeed which had made it just a smidgen harder to run ram shot over the world, that back door approach has been a two-pronged attack by the military branches to get their quota of recruits for their all-volunteer military services in the high schools. First to make very enticing offers to cash-strapped public school systems in order to introduce ROTC, junior version, particularly but not exclusively, urban high schools (for example almost all public high schools in Boston have some ROTC service branch in their buildings with instructors partially funded by the Defense Department and with union membership right and conditions a situation which should be opposed by teachers’ union members).
Secondly, thwarted at the college level for officer corps trainees they have just gone to younger and more impressible youth, since they have gained almost unlimited widespread access to high school student populations for their high pressure salesmen military recruiters to do their nasty work. Not only do the recruiters who are graded on quota system and are under pressure produce X number of recruits or they could wind doing sentry guard duty in Kabul or Bagdad get that access where they have sold many young potential military personnel many false bills of goods but in many spots anti-war veterans and other who would provide a different perspective have been banned or otherwise harassed in their efforts.
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