• Watch Bob Dylan Perform "Only A Pawn In Their Game," His Damning Song A

    From Open Culture@1:229/2 to All on Monday, August 31, 2020 17:46:53
    From: open.culture@bbs.alt119.net

    Trauma is repetition, and the United States seems to inflict and suffer from the same deep wounds, repeatedly, unable to stop, like one of the ancient Biblical curses of which Bob Dylan was so fond. The Dylan of the early 1960s adopted the voice of a
    prophet, in various registers, to tell stories of judgment and generational curses, symbolic and historical, that have beset the country from its beginnings.

    The verses of "Blowin' in the Wind," from 1963's The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, enact this repetition, both traumatic and hypnotic. In its dual refrains-"how many times...?" and "the answer is blowin' in the wind" (ephemeral, impossible to grasp)-the song
    cycles between earnest Lamentations and the acute, world-weary resignation of Ecclesiastes. "This ambiguity is one reason for the song's broad appeal," as Peter Dreier writes at Dissent.

    Just three months after its release, when Dylan performed at the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom on August 28, 1963, "Blowin' in the Wind" had become a massive civil rights anthem. But he had already ceded the song to Peter, Paul & Mary, who
    played their version that day. Dylan ignored his sophomore album entirely to play songs from the upcoming The Times They Are a-Changing-songs that stand out
    for their indictments of the U.S. in some very specific terms.

    Dylan played three songs from the new album: "When the Ship Comes In" with Joan
    Baez, "Only a Pawn in Their Game," and "With God on Our Side." (He also played the popular folk song "Keep Your Eyes on the Prize.") In contrast to his vaguely allusive
    popular anthems, "Only a Pawn in Their Game"-about the murder of Medgar Evers-isn't coy about the culprits and their crimes. We might say the song offers an astute analysis of institutional racism, white supremacy, and stochastic terrorism.

    A bullet from the back of a bush
    Took Medgar Evers' blood
    A finger fired the trigger to his name
    A handle hid out in the dark
    A hand set the spark
    Two eyes took the aim
    Behind a man's brain
    But he can't be blamed
    He's only a pawn in their game

    A South politician preaches to the poor white man
    "You got more than the blacks, don't complain
    You're better than them, you been born with white skin, " they explain
    And the Negro's name
    Is used, it is plain
    For the politician's gain
    As he rises to fame
    And the poor white remains
    On the caboose of the train
    But it ain't him to blame
    He's only a pawn in their game

    The deputy sheriffs, the soldiers, the governors get paid
    And the marshals and cops get the same
    But the poor white man's used in the hands of them all like a tool
    He's taught in his school
    From the start by the rule
    That the laws are with him
    To protect his white skin
    To keep up his hate
    So he never thinks straight
    'Bout the shape that he's in
    But it ain't him to blame
    He's only a pawn in their game

    From the poverty shacks, he looks from the cracks to the tracks
    And the hoofbeats pound in his brain
    And he's taught how to walk in a pack
    Shoot in the back
    With his fist in a clinch
    To hang and to lynch
    To hide 'neath the hood
    To kill with no pain
    Like a dog on a chain
    He ain't got no name
    But it ain't him to blame
    He's only a pawn in their game

    Today, Medgar Evers was buried from the bullet he caught
    They lowered him down as a king
    But when the shadowy sun sets on the one
    That fired the gun
    He'll see by his grave
    On the stone that remains
    Carved next to his name
    His epitaph plain
    Only a pawn in their game

    These lyrics have far too much relevance to current events, and they're indicative of the changing tone of Dylan's muse. His refrains drip with irony. The killer of Medgar Evers "can't be blamed"-an evasion of responsibility that becomes a powerful force
    all its own.

    Dylan revisits the themes of generational trauma and murder in "With God on Our
    Side" (hear him sing it with Baez at Newport, above). The song is a sharp satire of his historical education, with its inevitable repetitions of war and slaughter. Here,
    Dylan presents the exponentially gross, existentially dreadful, consequences of
    a national abdication of blame for historical violence.

    Oh my name it ain't nothin'
    My age it means less
    The country I come from
    Is called the Midwest
    I was taught and brought up there
    The laws to abide
    And that land that I live in
    Has God on its side

    Oh, the history books tell it
    They tell it so well
    The cavalries charged
    The Indians fell
    The cavalries charged
    The Indians died
    Oh, the country was young
    With God on its side

    The Spanish-American
    War had its day
    And the Civil War, too
    Was soon laid away
    And the names of the heroes
    I was made to memorize
    With guns in their hands
    And God on their side

    The First World War, boys
    It came and it went
    The reason for fighting
    I never did get
    But I learned to accept it
    Accept it with pride
    For you don't count the dead
    When God's on your side

    The Second World War
    Came to an end
    We forgave the Germans
    And then we were friends
    Though they murdered six million
    In the ovens they fried
    The Germans now, too
    Have God on their side

    I've learned to hate the Russians
    All through my whole life
    If another war comes
    It's them we must fight
    To hate them and fear them
    To run and to hide
    And accept it all bravely
    With God on my side

    But now we got weapons
    Of chemical dust
    If fire them, we're forced to
    Then fire, them we must
    One push of the button
    And a shot the world wide
    And you never ask questions
    When God's on your side

    Through many a dark hour
    I've been thinkin' about this
    That Jesus Christ was
    Betrayed by a kiss
    But I can't think for you
    You'll have to decide
    Whether Judas Iscariot
    Had God on his side.

    So now as I'm leavin'
    I'm weary as Hell
    The confusion I'm feelin'
    Ain't no tongue can tell
    The words fill my head
    And fall to the floor
    That if God's on our side
    He'll stop the next war

    Dylan's race/class analysis in "Only a Pawn in the Game" and his succinct People's History of Christian Nationalism in "With God on Our Side" stand out as interesting choices for the March for several reasons. For one thing, it's as though he had written
    these songs expressly to take the political, economic, and religious mechanisms
    and mythologies of racism apart. This was radical speech in an event that was policed by its organizers to tone down inflammatory rhetoric for the cameras.

    23-year-old John Lewis, for example, was forced to temper his speech, in which he meant to say, "We will march through the South, through the heart of Dixie, the way Sherman did. We shall pursue our own scorched earth policy and burn Jim
    Crow to the
    ground - nonviolently.… the revolution is at hand, and we must free ourselves
    of the chains of political and economic slavery." As a popular white artist, rather than a potentially seditious Black organizer, Dylan had far more license
    and could "use
    his privilege," as they say, to describe the systems of political and economic oppression Lewis had wanted to name.

    Dylan's performance was one of a handful of memorable musical appearances. Most of the singers made a far bigger impression, like Mahalia Jackson, Marian Anderson, and Baez herself, whose "We Shall Overcome" created a legendary moment of harmony. No one
    sang along to Dylan's new songs-they wouldn't have known the words. But Dylan was never careless. He chose these words for the moment, hoping to have some impact in the only way he could.

    The 1963 March's purpose has been overshadowed by a few passages in Martin Luther King, Jr.'s powerful "I Have a Dream" speech, co-opted by everyone and reduced to meme-able quotes. But the protest "remains one of the most successful mobilizations ever
    created by the American Left," historian William P. Jones writes. "Organized by
    a coalition of trade unionists, civil rights activists, and feminists--most of them African American and nearly all of them socialists."

    Dylan sang stories of how the country got to where it was, through a history of
    violence still playing out before the marchers' eyes. Whatever political tensions there were among the various organizers and speakers did not distract them from pushing
    through the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the Fair Employment Practices clause banning discrimination on the basis of race, religion, national origin, or sex-protections that have been broadened since that time, and also challenged, threatened, and stripped
    away.

    Fifty-seven years later, as the RNC convention ends and another March on Washington happens, we might reflect on Dylan's small but prescient contributions in 1963, in which he aptly characterized the traumatic repetitions we're still convulsively
    experiencing over half a century later.

    Related Content:

    The Moment When Bob Dylan Went Electric: Watch Him Play "Maggie's Farm" at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965

    A Massive 55-Hour Chronological Playlist of Bob Dylan Songs: Stream 763 Tracks

    James Baldwin Talks About Racism in America & Civil Rights Activism on The Dick
    Cavett Show (1969)

    Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness

    Watch Bob Dylan Perform "Only A Pawn In Their Game," His Damning Song About the
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