John Mellencamp & Sheryl Crow -a wonderful night!

by wozadummy 2 Replies latest jw friends

  • wozadummy
    wozadummy

    My woife and I went to the best concert last night at the Adelaide entertainment centre. Did'nt go to many things like that when we were JW as it's just not something done here by JW's unless you keep it quiet . I love all sorts of music and even make some of my own. I'd forgotten how loud it can be .

    It was the same venue we used to go to district assemblies but now we got real value for our time spent.

    The sound tech stuffed up a bit where we were sitting ,as it sounded a bit over modulated when Sheryl Crow played but she was absolutely fantastic ,such a big voice for a tiny woman. I really liked some of here new stuff.

    But what a bonus to have two great stars on the same night. John Mellencamp had them eating out of his hand and we had great sing-a-longs.

    It surprised me when he said that he came back here after 15 years and wanted to play one of his songs that he had'nt played for 15 years ,and then he revealed why ,as when he was 22 years old , it was here that he actually had his first number 1 hit..... WOW.

    And to make the night special he introduced to us his 13 year old son to play guitar ,but he joked it was only part time.

    Both of these performers spoke of how bad things had got in America and Mellencamp said he'd written the President to say that the president should hand back the country to Britain as they could'nt do a worse job of running it!!!

    He's not frightened to make political comments lol

    Anyway ,fantastic show by both and it is good that some things are still very good in the old U S of A

  • Nowman
    Nowman

    I am a big fan of both. John Mellencamp reminds me of my childhood...Sheryl Crow reminds me of when I left the org in 1992, I think that was when her 1st CD came out, ("Leaving Las Vegas") and I worked at this place called Olivers at night, and I would sing the songs from that CD to my girlfriends, I was always singing...still singing...

    Sheryl Crow's songs are great Kareoke songs too, I have sung many, "I used to ride with a vending machine repair man"...la la la...(or is "Laundry machine repair man?)...

    Nikki

  • purplesofa
    purplesofa

    Mellencamp Reflects on the Election

    A deeply moved John Mellencamp spoke this morning about the election of Barack Obama as the 44th president of the United States.

    “This for me is something I never thought I would see in my life,” said Mellencamp, echoing a feeling common to millions of Americans black and white and all colors in-between—especially those who came of age in the 1960s.

    “I remember the assassination of Martin Luther King and the marches in Selma, Alabama, and seeing Rosa Parks, demonstrators getting sprayed by fire hoses and attacked by police dogs and all the other horrible things that happened at that time in our country,” he continued. “Then I played at the 2004 Democratic Convention, which was my first introduction to Barack Obama, and after his keynote address I looked at my wife Elaine and said, ‘Man, what a poet! He could be president of the United States!’ And that’s absolutely verbatim.

    “But even I, who have written countless songs about race, could not believe that a man of color could be president of the United States. But today I am so proud of America. I am so happy for all Americans, that we have finally started to fulfill our obligation to the immortal words of our Declaration of Independence, that all men are created equal. We cannot expect this man to immediately change the last eight years of fear and deception, but I think we can rejoice in the fact that there is someone speaking not just for his own interests, now, but hopefully as a voice for us all.”


    t seemed only fitting that on the day that a new CBS News/New York Times poll found that a record high 89 percent of Americans—Republicans, Democrats and Independents alike--believe that the country is on the wrong track, John Mellencamp announced a new Web site exclusive solo acoustic video performance “Troubled Land,” the single from his acclaimed album “Life, Death, Love, and Freedom.” And in agreement with the song’s opening lyric “Well there's a pain in my side/But I keep travelin’ on/Bring peace to this troubled land…,” Mellencamp was himself greatly troubled.

    From the rustic setting of his home in Bloomington, Indiana, he shared his thoughts on the war, the role of government, and of course, the economy—all topics that are reflected in “Troubled Land”’s dark tone.

    “Ten years ago there wasn’t a house in town worth a million dollars—and now there are so many!” Mellencamp said, but not with approval. “Who are these people that can afford them? They can’t afford them. That’s the whole point!”

    America’s rampant consumerism, he suggested, breeds such crippling national irresponsibility.

    “If it’s a divine right to have a car, everybody would want to have a Porsche,” he postulated. “Nobody would be responsible.”

    Hence the necessary evil of government, and by extension, the more recent unnecessary evil of government deregulation.

    “Society needs government--that’s why we have laws,” he said. “Do I always want it in my house? Hell, no! But I understand that we’re all human, and according to the Bible, sinners: We tend to let our greed and irresponsibility take advantage of the system. And there’s been nothing in the last few years to prevent us from doing so, in fact, we’ve even been encouraged to be irresponsibly greedy and wasteful! So you really can’t blame people for wanting a million-dollar house or a Porsche, but it’s only helped lead us into the economic mess we’re in now.”

    Shifting to the foreign affairs aspect of all that ails “this troubled land,” the avowed pacifist commented on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    “We’re in wars that we shouldn’t be in,” he said. “We simply cannot afford, either ethically or economically, to continue to be the police of the world.”

    An additional negative associated with the wars, he noted, is the privatization/outsourcing that he feels has been so damaging to American society as a whole. He referred specifically to private security contractors like Blackwater USA, a product of a limited military commitment at the onset that has since proven enormously costly for all sides.

    “It’s the same things with privatized prisons in this country—to use one example,” Mellencamp said. “Why are there so many prisons? Because they’re owned by private companies! And they’re filled with petty drug-use people because the companies get a set amount of money per inmate and spend less than they get so the rest is profit—and there’s no incentive to let anybody out..”

    The end result is “the ruination of the compassionate country that the United States used to be,” concluded Mellencamp. “But here’s the zinger: In some ways, it’s almost a good thing. Because we’re lacking the roots of what made this country great. You hear it in the music, see it in the movies. And what about the labor of the great American workers? We don’t have that anymore, either, because there’s no work for them to do! So maybe it’s best if we bottom out, to allow our compassion and authenticity to come back. And responsibility.”

    He nostalgically recalled the time of his grandparents.

    “If you wanted a soda, you had to pay for the soda. You couldn’t charge it or put it on layaway or steal it. If you want a soda you have to pay for the soda! And the Depression gave us Woody Guthrie! Like today, you know, it’s the Pussycat Dolls. But Woody was the real thing. He was authentic.”

    The “Troubled Land” video is Mellencamp’s second Web site-only clip, following last month’s acclaimed cover of Bob Dylan’s “The Times They Are A-Changin’.”
    -jim bessman

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