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Empathy is the First Ingredient

By Robert Jensen, The Progressive. Posted October 1, 2005.


Acclaimed Texas folk singer Eliza Gilkyson is a unique combination of heart, soul and progressive political vision.
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Eliza Gilkyson cracks one of her more mischievous smiles and introduces a new song to the overflow summer crowd at the Cactus Café in Austin, Texas, as "one that may get me in a little trouble."

"The cowboy came from out of the west, with his snakeskin boots and his bulletproof vest," she sings, and the audience jammed into the small club -- quickly figuring out where the song "Man of God" is heading -- leans into the song.

"Gang of goons and his big war chest, fortunate son he was doubly blessed/Corporate cronies and the chiefs of staff, bowing to the image of the golden calf," Gilkyson sings, her voice crackling. "Startin' up wars in the name of God's son, gonna blow us all the way to kingdom come."

After the first line of the chorus, "Man of God, man of God, that ain't the teachings of a man of God," the audience explodes, Gilkyson grabs hold of the crowd's energy, and the 55-year-old singer/songwriter finishes a passionate rendering of the song from her new Red House Records CD, Paradise Hotel.

 "I'm actually a non-confrontational person; I want everyone to like me," she says a couple of weeks after that June show at a diner in Austin, her home since the early 1980s. "I don't think of myself as particularly capable politically, but I guess I have been dragged into it."

Gilkyson has always lived on the progressive side of the fence, from her California childhood with a folksinger father, to her back-to-the-land days in New Mexico, to her brief 1980s tour as a New Age diva (a role for which she was miscast and from which she escaped quickly), to her return to her folk roots that culminated in her first Red House release in 2000, Hard Times in Babylon.

The 2000 election pushed her to be more openly political.

"When Bush got elected, I felt like my back was to the wall," she says. "Before that election, I thought of politics as kind of hopeless. I had it all theorized, about why I shouldn't bother. So, I stayed out of it. But that's just not possible anymore."

Much of her attention these days is focused on the high crimes and misdemeanors of the Bush Administration, though she doesn't believe the country's problems will be solved by putting a Democrat in the White House.

At the core of her current political mission, beyond opposition to the Iraq War or other specific issues, is the need to "normalize dissent" -- to show that one can speak out, survive, and make a difference.

"I understand that lots of people are afraid. There are musicians who are afraid to speak up," she says. "But the reaction I get to these songs is mostly positive. There's no reason to back down."

Gilkyson pushed herself on the 2004 release Land of Milk and Honey, which was nominated for a best contemporary folk album Grammy. It starts with "Hiway 9," a song about the destructiveness of the U.S. war in Iraq that sounds like a classic truck-driving song but slips into lyrics about the war's aims: "go on and liberate my people and their o-i-l."

Although some of her songs are political, "Man of God" is unusually blunt; typically, she doesn't like songs that are preachy.

"I can't stand 'message music,' in which the songwriter is trying to drive home a political point too much," she says. "For me, ['Man of God'] was more of a visceral song, an angry song."


Digg!

Robert Jensen is a journalism professor at the University of Texas at Austin, and the author of, most recently, The Heart of Whiteness: Confronting Race, Racism and White Privilege (City Lights, 2005).

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Great Piece!
Posted by: Tom Degan on Oct 1, 2005 3:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If this article is, as some may suspect, a shameless promotion for this young lady's talents - it worked! I'm going to purchase everything by her that I can get my hands on. Entertainers with substance are so rare these days - at least with respect to the Clear Channel controlled airwaves - that when something of beauty comes along you've got to grab it while you can.

So there. Your plug worked. Are you happy?

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
tomdegan@frontiernet.net

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Gilkyson Rocks
Posted by: david.model@senecac.on.ca on Oct 1, 2005 7:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Shades of Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger and Peter, Paul Mary resonate in Gilkyson's songs and in her insights. An artist expressing dissent is a welcome relief from the violent, misogynist empty-headed crap we usually hear in music.

Her point about normalizing dissent is extremely important because without a comfortable atmosphere in which to express opposition to power, there is no freedom of speech. It almost seems too obvious to point out that freedom of speech isn't about agreeing with the establishment.

There is a long history of suppressing dissent in the United States beginning in 1798 when the government passed the Alien and Sedition Acts that punished people for criticising the government. Abe Lincoln suspended habaes corpus without which one of the most basic freedoms in a democracy vanishes, namely the freedom from arbitrary arrest. In 1918 the U.S. government passed another Sedition Act followed by the Smith Act in 1940.

Of course the epitome of repressive laws is the Patriot Act which allows the police to enter and search your house and remove anything they choose without notifying you. If memory serves me correctly, another country in the 1930's granted itself the same powers. I believe it was in Germany.

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Prayers to God
Posted by: Ingarose on Oct 1, 2005 5:53 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Frankly at age 67 I have never heard of 'Gilkyson'.But one thing struck me she somehow has God in her songs. Well, somehow I have a suggestion for her. Why not write a song titled 'Prayers to God'.

You see, everyone is praying to God. George W is praying that he will defeat the bad guys. The bad guys are praying to God that he will defeat the big old Satan (USA),

The Israelis are praying to God to defeat the Palestinians and the Palistinans are praying to God to defeat ther Israelis.

The Katrina victims are praying to God to help them start a new life. OK, the Rita victims are trying to figure out how to pray to God, since God apperently only listens to Katrina victims.

And then there is Natalees Holloway's mother who prays to God with her supporters to send Natalee back home or help her to destroy Aruba.

Well, today I prayed to God too but I realized that he problably was too busy listening to all the other prayers.
I just asked God if he could help us with our cat and dog problem. For years cats and dogs have lived togehter in our houshold without much funfare. But then came 'Cosmo'. We adopted him from a sheriff's kennel. He was a an abandoned 6 months old mix. First he tore up everying in sight but after a while he adapted except for the cats. He terrorizes the hell out of them and even injured one. Well, we could simply send 'Cosmo' back to the Sheriff's kennel and live happlily ever after. But he really loves us and we love him and we just try everything to make things work. Therefore, the prayer to God.

Look, we don't keep up with modern songs, actresses, dumb shows etc., but if I were a creative song writer I would write a song: "Prayers to God".

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» Cosmo!!!! Posted by: Poe
» RE: Cosmo!!!! Posted by: Poe
I have got to get that song...
Posted by: sgtmartin1 on Oct 1, 2005 9:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
She's captured my feelings of outrage and frustration and I'll bet a lot of others' as well.

I'll be on the lookout...thanks for the enlightening piece.

Here's one that may bring a smile as well: Breaking news: "Environmental Disaster: Republicans get Protection in Endangered Species Act."

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I love this woman's music
Posted by: 4Peace on Jul 24, 2006 3:28 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I attended an Eliza Gilkyson concert about 6 months or so ago. She was on a bill with Jimmy LaFave, another terrific Austin based singer/songwriter. Anyway, Eliza's performance was very enjoyable with a good mix of butt-rocking music, with great guitar solos, and songs about life's experiences and politics. Good lyrics and good melodies. Also, I was moved by her personality which made me think of her as a fellow journier and quite likeable. I wish I had seen this when it was first posted. This is not an advertisement but an enthusiastic appreciation for her music and a recommendation you at least listen to some samples on her website. Happy listening.

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