Posts Tagged ‘Alternative Country’

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Dana Lyons – "Cows With Guns" (1995)

2009/11/20


Viva la revolution, all you bovine lovers!

It just so happens that I was asked about my vegetarian ways today by someone with the question "What sort of practicalities or issues do you run into?" and a link to this article, "Bellying Up to Environmentalism". My response was as follows. I have much to say on the topic and even what I have here only scratches the surface. If you want a short answer then you should stop reading now and just know that I am a vegetarian not because of my love of animals or the environment, it is because I hate plants.

Seriously though, I've been a vegetarian for over 13 years. I am of the ovo-lacto variety. I eat eggs and dairy products. I even occasionally buy something made of leather or other animal products.

I was hardly raised vegetarian. G pointed out to me the other day that being a vegetarian was part of my teenage rebellion. I live in a meat eater's world here in the United States, where it is frequently difficult to get anything other than a salad or perhaps some pasta at restaurants as the only real vegetarian options. I am never surprised but always disappointed when the main part of my meal is some sort of fried potato. Our culture views meat as a nutritional necessity, though I am living proof it is not. Our meals in this country tend to focus on the meat, and view everything else as something added to the meat. e.g. A hamburger is not a hamburger unless it has the meat. The pickle, lettuce, tomato, etc. are all toppings.

When I do eat out I do tend toward the foreign foods. They tend to view the meat as an additive. Go to a Thai or Chinese restaurant, for example, and tofu is easily swapped for chicken without compromising the essence of the meal. In mexican food, beans is offen the substitute. With Indian meat can be left out 9 times out of 10 and you would never know the difference. Even Italian food is typically centered around the pasta, the bread or the sauce.

At home it is a similar story. G (who is essentially a vegetarian because of me, and not when we go out to eat) and I tend to cook meals without meat, usually with either rice, pasta, bread, pie crust, spaghetti squash, or burritos as a base, and then assorted vegetables, tofu, beans, and sauses added. For some things we have swapped out a vegetable alternative. e.g. instead of cheeseburgers, we frequently use portobello mushrooms in place of the burger. Instead of meatballs, G makes the most delicious eggplant balls, instead of deli meats on sandwhiches I spread hummus. We do use the fake ground beef, and the veggie burgers, and fake chicken patties too, but mostly because they are quick to prepare. I do not think of them as "fake meat" though because they rarely taste like meat and anyone expecting meat will be disappointed. They are really their own type of food.

It is difficult for me to be too picky if I want to eat out at restaurants at all. I know the veggie burgers were likely grilled on the same stove as the burgers. The fries were fried in the same fryer as the chicken wings. My veggie sub was sliced on the same cutting board and with the same knife as all the meat sandwiches. You just have to keep your eyes open and accept that there will be contamination or even that the veggy soup you just took a big spoonful was actually chicken soup.

I've known for a long time that being vegetarian is more environmentally friendly. Guilting people into being vegetarian is probably the wrong approach to try vegetarianism or reduce meat intake. There is definitely a financial savings by eating less meat, but more importantly there is a huge health savings. For example I had my choleterol tested last year and the doctor said it was "perfect". I got a perfect score. No force fed cherrios for me! I challenge any meat eater to produce the same results. I would also say that about a month or two after I did make the initial switch I never felt better. I lost weight immediately too. I also opened my eyes to a world of food that I had previously only eaten because "it was good for me". I have to believe now that vegetables taste more appealing to me because I crave them, not meat. By shutting out meat I actually feel like I opened a lot more doors to other flavors and cultures of food that I had previously avoided.

Given the frequency of meat recalls, and knowing that so much meat is bathed in ammonia to sterilize it, or contains high amounts of hormones, drugs, or mercury, I feel better not touching the stuff. The fruit and vegetable industries are not without fault though (e.g. Monsanto engineered corn, over insecticided apples, spinach recalls, etc.), so that alone is not enough. Really that is an arguement to go free range and organic.

If you eat egg and/or dairy, you will still get plenty of protein. Even then you do not need animal protein to survive, as my Vegan friends have proved. Don't believe the protien myth the meat eaters will tell you. How the body uses and produces protiens is another lecture entirely though.

I would encourage meat eaters to consider eating meat only once a day if they are eating it twice now or fewer times per week if they are eating it every day. Or perhaps next time you make a meat dish at home, reduce the amount of meat put in in exchange for more of the other ingredients. Personal as well as environmental benefits can still be gained through reduction.

…oh and if that is not enough to convince you, then perhaps the threat of cows with guns will do it? No? What about the chickens in choppers?


Song Recommendations

If you like this song, I also suggest:

I also suggest the music genre:


Click here for more info on Dana Lyons – Cows With Guns – "Cows With Guns".

The MP3 may be purchased here…

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Kerri Powers – "Tallulah Send a Car for Me" (2009)

2009/10/02


This is good stuff from Kerri Powers. Good stuff you need to hear!

On a totally unrelated post, my friend posted this song in the comments. I didn't have a chance to listen to it until this morning, but now I've listened to most of Kerri Power's album. I am intrigued.

I think it is tough for folk artists to make it big. They tend to get ignored by the industry and most of the public. So many of them are just one man shows, song and guitar. They have a lot of competition just in folk alone, with minimal support or visibility. Also the nature of the music is such that it is not going to knock your socks off, yet it is just what most of us need at the end of a long day.

I don't know how we get artists like Kerri out of the shadows, but listen to "Tallulah Send a Car for Me" (and then perhaps more of Kerri's songs here), and perhaps we can all do it together. I also suggest "Do You Hear Footsteps" and "Trying To Make My Way To You". Regardless, at least she has faith in the shadows.


Song Recommendations

If you like this song, I also suggest:

I also suggest the music genre:


Click here for more info on Kerri Powers – Faith in the Shadows – "Tallulah Send a Car for Me".

The MP3 may be purchased here…

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The Dixie Chicks – "Long Time Gone" (2002)

2009/06/03


I love The Dixie Chicks. They have got to be my favorite Country musicians. Period. I would not consider this my favorite song by them, but I felt like it this morning. A perfect opening to an album named "Home".

As you all may recall in 2003 Natalie Maines spoke out against Bush and his impending invasion of Iraq and Iraq War… "Just so you know, we're on the good side with y'all. We do not want this war, this violence, and we're ashamed that the President of the United States is from Texas." Now I don't know if throwing the entire state of Texas under the bus was necessary (I mean Eisley and The Polyphonic Spree are from Texas …perhaps parts of it could be thrown under), but otherwise I agreed and still agree with them. I was and still am ashamed of President Bush and ashamed of the war. I was against it from the start. I am still against it. Every argument for it then and now is either a two-faced lie or not good enough to justify the human and economic costs.

Then Natalie Maines apologized within 4 DAYS. But still people were throwing away, burning, bulldozing, etc. their Dixie Chicks CDs. I have 2 words for all those people who ever did that:

FUCK YOU

You people are forever on my shit list. Anyone who supports the government (or one particular political party) 100% of the time is on there too. I do not want any of you as my leaders or representatives or in the government at all because YOU ARE THE PROBLEM!!!

If "we the people", famous or not, do not have the freedom to express our opinions without others taking violent action, then we might well forget out that first amendment "Freedom of Speech" thing. If we are not allowed to disagree with our President or the government then the government is not really serving us, we are serving them. The Declaration of Independence says clearly that governments are "deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed", so it is our duty to express our disagreement or agreement to guide THEM, not to follow the President blindly. (And yes… that goes for all you Obama lovers too.) The President, government, Republicans, or Democrats do not dictate our opinions. We the people should dictate theirs. Bush even said a month after the comment "The Dixie Chicks are free to speak their mind. They can say what they want to say." but still they were dragged through the mud for years because of that one comment. It disgusts me.

And to all of you who do not like the Dixie Chicks for artistic non-political reasons… I'm cool with that. Their sound is definitely not for everyone. If you still want some country though, may I suggest some Alan Jackson?

UPDATE 2009-06-08:

Since writing this post, I cannot help but think of the bulldozing of the Dixie Chicks CDs as being synonymous with the Nazi book burning. Not cool man. Not cool.


Click here for more info on The Dixie Chicks – Home – "Long Time Gone".

The MP3 may be purchased here…

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Stacey Earle – "Show Me How" (1998)

2009/04/21

Audio Stream: http://www.rhapsody.com/stacey-earle/simple-gearle


Here is the scene…

I'm in Boston for a temp job and it is 1999. I am not a teenager, but I'm not a college graduate either. I have no one to hang out with and meeting people in bars is not my thing (or in other words I suck at it). I am still getting over the end of a long and painful relationship. I decide I'm going to walk around Harvard campus and pretend I go there to cheer myself up. I've got nothing else to do. I could go back to my closet of a room (oh wait… it IS a closet) and feel sorry for myself, but I did that last night.

I happen upon Sanders Theatre, this cool old building and I wonder if I can see the inside. It just so happens there is a folk concert featuring Christine Lavin starting in an hour. I wander in the vicinity until someone opens the door, and I go in. (I'm not a big 'folk music' guy, but why not. If it sucks at least I got to see the theatre, right?) I am the only audience member at this point, and it is surreal to be in this old old theatre seemingly mad entirely of wood alone. I breathe it in.

One by one an audience forms, though it is a sparse crowd. I sit on my bench alone. A woman with her guitar emerges on the stage. She is the opening act and her name is Stacey Earle. She starts to play and I swear I am in another world. "How could this one woman be so good?" I think. Song after song is so heart felt and thoughtful. She is beautiful in her performance. By the time she is done, I feel reborn.

Christine Lavin performs and she is good, but it is Stacey Earle's performance that still has my head swimming. I feel compelled to tell her how much I enjoyed her performance. I do so before I even realize I'm not one to just walk up to people and start talking. But that is what I did. Before I know it, I have purchased her album, she has signed it for me, and she leaves me with a smile.

I distinctly remember her performing many of the songs to this day. I remember this song in particular struck just the right chord with me at the time. Like it was exactly how I felt at that time in my life. So perfectly bittersweet. So perfectly honest.

Thank you for that memory Stacey Earle.

PS: The link above is to rhapsody.com, where you get a limited number of "plays", but I highly suggest that if you like the song you just buy the whole album. It is worth it. Also it is very likely to be one of my "Albums of the Week / Must Own Albums" in the near future.


Click here for more info on Stacey Earle – Simple Gearle – "Show Me How".

Or visit http://www.staceyearle.com/

The CD may be purchased here…

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Johnny Cash – "Folsom Prison Blues" (1955)

2009/04/20


The great Johnny Cash. Frequently it is the early stuff that is the best with influential musical artists. Or perhaps just the most memorable. Perhaps because that is where the influence starts and the affects are then magnified as time goes by. I'd guess that "Alternative Country" would not be what it is today without him. Regardless, it is hard to deny Johnny Cash's influence, from him helping to give artists like Bob Dylan a boost, to his work on "The Johnny Cash Show", and even his participation in the "The Highwaymen".

PS: I liked the fan made video. It has a simple way about it I think Johnny Cash would've appreciated.

UPDATE 2010-07-03: Thanks to antiquated copyright laws that do nothing other than keep me having to replace links to the videos I link to but don't actually prevent any copying, the fan made video is not available in the USA, so I have replaced the link to another less interesting video. Johnny would disapprove, I think. In case you are not in the USA, here is the video:


Click here for more info on Johnny Cash – "Folsom Prison Blues".

The MP3 may be purchased here…