Ecology Songs 1964-1987 

With all the various realisations about climate change, the earth’s carrying capacity, the implications of our lifestyle, over-population etc I thought I’d go back and see how musicians past and present have dealt with ecological themes. This is a first-time trawl through the topic, noting that – for all the vitriol slung their way over the last thirty years – the hippies had an active ecological critique and that this found its way into late 60’s and early 70’s music.

One marker of the way that the topic came into public consciousness was the 1962 publication of Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring. That year Malvina Reynolds wrote The Rain to protest nuclear testing in the earth’s atmosphere. Two years later, the Searchers recorded a version of Reynolds’ song as What Have They Done To The Rain. The lyric is fairly vague but the Searchers give it their customary sweet, emotional treatment: it made the UK top 20 in late 1964 and you can see it on youtube:

From early 1966, the Yardbirds’ Shapes of Things is a key High Sixties record: a huge UK hit with Keith Relf’s gothic vocals, a super-hot Jeff Beck solo, and the following lyrics: ‘now the trees are almost green/ But will they still be seen?/ When time and tide have been/
Fall into your passing hands/ Please don’t destroy these lands/ Don’t make them desert sands’. They continued this theme on their 1966 album, particularly on Farewell.

The Doors second epic, When The Music’s Over is not overtly ecological – Morrison has a lot to get off his chest – but it does contain the following, haunting section: ‘what have they done to the Earth/ What have they done to our fair sister?/ Ravaged and plundered and ripped her and bit her/ Stuck her with knives in the side of the dawn/ And tied her with fences/And dragged her down’.

Going Up The Country, cover artwork

As early as 1967, there was a powerful ‘back to the land’ movement, away from technology and consumerism and the money machine. For more, see Lisa Law’s book Flashing In The Sixties (US) and the work of Donovan and Vashti Bunyan in the UK (Kieran Evans’ recent film, From Here To Before, is an excellent introduction). Songs about going back to the country are plentiful in late 60’s rock, from Quicksilver’s Shady Grove to Canned Heat’s Going Up The Country to the inevitable Woodstock. (see Guardian blog here).

One of the earliest and most incisive was Neil Young’s Here We Are In the Years, a stand-out track on his excellent (and much under-rated) first solo album. Young relates all the ills of a youth-obsessed, reified consumer society to a lack of respect for the natural world: ‘while people planning trips to stars/ Allow another boulevard to claim/ A quiet country lane/ It’s insane’.

Ray Davies’ concerns about the modern world burst forth on Apeman, a big 1970 hit for the Kinks. ‘I’m no better than the animals sitting in the cages in the zoos, man’, he sings in this catalogue of woes: ‘over-population and inflation and starvation’. Ecology raises its head in the memorable section: ‘I look out my window, but I can’t see the sky/ ‘Cos the air pollution is fogging up my eyes/ I want to get out of this city alive’. Fogging sounds suspiciously like fucking.

Big Yellow Taxi, record label

‘They paved paradise, put up a parking lot’, begins Joni Mitchell on one of her most upbeat songs, Big Yellow Taxi; ‘with a pink hotel, a boutique, and a swinging hot spot’. The lyrics are straight out of Silent Spring: ‘hey farmer, farmer, put away your DDT/ I don’t care about spots on my apples/ Leave me the birds and the bees – please’. Her quicksilver laugh at the end is a classic moment.

Written by Skip Battyn, Kim Fowley and Roger McGuinn, the Byrds’ Hungry Planet (from their patchy Untitled double) is even more explicit – and prescient: ‘I’m a hungry planet/ Orbiting in the sky/ The things they did to hurt me/Pass on by and by/ Now here I am all alone/ They never ever learn/ Well I had to shake and quake/And make their houses burn’.

It doesn’t stop. There’s Danny O’Keefe with his toxic smog melt-down, 3.10 Smokey Thursday – which you can hear on Meridian 1970. Then there’s Spirit’s Nature’s Way, from The 12 Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus: ‘it’s nature’s way of telling you, summer breeze/ it’s nature’s way of telling you, dying trees…it’s nature’s way of telling you/ Something’s wrong’.

The New Riders of the Purple Sage tackled their topic on their classic first, city-to-country album: ‘Hey look at the green, green tree/ It ain’t quite as green green as it used to be/ And hey, look at the cool clear water/ It ain’t quite as cool and clear
as it ought to be/ And we live in the Garden of Eden, yeah/ Don’t know why we want to tear
the whole thing to the ground’.

The Beach Boys echoed these sentiments on Don’t Go Near The Water, from 1971’s Surf’s Up, albeit tinged with their habitual postivism: ‘don’t go near the water/ Don’t you think it’s sad/ What’s happened to the water/ Our water’s going bad/ Oceans, rivers, lakes and streams/ Have all been touched by man/ The poison floating out to sea/ Now threatens life on land’.

Hawkwind, as was their wont, took everything further and fashioned an epic 12 string drone to condemn Western society on We Took the Wrong Step Years Ago: ‘take a look around and see the warnings close at hand/ Already weeds are writing their scriptures in the sand…The morning sun is rising, casting rays across the land/ Already nature’s calling, take heed of the warning’.

On the classic What’s Going On album, Marvin Gaye added ecology to his list of what is/ was wrong with America on Mercy Mercy Me: ‘radiation in the ground and in the sky/Animals and birds who live nearby are dying/ Oh, mercy mercy me/ Oh, things ain’t what they used to be/ What about this overcrowded land?/How much more abuse from man can you stand?’

With the teen/ ballroom/ gender preoccupations of Glam rock, ecological songs fell out of favour somewhat – although Sparks delivered a vague warning with Never Turn Your Back on Mother Earth: ‘when she’s on her best behaviour/ Don’t be tempted by her favours/ Never turn your back on mother earth/ Towns are hurled from A to B/ By hands that looked so smooth to me’.

The Day the World Turned Day-Glo, single sleeve

Despite all the rhetoric, many first wave punks had been hippies, or had been influenced by hippies. The most preoccupied with consumerism and materialism were X-Ray Spex, whose The Day The World Turned Dayglo is a fabulous, totally art-i-ficial dystopia: ‘the X-rays were penetrating/ Through the latex breeze / Synthetic fibre see-thru leaves/ Fell from the rayon trees’.

Fast-forwarding well into the next decade, R.E.M.’s Cuyahoga took its title from the famously polluted Cleveland, Ohio river that caught fire several times during the 20th century, most notably in 1952 and 1969. In calling for a new national vision, the lyrics relate this environmental disaster to the country’s industrial past: ‘Our father’s father’s father tried, erased the parts he didn’t like’.

And from around the same time, Mr. Fingers had this super-graceful vision of another world, a Distant Planet where they can be free from racism as well as environmental and economic degradation: ‘you can eat the food around you, you will hunger never more’. Yet they know it’s a pipe dream: ‘distant planet, distant planet, far far away’.

I’m sure there are many more examples with the rise in environmental consciousness. Any thoughts?

Vinyl: Lamonte Young, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Spooks in Space… 

Floating Frequencies, cover art

First, LPs – one old and one new. Since 2006, Eleh have released nine limited edition vinyl only lps of pure sine wave drones, using a vintage analogue synthesiser and test tube oscillators. They are in the tradition of pioneers like LaMonte Young, Terry Riley, Charlemagne Palestine and Pauline Oliveros (with whom they have collaborated on “The Beauty of the Steel Skeleton”/”Drifting Depths” (2008). Their second album, “Floating Frequences/ Intuitive Synthesis II” (2007) – tagged ‘Pure Tone. Pure Sound. Pure Analog’ – contains three tracks that explore the very low end of the sonic spectrum: ‘Black Mountain 1933′ and ‘Pulsing Tone: Study of Seven Sine Waves Pts 1 & 2′. As their slogan goes, ‘volume reveals detail’: turn them up and you get a sound as hypnotic and psychoactive as any LaMonte Young installation – like the one I saw at the Dia Foundation in 1989: ‘The Romantic Symmetry (over a 60 cycle base)’. Eleh are almost as hermetic as Young, giving no interviews and releasing limited vinyl only editions that go out of print almost as soon as they are issued – for more details, go to http://www.importantrecords.com/

Shady Grove, sleeve art

Quicksilver’s third record, “Shady Grove” – which I’ve just returned to after years of neglect – is routinely ignored, but I prefer it to “Happy Trails”. After the departure of founder member Gary Duncan, the group added famed British session pianist Nicky Hopkins – famous for his work with the Rolling Stones and the Kinks, who wrote “Session Man” in his honour – and recorded this strange, discursive album over the summer of 1969. Each side begins with a solid rock number: “Shady Grove” is an early entrant in the ‘message from the country’ song stakes (see also, Joni Mitchell, “Big Yellow Taxi” and “Woodstock”, Canned Heat “Going Up The Country”, Steve Miller Band’s “Going To The Country”), while “Joseph’s Coat” is super-psychedelic – a biblical parable layered with chant-like vocals, weird mutterings, a soaring John Cipollina solo, and electronic whooshes. The four ballads – two of which were written or co-written with Denise Jewkes, from the all-female band Ace of Cups – slowly reveal a serpentine, if not sensitive charm. There are another couple of rambling rockers: “Three or Four Feet From Home”, written by John Cipollina, and “Holy Moly”, written by long-standing collaborator. Nick Gravenites. And the finale, the instrumental “Edward, the Mad Shirt Grinder” is – for better or worse – a track that could only have been made in the late sixties: a mad, pell-mell piano/ guitar dash that twists and turns for nearly ten minutes. Complete with a green-saturated fold-out sleeve by George Hunter’s Globe Propaganda, “Shady Grove” made the US top 30 and stayed on the charts for over two months. That was it for that version of Quicksilver: Gary Duncan returned with Dino Valenti in tow, and from then on the group record was dominated by Valenti’s, shall we say, idiosyncratic vocals and lyrics. Like all the other first wave SF acts, they then started to make bad records and didn’t stop for several years.

Spooks in Space, label image

There’s a great mix 12″ from 1981 that predates the commercial release of what’s usually regarded as the first cut-up rap tune: Grandmaster Flash’s “Adventures on the Wheels of Steel”. Released on Just Eyes and Teeth Records, “The Amazing Adventures of Jungle Jenny” by Spooks in Space is a sixteen minute jam – loosely based on the Tom Tom Club’s “Genius of Love” – that mixes in snatches of records by Kurtis Blow, James Brown, Timmy Thomas, Isaac Hayes – of course, “Theme From Shaft”, Jimmy ‘Bo’ Horne’s brilliant “Spank”, D-Train’s “You’re The One For Me” among many others. It reminds you of how great dance music was in the early eighties – the sense of play, fun, exploration and sheer kineticism (for more, see the “Dreams Come True” compilation) as well as being a time capsule of the break records du jour. Oh, and it has phasing. I’ve just checked discogs.com and you can pick this up fairly cheaply.

Sharon Tandy, Hold On, single label

On to 45′s: Sharon Tandy’s “Hold On” (1967) is an acknowledged sixties classic that has been released on several cd’s – including Ace’s brand new, excellent compilation “Girls With Guitars” but the original Atlantic 45 is super-crunchy: a fantastic mixture of soul flash, psych guitar and Tandy’s cool but assertive vocal. You can hear the greased fingers hit the guitar strings, and the drums go right through you. Considering how constrained many female singers were in the sixties, it’s great to hear Tandy’s warning words of encouragement: ‘I can help you hold on/everything you do is wrong’. She was backed on this near-hit by freakbeat band Fleur De Lys, all of whose singles – especially “Circles” and “Gong With The Luminous Nose” – are great (and are collected on the “Reflections” cd).

JJ Cale, single label

Before his 70′s career as backwoods minimalist, J.J.Cale was a jobbing musician on the Sunset Strip: his first single for Liberty Records, “It’s A Go Go Place”, sought to ride the then prevalent Johnny Rivers trend. Released later in 1966, “Outside Lookin’ In” is a different beast altogether: a hypnotic slice of paranoia dominated by an almost reggae style, off-beat rhythm guitar and droning bass. The drones continue on the flip, “In Our Time”, with its weird mumbling vocal rounds. You should be able to pick this one up without difficulty – a forgotten document from the Strip at its height, caught between The Whisky A Go Go and The Trip. (For more, read Domenic Priore’s illustrated history, “Riot On Sunset Strip”).

The Phycle, single label

You could play it next to another 1966 45, by an unknown Texan group called Yesterday’s Obsession. Produced by Huey P. Meaux (best known for his hit records with the Sir Douglas Quintet), “The Phycle” is a punk/mystical masterpiece. There’s a snare snap, a rolling bass and a youth coming on like the old man of the mountains as the Farfisa curls like incense smoke: ‘I have this peace/ Inside of me/ That’s lasted for/ A thousand years’. Unlike many records that sought to reproduce the initial impact of LSD, this is restrained: the wildness of the lyrics is always threatening to break out in the music but never does. And there is a strange hint of the acid mind control that would come: ”the others watch me/ As I clear the webs away/ And give them some/ Collecting all their eyes….’ The flip, “Complicated Mind”, is more standard folk rock, with more strange tales of hell rather than heaven: ‘We must be saved/Brains enslaved/ Nerves full of holes/ Complicated mind is Strange/ Unnecessary illness dominates the will’.

Marshall McLuhan, single label

Published the same month (March 1967) that “The Velvet Underground and Nico” was released, Marshall McLuhan’s “The Medium Is The Message” became an instant bestseller and has become a key text. Columbia Records quickly rushed out an LP of McLuhan and his colleagues Fiore and Jerome Agel reading selections from the book, which is a very high sixties product with people talking at and over each other, added found noises and distortion – which should be reissued (for more, see Johnny Trunk’s eloquent article in Mojo May 2009). The whole point was simultaneity. There was also a promo 45, which culled selected five and ten second spots for DJ’s with locked grooves (just like the Velvet Underground flexi in Aspen’s POP issue, “Loop”) with visionary/ critical slogans: ‘everything we do is music’.