Music and candidates: an uneasy alliance
When it comes to presidential campaigns, carrying a tune isn't always easy
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So let's say it's the early 1980s, and you're a rising young musician named John Cougar Mellencamp. You cut a song with a chorus that oozes Jeffersonian democracy and adds a touch of postwar suburban placidity. "Ain't that America — for you and me," you sing in your gravelly Indiana voice. "Ain't that America; we're something to see. Ain't that America: home of the free. Little pink houses for you and me."
Now let's say you're a strategist for Sen. John McCain, Republican candidate for president in 2008. You hear "Pink Houses" 25 years after it was recorded and think to yourself, hey — this is perfect. Let's blast this out at the big guy's rallies and hitch our wagon to Mellencamp's imagery.
That scenario proved problematic when it unfolded earlier this year. First, Mellencamp is a Democrat and activist who has supported John Edwards. He didn't like his work being co-opted and asked McCain to stop. Second, and just as important, "Pink Houses" is an edgy, melancholy song about chances lost and potential wasted:
"'Cause they told me when I was younger, said, `Boy, you gonna be president.' But just like everything else, those old crazy dreams just kind of came and went."
For someone coveting the White House, that's not exactly staying on message.
In the 21st century, music and politics exist at an intersection as volatile as the lonely crossroads in Mississippi where bluesman Robert Johnson supposedly bartered his soul for guitar prowess. And let's not pick on McCain; he's but one victim — or perp — of this music minefield.
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And in doing so, they offer glimpses into the national temperament.
"Interesting thing about campaign songs: They mirror the life of America. It's as if we're taking snapshots," says Oscar Brand, an 88-year-old folk musician and radio host who recorded an album of campaign music ranging from the eras of George Washington to Bill Clinton.
Brand, though, focused mostly on what prevailed until roughly John F. Kennedy's time — songs crafted expressly for the candidates, among them "Tippecanoe and Tyler, Too," "Lincoln and Liberty" and the mercifully obscure "Get on a Raft with Taft." These days, the zeitgeist dictates that candidates invoke existing tunes. We've seen how that turns out: Shouldn't presidential hopefuls bother to get a culture maven to idiot-proof song choices — or, at the least, print out a lyric sheet?
Often the songs are played in fragments as attempts to capture a mood rather than convey a message. Hillary Rodham Clinton has used pieces of Tom Petty's "American Girl" and Mellencamp's "Small Town" to convey the basic imagery of their titles; at a recent rally in a Pittsburgh suburb, her husband came on stage to the Police's "Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic." What the other lyrics might be didn't much matter.
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