Folk music, on the surface

I seem to like folk music a lot. This is a more recent discovery for me, and I’m questioning what it is about it that I like. I was interested in the 70’s Singer/Songwriters that were discussed in class last week, probably mostly for the reason that they stem from folk. I revisited Carol King’s album Tapestry, and so far I enjoy it, but for surface level reasons- because it has folk-sounding elements (i.e. piano-lead; acoustic guitar presence; poetic lyrics but in everyday language; storytelling or personal themes in the lyrics). It sounds homey to me for some reason.

I have a “folk” playlist on Spotify, and because I was curious about which subcategories they are actually in, I looked them up on Wikipedia to see how their genres were labelled (and to see if I was wrong). “Indie Folk” came up for the majority of my favorites: Iron and Wine, The Milk Carton Kids, Mumford & Sons, The Oh Hellos, and Radical Face. There were some different ones- The Wailin’ Jennys, a Canadian group, came up as “Bluegrass/folk”, and Sandra McCracken, a Christian singer, got “Americana/folk/gospel”. Trace Bundy is another big one on my playlist, but I’m not sure if he counts as folk because his music is just acoustic guitar instrumentals. I’d have to listen to the songs more to pick out styles. Anyway, it doesn’t surprise me to find that there are dozens of subcategories stemming from folk. This creates a lot of variety which I enjoy.

Reasons I like the music are pretty simple: I just enjoy the mellowness of the sound and the acoustic-driven style. This seems pretty surface-level though. I seem to just like the way the music sounds without much regard for what the lyrics are talking about. Not that there’s anything wrong with listening to music just for the sound of it. I just think its important to note that, when getting to know another genre, it’s easy to associate it with preconceived stereotypes. Like for me, when I hear a bluegrass song, I might see countryside imagery in my head and find that relaxing while the lyrics could be about something totally different.

Thoughts on Larry Norman’s music

When I approached the song presentation, I was thinking about music genres that have influenced my life, and one of them is Christian rock–or rock music with Christian themes (depending on how you define it or who you’re listening to). Growing up, I was into Reliant K, Superchick, and Skillet, to name a few—and these seem to fit into a more of a punkish/early 2000’s rock genre. Of bands from more of my dad’s era, I admired Petra, a band from a handful of Christian rock bands that started around the late 70’s. I didn’t know too much about Larry Norman, who has been blamed for starting that genre in the late 60’s. Since he was an influential figure to these other bands I like, I decided to read up on him more.

As I went listening some Larry Norman songs for the first time, I felt like there was something raw and bold about the style (the themes). Some words I would use to describe his songs: storytelling, outspoken, straightforward, catchy. The music (sound) style ranges from fast rock-n-roll to slow folk ballads. From what I read and listened to, it seemed like Larry was able to make an impact with the messages in his songs while not failing to have fun with the music at the same time. The song “Why should the devil have all the good music?” is an example of a song that both expresses his zany side while also confronting a serious issue (the fundamentalists’ retort that rock music and Christian music shouldn’t be mixed).

“The Great American Novel” was the song that really got me. Maybe I just like depressing folk songs with sarcastic titles. But I like the serious tone it takes, and found it interesting to see what Norman chose to protest about (the moon landing in particular). The style of the song as well as lamenting the messed up things in our nation is similar to Bob Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind”. What’s different about it is the Christian perspective. The lyrics are almost entirely a lament about political downfalls, but the whole point, which he gets to at the end, is that we need Jesus, as the lyrics read at the end: “Don’t ask me for the answers, I’ve only got one: that a man leaves his darkness when he follows the Son.”

Another popular song by Norman was “Why Don’t You Look into Jesus?” I looked this up and read that he wrote the song about Janis Joplin. That seemed obvious when I reread the lyrics “Shooting junk till you’re half insane/Broken needle in your purple vein”. I had mixed reactions when I heard the song: Is this a bash on the hippie/partying lifestyle? Is this arrogant? Then: He’s simply saying that there’s something(one) better, and he won’t hesitate to tell you it’s Jesus. So I can see how the song can be reacted to in different ways and how my beliefs affect how I react to the song. Either way, it’s one of those songs that tries to make you reconsider what you’re doing with your life.

If you’re interested, here’s a playlist- I typed in the YouTube search ‘top songs by Larry Norman’, mostly out of curiosity to see what would come up. This playlist has a mix of the songs I mentioned as well as some other ones.

 

Song Presentation: Larry Norman – “The Great American Novel”

1. I was born and raised an orphan in a land that once was free
In a land that poured its love out on the moon;
And I grew up in the shadows of your silos filled with grain
But you never helped to fill my empty spoon

2. And when I was ten you murdered law with courtroom politics
And you learned to make a lie sound just like truth;
But I know you better now and I don’t fall for all your tricks
And you’ve lost the one advantage of my youth

3. You kill a black man at midnight just for talking to your daughter
Then you make his wife your mistress and you leave her without water;
And the sheet you wear upon your face is the sheet your children sleep on
At every meal you say a prayer; you don’t believe but still you keep on

(Refrain) And your money says in God we trust
But it’s against the law to pray in school;
You say we beat the Russians to the moon
And I say you starved your children to do it

4. You are far across the ocean in a war that’s not your own
And while you’re winning theirs, you’re gonna lose the one at home;
Do you really think the only way to bring about the peace
Is to sacrifice your children and kill all your enemies?

5. The politicians all make speeches while the news men all take note
And they exaggerate the issues as they shove them down our throats;
Is it really up to them whether this country sinks or floats?
Well I wonder who would lead us if none of us would vote

(Instrumental/piano solo)

6. Well my phone is tapped and my lips are chapped from whispering through the fence
You know every move I make, or is that just coincidence?
Well you try to make my way of life a little less like jail
If I promise to make tapes and slides and send them through the mail

(Refrain) And your money says in God we trust
But it’s against the law to pray in school;
You say we beat the Russians to the moon
And I say you starved your children to do it
You say all men are equal, all men are brothers
Then why are the rich more equal than others?
Don’t ask me for the answer, I’ve only got one:
That a man leaves his darkness when he follows the Son