Day 87 (June 14): The Chambers Brothers - Time Has Come Today
It's a good time to talk about the Vietnam War. Well, is it? I'm less confident now that I've written that sentence. Is it ever a "good" time to discuss one of the most appalling atrocities of imperialism in the last century? Is it crass to even suggest that. Shit, sorry.
What I was going to say before that burst of self-doubt was that Spike Lee's new joint (that's what all the cool kids say), Da 5 Bloods, came out this weekend. It is a phenomenally large and hefty movie, bulky with the weight of 50 years of history and centuries of trauma, but leaving all that unimportant stuff aside, it's also got some sick Vietnam War protest tunes on the soundtrack (the point of the whole thing, I guess).
Today's song of the day is just one of those, "Time Has Come Today" by the Chambers Brothers. You know, that one. The opening bars are as good a soundtrack to the cultural image of Vietnam as anything, but - hey, the full song itself is a little more than a wee bit of jangling guitar.
It's a ton weirder than you'd expect, really, slowing and starting and speeding up and refusing to let the listener rest. It also makes up the word "psychedelized", which I think is great. The word, not a trauma-induced addiction to psychotropics. I don't endorse that. There goes my foot in it again.
What I was going to say before that burst of self-doubt was that Spike Lee's new joint (that's what all the cool kids say), Da 5 Bloods, came out this weekend. It is a phenomenally large and hefty movie, bulky with the weight of 50 years of history and centuries of trauma, but leaving all that unimportant stuff aside, it's also got some sick Vietnam War protest tunes on the soundtrack (the point of the whole thing, I guess).
Today's song of the day is just one of those, "Time Has Come Today" by the Chambers Brothers. You know, that one. The opening bars are as good a soundtrack to the cultural image of Vietnam as anything, but - hey, the full song itself is a little more than a wee bit of jangling guitar.
It's a ton weirder than you'd expect, really, slowing and starting and speeding up and refusing to let the listener rest. It also makes up the word "psychedelized", which I think is great. The word, not a trauma-induced addiction to psychotropics. I don't endorse that. There goes my foot in it again.
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