"Stadium Love" - Metric - Indie - 2009
"Dyke March 2001" - Le Tigre - Feminist Pop - 2004
"Big Business Monkey" - Daniel Johnston - Indie - 1983
"Fortune" - Little Dragon - Indie - 2009
"Show Stopper" - Peaches (See Video Below) - Pop - 2009
Songs for "Liberation" Aim -
"Cycling Trivialities" - Jose Gonzalez - Indie - 2007
"Golden Age" - Beach Fossils - Indie - 2010
"Cape Dory" - Tennis - Indie - 2010
"The Pirate's Gospel" - Alela Diane - Indie - 2009
"Cold War" - Janelle Monae - R&B - 2010
The following assignment examines the Hindu themes of “success” and “liberation” and what role these ideas have on American popular culture, particularly in the music being created. Although Hindus make up a small percentage of the United States population, many of their practices and beliefs have entered the vernacular of American life. While searching among a number musician’s song lyrics, I found the themes of “success” and “liberation” to be widely expressed in the music being created—in my opinion, neither theme was particularly difficult to find. However, the Western ideas of “success” and “liberation” and how to achieve these ambitions are sometimes much more different than the spiritual approach rooted in Hindu values. For example, although Peaches’ lyrics are often characterized as satirical, her song “Show Stopper” nonetheless describes the wealth, power and fame that stems from being able to capture an audience’s interest or attention. Ultimately, Peaches’ idea of “success” is grounded in a level of narcissism and egotism that the Hindu concept of “success” does not perpetuate. As stated in class lecture, the insatiable desire for success centers too much meaning in the self, which is too narrow approach to liberation.
In the Peaches’ video, the director and cinematographers have taken a unique approach and combined a narrative with real behind-the-scenes look at the fame and wealth that comes with the success of being a pop star. Naturally, the video is awash with a level of consumer capitalism, stardom and the advantages of wealth. Merrill Beth Nisker, the real name of the stage performer Peaches, is seen in the video trying on a number of expensive costumes and being interviewed by a renowned magazine in a elaborate, decadent-looking hotel. However, throughout the video, Peaches seems to maintain that she is not a product of the entertainment industry and insists that she has made her own choices. Ultimately, Hinduism encourages individuals to perceive the world as unreal and as a result, not to place value in material success—undermining not only Peaches but all of the examples of “success” in American music. Ultimately, the only way to achieve freedom or “liberation” is after karma has been resolved and realization of the self and god has been attained. Although Jose Gonzalez’ “Cycling Trivialities” and Alela Diane’s “The Pirate Gospel” come close to the ideas of Hinduism’s “liberation” there is still a lasting difference in renouncing the world and escaping from its trivialities or hardships.