I enjoy taking Slate’s weekly news quiz put together by Ken Jennings, but they recently put up some other quizes to test if you can identify a song with only 1 second of audio. I got 9 on the current songs, but 14 on each of the 60’s, 70’s, 80’s and 90’s. I did atrocious on the Hip hop one with 8, but see how you do on all of these. Leave your answers in the comments.
I’m guessing because of the recent current events, Gil Scott Heron and his music, especially the great song The Revolution Will Not be Televised, has been featured on a few of the blogs I read along with a piece last night on NPR’s The World about protest songs. While I think he is a important artist and his words/music can be powerful right now, I will let better writers comment on that.
What I want this blog post to focus on is his other famous song, Johannesburg (That link is a great one from his appearance on SNL with Richard Pryor). The NPR piece brought up the interesting fact that because the South African apartheid regime banned the song, when Heron first performed the song in Johannesburg, people didn’t know the chorus and somewhat threw the band off when they didn’t yell it back. It also mentioned that part of the genius of the song was that the chorus was a parody of the jingle for Thunderbird wine, that was popular in poor, black communities.