I heard it was you,
Talking ’bout a world where all is free.
It just couldn’t be,
and only a fool would say that.
- Steely Dan
That was the first song that popped up on my iPod yesterday morning, and it fit perfectly with a few reflections I’d been having on last weekend. The 9/12 right wing demonstrations have been pretty well picked over by now, and there’s part of me that’s reluctant to pay much more attention to that crowd, but here’s my view on it for the record.
FBdN son #1 and I set out on Saturday morning for the U.S. Botanic Garden, a lovely spot right near the Capitol Building. I had forgotten the demonstrations were even happening until I saw, from the bus window, a couple of sign-bearers headed for the White House. Then our bus, which normally would have gone down Pennsylvania Avenue, was forced to detour.
We ended up over by Union Station, so we got off and walked over toward the lawn in front of the Capitol. That meant we had to cross the street, right through the parade. Right into the path of the crazies.
We made it past the parade and into the botanic garden, a haven. For anyone who hasn’t been there, I recommend it. It’s an extraordinary building, and like a lot of things in Washington, it’s free. Some of the wingers had figured this out – a few were straggling in to use the very clean and well-maintained restroom. I saw two even strolling around, taking in the flora. Maybe they needed a break from chanting about socialism.
Now FBdN son #1 and I had some business to take care of: playing trucks in the very clean and well-maintained gardens behind the greenhouse. But our haven was upset by all the yelling and bullshit coming from the serious sound system.
One speaker was some sort of activist from Louisville, KY. I guess she’s got a band, because they busted into a song, ‘The U.S.S. of A,’ warning of impending socialism here in the U.S. (government’s going to take over your churches, etc.) She sounded like a bizarro Grace Slick.
So at best these people are just dumb. I wonder what they think when they ride the Metro? That maybe private enterprise would have done it better?
Conservative Protesters on the Metro, September 12, 2009
I also grabbed a photo of a couple of protesters eating lunch at the excellent Cascade Cafe inside the National Gallery of Art, a government-run museum where the price of admission is zip. You still have to pay for lunch, so I suppose it’s not a world where all is free.
Tea Partiers Enjoying a Quiet Lunch at the National Gallery of Art
Finally, I took a quick a video of the right wing protests from the Mall. Down towards the Washington Monument was the National Black Family Reunion. Quite a contrast to what was going on down by the Capitol.
CHICAGO – To prepare for their current tour, Steely Dan had to relearn their own music.
The band will perform one of three albums — “Aja,” “Gaucho” or “The Royal Scam” — in its entirety on select dates of their Rent Party tour. On other dates, they will play requests that fans submit through their Web site. That means Steely Dan had to do some homework.
“We had to learn a lot a whole bunch of stuff we haven’t been doing, just trying to guess what people might vote for,” said singer Donald Fagen.
Guitarist Walter Becker found the idea intriguing because some of the songs they had never performed live.
“We had stopped performing in the ’70s when we recorded these three albums, so we never really went out to perform the tunes from these three albums,” said Becker.
Six nights! And there’s a good chance I’ll be in NYC for at least one of them. They’re apparently doing “special setlists.” Aja on on 7/28/09, for example.
Special setlists seem to be a big draw. Mpomy, Sturj, and I saw Primus do “Seas of Cheese” back in 2004. On August 28 last year, the night Barack Obama gave his nomination acceptance speech in Denver, I saw Liz Phair at 930 perform a special setlist: “Exile in Guyville” in its entirety. “You won’t miss Barack,” she said that night. “Not on my watch.”
Anyway, back to Beardfish. I suppose this isn’t surprising, given that they’re the great Swedish hope for prog, but when I listen to the band I get distinct Yes flashes, and it brings me back to high school. For some reason, I think of listening to Yes on Amtrak, going up to Massachusetts. I thought it was cool to stare out the window and listen to “Heart of the Sunrise.“
Speaking of trains, Beardfish’s “Into the Night” was one of the tunes I hit on the Metro.
The other song was Weezer’s “The World Has Turned and Left me Here.” I’m going to nominate that record, “Weezer,” for an award under “greatest rock records of all time.”
By the way, Weezer is playing this summer in the greater Washington area, as part of a festival with an absolutely insane lineup of acts. I don’t think I’m going to try for tickets for that one, though.