I was inspired by a podcast called The 500 hosted by Los Angeles-based comedian Josh Adam Meyers. His goal, and mine, is to explore Rolling Stone's 2012 edition of The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.
Album # 394
Album Title: Good Old BoysArtist: Randy Newman
Genre: Roots Rock, Country Rock, Satire
Recorded: Warner Brothers' Studio, Hollywood, CA (72-74)
Released: September, 1974
My age at release: 9
How familiar was I with it before this week: Not at all
Song I am putting on my Spotify Mix: Marie
Recently, the Canadian subscription channel Crave re-released Chappelle's Show, an early 2000s American sketch comedy program created by and starring comedian Dave Chappelle. The groundbreaking and critically acclaimed series challenged racial stereotypes through provocative and controversial satire.
In one sketch, a spoof of the PBS news program Frontline, we meet Clayton Bigsby a blind, white supremacist who is unaware that he is black. In another, a parody of modern day professional sports drafts, various multiracial celebrities are "claimed" by a single race. Tiger Woods, who is African-American-Thai-Chinese, is drafted by The Blacks, while Jewish-African-American Lenny Kravitz is selected by a Hasidic Rabbi representing the Jewish Team.
Clayton Bigsby - Black White Supremacist (top) and Racial Draft from Chappelle's Show |
Much like Chappelle's Show, no one is spared from Newman's satirical assault. On the opening track, Rednecks, his narrator, Cutler, lists the negative stereotypes regularly associated with men from the deep south. However, as the song continues, Cutler turns his attention to the hypocrisy of northern liberals who claimed to be racially enlightened -- a polite fallacy obscuring a reality of racial segregation, which occurred through practices such as redlining or the phenomenon of white flight. In either situation, caustic or polite, African-American communities are marginalized.
I have always loved satire. Blazing Saddles, Monty Python's Life of Brian, and Dr. Strangelove were among my favourite films before I was old enough to fully appreciate the full force of their satirical messages. They are that rare breed of film that could appeal to all ages, for entirely different reasons. They brilliantly blend simple, slapstick comedy with powerful social commentary. The uncomfortable but titillating thrill I got from those films was captured in a delightfully provocative 34 minutes of music from Newman on this, his first of three records on The 500.
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