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Slash and Burn: the music of Stephan Smith.


Stephan Smith is one of the most promising protest singers in America. The thirty-six-year-old Smith has been hailed as the Woody Guthrie and Bob Dylan for this generation by The New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times and The Village Voice.

On the first anniversary of 9/11, Smith released his anti-war song "The Bell," recorded with Pete Seeger, as a free MP3 over the Internet. "The Bell" was one of the first anti-war statements to make national press:

"Oh I'm sounding the drums of war, "said the man at his desk.

"Oh I will not fight your war," said the child and he stood.

"Oh but don't you love your country?" said the man at his desk.

"Yes, I do, but you don't," said the child and he stood.

"Oh but don't you know the truth?" said the man at his desk.

"Yes, you lie and call it truth, "said the child and he stood.

Despite the fact that no major industry company ever promoted it, "The Bell" was covered by artists ranging from Dave Matthews to DJ Spooky and printed more than 200,000 times on various compilations worldwide. "While the publishing and film industries have bankrolled and profited from dissent in the past year, the music industry, once the scion sci·on  
n.
1. A descendant or heir.

2. also ci·on A detached shoot or twig containing buds from a woody plant, used in grafting.
 of protest, remains timid," says Smith.

Smith sings in nine languages, including Yiddish and Arabic, befitting be·fit·ting  
adj.
Appropriate; suitable; proper.



be·fitting·ly adv.

Adj. 1.
 his eclectic roots. "I grew up in Virginia, steeped in the American musical tradition, but my mother is Austrian, my father Iraqi with Kurdish origins, and I have a Jewish great grandfather," he says. "So if I can sing harmoniously, I'm sure the whole world can sing in a beautiful chorus."

His father's family lives in Mosul and Baghdad, where four of his aunts and uncles work as doctors in the main hospitals and occasionally report on their daily lives and struggles. They lament the fact that the U.S. media do not relate the level of suffering placed on ordinary citizens. Smith's uncle, Ghazi gha·zi  
n. pl. gha·zies Islam
1. A man who has fought successfully against infidels.

2. Often used as a title for such a warrior.
 Kamil, former director of the nation's electrical services, told Smith, "Innocent people, women and children, have been killed and are dying of cancer because of depleted uranium, and for what? For a few individuals to control our oil. But I'm not angry at Americans because I know they don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
."

His new album, Slash and Burn This article is about the agricultural practice of slash and burn. For the military tactic, see scorched earth.

Slash and burn refers to the cutting and burning of forests or woodlands to create fields for agriculture or pasture for livestock, or for a
, on the independent Artemis Records started by Danny Goldberg, touches not only on Bush and the war in Iraq, but on unethical globalization globalization

Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation
 and its trail of iniquities. Slash and Burn's twelve songs mix political content and pop music. Smith has called it "popolitical." He explains: "While I am drawing on the ballad legacy of writers like Dylan and Guthrie, I'm inspired by people like Bob Marley and John Lennon who used the sounds of their times to make protest accessible. Protest music can be pop. It must be both infectious and pro-found to have widespread social impact." The album fuses rap, rock, folk, and country music. It advocates global justice and ethical globalization as the only way to stop the current world violence and inequality that breed social division.

The rap, rock, and folk-tinged single "Taking Aim" is, according to Smith, a "hymn to altermondialisme," the French term inspired by the Porto Alegre slogan "Another world is possible."

"In the Air" is a dance song with a heavy samba beat and rapid-fire lyrics delivered in a Jamaican MC style. Linking economic imperialism with military oppression, Smith gives shout-outs to Radical Cheerleaders Notable cheerleaders
  • Paula Abdul, Los Angeles Lakers, Van Nuys High School
  • Christina Aguilera, North Allegheny Intermediate High School[]
  • Kirstie Alley
  • Ann-Margret
  • Toni Basil
  • Kim Basinger
  • Halle Berry
  • Sandra Bullock[0]
 and the Landless land·less  
adj.
Owning or having no land.



landless·ness n.

Adj. 1.
 Workers Movement in a powerful rendering of our current situation:

While the trees come down in the Amazon

Young kids getting killed fighting tanks with stones

By soldiers like drones. Look out here come the clones ...

But in Brazil they got people takin' over private land,

And in India they go to stop another dam.

Kablam! The bombs drop in the Sahara Sand

While the Clear Channel Radio plays another Boy Band?

Smith's musical satire "You Ain't a Cowboy," which addresses an unnamed but obvious American Tartuffe Tartuffe

swindles benefactor by pretending religious piety. [Fr. Lit.: Tartuffe]

See : Hypocrisy
, was pre-released over the Internet on Audiolunchbox.com in what was billed as the first such large-scale MP3 release to benefit a non-profit. It was also one of the first major anti-Bush songs released widely in the U.S. With all proceeds going to the political action group TrueMajority.org, the hilarious song was downloaded hundreds of thousands of times. With a flawless Southern drawl drawl  
v. drawled, drawl·ing, drawls

v.intr.
To speak with lengthened or drawn-out vowels.

v.tr.
, Smith depicts Bush as an imposter and ridicules him as a PR creation:

You ain't nothin' but an oil tycoon.

You ate yer whole life from a silver spoon,

The whole country knows you're an aristocrat goon,

But you still ain't got the sense to know when it's high noon.

Other songs on the album include "World to Come," a hauntingly beautiful appeal to the "next world." The album's title track, "Slash and Burn," with its rebellious lyrics, decries corruption in the music industry. "Bitter Happiness," featuring former Gil Evans trumpeter Leif Arntzen, is a jazzy jazz·y  
adj. jazz·i·er, jazz·i·est
1. Resembling jazz in form or nature; rhythmical.

2. Slang Showy; flashy: a jazzy car.
 elegy elegy, in Greek and Roman poetry, a poem written in elegiac verse (i.e., couplets consisting of a hexameter line followed by a pentameter line). The form dates back to 7th cent. B.C. in Greece and poets such as Archilochus, Mimnermus, and Tytraeus.  to our ravaged rav·age  
v. rav·aged, rav·ag·ing, rav·ages

v.tr.
1. To bring heavy destruction on; devastate: A tornado ravaged the town.

2.
 environment:
   Something odd blows in the breeze,
   Poison waves the eye can't see,
   Permeating every tree,
   Apple blossoms without bees.
   The Matterhorn has lost its freeze,
   There's a shiny layer on the sea,
   Tell me, what paradise is this,
   This bitter happiness?


Smith lets his Appalachian roots come out in his rewrite of the folk standard "Shenandoah," as well as in his rewrite of the classic murder ballad "Omie Wise" in memory of Lee Kyung Hae
This is a Korean name; the family name is Lee.
Lee Kyung Hae (1947 – September 10, 2003) was a South Korean farmer and activist who opposed globalization and protested for the local farmers and fishermen of his home country whose jobs were
, the South Korean farmer leader who committed suicide in Cancun in 2003 at the WTO See World Trade Organization.  demonstrations.

Smith has done more than 140 shows across the United States in a single year, with many gigs for local peace groups. "In a way, I'm building my audience like Ani DiFranco did through the women's movement, but I'm doing it through the global justice movement."

Smith is now gearing up to release his pop song "Break the Bread"--which could be deemed a working class anthem for equality, with its obvious religious resonance--in a joint effort with the National Council of Churches. "We have to reunite America and the world around the dreams of global justice and equality," says Smith. "We have to be boldly idealistic to reach out to the young, the religious communities, and the working class and to appeal to people's most noble instincts instead of to their intolerance and fears."

Natasha Saulnier is a freelance reporter whose works appear in The Independent (UK), Liberation, and L'Humanite, among others. She is currently working on the war memoir of Iraq Veteran Marine Staff Sergeant Jimmy Massey, entitled "Cowboys from Hell."
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Author:Saulnier, Natasha
Publication:The Progressive
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 1, 2005
Words:1098
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