
As a 7-year-old, I knew that a bad, bad thing had happened to an important man. I knew the man was dead. I knew people were rioting because he was dead.
BUT AS A Southern child growing up in a working-class, white and illiberal milieu, the only thing I knew about the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., was that he was not afforded the commonly benign label of "colored" and certainly not the formal moniker of "Negro" -- which you only heard on the TV and radio, anyway.
I had heard that he was something called a "communiss."
What I would find out later -- as I grew in knowledge and as my world grew in size and scope -- was that Martin Luther King Jr,. died not only so that African-Americans could be free in this "land of the free," but so that I might be free, too.
We may not be totally free yet, but we're getting there. And because one man obeyed his God all the way to his own Calvary, we -- all of us, black and white -- are a lot closer than we would be otherwise.
This week's edition of 3 Chords & the Truth is dedicated to remembering and mourning what happened in Memphis, Tenn., four decades ago Friday. America is a much changed country for the assassinations of King and, a mere two months later, Sen. Robert Kennedy.
That change was a profoundly tragic one from which we've yet to recover. All these years later, the wounds still bleed.
But the Big Show also celebrates a momentous life -- and the profound difference it made in this country and in the world.
On this week's program, you won't hear me getting in the way of the music . . . or the message. Thus, I'll publish this week's playlist below.
Enjoy the show.
Say It (Over and Over Again)
John Coltrane Quartet
w/ McCoy Tyner (piano), Jimmy Garrison (bass),
Elvin Jones (drums)
1962
It Feels Like Rain
Aaron Neville
1991
Help Us, Somebody
Chris Thomas
1990
The Sky Is Crying
Elmore James
1960
Keep On Pushing
Curtis Mayfield & the Impressions
1964
Redemption Song
Joe Strummer & the Mescaleros
2003
Memphis Blues Again
Bob Dylan
1966
Boulevard of Broken Dreams
Green Day
2004
Inner City Blues
Dirty Dozen Brass Band
2006
Don't Burn Baby
Sly & the Family Stone
1968
We Gotta Live Together
Jimi Hendrix
1970
Motherless Child
Hootie & the Blowfish
1994
Nothing Lasts
Matthew Sweet
1991
Faithful To Me (Reprise)
Jennifer Knapp
1997
Lay My Burden Down
(feat. Mavis Staples & the Dirty Dozen Brass Band)
Dr. John
2004
Forever Young
Joan Baez
1974
1 comment:
Thanks for including "Don't Burn Baby" by Sly and the Family Stone on your list. It is one of Sly's most powerful songs. I write about it and more in my book about Sly. Check it out at http://www.lulu.com/content/1412956
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