Showing posts with label Jeremy Corbyn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeremy Corbyn. Show all posts

Monday, 27 May 2024

The Political Significance of The Beatles

 

What was the political meaning of the Beatles? I realise this is a rather dilatory question to ask of a band that broke up in 1970. But fascination with them endures and the real answer to this question, is, in my opinion, utterly different from the ones that are usually put forward.

On the surface, the political significance of the Beatles is exactly that, superficial. The company they established, Apple, did not embody, in Paul McCartney’s description, “Western communism”, whatever that was supposed to mean. John Lennon’s utopian, anti-materialist song ‘Imagine’ undoubtedly had, and still has, influence but personally I can’t take seriously someone wondering if I’m able to “imagine no possessions” while playing a grand piano in his stately home (and employing a gardener, a cook, and an art advisor).

As political role models, the Beatles were terrible. They moaned about paying too much tax – which Lennon claimed made them “anti-establishment” – and expected the minions they employed to indulge their every wish. In 1969, their press officer, Derek Taylor, was prompted to wonder why on earth he worked for them:

Whatever the motivation the effect is slavery.  Whatever the Beatles ask is done. I mean, whatever the Beatles ask is tried. A poached egg on the Underground on the Bakerloo Line between Trafalgar Square and Charing Cross? Yes, Paul. A sock full of elephant shit on Otterspool Promenade? Give me ten minutes, Ringo. Two Turkish dwarfs dancing the Charleston on a sideboard? Male or female John? Pubic hair from Sonny Liston? It’s early closing, George (gulp), but give me until noon tomorrow. The only gig I would do after this is the Queen. Their staff are terrified of them, and not without reason. They have fired more people than any comparable employer unit in the world. They make Lord Beaverbrook* look like Jesus.

But despite the egotism, they managed, in their later years, to produce the most innovative, experimental and influential music in pop history, while remaining to quote a phrase – more popular than Jesus. In April 1966, for example, they recorded this and in the same month this ‘song’. In a two month period spanning December 1966 and January 1967, they produced Strawberry Fields Forever and A Day in the Life, which no-one, to this day, has come close to imitating. In the summer of 1967, when a normal band would have been promoting their last ground-breaking album, released a few months before, they took a completely different tack. The following year, the sound changed again and again from month to month. In 1969, they could still knock out classic pop songs while increasing disliking each other. And they probably invented heavy metal, either in 1965 or 1968.

In 1967, they were warned by the press that the Maharishi, the Indian meditation teacher under whose spell they were falling, was “commercial”. To which, Lennon replied, “Well, that’s fine because we’re the most commercial band in the world”, or something like that.

And, in terms of sales and merchandise, they certainly were. But judged by the standard of our current definition of “commercial” – following established trends, playing it safe for maximum sales, not upsetting anyone – the Beatles were anything but.  That determination to innovate, to go against the grain, to not give a damn what anyone else thought – while successfully remaining  at least as popular as during Beatlemania in the early sixties  – is what makes the Beatles historically interesting and politically significant. Their last album, Abbey Road, sold more copies in America than Sgt Pepper which, in turn, sold vastly more copies than the early Beatlemania LPs.

Barry Miles, a friend of the band who, as owner of the Indica bookshop in London introduced them to underground books and trends, said something perceptive about them a few years back. “The interesting thing,” he noted, “is that the Beatles were not only the world’s most commercial band but, at that point, [1966] they were also the world’s most experimental band, which was very unusual”.

“Brian Epstein [their manager] was concerned that they were going too far ahead of their fanbase,” he added. “But they were always very sensible, they wanted to bring the fans along with them. They did want to become some wild, avant-garde band that only 150 people had heard of.”

Back in 2009, the late cultural theorist Mark Fisher spoke about the “cult of minimal variation” – the pervasive compulsion to produce cultural products that are almost indistinguishable from those already successful. But, said Fisher, this ignores what people instinctively desire which is “the strange, the unexpected, the weird”.

“These can only be supplied,” he went on, “by artists and media professionals who are prepared to give people something different from that which already satisfies them; by those, that is to say, prepared to take a certain kind of risk.”

This is precisely what the Beatles, devoted members of the cult of maximum variation, were determined to do, even when it was met with incomprehension or hostility.

To this day, some Beatles fans complain that eight minutes of the White Album is taken up with ‘Revolution No 9’, a non-song consisting of noises and snatches of conversations aimed to paint in sound, in Lennon’s words, “a picture of revolution”.

Whether he succeeded or not (he later thought it was “anti-revolution”), Revolution No 9 became, in author Ian Macdonald’s description, “the world’s most widely distributed avant-garde artefact”. The track was “one of the most striking instances of the communicative power of pop”. Rather than remaining “the preserve of the modernist intelligentsia, Lennon’s sortie into sonic chance was packaged for a mainstream audience which had never heard of its progenitors, let alone been confronted by their work.”

The point is not whether the Beatles experimental work was good or bad (half a century on, I think the jury’s decided that most of it, maybe not ‘Revolution No 9’, was extremely good) but that, in stark contrast to today, they were able to produce it whilst remaining wildly popular. What the Beatles had, in fact, was an out of control popularity, which is why powerful people (like Nixon’s future Vice President Spiro Agnew or the anti-communist John Birch Society) were always trying to ban their songs, often for exceedingly dumb reasons.

Music aside, the Beatles’ influence – popularising meditation, promoting LSD or inspiring Charles Manson – was questionable but it certainly existed as a force and they knew it did. This is why Lennon spent the Beatles’ dying days planting acorns and singing about peace while sitting in bed – because he knew the media would report whatever he did because of who he was.

And there is something inherently subversive about uncontrollable popularity, whether it is used wisely or not. This is while the elites that have power within western societies are fixated on controlling popular opinion. They’ve realised there’s no need to ban radical manifestoes, uncomfortable facts, or avant-garde expression but just make sure that only fringe minorities are exposed to them. Usually this works quite efficiently.

But when elites lose control of the narrative most people consume, that’s when they get desperate. The ‘shock’ 2017 General Election campaign – in which the left-wing, anti-imperialist Jeremy Corbyn got 41% of the vote in reactionary old England – happened in large part because the broadcast media were suddenly legally obliged to report what the socialist Labour party was actually saying, rather than just amplifying smears from the billionaire-owned right-wing (and liberal) press. Everything that has happened since – the blatant lying, the purges, the establishment arrogation of the liberal media, the mysterious algorithm changes, has been about regaining control.

This multi-fanged operation has undoubtedly been successful, at least temporarily. But the genocide in Gaza has revealed that controlling the narrative is more difficult to sustain in era when people have alternatives to legacy media at their fingertips. And the desire to control popular reaction is leading to outright repression, even in esteemed liberal democracies. Whether this impulse will be ratcheted up is a distinct possibility. The Hague Invasion Act, authorising the US President to invade the Netherlands should the International Criminal Court put any of its citizens on trial was passed in 2002 under George Bush but has now been extended to Israel.

Whether faced with overt authoritarianism or the manipulation of opinion (or, as is likely, a combination of the two), the only ‘cure’ is reform of the media to ensure that diverse opinions reach the mass of people: ‘cure’ in the sense that the patient may die in a nuclear conflagration, or endure the slow death of global warming, if this course is not followed. But because of what it will lead to, it will be fought tooth and nail.

In this future conflict, what the Beatles said politically or explicitly represented is really not interesting at all. It’s a total blind alley. What is interesting is that they were able to experiment and reach hundreds of millions of people directly while remaining beyond the grasp of their detractors and conservatives of all stripes. That is the most precious form of power of all.

 

*Beaverbrook (Max Aitken), a sort of proto-Rupert Murdoch, was the owner of the Daily Express (in addition to being a government minister in Britain in the two world wars) and was famous for sacking journalists whose output was not to his satisfaction.

Sunday, 17 September 2023

Waking up to Sonny and Cher again

In what I suppose can be classified an example of irony, they keep repeating Groundhog Day on TV. But in order to live in Bill Murray’s head and experience the same day over and over again you don’t have to switch on ITV4. You just have to reside in Britain and pay the barest attention to politics.

The latest example of the recurrent waking nightmare comes in the form of the Daily Mail demanding (in the person of columnist Andrew Pierce who’s also a regular on Good Morning Britain) action against “an army of shirkers” on sickness benefits “which the British taxpayers are footing the bill for”.

According to the Mail “a senior government source” only a million of the 2.4 million people on universal credit or ESA and not required to carry out work-related activity are “so disabled they are incapable of doing any work”.

If this rings any bells, it might be because of the 2007 ‘independent’ report by former investment banker David Freud – commissioned by Tony Blair just before he left office – which concluded that the 2.68 million people then on Incapacity Benefit should be reduced by 1 million.

Despite Freud getting “his numbers wrong” (he only looked at recent claimants, not long-term ones), his eponymous report became holy writ for different governments. Its thinking was at the heart of the Work Capability Assessment (WCA) – the “functional”, non-medical test for all Incapacity Benefit claimants introduced by Labour in 2008. The WCA was founded on deliberately ignoring medical history and the opinions of doctors.

Although it was Labour’s brainchild, the Conservative/Lib Dem coalition found the WCA very much to their liking when they assumed office in 2010. In fact, Freud switched sides – if he had ever had a side beyond that of the rich – becoming a junior minister in the Cameron government.

Sick consensus

Judged in terms of the amount of sheer human misery the WCA has generated – it was revealed in 2017 that the number of disabled claimants attempting suicide had doubled in its first nine years  – I think the assessment has no equal among post-war domestic government policies.

There is no reason to think, by the way, that the current moral panic over work-shy fakers is any more grounded in reality than Freud’s report was. As a result of Covid, lockdown and the near collapse of the NHS, Britain is a much sicker nation. But these factors will be completely ignored by propagandists eager to replicate past tricks.

But the depressing reality is that these tricks work – in the sense of guiding the ‘national conversation’ in a certain direction. Or, to be more exact, returning that conversation to the lines it took between 2006 and 2015. Welcome to Groundhog Day politics.

Sir Kier Starmer’s Labour party, for example, has signalled that it is right behind the government’s approach to sickness benefit claimants. In January, in a speech delivered at Iain Duncan Smith’s think-tank (now there’s symbolism for you), then shadow Work and Pensions secretary, Jonathan Ashworth, decried the “the huge economic cost” and the “the increased health-related benefit bill” the taxpayer is lumbered with as a result of severely disabled people not getting jobs. Ashworth was referring to claimants in the ESA Support Group – exactly those who, according to the “senior government source” with the ear of the Mail, are not so disabled they are incapable of any work. I think you call it being on the same page.

Being there

But in the brief interregnum between 2015 and 2019, then Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn was definitely not on the same page. In fact he was reading an entirely different book. Centrist Starmer fans love to claim that while Corbyn was leading an ineffectual protest movement, the very serious Sir Kier is determined to actually win an election and make a difference by being in power. The first part is very likely to happen.

However, discounting for a moment that sabotage from within his own party may have prevented Corbyn from becoming Prime Minister in the summer of 2017, it is interesting to note the degree to which he yanked politics in a more humane direction simply by being there; by being leader of the opposition for four years

For example, I don’t think it’s a coincidence that the percentage of Universal Credit claimants sanctioned fell from 9% in 2015 to 3% in 2019, the exact period of Corbyn’s tenure. With him safely out of the way, ‘Boris’ Johnson’s “way to work” policy severely intensified the sanctions regime in 2022.

In 2016, with Corbyn’s Labour committed to scrapping the Work Capability Assessment, the government eased WCA conditions, excusing those with severe conditions from reassessment. By contrast, with the putative opposition now reading from the same hymn sheet, the government is planning to tighten the fitness to work test – by removing lack of bladder or bowel control or the inability to access an outside location from the list of “descriptors” used in the assessment.

It’s remarkable just how many U-turns Corbyn – whose leadership was under almost permanent siege from within – did force the government to make. And these were not all extorted when the government was enfeebled after losing its majority in the 2017 election. Many happened before that.

That as Chancellor under Johnson Rishi Sunak could signal “a decisive end to austerity” had a lot to do with the fact that Corbyn implacably opposed austerity from day one of his leadership. Indeed, that’s why he was elected by the Labour membership. He was also integral to forcing the original austerian, George Osborne, to beat an embarrassing retreat on proposed tax credit cuts.

Now, by contrast, with Starmer’s Labour committed to abiding by Tory spending plans, the renewed austerity earmarked to begin in 2025, will happen regardless of which party wins the next GE. Any momentum behind a campaign to abolish the Tories’ two child tax credit cap has been asphyxiated  by Starmer promising to keep it – one of the many “hard choices” (the phrase parrots Hillary Clinton) he has pledged to make if he enters Downing Street.

This pattern has been replicated across the policy spectrum – from taxes on the super-rich, to the treatment of refugees, from the powers of the security state over citizens, to the disavowal of public ownership of utilities. Corbyn shot holes in pre-2015 cross-party mono-politics – extracting some, not insignificant, concessions – while Starmer has methodically rebuilt the ramparts.

Iron Man

To be fair to Sir Kier he does have a stellar record on U-turns. Unfortunately, they all apply to Labour’s own programme – the social-democratic policies that got him elected as leader but which he has systemically discarded in favour of enervated third-term Blairism.

Corbyn’s mere presence shifted British politics slightly to the Left. His successor has used his position to return it to the sterile trajectory it took before the unexpected elevation of the MP for Islington North. And by stopping Corbyn from even standing again as a Labour candidate – an act with no precedent in British political history – to ensure that that fleeting effusion of hope never recurs.

Regardless of whether Starmer wins the next election or not, that’s his role.