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Van Morrison and Eric Clapton Take Back the Culture for Freedom

Roger L. Simon
By Roger L. Simon

Eric Clapton performs on stage at The O2 Arena in London on March 3, 2020. (Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images)
Eric Clapton performs on stage at The O2 Arena in London on March 3, 2020. (Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images)

Commentary

As anyone even half-awake, as opposed to ”woke,” knows, the arts, monolithically left, are about as dead as they have ever been in our culture.

Name the genre, it’s one propagandistic bore. The message is always the same—and it’s a downer.

When art is created by conformists—and at this moment the left are the biggest conformists possibly imaginable—it is sure to be worthless.

Speaking of which, as a member of the Motion Picture Academy, for the first time ever I didn’t even bother to vote this year, let alone watch the movies. Who needs Hollywood’s solemn lectures?

But, there’s hope, big hope actually, from the music world, and at the highest levels.

The Brits Van Morrison and Eric Clapton—two of the greatest stars of the last fifty years—have broken from the oh-so-tired, conventional “progressive” mold of popular music with not one, but two songs that push the content envelope.

They are actually taking back the culture for freedom from the leftwing conformists.

Naturally, the songs are being squelched—or, in the case of YouTube, often presented after interminable advertisements from the likes of Stacey Abrams—with their creators being canceled by the hordes on that enemy of all slightly original (read: conservative or libertarian) thought, Twitter.

The first song is an anti-lockdown blues written by Van Morrison and sung by Clapton—“Stand and Deliver”—the proceeds going to Morrison’s Lockdown Financial Hardship Fund.

Needless to say, it’s not getting a lot of radio plays, which is amazing considering the pedigrees of the artists.

You can listen to the song here—it rocks like days of old. Here is a sampling of the lyrics:

Stand and deliver

You let them put the fear on you

Stand and deliver

But not a word you heard was true

But if there’s nothing you can say

There may be nothing you can do

Do you wanna be a free man

Or do you wanna be a slave?

Do you wanna be a free man

Or do you wanna be a slave?

Do you wanna wear these chains

Until you’re lying in the grave?

I don’t wanna be a pauper

And I don’t wanna be a prince

I don’t wanna be a pauper

And I don’t wanna be a prince

I just wanna do my job

Playing the blues for friends

Magna Carta, Bill of Rights

The Constitution, what’s it worth?

You know they’re gonna grind us down, ah

Until it really hurts

Is this a sovereign nation

Or just a police state?

You better look out, people

Before it gets too late

Magna Carta, Bill of Rights, indeed. Is this a sovereign nation or a police state? These guys apparently honor our Constitution the way we do here at The Epoch Times.

Maybe Clapton, one of the greatest guitar players of his or any generation, should have been playing and singing this on the steps of the Capitol on Jan. 6.

The second song has the two men singing together – “Where Have All the Rebels Gone?” Where indeed? Their answer:

Where have all the rebels gone?

Hidin’ behind computer screens

Where’s the spirit, where’s the soul?

Where have all the rebels gone?

Well, you can’t be a rebel if you’re a conformist. And that’s, as I noted above and Messrs. Morrison and Clapton evidently concur, what we see all around us.

But has Clapton gone too far? From the BBC of only a few hours ago:

“British rock icon Eric Clapton has said he will not perform at venues that require concertgoers to be fully vaccinated against Covid-19.

Opinions differ, of course, but in an allegedly free society like ours, it should be up to the citizen to decide for him or herself what they put in their body. What did we used to say— “Our bodies, ourselves”? (How times have changed!)

The BBC continued:

“UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said proof of vaccination must be shown at clubs and venues from September.

“Clapton said he will not perform anywhere there is a ‘discriminated audience present’. …

“In May, Clapton said he had experienced a ‘severe’ reaction to the AstraZeneca vaccine.”

As it happens, Clapton and Morrison will be playing together, far from the authority of Boris Johnson, at the Bridgestone Arena in my hometown of Nashville, Sept. 11.

I plan on being there, sans mask. I wouldn’t want to be part of a “discriminated audience.”

Roger L. Simon is an award-winning novelist, Oscar-nominated screenwriter, co-founder of PJMedia, and now, editor-at-large for The Epoch Times. His most recent books are “The GOAT” (fiction) and “I Know Best: How Moral Narcissism Is Destroying Our Republic, If It Hasn’t Already” (nonfiction). He can be found on Parler as @rogerlsimon

Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.

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