Success
Rich Girl- Hall and Oates
Baby You Can Drive My Car- The Beatles
Power Windows - John Berry
Juicy- The Notorious BIG
Black and Yellow- Wiz Khalifa
Liberation
Crossroads – Bone Thugs-n-Harmony
Ridin' Solo- Jason Derulo
Black Bird – The Beatles
Revolution- The Beatles
Peace Train- Cat Stevens
After finding and reviewing more songs which I felt fall into this category I have found that this blog assignment to be easier than the last. Community service, which I have said in my last blog, was the hardest for me to do because of the fact that most artists do not fall into the Hindu aim of community service. The songs I have chosen directly and indirectly state the aim of the assignment, and while some may be cheesy, nonetheless state the aim. On the indirect approach, Blackbird by the Beatles has had some analysis taken on the song, one of the major points being about the Civil Rights Movement in the United States. The Song is an exposure to the movement through indirect means since there is no real outward spoken point, just metaphors. On the other hand the point is clearly made in the success songs. Juicy by BIG is a classic example of someone ridden into poverty, utilizing his talent, and becoming severely rich and famous, and the rich and successful aspect is stated in the second half of the song Black and Yellow by Wiz Khalifa is even more apparent in the success category because a story of how he came is non-existent, yet the whole song is about his success, but with some background knowledge, is a success story being this is his first single and CD after his demo tapes. The two categories relate to the Hindu aims much better than the last, yet there is a downfall at a time. Success in the Hindu culture is not expressed upon the fact of making a a lot of money and indulging in worldly pleasures, on the contrary, the Gita expresses that one who falls into this will not move on to the next life and the possessions that they strive and hurt for in their life is all that they can obtain, and on a a grand scheme, really isn't a lot. Liberation falls a lot more into the Hindu aim because Liberation, from the above songs I chose as an example, is not about worldly pleasures but about making sure everyone can be free from oppression and be treated equally as human beings. The Hindu aim strives for this point because it feels it needs to be right and just to all, even though the caste system went astray from this point, but besides that, the songs fit perfectly.
I greatly enjoyed reading your commentary on the song selection, particularly Blackbird by The Beatles. It is one of my favorite songs by them and I never quite looked so deep into the lyrical meaning behind it. The other artist you talked about, Wez something... was actually quite nice to learn about to, its a pleasant surprise that some people take just as much interest in the music they listen to as I do.
ReplyDeleteI agree with your statement about how liberation in America is about equality and breaking free from oppression. But in Hinduism, the caste system was implemented as a part of moksha in the sense that one way of fulfilling your duties is to serve your caste well. So really the caste system is a part of liberation.
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