RIP Mushy Peas – The Ghost of Joe Strummer, The Pseudo-Victorian Mindset of Donald Trump, and The Essence of Multiculturalism
In recent weeks, the prevailing cliché that the world is
getting to be a smaller, more cosmopolitan place has taken a blow to the solar
plexus. We have had an apparent majority
of British voters follow a pied piper and turn the clock back to, oh say
1895. We have a major political party’s
candidate whose platform is most closely associated with building a physical
wall between the US
and its neighbor to the south and excluding continued immigration of adherents
to an entire religion. And he picked a
running mate whose calling card is purporting to sign a bill into law which
would enable every Joe’s pizzeria in Indiana
to refuse to serve customers just because they, you know, look a little
gay. Excuse me, and pardon my language,
but what exactly the fuck is going on here?
I don’t know.
Sorry. I can however submit that
there are worse places for thoughtful, goodhearted people to turn for guidance
than to the words of the late, great Joe Strummer. After all, during his all too short life and
musical oeuvre, he had a thing or two to say about misguided political leaders
with a tragicomically myopic view of the world.
Last week, listening to Global a Go Go - one of Joe’s three
noteworthy post-Clash efforts with his band The Mescaleros - I was struck by
how my favorite track “Bhindi Bhagee” is so, so on point for these bizarre
times. Besides a freewheeling, killer
beat and gloriously skittering African-ish guitars, it features a poignant and
personal first person narrative from Joe that puts a line under his entire body
of work by capturing the essence of his global humanist, multicultural vision.
Strolling down the ‘high street’ (that’s like Main Street,
Donald) of some unnamed British locale,
Joe is approached by a tourist from New Zealand (WASPish, no doubt...) and is
asked where one might find mushy peas. A
better metaphor for a bland, homogenous, and long-gone England would
be hard to conceive. Joe thinks,
bemusedly, before responding that, well, can’t get ‘em anymore round here –
before reeling off a plethora of diverse offerings that are readily available –
curries, empanadas, ackee...you get the picture. The parable continues with the visitor asking
Joe what kind of music his band plays, and again, Joe rambles on about the
gamut of international styles his band can offer. Both, damn right delicious.
“Bhindi Bhagee” ranks up there with countless Clash classics
like “Let’s Go Crazy”, “Jimmy Jazz”, and “Bankrobber” that so effectively fuse
disparate musical threads from around the world into a vibrant new musical
reality. Sandinista’s “Let’s Go Crazy” –
one of the band’s truly crowning achievements – wonderfully foreshadowed Joe’s
giddy embracing of a muilticultural mindset of inclusion in the introductory
sampled remarks from a Carnival announcer, imploring the gathering faithful to
“have a great, peaceful time at Carnival time – black, white, pink, blue, you
name it...”
We can’t predict how long this surreal isolationist mojo
will carry on either Stateside or across the pond, but I can say with
confidence that somewhere Joe is rolling another Turkish cigarette, and he is
not amused. He will also say he’s seen
it before (“Something About England”) and counsel us to hang in there with hope
for the future, I’d expect.
Mushy peas, sorry, but the world in which you enjoyed
primacy has been evicted from High Street and relegated to an obscure
suburb.
-Rhythm Slayer
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