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Shock & Awe 06/21/2010
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This is the first in a series of posts I will be doing about the songs on the debut E.P.  Track number one is of course the title track "Shock & Awe" and the inspiration for it came after hearing about music being used in torture sessions in Guantanamo Bay without the consent of the musicians who made it.  When this became public, most of the musicians whose music had been used were, as to be expected, pretty damned pissed off and rightfully so.  If you're not familiar with the story you can read more about it here:

Performers Angry About Music Used In Gitmo

But the song isn't specifically about this situation even though it was the initial thing that got me thinking in this direction.  As I was reading about this I remembered hearing something about how music blasted out of loudspeakers on helicopters had been used to scare the enemy in Vietnam and then some other movie images of soldiers getting "pumped up" by certain kinds of heavy, aggressive music came to mind.  In general I started thinking about how music can be used in what I consider to be negative ways.  The title itself is taken from a fairly recently coined military term for going into a battle with so much firepower and force that the enemy is basically shocked into submission.  Quick and relatively painless is the idea.  Except for the innocent civilians who tend to get in the way...but that's a whole other tangent.

Anyway, I had this riff that seemed almost like something that could have been turned into one of these songs that the military likes to use so I thought, hell, why not?  Except this one will have twist and turn it back on itself!  So after the verses which seem like something a bunch of grunts would get a real rush from, the whole thing turns against them in the final refrain, basically saying "Hey you suckers!  Gotcha!  This song is not what you thought it was and maybe you should think again!"

I wouldn't call it an "anti-war" song as such, but more of a statement against aggression of any kind especially when it is so uncontrolled that it results in the death of innocent bystanders.

The fact that the vocals went into a kind of rap or spoken word form was really just a spontaneous experiment that I ended up really liking.  Hope you do too.  All for now.
 


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