Super Bowl Songs: I Am a Patriot

It is time once again for Chimesfreedom to take a look at songs related to each Super Bowl team. With this year’s battle between the New England Patriots and the New York Giants, we first consider the Patriots, using a song incorporating the New England mascot instead of going with Barry Manilow’s “Weekend in New England.”

Back in the 1980s before there was the Internet where you can find a large amount of music and concert footage of your favorite artist, I was desperate for anything related to Bruce Springsteen for the long years between albums. In one of those periods, I discovered the music of Little Steven and “I Am a Patriot.”

Little Steven, of course, is “Miami Steve” and Silvio Dante and Steven Van Zandt, a guitarist and singer in Springsteen’s E Street Band. While Springsteen’s songs gradually included more political allusions, Little Steven wore his social issues on his sleeve. “I Am a Patriot,” though, he reclaims the word “patriot” from the politicians and asserts its meaning as an advocate for freedom.

And I ain’t no communist, and I ain’t no capitalist;
And I ain’t no socialist;
and I sure ain’t no imperialist;
And I ain’t no Democrat;
And I ain’t no Republican either;
And I only know one party,
And its name is freedom;
I am a patriot.

Little Steven recorded several very good albums on his own during the 1980s, including Men Without Women (1982), Voice of America (1984), Freedom No Compromise (1987) and Revolution (1989). He added one last album in the 1990s with Born Again Savage (1999), which was not as successful as his previous albums. “I Am a Patriot” is off of Voice of America, and the song has been covered by Jackson Browne and Eddie Vedder, among others. Browne also has performed the song with Little Steven.

As for this weekend, at the end of the day on Sunday, New Englanders are hoping they can proudly assert the refrain of the song. Meanwhile, check out the Super Bowl song for the New York Giants.

Are you a fan of Little Steven? What other songs are appropriate for the New England Patriots? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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  • Nelson Mandela, Sun City, and Changing Times
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  • Little Steven and Bruce Springsteen: “It’s Been a Long Time”
  • Little Steven is Releasing “Soulfire”
  • Purple Rain: Prince at 2007 Super Bowl
  • Springsteen and Vedder Sing “Bobby Jean”
  • Super Bowl Movies: The Patriot vs. Giant

    The Patriot Mel Gibson Each mascot from this year’s Super Bowl teams has a sprawling epic film, so let’s see if the movies can help us predict the future National Football League champion. In one corner, for the New England Patriots, there is The Patriot (2000), starring Mel Gibson and Heath Ledger. In the other corner, for the New York Giants, there is Giant (1956), starring Rock Hudson, Elizabeth Taylor, James Dean, and Dennis Hopper. Like the two football teams and their quarterbacks, the male lead in each film has an interesting storyline in real life as well as on the field or screen. But who will emerge victorious?

    The Patriot covers one man’s family through the American Revolution, as Mel Gibson plays a reluctant fighter who leads a rag-tag group of patriots. The film follows the usual Mel Gibson movie pattern with one of his loved ones getting killed, Mel getting mad, and Mel killing a lot of people (Braveheart, Mad Max). Although the film has its detractors (a 62% critic Rotten Tomatoes rating) claiming the movie glosses over the slavery issue and it makes the British into sort of 1700’s evil Nazi-type characters, it is a fun action move with exciting battle scenes (an 80% audience Rotten Tomatoes rating).

    Giant, a movie that traces the ups and downs of the fictional Benedict family in Texas, also has its detractors claiming the epic is overlong. Still, the film, which is based on a novel by Edna Ferber, has great actors and it was the last time James Dean appeared in a leading role. In trying to capture a scope as big as Texas, the movie features several classic scenes, such as one where James Dean marches across the land his troubled character inherited, and another classic scene is where Rock Hudson’s bigoted character stands up for a family of Mexican immigrants in a diner as the jukebox plays “The Eyes of Texas Are Upon You.” While our twenty-first century eyes may recognize some problems with portraying a white man as the rescuer, the fact that Hudson faced discrimination in his real life adds another layer to the scene.

    Using our movies to predict the Super Bowl, who wins? With a 95% critic rating and 85% audience rating on Rotten Tomatoes, Giant is the winner in the battle of the movies. Going by the audience ratings of The Patriot (80%) vs. Giant (85%), the New York Giants will beat the New England Patriots by five points, which seems a little more believable than the film critics’ prediction of a 33-point romp for the Giants (95% to 62%).

    giant rock hudson elizabeth taylorLike the New England and New York teams, both films have their imperfections but are fun to watch. If the football game this weekend gets boring, you could do worse than popping in one of these movies.

    What do you think of The Patriot or Giant? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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  • Super Bowl Songs: I Am a Patriot
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    Football Songs: Tim Tebow’s St. Elmo’s Fire

    st. elmo's fire John Parr, who recorded the 1980s hit “St. Elmo’s Fire (Man in Motion)” for the Brat Pack movie St. Elmo’s Fire has decided to re-record the song in honor of . . . a football player. Parr explained that he was inspired by Tim Tebow, the Denver Broncos quarterback who is known for talking about his Christianity and for kneeling in thanks on the field of play. Some, like Parr, see inspiration in Tebow, while others see hype for a mediocre quarterback.

    Parr’s recorded “Tim Tebow’s Fire.” Warning: If you are a fan of the movie, St. Elmo’s Fire, you might want to avoid listening the the new version and getting it stuck in your head.

    The phrase “St. Elmo’s Fire” comes from a weather phenomenon involving electrical charges commonly seen by sailors during thunderstorms. It was named after a mispronunciation of St. Ermo or St. Erasmus, the patron saint of Mediterranean sailors. Whether or not you think of Tebow as some kind of saint, he certainly has become a phenomenon.

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    A Schoolhouse Rock Lesson for Hank Williams Jr.

    Hank Williams Jr Yesterday on Fox News, Hank Williams Jr. got in some trouble for apparently comparing Pres. Barack Obama to Hitler, resulting in ESPN pulling his opening montage for Monday Night Football (“Are You Ready for Some Football!?”). To be fair, he actually said that Pres. Obama and House Speaker John Boehner getting together would be “like Hitler playing golf with Netanyahu.” So even though he showed great disdain for the president in the rest of the conversation, his controversial comment was more about the divide between the Democrats and Republicans. Still, he should have known that comparisons to Hitler are likely to cause problems. I cannot wait to see the “Downfall” video someone makes from this event.

    Williams’s comment that provoked the most humor, though, is when he called the president and the vice-president “The Three Stooges.” So, to help Mr. Williams out with his math, today we present “3 is a Magic Number” from Schoolhouse Rock:

    Schoolhouse Rock was a series of short animated musical segments that gave me a short burst of education on Saturday mornings when I was a kid. The series originally ran from 1973-1985, but the series was revived in the 1990s. The ABC series covered a range of categories, including Grammar Rock, Multiplication Rock, History Rock, and Science Rock. Several specific videos are forever etched in my memory, including “Conjunction Junction” and “How a Bill Becomes a Law.” But perhaps the one song that has had a significant life of its own among rock artists is “3 is a Magic Number.”

    Schoolhouse Rock Several of the songs have been recorded by rock artists, including on this compilation CD. But “3 is a Magic Number” seems to be the one that works best outside the Schoolhouse Rock cartoons, perhaps because it is a great song and it works as an independent song about family and love. On the other hand, “Conjunction Junction” cannot be about anything besides conjunctions. “3 is a Magic Number” has been performed by Jeff Buckley, Blind Melon, the Jonas Brothers, Alvin & the Chipmunks, Jack Johnson, and De La Soul.

    Now if we could just add Hank Williams Jr. to the list. “Are you ready for some math?”

    What is your favorite Schoolhouse Rock song? Who would you like to hear sing it?

    [Oct. 6, 2011 Update: Today ESPN announced that Hank Williams Jr. will no longer appear on Monday Night Football. Williams claims that he was the one who decided to part ways.]

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    Super Bowl Songs: Bon Iver & “Wisconsin”

    Bon Iver Wisconsin“Wisconsin” by Bon Iver (click play button)

    Bon Iver For EmmaChimesfreedom continues its celebration of today’s Super Bowl battle between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Green Bay Packers with a song about the home of the Packers: “Wisconsin” by Bon Iver.

    Although Bon Iver’s “Wisconsin” is a recollection of events that happened in Wisconsin, the song is more universal. The narrator is singing about a lost love and his memories of their time in Wisconsin.

    Bon Iver is the recording name taken by Justin Vernon, and “Wisconsin” is a hidden track on Bon Iver’s 2007 album, For Emma, Forever Ago. Most of the album was written by Justin Vernon during a time of seclusion in a Wisconsin cabin. Following a break up with his former band, an illness, and the end of a relationship, Vernon moved from North Carolina to his childhood state of Wisconsin to live alone in his father’s cabin for almost four months. Out of his pain, he created the album.

    You’re up on the bar and your shaking
    With every grimy word
    Who will love
    Whats love when you’ve hurt
    You wonder as you see the snow kissed the curb
    Love is loves return

    That was Wisconsin that was yesterday
    Now I have nothing that I can keep
    Cause every place I go I take another place with me
    Love is loves critique

    Vernon took the name Bon Iver from an episode of Northern Exposure where residents of Cicely, Alaska emerged from their homes after the first snow to wish each other “bon hiver” — French for “good winter.”

    Have a good Super Bowl Sunday and be safe. Bon hiver.

    Bonus Cheerier Songs: If you would like a “happier” song set in Wisconsin, here is the opening to Laverne & Shirley.

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