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NEW WORLD WAKING: SONG BY
SONG
Musical notes by Steve Schalchlin
PROLOGUE (NEW WORLD WAKING)
This is a dream sequence number about a singer in a bar where the gods hang out. During the
vision, he notices that the gods aren't speaking. Suddenly, the gods are put on trial.
Symbolically, the point of the song (without hitting the listener over the head) is that if the gods were doing their job, we wouldn't be living with this kind of violence. The singer, confused about who would have the power to bind the hands and feet of the gods, is then commissioned to find a song which will free up the gods to do their job of creating peace.
PART ONE: VIOLENCE AT HOME & THE
COMMUNITY
But I returned to that page day after day, just looking into his eyes and
wondering what would make anyone want to hurt this boy?
Finally, I wrote Gabi and asked her to tell me the whole story. She emailed it.
Then I asked her if I could post it on my website. She wasn't sure at first. She
needed to think about her entire family. Bill's older brother, Noel. Her
husband, Alec.
But she did allow me to post it. And the feedback was so heartwarming and
supportive, she put her story up on her own site. This led her into more
Internet activism such as the
Safe
Schools Coalition and
Families
United Against Hate, which gives comfort to the families of the hate crime
victims.
It was through Gabi that I made my connection to John Lennon's piano.
When Kenny Goss, George Michael's partner, read about Gabi's story on the
Internet, he brought John Lennon's IMAGINE piano to her home for an art exhibit,
and she requested that I sing "Will It Always Be Like This." I was flown to
Olympia, and it was right there, sitting at John Lennon's piano beneath a shade
tree on a beautiful sunny day in Olympia, Washington that the vision for
"Pantheon Bar & Grill" was finally born.
Our story had come full circle. The first words you hear in this cantata for
peace is "Will it always be like this?"
BRILLIANT MASQUERADE
The Story of Billy Tipton.
I was writing songs for an upcoming project with Alexandra Billings, a brilliant
singer from Chicago but now living in Los Angeles. Since she's proudly
transgender, I was looking for a song relating to transgender issues. Then, an
old friend of mine, music journalist and songwriter Paul Zollo suggested Billy
Tipton, the famed sax player who had a great career in the 40s and 50s, but then
stopped performing. So I asked Paul if he would write the lyric.
The story goes that Billy's five wives were shocked and surprised to find out,
at Billy Tipton's autopsy that "Billy" was born "Dorothy."
It was assumed that "Dorothy" had become Billy because it was easier for a man
to get hired as a musician than a woman in those days. But Billy also had five
marriages, never completely disrobing at night saying he was "injured."
So, was Billy Tipton transgender? Was Billy a lesbian who merely dressed up as a
man to make a buck? A recent biography states that when he visited his parents,
he dressed up as "Dorothy."
But whatever you feel about Billy Tipton, he lived life on his own terms. It was
said that he dropped out of the music business because he was afraid of people
finding out his secret.
So, this song is just Billy's story, but it's also about the violence of
transphobia and the violence of life trapped in the closet. Lyrics by Paul
Zollo.
DEAD INSIDE
A Song about Internalized Homophobia
I became friends with world-famous gay blogger Joe Jervis (Joe.My.God.) on a
discussion board a few years ago. Like myself, he is HIV positive and he has
lived through the Holocaust of AIDS. In describing his life, he would frequently
use the term "Dead Inside," as a way to describe himself and other people who
had simply stopped even trying to love because of the pain they've experienced.
Expanding on his theme, "Dead Inside" evolved into a song about the kind of lost
lives some GLBT people suffer as a result of homophobia that evolves into a kind
of self-inflicted violence. In the song, which takes place in a bar, a man warns
a prospective suitor that he has lost the ability to love only find out that
that is precisely what the other man is seeking.
PART TWO: VIOLENCE IN THE
WORLD
FRANCO ATE THE PAPERWORK
Violence as madness.
"Franco Ate The Paperwork" began as a nonsense title suggested me by drummer Ned
Sykes. Oddly, it began to make sense to me as I realized that violence is
madness. So, I wrote an impressionistic lyric to reflect this insanity, and
amplified it through the use of Latin dance music.
"I ENTER THIS BATTLE GRAVELY"
Song of the Reluctant Soldier
I feel that in our culture, violence is celebrated as if it were a sporting
event. This song is based on the Tao Te Ching, number 32. It acknowledges that
war sometimes is inevitable when one is being attacked, but that one should
enter a battle as if going to a funeral, recognizing that the "enemy" is human,
and that any life destroyed lowers us all.
WAR BY DEFAULT
The Media's Song
An observation about how the media perpetuates and encourages war as an
inevitability by raising the temperature of the debate and celebrating violence
with music and computer graphics all in search of ratings. But also how
politicians seem to resort to violence first before any real effort at diplomacy
is attempted. The musical style is spy club music.
HOLY DIRT
A Song of Religious Violence
I was sitting alone, early one morning, when the news came that the Golden
Mosque in Iraq, one of the holiest sites for Shi'ite Muslims, had been destroyed
by Sunnis trying to start a sectarian war. I felt a great deal of pain and
compassion for the Golden Mosquers until they themselves went out and killed a
couple of hundred people in retaliation.
I started to observe that every time a religion or cult or belief system
designates an object to be "holy," people have to die over it. I thought,
cynically, that maybe that's how they tell how holy they really are, by how many
deaths they've caused.
I don't really hate religion. But I think, too often, religion is like a stick
of dynamite in the hands of an angry child.
PART THREE: THE AWAKENING
SUITE
LAZARUS COME OUT!
This lyric used the Biblical story of Lazarus, who was raised from the dead. In
the gay community, the HIV positive people who survived the first wave of
AIDS-related deaths are referred to as Lazarus people. In this song, a Lazarus
person confesses that he would not be alive without the love and support of the
people who loved him and refused to let him die.
WILLIAM'S SONG
Based on the true story of PFLAG mom, Carolyn Wagner and her son, William, this
is a real life example of a mother using non-violent actions -- the court system
-- to end the violence and discrimination that was being constantly visited upon
her non gender conforming son.
William had been constantly beaten and hounded in Arkansas at Fayetteville High
School, finally attacked in the street where he literally crawled home in a
trail of his own blood. His mother tried to convince the Principal to action,
but the Principal blamed William, dismissing her protests as "Boys will be
boys." She took the school system to court and won the case, forcing the small
town school system to institute a safe schools policy which has set a standard
for school systems all over the country.
Musically, this song is also southern, a blues rocker with just a hint of
50s.
MY THANKSGIVING PRAYER
A song of peace.
"May the music bring a
healing to this cold and troubled land." Another lyric from Rev. Peter Carman, I
absolutely fell in love with the message of simply being thankful. Thankful that
we are here. Thankful that the audience is open to our message. And thankful
that we have the gift of music to sustain us and to bring peace and healing.
EPILOGUE
The singer realizes that the there is only one culprit which can limit the
power of the gods, one's own self. And that if there will be change in the
world, it will have to start with his or her own hands. Being a singer, what
one can do is use the power of music.
MY RISING UP
The singer, realizing that he or she has the
power to create change and sees it as a personal rebirth with the
realization that he/she is not alone. The song is written in a very
specific southern Gospel quartet style. A religious person can feel
that God is with him or her. A secularist can imagine a lover or parent
or even one's own personal conscience.
MAY THE MUSIC BRING HEALING.
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