UPDATE: More fine examples added – see below
Unless you have really been paying attention for a very long time, you will have missed my various attempts to share examples of diplomatic themes appearing in great rock lyrics.
And the time has come for a former senior diplomatic practitioner (ie me) to draw the planet’s attention once again to some of the finer examples – and to urge you to buy them through Amazon so I earn a few groats.
Let’s start. If it is tense Cold War confrontation you want, try the Clash’s Ivan Meets G.I. Joe:
He wiped the earth – clean as a plate
What does it take to make a Ruskie break?
But the crowd are bored and off they go
Over the road to watch China blow!
If you are a close follower of variations in US Embassy opening hours round the world, try Donald Fagen’s The Goodbye Look:
Now the Americans are gone except for two
The Embassy’s been hard to reach
There’s been talk and lately a bit of action after dark
Behind the big casino on the beach
And for those who support the application of the EU’s odious Working Time Directive even to American diplomats, here is So it Goes by Nick Lowe:
Now up jumped the U.S. representative
He’s the one with the tired eyes
747 for the midnight condition
Flyin’ back from a peace keepin’ mission
This album, by the way, also has the finest ever song about being eaten by one’s own dogs.
Usually I look for some sort of reference to actual diplomatic practice, not a passing word such as in Cheap Trick’s I Love you Honey but I Hate your Friends:
That limp wristed two-fisted diplomat
Better draw a map, to see where he’s at
Or Elvis Costello’s Green Shirt:
Never said I was a stool pigeon
I never said I was a diplomat
Everybody is under suspicion
But you don’t want to hear about that
Or even Blinded by the Light by Manfred Mann’s Earth Band:
Madman drummers bummers indians in the summer with a teenage diplomat,
In the dumps with the mumps as the adolescent pumps his way in to his
hat.
Try instead the rarified atmosphere of high-level international relations as in Frank Zappa’s Rhymin’ Man:
A few years later, legend says,
Rhymin’ man made a run for Prez
Farrakhan made him a clown,
Over there near Hymie-Town
Said he was a diplomat —
Hobbin’ an-a-knobbin’ with Arafat
Castro was simpatico,
But the U.S. voters, they said: “No!”
And Michelle Shocked’s impressive reference to diplomatic immunity:
Oh Streetcorner Ambassador
It seems so clear to me
The more you are ignored
It’s called diplomatic immunity
Not to forget immigration policy – George Harrison’s magnificent Awaiting on You All:
You don’t need no passport
And you don’t need no visas
You don’t need to designate or to emigrate
Before you can see Jesus
Finally, super lyrics from Pink Floyd as they got into their stride, with one nice metaphorical diplomatic line:
Overhead the albatross hangs motionless upon the air
And deep beneath the rolling waves in labyrinths of coral caves
The echo of a distant tide
Comes willowing across the sand
And everything is green and submarine …
And through the window in the wall
Comes streamin in on sunlight wings
A million bright ambassadors of morning
And no one sings me lullabies
And no one makes me close my eyes
So I throw the windows wide
And call to you across the sky.
Ah. When we were young.
Any more examples out there?
UPDATE
This post has prompted an avalanche of new suggestions from several people (including Bruce Springsteen fans keen to keep the record accurate – see comments) whose elderly collection of LPs is very different to mine.
Many complain that I missed the best of all – Bob Dylan‘s Like a Rolling Stone:
You used to ride on the chrome horse with your diplomat
Who carried on his shoulder a Siamese cat
Ain’t it hard when you discover that
He really wasn’t where it’s at
After he took from you everything he could steal.
Not to ignore Joni Mitchell and her look at certain big-power rivalries in Blue Motel Room:
You and me, we’re like America and Russia
We’re always keeping score
We’re always balancing the power
And that can get to be a cold cold war
We’re going to have to hold ourselves a peace talk
In some neutral cafe
You lay down your sneaking round the town, honey
And I’ll lay down the highway
Thanks to Twitter too for prompting yet more.
This one has a general IR theme but is utterly new to me – sent in by @tonyveitchUK: Clang of the Yankee Reaper by Van Dyke Parks:
Out in the rude wild abandon
The Shah of Iran bought the plan
Seen with the Queen he was all smiles
He just bailed out the British Isles
It’s time to drink tea from fine china
Just think of him, when your light starts to dim
@OdessaBlogger draws our attention to The Clash‘s prescient analysis of ‘Climate Change’ (and the likely failure of the Thames Barrier) in London Calling:
The ice age is coming, the sun’s zooming in
Engines stop running, the wheat is growing thin
A nuclear error but I have no fear’
Cause London is drowning and I, I live by the river
Mind you, my own favourite Clash song is London’s Burning with these timeless words about road conditions near Hammersmith:
I’m up and down the Westway, in an’ out the lights
What a great traffic system – it’s so bright
I can’t think of a better way to spend the night
Then speeding around underneath the yellow lights
And this one submitted by @NickJonesCOI, who is paying attention all the way from No 10 = Bonzo Goes to Bitberg by the Ramones:
Bonzo goes to bitburg then goes out for a cup of tea
As I watched it on TV somehow it really bothered me
Drank in all the bars in town for an extended foreign policy
Pick up the pieces
What causes havoc in international relations? @CiesseJay suggests that the Rolling Stones‘ Sympathy for the Devil has the answer:
I stuck around St. Petersburg, when I saw it was a time for a change
Killed the czar and his ministers – Anastasia screamed in vain
I rode a tank, held a generals rank
When the blitzkrieg raged and the bodies stank
Pleased to meet you
Hope you guess my name, oh yeah
I am not sure what to make of this proposition from @DianaProbst, namely that “the Russian chorus of The Hippopotamus Song was translated ‘Down to the hollow, there to improve our cultural relations”.
She also reminds us of Tom Lehrer and Send the Marines:
When someone makes a move
Of which we don’t approve
Who is it that always intervenes?
UN and OAS
They have their place, I guess
But first send the Marines
Anyway, Diana is an artist based in Cambridge who does fine deft-touch work – and it’s for sale! Check out her website.
A reader gives this obvious and excellent example by Peter Sarstedt:
You go to the embassy parties
Where you talk in Russian and Greek
And the young men who move in your circles
They hang on every word you speak, yes they do
Finally, @whitefinger rightly draws attention to Warren Zevon‘s The Envoy, perhaps the best of all diplomatic rock songs in that it takes and personalises numerous diplomatic themes to good effect:
Things got hot in El Salvador
C-I-A got caught and couldn’t do no more
He’s got diplomatic immunity
He’s got a lethal weapon that nobody sees
Looks like another threat to world peace
For the envoy
Send the envoy
Send the envoy
Whenever there’s a crisis
The President sends his envoy in
Guns in Damascus
Oh, Jerusalem
Nuclear arms in the Middle East
Israel is attacking the Iraqis
The Syrians are mad at the Lebanese
And Baghdad do whatever she please
Looks like another threat to world peace
For the envoy
Send the envoy, send for me
Mission accomplished?