Yesterday, by a random coincidence, I happened upon a prime,
high-profile example of the mysterious process by which an author ends up
hiding the personal and/or the political in the subtext of published words
which then become famous. Those who follow this blog know I’ve found a few
hundred such examples in Austen’s prose and Shakespeare’s verse, but today, as my
Subject Line hints, I bring an example of Beatles lyrics which cast startling,
ironic light on the Brexit occurring nearly a half century after those lyrics
were written. As you’ll see, the “Get back to where you once belonged” chorus
we’ve all sung along with Sir Paul has turned out to be eerily prescient of the
Brexit now hogging the world’s headlines, and giving the jitters to all
Americans (like myself) in the “Never NEVER Trump” camp.
To begin, listen to this YouTube audio https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WcjBF1uj6Do of an early version of “Get Back” with lyrics
very different than the ones we all know, which of course are:
Jo-Jo was a man who thought he was a loner But he knew it
wouldn't last
Jo-Jo left his home in Tucson, Arizona For some California grass
Get back, get back Get back to where you once belonged
Get back, get back Get back to where you once belonged Get back Jo-jo Go home
Jo-Jo left his home in Tucson, Arizona For some California grass
Get back, get back Get back to where you once belonged
Get back, get back Get back to where you once belonged Get back Jo-jo Go home
Sweet Loretta
Martin thought she was a woman But she was another man
All the girls around her say she's got it coming But she gets it while she can [Chorus]
All the girls around her say she's got it coming But she gets it while she can [Chorus]
Get
back, Loretta Your mama's waiting for you
Wearing her high-heel shoes And her low-neck sweater Get back home, Loretta
Wearing her high-heel shoes And her low-neck sweater Get back home, Loretta
So, how did the Beatles get from there to here? To find out,
now read the following informative 2013 Salon.com article, describing, with satisfying
detail, how those edgy earlier lyrics morphed into the innocuous ones we’ve all
known the past 45 years:
Although I urge you to read the whole (not very long)
article, here are the most relevant highlights:
“No Pakistanis”: The racial satire the Beatles don’t want you to
hear by Alex Sayf Cummings
The song that became
Get Back began as an anti-immigrant satire so easily misunderstood it remains
in the vaults Imagine that a popular American rock band – say, the Black Keys
– wrote a song about immigrants. There are too many of them, the lyrics
suggest, and they take jobs away from native-born workers. The chorus
recommends that they go back to their countries of origin, where they really
belong. Though the song was meant to satirize xenophobia, “No Mexicans” could
be easily interpreted as an anthem of racism. This was the situation that the
Beatles faced in 1969, when they first concocted the song that would become
“Get Back.” Better known as a playful take on counterculture, starring the
gender-bending Sweet Loretta Martin and the grass-smoking Jo-Jo, the song
originally dealt with South Asian immigration to the United Kingdom.
…The year, of course, was 1968 – a time of race riots, political
assassinations, and social ferment. Into this heady atmosphere walked a British
M.P. named Enoch Powell…Enoch borrowed the words of Virgil to describe the
threat of continued immigration to the United Kingdom. “As I look ahead,” he
said, “I am filled with foreboding; like the Roman, I seem to see ‘the River
Tiber foaming with much blood.’” For maximum poignancy, he told the story of a
gloomy constituent who wished he could afford to leave the country, because the
influx of immigrants meant that “in 15 or 20 years’ time the black man will
have the whip hand over the white man.” A friend recalled that Powell expected
the speech to “go up ‘fizz’ like a rocket,” and a local TV crew rushed down to
tape what they expected to be a much-discussed news item after seeing an
advance copy of speech.
The so-called “Rivers of Blood” speech caused the media
firestorm that Powell had wanted. Accusations of racism led to his cabinet
ouster by Prime Minister Edward Heath, but some citizens maintained that “Enoch
was right” – a slogan that became a commonplace of racial resentment in the
following decades. The Beatles, however, did not share this view, and Powell
became the target of several songs the band recorded for…Let It Be in 1970. In a recording known as “Back to the Commonwealth” or “The Commonwealth Song,” the band blasts the
politician by name. “Dirty Enoch Powell said to the immigrants, immigrants you
better get back to your commonwealth homes,” McCartney warbles over a
skittering beat. Soon enough, however, we learn that “Heath said to Enoch
Powell you better get out, or heads are gonna roll.” …Lennon chimes in
occasionally, in the voice of a prim old English woman, “The Commonwealth is
much too common for me.
… Who McCartney was actually referring to is difficult to
determine from the recording, but the Beatle later insisted that any pejorative
racial tone was not intentional. “There were a lot of stories in the newspapers
then about Pakistanis crowding out flats – you know, living 16 to a room or
whatever,” McCartney said in 1986, one of the rare times he talked about the
songs. “If there was any group that was not racist, it was the Beatles. I mean,
all our favorite people were always black.”…“Get Back”… shed its racial
implications on the way to wide release. Instead of a Puerto Rican and a
Pakistani, the official version deals with Jo-Jo, who “left his home in Tucson,
Arizona, for some California grass,” and a cross-dresser named Sweet Loretta
Martin. McCartney advises Jo-Jo to get back to his roots, while warning that
Martin will “get it” some day if she keeps up her transgressive ways. The
Beatles evidently felt more comfortable addressing counterculture and sexual
liberation in the song, rather than risk releasing a recording whose satirical
intent could be misconstrued as an anthem of racial backlash.”
From that article, and other Net content, I take McCartney at
his word– after all, only a few years earlier Lennon inadvertently ignited a
firestorm with these candid ruminations from the cultural mountaintop he and
his fellow Beatles sat atop in 1966: “Christianity
will go. It will vanish and shrink. I needn’t argue about that. I’m right
and I’ll be proved right. We’re more popular than Jesus now. I don’t know which
will go first, rock ‘n’ roll or Christianity. Jesus was all right but his
disciples were thick and ordinary. It’s them twisting it that ruins it for me.” Plus, McCartney, as
the world knows, was devastated by the end of the Beatles, and also was aware
of how the White Album had served as inadvertent inspiration to Charles Manson’s
demonic cult.
McCartney must’ve recognized what my research on Austen has shown me countless times - how easily a clever satire can be missed entirely, and can instead be taken literally. So the last thing he was going to do in a recording, which he hoped would keep the group going by returning to its rock’n roll roots, was to risk triggering yet another nightmarish public uproar.
McCartney must’ve recognized what my research on Austen has shown me countless times - how easily a clever satire can be missed entirely, and can instead be taken literally. So the last thing he was going to do in a recording, which he hoped would keep the group going by returning to its rock’n roll roots, was to risk triggering yet another nightmarish public uproar.
But that’s not quite the end of this story of surprising Lennon-McCartney
subtext in “Get Back”. The stimulus that first prompted me to even look at the
above Powell-Trump echo via the Beatles, was not, as you might’ve guessed, my experiencing
a sudden epiphany of the aptness of the phrase “Get back to where you once
belonged” to Brexit – you can go on Twitter right now and find several examples
of Tweeps making that connection having no awareness of the history of the song.
Of all things, it was my happening to hear yesterday that one of
John Lennon’s little known nicknames was “Jo-Jo”. It took me about 5 seconds to
ask myself the following question --- did McCartney have Lennon specifically in
mind when he wrote that chorus? Was this his way of telling John to “get back
to where you once belonged”? I.e., was Tucson his metaphor for the Beatles
before John left under the allure of California grass and Loretta in the low
neck sweater (i.e., Yoko)?
I knew it was a long shot, but imagine my pleasure when I quickly
came upon what I hope you’ll agree is a smoking gun in the Wikipedia entry for “Get
Back”:
“In 1980, Lennon stated
"there's some underlying thing about Yoko in there", saying that
McCartney looked at Yoko Ono in the studio every time he sang "Get back to
where you once belonged." “
Q.E.D.
Q.E.D.
So, who’d have thunk that “Get back to where you once belong”
was a line that meant so much? In any event, while my generation’s fondest
cultural fantasy, of a reuniting of the Beatles, can never be (except in the
afterlife, if there is one and if the deity is especially merciful to Baby Boomers),
at the very least we can all still hold out hope, and work hard, for some
miraculous averting of implementation of Brexit, and for Trump to go down to
ignominious defeat here in the States in November. For then we might once again imagine “all the people sharing all the world”, and hope that we all “get back to where we once belonged”—in a true Garden of Eden of world peace.
But as long as Trump still exists as a threat to our civilization, one final parting shot at him -- is there any way, in addition to his copy of Hitler writings by his bedside, did he happen to be an admirer of Enoch Powell as well, with his "River of Blood", and was that on his mind when he uttered his foul innuendoes to Megyn Kelly about "blood coming out"? It's so disgusting a possibility that it's probably true! For more in that vein, read this:
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/23/opinion/campaign-stops/donald-trump-and-the-rivers-of-blood.html?_r=0
But as long as Trump still exists as a threat to our civilization, one final parting shot at him -- is there any way, in addition to his copy of Hitler writings by his bedside, did he happen to be an admirer of Enoch Powell as well, with his "River of Blood", and was that on his mind when he uttered his foul innuendoes to Megyn Kelly about "blood coming out"? It's so disgusting a possibility that it's probably true! For more in that vein, read this:
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/23/opinion/campaign-stops/donald-trump-and-the-rivers-of-blood.html?_r=0
Cheers, ARNIE
@JaneAustenCode on
Twitter
2 comments:
Very interesting to learn about "Get Back," but the politics of Brexit is much deeper than just immigration. When the Beatles wrote, the EU had barely begun its evolution into a Superstate of anonymous dictocrats seizing control of every local resource and civic freedom.
Thank you very much, Gina Ann, I only just noticed your comment a moment ago. Yes, your gloss makes a lot of sense.
ARNIE
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