An Old Song with Contemporary Relevance
This afternoon I was writing about Theaster Gates’ Afro-Mingei exhibition at the Mori Art Museum (continuing until September 1, 2024), I plugged an old CD from 1995 by Don Henley, formerly of The Eagles, into my player. Toward the end is a song that I had listened to dozens of times in the past. But this time, I felt like it was highly applicable to a certain political figure in the United States today.
The song is titled “The Garden of Allah” and the stanza that suddenly impressed me by its meaning in 2024 is as follows:
I was only half-listening to the album, but the lyrics of this particular song grabbed my attention. It perfectly describes the political situation this year, in which a large group of Americans don’t care about what is right or what is wrong. It is all about “belonging” to a certain group, one which has no policies, no plan, no sense of responsibility for what happens in the country or with its allies. The only change that Henley could make to replace “people selling t-shirts” with “people selling gold sneakers.”
Well done, Henley.
(298 words)