John Lennon wrote "Working Class Hero" to connect with the working class of the 1970s and give them hope of rising from inferiority. "Working Class Hero" is a folk blues song that speaks to the working class audience about the disparity between the elite and the hard-working middle class. As the gap between the social classes was widening, people were willing to express the discontent of their lives. These "rebels" believed they could mitigate the economic and social struggles. In this song, the audience is the working class who is being encouraged to challenge the status quo of inequality.
While the ruling elite tortures them, the working class has a change to get "to the top" if they follow Lennon's plan for social change.The audience idolizes Lennon for being the "hero", representing their quiet voice calling for action. Although they don't have many resources, the working class can become the champion of social progress by protesting for more ownership and better conditions.
This blog will explore the music being influenced by the social movements of the 1960s and today. In these "pages", you will discover how rock 'n' roll music is relevant to working class.
Friday, February 27, 2015
Thursday, February 26, 2015
Disparity by Design: Ethos
The band, Rise Against, is a well known group that originally started in 1999. The group released a series of albums before Endgame, with their album Siren Song of the Counter Culture becoming a huge success. Several of the songs were certified Platinum and a couple of albums ranked high on the Billboard 200 charts. They were even the opening act for the widely popular band Linkin Park during their US tour. Rise Against has thus gained a substantial fan base, considering the popularity of their songs and their success as a group. Upon hearing their song Disparity by Design, listeners might pay more attention to the lyrics given Rise Against's reputation and time in the music scene. Their reputation is enough for people to think about the current issues in society, and in this particular case, economic inequality.
Disparity by Design: Audience Analysis
Punk rock and melodic hard core have a particularly niche audience. Very generally speaking the audience of this genre alone is liberally minded, young, white, and middle class. However Rise against
takes advantage of this as an opportunity to change the their audience’s stance
on equality for minorities, women and the poor. Disparity by Design pushes for
an ideological revolution that would make equality a social norm that people
conformed to without ever questioning. This kind of radical shift in ideology would probably not be as well received by older audiences because it’s hard to teach an old dog new tricks. With a younger audience they are usually more liberal minded and open to
changing their beliefs on issues such as equality. The young people of today
will be the leaders and decision makers of tomorrow. Rise against takes full
advantage of their influence on their audience to promote change for a more inclusive future.
Wednesday, February 25, 2015
Working Class Hero: Ethos
Throughout the song, “Working Class Hero,” John Lennon utilizes
ethos by making himself seem as if he knows everything about the working class
and that people should trust and listen to him. Due to his knowledge,
people should believe him. At the end of the song he says “A working class hero
is something to be. If you want to be a hero well just follow me,” which
establishes a relationship between him and the audience because he makes
himself seem credible.
Through his lyrics, Lennon uses ethos to relate to the rhetorical
situation at the time. He makes the audience realize the truth in the world around
them. By saying, “they hate you if you’re clever and they despise a fool,” Lennon
explains how at the time if you did not think and act the way everyone else
did, you were punished; if you tried to aspire, there would be consequences. The
listener gets the impression that Lennon believes people should be allowed to
do whatever they want without being punished.
“Working Class Hero”: Pathos
The song opens with the solemn lyrics, “As soon as you’re
born they make you feel small,” making the audience feel inferior and hopeless.
The steady guitar rhythm makes the working-class audience reflect on their troubled lives. But Lennon gradually shifts
the tone of the song when begins to sing the chorus, “A working class hero is
something to be,” giving the audience hope of achieving success. The verses of
the song tell the miserable life of a factory worker. The labor movement was
inspired by workers who joined unions to fight for better conditions.
Lennon’s use of explicit language helps the audience to feel
what it is like to be taken advantaged of at bottom of the social hierarchy.
The working class citizen feels degraded but Lennon’s use of the word, “hero”
empowers the weak to have courage and overcome adversity. Ending the song in a
authoritative tone, Lennon encourages the working class to follow him to
improve their lives.
Tuesday, February 24, 2015
Working Class Hero: Logos
Even though the purpose of the song is to appeal to the
audience’s emotion, the word choice makes it seem like Lennon has world
knowledge about people in the working class. He tries to persuade the audience
of how tough life is in the working class by building himself up and attempting
to explain how he knows what working class life is. By doing so, he establishes
credibility and makes the audience believe he is working class and should
therefore trust his opinion on the situation. Lennon portrays logos by his use
of irony. He utilizes the song to describe the struggles of a working class
citizen but proceeds to state that a working class hero is something to be.
When Lennon says, “they hurt you at home, and they hit you at school,” he wants
to reach out to the audience to say that the cycle needs to be broken at a
younger age.
Lennon’s logical argument throughout the song brings up the
issue of the inequality of the class structure. From listening to the song, one
realizes that Lennon believes that instead of having multiple sides in society,
there should be one side with no bias. By stating his position on the
situation, he convinces the listener, through logic, what the issue is and how
it should be resolved.
Disparity by Design: Pathos
There are certain things about a song that can be appealing when you first listen to it. Whether it's an upbeat tune, or a sweet melody, there are ways music can instantly captivate the listener. For Rise Against's song, Disparity by Design, the intense electric guitar and drum beat demand attention and create a sense of urgency. The lyrics of the song contain strong diction and a tune that might empower the listener to stand up and make a change. The lyrics say, "And like a single domino, that falls while the rest stay vertical, we're fed these empty fairy tales and I'm through believing," expressing the frustration of economic equality that a lot of the listeners could relate to. Also, the similes and imagery help the listener picture what the song is trying to get across. By using lyrics and a powerful upbeat tempo, Rise Against is able to appeal to the emotions of the listeners and create a song that drives listeners to reflect upon the Occupy movement.
Disparity by Design: Logos
Disparity by Design speaks from the perspective of victims
of discrimination. Rise Against projects the discontent of people who are
treated differently for possessing qualities beyond their control that their
disparagers find unworthy of equal treatment.
Disparity by Design supplies the issue, an
institutionalized system of discrimination of people based on differences they
cannot control, examples in the form of instances in which people are deprived
of equal opportunity, and the conclusion that people of these groups are not
any less valuable than their disparagers. The reaction that the audience with
experiences of this kind will have is apparent. They will apply their life’s knowledge and
experiences of hardship to supply the missing premise validating the point that Disparity by Design makes.
Monday, February 23, 2015
"Working Class Hero": Kairos
John Lennon released this song, “Working Class Hero” in 1970,
a time when the American working class realized their labor struggles and
joined unions.
In this song he criticizes difference between the high and
low social classes. During the 1960s, 95% of Americans classified themselves as
part of the working class (or middle class). However, an elite upper class did
rule the working-class families. The gap between the social classes was
widening, especially when women entered the working industry. Motivated to
express rebellious mindset, Lennon wanted break free from conformity and give
the working-class hope for improvement in their conditions. The middle class resonated with this revolutionary song that warns them about the experience of “being processed”.
People felt alienated at work because labor-power made work
only a means of earning money, not expressing their life. “Working Class Hero”
attempted to release the “inner rebellion” inside of the middle class who suffered
from wage slavery. It is was the ideal time for the “peasants” to emerge from
their factory shells and rise against the degrading standards.
Sunday, February 22, 2015
Working Class Hero: Major Rhetorical Argument
Working Class Hero, a powerful song by John Lennon released in 1970, reflects on the injustice of the social classes at the time. John Lennon portrays his opinion on the issue throughout the song using strong rhetoric. Through his relation to the audience by
the use of the word “you,” Lennon describes how the working class was treated
unequally mostly due to capitalism and the government. Lennon begins by
describing how terrible the life of a working class person is, but then
continues on to say that a working class citizen is something to be. By
emphasizing this contradiction, Lennon depicts how the working class is stuck
in a cycle that is controlled by people of higher status. Throughout the song, Lennon describes how at the time, everyone was expected to act and think the same way. He explains
how if you are born into a certain social class, you will most likely stay
within that class and the result of trying to aspire and achieve are shown in
the lines: “They hurt you at home and they hit you at school. They hate you if you're clever and they despise a fool.”
Major Rhetorical Argument: Disparity by Design
Disparity by
Design, a contemptuous song by Rise Against, aims to give voice to the
ongoing culture of discrimination that minorities, women, and the poor endure
and the 1% that pretends it doesn’t exist. Rise Against asserts that the rich and privileged deprive these
groups of equality by perpetuating a system that gives less opportunity to
anyone who isn’t one of their cronies while continuing to profess that everyone
has a shot at the ‘American Dream’. This kind of system creates two Americas
with a set of rules for the 1% and another for everyone else.
This song identifies these victims with terminology often
associated with political conversations centered around their respective issues.
Women are referenced with the phrase “glass ceiling” the poor with “pull on
these boot straps” and minorities with the mention of ‘reparations’. Each of
these phrases calls on a history of oppression at the hands of the elite 1%.
All of these groups have fought for equality from the same oppressor yet still
have not gained equality. The biggest threat to progress is the unwillingness
to acknowledge that these groups still face discrimination. In this kind of
system the oppressed are expected to suffer in silence or appear to be crying
wolf.
Rise Against expresses the need for an ideological
revolution that would create a generation of people that are culturally aware
of the struggles of women, minorities, and the poor. Instead of convincing
their audience to take drastic action, Rise Against opts for a ‘lead by
example’ approach. When equality for all is a social norm, conformity is a far
more effective at changing such pervasive issues as disparity of treatment than
aggressive protest. The wealthy elite that capitalizes from repressing certain
groups will begin to be replaced by younger more forward thing generations.
Starting this conversation and implanting the appreciation for equality in
future generations is the start of meaningful progress.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)

