Monday, January 17, 2011

The Politics of a Smashed Guitar


Here are a couple of things I'm not down with -- crimes against crimes against guitars and politicians with guitars.

This blog has long stood in unwavering opposition to guitar smashing (although Pete Townshend has a lifetime get-out-of-jail-free card) so it was nice to read about a guitar fighting back and taking a piece out of would-be guitar smasher.

The rapper known as The Game was shooting a video for a song last week and apparently thought busting up an acoustic splinters would make a creative statement of some sort. A piece of the shattered guitar ended up cutting one of his fingers and Game had to go to the hospital to stitched up.


And then there's Mike Huckabee, the former Arkansas governor, 2010 Republican presidential candidate and Fox News political pundit. He's a bass player from way back and stopped in recently at the massive National Association of Music Merchants trade show in Anaheim, Calif. When somebody stuck a bass in his hands and Huckabee ended jamming with Phil Collen, the Def Leppard guitarist, and a guy from Martin, as seen in the photo on the left and this video.

"One of things I feel we've got to learn is that music is a life skill," Huckabee told the masses at NAMM. "People my age aren't playing tackle football anymore but I'm still playing msuic. In fact, I'm having more fun now doing it that I've ever had in my life because I'm doing it for the joy of it."

Huckabee also spoke about how important it is for schools not to drop their music and arts programs. So maybe I'm going to have to rethink my stand on guitar-playing (and bass-playing) politicians.

3 comments:

DAG said...

This takes me Back. I have been fortunate enough to have witnessed Pete Townsend smashing guitars on three occasions. On two of those nights Keith Moon was on drums and performed his destructive magic on his skins. I remember reading that Pete said he always made sure he had switched to a cheap guitar before the final song.

Those were great extremely loud concerts.

ALittleGuitar said...

Three guitar smashes and two drum destructions -- pretty damn good. With the Who, that's like witnessing history.

CassyM said...

Can't say that I saw three, but I have seen two. And one of them was up close and personal: sitting on the floor of the Fillmore, about five feet from The Who. Arthur Brown opened the show, singing his one and only his, "Fire," complete with pyrotechnics and wearing a devil costume. I guess he felt he had to give his all to compete with that upcoming guitar-smashing. It was a pretty wild show.