Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 21 – Those of us
old enough to remember the anti-war demonstrations of the 1960s well recall the
critical role that music played in attracting attention to and generating
support among young people to join the protests. Clearly, those now making
government policy
either
do not remember or have intentionally forgotten that lesson.
Instead, in ways that undermine
their own position, the Russian powers that be have banned popular rappers from
giving public concerts, leading to their radicalization and linking up with the
opposition, Aleksey Voloshinov writes in “The Music of Russian Protest” in The
New Times (newtimes.ru/articles/detail/186615?fcc).
Last week, Vladimir Putin called on
the government to create a new youth patriotic structure to produce content
online and otherwise that will attract younger people, the New Times
commentator says; but the Kremlin leader has behaved in ways that are having
exactly the opposite effect.
Earlier this month, Putin’s regime
angrily responded to rap lyrics by Husky on “The Seventh of October” in which
he marked the Russian president’s birthday by talking about Putin’s links to
organized crime and his use of “’sugar’” at Ryazan in 1999 as being completely
normal for the leader, “all in a day’s work,” as it were. Husky’s concerts were
cancelled.
Husky had in fact been working on
this rap since 2011 but then he ended the work with sarcasm and now with
anger. His lyrics have come increasingly
angry and the authorities were outraged as well by his words about Russians
supposedly eating the dead, something they suggested was promoting cannibalism.
It is now rumored, Voloshinov says,
that Husky may face criminal charges. Other prominent rappers, Oxxxymiron,
Basta and Noize MC, have come out in support. And that is part of a general
shift: rappers are becoming ever more radical and ever more involved with the
opposition as the regime restricts their chance to perform in public.
Preventing them from giving public
concerts does little good, the commentator says. Most have huge followings on
YouTube and other social networks and so continue to reach their predominantly
youthful audience despite or perhaps increasingly because of the regime’s hostility
to them.
This use of social media has had
another consequence, one that few rappers or those in the government might have
expected. Because the audience of the rappers is predominantly young, hip and
anti-government, rappers who appear to support the Kremlin on a wide variety of issues have been forced to
back down lest they lose their followings.
One who supported pension reform,
for example, soon backtracked. And another who was positive about Putin did the
same when his followers complained that by supporting Putin, he was supporting
bans on gay parades. As a result, there are almost no rappers in Russia who
remain “completely loyal” to the powers that be.
Another Moscow commentator, Georgy
Bovt, says that rap presents a far greater challenge to the regime than did
rock or jazz in Soviet times. Those could be banned, and the circle of those
who knew them limited. But now, the regime can’t prevent rap lyrics from
reaching and affecting their intended audience (bfm.ru/news/426706).
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