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- <text id=93TT1447>
- <title>
- Apr. 19, 1993: Hello Again, Mary Jane
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Apr. 19, 1993 Los Angeles
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MUSIC, Page 59
- Hello Again, Mary Jane
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Pot culture is back, as rockers and rappers are singing the
- praises of marijuana
- </p>
- <p>By CHRISTOPHER JOHN FARLEY
- </p>
- <p> Sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll. Drugs have long been viewed
- as part of the culture of rock music. Jim Morrison. Jimi
- Hendrix. Live fast, die young. In-a-gadda-da-vida, baby. But
- throughout the just-say-no '80s, rockers and rappers held their
- collective breath. When would it be safe to inhale? Now, with
- the '90s, many musicians feel that the cultural tide has shifted--so they're going public about marijuana use and celebrating
- the weed in song lyrics. Once again, pop music is going to pot.
- </p>
- <p> Listen to the rap group Basehead on its new song I Need a
- Joint: "So how to get over, how to get by?/ I wish I had a joint
- to get me high." The Seattle band Supersuckers has a song
- called Tasty Greens, which does not refer to spinach. The title
- of a new album by gangsta rapper Dr. Dre, The Chronic, is the
- name of a particularly potent strain of marijuana. More
- obliquely, the hard-rock band Living Colour celebrates Hemp
- (another of the virtually interchangeable terms for marijuana)
- in lyrics that read like something a junior-high burnout might
- carve on his desk during detention: "How carefully I've shaped
- you in the solitude of days./ How peaceful is my mind entwined
- in cord around my fingers."
- </p>
- <p> Many pro-pot songs simply represent a renewed candor about
- musicians' long-standing use of the drug. "I'm not trying to
- say, `I smoke weed, so everyone else should,' " explains
- Basehead leader Michael Ivey. "It's more a form of honesty. It's
- part of my life." Onstage, the Southern rockers the Black Crowes
- perform under a 48-ft. by 24-ft. banner emblazoned with a
- marijuana leaf. Says the group's lead singer, Chris Robinson,
- who posed for the cover of High Times magazine smoking a joint:
- "Pot is an essential part of life on the road."
- </p>
- <p> Marijuana use is also becoming more open among
- music-industry executives, for whom, according to some, it's
- replacing "harder" drugs such as cocaine. Says John Scott of
- Rush Management, who works with such performers as Positive K
- and De La Soul: "I like smoking pot before press interviews, and
- so do some of the acts. It makes the session more interesting.
- And when you have a lot of bands staying in the same hotel, they
- almost always end up in the same room, smoking."
- </p>
- <p> Like every other trend in pop music, the new pot
- proselytizing has inspired its own paraphernalia. Some
- aficionados hollow out Phillies Blunt cigars and fill them with
- dope. (For those unsure of the technique, rapper Redman's new
- song How to Roll a Blunt provides instructions.) PHILLIES BLUNT
- T shirts have gone mainstream, sometimes topped off with the
- marijuana-leaf baseball caps that have replaced X caps as the
- hot hat on the street.
- </p>
- <p> To baby boomers, today's marijuana music may seem just
- another reworked '60s social trend that was created by their
- generation. Actually, says Richard Cowan, executive director of
- the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, it
- has roots in several decades. Steve Bloom, music editor of High
- Times, points to the bebop-jazz musicians of the '40s as
- influences on many pro-pot hip-hop performers. Re-Hash Records
- has released Marijuana's Greatest Hits Revisited, new versions
- of reefer songs written between the '30s and '70s. "We didn't
- start this," acknowledges B-Real of the rap group Cypress Hill,
- who says he smokes pot almost every day. "We're the newest to
- hit with it. We're revitalizing the pot movement."
- </p>
- <p> It's a movement only in the loosest sense of the word, and
- its members are disparate. A philosophical base of sorts has
- been laid by Jack Herer's book The Emperor Wears No Clothes, an
- investigative history of marijuana and its uses. Groups like the
- Cannabis Action Network have brought youth and an
- environmentalist ethic into the trend. And the new film The
- Money Tree, about a pot grower, gives hempsters a movie to call
- their own.
- </p>
- <p> Law-enforcement officials say pot advocates are just
- blowing smoke when they talk about the comeback of the weed.
- "Perhaps because of the change of administrations, the marijuana
- lobby is out in full force," says Robert Bonner, head of the
- Drug Enforcement Administration. "The fact is, they're losing
- the battle." In 1985 more than 23% of youths ages 12 to 17 said
- they smoked marijuana; in 1991 that figure was 13%, and Bonner
- says it is still falling. Bonner also offers a reminder that
- studies confirm such marijuana health risks as destruction of
- nerve cells in the brain and lung damage.
- </p>
- <p> The reply from musicians? Sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll! At
- least for them. "If it's not your bag, don't get into it," says
- Robinson of the Black Crowes. "[But] would [French writer]
- Jean Cocteau have been as good if he hadn't been an opium
- addict?" Maybe not. Then again, he might have been better.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-