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- From: tmw9@aber.ac.uk (Thomas Mayne Waddell)
- Newsgroups: rec.music.folk
- Subject: Re: More folk music & politics: Tommy Sands
- Keywords: folk music, politics, Tommy Sands
- Message-ID: <1992Nov22.133712.5698@aber.ac.uk>
- Date: 22 Nov 92 13:37:12 GMT
- References: <Nov.18.12.25.12.1992.10723@andromeda.rutgers.edu>
- Organization: University of Wales, Aberystwyth
- Lines: 32
-
-
- I come from Newcastle, Co Down, just about an hour away from the home town of
- Tommy Sands and therefore I think I can claim to understand his position. He is
- quite Socialist and also very Pacifist...hence his condemnation of the IRA and
- the UDF. He is Nationalist...however he seems to believe that before we can
- really start to try and solve the differences between the two communities in NI
- we must first understand the similarities...To give an example of lyrics that
- show this just listen to "There were Roses":
-
- "For the ground our fathers ploughed in,
- The soil it is the same,
- And the places where we say our prayers
- Have just got different names."
-
- So for Tommy Sands as for a lot of people in NI the most important thing is to
- get an atmosphere where we can all forget our prejudices and talk. So in his
- music, although, the majority of his listeners would be, almost by definition,
- Nationalist he tries not to pass any judgements of the type "Ireland must be
- united".More important is that the minority that cause the violence must be
- stopped.
- I was at a Tommy Sands concert during the Summer and he played a song
- which he had written just recently about mixed marriages which took many of the
- stereotypes held by each community and held them up to ridicule. I don't think
- that it has been released in any form yet...but I would be very interested to
- know if it has.
- Politics in Northern Ireland is very confusing and sometimes hard to
- understand, principly because many of the standard labels don't apply. For
- instance the SDLP (Social Democratic and Labour Party) frequently comes under
- criticism for being Nationalist first and Socialist a poor second, despite its
- name.
-
- Tom.
-