Not all artists get angry when political figures appropriate their music for campaigns. Many people are aware how furious the Wilson sisters are about how McCain pirated the classic Heart song, "Barracuda," to further the mythologizing of right-wing extremist Sarah Palin. Meanwhile, though, every other songwriter in the world seems to be offering Obama old and new songs they want to see be used in a crusade to change the country.
Gary Wright's 1975 smash "Dream Weaver," is one of the most beloved, most inspiring, and most recognizable songs in the world. Like many people, I thought of Gary a couple weeks ago when the song was played as a kind of theme when Joe Biden's son was introduced at the Democratic Convention in Denver.
A couple days ago I asked Gary how he felt about it being used that way and where he stands politically. He told me he considers himself a progressive but that he's "not one for strictly adhering to one particular party. I vote for the person who I believe in." He told me he's been supporting Obama since the primaries and I asked him what it was about Obama that made him want to win the White House.
"I think it started with my total disillusionment with the Iraqi War and the total disregard Bush has for our environment, his practice of cronyism with his oil buddies that led to the rise of the price of gas." He reminded me of a People For the American Way event we had gone to together in September 2004, almost 4 years to the day. "Bill Moyers warned us to beware of George Bush because of his relationship to the conservative Christian right, the rapture and all that... and he predicted that the price of oil would dramatically rise during the last part of his term. And he was exactly right. So I was totally disillusioned and then I heard Obama and I thought he doesn't have a lot of experience but he has great ideas and charisma, a very magnetic person who is right on the money when he talked about our being involved in the wrong war and how we shouldn't have been in Iraq but fighting al-Qaeda in Afghanistan. I like his attitude of engaging leaders. I know first hand-- I travel abroad a lot and I have a lot of friends in Europe-- that our foreign image is at an all time low. I feel Obama is someone who can turn that around."
Then he told me that after "Dream Weaver" was used at the convention, his wife, Rose, googled it with Obama's name and they found the YouTube clip, below. "Someone put it together and it was very, very inspiring. We both got teary eyed because it was so inspiring. I was very pleased and thought, 'Wow, what a great usage of my song.'"
With Wayne's World and all that, the perception of the song's meaning got a little bit changed for a lot of people. It's a very spiritual song. "Dream Weaver" is really a song whose lyrical content is about the consciousness of the Universe: God moving us through the night-- delusion and suffering-- into the Higher Realms. And when I saw that YouTube I thought, "this captures what the song is really about. I wrote it about Hope, moving through the Darkness into the Light of Hope."
Very inspiring! Twenty years after writing that song, Gary was -- as he still is -- still writing songs that elevate the soul and in 1995 the album First Signs Of Life was released. I just rooted around and found 20 rare promotional copies of a 3-song sampler from that album, "Don't Try To Own Me," "Better Get Up And Go," and "Arawa." I'd be happy to send the CDs to the first 20 people who donate at least $25 to any of the progressive candidates endorsed by Blue America. Just add one cent to your donation as a signal that you want me to send you the CD.
Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to
Just for the record, "Light of Smiles" is also a very good album. It took the "Dreamweaver" sound even farther. I never knew anything about Gary Wright, it's interesting that he supports Obama.
I too hear Dreamweaver and it immediately takes me to a great time in my life when I was young and romantic. I can feel just like I felt then when those dreamy electronic notes drift to my ears and through my mind. I love Gary Write, I'm glad he supports Obama and I hope there are enough thinking people who will see the truth and help us out of this quagmire. Even McCain says "Are you better off now than you were 4 years ago?" HEY BUD, THAT:S REPUBLICAN TIME!! You can't change Republican screw ups with other Republican screw ups and expect it to come out differently. That's how you define insanity, you know!
We don't need dreams folks, we need reality.
Barack's health care plan is better than McCain's but will either take hold? We have heard the promises numerous times in the past, and nothing has happened.
http://myrealitytelevision.com/2008/09/mccain-versus-obama-on-health-care/
Dream Weavers are similar to Snake Oil Salesmen
A classic song. And now Gary's a class act for not wanting royalties from use of it in this case. :-)
Every time I hear the song "Dream Weaver." I have flashbacks and I get goosebumps. It is truly and inspirational song. Thanks Gary. I love Obama too.
I've always loved that song and I love Barack Obama. A very winning combination.
""Dream Weaver," is one of the most beloved, most inspiring, and most recognizable songs in the world" Most recognizable, I'll give you that one but as for the rest, I don't think so. Maybe "most likely to make me scream in agony and want to rip my car radio out of the dash board" Songs like "Dream Weaver" (along with memories of PE class but that's another story) are one of the reasons I don't have very fond memories of the 70's. Still I'm glad he supports Obama. There is room for everyone, even pop muzicians.
The McCain campaign didn't "pirate" Heart's song. They paid a licensing fee to ASCAP for use of this song, and all the other songs they used. Why didn't you report that?
They paid the fee after the fact. It's an old GOP trick that dates back to the Reagan/"Born in the USA" debacle. The candidate or party must seek permission from the artist and writers before they use the song, like any other promoter or producer. Knowing that most musicians would rather not have Republicans using their songs, the GOP simply appropriates the song without permission and then pays the royalty and, I hope, a penalty. It's a case of pirate now, pay later. This is the only way Republican candidates can avoid campaigning to a soundtrack consisting entirely of Ted Nugent and Pat Boone records.
If you use an identifiable song to advertise a product, the association implies the artist's endorsement of that product. If you deliberately do this without asking, over and over, because you know that the answer you get will be in two words ending in "you!", then you're into territory not covered by song licensing fees: that's misapprpriation of identity. All the artists should file suit. Playing Springsteen, Heart, Jackson Browne, etc at a televised political event is a deliberate attempt to imply that these public figures support that candidate.
Mr Klien.
Great article
Thank you,
American International Group is preparing to pay millions of...
I'm pleased to announce the launch today of two new HuffPost...
After a three-night stay in Moscow, the Obamas touched down in Rome on Wednesday so Papa President...
How would you like to live in the White House? Take the HuffPost Poll of World Leaders' Residences...
UPDATE: Paris Jackson also spoke. Watch her moving...
I was sorry to watch, live on CNN, Edward R. Murrow and Emmy Award-winning broadcaster and...
The following post...
It was with interest that I read Dr. Soram Khalsa's post on The Huffington Post...
Below are photos from Michael Jackson's memorial, with Mariah Carey, Lionel Richie, Smokey Robinson,...
Yesterday evening, Greg Sargent reported on The Plum Line that one of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's key reasons...
OH NOES! What happened on Fox and Friends today, people?
It's been a rocky year for Letterman and Palin. He joked...
I'm liveblogging the latest Iran election fallout. Email me with any news or thoughts, or follow me...
MADISON, Wis. (AP) -- Oscar G. Mayer, retired chairman of the Wisconsin-based meat processing company that bears his name,...
It's summer, the time for weddings! A few of my friends are getting married this summer and fall, so lately...
SYDNEY — Residents of a rural Australian town hoping to protect the earth and their wallets...
I get many letters like this from readers...
Posted September 7, 2008 | 10:09 PM (EST)