A few of weeks back I mentioned that I'll occasionally be writing about other genres of art as long as the work is related to music in some way. Today is the first installment of a new series called The Musical Art Gallery.
I've briefly written before about how mp3s and their players have drastically altered the consumer landscape of how music is digested and that one of the casualties of the new technology is CD and album cover art. This outlet for artists already suffered one major setback when CDs replaced long playing records. Many classic LP covers just don't seem as majestic, or as important, on a CD jewel box. I'm sure there will come a day in my lifetime when CDs will become a thing of the past too, so before they join LPs on music history's forgotten scrap heap, let's look at a fine painting that is featured on the cover of one of my recent favorite releases.
The CD, Myths & Fables by jazz singer-pianist Bett Butler, was reviewed here earlier this year. The painting that graces the cover of her disc is called "Strange Fruit" and it is named, of course, after the famous and luridly vivid Billie Holiday song about racism. The cover is a colorful depiction of the infamous lynchings of Holiday's and Butler's people from a not to distant bygone era. A cursory look at this modern painting may not immediately make its intentions clear. However, once you know the story behind Holiday's song, and you look more closely at this work by artist Courtney Reid, the full meaning of her effort becomes painfully apparent. "Strange Fruit" would even be more effective gracing the cover of a full sized 33 1/3 RPM record jacket because in that format the cover would be suitable for framing. When CDs are gone for good paintings like "Strange Fruit" will have one less outlet for public exposure and a song like Butler's "Nothin' To Be Proud Of," from Myths & Fables may not get it's point across as well as it should, and that will be a real shame.
For those people who are unfamiliar with the song here are the lyrics to "Strange Fruit".
Finally, with the kind permission of Bett Butler The lyrics to "Nothin' To Be Proud Of" are posted below.
"Nothin’ To Be Proud Of" (music & lyrics by Bett Butler)
©2003 Baby Junior Publishing (BMI)
Now I was born and raised here
And I love these people, and I love this land
And I’m proud of who we are and what we’ve made here
But certain things I’m finding hard to understand
Comes a time we have to question what you’ve always been taught
Seems like things aren’t always simple black and white
Seems we’ve treated certain people badly in our time
Seems we haven’t always done what’s right
Chorus:
Ain’t nothin’ to be proud of
Ain’t nothin’ to be proud of
Ain’t nothin’ to be proud of
Ain’t nothin’ to be proud of
Now we are young as a country
Sometimes we act with the carelessness of youth
We think that we’re invincible, we can do no wrong
We make decisions not entirely based in truth
And it seems we’ve treated certain folks unfairly
Even while we claim that God is on our side
But I can’t help but think that God has much more sympathy
For people to whom justice was denied
(Chorus)
Now different things mean different things to different people
Like the meaning of a symbol or a song
But rubbing salt into the wounds of people’s painful memories
How can we ever learn to get along
(Chorus)
And we find it really hard to say we’re sorry
So the shadow of injustice still remains
We build monuments to those who died in battle
But we seldom speak of those who died in chains
(Chorus)