conservative rock bands?

Huh? What rock have you been living under where you don’t think that American conservatives are very much for ownership of any kind of firearm?

FTR, Skynyrd’s song was for getting rid of all handguns: lyrics.

Fingolfin, some comments on your long post.

  1. I believe it was Paul Davis who did “Having my baby.” Not Paul Anka. Maybe Anka wrote it, but he did not perform the hit version.

  2. On the Album version on “Revolution,” from the “White” album, after the words “Don’t you know you can count me out,” John Lennin sings “in.” Go figure

On 29, I believe Lynard Skynard had satire in mind. I think the band was more into fishing and cold beer than politics.

Just because a band decides to play at a political fundraiser, does not necessarily mean that all, or any of the band members support that party or cause. I have heard that John MacVie, of Fleetwood Mac, is republican. I know I read it somewhere, but I have no cite.

I do present a conservative, in the Trent Lott tradition, musician, Johnny Rebel.

http://www.officialjohnnyrebel.com/

Lynyrd Skynyrd was extremely political. For instance, these are some of the lyrics to “Things Goin’ On”:

Doesn’t sound very conservative to me. Skynyrd’s politics were pretty much 60’s hippie radical, except with southern tilt.

Sonny Bono.

Mick Jagger, in a circa 1982 interview with PENTHOUSE, claimed that every major Black musician he knew of had voted for Reagan and that so had he (I didn’t know he was even a US citizen). My guess is that they were all single-issue voters on taxation.

The Van Halen member who was so Pro-Life was the guy from Extreme (Pornograffiti 2, “More Than Words”) who briefly signed on as Sammy Hagar’s replacement in the early 90s.

And what was ELO’s “It’s a Living Thing” if not a pro-life anthem?

I don’t think it’s that simple. The most apocalyptic hit song of all was “Eve of Destruction,” but note that it was the conservatives who got royally pissed off over it and they even tried to ban it from the radio.

However, the most literally apocalyptic song I know of is “Supper’s Ready” by Genesis, which directly uses Christian imagery from the Book of Revelation. And yet… its lyrics include satire such as
There’s Winston Churchill dressed in drag
He used to be a British flag
Plastic bag
What a drag

which was highly disrespectful, to say the least, towards such venerable Conservative icons.