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S.T.U.N. Count Down To Revolution (MTV-Viacom promotes anticapitalists)
MTV ^ | 06.20.2003 7:56 AM EDT | Jon Wiederhorn

Posted on 06/22/2003 12:57:38 PM PDT by weegee

Every punk and metal band screams in rage and anguish. Los Angeles bruisers S.T.U.N. don't just scream, they Scream Towards the Uprising of Nonconformity. It's what the letters in their name stand for, and it's clearly the type of motivational political stuff they represent.

Sometimes, when a band wants to show just how gosh darned dedicated it is to such an ambitious goal, the tariff must be paid in blood. S.T.U.N. made such a gesture at a Dallas show in May when, during the second to last song in the set, vocalist Christane J. climbed the bass drum, then leapt off. At the same time, bassist Nick S. was swinging his bass around, and one of his tuning pegs made full contact with the singer's forehead.

"My head split and blood poured down my face," said Christiane. "It was kind of like slow motion up until it happened. Then it just felt surreal and weird. I felt fine, there was just blood everywhere."

Even with the deep gash, the singer finished the show, and then rushed to a hospital, where he received 10 stitches. "I'm surprised this sort of thing doesn't happen more often because I'm always climbing and jumping all over the place," Christiane said. "When I was growing up, I would go to see bands and I was just so bored, and I remember thinking, 'If I ever get a chance to be up there, I would do something creative or something people would remember.' "

Christiane got his opportunity three years ago when he placed a "musicians wanted" ad and guitarist and songwriter Neil Spies responded. The singer's dramatic flair meshed well with Spies' political rhetoric and the seeds of revolution were planted. After recruiting Nick and drummer Bobby Alt, S.T.U.N. began to blossom.

The band's recently released debut, Evolution of Energy, is packed with musically abrasive songs that combine Refused-style punk progressions with the polemics of Rage Against the Machine and the flamboyance and positivity of Jane's Addiction.

"It's a celebratory statement of what's possible," said Spies, who pens all the lyrics. "Everybody can be fearless in creating their own thoughts and becoming everything they want to be. I think revolution is life. When somebody brings in something new and you've gone to a different place, you're alive. When you're stuck in a rut, you're not. And I think the world we live in sometimes forces us to be in a rut."

S.T.U.N.'s first single, "Annihilation of the Generations," succinctly sums up Spies' socialist-style manifesto, which he adopted after the works of Noam Chomsky, Daniel Quinn and others.

" 'Annihilation of the Generations' is about people not paying attention to how many people have it worse off than them in the world," he explained. "Those numbers are going to build, and when they come into the neighborhoods of the naïve, then they have to pay attention. We may be heading on a road to extinction if we keep not paying attention and not learning about other people and keep trying to control them."

Spies wrote the song based on a personal revelation. Like most punk rockers, he grew up feeling inadequate and underprivileged, but rather than mope about it, he made the best of the situation.

"I'd think about all the millions of people that had it worse off then me," he said. "There's always somebody in more pain or with less love. People have to stop always wanting more because that's not the key to happiness."

Like famed author/activist Michael Moore and Rage Against the Machine, S.T.U.N. believe capitalism kills. Only by evening the playing field, argues Spies, can society end the war that exists between the rich and poor in this country. Not only does he believe that materialism is shallow, he's convinced that it's a vehicle to a life of unhappiness.

"I think if you were to be completely rich and have everything you could have in this world, if everyone around you didn't have it also, sooner or later you'd be lonely and bitter," said Spies. "There's enough resources in this world. There's enough space for everybody to live like a king. People need to ask themselves why that's not happening."

—Jon Wiederhorn


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: antiamerican; anticapitalism; anticapitalist; bewaretheredmenace; blameamericafirst; boycott; boycottviacom; cbs; communists; culturewar; freeenterprise; hateamericafirst; mccarthywasright; mtv; musictelevision; nick; noamchomsky; reddupes; redmenace; revolutiontelevision; seebs; seebsviacom; simonandschuster; socialists; spike; tnn; tvland; unamerican; vh1; viacommie; viacomradio
"Like famed author/activist Michael Moore and Rage Against the Machine, S.T.U.N. believe capitalism kills."

The culture war rolls on.

1 posted on 06/22/2003 12:57:38 PM PDT by weegee
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S.T.U.N.'s Christiane J.
Photo: Malia James

2 posted on 06/22/2003 12:58:34 PM PDT by weegee (NO BLOOD FOR RATINGS: CNN let human beings be tortured and killed to keep their Baghdad bureau open)
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To: weegee
Like famed author/activist Michael Moore and Rage Against the Machine, S.T.U.N. believe capitalism kills.

I see. You mean he is pig-ignorant.

Only by evening the playing field, argues Spies, can society end the war that exists between the rich and poor in this country.

Hellooooo? What war? There is no such war, to the lasting regret of left-wing thugs like these.

Not only does he believe that materialism is shallow, he's convinced that it's a vehicle to a life of unhappiness.

Given that what he preaches is completely materialistic, his ignorance seems to extend to the meaning of the word "materialism."

3 posted on 06/22/2003 1:38:45 PM PDT by The Hon. Galahad Threepwood
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To: weegee
Millionaire anti-capitalists.

Obviously these people have no ability to conceive of irony.
4 posted on 06/22/2003 1:55:53 PM PDT by Seruzawa (commies- nuke 'em til they glow and shoot 'em in the dark.)
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To: The Hon. Galahad Threepwood
The anarchist-socialists want to overthrow our constitutional form of government. They want a war. Funny how their treason is tolerated.
5 posted on 06/22/2003 2:02:23 PM PDT by weegee (NO BLOOD FOR RATINGS: CNN let human beings be tortured and killed to keep their Baghdad bureau open)
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Another bloody screaming stupid socialist punk band raving against "the system"?

How completely conformist this S.T.U.N. is - they've totally sold out to the system.

6 posted on 06/22/2003 2:14:33 PM PDT by D-fendr
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To: D-fendr
The socialists have been trying to co-opt punk, the answer movement to sixties' hippies the same way they co-opted the sixties music movement.

I've seen some books that purport to try to "restore" the political foundation that "punk always had". It was a musical movement. A return to basics. In the 1960s, snotty angry young men could sing about things like the taxman but generally it was about a guy's girl leaving him or him dumping his nogood girl. Velvet Underground sang about drugs (as did other bands in the 1960s and 1970s punk).

MC5 were a rock and soul band who got co-opted by the White Panther Party (their management was into this) who played them up as political radicals but truth be told, they were the Monkees of the revolutionary movement and did not live the life.

Were Iggy and the Stooges political?

The Ramones were more about Dee Dee's hopeless life than politics (and band leader Johnny Ramone was and is a conservative Republican).

British punk co-opted the American sound (future members of the Sex Pistols and Clash were there when the Ramones played England July 4th, 1976).

Sex Pistol's manager, Malcom McClarean had made himself manager of the New York Dolls before he formed together his own band to manage. While he was manager of the Dolls, he made them dress in red uniforms and perform in front of Communist flags. The band knew that this wasn't what they were about.

Even Johnny Lydon was bored by the political posing by the Clash (he said that it was just grabbing pages from Marxist texts).

I'm curious why Viacom (the other major player in radio) would be advancing anticapitalist pied pipers when there are genuine musical performers out there who don't get a shot.

The leftist media has been stoking the fires of revolution in this country. The extreme left quieted down after 1992. In the late 1990s, they started to motivate against the WTO gatherings (and now G7/G8 gatherings). It is an international movement that the media is welcoming to our shores. I do not even understand why these troublemakers are granted visas.

The "antiwar" movement is just continued momentum for the same crowd. Some housewives and students don't realize who they are alligned with.

7 posted on 06/22/2003 2:50:50 PM PDT by weegee (NO BLOOD FOR RATINGS: CNN let human beings be tortured and killed to keep their Baghdad bureau open)
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To: weegee
Interesting commentary. Very good.

Thanks.
8 posted on 06/22/2003 9:48:55 PM PDT by D-fendr
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