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Empire
Builders
PopMatters.com
9 September 2004
"I wrote much of this CD on the road while touring Europe and Australia
in 2002 and 2003... During that contentious time, I couldn't ride on a
subway, train or plane without complete strangers berating me about U.S.
foreign policy. There I was, with my cowboy hat and Midwestern/Southern
drawl -- an open stereotype, an obvious target. I wanted to climb and
shout from the highest Gothic European cathedrals: "MY EUROPEAN COUSINS!
AMERICA CAN STILL CREATE AND EXPORT HUMAN DIGNITY AND PROGRESSIVE THOUGHT.
DON'T GIVE UP ON YOUR PROGENY!!"
Jason Ringenberg, in his liner notes to Empire Builders
When you hear that Jason Ringenberg's newest is a political record, it's
OK to cringe at the very idea. With few exceptions (most of them decades
old), mixing politics and rock rarely produces anything worth listening
to. Perhaps by its very nature, a song -- which already has its own concerns
of rhythm, verse, chorus, etc. - just doesn't lend itself to nuanced political
discourse.
At any rate, Ringenberg's experiences in Europe compelled him to write
Empire Builders, a country-tinged effort at defending his homeland's promise.
Thankfully, it's more than a strident screed against American Imperialism.
For Ringenberg, America is at a point -- facing what is far from its first
shame and certainly not its last - that it must rise above. Ironically,
Empire Builders conveys that lesson best when it ignores the global stage
and settles into the individual human level, to explore what makes each
man or woman do the right thing.
Things get off to a rocky start. "American Question", despite
setting the record's moral tone ("Can we export dignity / Respecting
those who disagree?"), suffers from a processed ping-ponging beat
and sketched out platitudes ("We can bomb most any land / And send
their kids to Disneyland"). "Rebel Flag in Germany" features
what surely must have been a surreal and uncomfortable experience for
Ringenberg, but the arrangement's loping twang fails to deliver on Ringenberg's
outrage. Similarly, his cover of Merle Haggard's "Rainbow Stew"
comes off feeling jokey (in contrast to the later "New-Fashioned
Imperialist", which actually benefits from a polka bounce driving
a list of global capitalist sins).
"Tuskegee Pride", though, marks the album's turning point, told
from the perspective of a Tuskegee Airman from World War II. Progressing
from the narrator's ambivalence about Europe's problems ("In the
fall of '39 Hitler made a mess / But frankly I didn't see the difference
I guess / From what he was doing and what was done to us") to his
rush to enlist, through the racial insults hurled at him by white soldiers,
finally to his and his brethren's acceptance as warriors, and on to his
ability as an old man to impart the lessons he's learned to the next generation.
"Chief Joseph's Last Dream" creates an evocative mood with plaintive
strings and inspired percussion that resembles rumbling hooves, as Ringenberg
lists a series of images and memories coursing through the chief's mind
as he passes away. "Half the Man" is a pedal steel-driven tribute
to Ringenberg's father, while "Eddie Rode the Orphan Train"
(written by Jim Roll) portrays a man rising above his hardscrabble past
to raise his kids with kindness and honor.
For the most part, Empire Builders concerns itself with those who build
what Ringenberg calls "the truest and purest empires - those of heart
and spirit". That focus on the personal leaves out a lot of the usual
400-pound gorillas like George W. Bush, Iraq, Halliburton, etc., which
is probably for the best. Both sides of the political landscape are so
firmly entrenched that a subtle end run like the one found on Empire Builders
(the most basic of pleas: whatever happened to personal responsibility?)
might be the only way to change anyone's minds about anything. Consequently,
the best moments on Empire Builders are the seemingly least political,
the ones that don't evoke war, terrorism, corporate pillaging, or me-first-gimmy-gimmyism.
Rather, they evoke the common experiences and choices that we all have,
and hopefully navigate with success.
As such, Empire Builders is an uneven beast, with as many stumbling failures
as transcendent triumphs. You get the sense that Ringenberg gets to say
all that he wants to say, but his choice of delivery often reduces his
impact. That's not just because of his heavy drawl (which most of America
usually feels is just cause to write an opinion off as naive hick-ism),
but also because modern-day colonialism is such a many-tentacled monstrosity
that it could make Lovecraft's Elder Gods gibber with madness. There's
a reason why Metallica's "One" holds up as one of the best anti-war
songs of recent years - it wasn't tied to a time or place, but to a personal
hell that will exist as long as war survives. The best moments of Empire
Builders soar on the simple realization that everything, no matter how
small, is a choice.
Andrew Gilstrap, PopMatters Associate Music Editor
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