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Empathy for the Enemy and the Oppressed: Political Pop Songs from the Eighties

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Screen shot from the video for Elton John's "Nikita" (1985).

Screen shot from the video for Elton John's “Nikita” (1985).

Themes of love, loss and the other trials of our personal lives have been the mainstay of popular music for centuries. But in every generation there are pop artists who have taken on that other great theme called politics, responding to current events and instances of injustice both domestic and global, and bringing often controversial issues to the attention of the young people who make up their audience.

Growing up in Macedonia in the 1980s, my awareness of global politics was very much influenced by pop music, as a number of A-list artists during that era released huge hits addressing political issues, some of which were considered quite controversial at the time.

Here are a few of the stand-out political songs from the era:

 “Sunday Bloody Sunday” – U2 (1983)

One of the most influential and overtly political songs by the Irish rockers, “Sunday Bloody Sunday” [1] describes the horror the Bloody Sunday [2] massacre in Derry, Northern Ireland, in which British troops shot and killed 14 unarmed civil rights protesters and bystanders in 1972.

The sound of the voice of the young Bono, shouting “This is not a rebel song, this is Sunday Bloody Sunday!” can still cause one to feel goosebumps, even for those who for whom he has become very much a part of the establishment.

“Pride (In the Name of Love)” – U2 (1984)

The following year, U2 released “Pride (In the Name of Love)” [3], about the American Civil Rights movement and the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. [4]

Early morning, April four
Shot rings out in the Memphis sky
Free at last, they took your life
They could not take your pride

“Gimme Hope Jo'Anna” – Eddy Grant (1988)

Guyanese British musician Eddy Grant [5] turned the age-old pop song device of addressing a loved one on its head in 1988’s “Gimme Hope Jo'anna” [6]. The Jo'anna in question is not a woman, but a nickname for the South African apartheid regime [7], personified by the city of Johannesburg.

Well Jo'anna she runs a country
She runs in Durban and the Transvaal
She makes a few of her people happy, oh
She don't care about the rest at all
She's got a system they call apartheid
It keeps a brother in a subjection
But maybe pressure will make Jo'anna see
How everybody could a live as one

The major political issue of the 1980s was the Cold War [8] that had been simmering between the two giant blocs of East and West since the end of the Second World War, threatening the planet with nuclear destruction. For decades, its influence permeated the daily life of many throughout the word, not to mention all forms of art, not only science fiction. Many of the songs inspired by the Cold War carry antiwar messages, demanding an end to the conflict and promoting empathy for the people “on the other side.”

“99 Luftballons” – Nena (1983)

German band Nena [5] gained worldwide fame with their 1983 hit “99 Luftballons” [9]. The original German version of the song tells the story of a trigger-happy fighter pilot provoking a military incident after shooting at a swarm of children's balloons, starting a 99-year war.

“Nikita” – Elton John (1985)

At the peak of his career in 1985, Elton John sang about “Nikita” [10], a love interest confined behind the Iron Curtain [11]. The name “Nikita” is given to both boys and girls in Slavic countries. The video for the song featured the beautiful Nikita character, played by British female athlete and model Anya Major [12], famous for starring in Apple Computer's “1984” commercial [13].

Do you ever dream of me
Do you ever see the letters that I write
When you look up through the wire
Nikita do you count the stars at night

And if there comes a time
Guns and gates no longer hold you in
And if you're free to make a choice
Just look towards the west and find a friend

“Russians” – Sting (1985)

Another song promoting empathy and humanizing “the enemy” was Sting's “Russians” [14] (1985), which commented on the exchange of warmongering rhetoric and fears of nuclear annihilation.

We share the same biology
Regardless of ideology
What might save us, me, and you
Is if the Russians love their children too

In 2010 Sting said that his inspiration for the song were Soviet children's programs [15] like these [16] that he had watched via a “stolen” satelite TV signal.

“Wind of Change” – Scorpions (1990)

The collapse of the Soviet system [17]also inspired several songs. “Wind of Change” [18] by the German rock band Scorpions, released in 1990, became an anthem for the reforms that were underway, with high hopes, all over Central and Eastern Europe.

The world is closing in
Did you ever think
That we could be so close, like brothers
The future's in the air
I can feel it everywhere
Blowing with the wind of change

Take me to the magic of the moment
On a glory night
Where the children of tomorrow dream away
in the wind of change

This power ballad [19] remains popular, and was recently used in the closing scene of the controversial political comedy “The Interview.” [20]

This list is just a tiny sampling of a vast tradition that includes hits such as Simple Minds’ “Belfast Child” [21] and “Mandela Day,” [22] (1989), and the somewhat more recent “Zombie” [23] by the Cranberries, released in 1995.

What is your favorite political pop song? Leave us a note in the Comments!