Billy Bragg

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Britain in the early 1980s was a time full of disaffection. Maggie Thatcher had won the Falklands War singlehandedly - or so it was made to seem - and on the back of that she won an election landslide, despite the fact that almost everyone under 30 hated her1. One in ten of the working-age population was unemployed, and most of the rest were feeling the squeeze of mortgage payments at 14%. It sometimes seemed that there was only one voice crying out against the injustice: a voice that couldn't pronounce its Rs, a voice singing poetry set to music, accompanied by a lone guitar. The distinctive voice of Billy Bragg, the Bard of Barking.

Billy and Politics


Billy Bragg's career has been defined, and to some extent limited, by his political convictions. His early life in working-class Essex left a deep impression, a feeling that his was a generation with few choices. From his school, you either went to work for Ford or joined the army2. It is no surprise, then, that two recurring themes in his work are the quiet heroism of the working man and the nobility of the ordinary soldier - and how both are exploited and oppressed by the twinned forces of capitalism and nationalism.


On Life's a Riot with Spy vs Spy (1983), his short first album3, the track 'To Have and To Have Not' spoke directly to his careerless contemporaries:


At twenty-one you're on top of the scrapheap

At sixteen you were top of the class

All they taught you at school was how to be a good worker

The system has failed you, don't fail yourself


A year later, on Brewing Up with Billy Bragg, his politics had become more radical and he targeted the 'popular' press - overwhelmingly supportive of Thatcher - for particular criticism:


Those braying voices on the right of the House

Are echoed down the Street of Shame4

Where politics mix with bingo and tits

In a money and numbers game


It was also on Brewing Up... that Billy sang his tribute to the soldiers who died in the Falklands, 'Island of No Return'. In it, he was quick to point out the irony that these men had died, not in the ideological struggle against the reviled Russians, but in a territorial squabble with a right-wing country to which, only a short time before, the government had been encouraging arms sales:


I never thought that I would be

Fighting fascists in the Southern Sea

Saw one today, and in his hand

Was a weapon that was made in Birmingham


The mid-eighties were the height of Billy's party political involvement. In the wake of their demolition by the Tories at the polls, the Labour Party wanted a fresh idea to attract young voters: Billy was a founder member of the resultant 'Red Wedge', a coalition of musicians and comedians, from Paul Weller to Ben Elton, who lent their support to the cause. Sadly, it couldn't disguise the fact that Labour were an unelectable mess and they were hammered again in 1987.


The Red Wedge disintegrated, but probably its finest legacy was the Between The Wars EP (1985), a Socialist rallying cry on which Bragg contrasted the building up of the military with the running down of industry in the title track; remembered the roots of the labour movement in 'The World Turned Upside Down'; and finally challenged Britain's youth to rise up in support of the striking miners - a favourite cause - in 'Which Side Are You On?'. Britain's youth decided it preferred a nice sit down with the mild melodies of Phil Collins & Philip Bailey's 'Easy Lover', and the miners were crushed. A tiny bit of Billy was crushed with them.


In 1987, radicalism was still very much on Billy's agenda. Talking with the Taxman About Poetry contained tracks such as 'Ideology' and 'There is Power in a Union', but Neil Kinnock had started the process of dragging Labour towards the centre ground, and Billy's brand of radical socialism was falling from grace.


By the time Worker's Playtime (1988) came out, Billy had shifted perceptibly from party politics to specific issues of social justice. The issue of prisoners held, untried, in police cells was highlighted in the bitter 'Rotting on Remand', while the high-profile row over homosexuality in the armed forces was given a twist in the exquisite 'Tender Comrade'. In this a capella track, Billy described how soldiers under fire have always forged strong emotional - and sometimes, shock horror, physical - relationships in the pressure-cooker of war.


Will you say that we were heroes

Or that fear of dying among strangers

Tore our innocence and false shame away?

And from that moment on, deep in my heart I knew

That I would only give my life for love

The Internationale (1990) seemed to signal a return to full-blooded left-wing politics, but in reality it was a death-rattle and a lament: Billy's beloved Labour Party had abandoned him. The party of Tony Benn5 and Michael Foot6 was giving way to 'New' Labour, which would ultimately lead to Tony Blair and Peter Mandelson becoming more firmly pro-establishment figures than the Conservatives they opposed. Bragg retreated into the bubblegum pop music of Don't Try This At Home (1991), though his personal commitment to worthy causes continued, this time in the form of the AIDS charity single 'Sexuality', while the small-scale human tragedy at the heart of war was evoked to great effect in 'Everywhere'.


Billy Bragg's political convictions have moved more slowly than those of the world around him - possibly to his credit, but certainly not to his profit. On William Bloke (1996) he was urging people not to desert Labour in 'From Red to Blue', while mouthing the unfashionable S-word7 in 'Upfield'; but he seemed most stuck in an historical backwater on the Bloke on Bloke EP - consisting of tracks which didn't quite fit on the album - by railing against the 'Thatcherites' seven years after the Iron Lady was deposed.


Billy Bragg is now deeply unfashionable, and delights in being a thorn in the flesh of the party that he has so long supported - hoping against hope to shame it into restoring some of its egalitarian ideals. He was made for a different age.

Mermaid Avenue


Mermaid Avenue, in the New York's Coney Island, is the street on which legendary folk singer/songriter Woody Guthrie lived for the decade which followed the end of World War II. Unable to get a recording contract because of his left-wing views and the prevailing Cold War paranoia, he wrote down lyrics to more than 1000 songs which were never performed.


In 1995, Woody's daughter Nora Guthrie approached Billy Bragg and offered him Woody's lyrics if he would like to write tunes to fit them. He jumped at the chance. In his unique 'collaboration' - with a man who died when Billy was only ten years old - by the American alternative country band Wilco. The result was a brand new album with an old-time quality, widely regarded as one of the finest recordings of any type to be released in 1998, and followed by a second album in May 2000.


The songs range from the Beatlesque nonsense of 'Hoodoo Voodoo' to the political idealism of 'I guess I planted'. The whole is highly recommended.

Billy and Love


The reason that Billy Bragg's music was so beloved of teenage boys was that the politics gave it credibility, and that meant the albums could sit without shame on their shelves, yet in between were many more songs about what really concerned them - girls. What is more, he sang about all the soppy things these young men couldn't discuss with their mates without appearing dangerously effeminate - relationships, love, tears, and the messy, sticky business of sex.


He described what it's like to be a schoolboy, in love with a girl who's out of your league:


In the end it took me a dictionary

To find out the meaning of unrequited

While she was giving herself for free

At a party to which I was never invited


- The Saturday Boy


He sang of the intensity of first love:


Walking in the park, kissing in the dark

And my head against your pillow

Late at night a lover sings

Adam and Eve are finding out all about love


- A Lover Sings


He sang of the pain and guilt that results from infidelity:


For the facts of life are not Man and Wife

But Man and Woman, sadly

And the apple that doesn't want to get eaten

Will still fall off the tree


- The Myth of Trust


And of the despair when love dies:


In public he's such as man

Punching at the walls with his bare and bloody hands

He's screaming and shouting and acting crazy

But at home he sits alone and cries like a baby


- Little Time Bomb


Billy Bragg voiced the feelings of a generation of men who had been told to keep all that nonsense locked up inside - yet he was still a good bloke, he'd been in uniform, he drank beer. It was okay to like him. Get a group of Englishmen together who were born in the late 1960s, and there's a good chance they'll be able to sing along to 'A New England'8 - but only if you get them sufficiently drunk first.

Words and Music


As a lyricist I still yearn for that one line that strips it all down and gets right to the core. I hope people still want that. If not, it's back to the Job Centre, with or without a dance mix.


- Billy Bragg, Vox, November 1991


Billy Bragg is an accomplished guitar player with a distinctive style, but he's no Eric Clapton. Nor does he have Britain's finest singing voice. His songs are pleasantly tuneful, but it is in the lyrics that the magic lies. Were it not for his left-wing leanings, he might have made an ideal choice as a modern Poet Laureate9.


Singles chart success has almost always eluded Billy. The Between The Wars EP was his only top-20 record (peaking at Number 15), with the exception of the charity Beatles cover 'She's Leaving Home'10. His peripheral status in chart terms does at least allow his fans to feel they are 'in' on something rather more discerning than everyday pop.


Billy's musical influences range from folk to the punk which was so in vogue when he started out, and which he has to thank for opening the record company's doors to acts with more energy and ideas than polish.


When a folk club artist goes out with his guitar, he might think he's James Taylor or Bob Dylan. When I go out, I still think I'm The Clash.


- Billy Bragg, NME, 1984


But Billy is basically a rocker, as he demonstrated with a loving and hilarious pastiche of 'Route 66', in which he described the delights of Essex's major highway, the A13:


If you ever go to Shoeburyness

Take the A-road, the OK-road, that's the best

Go motoring on the A13


- A13, Trunk Road to the Sea


Humour, and especially wordplay, is a key element throughout Billy's lyrics:


We passed very fast, like ships in the night

Or cars in a contraflow system


- From a Vauxhall Velox

One of these day's you're going to get caught

It'll give you a pregnant pause for thought


- Accident Waiting To Happen

How can you lie there and think of England

When you don't even know who's in the team?


- Greetings to the New Brunette


Whether funny, touching, or bursting with righteous indignation, Billy Bragg's lyrics are delivered in a strident voice which is never pretty, but works perfectly with the clanging chords of his guitar. The more backing he gets, and the smoother the production, the less well the formula works - which is why the reader is strongly urged to catch him performing live, if at all possible.


After all, how often do you get to see a genuine relic of the class struggle in these days of bland centrism?

More About Billy


Billy Bragg was born on 20th December 1957 in Barking, Essex. The Official Billy Bragg website provides news and information of upcoming performances.


There are several unofficial fan sites out there, and one of the best is Todd Westby's, which also provides many useful links. The magazine quotes above were found at David Doull's Billy Bragg Quote Generator.

1The only recorded exception was William Hague, already dreaming of the day when he would take over her mantle of 'reviled leader of the Conservative Party', even though he was still in short trousers. Mind you, he was 22 years old at the time...2Billy joined the army, but quickly bought himself out for the princely sum of £175.3Sometimes classified as an EP, but if that were Billy's opinion then he wouldn't have subtitled Taxman 'The Difficult Third Album'.4Fleet Street, then the home of most of Britain's national newspapers.5Born Anthony Wedgwood Benn, he renounced his hereditary title as Lord Stansgate in order to remain in the House of Commons. Benn was the doyen of Labour's 'Loony Left' in the 1970s and 1980s.6Labour leader at the 1983 general election, famous for dressing in an old donkey jacket and looking like the scarecrow Worzel Gummidge. Foot was the last genuine left-winger to hold major office in the party.7Socialism, which has become 'the concept that dare not speak its name' for New Labour.8A track which - with a bit of gender realignment - was taken to Number 7 in the UK charts in 1985 by the late and often underrated Kirsty MacColl.9Britain's official 'state poet', commissioned to write commemorative verses for royal weddings and other national celebrations. Cabinet minister 'Mo' Mowlam was widely derided for suggesting Sir Paul McCartney for the post.10The reference books will tell you this was Bragg's only Number One, but such a claim carries a veneer of dishonesty: the reverse of the double-A side was the Wet Wet Wet version of 'A Little Help From My Friends', which got the vast bulk of the airplay, and presumably prompted most of the sales.

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