group's human beatbox Radioactive
received a visit from two plainclothes Army officers.
"She'd spoken in an interview about her daughter who
has been deployed in the Gulf, and her son who is in
this band Spearhead," says Spearhead frontman Michael
Franti. "They showed her a picture of her son wearing a
t-shirt that said 'Unfuck the world' on the front, and
'Dethrone the Bushes' on the back. They told her that
was an un-American statement. She said, 'That's free
speech,' and they said, 'Well, things are changing these
days.'"
The men who visited the frightened woman told her
that her daughter's CDs had been confiscated, and that
her son had recently taken two flights to Japan. "Why
would he do that?" they asked her, according to Franti.
The men then showed her a list of names of people who
worked in Franti's management office in San Francisco
and a photograph of her son performing with Spearhead at
the peace rally one day prior. "It kind of put a scare
into all of us," says Franti. "The fact that people
would be paying this close attention to what we're doing
as musicians is a bit freaky. We're human rights workers
-- we don't believe that people should be killed. We're
not about wanting to overthrow the government, but we
want to speak out. It's made us deepen our belief in
what we do and work that much harder."
Spearhead recently debuted a Sly and Robbie dancehall
remix version of their song "Bomb the World" on the
Internet. The song, from their upcoming album
Everyone Deserves Music, was written in the
aftermath of September 11th and features the chorus:
"You can bomb the world to pieces, but you can't bomb it
into peace."
"Look at the way all of these different songs have
been put out in opposition to the war: the Beasties,
Lenny Kravitz, Zack de la Rocha, R.E.M.," Franti says.
"Labels are afraid to put those out as singles and bring
them to the radio stations out of fear for what happened
to the Dixie Chicks. Now it's coming to the Internet,
which is great. But it's unfortunate that we live in a
time and in a country where radio is so centralized and
under the control of so few voices. Our musical heroes
all spoke to the times, but this time around we're not
able. Not in the same way."
Franti, a longtime activist but no conspiracy
theorist, is not fearful of big brother Bush putting his
hand down on the artist's shoulder. Not directly, at
least. "I don't think Spearhead is under an
investigation, or any other artist is," Franti says,
acknowledging the fear that the visit by the two
officers had on Radioactive's mother. "But people who
are doing human rights work are creating little blips on
the radar. And they're now investigating everyone whose
views are contrary to the policies of the Bush
administration. Hopefully it doesn't amount to anything
more than that . . . Hopefully."
ANDREW
STRICKMAN
(April 3,
2003)