/ 27 October 2003

How rock’n’roll fell out of love with drugs

Young musicians today are more likely than those of previous generations to decry the harm that drugs can cause, according to research in America.

The study, based on an analysis of drug lyrics in English-language popular music since the 1960s, was last week highlighted as one of the few pieces of good news in the annual survey by the European monitoring centre for drugs and drug addiction, the EU’s drugs agency.

The research, published by the University of Texas at Austin, explodes the conventional wisdom that popular music encourages teenagers to abuse drugs. The author, John Markert of Cumberland University, Tennessee, says that although there has always been a generally hostile attitude towards heroin and other hard drugs, teenage listeners today ”are being exposed to more negative images of marijuana and LSD than older listeners”.

The research comes as MPs are preparing to vote on Wednesday to approve the reclassification of cannabis. Songs dealing with illegal drugs have always dotted popular music. In the 1930s, Fats Waller dreamed about a 5ft joint in Viper’s Drag, and Harry ”the Hipster” Gibson posed the question: ”Who put the benzedrine in Mrs Murphy’s Ovaltine?” But it was not until the 1960s that it became a constant theme.

Markert’s study, Sing a Song of Drug Use-Abuse, is based on analysis of 784 songs since the 1960s that explicitly mention an illegal substance. It shows that while heroin and cocaine have largely been treated with hostility by musicians, their attitude towards cannabis and LSD has changed sharply over the years. Markert found 100 songs with lyrics about heroin, more than half from the 1990s. But whether it is Lou Reed’s ”It’s my wife, it’s my life” from the song Heroin, Neil Young’s ”I watched the needle take another man” from The Needle and the Damage Done, or Pearl Jam’s ”It’s my blood” from Blood, they demonstrate an increasingly hostile attitude in the 1990s.

Nearly twice as many songs deal with cocaine and they are also generally negative. Some from the 1960s and 1970s such as ”She don’t lie, she don’t lie, cocaine”, from Eric Clapton’s version of JJ Cale’s Cocaine, and the Grateful Dead’s ”Drivin’ that train, high on cocaine”, are hardly negative. But by the 1990s the attitude is far more trenchant with rap music presenting cocaine, particularly crack, as a loser drug.

Prince’s 1990 New Power Generation is typical: ”Cocaine was the thing that I took on … I was headed 4 the kill, steal, destroy and die”. But the research argues that there has been a much bigger shift in attitudes towards marijuana and LSD, and musicians use their hostility to drugs to attack the older generation. Markert says that while Jimi Hendrix’s Purple Haze personified 1960s acid rock, four-fifths of the songs that explicitly mention LSD are post 1980 and overwhelmingly hostile.

”Contemporary young people view LSD as the drug of older, screwed-up middle-aged people,” he says. The majority of the songs in the sample are about cannabis and generally take a positive approach, although the more recent songs are more equivocal. Few 1960s songs explicitly mention marijuana, mainly because they would have been banned from radio. The veteran country singer Willie Nelson produced a platinum-selling album, Hempilation, in 1995 singing the praises of cannabis.

In the 90s, several over 30s musicians, such as JJ Cale, Tom Petty and Sheryl Crow, released albums that lauded marijuana and were geared to an older, more marijuana accepting audience. They contrast sharply with the message from Biohazard’s 1994 Failed Territory — ”another neighbourhood gets destroyed by the drug deal” — which attacks the systemic problem associated with drug use and is shared by nearly half of the 1990s songs analysed by Markert.

”1990s music such as Biohazard’s sees nothing good with dope. Drugs are bad; there is no equivocation, no okay drugs such as marijuana or LSD and many of them link cannabis to other drugs such as cocaine as a gateway drug.”

How rock’n’roll fell out of love with drugs

1960s

Puff, the magic dragon, lived by the sea

And frolicked in the autumn mist in a land called Honalee.

Peter, Paul and Mary, Puff The Magic Dragon,1963

Everybody must get stoned

Bob Dylan, Rainy Day Women, 1966

One pill makes you larger

And one pill makes you small,

And the ones that mother gives you

Don’t do anything at all.

Go ask Alice

When she’s 10 feet tall.

Jefferson Airplane, White Rabbit, 1967

Picture yourself in a boat on a river

With tangerine trees and marmalade skies

Somebody calls you, you answer quite slowly,

A girl with kaleidoscope eyes

The Beatles, Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds, 1967

When I put a spike into my vein

And I’ll tell ya, things aren’t quite the same

When I’m rushing on my run

And I feel just like Jesus’ son

And I guess that I just don’t know

Velvet Underground and Nico, Heroin, 1967

1970s

I hit the city and I lost my band

I watched the needle take another man

Gone. The damage done.

Neil Young, The Needle and the Damage Done, 1972

If you wanna hang out, you gotta take her out, cocaine

If you wanna get down, get down on the ground, cocaine

She’s all right, She’s all right, She’s all right

Eric Clapton, Cocaine,1977

1980s

Pass the dutchie from the left hand side

Musical Youth, Pass the Dutchie, 1984

Your daddy works in porno

Now that mommy’s not around

She used to love her Heroin

But now she’s underground

Guns N’ Roses, My Michelle, 1987

1990s

But that’s okay ‘cos we’re all sorted out for E’s & wizz

And tell me when the spaceship lands ‘cos all this has just got to mean something

Pulp, Sorted for E’s & Wizz, 1995

I’m on crack

I’m doing lines all the time

John Belushi was a friend of mine

Can’t relate, I’m losin weight

Grinding my jaw, breaking the law

Stealing tens and twenties from my ma and pa

Dickies, I’m On Crack, 1995

Sun so bright that I’m nearly

Blind Cool cos I’m wired and I’m out of my mind

Warms the dope running down my spine

But I don’t care ’bout you and I’ve got nothing to do

Spiritualised, Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating, 1997

You’re living life fucked-up every single day

And now I can’t remember the last time you were straight

You’re a joke but no one’s laughing any more

White Town, Peek and Poke, 2000

Guardian Unlimited Â