Comment of the Moment: Mick Jagger on Politics in Music
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There's a really good interview with Mick Jagger in the New York Times that was posted this week (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/Thanks for the comment Knowledge Nomad. That's two CotM's in the past week, so congratulations. We very appreciate the thoughtful observations here on TW. Especially on one of our long running topics -- Politics in Music.07/11/magazine/mick-jagger- interview.html) Definitely worth a listen. But, for the purposes of Neil Young fans, there's a few times when he mentions that getting political in your songs is probably best dropping hints at and being tangential to your writing because the public doesn't want to hear it.
"Interviewer: I want to put the question in slightly different terms. There’s a movie performance of yours that I love, in “The Man From Elysian Fields.” You play a middle-aged man who runs an escort service. That performance has a lot of regret in it, and I assume that you wouldn’t have been able to give a performance like that earlier in your life. So, similarly, are there things that you can do in a song or did on the new album that make you think, Oh, I wasn’t capable of inhabiting that lyric earlier?
Mick: That’s a good question. It requires a lot of thought to give a good answer. I wouldn’t have written any of these songs when I was 30, honestly. And I’ve also gotten into this habit of doing songs that are about personal relationships and then I throw a verse about politics in there. That’s a trick that I’ve learned from other songwriters, because nobody wants to hear a whole song about politics or social comment. A blues song like “Rough and Twisted,” you talk about women and everything, but then you throw in stuff that’s obviously political: “The only club was called conspiracy.” “What they wanted was tyranny.” So you find yourself using these tricks."
And again:
"Interview: There are a handful of political lines sprinkled throughout the new record. You sing about scuttling billionaires “scrambling to their bolt-holes in the sky,” about dirty rat autocrats and rubber-stamping judges. I find it heartening to know that Mick Jagger sees the same problems as the rest of us. Can you tell me more about what you’re seeing when you look around the world?
Mick: It’s not the first time I’ve done songs with social comment. I like doing it, but in small doses. It’s pop music, you know. “Ringing Hollow” is completely social comment. But even then, I had two songs that were on the same subject, which is my love of America."
So, clearly Neil takes a different approach. As do many other great musicians both contemporary and historically. But, does Mick have a point? Certainly the formula that has worked for the Stones is to eschew much social commentary, and Mick, at least, is aware enough [how many rock stars have attended the London School of Economics and Political Science and read Kant?] that he most certainly could do more social commentary.
My own take is, which isn't particularly deep, there is indeed an audience for music with social commentary, but also that it's understandable that even those with a taste for social commentary in their music also like music that doesn't fit that description. I've got room in my collection for the Stones, Neil, Nina, Jesse Welles, Shinyribs, etc.




























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3 Comments:
We don’t need politics in music until we look up one day and realize we are living in a fascist police state (come November).
I am so grateful Neil Young has been an environmental activist & anti war activist. I just happen to have the same set of values & involvement in various causes, like democracy! Like civil rights & human rights!
Arrest the war criminals!
Your rustie grain brother Alan in Seattle
Mick Jagger I always perceived as a highly manipulative character in both song and interview. So his "It's Only Rock'n'Roll but I Like it"-position on politics in songwriting to me appears something adapted in hindsight by an 82-year-old. But history is not to be re-written. During the later 60's and 70's in Europe the Stones were a political band, expressing the rebellious spirit of more than one post-war generation. Sure "Satisfaction" was followed by "You Can't Always Get What You Want" (forget about the verses, it's the refrain that counts) . If Jagger (and many others, among them Robert Zimmerman) distance themselves from the roles they once played that's just fine. Songs like "Prodigal Son", "Streetfighting Man" or "Sympathy for the Devil" essentially still remain political statements. In the 60's In Europe to listen and to cover music by all these great American blues musicians was a political statement as long as the civil rights movement in the US was marching, protesting and hoping for a better future.
In 1990 when the wall had come down I took East Germans to atttend the Stones' "Urban Jungle" show at the Olympic Stadium in Munich. While the Stones did not disappoint me, they were the perfect imitators of the band formerly known as the Rolling Stones, the East Germans reacted as if they were sucked up by a time machine, being transported back in time when listening to the Stones records or tapes smuggled across the tightly controlled East German border was an act of protest and rebellion. So I believe Jagger & Co. have it wrong, not all wrong, but partly wrong. With the performing arts it's not all about the intention of the artist, but also how they're being read. For a long time the younger Rolling Stones did not behave as if their music was just "pop music". The political anti-septic direction their music followed was a later phase of the band, but not the formative time that created their image and their huge fan base around the globe. Being a former student of the London School of Economics Jagger knows all that very well, I assume. To narrow down the interdependent relation of politics and rock 'n' roll to inserting a few lines in a couple of songs on the new album is one of these manipulative tricks Jagger is known for. Pleased to meet you...
Uh, ok Mick. Fingerprint File?
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