• Did the CIA Write the Scorpions' "Wind of Change," One of the Bestselli

    From Open Culture@1:229/2 to All on Monday, July 06, 2020 09:30:00
    From: open.culture@belver.alt119.net

    By the time the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, it seemed the fate of the Soviet Union was all but sealed. It would be two more years before the USSR officially
    dissolved, and flew the Soviet flag over the Kremlin for the last time, but the
    age of Cold War
    belligerence officially ended with the 1980s, so it seemed. Soft power and suasion would finish the job. And what better way to announce this transition than with the soft-rock stylings of a power ballad like the Scorpions' "Wind of
    Change"? The
    sentimental song from German metal and hard rock favorites was suddenly inescapable in 1990, and it was not at all subtle about its message.

    The song became a massive hit and remains one of the best-selling singles of all time. It served as "a soundtrack of sorts to a political and cultural revolution," writes Richard Bienstock at Rolling Stone. Oddly, "especially in light of the Scorpions'
    background... 'Wind of Change' was about neither the Berlin Wall nor their German homeland." Instead, the song was ostensibly inspired by a historic two-day festival the band played in Moscow in 1989, a so-called "hard-rock Woodstock" featuring metal
    royalty like Ozzy Osbourne, Mötley Crüe, Cinderella, and Skid Row alongside hard rock Soviet bands like Gorky Park.

    Three months after the concert, the Berlin Wall fell, and Scorpions' lead singer Klaus Meine wrote the words:

    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

    The iconic whistled intro and lighters-in-the-air video cemented "Wind of Change" as a definitive statement on how the "children of tomorrow" will "share
    their dreams" in a globalized world. Tantalizingly vague, the lyrics read like Surrealist ad copy,
    sliding back and forth between doggerel and weird Symbolist incantation:

    The wind of change
    Blows straight into the face of time
    Like a stormwind that will ring the freedom bell
    For peace of mind
    Let your balalaika sing
    What my guitar wants to say

    These lines, it may not shock you to learn, may have been written by the CIA. At least, "that's the mystery driving the new eight-part podcast series Wind of Change," writes Nicholas Quah at Vulture. (Listen on Apple, Spotify, Google, and on the
    podcast website.) "Led by New Yorker staff writer Patrick Radden Keefe and produced by Pineapple Street's Henry Molofsky… the journey takes us to a shape-shifting Wonderland, a world where an American agency like the CIA may very well have participated
    in the production of pop culture as part of concerted efforts to build sentiment against its enemies abroad. It might even be something that's happening right now."

    Those who've read about how the Agency has influenced everything from Abstract Expressionism, to literary magazines, creative writing, and Hollywood films might not find these allegations particularly surprising, but as with all the best examples of the
    serial podcast form, it's the journey, not the destination that makes this story worth pursuing. Keefe approaches the subject with a naiveté that might be deliberate, playing up the idea of mass entertainment as "carefully devised and calibrated
    messaging."

    The podcast is great fun ("it's been described as This is Spinal Tap meets All the President's Men," writes Deadline); its story, Keefe says in a statement, "stretches across musical genres, and across borders and periods of history." Do we ever find out
    for sure whether the agency best known for overthrowing governments it doesn't like wrote the Scorpions' 1990 power ballad "Wind of Change"? "Hear the music, and the accents and the voices," says Keefe, "and judge for yourself who might be lying and who
    is telling the truth."

    If you ask Klaus Meine, it's all a fantasy. (But, then, he would say that, wouldn't he?) "It's weird," the Scorpions singer commented after learning about
    Keefe's podcast. "In my wildest dreams I can't think about how that song would connect with the CIA.
    "  The idea, however, would make "a good idea for a movie," he says, "That would be cool." A movie, maybe, funded by the CIA.

    Related Content:

    How the CIA Funded & Supported Literary Magazines Worldwide While Waging Cultural War Against Communism

    The CIA Assesses the Power of French Post-Modern Philosophers: Read a Newly Declassified CIA Report from 1985

    Read the CIA's Simple Sabotage Field Manual: A Timeless Guide to Subverting Any
    Organization with "Purposeful Stupidity" (1944)

    How the CIA Helped Shape the Creative Writing Scene in America

    Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness

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