#21 - JRL 2008-45 - JRL Home
Context (Moscow Times)
February 29-March 6, 2008
Voicing a Protest Vote
Protest band Televizor sings "Your Putin is a Fascist."
By Sergey Chernov
'I disagree. With both sides," is the slogan on the posters for Televizor's
concert at B2 on Thursday. The words are a quote from Mikhail Bulgakov's
satirical novella "Heart of a Dog." In the week of the presidential election,
the line clearly refers to President Vladimir Putin and his handpicked
successor, Dmitry Medvedev.
The Moscow concert is going ahead, but the outspoken rock band had a concert
canceled in St. Petersburg last week. The band used to push the limits of
censorship in the 1980s, when it came out with songs such as "Get Out of
Control" and "Your Daddy Is a Fascist," but the latest ban is the first since
the Soviet period.
The St. Petersburg club ROKS canceled a concert called "The Other Music," the
name referring to The Other Russia, even though posters were already on streets
and tickets were on sale. The club's management said it did so because of
planned power maintenance in the building -- and because the bands failed to
inform the venue that the event was "political." The bands that were to take
part, including Televizor and SP Babai, believe the club instituted the ban
after a phone call from the authorities.
"The logic of events made me suspect long ago that it would all come to this
in the end," frontman Mikhail Borzykin said in an interview this week. "The
regime has nothing left to do but to grow more severe, because it has no
constructive functions, and the development of free culture isn't in the plans
of either Putin or Medvedev. The logic of the process is such that everything
will only get worse."
Last year, Borzykin took part in four Dissenters' Marches and several other
peaceful opposition rallies in St. Petersburg, some of which were violently
dispersed by OMON forces. Meanwhile, his 1980s peers, such as Akvarium leader
Boris Grebenshchikov and Alisa frontman Konstantin Kinchev, have built up cozy
relationships with the Kremlin.
"I read too often [in their interviews] ... 'We are people of art, and art is
higher than politics. A poet should not march,'" Borzykin said. "It's the same
reasoning that I heard from people in 1985 and 1986. It's a surprising case of
deja vu."
The singer wrote a song called "We're on the Different Sides of the
Barricades" about some of his fellow rock musicians.
"I think one should live in step with reality. To do this, one should know it
and understand it a little bit," he said.
"So I went out and took a look. And I saw that what I had been told was not
quite true. The people who take part in Dissenters' Marches are mostly
intellectual and spiritual, driven not by mercantile interests but rather by a
feeling of the injustice of what is happening around them."
Some of Borzykin's new songs, such as "Stay Home," which urges the listener
to go out and protest, and "Nail the Cellar Shut," a biting criticism of the
current Kremlin rulers (the title refers to the Lenin Mausoleum), stem from his
experience in street protests. He is reluctant to call them political, however.
"There's no sign of politics at all, I think this is a normal human reaction
to pain, to injustice," Borzykin said.
"To call these songs political is perhaps conformist. A standpoint of 'I'm
outside all of this' doesn't work anymore. You only can ignore the reality until
you realize that you're already being raped. Or until something happens to your
relatives in a nearby police precinct or on our crazy streets," he said.
Borzykin believes that the anti-totalitarian anthems he wrote in the 1980s
have gained new relevance. For the last five years, he has dedicated his song
"Your Daddy Is a Fascist" to Putin, changing the chorus to "Your Putin Is a
Fascist."
In compliance with his stance, Borzykin will not be voting in Sunday's
presidential election. "I will ignore the election, and I have nothing left to
do but go to the Dissenters March on March 3," he said.
"I don't have much of a choice; my photo is on the front page of the
newspaper calling people to come to the Dissenters' March. Five of the activists
who distribute the paper near metro stations have already been detained. One was
beaten. The choice has been made. On March 3, I will go to the march," he said.
Televizor plays Thurs. at 9 p.m. at B2, located at 8 Bolshaya Sadovaya Ulitsa.
Metro Mayakovskaya. Tel. 650-9918/09.
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