Now
That’s Entertainment! |
By R.T. St. Claire
Special to The Lookout
August 13 -- McCabe’s has got to be the place to
see a solo musical performer of any kind on the west side, and for
San Francisco political satirist Roy Zimmerman, Sunday night was
something like The Daily Show’s Jon Stewart doing a solo hootenanny:
A little old-time folky with a lot of biting modern cool.
Zimmerman was in prime form on McCabe’s modest, sparse, black
stage. From his neatly pressed white shirt and sensible tie, down
to his sharp slacks, and yes, his sensible sandals, you’d
think you were looking at some new presidential candidate slinging
an acoustic guitar.
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Roy served up his unique and tasty brand of
liberal observations (and skewerings) of the neo-cons and
their Machiavellian ways and means with infectious originals
like “Dick Cheney” (“…the briefcase,
the trench-coat, the super-spy stylin!”), to “Chickenhawk”
espousing the slippery way that Bush and his cronies all managed
to get out of doing their respective stints in the armed forces
(“…but I just had other priorities, like feeling
more at ease”), and “I’ll Pull Out”
sung as if W was having a pre-coital drink, trying to seduce
the entire country of Iraq (“…I’ll pull
out! I promise!”).
Photo by Samantha Knapton |
But Zimmerman saves some of his best barbs for the religious right,
with foot-stompers like “Creation Science 101” (“…because
when this semester's through, it's straight A's for students who
shun Evolution”), the thoughtful (and painful) “Abstain
With Me” (“…the abstinence-only doctrine is kinda’
like the just-hold-it potty training method.”), and show-stopper
“Ted Haggard Is Completely Heterosexual” (“…
he put the men back in Amen.”).
If Roy draws the audience in with his clever, fun lyrics and between-song
banter (“When I heard that Dick Cheney shot some guy in the
face, I just figured he was exercising his 2nd Amendment Right to
Free Speech.”), he brings you right back to the un-funny real
world with his haunting and serious pro-troop number “Thanks
For The Support,” imagining how soldiers in the field must
feel, sent to fight an unjust and immoral war that doesn’t
even have any clear goal.
If any of this sounds a bit bleak, Roy’s set wound-down with
a surprisingly visual and uplifting song (“America”)
about the amazing diversity of this melting pot country of ours
(“America is a Japanese fiddler in Branson Missouri doing
Louie Armstrong… it just might work”).
The end of the nearly sold-out night culminated in an encore featuring
Zimmerman’s lone non-political tune: “What If The Beatles
Were Irish?” -- a rip-roaring medley of Beatles tunes, done
hard and fast, ala The Irish Rovers by way of The Pogues.
Dick Cheney, Ted Haggard, and The Beatles? Now that’s entertainment!
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