Songs Of The Day 5/7/2016: 5 by Laibach
Laibach had a lot on its agenda, way more than the scope of this facile, trifling webspace will allow. "Cultural criticism" is how they describe it. That's fair. I like to criticize culture from time to time when I have out-of-town visitors. As you might deduce, taking music with fascist overtones and using it to do cover versions is a tactic that seems to write itself. (Well, cover itself.) That's where Laibach really made their most poignant points.
They redid almost the entire Beatles' album Let It Be - in terms of lyrics perhaps their least substantial work - and turned it into an autocrat's workout music. Laibach also made a project with seven different interpretations of the Rolling Stones' "Sympathy for the Devil." Their album NATO featured songs concerned with war, including "The Final Countdown," which you have to consider kind of a gimme. And then there's Laibach's reworking of Andrew Lloyd Webber's Jesus Christ Superstar, a blaspheme-fest that almost justifies anything they ever tried to do.
Fun fact: Last year Laibach became the first band from the West to do a show in North Korea. Rolling Stone had an interesting interview with member Ivo Saliger about their trip, during which they played songs from The Sound of Music in Pyongyang's Ponghwa Theatre and did an acoustic set at a local music school. How much culture can one group criticize in one vacation?