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Embed: 'Til the street Samurai said to my face
That any flag that's worth a shit
Was woven from fire in the first place

Bail out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic Reverses
Bail out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic Reverses

Bail out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic Reverses
Bail out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic Reverses

Bail out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic Reverses
Bail out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic Reverses

Bail out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic Reverses
Bail out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic ReversesLyrics provided by TANCODEhttp://lyricsever.com/" readonly=""/>

Satanic Reverses Lyrics

In the 1970's
The OPEC nations began to dominate
The world's oil economy
In the 1980's, Japan became the world's
Number one economic power

In 1989 the nations of Eastern Europe
Attempted to restructure
While in the United States civil rights have
Collapsed at the hands of fundamentalists
And national insecurity's at an all time high

Exxon and on and on and on
The ministers of double speak
New meanin' of clean they tried to teach us
They staged the phoney shampoo of the Valdez greases
Completely jheri curled the beaches

Pipe bomb for the NAACP
And a hit on Salman Rushdie, the Berlin Wall comes down
And the U.S. cracks down on illegal aliens
Ban the freedom of choice for those wantin' abortion
And enforce capitol punishment

Twenty four hour radio ban
For indecency determined by the F.U.C.C.
Why are we so anesthetized to the lies?
Because we do it in our own lives
We believe all the things that we want to hear
But then we also love to criticize

Bail out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic Reverses
Bail-out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic Reverses

Bail out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic Reverses
Bail out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic Reverses

In 1992 the European economic community will reform
In 1997 the city of Hong Kong will become
A part of the People's Republic of China
In 1999, and this is no coincidence
The nation of Panama will control it's own canal

While in the United States
Civil rights have collapsed at the hands of Fundamentalists
And national insecurity's at an all time high

Helms said ban the photograph of the piss Christ
It's sacreligious not an art
While we all try to discern between our cup of tea
And what we call obscenity, the house's legislation
Ripped the phoney foundation off what we thought inherent

Sent Joey to the Supreme Court
'Cause he made a statement, they called it
Desecration of the symbol that was meant to represent
The freedom of so called choice and dissent
They almost had me believin' it, they were bleedin' him

He said, "Burn baby, burn"
'Til the street Samurai said to my face
That any flag that's worth a shit
Was woven from fire in the first place

Bail out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic Reverses
Bail out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic Reverses

Bail out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic Reverses
Bail out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic Reverses

Bail out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic Reverses
Bail out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic Reverses

Bail out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic Reverses
Bail out the banks loan art to the churches
Satanic Reverses

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
The Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy were a transitional Rap/Hip-Hop band from San Francisco, California, USA active during the early 1990's. The band was formed in 1990 by Michael Franti and Rono Tse, who both previously were part of the raw, musically aggressive industrial influenced group The Beatnigs who also debuted on the Alternative Tentacles label. The group, who soon secured a deal with Chris Blackwell's Island label, were named in part from the phrase "The Disposable Heroes of Hypocrisy", used in some Socialist literature,and predate's Michael Franti establishing his long running group Spearhead in the latter part of the 90's.

The Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy had problems being accepted in the commercial hip-hop scene due to Franti's deeply literate and overtly political lyrics, and their avowed disinterest in gangsta party anthems, mysogyny and homophobia prevalent in that genre. They found audiences opening shows for other major politically conscious acts like U2, Billy Bragg, Rage Against The Machine, Nirvana and Arrested Development. Critics associated them by genre with sampling groups of the time, like Pop Will Eat Itself and The KLF . They also were compared to Gil Scott-Heron due to the spoken vocal styles of Franti, the fresh 7 string jazz guitar stylings contributed by Charlie Hunter and the up-front political messages in the music.

Their debut album, Hypocrisy Is the Greatest Luxury, received critical and underground acclaim upon its release in 1992, but was never commercially successful. Franti's lyrics address a wide range of issues, from Mass Media bias and abuse on "Television: Drug of the Nation" to racial equality on "Socio-Genetic Experiment", in large part inspired by his own childhood. The album also included a cover of the Dead Kennedys track "California Uber Alles" (with updated lyrics about then Governor Pete Wilson). "Television," which received wide airplay on college and alternative radio stations, had previously been recorded by Michael Franti's first band, The Beatnigs.

In common with other bands of the time on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, the Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy used sampling and scratching as a primary tool of music recording, and mixed Rock, Hip-Hop, Rap, and Jazz in combinations that were ground breaking for the time. Later artists such as The Prodigy, Aphex Twin all built on approach to music creation used by The Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy, among others.

Among their contemporaries, the band had strong artistic, political, and personal ties to both Meat Beat Manifesto and Consolidated. The recording of Hypocrisy is the Greatest Luxury was co-produced by Consolidated's Mark Pistel, and prolific Meat Beat Manifesto frontman Jack Dangers assisted with mixing.

In 1993 the duo worked with William S. Burroughs, recording music for a collaborative album entitled Spare Ass Annie and Other Tales. This album diverged greatly from the style of the band's previous work, as they were largely providing musical background and accompaniment to Burroughs' spoken readings from several of his books. The Disposable Heroes split up shortly after. Michael Franti formed Spearhead, which (to date) have released 5 albums and are still a going concern, while Tse worked with the Mystik Journeymen. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

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The Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy