This is a much too pessimistic point of view IMO. You should see how it's like over here, there's an increasing number of associations where {mostly young} people get themselves concretely involved with society issues. It's the same people who tag things like "we're sick of ads - overdose!" on street ads at night and lead the local anti-advertising movements (some of them get fined regularly, but they must find that funny
), the same people you can meet in these concerts up and down the stage. They publish free magazines, and fund the association by selling cheap pins and T-shirts now and then.
I do concede however that the description you make of a good part of this public (the perpetually stoned rastas, the fundamentalist commies, the clueless Che Guevara fans...) is quite exact. I have the feeling that you are/were at some point involved within this "scene" in order to know so well what you're talking about.
But these guys
are not the majority of the public, luckily for us! The average "twenty-ager" people are STILL interested in the future of society a lot. On political and historical events, most of them are astoundingly clueless and awesomely naive, right, but they have a very strong curiousity of political ideas, provided a goodwilling soul deigns to explain them.
In my opinion, behaving according to this defeatist point of view is the very worst thing to do. No one actually educates people to anything - and especially
this -, it's people who educate
themselves according to the example you give them, and in this regard it is the duty of the most educated ones to constantly show
examples to the masses. Take any example in history ; when those who master a domain of knowledge cease to practice it, the whole domain of knowledge vanishes away. Apply this to politics, and see for yourself what it gives
Back to the topic of music, I state that no, music is not dead, and yeah, it can and MUST still be a statment! 8D
Music is the art that conveys the most emotions (or put it differently, a significant amount of emotion the more quickly). I am personally unable to listen to Bach's adagio for organ in C or the one for violins in D minor without feeling as weepy as a blonde watching the Titanic movie, and I state this without shame. Identically I am unable to listen to a Muddy Waters blues without FEELING the pain that guy is expressing as I am unable to listen to punk rock without feeling an urgent need to riot, no shit! And I am ashamed to see this noble art in the hands of greedy label owners who suck more than $20 out of us for each disc bought where the artist will touch $5 at most, as well as I am ashamed to see a whole generation listening to music as if it was... wait, no. Not listening. They don't LISTEN to music. They just hear some noise. In the background. And meanwhile they're doing any frikkin thing else.
Holy shit, I feel they miss the point