Wednesday, September 5, 1934 Pago 16 Daily Nebraskan anemia . aroid Ic King, The Crowns rock against Reagan By Mesa Z. Kcppekaan Dally Nebraskam SerJor Reporter If Ronald Reagan gets re-elected president this November, Joe "King" Carrasco will cross the Rio Grande into Mexico never to re turn except on tours and week ends. " That's why our stuff is getting more Tex-Mex," said Carrasco. "It I can figure out a way to get down there and stay, 111 move. Reagan's foreign policy is unbelievable. He's going to get us blown up." Carrasco and his band, The Crowns, relaxed Monday after noon at a small party before play ing that evening at the. Royal Grove. The 30-year-old Texas rock er promised two trends in the band's newest releases: more Latin influences and more politi cal lyrics. Carrasco said he has always been a political person. He reads up to four newspapers a day, particularly when he's not on tour. But he gets a lot of his information first-hand in Central and South America. "I spend a lot of time traveling and talking to people, and I can 4 "Federates" is political in a way. It's about taking mushrooms and hanging around the pyramids. If everybody did that, all the world's problems would be solved.' see our foreign policy is totally wrong," he said. "Anti-American sentiment is running really high. But no one here gives a fuck, and that blows my mind." Carrasco said that since Rea gan's reign began, the United States has fought wars that Ameri cans know nothing about. He said he thinks that if Reagan wins another term, the United States will invade Nicaragua. After watching the president on television deliver speeches to Republican conventioneers Car rasco said, he decided the pres ent administration is run "like a cowboy movie, with John Wayne as president." His new album, Bordertawn, will come out in Europe in two weeks. The new lyrics indicate his sympathy with Central and South American problems and his un easiness with U.S. stands. One song, "Current Events Are Mak ing Me Tense" was written after Carrasco had a nightmare about nuclear war. "I dreamed we were on tour in California and I heard on the radio that missiles had been launched" he said. "Everybody was hauling ass and all I could think of was, Til never see Texas again.' " Other songs on Bordertown, which will be available in the Uni ted States as an import, include "Who Bought the Guns That Killed the Nuns" and "We dont Speak The first verse of "Who Bought the Guns . . gives Carrasco's perception of Reagan's Latin American policies: "Who gave the order to cross the border? Who gave the order for all this torture It was a man, a man, a man with a plan For murder and aggression across this land." Later in the song we find out the man is "Konny, and he is not funny." Carrasco said he got interested in Central American politics more than ten years ago. While living and working in Austin, Carrasco became sympathetic to the prob lems of Salvadoran refugees. He said it's a criminal offense to har-' bor refugees there because the U.S. government doesnt recognize them as political refugees, but economic refugees. Since then, Carrasco has visited El Salvador. He said the easiest way to imagine what life is like in El Sal vador is to picture two identical duplexes next door to each other. In the U.S. duplex, 60 people live there. Fifteen people get the bed room, bathroom and kitchen, and 45 people are stuck in the living room. Two hundred people live in the Salvadoran duplex. Four people get the whole house, and the rest live in the back yard. "If you look at the people per square mile here compared to there, and the way the wealth is distributed, that's a good anal ogy," Carrasco said. "People in Central America have been held down too long. They want what we have here, and I don't blame them." Early political interests gave some of his old songs a "semi" pol itical bent. "Federales," from his album For the Hottest Mouth in Town, has a tongue-in-cheek pol itical message. "Federales' is political in away," he said. "It's about taking mush rooms and hanging around the pyramids. If everybody did that, all the world's problems would be solved, if you know what I mean." "It's good to make people think while they listen to your music, but the important thing is to have fun," he said. "I just want to make people happy and maintain my lifestyle, which is loose." Grove revellers trampled on any allusions to foreign policy, Reagan and the Central Ameri can strife as they hoped, bopped and stomped through the King's nearly two-hour set. King's real pull lies in the Latin-Mexican beat of drummer Dick Ross and the bass guitar of George Reiff. The showmanship of Kris Cummings and her trademark farfisa organ as well as The King's acrobat ics keep feet glued to the dance floor and eyes focused on stage. The King's finale was a precar ious climb over stage and speak ers to the second floor of the Grove. He somersaulted into the waiting arms of the crowd who passed him hand-over-hand back on stage. Sweat poured fast and furious as Carrasco boogied to "Party Weekend" and "Dont Bug Me Baby," both from his most recent American release. "My roots are Tex-Mex, so that's what we play," Carrasco said. The fact that I play Tex-Mex music is rebellious and subver sive in itself. It goes totally against the grain of American music. "What's held Latin music back so long is the language. I played with a lot of Mexican bands, and I try to put English lyrics to some Mexican polkas. My Chicano friends said I was crazy, but some times it worked." ' i " ..T-s ! t X - n : X. J '7 ; v j ( 4 .. ' .'t ' l ' '' ' i X y I " I , I I ft . -..-jbo" " t m. -.4 . -f I Joe "Eimg" Carrasco and The Crowns play coErt Jester cX & prc-show party Monday elternooii. 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