Two of the children, Jimmy and Julie, encounter personal
struggles that help them rediscover and fulfil their mission in life. The
musical explores the Mormon doctrines of ‘premortal’ life, ‘foreordination’
(the idea that, before birth, God selected particular people to fulfil certain
missions during their mortal lives), and eternal marriage. It depicts abortion
and birth control as being contrary to the divine plan: in the same year that
the musical was first staged the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
released a statement which read ‘The Church opposes abortion and counsels its
members not to submit to or perform an abortion except in the rare cases where,
in the opinion of competent medical counsel, the life or good health of the
mother is seriously endangered or where the pregnancy was caused by rape and
produces serious emotional trauma in the mother. Even then it should be done
only after counseling with the local presiding priesthood authority and after
receiving divine confirmation through prayer.’
That still hold true today, and what else would you expect
from a ‘faith’ that teaches that God used to be a man on another planet, that
he became a God (that’s ‘a’, not ‘the’) by following the laws of the God on
that planet, that he came to earth with his wife, and that their children
included Jesus, the devil, and you – oh, and that you have the potential of
becoming gods of your own planets and are then able to start the process all
over again. And don’t get me started on gold plates, magic hats, seer stones
and whatnot.
As an aside, what would be the point of praying to God to
allow you to have an abortion after being raped? Surely if God existed he/she
would have prevented the rape in the first place? Just sayin’…
Saturday's Warrior
was first staged in 1973, with the soundtrack issued by Embryo Records the following year. A huge hit with the LDS community, in 1989 a horribly
overacted video version of the musical was produced (which you can find on
YouTube if you have nothing better to do). In a peculiar twist, a year after
the video was issued two men – Karyl Eugene Harkins and Peter R. Jepp – were
sued by Robert Williams of Fieldbrook Productions Inc (who owned the rights to
the video performance) for illegally producing 1,000 copies of the
videocassette for sale in Utah. Williams claimed that Harkins had copies made
from another copy (i.e second generation) and that they were of poor quality.
Selling them would ‘irreparably damage the reputation and marketability’ of the
original video. Harkins, who has practiced in naturopathic and homeopathic
medicine at Salt Lake Homeopathy since 2002, is no stranger to run ins with the
law: in 2014 he was charged with Unlawful and Unprofessional Conduct for
practicing homeopathic medicine without a license. According to charging
documents undercover agents went to Harkins' practice and claimed to have
various ailments like pressure in the head, shoulder pain, frequent urination,
and frequent thirst. Harkins allegedly placed two fingers on the investigator’s
arm, asked him questions, then diagnosed him with ‘Worms, fluxes, bacteria in
his body, and 26 kinds of tape worms.’ Harkins then allegedly sent the
undercover agent home with $259 in supplements.
Anyway, I digress. This ridiculous mish-mash of American
cheese, religious cliché and rock ‘n roll has - a staple of LDS households for the last 40 years - hit the
big screen this year, after a Kickstarter campaign raised over $10,000 to fund
it. Universally panned (outside of the LDS community, that is), according to
the movie’s website ‘When Lex de Azevedo wrote the iconic chords that have
become immediately and emotionally recognizable to fans around the world, he
had no idea the impact that they and Saturday’s Warrior would have. The story and the songs gave voice to,
and filled a need for, members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints. In the 60’s and 70’s rock music had become the pulpit of a generation
and that pulpit was preaching values that were opposed to what the LDS church
believed. Saturday’s Warrior was
the first time that LDS people saw their culture represented through the medium
of popular music and it was an immediate phenomenon.’
And there you have it; clearly the LDS chose to ignore the
phenomenal rise of the Osmonds – who, naturally, de Azevedo had also worked
with. Four years after Saturday’s Warrior
debuted, our Lex lent his musical chops to another Mormon musical, the much
less successful My Turn on Earth, and
in 2007 Lex’s co-conspirator Doug Stewart debuted The White Star, the sequel to Saturday’s Warrior, only this time without Lex’s involvement.
I'm not sure what, if anything, I've learned from listening to this - apart from that stuttering is a mortal sin, or something. Still sit back, put a hat over your face and indulge in a brace of cuts from the soundtrack to Saturday’s Warrior: Pullin' Together (complete with awful, shrieking children), and the apocalyptic power ballad Zero Population.
I'm not sure what, if anything, I've learned from listening to this - apart from that stuttering is a mortal sin, or something. Still sit back, put a hat over your face and indulge in a brace of cuts from the soundtrack to Saturday’s Warrior: Pullin' Together (complete with awful, shrieking children), and the apocalyptic power ballad Zero Population.
Enjoy!
7/10/16
ReplyDeleteRobGems.ca wrote:
Lex De Azvevdo was also a former producer for Capitol Records in the 1960's responsible for producing acts as Mrs. Miller and The Human Bienz among other acts. To go from these tasks to the Mormon bizarre-ness he displays here is mind boggling, but similar to what Mike Curb did to his acts on MGM Records until he finally ran it into the ground in 1975, leaving Polygram Records to clean up the mess he left behind. Go Figure. No wonder Right-Wingers can be nutty people.
I'm confused - the LDS opposes abortion, and yet one of the lines inn "Zero Population" is "Legalized abortion is the answer, my friend."
ReplyDelete"Zero Population" is a song sung by Jimmy's friends, who are trying to lead him astray from the values of his family.
DeleteMama mia. That cannot be your last name.
ReplyDeleteThat, however, is mine.
DeleteI kid thee not,
my wise and just liege...
The one thing that is missing is that Robert Williams was paid $100,000 for the rights to produce Saturday's Warrior and that the rights were transferred to a Company that was going to produce the movie and Robert Williams never told the investors in the movie that he sold the rights again to another part. Williams gave Harkins the movie to publish. and Harkins, who is still practicing homeopathy had all charges dismissed and espounged because it is legal in Utah to practice homeopathy, but back to Williams who filed bankruptcy to try to avoid the lawsuit for the money he stole for the copyrights to Saturday's Warrior. It is amazing the insanity that has gone on with that whole thing and the lies and deceit from what we though were "good members of the LDS Church, So if you want to be a truthfull person, get the facts right!
ReplyDelete