Custer’s Last Stand

Under Appreciated

CUSTER’S LAST STAND
 
 

The music on Broken Treaties is basically soft rock; much of the music has lush strings, so Silverbird is often classified as a disco band, even though 1971-1973 is early in the disco era to say the least.  However, there are a variety of musical styles and several lead vocalists; and overall, the music has a definite tribal feel.  Their voices merge beautifully, providing fine background vocals; on “Would You” and “Poor Boy”, the lead vocals are several singers in harmony.

The opening tracks on each side – “Custer’s Last Stand and the title song, “Broken Treaties” – deal effectively (and far less provocatively than Buffy Sainte-Marie did on It’s My Way!) with the basics regarding Native Americans; besides the themes that are obvious from the song titles, the songs talk about the slaughter of the buffalo herds and the current poverty among Native Americans.  The mood of these two songs is appropriately somber, though the majority of the songs on Broken Treaties are upbeat. 

 

Although Custer’s Last Stand was one of the few Indian victories, it is probably the best known battle involving Native Americans and has been for decades.  I recently saw a movie called They Died with Their Boots On – this catchphrase has been popular for years – that portrays George Armstrong Custer heroically; the 1941 movie was apparently highly fictionalized but notes that Custer graduated last in his class from the U. S. Military Academy at West Point.  I had learned that about Custer in the “Final Jeopardy” question on a Jeopardy! show a long time ago. 

 

(August 2013)

 

Last edited: March 22, 2021