The Stone Roses (album)
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
Related e |
Featured: |
- Roman Coppola's 2001 film CQ depicts the Paris film-making world of the late 1960s and makes repeated reference to the events of May 1968.
- The Rolling Stones' song "Street Fighting Man" was heavily influenced by the student riots.
- Philippe Garrel's 2005 film Les Amants Réguliers ("the regular lovers") is a three-hour-long rejoinder to The Dreamers that portrays the May 1968 events through the eyes of a group of young artists who grow increasingly absorbed in a world of drugs and free love upon what they see as the failure of the May 1968 events.
- The Stone Roses song "Bye Bye Badman" on their eponymous debut album was said by lead singer Ian Brown to be about the riots. The lemon the band commonly uses as a logo represents the lemons used by protesters to sooth their eyes from the effects of tear gas.
- The video for Röyksopp's single "Only This Moment" depicts events from the May 1968 riots.
- The Merry Month of May is author James Jones's 1971 novel concerning the 1968 events in Paris. It is centered around a rich American family, the Gallaghers, living as expatriates in Paris.
- Renaud wrote the song "Crève Salope" during the protests, and it became a favourite of the protesters.
- Jean Luc Godard's film La Chinoise portrays the ideas of a small group of students on the eve of the May 1968 events.
- Jean Luc Godard's film "Tout Va Bien" portrays the attitudes of French people 4 years after the May movement.
- Artist Jamie Reid was inspired by the poster "A Youth Too Often Worried About the Future", produced during the May events, for his artwork on the Sex Pistols' 1977 single "God Save the Queen.
- Inertia Blooms 2008 EP, 'Cours camarade, le vieux monde est derriere toi' takes it's name from a popular slogan of the May 1968 student movement. It's artwork is also a piece of graffiti heavily associated with the events. "
Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "The Stone Roses (album)" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.