In this Book

Love Don't Need a Reason: The Life & Music of Michael Callen

Book
2020
Published by: Punctum Books
summary
From a stage erected in front of the US Capitol, on April 25, 1993, Michael Callen surveyed the throng: an estimated one million people stretched across the National Mall in the largest public demonstration of queer political solidarity in history. “What a sight,” he told the crowd, his earnest Midwestern twang reverberating through loudspeakers. “You’re a sight for sore eyes. Being gay is the greatest gift I have ever been given, and I don’t care who knows about it.” He then launched into a gorgeous rendition of “Love Don’t Need a Reason,” the AIDS anthem he composed with Marsha Malamet and the late Peter Allen. As Callen finished singing, people stood cheering and flashing the familiar American Sign Language symbol for “I Love You.” For they knew the song’s sentiment rang true for Callen, who had recently announced his retirement from music and activism after a living for more than a decade with what was then called “full-blown AIDS.” After the March on Washington, Callen returned to his recently adopted West Coast home, Los Angeles. In the ensuing months, his health rapidly declined, and on 27 December 1993, Callen died of AIDS-related pulmonary Kaposi’s sarcoma. Love Don’t Need a Reason focuses on Callen’s most important and lasting legacy: his music. A witness to the overlooked last years of Gay Liberation and a major figure in the early years of the AIDS crisis, Michael Callen chronicled these experiences in song. A community organizer, activist, author, and architect of the AIDS self-empowerment movement, he literally changed the way we have sex in an epidemic when he co-authored one of the first safe-sex guides in 1983. A gifted singer, songwriter, and performer, he also made gay music for gay people and used music to educate and empower people with AIDS. Listening again to his music allows us to hear the shifting dynamics of American families, changing notions of masculinity, gay migration to urban areas, the sexual politics of Gay Liberation, and HIV/AIDS activism. Using extensive archival materials and newly-conducted oral history interviews with Callen’s friends, family, and fellow musicians, Matthew J. Jones reintroduces Callen to the history of LGBTQIA+ music and places Callen’s music at the center of his important activist work.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page, Frontispiece, Copyright

pp. i-viii

Contents

pp. ix-x

Acknowledgments

pp. xi-xvi

Epigraph

pp. xvii-xviii

Dedication

pp. xix-xx

Preface: I Almost Missed the Epidemic

pp. 21-31

1. Kerosene Lantern: An Introduction

pp. 32-47

2. Small Town Change

pp. 48-63

3. No, No

pp. 64-77

4. Innocence Dying

pp. 78-91

5. Nobody’s Fool

pp. 92-109

6. Where the Boys Are

pp. 110-129

7. Living in Wartime

pp. 130-141

8. We Know Who We Are

pp. 142-155

9. How to Have Sex in an Epidemic

pp. 156-179

10. Lowlife

pp. 180-201

11. Purple Heart

pp. 202-217

12. The Flirt Song

pp. 218-233

13. One More Lullaby

pp. 234-251

14. Take It Easy

pp. 252-271

15. They Are Falling All around Me

pp. 272-287

16. Sometimes Not Often Enough

pp. 288-299

17. On the Other Side

pp. 300-313

18. Goodbye

pp. 314-327

19. The Healing Power of Love

pp. 328-337

20. Michael Callen’s Legacy: A Conclusion

pp. 338-351

Bibliography

pp. 352-371
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