I grew up listening to Manhattan Transfer (and still love them to this day). My favorite album of theirs is Mecca for Moderns. It has what is perhaps the weirdest song I’ve ever heard - “(Wanted) Dead or Alive”. This album came out in 1981 and most of the dictators in this song are now dead, but every now and again I’ll come across one in my reading and think, “Oh. That’s one of those guys from the song.” Two of lines in the song are about the Shah of Iran:
“The Shah had a short time to live because the Ayatollah don’t forgive.”
“Shah of Iran tried so hard to survive. He too is wanted, dead or alive.”
I was not very old when this album came out, and I’m using this album to explain my fascination with Iran. (I also think I’ve been cooped up in Nashville too long, and anything exotic and different is bound to pique my interest.) So when several books about this renegade country came across my desk, I decided to check them out to better understand just why my musical heroes were singing about these people.