Saturday, December 27, 2003
Went to the local independant (note: not "indie," given their prelidiction for metal) record store today and, somewhat unfortunately, they were having a 30% off used CDs sale. So I sort of went through and bought everything that I saw and thought, "Hey, why don't I own that?" Many I had heard before in MP3 form (partial or whole) and/or owned cassettes of, but I figured it was more likely I'd listen to them as whole CDs, and hey, why not. Anyway, the haul:
- Liz Phair, Liz Phair (for year-end-assesment purposes)
- Eminem, The Slim Shady LP
- Jay-Z, Life and Times, Vol. 3 and The Blueprint
- Outkast, Stankonia
- Justin Timberlake, Justified (still in the shrinkwrap, the poor misguided fools)
- The Breeders, Last Splash
- The Phenomenological Boys, Melody, Melody, Melody, and More Melody (which Pitchfork panned, but whatever)
- The Rentals, Return of the Rentals
- Van Halen, 1984
- Weezer, the blue album
That first Weezer album really is good--I got the Spike Jonze DVD for xmas (more on that later, maybe) and watching the videos for "Buddy Holly" and "Undone" made me remember what a fantastic burst of power-pop that first LP was. So I got it! God bless capitalism!
posted by Mike B. at 5:44 PM
0 comments
Got hepped to this Nick Southall post by Luke, and you'd think I'd agree with it, given my whole thing about art-under-repression facsimiles. But eh, I don't. Of course, I don't agree particularly with the thing he's arguing against, either (even I can't swallow lines like "This is where Will Young becomes genuinely politically important..."), but I usually think English people look silly when they argue about class and start casually throwing around Marxist terms. So the Carmody thing doesn't really need a response from little old me, as Southall seems to have covered that pretty well already, but I think it's worth taking a few pokes at Southall's.
The difference between what I'm complaining about and what he's complaining about is that mine involves painting the culture you're already in as a repressed one and his involves taking on the trappings of an actually repressed culture, and the difference between those two is that mine you can get away with and his is just clearly fucking stupid. Very few people would read that Kula Shaker quote--"people in India may be poor but they're happy"--without thinking "wow, what a stupid cunt," and if they didn't think that, then there's not much you're going to be able to do to talk them out of it, since when educated people get illogical ideas in their head it's already gotten past all their "this contradicts all evidence" blockades to go straight to their "I like this" center. (An interesting problem in politics, but never mind.)
But similarly, I don't think anyone can read the Gallagher quote, er paraphrase-- if Coldplay weren't in a band they'd have good careers as solicitors or something; I'd have been working in a factory. It doesn't seem fair that they're denying an escape route to some other kids out there who need it--without also thinking, "wow, what a stupid cunt," unless you just violently hate Coldplay. (Cough, cough.) It's especially incongruous to espouse if, like Mr. Southall, you've said a few sentences ago that:
Keeping it so real that you get shot is not a positive message to be sending out. Interpolating yourself within a culture in which many young people fnd themselves trapped, therefore perpetuating that entrapment for others, is not a good thing. Choosing to ignore your own heritage in favour of a parodical fetishisation of someone else's, especially a less privileged heritage, smacks of the worst kind of cultural tourism.
Now, I agree with the first sentence, but look, we can all see that there's a big difference between promoting gangsta-ism and promoting, um, singer-songwrita-ism, right? The difference between the two things (follow along now) is: one is identified with a particular class, and one is not. Being a pop musician most emphatically is not. True, many of the musical traditions and styles used in pop music are, but the whole point of turning those actually folk musics into pop music is that it becomes commercialized and thus disassociated with the class the styles came from. You can complain about it at the point that the appropriation takes place, I suppose (though I certainly wouldn't), but at the point where it's already become the pop mainstream the whole fucking point is that it's available to anyone.
Even the specific argument being made by that Noel paraphrase is ludicrous. Coldplay is successful not because of their position but because of their talent and their image and all that other bullshit, and can we please drop the demonstrably untrue idea that record labels can push stuff no one actually likes down their throat? Coldplay did, your tastes aside, succeed because some people like the songs they sing and the way they sing them. Moreover, if Chris Martin was dead, that doesn't mean that hot "LC" pop group The Sons of Factory Workers would magically achieve success, because pop music is not a fungible product. Yes, if Kellogg's were to no longer exist, all the other cereal companies would see a roughly proportional increase in sales, because people need cereal and they don't care all that much, ultimately, about the brand. But no one needs to buy pop music--in a year where there were no records produced that people liked, very very few records would get sold. So saying that Coldplay is evil because they block the prospects of some other, less fortunate group of musicians is just a weak attempt to justify your Coldplay hatred by appealing to leftist political norms. Trust me, the record companies would love to have a working-class Chris Martin in addition to, or even instead of, the actual Chris Martin, if for no other reason than he'd have less experience with money and would be easier to exploit. But talent is not a democratic thing, and talent, on a certain level, is what pop music is all about. You can't buy talent, and you can't give it away, and not exercising it isn't an act of mercy on some other poor unfortunate (and smacks of paternalism just a wee bit this theory, eh?) but just a denial of what you have to offer. And you can do that--that's fine. But it's hardly an act of charity.
So should some radio presenter who is white pretend to be black? Of course not, if only for the reason that you look like a twat. But that doesn't mean that we all have to stay inside our own rigidly proscribed cultural classes. Do I like people who fetishize India? No, but I don't think that means they shouldn't be able to use Indian musical styles, although it would be even better if they engaged in political activism to use their privileged Western position to cure specifically Indian injustices. (In other words, you gotta read the news, Poncho.) I can certainly prefer that people approach their genre-melding a certain way, but I also, personally, have a hard time arguing against the product if it's good. ("Ooh, he called it 'the product,' he's embracing it as an end-result of the industrial process of exploitation and..." Yes, yes.) And, honestly, I have a hard time getting as riled up about "cultural tourism" as most people; the only one that really bothers me is when idiots pretend to be artists, and all their idiot friends pretend along, and then a newspaper writes a story about them, and it's all very funny and they're having a good time except you're a shitty artist, dingbat! But (ahem) anyway, yes, most other forms of it just don't concern me that much. Are trust fund kids wearing trucker hats idiots? Sure, but while we've got foreign nationals being held at Guantanamo I just can't see myself getting too bothered by it. Know what I mean? There's a separation between the cultural and the political ultimately, no matter what people want to claim, and the political matters and the cultural doesn't. Simple as that.
I need to write a bit more about this, specifically about the middle class as a new cultural ideal, but right now I need to go bake a pie, and this'll do for a while.
posted by Mike B. at 11:40 AM
0 comments
Friday, December 26, 2003
From the Newsweek "Who's Next" issue profile of James Murdoch, son of Rupert:
After a rough start with NewsCorp at 15 (as an intern at the Sydney Mirror, he was snapped napping at a press conference by a rival paper), he studied film and history at Harvard. He left without graduating in 1995 to cofound Rawkus Records, a hip-hop label. James and the partners then sold Rawkus. The buyer? NewsCorp, where James became chief of its music division.
Aha! El-P's anti-corporate stance suddenly becomes a lot more clear. "What motive did he have, your honor?" "An encounter with the Murdoch family..."
posted by Mike B. at 11:05 AM
0 comments
Wednesday, December 24, 2003
Dear Jason Gross: I pretty much totally disagree with you about that Liz Phair letter. Just because Liz wrote something outside the vernacular of rock criticism--in the vernacular of, as it happens, the artist--doesn't mean she's crazy or incoherant. It means people maybe are too eager to see her as crazy since it means they don't have to actually read the thing. And it certainly was a lot better than that hissy fit of an original review.
posted by Mike B. at 12:15 PM
0 comments
Going home, no more blogging for a while, happy etc., etc., etc.
Will be back in next week to work some days (wahoo) so maybe posts then.
Be safe, unless I hate you (which is most people), in which case I hope you die a horrible death. On Christmas.
posted by Mike B. at 11:58 AM
0 comments
Tuesday, December 23, 2003
Got the Blue Jam CD at lunch.
More on that later.
posted by Mike B. at 3:53 PM
0 comments
You know what I hate? I hate it when someone sends me an e-mail asking about the status of a license they faxed over less than a week ago, and then an hour later sends another e-mail threatening legal action because of our lack of response.
Guys, don't threaten legal action so easily. Seriously. Just ask politely. Sheesh.
posted by Mike B. at 3:47 PM
0 comments
Listened to a bit of the Cold Mountain soundtrack at lunch. And it's weird--the Jack White songs alongside the Krause and the sacred harp songs all sound, uh, kind of the same next to each other. Well, sonically. The thing that struck me specifically was that it's clear in the Jack White songs that whoever recorded them (Burnett?) made it sound like Alan Lomax recording onto ADAT by, sounds like, getting all the instruments via two room mics and then direct-micing the vocals. In particular, the violins and guitars sound distant, especially in the second Jack White song, but the production is still crisp and clear.
It is kind of cool to hear a room-mic production of a fairly well-known musician--lo-fi, but in a good way. Really makes you work as a musician.
posted by Mike B. at 3:44 PM
0 comments
Monday, December 22, 2003
Tom has graciously responded to my response to his "Hey Ya" review. It's all good. Let me use this opportunity, though, to respond to a few of the things brought up in the response and the comments thread.
Specifically: "whiteness." Now, I've actually addressed this before--I think that it's glaringly obvious that Andre's concern with The Love Below image-wise (so i.e. the album art and videos and so forth) was, at least in part, to play with whiteness as a trope or image or artistic technique, and to in some ways reimagine the history of pop music. You could worry, given the pre-release rhetoric Andre was putting out, that he had gone all serious-artist Prince on us, but of course, this turned out not to be the case. In making an argument about the debasedness of modern music by making music that was much better, he made a reactionary statement in a profoundly liberal way. Kind of like punk, he doesn't so much seek to recreate an old style as forge a new style by willfully ignoring or selectively interpreting decades of artistic history.
With the video, I think Tom nails it in comments:
The video is clever cos it's imagining - as I see it - Outkast as Ed Sullivan Show world-changers in a universe where black people got on those kind of 60s pop shows and where black families were watching them. Not knowing the details of Ed Sullivan this may have been the case anyway but I don't get the impression it was. It enhances the integration aspects of the song - which I do 'get', thanks Matthew, that's one of the reasons I like it - and predicts its own crossover too. I was just trying to speculate on what makes the song different and the nerdy thing is my best stab at explaining it.
Mwanji is right, too, in saying that the song and video are not being wholly white. This is true, but it's better for being true. Andre's not doing a reverse minstrel act, he's doing a reinterpretation, and it's amazingly effective. He's retelling the history of pop music with blacks as the dominant culture, which is what's white about it. Sure, the specific forms scream "white" but it's the setting and the audience and the implied economic positions--for instance, in a white-dominated late 50's/early 60's, a really hot drummer, black or not, could never perform shirtless on a TV program, but it's reasonable to assume that in a black-dominated culture, he could have, and all the performers are clearly allowed to be differentiated as individuals instead of being grouped in identical suits--that make it an alternative history. It goes beyond its most logical predecessor, Nirvana's "In Bloom" video, by not merely pointing out the ha-ha irony of placing today's libidinal, debauched music in the context of the straight-laced variety programs (a key sign here, given their clashes with Elvis/Morrison/Jagger et al over suggestive behavior), but by taking on the variety shows on their own terms, showing what was and could have been good about them.
In other words, Andre is retelling history with transparent falsehoods, and in doing so, allows us to reclaim it. Transparent falsehoods here being better than the half-truths one sometimes sees in revisionist history because they immediately stave off any criticism of their falsehood and ideological bent by acknowledging it and playing with it, and better than murky full truths by being a better and more understandable story. (By "better," of course, I don't mean more noble but more effective. And if you don't think there's something of an agenda here, well, I wonder what hip-hop you've been listening to.) Telling a plausible untruth that happily admits its artificiality gives us another narrative to choose from, another history to believe in when we're making the new, and in that it's remarkable. What's presented is a past where blacks participated openly in the mainstream, and one of the useful services that provides is to take black music out of the position of being always oppositional--which, let's be honest, is the actual position it finds itself in today, even if it continues to pretend otherwise. If the position of a MC or a R&B or soul singer is always that of being oppressed, either by the culture or by society or love, then it's hard to make music that encompasses the promise of change. Andre's vision--which is not trailblazing so much as being a perfect encapsulation of the tenor of the times--stands out because when most musicians, black or white, engage in the practice of criticism, 99% of the time it takes the form of mere objection or complaint: my life sucks, oppression sucks, the government is unjust, men suck, women suck, and so forth. Partially, I'll happily acknowledge, this is because complaint sounds so goddamn good in pop music: a rocker screaming about something or other is often really enjoyable to listen to, and, honestly, most of us spend a decent portion of our lives pissed off anyway, so we can certainly relate. But what's done far less often, and even less often well, is to express the possible good. "You could be free," for instance, is one of the best and one of the most common but, at this point, one of the least convincing. Andre's works in large part because so much of it is being conveyed wordlessly. The music just makes you want to fucking move, to do something, to dance around and sing and get out there and, I dunno, plant a tree or something. And the video imagines something in a way that is, as I say, not actually true, but possibly true. The vision is wonderful because it is so inclusive: everyone is in on this, everyone could dance, everyone could watch this show and feel some kinship with it.
Andre is here performing one of my favorite artistic/critical tricks: he is taking a joke literally, and what he's getting out of it is magnificent. The joke in question is the one about whiteness meaning power. Of course, it doesn't, any more than cookie = power; the fact that white people have most of the power in the world is simply an accident of history. But I don't think we speak about it that way. We speak of it like this: to be white is to have power, we must end white power, the image of power is an old white man in a business suit. But we speak of it in these terms because to not do so would be both silly and dishonest. Sure, it's an illogical thing, but it's still a true thing, and while there are certainly non-whites with power, that doesn't matter so much for rhetorical purposes. The concentration of money and power in the hands of one particular race, and moreover, one particular country, is monumentally unjust. For most people's purposes, whiteness does equal power--but it's true in the sense that a joke is true. It's honest, but it's not right.
But what Andre does is take it to sort of a logical extreme. What if whiteness' association with power really is this sort of purely accidental thing? It can't just be the skin, since there are many impotent and poor whites. What is it, then? Ah, well: the trappings. The signs and signals. The--maybe-- culture. And if these things are the source of the power, then the power is very easily transferred. Hip-hoppers' bling-bling aesthetic, which reclaims Bentleys and Escalades as emblems of specifically black affluence, don't go far enough: Andre wants to go back and reclaim the history first, take all the symbols that morphed into our modern culture and make them (gulp) multicultural. More accurately, he doesn't want to colonize or imitate high-class culture: he wants to colonize the white middle class, which, of course, blacks have been doing for a while both in reality and in the culture (think the Cosby Show). But Andre takes that joke (middle-class blacks as just like the rest of us) and the joke about whiteness as a sort of secret magical incantation, a ring of power if you will, and rewinds it about 40 years, reclaiming the very image on which today's white middle-class bases its cultural memory and standards.
And ultimately, of course, whiteness becomes an incidental issue to class, as we all knew it would. No one claims that, the characters in, say, Bad Boys are "acting white" because they're acting rich. Same with your standard-issue bling-bling. (There's also the criminal element to it in the Mafia allusions, and criminals have always existed safely outside the mainstream, no matter the race.) But because Andre acts middle-class, it's white. And to me, that's pretty damn interesting.
(Yes, before you suggest it, I am getting Bloom's _Anxiety of Influence_ for xmas. And aren't you proud of me for not using the word "reinscribe" once? I hate that word.)
UPDATE: At Mwanji's request, here is my post about Big Boi's "The Rooster." Incidentally, the top post on his blog right now is a link to a great article about session musicians, and his commentary is real nice.
posted by Mike B. at 4:57 PM
0 comments
Sunday, December 21, 2003
Interesting manifesto.
Like it a lot, and it sums up some of my critical stances pretty well, especially in the value of dialogue and response and all like that. Translate "public space" to politics and you see how all my obsessions circle around and around...
Two points I'd disagree with, personally:
5. We do not reject poetry or art. We know we feel rapture and we know you do too, but we also know that rapture is individual and can't be communicated. Give us something to share, to discuss. Tell us how we might become intoxicated. Or intoxicate us!
Well...I do. Reject poetry and art, that is. I think they suck. Suck a whole lot. But I'm weird.
Regardless of their suckiness or not, I don't think they really live up to the standards being proposed here, since blogopoetics and visuals rarely elicit a response. Luke's poetry--if you want to call it that, which people do, so OK--gets linked to with a "this is great!" but no criticism or comment, unless I'm misrecalling. Sasha's pictures, though very nice, never seem to get publicly commented on at all. What else is there? Marcello's stuff, while certainly creative, is prose, creative nonfiction. Woebot (and TWANBOC before it) posted a lot of pictures, but they weren't originals, if I recall, and none of them generated much debate. Some bloggers don't write very well, but that hardly qualifies as poetry. I'm aware that this is just me being capricious here in part, but at the same time a big problem I have with modern art and poetry is that it seems to close off or severely limit debate. This certainly seems to be the case 'round these parts.
12. We think a meal or a bus ride can be as interesting as a painting or a record.
"...but almost never is," would be what I'd add. Sure, I'd read David Foster Wallace or Chuck Klosterman or Heather Havrilesky talk about buying tomatoes, because they are great writers and have that particular talent for being able to talk about almost anything in an interesting way. And you could certainly have a great, funny anecdote about a bus ride, or something really meaningful and fascinating could have happened to you at a meal. Or the meal itself could be really interesting. But almost definitely not. And hopefully you'll have the sense to know. But if you're unsure--well, just don't. For better or worse, very few people are David Foster Wallace.
I dunno. I tend to think human being as fairly uninteresting as human beings, which is why, for example, reality shows have succeeded by being extremely unrealistic and the best memoirs are the ones with lots of fabrications. (And diary entries get marginally more interesting with a good beat and riff behind them.) If some stranger is interested in your life, well, that probably means you should stop telling everyone about your life and start seeing a therapist and/or personal trainer regularly, because people are generally only interested in fucked-up lives. And regardless, it'd be far more interesting to see you engage with something outside yourself, which is what the bloggers who I read regularly do. (With the exception, of course, of my own personal friends, whose blogs work as convenient alternatives to regular e-mails.)
I guess this is just me being grumpy, but, still, it's something I've felt for rather a while.
posted by Mike B. at 6:33 PM
0 comments
Received this e-mail Friday.
Note the recipients list: a bunch of clearchannel folks and some other radio folks...and, uh, me. Kinda odd.
(decided to delete the full-text version in favor of page flow, but it's available via this link)
posted by Mike B. at 5:19 PM
0 comments
|
|