Archive for the ‘Musical Culture’ Category

#400 – This Is Not a Love Song

Monday, July 5th, 2010

john lydon’s public image, ltd., is neither public, nor an image, nor limited.

Listening to a recent, and quite incongruous, guest disc jockey appearance by John Lydon on NPR’s All Songs Considered, what stuck out the most was that Lydon is so often misinterpreted as a deeply-manipulative artist, as someone who continually toys with the facades of pop culture and celebrity culture.

But maybe it’s the exact opposite. Lydon is just totally himself. There is no public image to him, there’s just him. And this blatant honesty and lack of self-consciousness is quite disconcerting for interviewers and listeners. It’s so disconcerting that it gets misinterpreted as manipulation when it is in fact the exact opposite: pure, unadulterated honesty.

The lack of a filter, the purity of intent, the lack of a screen between his private persona and his public one, is what makes Lydon so scarily wonderful to watch and hear. There is simply no artifice, just sheer expression, which paradoxically makes us defensively long to take cover in the belief that everything is deceptively rotten with Lydon.

Bob Boilen’s interview with guest disc jockey John Lydon.

#397 – Geeking Out

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

two critics on the art of fandom & the politics of geekdom.

Artistry often begins in fandom—as an aspiration, at first, not really to express one’s creative identity but to take on someone else’s. …Real anxiety comes not with influence, but with the imperative to transcend it, which is another part of creative development.

- David Hadju, “Pretending,” on The Beatles: Rock Band & Guitar Hero, The New Republic, 2 December 2009

Whatever the personal roots of Lethem’s compulsions in temperment and trauma, geekdom also responds to a wider history. It is not simply fandom and was not fully possible before the 1970s, the decade in which Lethem grew up. Its scholarly posture awaited the erasure of high/low distinctions and the rise of a popular culture that thought enough of itself to elicit a corresponding critical seriousness. …All of a sudden it was intellectually respectable to spin out theories about Spiderman or I Dream of Jeannie. And not just respectable, but necessary. The ’70s also marked the moment when media culture reaached a kind of saturation point, the age by which we found ourselves, as George W.S. Trow famously put it, within the context of no context. What Warhol intuited and Sontag theorized was now universal—and for children of the ’70s, congenital. All media, all the time: commercials, billboards, boom boxes, Muzak, cable; hooks, jingles, icons, slogans, logos. …Geekdom resists the informational avalanche through the impossible strategy of seeking to master it—hence both its theoretical drive and the infinitude of its quest.

— William Deresiewicz, “A Geek Grows in Brooklyn,” on the novel Chronic City by Jonathan Lethem, The New Republic, 21 October 2009

Hadju, adolescent of the 1960s, and still something of a modernist, argues that fandom arises out of imitation—the anxiety of influence comes from the next step: trying to become yourself.

Deresiewicz, child of the 1970s, and fully born into the postmodern experience, expresses an entirely different worry: no more is the issue to become yourself in the shadow of heroes, but rather simply to survive the onslaught of information in the first place.

This is not an anxiety of influence, but rather an anxiety of lack of influence. The goal is not originality, but mastery of lost originals. One geeks out not to transform oneself, but to find refuge in what already exists.

#392 – I’ll Sing the Song When You’re Gone

Monday, May 31st, 2010

sam amidon’s digital folklorica.

The opening chord sequence of “Sugar Baby,” the first song on Sam Amidon’s album of traditional American folk songs, All Is Well, announces that this record is up to something other than merely replicating Appalachian tunes. No Songcatcher here. Instead, the chord’s suspended bass notes and more darkly-hued, cosmopolitan, almost bossa nova-ish harmonies place the listener one step removed from the original setting, as if we were listening to coal-streaked, boney fingers frailing silver-banjo strings while sitting in a space-age bachelor pad (or better said a Dwell magazine loft studio in Williamsburg, Brooklyn) instead of on a mountain cabin porch.

That is to say, the music acknowledges, even celebrates its inauthenticity. But it does so by sonically signaling a relocation and displacement of one era’s folk music to another context. The old folk lyrics are so capacious, of course, that they make this transit well. Their allegorical dimensions only widen and encompass more in the new setting. No sepia tones in this digital photo album: place names and old, weird Americana jump into the present, pertinent and resonant.

On All Is Well all is not. Horns, strings, and other orchestral textures coat the raw songs in a kind of eerie, haunted soundscape. Reverb and multilayered vocals add to the feeling of hearing music once removed. Moreover, Amidon sings the songs in a kind of flat, affectless, hypnotized daze—it’s a voice that ventriloquizes old mountain singing, but with a hint of self-consciousness about the imitating. Amidon doesn’t want to become a mountain singer himself, but rather, in his timbre and tone, he seems to connect his own deep listening to mountain music to the production of meaning and feeling in the contemporary, sleek, synthesized city. He’s a new kind of New Lost City Rambler.

In one sense, the formula is simpler than all this: Amidon’s album merely sounds like traditional American folk music covered by Sufjan Stevens. But as the music washes over you, there is the feeling that there is more here than meets the ear. Amidon does not tap into the wellspring of American folk music itself, but rather, more intriguingly, spins his listener around on the whirlpool of figuring out exactly what makes folk music folk.

We can always rely on Louis Armstrong’s famous bit of philosophizing on this topic: “All music is folk music—I never heard no horse sing a song.” True enough. But then maybe all music needs to be heard by someone else besides the singer in order to count as music. Which is to say that Amidon’s album connects to a long-running debate about folk music.

The question goes as follows: are vernacular sounds always-already folk music or do they only acquire folkiness after being assigned the category by some outside force, usually a representative of some higher, more supposedly modernized socio-economic class?

The first position imagines that music counts as folk for insiders who may not have even heard of that label. From this perspective, if folk music is made in the forest, and no one is there to hear it except for a small, remote, closed-circle of forest dwellers, then it’s still folk music for this special group of people known as the folk, no matter how they themselves might understand the music.

The second position, by contrast, locates the authenticity of folk music in the ear of the beholder, in this case the outsider, the culture broker, the recorder and adjudicator from on high, who doles out the label of folk where he or she sees fit. From this perspective, folk music and musicians are only created from without. Reception is all. Listening is what imbues music with its folkiness. If it’s played in the forest, and no one from outside overhears it, then it can’t become folk. Musical sound must become reified—heard and situated (and in the process inevitably recast) by an external force—in order to become suffused with the magic of folk’s spell of authenticity.

What is intriguing about Amidon’s album is that it seems to defy these two positions, or rather, it combines them. There are times when the music gets a bit boring and rote—it’s almost too mellow and reserved—but on songs such as “Sugar Daddy,” “Saro,” “Little Satchel,” and “O Death,” the new sonic setting makes the music at once heard at a distance and heard with an immersive, almost overwhelming immediacy. Your perspective, far away, close up, see saws.

For a moment you can’t tell the folk forest from the digital trees, and you get lost where once you were found, and found where once you were lost.

Listen to Sam Amidon’s All Is Well.

#387 – If You’re Feeling Sinister

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

indie-pop at nordstrom.

Play me a song to set me free.

- Belle & Sebastian, “Stars of Track and Field”

My tri-annual desperate trip to the mall for something resembling respectable clothing last weekend took me to the men’s clothing department at Nordstrom, where, piped out of the sound system, came the strains of Belle & Sebastian. One of the songs off of If You’re Feeling Sinister. Which brought me back to one of the Scottish band’s first U.S. gigs at Angel Orensanz Foundation in New York City, in 1997.

Dude, I was there! I am authentic indie-rocker—hear me whimper! Okay, just kidding. Nonetheless, it was still something of a shock—a small one but it registered—that this music, at first celebrated by a select few for its obscurity, would travel from a mysterious show on the Lower East Side to the anonymous sales rack of a suburban Chicago mall.

And yet, of course, it’s no surprise at all. Is this not the fate of all tuneful indie-pop? Or at least of the stuff valued at first for its non-mainstream sound and style. Pure easy listening, settle down.

The homogenization and incorporation of this music is to be expected. What was more odd was that the song still carried something else besides its utter, merciless cooptation.

This muzak contained a message in a bottle. It was labeled and sold, but not entirely watered down.

Of course, perhaps this is exactly what it was meant to sell: the sound of not being in a mall in suburban Chicago, even as one was there; the sound of pretending not to be part of the problem even as one is part of the problem. Credit card whipped through their slots, clothes made in god-knows-what exploitative working conditions folded neatly in a bag and hidden away. Ohh! Get me away from here, I’m dying.

Yet, there was something in hearing Belle & Sebastian among the natty manikins and Joseph Abbouds that defied even this clever bait-and-switch of hip consumerism. There was a desire that the song still carried despite its deployment to distract.

This struck me as something miraculous. The song communicated the musical traces of a moment preserved: the sound of people assembled in communal creativity and human connection; the excitement of making and hearing something that spoke to deeper urges for human connection even as it had been commodified and trivialized.

The song hand-signaled within its mass-distributed notes. It reminded me that even as music gets lost in the mall, it keeps something of its power. The ends of music’s production are not entirely vanquished by the means of its consumption.

#382 – Crocus Behometh Strikes Again

Friday, April 16th, 2010

America’s “crank prophet” puts the pere ubu into ubu roi.

Andrew Hultkrans has a wonderful review of Pere Ubu henchman David Thomas‘s latest mad work of punk-theater, Bring Me the Head of Ubu Roi.

Favorite line:

Thinner than in the old days, though still physically imposing, he resembled Rush Limbaugh as a homeless flasher.

There is so much going on in that comparison I don’t know where to start! But forget about starting, I’m glad to follow Hultrans as he follows Thomas, even if they might be taking us off a cliff. Such pratfalls and swan dives have always been there when listening in to David Thomas’s brilliant, disturbing rants and Pere Ubu’s careening mutant-rock.

#381 – Subterranean Academic Conference Blues

Monday, April 12th, 2010

johnny’s in the classroom, delivering a power point…

From IASPM-US Conference 2010, New Orleans.

#380 – Black & Blue, Part Two

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

trying to get deep down in this connection: the blues as “vertical sound in a horizontal world.”

Allen Lowe offers the tantalizing notion that the blues is a “vertical sound in a horizontal world.” This reminded me of a comment the saxophonist David S. Ware once said. I’m paraphrasing here, but he called his sound vertical too, and also remarked that he was interested in its velocity. I hadn’t the foggiest idea what they meant at the time, but Lowe’s notion of the blues as “vertical” made me think about what what Ware meant. Or maybe not what he meant, exactly, but what I might take to be the meaning of what he meant.

To say that the blues is a “vertical sound in a horizontal world” is to articulate the ways that this musical form took shape on an oppressive, insanely-constraining, terrorizing plane of social regulation—Jim Crow—as a means of both descending and transcending.

The blues traversed the impossible conditions of Jim Crow by crossing the wires of the sacred and the profane. It became a temporary lifeline out of Jim Crow, a kind of musical terraplane with wings, fueled by sounds such as a rising, moaning breath or the bottle-necked energies of a guitar-string squeeze. At the same time, it became a rope for sinking down, down, down to the lower frequencies, where stark inhumanity had to be met by the search for a wellspring of life worth living.

The blues allowed one to ascend to the celestial or dive into the disturbing muck and funk of life. It became a column of air between pleasures and pains, joys and sorrows, purity and impurity, dangers and liberations, frustration and consolation, restlessness and release.

This notion of the blues as a “vertical sound in a horizontal world” allows us to hear the music as a means of transport: a ride up to an overview or a slide down into the subterfuge—and as a musical go-between between the two.

The blues was a double helix. The blues was a vector.

#379 – Black & Blue

Monday, April 5th, 2010

allen lowe’s madly-intriguing preview of an upcoming talk: the blues as “a vertical sound in a horizontal world.”

When I interviewed Wynton Marsalis not too long ago I asked him about his recent negative comparison of hip hop to old time minstrelsy – isn”t that the point, I said, for artists to take control of the means of oppression, to make it their own through manipulation of stereotypes in their own favor? Think Fats Waller, think Louis Armstrong…

He informed me in no uncertain terms that minstrelsy was nothing but an instrument of racial, social, and political degradation; and that I was just an ignorant academic, cloistered in my own narrow (white?) world. The blues, he said, was everything, minstrelsy nothing. And Louis Armstrong was god’s creation through the medium of the blues.

This led me to thinking: Was Armstrong really a great blues player? Was Marsalis really a blues player? Do jazz musicians know anything about the blues? Or do they proclaim their love for something that, in their hands, remains a shadow of its former self?

And I concluded: Louis Armstrong’s was a minstrel soul. But the blues is a haunt. Sometimes it comes in the form of reality. Sometimes in the form of fantasy. If you love it you accept it for what it is (not what you want it to be): part minstrel creation, part deep Delta, part pop, part everything else out of the genius of African American creations: a vertical sound in a horizontal world, a piece of consciousness as racially skewed as the rest of America.

Allen Lowe, “Looking at Down from Up: Blues from Blackface to Whiteface (or: All the Blues You Could Play By Now if Stanley Crouch was Your Uncle),” description of upcoming talk at EMP 2010 Pop Conference

Allen Lowe’s website.

Continued: Culture Rover #380: Black & Blue, Part Two.

#369 – Nonsense and Sensibility

Monday, March 1st, 2010

hearing the seriousness in the silliness of they might be giants.

Person man, person man / Hit on the head with a frying pan / Lives his life in a garbage can / Person man / Is he depressed or is he a mess? / Does he feel totally worthless? / Who came up with person man? / Degraded man, person man – They Might Be Giants, “Particle Man”

At first, it all sounds like so much silliness that you want to tag all the music as novelty songs. They Might Be Giants seem to amount to nothing more than silly stoner-nerd fantasies, art-school concepts gone too cute, lyrical gimmicks and goofy Beatleseque musical quotations that float by harmlessly but slowly start to annoy. We all live in a yellow polka dot bikini, etc.

But re-listening to the songs of They Might Be Giants reminded me that there’s much more to their music than just cotton-candy fluff. What’s most intriguing about the duo of two Johns—Flansburgh and Linnell—is that it achieves a tone that mingles silliness and seriousness in a peculiar arrangement.

Two Johns: Flansburgh and Linnell of They Might Be Giants

The absurdist lyrics of songs such as “Particle Man,” “Doctor Worm,” and “I Palindrome I” are like deadpan jokes. You start to laugh, but the more you listen, the less funny they become, the more they become tales about feelings of sadness, shame, guilt, revenge, bitterness, and other emotions one would never expect to lurk in silly sounds. These are comics who wrap bitter truths inside gaffaws. Theirs are truly punch lines.

The songs of They Might Be Giants lead to unexpected comparisons. I think of the lyrics of songs such as “Smells Like Teen Spirit,” which also mingle the silly with the serious. This music draws blood from nursery rhymes, offers a sensibility rendered from nonsense. Like Nirvana, They Might Be Giants let us smell the stink beneath the underarm deodorant, show us how power lurks in playfulness, and shrink-wrap the void into the details of even the most vacuous trash of contemporary lives.

#358 – Hope I Get Old Before I Die

Saturday, January 23rd, 2010

from mockumentary to best rockumentary ever: young@heart.

For the comic perspective, which sees us all as ineluctably enmeshed in history, ultimately subsumes the revolutionary utopian perspective simply by locating it in the ebb and flow of history’s tides. After all, tomorrow never knows. …It remembers. – Nick Bromell

The documentary Young@Heart seems to be about old age, but as the film unfolds, it turns out that it is really about rock ‘n’ roll.

At first, you think the film is a gag. Is it mocking these retirees who dare to sing rock songs and other pop hits? It sure seems like it when director Walker George intersperses silly MTV-style videos of the chorus members in between his cinéma vérité.

But slowly, you start to realize that a deeper, more substantive comedy is at work in this film as it moves between the brink of death and the absurdity of life.

The film begins to display precisely the comedic perspective that Nick Bromell argues rock music acquired in the 1950s and 60s. Bromell contends that rock became the crucial cultural medium in which baby boomers developed a particular structure of feeling: an adolescent “double consciousness” that drew upon African-American expressive traditions to transform alienation into a deeper understanding of history and struggle. Rock, for Bromell, was not only about the tragically-messianic utopianism of 60s anti-authoritarianism, but also about a more profound “comic vision of reconciliation.”

Recovering his memories of coming of age to the sounds of Elvis, the Beatles, Dylan, and the whole rock tradition, Bromell writes about how the music awakened a consciousness of time, mortality, fluidity, and (with a nod to William James) all the implications of lifting the veil on the radically destabilizing pluralism of human experience.

From a later moment in the life cycle, trying to remember the 60s and why they were important in ways that are so easy to forget, Bromell writes that, “It is as if these songs’ own consciousness of the brevity of their vision and the futility of adolescence created a genie who could fly forward through time and greet me when I arrived here.” The music in Young@Heart shows how the awareness of “brevity” and “futility” that rock revealed to Bromell can even reappear later in life than middle age. In this case, it reappears for retirees who are older than the baby boomers themselves.

Reinvigorating what Lawrence Grossberg has called the rock formation when they sing everything from the Rolling Stones to James Brown to the Ramones to Cold Play to Sonic Youth, the members of this retiree chorus reverse the famous dictum from the Who: to rock is to in fact hoping to get old before you die. But you can only do this by embracing an adolescent defiance that, as Bromell contends, is busy being born precisely from the realization that it will fade, like the last notes of a song, into the flow of history itself.