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I believe
twas Lance -- or Justin, or Chris -- who told
Rolling Stone: "Were out to have another
great album. Thats our goal. We dont determine
album sales; people do. We determine how good the record
is." The time was right before *NSyncs late-summer
release of Celebrity, which would go on to top the Billboard
200 but more importantly provide a really good excuse
for the boy band to tour (read: cash in; record sales
see that the label is taken care of first). To the gentleboys
of *NSync, bubblegum has become both disease and cure
-- finding them cold representin either the grotesque
faces of an industry that too closely resembles an old-boy
network or the American Dream realized. Danceable beats,
banal (but coherent) lyrical content, band members
faces on lunchboxes. A scene replayed a million times
over by as many players since Presley. Its okay
to think *NSync are hacks. In their first Celebrity
single, "Pop," the boys go on the defensive,
explaining away their appeal in beats per measure, and
its you fault if you dont "get"
it. And it is. But an explanation no listener ever really
asked for? The impression is this: *NSync revel in their
reticence to concede to fames treasures as if
they were impossibly cultish because Big Time cant
be "cool" -- there, theyve made an admittance.
Friendly beats, clean-living, cookies and cake! *NSync
seek to renegotiate the deal they signed with the devil.
Do *NSync know something we dont? Is bubblegum
on the wane? Should Max Martin be filing coffee shop
counter-people applications? The Celebrity sound doesnt
drop any hints, it sticks mainly (theres that
word again) to the stuff of *NSync past, but theres
definitely a type of doe-eyed defiance that crops up
here and there. In sonic puffery, which may no doubt
move your toes to a-tappin, the boys-II-men of
*NSync have taken something as heavy-duty as the essence
of pop appeal going back to Jolson and repackaged it
as a flashy advert for Five Guys Named Justin. The sound,
melody and lyric and rhythm, is nearly absolute. Warm.
Comforting. Something new entirely. A mushy, spirited
"why-cant-we-all-just-get-along" composed
of the posturings of conservative, bastard genius.
Is
bubblegum a response to what music lovers want or a
product, duly shrinkwrapped and creatively marketed,
forced down music lovers throats? There probably
isnt a straight-up "answer" but nothing
other than this old question creates a more complex,
stunning picture of what it means being artist/businessman/music
fan at the start of the third millennium. Into the mix:
Brains, boobs, harmonies, dissonances, honest Abes,
jackasses. A billion variables. The culture takes the
shape of a 50-foot-tall multi-headed accountant composed
of sweat and shit and bad suspenders and a CPU that
just wont give up. And onward it cabbage-patches.
Scratching, cross-fading. Tuning the Les Paul. The crescendo.
The intro; rehearsed, multi-tracked and remixed. The
ruling class is the system itself -- or so it seems;
nothings that absolute or to be taken as gospel.
A mélange of pixilated images and roadies and
noises coalesces into something resembling what Frankfurt
(Old-) Schoolers like to call the "Culture Industry."
Capitalism shaping itself in its own reflection. Neat-o,
huh?
Well,
take a Super Bowl halftime show and run it on a loop.
Forget the score. Were selling re-memories here.
The industry as county-fair barker. Tons of good-looking,
quasi-talented folk in the rings. Flat as cardboard
cut-outs, but we got the MTV hook-up anyway. They look
real there. Recording our gasps and boners and booty
drops in seven-second delay; packaged and stuck on shelves
in polycarbonate form. Pop -- music -- just cant
be. We need to enable the sizzle. Smiling. Elbowing
through for a poster. Dancing. Jerking off secretly
when we get home or under the blanket in the living
room around company. The ritual is performance art itself.
Harakiri in Times Square at the stroke (har, har) of
midnight. See it on the Net. Tune in, tune out:
The explosions come pre-packaged for us. Virgin Megastore
is having a sale on remorse and we cant seem to
shake the feeling that theres more to All This
than a groovy Lexus sedan and tits on TV. So lets
reduce it. "Record companies have fooled everyone
into believing that nothing is important except fluff,"
goes Chris Robinson of the Black Crowes to Blender,
"And I hate them for that." But the poor (e.g.
the Black Crowes) and their supporters are, to me, just
dandy in their opposition. "Compassion easily becomes
a selfish pleasure fostering self-righteousness. It
requires a constant supply of the poor and the weak,
instead of encouraging the healthful and self-reliant":
Nietzsche. (And all this crap about authenticity, I
dont buy it; anyone who thinks biography presupposes
good taste should shovel his own way back into his cave.)
Primetime is all the time. Rock and roll is everyones
dream. Or nightmare. It just depends.
The
period to return to for some type of answer may be the
time after Presley and Little Richard and before the
British invasion, somewhere around the late-1950s, early-1960s.
Record labels were pissed that they hadnt begun
producing and distributing what were then known as "race"
records, basically R&B by black musicians; because
these gems were what white kids were really into. The
radio was full of utterly innocuous stuff: Teen idols
(playing sexuality close to the vest -- literally!),
girl groups and some new hybrid of Caribbean folk star
-- basically, song interpreters, making pop out of the
handiwork of professional songwriters ensconced in Manhattan
office towers. Radio was under the thumb of the record
labels and the labels were not going to let "race"
records, of which labels had no vested interest remember,
dominate the airwaves; so they kept the pap pouring
out. Its all a control issue, and there was no
doubt that the relationship between record labels and
radio was corrupt as hell. Then The Beatles first exploded
in Britain, then here, and industry once again reverted
to something resembling a hospitable working environment
before again turning into something of a totalitarian
state then back again ad infinitum. But thats
another story. The willingness and ability of corporations
to exert influence on popular taste has a precedent.
Fast-forward
50 years. Scribble up the palimpsest. Pastiche culture
needs to be figured in, somewhere. Good ole tradition
cant satisfy this hunger. Instantaneous culture.
Tocqueville still rings true: "Neither men of great
learning more extremely ignorant communities are to
be met with; genius becomes more rare, information more
diffused. There is less perfection but more abundance
in all the productions of the arts." And Adorno
called us pop music lovers, "insects."
Were
worse for wear.
This
writing comes to you from a music lover and fellow traveler
who has just recorded an EP (for the drawer) and generally
spends his days talking music over e-mail with really
smart people whose jobs involve listening to and writing
about ungodly amounts of music. One thing you learn
from all this jawing is that tastes change. The song
remains the same but the landscape underfoot morphs.
This is a phenomenon I like to call, "Holy Shit:
New Shit Amazes Me Every Day." Am I the only one?
Hardly. Theres Rhino records, for one. And oldies
radio, another. And no one can generate enough money
to buy every great CD out there. And a sort of sadness
sets in. But at the moment you realize youre part
of the game you freak. You know in your heart its
all about the music, dog. Fuck them trends (though even
you have to admit turning everyone on at the record
store where you work to Hemispheres was a big thrill;
every other record store was spinning Os Mutantes or
Radiohead. But you guys were blasting Rush! How counter-cool
cool is that?!?). Then thats it. Embracing patronage
as integral to artistry has left us only blissfully
ignorant. Were too small to matter. Each of us.
But
what about the jazz quartet down the street that refuses
to be recorded and has rejected repeated offers from
Blue Note? Or the pop-star-to-be who on the eve of his
major label debut decided to become a lounge singer,
just to piss everyone off? Sorry but doesnt count.
Simon Frith: If the media doesnt report on it,
it doesnt exist. To subvert power you have to
be powerful and to be powerful you have to have played
the game. You can go back to "art for arts
sake," which though popular around the end of the
19th century probably has its roots in Gautier 50 years
earlier, but what youre really talking about now
is "sacred art for sacred arts sake."
Radiohead and its nonsense records, Kid A and Amnesiac,
come to mind. Rolling Stone: Theyre great; theyve
given the industry the finger. Q: Publicity stunt. Us
(as in "We, the People," not Jan Wenners
other magazine): Damned if they do, damned if they dont.
The stupidest person listens to more than 30 seconds
of Metal Machine Musicbefore ripping it off the turntable
and flinging against the wall. But we needed that, though,
sure; it flogs sense into the philistine. Liberal apologists
like to call that shit GOD. Whos in the drivers
seat? Shit, whats being driven? Vulgar Marxists
even disdain the kind of "political pop" bands
like Public Enemy and Rage Against The Machine traffic
in, calling making music a petit bourgeois pursuit;
Why are these young people tinkering around with guitars,
vulgar Marxists say, when they can be out leading the
local union in a march? Then the counterpunch: But RATM
is using the machine to turn the machine on its head.
Oh, really? So thats why so many record label
execs have been seen eating box lunches. Right. Right
. . .
Now
when Bruce Springsteen makes a rap album and basically
gives it away for a nickel, Ill applaud like a
fucking idiot.
From
left field: The Culture Industry works to keep us, the
people, down, man! The code words the rappers and Britney
drop in their songs. The symbols. Shit doesnt
allow us to communicate. Really. That, and its
impossible to talk over the Notorious B.I.G. blaring
from the tricked-out Escalade out front. The drum loop
repeats and repeats and the man in the front seat claims
his African roots move him to viscerally enjoy the repetition
of the beats and you just gotta shake your head and
shake it all off. Its not his fault, its
not his fault. And its not Biggies fault,
either. But, oh, well: Is Britney the choice of a new
generation? Or is Christina just the real thing? (Tastes
great! Less filling!) At least Super Bowl watchers can
empathize with the buds on TV, sipping Bud ("True").
Who relates to Britney and her bio-power besides other
super pin-ups and really delusional womenchilds? Tell
the left its not a conspiracy theory, though,
bro. Springsteen has as much power as EMI, if not more.
Check the switch: Consumers rule, as consumers. Britney
can drop code words, for "sex" and "romance"
and whatever else she talks about; she can shake it
and sell it. But whats it worth? A bunch of hip
patois and false representations on MTV shows? I cant
find one honest idea anywhere in there. And here I am
shaking my ass like everyone else -- but, just, not
as enthusiastically. Leaves me quick not to throw my
allegiances behind any "product," big-tittied
or not (though my friends and I, when younger, would
fight over the heavy-metal guitarists we thought ruled
best; still, theres something more than a degree
of symbolism involved in that. It was the music that
riled us, man!).
Britneys
new video for the song, "Im a Slave 4 U,"
is hot! In it, shes soaking wet, covered in smudge
marks, barely dressed and whispering shit like "I
really wanna do what you want me to" while slinking
all over the screen. Its like some other Britney
videos but darker; the mood hovers around that warehouse-chic
aesthetic. Pop music is one tough workout, Brit and
her boys would have you believe. The vids essence
revolves (expectedly) around the blondey -- shes
in every frame, every second -- though the song itself,
produced by the Neptunes, surprisingly understates the
glamour gals role. She doesnt "oh,
baby, baby"; doesnt dictate ("STOP!");
instead, lets the minimalist vibe carry her along. In
other words, its all very un-Britney. Reminds
one of when Madonna became a woman, lo these 15 years
ago. So is legitimacy as easy as a push-up bra and some
fake dirt? Eh, no -- unless the musics good. In
this case, it is. The future? Too early to tell, though
chances are slim therell be any. "Lady Marmalade"
put Christina over the top; Britneys less-attractive,
more-moody younger sister couldnt have stagecrafted
a better escape into adulthood than that. The tightrope
Britneys walking is flimsy, the wind is unforgiving.
Theres Frankie Lymon down below: A star by 13,
singing lead on "Why Do Fools Fall in Love,"
causing a stink. He dropped his Teenagers and went solo.
His voice grew deeper, with age. Dust accumulated on
his new 78s. He died at 25, a heroin O.D., destitute.
Its not a cautionary tale just a way of stringing
you along. Deal with it.
Because
we think we know what we want, but do we really? Isnt
everything just programmed into us from birth in a consumerist
society? So that we only think we know what we want
(to listen to, to eat, to wear, to vote for)? Will the
new war give us some direction other than towards the
comfort of being a happy, satisfied customer? Will the
wheels of fashion slow down for only a little while?
Will power brokers stave off obsolescence for us so
that we can make do with the pop music and designer
jeans we have now? Im really broke, anyway. Severance
is nearing its end.
Another
bomb to drop is wondering how we got this way in the
first place. My guess: suburbia. Yup. Separated us,
demoralized us (unwittingly), decentralized us, miseducated
us. Commercials, commercial music, useless "needs"
then took over, quieting us. And big business co-opted
our discussions on race, our voting booths and, especially,
our tastes. Things that used to mean a lot to us dont
really anymore. But why fight it? Well, why resist being
dominated? Some dont. Their only voices are as
consumers, sure -- they can choose not to buy or buy
something else -- but, hey, at least thats something.
Were too good at watching. "Hey, hon. There
goes GE gobbling up NBC. Oh, yeah. Thats Ronny
Reagan prodding them along. Isnt he cute?!"
The interests grow more narrow and more narrow. We look
for something to read but only find . . . MORE advertorial.
The consumer rags are all mute about how we, da people,
fucking subsidize ads (companies, except the sins, write
em off) in paying higher prices at the counter.
And the divide between the haves and have-nots gets
wider. Dirtier.
The
truth is in the telling, though. Mass culture cant
be everywhere at once, in the same circumstances and
at the same time. Truth was Foucaults dispositif.
And thats why we have pirate radio and tracking
music. And no ones saying its all the medias
fault. No, no, no. Theres enough blame to go around:
Schools; churches; families; offices. Internet Web zines.
A
Google search retrieves nearly a hundred music, music-related
magazines. All devoted to naming the unnamed (and you
cant "un-peach" the peaches). You wouldnt
know Lou Reed thought only morons digested Metal Music
Machine unless you had some subscription to some upstanding
mag, anyway. The impact on what you hear, though: T-Model
Fords predilection for knife-fighting might make
you more interested/bored by his music but is it for
the musics sake that youve become aware
of what T-Model does during off-hours or yours? (You
probably stare at car wrecks, too, huh?) Then again,
maybe Lou Reed doesnt know what the hell hes
talking about, even though its his project being
discussed. The only shit I trust coming from a musicians
mouth is when it concerns what color guitar he plays.
Words, words, words. Musics infinite qualities
condensed into quips and asides. The hypnotizing crackle
of an album at the end of its duration. Images flood
the brain: Signpost, passing, going off cliff. Your
focus drifts. The only available language is feedback.
You make the best of it, tongue firmly planted in cheek.
The
music is the industry and vice-versa. Neither is independent
of the other. They grew up together. They shall grow
old together.
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