STEVE ALBINI

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BhD

m0stly clean (Slowsquatch), Thursday, 9 November 2023 21:47 (six months ago) link

Psychic... Powerless... Another Man's SAT

Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Thursday, 9 November 2023 21:50 (six months ago) link

that BH section of the article is like um, dirtbag rocknroll Blood Meridian. i never messed with BH they didn't seem like they were for me maybe i should investigate

i saw rick moody and was "no way THAT rick moody"? ha i lived through his ice storm and he name checks my mom's 70s store in it, freaked out my 1993 brain

digital chirping and whirring (Hunt3r), Wednesday, 15 November 2023 14:31 (six months ago) link

one month passes...

As part of the annual WPRB Christmas charity drive, Neal Markowski recorded a four-track EP of Christmas-themed Big Black covers that are brilliant and hilarious. Proceeds go to the One Tail at a Time Pet Mutual Relief Fund, a charity that helps people out with pet-related expenses.

Holiday Cheer Where You Need It

https://f4.bcbits.com/img/a3520026086_16.jpg

Tahuti Watches L&O:SVU Reruns Without His Ape (unperson), Monday, 25 December 2023 15:43 (five months ago) link

Great stuff

nxd, Monday, 25 December 2023 19:32 (five months ago) link

christmas tree around
that's something to do

mookieproof, Monday, 25 December 2023 23:27 (five months ago) link

See, see, see I’m a drummer boy. I kill what I eat.

Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Monday, 25 December 2023 23:52 (five months ago) link

Pretty good Liz Phair zinger from a 1994 Guitar World interview:

GW: Producer Steve Albini seems to be conducting an inquisition, dissing first Nirvana, and Courtney Love, then your friends in Urge, and now he calls you a “slut”. Any comments?

PHAIR: Oh, what does it matter? Supposedly he has some kind of metal plate in his shin, and one of these days…

GW: The electromagnetic principle?

PHAIR: Yeah, I keep waiting for him to attract lightning or something.

Wooly Bully (2005 Remaster) (morrisp), Sunday, 7 January 2024 01:37 (four months ago) link

and now he calls you a “slut”

ilm hero steve albini

Paul Ponzi, Sunday, 7 January 2024 02:09 (four months ago) link

Referring to this letter I imagine

https://chicagoreader.com/news-politics/three-pandering-sluts-and-their-music-press-stooge/

Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Sunday, 7 January 2024 02:18 (four months ago) link

well actually he is only using slut metaphorically to refer to the selling out of the indie scene so it's not misogyny is an actual argument I have seen people make online

I hope he dies soon

Left, Sunday, 7 January 2024 02:22 (four months ago) link

He seems like an alright guy these days and I can forgive his past mistakes as he seems apologetic for most of it — plenty of people were edgelords in the 90s and 00s (go back and look at some of the early posts on this very message board for easily obtained evidence) and at least he owns up to it instead of pretending it never happened. Also, he does indeed use “slut” to describe Liz Phair, Smashing Pumpkins, and Urge Overkill simultaneously in the sense that that they brazenly commercialize their music in order to sell records. Sure, that usage still might not fly today but it’s also not what might get implied out of context.

Slim is an Alien, Sunday, 7 January 2024 04:07 (four months ago) link

Well he sneers that Phair is “more talked about than heard” (as opposed to, what, Big Black?) – so I guess she can’t win if it’s bad she also tries to sell records(?)

Anyway, Wyman (in the column he’s responding to) writes:

Few would question what I guess would be called the artistic integrity of any of these acts: yet they’ve avoided (Phair), criticized (Pumpkins), or loudly abandoned (Urge) the harshness, vontrariness, and machismo of the underground in favor of a professed desire to sell records.


– and so Albini responds by very directly “questioning” their artistic integrity, in a show of underground-machismo posturing, which I guess is an impressive upping of the ante (hey, he’d appreciate that metaphor, right?).

Wooly Bully (2005 Remaster) (morrisp), Sunday, 7 January 2024 04:25 (four months ago) link

And y'know, I can get that the Pumpkins may not have been his bag, but he can't deny that the band and Vig put a hella lotta work into an album that was meant to express something personal (to Corgan) and connect w/people... you'd think he would at least respect that(?) And even if he thinks Phair is "a fucking chore to listen to," isn't she a genuinely "independent" artist expressing herself in a unique way? (I have no idea what "a persona completely unrooted in substance" means.)

It really feels like it's all about aesthetics to him. Like, it's just b/c they're not loud & abrasive(?)

Wooly Bully (2005 Remaster) (morrisp), Sunday, 7 January 2024 04:32 (four months ago) link

As a side note, it's kinda funny to compare what Corgan said the same year – "People don't fall in love to Pavement... they put on Smashing Pumpkins or Hole or Nirvana, because these bands actually mean something to them" – with Albini dismissing the Pumpkins as "stylistically appropriate for the current college party scene, but ultimately insignificant." It's like this recursive pit of "authenticity"-posturing.

Wooly Bully (2005 Remaster) (morrisp), Sunday, 7 January 2024 04:44 (four months ago) link

That posturing was everywhere in those days and it suuuuuucked

Muad'Doob (Moodles), Sunday, 7 January 2024 05:05 (four months ago) link

replaced by “identity” posturing. harder to fake (?), still unreliable, still annoying.

a single gunshot and polite applause (Hunt3r), Sunday, 7 January 2024 13:02 (four months ago) link

For anyone curious, here's Wyman's belated 2013 follow-up to that whole brouhaha:

https://music.newcity.com/2016/03/31/liz-phair-steve-albini-me-the-true-story-of-1993-the-greatest-goddamn-year-in-chicago-rock-history/

Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 7 January 2024 13:11 (four months ago) link

In January 1994 Liz Phair is already accused of "commercializing" her music?

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 7 January 2024 13:23 (four months ago) link

It was a different time, lol. I actually remember all that stuff really well, since it was my first year here. It was the peak of "sell out" snobbery. (Which I'm going to posit ended in 2001, after Jonathan Franzen refused to promote "The Corrections" on Oprah.)

Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 7 January 2024 13:53 (four months ago) link

the thing to remember is how much many of us really hated that music that seemed real great to everybody else, esp. Urge & the Pumpkins. I still hate that music! Viscerally! when people say eg

the band and Vig put a hella lotta work into an album that was meant to express something personal (to Corgan) and connect w/people

like, ok, but to me that music is utterly dire, just the worst shit in the world. awful -- and it's what we get when the underground surfaces -- that, or, even worse, Urge? for people who'd been digging a pretty killer Chicago scene, that sucked, and that was I think the crux of SA's letter to Wyman: "Artists who survive on hype are often critic’s pets. They don’t, however, make timeless, classic music that survives trends and inspires generations of fans and other artists. There are artists in Chicago doing just that, but you don’t write about them. You save your zeal instead for this year’s promo fixtures." There was a lot of interesting shit goin on in Chicago, but the people who got paid...were BC & Nash Kato. Awful! His dismissal of Phair I think is blinkered by the hype, which was pretty pitched, although I knew a lot of people who thought the Girly-Sound tapes were great and the stuff she did with that material was dull. But Urge Overkill and the Smashing Pumpkins, hating on them is God's work, they're still the worst

J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Sunday, 7 January 2024 15:05 (four months ago) link

something about new left radicalism disintegrating into various isolated local fiefdoms more concerned with policing themselves than in social transformation, and the attendant values into empty and arbitrary signifiers of taste and power and identity and belonging and exclusion

and then I guess something about the final victory of neoliberalism in sweeping all that away too and the associated economic precarity making all this integrity posturing look like the sort of elite indulgence which was probably always a big part of it anyway

Left, Sunday, 7 January 2024 15:10 (four months ago) link

idk enough about those bands and their music to hate or defend them but albini's own projects are some really dire colourless shit which I predict will continue not to connect with people in the way that phair's music will (I have soured on her personally lately for a few reasons but her work will continue to be generative and albini will only ever come off worse in spite of his deathbed conversions)

Left, Sunday, 7 January 2024 15:16 (four months ago) link

For anyone curious, here's Wyman's belated 2013 follow-up to that whole brouhaha:

Josh, thanks for this link, that was really interesting to read.

Wooly Bully (2005 Remaster) (morrisp), Sunday, 7 January 2024 15:29 (four months ago) link

I'm a bit more pleased this kind of policing is having a semi-revival (in the form of a suspiciousness of "industry plants" or whatever), and I'd argue rather necessary but it's really weird that re: albini vs urge, it's rarely brought up that they used to be roommates (who did dire colorless shit together)!

Philip Nunez, Sunday, 7 January 2024 15:35 (four months ago) link

for people who'd been digging a pretty killer Chicago scene, that sucked, and that was I think the crux of SA's letter to Wyman: "Artists who survive on hype are often critic’s pets. They don’t, however, make timeless, classic music that survives trends and inspires generations of fans and other artists. There are artists in Chicago doing just that, but you don’t write about them.

JCLC – Wyman’s argument in that long piece is that he wrote about such artists constantly, and Albini was attacking a strawman by claiming he was hyping up bands like the Pumpkins (whom he didn’t even praise in the column SA was responding to), Urge (whom he apparently thought were great, for reasons unconnected from any commercial potential), and Phair (who was pretty marginal in “commercial” terms, and whom Wyman was into since she was a nobody).

Is that response accurate? Honestly asking…

Wooly Bully (2005 Remaster) (morrisp), Sunday, 7 January 2024 15:38 (four months ago) link

(As a non-Chicagoan who only knows Urge from that corny Pulp Fiction cover, it seems weird to see them discussed as some sellout band. Looks like they had a minor rock hit?)

Wooly Bully (2005 Remaster) (morrisp), Sunday, 7 January 2024 15:39 (four months ago) link

"Sister Havana," yeah.

Thanks for this Wyman piece. Excellent reading.

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 7 January 2024 15:46 (four months ago) link

dire colorless shit

Oh, it had a color, lol.

Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 7 January 2024 16:02 (four months ago) link

Xxpost I definitely knew of UO as an underground act in the late 80s. I don’t know if they were any good then, but a lot noisier.

Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Sunday, 7 January 2024 16:05 (four months ago) link

Albini produced an Urge album iirc, and said they didn’t know what the hell they were doing

Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Sunday, 7 January 2024 16:06 (four months ago) link

Yeah, Wyman goes into detail in that piece about how those guys used to be tight, and then had a falling out (same with Wyman himself, apparently… It’s worth doing a Ctl-F for an incident involving Courtney Love)

Wooly Bully (2005 Remaster) (morrisp), Sunday, 7 January 2024 16:12 (four months ago) link

UO and SP have always sucked, I was there

Liz Phair has always been great

out-of-print LaserDisc edition (sleeve), Sunday, 7 January 2024 16:16 (four months ago) link

corgan is an insufferable weirdo but smashing pumpkins were still a top tier 90s rock band, i'd easily take them over every single grunge act for instance. of course albini would hate them though lol, especially with corgan being pretty unashamedly open about his commercial ambitions

ufo, Sunday, 7 January 2024 16:20 (four months ago) link

a top tier 90s rock band

hard disagree, sorry

out-of-print LaserDisc edition (sleeve), Sunday, 7 January 2024 16:22 (four months ago) link

JCLC – Wyman’s argument in that long piece is that he wrote about such artists constantly, and Albini was attacking a strawman by claiming he was hyping up bands like the Pumpkins (whom he didn’t even praise in the column SA was responding to), Urge (whom he apparently thought were great, for reasons unconnected from any commercial potential), and Phair (who was pretty marginal in “commercial” terms, and whom Wyman was into since she was a nobody).

it's hard not to revert into the heavy sectarianism of the time on this -- I have a FB friend who, when posting music he hated in the 80s, will say "I despised this then, but there was a war on" -- and it's a silly way to think of things, of course, but it's also metaphorically accurate. For people reading MRR, mapping out tour routes, booking their own shows, resisting the norms of the industry, the question of what the underground looked like, what it meant, what its values were, these seemed pressing. (Plus, the people reacting were very young, and while they were good at not sounding naive, young people are naive.)

With that sort of "I tend to inhabit a person whose opinions I no longer entirely share" caveat in place, the Wyman piece, while a great read, still seems full of things that bear scrutiny. For example:

Before Nirvana, pressure had been building a long time. Back in the 1980s, there were all these cool bands—the Pixies, Sonic Youth, the Replacements, Hüsker Dü, Black Flag, Fugazi—and gazillions more lost to history. Some of the music was tuneful, a subspecies of mainstream rock or even pop; some was harsher, with subject matter to match.

Here’s the thing, though. Whatever the sound, none of this stuff got played on commercial radio. Period.

Right -- that was the point of the underground: trying to build something different, avoiding commercial radio. "We lost the war," as my FB friend would put it -- few conceive of making less money and finding a smaller audience a price worth paying for underground purity now. But on our side, then, MRR was running pieces about, e.g., EMI's connection to the weapons industry. The whole world of mainstream success was regarded with severe skepticism, and it felt like there were other ways to make a living, reach people, and not have to feed that machine. The underground wanted to do things on handshakes and good will. Naive! But when it's working out, it's magic. Wyman is always-already beginning from the proposition "good music should find the largest audience possible." It's a deeply boomer stance, and it is, word for word, what the label guys said when they bought you dinner: "Don't you want your music to be heard by as many people as possible?" But those guys didn't actually mean "your music," they meant "the version of your music we think we can sell people, and pay you 18% per unit on." This stuff really rankled within an underground that was legitimately attempting to conceive of a self-sufficient economy, one involving independent labels, distribution cooperatives, tour routings that straight up did not exist before Black Flag and the Minutemen carved them out of a Thomas guide, 50/50 splits on sales (completely unthinkable on majors then and now; at least one big remaining indie who I know still pays exactly that).

But Wyman's position is, this underground music is actually infiltrating the culture, becoming viable - viability is great! That position was poison to people who sought to protect their scenes and to see them grow into new possibilities. Now, scenes actually can't be protected, they're ephemeral, the thing that actually kills them is time, nothing to be done about that. But for people who were and sometimes still are lifers in the underground, the consolation-prize quality of the music -- Pumpkins, Flaming Lips, what the Buttholes become instead of what the Buttholes were -- that was a bitter pill to swallow, because it's really just good old "nothing gold can stay," you know. So, Wyman's "I was already covering that stuff" is partially accurate, but ideologically, the more likely something was to have mainstream appeal, the more interesting it was to him. That's fine, but within a roiling scene facing centuries-old questions of what happens to scenes over time, it was a position worth interrogating at least, and, usually, attacking.

There's a great deal more in the Wyman piece with which I'd take issue but this I think is the framework that describes the tension.

J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Sunday, 7 January 2024 16:35 (four months ago) link

JCLC, what makes Wyman's stance "deeply boomer" as opposed to a combination of "late capitalism" and an artist's ego?

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 7 January 2024 16:41 (four months ago) link

JCLC, what makes Wyman's stance "deeply boomer" as opposed to a combination of "late capitalism" and an artist's ego?

It's the Jann Wenner stance exactly - we're changing the world by taking over the institutions, by putting our guys in the places where the old guard were. This is what the boomers will say to this day, what Wenner said I think in that cancel-me interview -- we changed the world, we changed the culture. Factions within the underground of the time differed on this question, of "changing things from the inside" (very common phrase then, and the one I think of as boomer) vs. "building our own structures" (these did & do tend to rely on already extant structures, whether actual IRL space "structures" like VFW halls or business structures like chains of distribution or the post office). but the boomer stance is absolutely "the system is fine, it's just that the wrong people are running it," imo, and that's Wyman all day, who thinks the good people are in charge once they're putting out records he likes.

J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Sunday, 7 January 2024 16:47 (four months ago) link

That makes sense.

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 7 January 2024 16:49 (four months ago) link

"We're replacing Ike with the New Frontier!"

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 7 January 2024 16:50 (four months ago) link

I remember when it was controversial that Matador signed a distribution deal with Atlantic (where, incidentally, Bettina was working before she started Thrill Jockey). But I've also heard the stories of, say, Husker Du being on tour and unable to find copies of "Zen Arcade" in the shops. (I also know the thrill of, c. this exact period of time, coming across someone with a cache of TMG cassette releases on Shrimper).

Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 7 January 2024 17:00 (four months ago) link

It's the Jann Wenner stance exactly - we're changing the world by taking over the institutions, by putting our guys in the places where the old guard were. This is what the boomers will say to this day, what Wenner said I think in that cancel-me interview -- we changed the world, we changed the culture.

But Wyman doesn't say thise(?) He says that Cobain wondered why it wasn't cool to be heard on the radio, like his rock heroes were, etc. I mean, I'm not a boomer myself, and this is exactly how I felt about a band like R.E.M. becoming popular when I was in high school – I thought it was great! And not for anything to do with "changing the culture," but b/c they deserved to be heard by as many ppl as possible.

Wooly Bully (2005 Remaster) (morrisp), Sunday, 7 January 2024 17:05 (four months ago) link

If anything, in that long 2016 piece, Wyman seems (or at least claims to be) totally uninterested in the system that results in records being put out, and is solely focused on the records themselves. I'm sure there's a valid critique of that position, but it's not the Wenner schtick at all.

Wooly Bully (2005 Remaster) (morrisp), Sunday, 7 January 2024 17:06 (four months ago) link

yeah, aero, I think you're reading way more into Wyman than he admitted in his essay -- unless you know him or are referring to other essays. He doesn't even come off particularly starry-eyed or idealistic here.

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 7 January 2024 17:07 (four months ago) link

yeah, aero, I think you're reading way more into Wyman than he admitted in his essay

it could be! I don't know him, but I am sort of rehearsing the feeling "we" (I was very small potatoes at the time) felt about it. I'm beginning from the bit I quoted:

Here’s the thing, though. Whatever the sound, none of this stuff got played on commercial radio. Period.

to which I think the scene's response, and one I still agree with, honestly, is: so what? How is that important? When you make this point, do you not assert "it's good to get commercial radio play, bands matter more when they get that" -- which is a bullshit assertion, bands can and did make seismic changes without a single commercial radio spin. Even leaving the indie neighborhood aside, metal, at the same time and in fact a little earlier, was proving the same point: commercial radio doesn't matter to a scene, it's immaterial.

J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Sunday, 7 January 2024 17:11 (four months ago) link

Yeah, tbf, when the alt rock thing happened it's not like I upped my radio listening or anything knowing I might hear REM mixed in with Verve Pipe or Candlebox or Marcy Playground.

Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 7 January 2024 17:16 (four months ago) link

like, and this sort of thing:

The next six months or so, as expectations grew for the release of the album, were delightful. I had the tape and could lord my possession of it over everyone else. I tracked Phair’s every local appearance and delighted in the exasperation I sometimes heard. Phair and I kept talking, always as reporter and subject, and all of the conversations were taped. I knew the record would be a critic’s darling, but in Phair herself you could see the makings of an actual star.

expectations grew...where? among whom? for what, exactly? it's clear (and it's fine! just trying to frame things here) that for him this was an exciting time in which an artist whose work he likes is about to break big. that's a familiar energy, narratively, people dig it. except in the underground, where they hate it, and not because they're jealous, either.

J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Sunday, 7 January 2024 17:16 (four months ago) link

I think he says the thing about commercial radio to make his point that Albini is being narrow-minded by disparaging these artists’, well, artistry, and asserting that they’re just trying to hit it big:

If these three artists didn’t have their own sound in their heads, they would have all behaved much differently and recorded much different albums. Urge wasn’t pretending to be grunge; Phair wasn’t pretending to be Madonna; Corgan wasn’t pretending to be the Cure. What I said in the essay was incontrovertible: Here were three artists who had some semblance of artistic integrity, who were trying to make their way in a complex world and displayed the neuroses to prove it.

Wooly Bully (2005 Remaster) (morrisp), Sunday, 7 January 2024 17:22 (four months ago) link

I think it's really a stretch to claim that UO in particular had "some semblance of artistic integrity", they always wanted to be big/make money and was about it

out-of-print LaserDisc edition (sleeve), Sunday, 7 January 2024 17:24 (four months ago) link

Well I can’t speak to Urge, but we’ve talked on here a lot about how R.E.M. were always very clear that they were aiming big. Does that mean they don’t also have artistic integrity? Aren’t they a definition of a band that found success while maintaining it? Albini seems to think these are mutually exclusive; Wyman (and many of us music fans) don’t…

Wooly Bully (2005 Remaster) (morrisp), Sunday, 7 January 2024 17:29 (four months ago) link


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