See, I think "Roundabout" is really danceable. "Who Are You," too.
― timellison, Saturday, 30 April 2011 01:46 (thirteen years ago) link
I love "Roundabout," so I agree with you...but obviously it's not what you'd call conventional dance music, and most people would find the idea of dancing to "Roundabout" funny. I think what I'm saying is that between rhythm-in-the-abstract and emotional-attachment-to-a-song as things that might motivate someone to dance, I believe the second factor is more powerful.
― clemenza, Saturday, 30 April 2011 01:51 (thirteen years ago) link
The book is not a lament for a loss of quality music – it's not like the well-springs of talent have dried up or anything – but it registers alarm about the disappearance of a certain quality in music: the "never heard this before" sensation of ecstatic disorientation caused by music that seems to come out of nowhere and point to a bright, or at least strange, future.http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/jun/02/total-recall-retromania-all-rage
― piscesx, Thursday, 2 June 2011 10:37 (twelve years ago) link
will we hear anything that defines the epoch? Or will we just find a clutter of reproduction antique sounds and heritage styles?
well the obvious answer is duh, lady gaga. and a whole load of other shite that no one will think is good but WILL define this era quite neatly from the current pop charts. so yes, like it or not, we do still have music that defines this era. its pop retooling 90s dance cheese.
― titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Thursday, 2 June 2011 11:30 (twelve years ago) link
lady gaga isn't going to define this era for me. plus you could argue that she's simply this era's answer to madonna or grace jones.
― broodje kroket (dog latin), Thursday, 2 June 2011 11:45 (twelve years ago) link
sure. you could argue that. shes a composite. but her records are very much of this era, in terms of the sonics and production etc.
― titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Thursday, 2 June 2011 11:47 (twelve years ago) link
Uh, Madonna's kind of on a different planet to Grace Jones, in cultural significance terms
― Tom D has taken many months to run this thread to ground (Tom D.), Thursday, 2 June 2011 11:47 (twelve years ago) link
Yeah because Madonna and Grace Jones didn't define their era at all.
― Matt DC, Thursday, 2 June 2011 11:47 (twelve years ago) link
Autotune durr.
― Matt DC, Thursday, 2 June 2011 11:48 (twelve years ago) link
To be "this era's answer to Madonna" is to be quite something, whether you approve or not
― Tom D has taken many months to run this thread to ground (Tom D.), Thursday, 2 June 2011 11:49 (twelve years ago) link
Autotune is to this era as slap-bass and sax solos were to the mid '80s, tis true.
― broodje kroket (dog latin), Thursday, 2 June 2011 11:49 (twelve years ago) link
Autotune far more prevalent though, I think
― Tom D has taken many months to run this thread to ground (Tom D.), Thursday, 2 June 2011 11:51 (twelve years ago) link
I feel like pop has kind of already made his thesis redundant. Give or take an Adele here or there, 2011 (and 2010) pop is nothing if not self-consciously modern, regardless of where its composite pieces come from.
― Matt DC, Thursday, 2 June 2011 11:51 (twelve years ago) link
Like, he started thinking about it three or four years ago and while he was writing the book everything changed.
― Matt DC, Thursday, 2 June 2011 11:52 (twelve years ago) link
Isn't "defining an epoch" through pop music - as a manageable and even inevitable cultural/critical exercise - as much a relic of the 60s/70s glory years as anything else, and thus the continued desire on the part of S Reynolds (and many others) to continually return to this mode of non-niche, Ed Sullivan, Top of the Pops imagined community itself a hopelessly retro way of thinking about the world?
― 40% chill and 100% negative (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 2 June 2011 11:53 (twelve years ago) link
yeah in some ways i think hes otm
in terms of underground/hipster music
kinda
but a look at the pop charts and while yeah you do have the duffys and adeles (though adele doesnt really sound retro per se, she just symbolises old fashioned music values) the bulk of it is horrendously ultra modern, same as the 80s
for all the retro soul groups, you also had a lot of ultra modern artists dominating, and technology was ruling over all
gagas records, like them or not, could not have been made in any other era, same for the black eyed peas, some of that is just that the modern sheen and post-mp3 production prferences renders them modern whether the actual content of the music is or not, but usher, ne yo, guetta, all this stuff can be traced back to the 90s in some ways, but the end result is definitely, very very of the time. people like retro music but the masses will almost always buy music that sounds of its time more than anything else imo.
― titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Thursday, 2 June 2011 11:57 (twelve years ago) link
xpostsTo be "this era's answer to Madonna" is to be quite something, whether you approve or not
― Tom D has taken many months to run this thread to ground (Tom D.), Thursday, 2 June 2011 12:49 (35 seconds ago) Bookmark
Sure, but the question is - is it new and original enough to evade the "retro" tag? I'm not sure about this really. First, Gaga doesn't really sound like Madonna/Jones, but she does fill the requisite pocket or category left behind by those artists.
I don't know if Reynolds touches on this, but music can work a lot like Darwinian evolutionary categories - there are pockets that will always need to be filled.
A few years ago I remember a bloke in his early thirties bemoaning emo culture, "what is this music? why are they all so depressed?" etc. I pointed out that every generation of disillusioned middle-class teens needs an angsty rock act or scene to align itself. "It was the Smiths when I was at school", he said. And grunge for me.
― broodje kroket (dog latin), Thursday, 2 June 2011 12:00 (twelve years ago) link
the masses will almost always buy music that sounds of its time more than anything else imo.
The ol' masses are more complex than that I think
― Tom D has taken many months to run this thread to ground (Tom D.), Thursday, 2 June 2011 12:01 (twelve years ago) link
― Matt DC, Thursday, 2 June 2011 12:51 (8 minutes ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
― Matt DC, Thursday, 2 June 2011 12:52 (7 minutes ago) Bookmark
Yep - definitely feeling that pop has taken a laxative lately and managed to move on significantly from revisionism in this decade.
― broodje kroket (dog latin), Thursday, 2 June 2011 12:02 (twelve years ago) link
Thesedays, the sixties is "history", the seventies are "retro", the eighties "old", and from the nineties up to now, you only get a sense that it's not today from the technology involved.
So, imagine that 90% of things from the last 20 years can avoid looking dated, it's not that we're looking at the past, it's more that the 'past' still looks like the present.
compare that to 1975, say, where stuff from the sixties was still around but old-fashioned, and the 50s looked like another era.
― Mark G, Thursday, 2 June 2011 12:05 (twelve years ago) link
It's all subjective of course. I'm sure a twenty year old would view Blur/Oasis in the same way as I might Echo & the Bunnymen or XTC or someone.
― broodje kroket (dog latin), Thursday, 2 June 2011 12:12 (twelve years ago) link
Yeah, but how the view for someone that liked The Faces, looking at The Ink Spots?
(ref: 1975 looking back at 1951, as opposed to 2011 lba 1990 or 2000 lba 1981)
― Mark G, Thursday, 2 June 2011 12:15 (twelve years ago) link
(actually, strike the Ink Spots, I'm way off: Make that Les Paul & Mary Ford instead)
― Mark G, Thursday, 2 June 2011 12:18 (twelve years ago) link
old hip hop looks ancient now compared to modern stuff (not talking about indie stuff obv)
britpop era doesnt look as diff if you listen to that vs current arctic monkeys or kaisers etc
― titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Thursday, 2 June 2011 12:25 (twelve years ago) link
the prob with rock is that you have artists dipping into all its eras all the time and simultaneously so its harder for it to be moving forward and sound diff how the 70s bands sounded so diff to the 50s artists
― titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Thursday, 2 June 2011 12:26 (twelve years ago) link
heard him on Radio 4 this morning
he sounds like a bit of a divot
― merked, Thursday, 2 June 2011 12:31 (twelve years ago) link
Everybody grows up listening to something, and doesn't really become capable of making much music of their own until they're 16 at least, so a certain degree of retro is obviously inescapable. And Reynolds' own sacred cows of acid house and drum and bass were in many ways rehashes of disco and dancehall themselves. But, not having read the book, I'd assume the thesis is more nuanced than that....
But the process of revivalism, like any communication, is imperfect and filled with noise. You hear something old, and then go looking for more and depending on what comes up in the record store, on youtube, or from your friend that you ask for recommendations, you build up an impression of an aesthetic that isn't necessarily at all related to what was happening at the time - as someone on here once said "your record colleciton is the map, not the territory".
Thus 00s revivalism could perhaps only be held to be different from any other era in that archival technology was better and people had more access to the sounds and scenes of the past, as they really were, than Dylan had to appalachian folk music or whatnot. But this doesn't really hold water either, as most of the prominent 00s revivals didn't really sound that similar to the thing they were reviving - The-Dream doesn't sound very much like trance music; Nu-rave sounds very little like rave and you wouldn't even have struggled to pull an Interpol record out of an early 80s line-up.
I wonder if it's less about what musicians were doing and more about the weirdly narrowed focus of the top 40, since record sales ceased to mean much. The reason the beatles are the second best selling albums artist of the 00s is nothing to do with their relative poplularity compared to Eminem and everything to do with who actually buys albums...
― windows desktop, Thursday, 2 June 2011 12:38 (twelve years ago) link
"acid house and drum and bass were in many ways rehashes of disco and dancehall themselves."
not nearly. just a basic listen to these genres will tell you that.
― titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Thursday, 2 June 2011 12:42 (twelve years ago) link
So you've not noticed any dancehall samples in early d&b or any similarities between the basslines and 80s digi-dub? And you wouldn't recognise that Ron Hardy would have played First Choice records next to DJ Pierre? That's an interesting take...
― windows desktop, Thursday, 2 June 2011 12:55 (twelve years ago) link
My point is that all "future music" inevitably starts somewhere and then evolves and it's the evolution that's the interesting bit.
― windows desktop, Thursday, 2 June 2011 12:56 (twelve years ago) link
of course i have but if i was at a dancehall club and some jungle came on a lot of people may hate it (and vice versa), because of the great (and clear) difference in the genres. but anyway, back to retromania.
― titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Thursday, 2 June 2011 12:59 (twelve years ago) link
I thought nabisco's point about how electroclash seemed retro at the time but now sounds very very of it's own time was a good one and probably applies here
― lebroner (D-40), Thursday, 2 June 2011 13:00 (twelve years ago) link
Its own - apostrophe use is the fault of phone
― lebroner (D-40), Thursday, 2 June 2011 13:01 (twelve years ago) link
sign of the times
― 40% chill and 100% negative (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 2 June 2011 13:05 (twelve years ago) link
Wow, SR evens gets his own front-page BBC panel (it's #2 on the domestic homepage; sorry international users) -
http://www.bbc.co.uk
http://news.bbc.co.uk/today/hi/today/newsid_9501000/9501996.stm
― 40% chill and 100% negative (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 2 June 2011 13:48 (twelve years ago) link
the power of faber PR
kudos to grimey though
― titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Thursday, 2 June 2011 14:08 (twelve years ago) link
"The quality fiction bestsellers of the 60s – zeitgeisty novels by JD Salinger, Philip Roth et al – remain a presence in our culture but did not trouble any noughties bestseller charts. Equally, there are no modern directors copping licks from Dr's Strangelove and Zhivago, nor authors styling novels after Portnoy's Complaint. But there are still bands ripping off the Beatles."
Lololol so rong.
― Matt DC, Thursday, 2 June 2011 14:21 (twelve years ago) link
when is this out btw? I checked online and it seemed to say it was already out, but when I preordered on Amazon, they wouldn't even give me an ETA.
― broodje kroket (dog latin), Thursday, 2 June 2011 14:23 (twelve years ago) link
Anyway, novels don't get remasters, deluxe editions etc. It's not really a fair comparison
― Number None, Thursday, 2 June 2011 14:37 (twelve years ago) link
Music used to be exciting because so much was fresh and new. No more. There are no great new riffs - just forgettable ones - no exciting new sounds. No original new melodies. No exciting new identities. just rehashes of old ones. The X Factor eneration has taken over. Frightening thought - has everything that can be done, now been done?
Alan Merricks, Oxted England
― http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:WhiteAmericanFolks.jpg (nakhchivan), Thursday, 2 June 2011 14:41 (twelve years ago) link
The X Factor enervation.
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 2 June 2011 14:42 (twelve years ago) link
The difference is that music is an unavoidable thing. It's harder to achieve mass-nostalgia among book readers because music is something we're exposed to from a young age, whereas book reading is subjective and will only be relevant to those who've read a book. Comparing Dr Zhivago to, say, disco, just doesn't make sense.
― broodje kroket (dog latin), Thursday, 2 June 2011 14:42 (twelve years ago) link
Disco Zhivago
― Mark G, Thursday, 2 June 2011 14:44 (twelve years ago) link
Disco Zhivago is now the name of my band. Thank you!
― broodje kroket (dog latin), Thursday, 2 June 2011 14:46 (twelve years ago) link
np
― Mark G, Thursday, 2 June 2011 14:48 (twelve years ago) link
A bit Gogol Bordello tho, unfortunately
― Tom D has taken many months to run this thread to ground (Tom D.), Thursday, 2 June 2011 14:49 (twelve years ago) link
nooh, it's not.
― Mark G, Thursday, 2 June 2011 14:49 (twelve years ago) link
Anyway, novels don't get remasters, deluxe editions
They get the equivalent though. By the 1980s the multiple forwards, notes and appendices of The Naked Lunch took up more space than the text itself. Also see the number of different translations of Proust you can get, not to mention the publication of the original manuscripts of things like The Wasteland. And that's before hardcover, collectible reprints, books being made into graphic novels etc etc. Literature is just as bad for raking over the coals of its canon as rock music.
― PG Harpy (Doran), Thursday, 2 June 2011 14:54 (twelve years ago) link
Agreed the analogy doesn't work (possibly because literature more comfortable with its own past, not so attached to a ideal of permanent novelty as pop/rock, & hence less riven by contradictions when drawing on its past), but I'd say new editions, new translations (Zhivago last year), luxury editions, fresh covers (especially by name artists/designers) occupy the same space - & the closest analogy probably that funny period when HarperCollins added talking points, essays & author interviews to paperbacks of their book-group friendly fiction titles. (do they still do this?)
xp but i'm posting it anyway
― portrait of velleity (woof), Thursday, 2 June 2011 14:55 (twelve years ago) link
I understand what you're saying but there's such a big market for stuff that plays hard and fast with what you're saying.
The current trend for books like Pride, Prejudice and Zombies for example.
― PG Harpy (Doran), Thursday, 2 June 2011 15:03 (twelve years ago) link