Article Response: The Death of Pop, Part 1

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but glenn: participating in this forum is (quite) easily defined and/or agreed-on; we all just look. But "critical judgment" is NOT so easily defined, let alone agreed on. All up this thread a variety of alternative versions of what constitutes (ugly phrase alert) "critical engagement" have been proposed, and you have casually batted them all away away without examination. OK, fair enough — you are not interested in these (many) modes of engagement. But your apparent judgment that those who ARE are a. themselves mindless, and/or b. victims of the imposition of mindlessness can ONLY BE A JUDGMENT OF CONTENT if you DO engage with their systems of value, from within, to see if they are i. onto something ii. fooling themselves. You have to risk being wrong before you're allowed to be called "right": I think your mechanisms of personalisation and communcation are (no, that's REALLY a generalisation: have historically had a tendency toward being) taste-baffles and filters to ensure that no information intrudes which will disturb the worldview of those within the Magic Circle of Personalised Communication and Intended Art.

mark s, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

The only reason I brought up any sort of us/them distinction in the first place was to point out that pop without an autonomous author is consumed by a very large number of people who either do not notice, do not examine, or do not worry about the lack of an autonomous author. That's clearly true. The question is whether the music should be judged differently because of this. Tom, by saying that the usual critical questions are irrelevant to pop, implicitly rules out asking them in connection with the music's ubiquity. But he only explains how they're irrelevant to why he likes pop, not why they shouldn't be applied for other reasons. To me this is like somebody saying that the appeal of McDonald's fries is how they taste, so talking about their nutritional value is irrelevant. I'm saying 1) that this makes no sense, the two are separate conversations that can co-exist, and 2) that McDonald's markets, deploys and prices so aggressively that the nutritional value of their fries is especially relevant, tantamount to a public health question. Note that the fries in this example, Britney et al, might have nutritional value. That's a separate argument. I'm just trying to convince you it's an argument worth having.

glenn mcdonald, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I'm still a little confused about the enjoy/endorse disparity. Can one enjoy a piece of pop music without endorsing it and vice versa? How can we ascertain the "nutritional value" of certain music? Should every pop song attempt to convey a positive message that contributes to the betterment of its listeners' lives?

Mitch Lastnamewithheld, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

1. Tim, I think I might also object to the idea that pop necessarily fails when it "tries to second-guess itself". I recall that when I first heard of Britney (I guess when "Hit Me Baby One More Time" was just about to be released) I thought it felt engineered to make as much cultural noise as possible: the combination of Britney plus school uniform plus chunky pop beats plus lyrics-which-might-refer-to- domestic abuse seemed primed to hit a lot of media, from the tabloid end through the prurient middle market to the high-minded cultural commentators). I think pop has always second-guessed itself, that's a major part of its 'nature'. What I understood Tom to be saying was that when machine pop starts explicitly talking about itself, it is dead. I would contend that pop continually talks to and about itself, and that it has done so more or less explicitly since I've been interested in pop, and probably long before. [A thousand curses on all of you, incidentally, because I can't get the Reynolds Girls finest moment out of my head now]

2. Glenn, I don’t agree when you say that Tom’s argument is that ‘the usual critical questions are irrelevant to pop’: he seems to me to be saying one route of criticism – a direct link between artist named on cover and content on record - is foxed by the way this pop is produced and consumed. I can’t see him saying any other of the ‘usual’ critical questions (whatever they may be) aren’t relevant. This may be my poor reading of the article.

3. Glenn: I've known so many people with fabulous art-critical abilities and terrible critical ability as far as their own lives or the lives of others are concerned. You may argue that thinking about what you [/I /they] are listening to is a start, better than nothing, but I could equally argue it's a stopping point, ‘soma’ of a sort for too many, and not very 'socially encouraging' at all.

4. Glenn (again, sorry!) I understand that you engage intellectually and emotionally with the records you mention above (I've no desire to argue about them, or your enjoyment of them which is your own business and of course completely valid... and very eloquently put, if I may say so). I don't, however, buy that those records treat you any differently than they treat me, or anyone else. We might react very differently, but then it sounds to me as though we would react very differently to Destiny's Child, or Elephant Man, or Sizzla. If (say) Mark Kozalek were to leave me cold and Destiny's Child were to move me to thought and / or motion, then should I still believe that MK's record was made *as if I were a critical individual* while DC's wasn't?

Tim, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

- Sure, you can enjoy things you don't endorse. I enjoy old Helloween records, but I also think they're terrible in a lot of really serious ways. I enjoyed the first Eve 6 record, but I think it's not materially different from the rest of a movement I think we'd be better off without.

- Yes, by "the usual critical questions" I meant the ones that assume there's an author responsible, "usual" used in the same way Tom says "most criticism of the teenpop boom". You're right that eliminating the author doesn't eliminate all critical approaches, but a) it sure undermines a lot of them, and b) some of the ones that are left, like musical innovation or independent lyrical invention, aren't often machine pop's strong points. Except for a point about "physical onomatopaeia" that sounded intriguing but I couldn't follow it, I don't see where Tom, or anybody else here, has offered what I would call a "critical approach" to machine pop, other than "I just like it" or "It's more exciting this way", which I think are equivalent. How, other than just comparing how happy we say these songs make us, can we talk about non-autonomous-author, non- self-defeatingly-self-reflective machine-pop? What are the valid questions to ask about "...Baby One More Time"? I don't mean this rhetorically; what are, in your opinion, the valid questions to ask about it?

- I agree that exaggerated critical abilities don't necessarily correlate to any other life skill. Nor do extreme math skills, massive historical knowledge or much of anything else. But you've got to learn to think by thinking about something. And music's advantage over math and history is that if you learn to think about music you implicitly learn that thinking isn't something you just do in school. If you think thinking about music is more likely to turn people into socially-maladjusted geeks, then well, that was exactly the point of soma in Brave New World, wasn't it, discouraging people from developing unbalancing passions?

- The point about how music treats its listeners is a bit slippery, I grant you. But I think there's something important there, closely related to the rest of this discussion, about whether art is primarily aiming for ubiquity or primarily trying to communicate something. But I'm an admitted elitist. To me dumbed-down culture like "...Baby One More Time" and Bay/Bruckheimer films and prime-time sitcoms are insulting, and the fact that so many people seem to enjoy them is no excuse at all.

And one other point, because I'm wearying of circling around and around on these:

- It's hard for me to credit an account of pop's death that doesn't address its birth. Tom says pop has had a short, glorious life, but as far as I can tell pop in the last four years hasn't been notably different from pop in the decades before that. Weren't the Village People, Shawn Cassidy, Leif Garrett, Paula Abdul, Mariah Carey, En Vogue, Tiffany and Debbie Gibson, at least, just as much "pop" as anything today? What about all those Holland/Dozier/Holland Supremes songs? Seems to me that if pop survived Diana Ross going solo and Alanis graduating from _Alanis_ to _Jagged Little Pill_, a little NSync petulance is hardly going to be its death.

glenn mcdonald, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

[Grr. This forum could use editing, or a preview function.]

glenn mcdonald, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Whoa, everyone's talking about talking about Pop Muzik.

I mean, literally. Go here to see other people discussing this same article (reprinted on another site)in some sort of parallel universe:

http://www. plastic.com/music/01/06/25/1517209.shtml

masonic boom, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

More discussion here.

glenn mcdonald, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I should at this point mention that I'm really pleased by the amount of discussion all this has generated, even if I'm not replying much (because it's kind of a work in progress). Thanks everyone contributing to this thread - not to mention on Earth-B and Earth-P!

Tom, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

1. I can't tell you how nice it is to hear that someone else didn't really understand Tom E's very difficult article.

2. I agree with Mark S that we cannot so easily be sure re. what is 'critical engagement'. I don't think that Glenn M, or Mark S, or Ally garance, or DJ Martian, or Ned Raggett, or whoever, are all pursuing the same grand project as me (or, for all I know, each other). I don't imagine that those people would be at all happy to be grouped with me, either. I imagine that they'd be appalled and horrified. That's to say: posting sometimes to ILM doesn't mean you're part of a group besides People On ILM.

3. To be Zenotic (??!): this phrase 'the autonomous author' is now getting a lot of unquestioned currency, like we are all sure what we mean by it. It's strange, because I always used to think that *no* author was 'autonomous'.

the pinefox, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

It's not that "autonomous author" has unquestioned currency, it's that it's the term Tom is using, and every time I try to substitute any paraphrase the discussion bogs down in arguing about whether my other term means something different, so I've switched to using Tom's exact terminology in an attempt, not entirely successful, to keep the conversation on track. Personally I prefer "puppet pop" or, more evocatively but trademark-transgressively, "Real Doll pop".

[Also: "Zenotic Method", neologized from Socratic Method and Zeno's paradox (in which you can never get more than halfway to anywhere).]

glenn mcdonald, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

[ps I've worked out TE's strategy:
Throw dodgy tidbit in GM's direction. GM gnaws angrily at it. Half a dozen oaves leap at him from difft directions and belabour him with their best rubber truncheons. By and by, exhaustion reigns. TE unleashes pt.2, a farrago of ungrounded gibberish which renders EVERYONE PRESENT AGHAST. But strength is spent and all bestest weapons are worn but to nubbins. Slack and sleazy, Ewing the Grate Manipulator triumphs boo. The end.]

mark s, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

As I understood it, Tom's article was meant to comment on something that's happened to the current run of chartpop - like the last 5-6 years - the "death" thus being something of a dramatic rhetorical device. I'm sure you could argue in a way similar to Tom's for other periods of pop excitement - not sure if he intends that generalization or not. But the article itself just focused on the recent run, so criticizing it for failure to notice/admit that "pop" has been around, in similarly exciting periods of history, for a long time, just misses the point.

Josh, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Here are some valid questions to ask about "... Baby One More Time":

Why do I like it? What is it doing to and for me, and my enjoyment of everything else?

This is no different than for non-machine-pop.

Josh, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

If you want to claim you know where the end point of this "current run" falls, I think it's fair to ask you to say where you think the beginning point was. Seems to me pop's been just like this for at least 40 years.

glenn mcdonald, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

One thing I don't understand is why everyone thinks they know what this 'recent run' is, and whether it exists, and when it's happened if it's happened. Is this 'movement' something that Tom E has invented?

That sounds like a criticism - but I don't think it should be: because one of the jobs of a critic might, possibly, be to 'invent their object' in such a way. If so, it might be that Tom E was doing that job very well (he does lots of critical jobs well, I have often suggested).

But I don't know whether to think that there has been a 'recent run' distinct from anything else, or not. On the one hand, I would like to say, Yes - there are all those records that I hate, all conveniently bundled up in that recent run. On the other hand, I am not sure that I could draw a convincing line between that run and earlier records that I hate.

the pinefox, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

"My knowledge of that kind of 60s teen-pop is limited to a few survey compilations and a Shangri-Las best-of, and I like them, but a) I don't pretend to know much about the cultural role that music played at the time, and b) it's not playing it now"

"Seems to me pop's been just like this for at least 40 years."

mark s, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

This is what I'm hearing from Mr. TE's article -

1. Many songs on the charts share a hyper-fussy production style and meticulously-planned hype/image positioning. At first I thought Tom was going to go into parallels here and wind up with the conclusion that pop is dead because music-by-corporate-committee sucks. But he says the opposite - "Pop is music where artistic autonomy is irrelevant to the impact of the finished product." I think I very much disagree with this - would "Whip It" have sounded the same after passing thru 20 Max Martin rewrites? "500 Miles"?

2. Said style of chartpop has got some great songs in it. Agree. At least for the 3 minutes they're on, which is all that matters for this discussion right?

3. This type of pop/hype nexus with interchangeable parts is a recent phenomenon yet already dying/dead because of ill-advised attempt at legitness -- noooo. Whattabout NKOTB? En Vogue? Is Justin T's 2-step move any different from Dawn going and making "worthy" songs in Lucy Pearl? It may be their own particular career suicide, but the parts are interchangeable, remember?

For me all these observations = death of bolt-from-blue chart shocker from Bloomington whose parents throw party on Sunday for the Top 40 countdown. But I don't even think THAT's true. In an era where everything accelerates, corporations aren't ultimately nimble enough to stay on top of all trends, or imaginative enough to come up with new ones. Tho it does take at least 1M dollars to even be at the table in U.S. radio (for all the payoffs) which ought to be illegal and hopefully will be soon.

Tracer Hand, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

It's really hard for me to think straight about any of this, the hatred I've got for major media outlets raging as hotly as it does thru my skinny little body.

My (small) point is that this "run" really started in the early 90s. Destiny's Child has got a different sound than En Vogue, more mechanized. But so has De La Soul these days (i.e. it's just the fashion, prob. impact of rave finally being felt on U.S. shores, not just some stupid vocal sample but kneading its way organically into the entire sonic strategy - too dull a reason but true I think). Anyhow: N*sync, etc. is an extension, the logical conclusion. An overdriven Pentium IV version of the supergloss Image of the Mecha-Pop Star in an Age of Media Control (NKOTB, Take That, En Vogue, etc.).

Re: self-obsession: Of COURSE these guys make meta-riffs, they're giving you "access" so you're not crushed with the overwhelming weight of their sanctionedness. They're puncturing holes in their own media balloon, crucially before you can (a la Beavis and Butthead). Overseriousness = DEATH in the pop market (except for v. specific moments like metal, onyx, etc.).

Tracer Hand, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Count me in among those who wonder when Tom thinks this current run of pop got started and what makes it different from previous pop. I can see a few new things - the Bay City Rollers and Leif Garrett never sold 10 million copies of an album, and never dominated the industry in the way that teen-pop does now - but I'm not sure that the music itself is produced and marketed in a much different way than it was before (or that it is more entertaining, which seems part of Tom's point).

Patrick, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Not sure about Tom, but my own definition of the "recent run" is a cross-section of teenpop and R&B from the US that first germinated in about '96 - the year of Backstreet Boys' "Backstreet's Back (Everybody)" Ginuwine's "Pony" and Blackstreet's "No Diggity" - all in their own way defining the new musical paradigm of sonically thrilling futuristic music coupled with (although more defined in the Backstreet Boys) a sense of indestructible self-confidence and inevitability. The rise of this music subsequently can be summarised by plotting the amount of work done by Max Martin and Timbaland, though obviously there were heaps of other people involved (artists including Ginuwine, Britney, Aaliyah, N'Sync, TLC, Christina Aguilera, Destiny's Child, Mandy Moore, Kelis, Jessica Simpson, Pink etc. etc.).

Some - possibly Tom - might argue that the British version of pop these last few years (Spice Girls, Steps, S Club 7, Hear'say etc.) should also be included, for monolithic coverage alone, but I've always allocated it a different place in my brain.

As for "second-guessing" - I meant pop second-guessing itself for the purpose of critical validation. N'Sync (and now Britney, apparently) drafting in BT to make their music more appealling to the non-pop masses was almost a foregone conclusion the moment people started to (for the umpteenth time) realise that there was something in pop music for people other than teenage girls. Second guessing for the purpose of mass commercial success I have no problem with - it's pop's job.

Tim, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Mark, don't be a jerk. In the first instance I was responding to a question about a specific set of groups ("ronettes, the crystals, the shangri-las, the monkees, dionne warwick, dusty springfield, leslie gore, the archies, etc."), none of which I happen to know that well. In the second I was talking about the existence of commercial not- written-by-the-artist pop through the ages, which I know well enough to hypothesize that it's been structurally similar at least as far back as the early 60s.

As for "thrilling futuristic music coupled with a sense of indestructible self-confidence and inevitability", how does this not describe, say, "Funkytown", "Crush on You" or "Gonna Make You Sweat"?

glenn mcdonald, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Well it's a different type of futurism, innit? "Funky Town" is disco, "Gonna Make You Sweat" is house - both of these are clearly pop, but they're pop as it manifests itself in separate styles of music (I have no idea which "Crush On You" you're referring to, hopefully not Aaron Carter's).

What I think defines the music we're talking about is that for the first time in a while a futurist musical approach was explicitly associated with pop in and of itself - not the pop end of another genre. By drawing disparate examples from all over the shop, you can quite rightly demonstrate that the ideas circulating were hardly new, but that doesn't disprove the novelty of this sort of thing as a movement. Otherwise by the same token we could say that Britpop is stylistically indistinguishable from any other dominant stage in British music, simply because other bands in a similar mould had existed for thirty years prior.

Tim, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Diff. between Lipps Inc. and N'SYNC: branding, which isn't something I talked about enough. Branding means that there is a 'band' or 'artist' for the consumer to focus on, i.e. the possibility of autonomy has been raised, and is then removed.

Diff. between Bay City Rollers and N'SYNC: Rollers are in a slightly different tradition, along with the Monkees. They are presented as a 'rock band' with defined instrumental roles. So the do-they don't- they play their instruments / actually *do* anything becomes part of the presentation. This is a totally interesting pop model but it hardly surfaces today and when it does - BBMak, Dimestars - nobody seems to want it. It feels slightly out of date I suppose.

Difference between early 60s girl-group pop and N'SYNC: not much except I wonder in terms of presentation....was artistic autonomy even an issue in pop, pre-Beatles and Dylan? (Pre-criticism, in fact).

(Of course there are massive massive sonic differences between NSYNC and all of the above, which should not be discarded)

But sonics aside these are nuances rather than actual differences. Pop continues. As Josh has suggested, "dead" in the article is rhetorical exaggeration (and intentional too). So what I'm saying - so far - is that this particular machine pop moment is coming to an end. When did it start? (I'm not sure this is relevant, but it's been asked.) Musically I can't think of anything pre NKOTB which combines mechanised music with a singer-dancer focus. The rash of hits I mentioned at the start of the article weren't intended to mean 'the start of machine pop', but were flagged up as the point at which machine pop started to be aesthetically interesting to me, i.e. when I realised I liked it. The public seemed to agree, since those hits also helped start the recent period of complete commercial dominance for the style.

And yes, none of this is new. I mention this even, at the end. If you can find it, take a look at Nik Cohn's Awopbopaloobopawopbamboom for an early sixties perspective on what he calls 'Superpop'.

Tom, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Tim: "Daft Punk isn't even pop by my tight definition anyway"

Surely not being pop is Daft Punk's only salvation: If their music sounds like that because it's just them talking to themselves in their private language, then fair enough, but if they're shovelling on the irony in an attempt to shift units, then they should be dragged from their cars and beaten. This doesn't apply to other artists: just Daft Punk.

Mitch: "There's nothing wrong with Radiohead making a record about their last record, while pop most certainly shouldn't."

This also has the problem that it fails the Backstreet's Back test.

Wow. Have none of you ever sat down and talked with people who don't "get" music, but still buy a lot? They do exist, (hence the success of Travis, hohoho) and they're very scary.

Also, my respect for Tom (already very high) goes up several notches due to the news that he also contributes to Barbelith. Also fascinating to see the difference in slant that they immediately pick up and run with.

Andrew Farrell, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

"Contributes to Barbelith" = a bit of a misnomer. UK webscene lynchpin and future of electronic publishing T.Coates e-mailed me and said, can I reprint the death of pop article? I said sure. And so here we are. But it's on the list of things I'd love to write something for eventually.

Tom, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

The Plastic thread is interesting and humbling because it shows up quite how much I've been writing for an audience - show the piece to a load of people who've likely never seen FT in their lives and you get comments like "Ewing has obviously been sitting on this column since 1999 waiting to plug names and titles in" and but-what-about- Timbaland defenses of pop. Sigh.

Tom, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

1. Tim F: what is BT? In my country it used to refer to the nationalized telephone industry - now privatized, I'm afraid, but still, come to think of it, called 'BT'. But there are lots of other tel. companies around now as well.

2. Where does all this stuff about 'futurism' come from? The only pop futurism (roughly speaking - ie. not in strict avant-garde terms) that I can think of = Bowie (Starman, Ziggy and what have you) and his New Romantic scions.

3. Seems disingenuous of Tom E to say, 'This Movement of mine has ended - but I don't care when it began'. If you want to persuade us that there has been a Movement, then offering some temporal parameters would help (perhaps you do do this. I'm not saying that you never do, or never would do).

4. Andrew F: don't know what you mean re. people who don't 'get' music. Most people on this forum probably think that I don't 'get' music. If people are buying lots of records, then - even though I almost certainly won't like most of them - I think that they can claim to 'get' that particular thing.

the pinefox, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

BT is, i think, a house music person leaning towards melodic side of things, arpeggioes etc, what i've heard i didn't like. maybe a bit william orbit? i'm sure tim f will provide a better description.

as for people not *getting* music, i have to agree with the pinefox. i would suggest that if someone buys a travis album and likes it, they *get it*. whether they buy a lot, or hardly any, they surely *get* it?

gareth, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Is the artistic autonomy (or lack of same) of N'Sync really that big a deal with the people who buy their records ? I mean, sure, when Hanson was doing well, fans kept talking about how they-play-their-instruments-and-write-their-songs wow-isn't-that-impressive, but isn't that just some after-the-fact my-fave-band-is-better-than-yours talk from people who would have bought the records anyway even without any perception of artistic autonomy ? If Britney Spears had written all the songs that made her famous, I think she would have sold the exact same number of copies that she did, it's just the way that she's discussed that would be different.

Patrick, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I was talking about people who can't (or don't see the point of) explain why they like the music they like. If you ask them why, they'll tell you it's nice. If you ask them if they like, say, the way the bass drops out in that part, and then comes back, they'll say they guess so, or just they hadn't thought about it, or that it's just, y'know, nice. I misspoke when I said they bought a lot of music (almost certainly not compared to most of the people on this forum) but they collectively buy a lot of music. I'm not saying you have to analyse when you enjoy, but you should understand why you would want to. Now more than ever, but that's the anti-corporate paranoid in me coming to the fore again.

Andrew Farrell, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Since Britney audience is (a) extremely variegated, since so large, (b) changes over time (eg gets older), then yes — probably this factor DOES impinge, Patrick. Pop teaches you it's OK to want more: the bolshier of its disciples fret (and worse) when more fails to emerge. One major way it impinges: out the mouths of the starts themselves. It apparently bothers some of them greatly: they are as prey as anyone living under liberal capitalism (like the Unthinking Robots they surely are) to a (confused and dilute) version of what has after all been LC's dominant aesthetic ideology for c.150 years, and remains the Common Denominator to "serious art" talk from Q to the Sun to the New York Review of Books (as in point-source authoring + select audience = superior art) . Hence recent emergence of worry into interview, and a crackle of cross-star dissing re "who's keeping it real" (cf Betty Boo on Westlife; Myleene on whoever she was pissed off with). Since one of the (many) things which makes the current situation difft is the extreme SIZE of the pool from which this pop-sector is drawn (in Roller days, who elswe was there: Jackson Five, Osmonds, that's it... and of course the Jackson Five produced ONE world-historical pop talent of EXTREME STRANGENESS and ORIGINALITY). Hence we can plausibily gamble that SOMEONE in this pool is gonna be swift and cute enough (not to mention: ANGRY AND BETRAYED ENOUGH — cf Robbie Williams) to turn the worry into a THING, instead of (as Tom worries) just dissolving into lame/whiny me-so- put-upon Spicer solo-alb terrain...

And of course there are extra twists in the loop. Sex awareness is one: any star with minor nous (and a thick skin?) can DIRECTLY access fan-fantasies abt him/her from safe lurker distance. We already KNOW this feedback loop has nourished and smartened a signif level of cult TV (Buffy/Xena/Star Trek blah blah): some of the core guys in THAT highly author-blurred collective ARE surfing their equivs of ILM. Popstars caused a power-tremor: the conventional routes of power shaken by K.Marsh's brilliant all- in-one-throw gamble, over the heads of studio-programmers, to the the SYMPATHIES of the MASS AUDIENCE...: then factor in Lara Croftism/hentai-idoru/porn-as-the-new-goth tendencies, where's the Madonna of this major car-smash of zeitgeist shifts? (Structurally this just = the 70s: yes, if you construct yrself a critical position which allows you to overlook-ignore-dismiss alkl the big things that are actually happening)

Finally: and this (I believe) is at the heart, what I (v.obscurely) have been calling PROG. This combines the sense of a need for progression (a highly stimulated, media-savvy-yet-unformed-naive audience growing up and demanding more; demanding what they THINK they've been promise) with the sheer density of (as yet unanchored) NOISE now packed into the ordinary signal. Competitive differentiation required a remarkable compactness of features w/o direct translateability: they seem like surface tweaks, but they soon become the core of the identity (what you reach for when the top-level message begins somewhat to alienate you). A ENORMOUS amount of unpoliced techy mind and cleverness (and reaction to intra-corporate boredom re the top- level message, also) is poured into these: it's there ready to explode, just as prog did in the 70s out of the mass of psych-pop (which was also noise and gimmick-rich, and starved of clear signal: disco and 80s masspop were — in different ways — far cleaner and smoother). One of the things that happens to records is that they are PLAYED AND REPLAYED VERY OFTEN, very far from the source: in which repetition, the readymades they all share lose force, while the tics swarm and mass and dissipate and reform and ATTACK! (Attack = this silly jerks' melodramatic presentation of a "mindless" generation suddenly pouring their expressive intent — a complex conflicted collusion between audiences and audience-focus-lightning rods = stars — into everything in the music which isn't already tied down.)

[To reduce it to a simplistic kremlinology of corporations: 60s/70s, corps in turmoil, central control-strategy-clarity lost; 80s/90s, corps in new-tech heavy-ass consolidation; 2000+ corps again in turmoil, central csc lost again...]

Or maybe we'll be really lucky and the new Joni Mitchell will emerge...

mark s, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

nothing to add here at the moment, except, GREAT post, mark.

gareth, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

The slide upwards to angry-Robbie defiant-Madonna independent stardom, or the slide downwards into oh-poor-popstar irrelevance, are still both steps out of pop, though. The tone of the article is one of observation not 'worry'.

Your prog idea I need re-readings to get (or clarifications, heh heh heh) - but would a problem here not be the sheer expense of producing the packed-signal pop artefacts, which kind of limits their use outside the corporate control structure...? Or have I not understood?

Tom, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Yes - very (characteristically) intelligent, (characteristically) brimming and bubbling with ideas as far as I can see. BUT I can't really follow it. I don't suppose you want to explain what that last big paragraph was saying?

the pinefox, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Robbie Williams and Madonna = no longer pop ?!? Tom, dude, you're turning into the Joe Carducci of pop. Whatever definition of pop that excludes them would also exclude half the artists in the top 40, and that makes no sense, unless to you pop is only about intention and process and not about result.

Patrick, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Joe Carducci's analysis is actually quite useful cos it forces you to get back to essentials. If we're going to use words like 'rock' and 'pop' we ought either to admit that they have no actual meaning at all beyond 'music' or we ought to consider what a tighter definition might be. I think in the end we might have to end up in the former position but it makes for interesting discussion (like this thread) to flirt with the latter.

Tom, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Also "steps out of pop" != "no longer pop". It would seem equally wrongheaded to me to deny that Madonna now is a different kind of thing than Madonna in 1984, as to say that what she is is not "pop". Maybe she's moved from being Pop in the tight sense of my article to "pop" in the broad shorthand sense.

Or maybe I should call my-definition 'pop' something like Absolute Pop to acknowledge the existence of a fuzzier and more nebulous category which exists in the grey zone between it and, say, Cat Power ;)

Tom, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Brane sleeps once more, the soft doze of the justified ancients. Soon — this they knew — they would be on the move again, further down and further in. Where Saknusem's scratched glyph remained to be read, they could follow. But to light and knowledge, or just further heat and murk and monsters?

Many tumble in, but few return to the sunlit lands...

mark s, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

2000+ corps again in turmoil

Howzat? Time Warner's (and the other 3's) grip on radio stations, the Top 40, etc. is icier than ever, and even more monolithic. I don't think it's just a pose.

Big difference in corporate media strategy btwn 70s (what mark s is maybe calling a trial run for tech-pop, yes?) and 90s which saw advent of what Tom's describing: in 70s the public was SEEN to control the "agenda" much more than today. In the film industry, for example, a studio would give 60 directors a $1M each to go make a movie and see what stuck. If something flopped, no biggie. If something happened to do well, ROI looked great. Today a studio will give 2 directors $30M each, and market each within an inch of its life so that they're guaranteed (after t-shirts, video rentals, overseas sales, etc.) to at least make their money back if not this year then after their VHS-sized piece of shit has managed to soak up enough cash worldwide. This is essentially the same strategy that they're using w/Britney and N*Sync. I don't think prog-mission/re-commandeering of sonic ammo happens in that environment, at least not from Justin Timberlake; there's too much at stake. Which is why it's going to be so great when it does happen -

Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

The new issue of Vibe has crushingly dull article about n*sync and how they're "stepping it up", "writing and producing".

Most curious angle: how it's becoming "okay for black people to like them" citing Puff Daddy and TLC as evidence.

Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Surprisingly, nobody has taken up Tom's most shaky premise, which is the "compartmentalization" of pop, and that the meta-awareness is removing this compartmentalization. I don't think the audience simply picks aspects, but rather that it imbibes the entire feel of a work, that it is impossible to seperate production, beats, lyrics, image, et cet. At the same point, the current pop-crowd has reached such a critical mass that they engage the discourse surrounding themselves, that they no longer enter the world fresh but rather confront a world of their own creation. A shakedown's a-coming, and only the strong will survive. But the teenpop crop is not the R&B crop is not the rap crop, and even as one wave evolves, others are on the horizon. I think it started with Britney cursing in Rio and was consumated, so to speak, when she took her own relationship's non-consumation to primetime. When the popstar ceases to be enigma, then the phenomina acquires a specificity which pushes it beyond pop. In other words, once the interchangability is gone, then we're dealing with something new.

Cyndi Lauper is no Madonna, but back in the day people would have said she was. And soforth.

Sterling Clover, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I was recently reading an article about fashion designer Mark Kroeker, that actually didn't mention music at all, but that got me thinking because of an idea they half dropped wherein the definition of art vs. product hinges upon whether or not the "designer" knows who his "customer" is while he's creating. In other words creating a mere product means that you find your audience, while creating art means that they find YOU. Probably nearly all pop consumers know this on some level, that they are not *really* appreciating independent art and are instead consuming a custom fit product that's just *posing* as art. Could it be that sometimes they enjoy this "ruse" better than the real thing because it just fits them BETTER? That it's very pretender/faker nature makes it all the more FUN? Therefore, yes, in this sense, self consciousness *is* the death of pop. Reality is no fun.

But still, it's quite weird the way people are so used to the idea of appreciating and getting excited over this stuff, that now even though now they are totally being slapped in the face with it's fakery (POPSTARS!) they still go through the motions of traditional "artist" fandom. I mean, shouldn't the reaction have been a NEW one? Isn't this a mass confusion? Isn't a mass disillusionment logically to follow? Should be interesting...

Kim, Wednesday, 27 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I've read very little of what's gone before.

However, Tom Ewing proclaiming The Death of Pop all sounds a bit Build Em Up, Knock Em Down to me.

The Dirty Vicar, Wednesday, 27 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I like that comment of the Vicar's. It's so Darren Tackle. He's probably right, too, come to think of it.

On reflection, I think it's becoming clearer that Stevie T was right in what he said, above, and that 'The Death of Pop' is an embarrassingly bad title, which is not really redeemed by talk of 'deliberate hyperbole', 'provocation', 'irony', etc. As ever, though, this is to cast no slur on the talented geezer Ewing himself, even though I think I am realizing I find his whole take on all this a mixture of the incomprehensible and (when comprehensible) unacceptable.

the pinefox, Wednesday, 27 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

one year passes...
When are we going to see Parts II and III of this Opus? Is pop still dead? Or is it walking among us like a REANIMATED ZOMBIE COP (like in Angel last nite?). Or was THE DEATH OF POP all a bad dream, like that series of Dallas dreamed up by some other Ewing?

Jerry the Nipper (Jerrynipper), Sunday, 15 September 2002 15:32 (twenty-one years ago) link

This was definitely one of the more memorable threads we've ever had, and I haven't even worked up the nerve to read the actual article yet.

Justyn Dillingham (Justyn Dillingham), Sunday, 15 September 2002 19:35 (twenty-one years ago) link

well, thanks for reviving it, I shall read it and learn something on this quiet sunday evening.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Sunday, 15 September 2002 19:52 (twenty-one years ago) link

incidentally, the name of the reason I disagree that's called PROG is well embodied in the appleton single, which peaked at #2, and has gone oddly unmentioned on ILM

mark s (mark s), Sunday, 15 September 2002 21:28 (twenty-one years ago) link

I wish I'd made notes about parts II and III because I can't remember what was going to be in them apart from a decision that pop was not in fact dead. II was going to talk about the press and the role of the critic in the pop process and III was potentially going to be a 'cover version' of an old Paul Morley article (with a new middle eight in tribute to Atomic Kitten).

Tom (Groke), Sunday, 15 September 2002 21:54 (twenty-one years ago) link


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