Simon Reynolds - C or D

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so they in effect place themselves outside of their own critical programme

Yes, that's a big part of the problem, isn't it? If there's a beef I have it'd be with things like this--less the actual ideas (we can always argue about ideas) but more the methods. Taking up the odious "everyone does this but us" technique. Taking up the "I will take one small detail from your argument and focus on that, ignoring all the parts that I cannot actually argue with" technique. The "I am seemingly being cordial but actually being a total cunt" technique. Basically, all the bad parts of arguing on teh int3ernets, but applied to arguing about theory. It makes me feel dirty, like we're having a Kirk v. Piccard flame-war, and that's exactly what I never wanted this to become.

Of course, I also never wanted to write tortuous sentences like the above. Can't always get what you want.

EppyIsNoLongerWaitingForGas, Friday, 7 October 2005 00:32 (twenty years ago)

I finally finished "Rip It Up And Start Again" last week. ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

don weiner (don weiner), Friday, 7 October 2005 00:38 (twenty years ago)

Feminine Pressure thirded as an article that rilly changed how i hear and think about music, especially the provocative weird "theses" included as the scattered points of the director's cut.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Friday, 7 October 2005 06:08 (twenty years ago)

Of course Simon (and Matt Woebot and Mark K-Punk) muddied the waters a bit by using the M.I.A. debate as a launchpad for an attack on popists who will risk everything to protect their own enjoyment.

i followed that debate a little (a little k-punk goes a long way) and i don't know that this is a fair summary -- i mean which popists are 'risking everything' exactly? what does this even mean?

N_RQ, Friday, 7 October 2005 08:18 (twenty years ago)

it means that they're prepared to entirely depoliticise and decontextualise a piece of music in order to privilege their immediate sensory/sensual response to it.

barbarian cities (jaybob3005), Friday, 7 October 2005 08:36 (twenty years ago)

mmm, i think that's impossible (i mean literally impossible), but any case it's not 'risking everything'.

N_RQ, Friday, 7 October 2005 08:41 (twenty years ago)

K-Punk is one of the most popist popists I know!

There are people on Dissensus whom I do enjoy reading and who do post interesting stuff, e.g. K-P, Stelfox, Derek W, Tim F (when he's on there), but otherwise it's a bit like the local Rotary Club with some pomo added.

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Friday, 7 October 2005 08:43 (twenty years ago)

k-punk pledges allegiance to girls aloud and destiny's child but his reasons for this are a little unclear, i think he kind of gets them wrong, all this anti-sex pro-robo stuff which i don't really understand -- ditto tim's emphasis on 'risking everything', as if liking a song were a transgressive (worthless pomo word) act.

N_RQ, Friday, 7 October 2005 08:48 (twenty years ago)

"..otherwise it's a bit like the local Rotary Club with some pomo added."

there was a smudge on my computer monitor that made "some pomo added" look like "some porno added", thus quite drastically altering the meaning. anyway, carry on.

*smokes plastic kid's toy bubble pipe*

latebloomer (latebloomer), Friday, 7 October 2005 08:51 (twenty years ago)

Listening to and getting pleasure from a piece of music is not the same as listening to and culturally analysing a piece of music. You can do both, or you can do one or the other. After all, you could do a pretty interesting cultural analysis of the phone directory if you wanted to, but it wouldn't make reading it any more enjoyable.

jz, Friday, 7 October 2005 08:55 (twenty years ago)

you don't have to 'do cultural analysis' but 'to entirely depoliticise and decontextualise a piece of music' is impossible. sure you can maybe try to switch off a few receptors, but you are always 'in context' and always 'in politics'.

there are ways of doing things, of course: maybe the popists are reacting to the misplaced puritanism of political correctness. i think most ilm types are involved in some kind of complex negotiation when listening to homophobic/sexist lyrics though, and i think it's a lie (or just worrying!) to say 'oh i can just ignore all that'.

N_RQ, Friday, 7 October 2005 09:01 (twenty years ago)

Trouble is, Schoolly-D rapping irrationally about how funny it is watching someone you've just shot squirming and writhing on the ground as they're dying is musically about 200 million times more compelling than the Black Eyed Peas rapping reasonably about how the CIA and KKK are inseparable. Ditto Public Enemy's "She Watch Channel Zero" > the Razorcuts' "Sorry To Embarrass You."

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Friday, 7 October 2005 09:10 (twenty years ago)

surely this is a case-by-case thing as opposed to a rule, though

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Friday, 7 October 2005 09:17 (twenty years ago)

marcello otm. basically life isn't as simple as just reacting with pleasure to nice things and reacting with disapproval to nasty things. sorry nrq. it aint that kinda world.

there's also obviously the possibility, esp with rap, dancehall etc, of listening primarily in terms of beats, production etc rather than the lyrics. this is how i naturally listen to much of aforementioned music, rather than because i'm privileging anything on ideological grounds.

equally, tho, it is posssible to some extent to ignore the cultural baggage surrounding a piece of music by not immediately discounting it in terms of the demographic that likes it. i'm sure i wouldn't much like the majority of girls aloud or 50 cent fans, but that's not going to stop me listening to the music with an open mind. this debate's been reduced by people insisting on absolutes, particularly in terms of the popist position.

barbarian cities (jaybob3005), Friday, 7 October 2005 09:20 (twenty years ago)

marcello otm. basically life isn't as simple as just reacting with pleasure to nice things and reacting with disapproval to nasty things. sorry nrq. it aint that kinda world.

i think marcello is otm, but haha yes very good 'blount move', 'life isn't like that etc etc', i'm not tuomas though, i know this stuff, but what can i say? oh, i know, i said COMPEX NEGOTIATION which i'm involved in too. you won't find any black eyed peas in my cd collection, but you will find ludacris and, yes, schoolly d.

i think i probably would like girls aloud's fans (not 50 cent's though).

i listen to music mostly for production and don't always trouble to figure out lyrics, but i still think this position, which spencer took, is a bit disingenuous.

N_RQ, Friday, 7 October 2005 09:26 (twenty years ago)

"i think i probably would like girls aloud's fans (not 50 cent's though)."

the effect of this sly, self-legitimating move, in ilm terms, is to say that 'i can fully identify with ordinary working folk who like pop music for the simple reason that it sounds good but i dislike those who listen to rap music about the streets on a non-authentic basis'. it's back-door rockism masquerading as popism!

barbarian cities (jaybob3005), Friday, 7 October 2005 09:32 (twenty years ago)

From my long experience of the South London bus system, most kids tend to be fans of both Girls Aloud and 50 Cent.

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Friday, 7 October 2005 09:36 (twenty years ago)

i think most girls aloud fans are twentysomething internet dude[tte]s, though...

N_RQ, Friday, 7 October 2005 09:38 (twenty years ago)

a lot more sugababes than girls aloud fans on south london buses these days, that's for sure.

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Friday, 7 October 2005 09:39 (twenty years ago)

rachel stevens' fanbase is basically annie's fanbase.

N_RQ, Friday, 7 October 2005 09:40 (twenty years ago)

bit more substantial i would have thought. otherwise annie would have had three number 11 hit singles!

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Friday, 7 October 2005 09:41 (twenty years ago)

that's true. rachel has 104 fans.

N_RQ, Friday, 7 October 2005 09:42 (twenty years ago)

that's about 100 more than jo o'meara has.

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Friday, 7 October 2005 09:43 (twenty years ago)

"i followed that debate a little (a little k-punk goes a long way) and i don't know that this is a fair summary -- i mean which popists are 'risking everything' exactly? what does this even mean? "

I didn't mean it in that way at all (the misreading is my fault not yours nrq I fear)! I meant that a large part of the nu-rockist critique of popists is the argument that for popists nothing is sacred (meaning, importance, consistency, authenticity, resonance etc. etc.) except some sort of shallow consumerist enjoyment. Hence the importance of the (empirically dubious) idea that M.I.A. fans celebrate M.I.A.'s political context and then, when questioned on this, the same M.I.A. fans say that this political context is irrelevant. i.e. the popist position is to have no position, to stand for nothing so as to fall for everything.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Friday, 7 October 2005 09:51 (twenty years ago)

Judging by the GA gig most girls aloud fans are 10-15 year old girls, with parents in attendance, and about 15% of the audience adults-without-children, mostly male. The racial demographic is pretty mixed among the families, pretty much entirely white among the adults. So now you know!

Tom (Groke), Friday, 7 October 2005 09:52 (twenty years ago)

but surely to celebrate mia's political context is an intensely rockist position, thru its insistence on authenticity? ie the straw man mia fan that you're referring to isn't in no position but rather oscillating between rockist and popist positions. so nu-rockists are thereby saying not that popism isn't a position but that those who do adopt it are too flaky to maintain it?

barbarian cities (jaybob3005), Friday, 7 October 2005 09:56 (twenty years ago)

ok, i get that, tim. i don't understand how it's really possible to listen in that contextless popist way, i don't even know if i want to! i think here reynolds at el were saying, 'how can you ignore all these issues when MIA herself foregrounds them'.

ie the popists have no position because authenticity is part and parcel of the whole MIA package.

there are very few people who boosted MIA for realness, iirc!

N_RQ, Friday, 7 October 2005 09:59 (twenty years ago)

x-post Barbarian Cities, sorta. Or, rather, they think popism = self-centered critical flakiness.

"there are very few people who boosted MIA for realness, iirc!"

You clearly never opened a newspaper or magazine ever!!!

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Friday, 7 October 2005 10:02 (twenty years ago)

"the popists have no position because authenticity is part and parcel of the whole MIA package."

only if you choose to take lyrics about rubicon and mangos with a straight ear, so to speak.

barbarian cities (jaybob3005), Friday, 7 October 2005 10:02 (twenty years ago)

You clearly never opened a newspaper or magazine ever!!!

-- Tim Finney (tfinne...), October 7th, 2005.

this i have to concede!

N_RQ, Friday, 7 October 2005 10:03 (twenty years ago)

I guess part of what 'popists' think is that it's OK to be inconsistent when you're listening to pop music! i.e. sometimes you'll like something and yr enjoyment will totally come from "authenticity", sometimes it might come from flagrant artifice, sometimes from a transgressive thrill, sometimes comfort, WHATEVER, but your job as a critic isn't to pick one and stick to it, it's to work out why you enjoy things on a case by case basis, get an idea of how/why they work for you, and not assume that becomes a master system of What Works In Pop.

(The only time I've really been baffled by anything SR has said recently was about 6 months back, either on Dissensus or his blog, I can't remember, when he said in essence, well yes I systematise things, by the time you're 30 you should know what you like, and I thought, god, I'm 30 and I know less about what I like or why I like it than EVER!)

(i.e. yes Ich Bin Ein Flake)

Tom (Groke), Friday, 7 October 2005 10:07 (twenty years ago)

x-post Tom just said what I was gonna say but I'm not gonna delete the following now:

" i don't understand how it's really possible to listen in that contextless popist way, i don't even know if i want to! i think here reynolds at el were saying, 'how can you ignore all these issues when MIA herself foregrounds them'. "

I don't think anyone really does listen to music in that gross-simplification-of-popism way. But music always has a multiplicity of contexts, whose importance vis a vis one another will be reshuffled according to how they intersect. e.g. it's easier to ignore M.I.A.'s political side on the dancefloor than it is when looking at her artwork or reading an interview with her. I think one of the first steps towards a reasonable critical discussion is to acknowledge that we are likely to use (and therefor conceive of) the same piece of music in different ways.

Against the point you raise above, one could just as easily say, "i don't know how you can ignore M.I.A.'s great hooks and awesome grooves when she herself foregrounds them." But such statements only get us so far if we don't acknowledge that we'll all rank these things differently.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Friday, 7 October 2005 10:09 (twenty years ago)

whwhat artist other than mia has, in recent times, caused popists and rockists to set about each other with such vigourously misrepresentative arguments, esp thru absolutising the others' positions?

this is not a rhetorical question.

.

barbarian cities (jaybob3005), Friday, 7 October 2005 10:10 (twenty years ago)

...and selling so few records into the bargain?

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Friday, 7 October 2005 10:13 (twenty years ago)

i think that's all true re. consistency, and i like tom's point about liking stuff for diff reasons at diff times, but still, i'm not convinced that the dancefloor is a place where context evaporates and that these differences are absolute. that reynolds point about knowing your reflexes -- i guess that's a person-to-person thing. it's funny of course cos he was nearly 30 when he started to like dance music.

context changes a piece of music, but only up to a point, and you know if you've seen an interview with MIA and then hear her on the dancefloor, you've still read the interview...

N_RQ, Friday, 7 October 2005 10:16 (twenty years ago)

it would be very wonderful if dizzee rascal one day revealed that he is nothing but a persona for an oxbridge educated situationist artist. the interesting question isn't whether his whole oeuvre would be invalidated but whether rockist critics believe that this scenario is inherently impossible because their ears are always good enough to detect the tinge of authenticity (even when they have no direct experience of the authenticating tableaux) and vice versa.

barbarian cities (jaybob3005), Friday, 7 October 2005 10:20 (twenty years ago)

Yeah I know that's why I said you can't get rid of contexts. On the other hand hearing something on a dancefloor might change your interpretation of what you read in the interview. Both act upon eachother.

The fact that neither abolishes the other is precisely the point. Actually the idea that the dancefloor abolishes everything else is something of a nu-rockist touchstone NRQ! Read that pop thread on dissensus!

"their ears are always good enough to detect the tinge of authenticity (even when they have no direct experience of the authenticating tableaux) and vice versa."

See yeah this is a big issue I have. If authenticity is basically referenced back to what your ears told you, isn't it, like, an inaccurate attempt to actually talk about something else entirely?

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Friday, 7 October 2005 10:22 (twenty years ago)

How many/few records has M.I.A. sold out of interest?

fandango (fandango), Friday, 7 October 2005 10:26 (twenty years ago)

Currently her album is sitting proudly at #378 in the Amazon chart and there are a lot of copies with promo stickers on them on sale in London's second hand record shops so that'll give you some idea.

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Friday, 7 October 2005 10:29 (twenty years ago)

Aroundabout 5,000 worldwide, considering her respective chart positions in the US and UK, and how I can't imagine any other country has gone for her.

(x-post)

Dom Passantino (Dom Passantino), Friday, 7 October 2005 10:30 (twenty years ago)

"See yeah this is a big issue I have. If authenticity is basically referenced back to what your ears told you, isn't it, like, an inaccurate attempt to actually talk about something else entirely? "

it's the classic romantic aspiration of being able to detect absolute, objective truth thru entirely subjective means. it's entirely oxymoronic, but obv very well established historically...

the idea that dancefloor abolishes all is a kind of foundational myth for dissensus as it allows 30something m-class, wannabe journalists to get down and dirty with real-life grime emcees and producers, thinking that their input is on the same-level collaborative, rather than patronising (in a kinda renaissance patron way of course)

barbarian cities (jaybob3005), Friday, 7 October 2005 10:31 (twenty years ago)

"it's the classic romantic aspiration of being able to detect absolute, objective truth thru entirely subjective means. it's entirely oxymoronic, but obv very well established historically..."

Mark K-Punk reformulates this objectivity as something like (neurology X deleuze)/zizek, which is at least audacious!

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Friday, 7 October 2005 10:32 (twenty years ago)

would the k-p response not be something along the lines of 'we are culturally programmed to regard the notion of objective reality as a romantic (thus false and impossible) aspiration, which in turn renders us culturally and politically passive (cue new labour), when in fact there exists the possibility to download new software - courtesy of zizek and deleuze - which will virally infect and re-programme our hardware into a brave, new, k-p sanctioned world!'

to an extent, i do like and agree with the k-p line that it's a very british thing to regard aspiration and endeavour towards revelation as a bit much really and therefore relax back into the easy, existing world of political, musical, neurological imprisonment, which dictates never pushing the boundaries and never recognising the notion of Higher Truth.

I may be entirely misrepresenting him but i believe he wrote something along those lines a while back.

barbarian cities (jaybob3005), Friday, 7 October 2005 10:46 (twenty years ago)

xposts

Currently her album is sitting proudly at #378 in the Amazon chart and there are a lot of copies with promo stickers on them on sale in London's second hand record shops so that'll give you some idea.

-- Marcello Carlin

Aroundabout 5,000 worldwide, considering her respective chart positions in the US and UK, and how I can't imagine any other country has gone for her.

(x-post)

-- Dom Passantino

Thanks! I'm not in a very cosmopolitan part of the country so it's a little hard to gauge things that way usually.

And good god, that really isn't much! I'm quite shocked. Although the download figures are probably astronomical.

With all the chatter she's generated I reckoned she would have still sold _much_ more than say, Ellen Allien (20,000-ish per album if DJ Mag is to be believed). So I thought saying she'd shifted 'very few' seemed unfairly dismissive. Apparently not.

M.I.A., the Velvet Underground & Nico of the '00's!! *cough*

fandango (fandango), Friday, 7 October 2005 10:50 (twenty years ago)

I think you summarised k-punk's position quite well bc!

There's an idea (amongst theory types) of objectivity/universality etc. as being "impossible but necessary". We can't really achieve it, but everything we do implies it and every time we try to throw it away we end up unwittingly reintroducing it.

The mistake of a lot of postmoderny stuff (and, in a different way, stuff like third way politics etc.) has been to trumpet the "impossible" bit and ignore the "necessary" bit. I sorta think that Mark (following Zizek to some extent) does the opposite, over-privileging the "necessary" part such that the recognition of impossibility is lost.

Whereas I think we really have to keep both plates spinning constantly, and recognise that we really need to mediate between these two poles - if we can't have universality in music criticism, we can at least look for the next best thing - be it a spontaneous shared visceral reaction or a description of a piece of music so breathtakingly spot on you think the writer's been inside your head, or... whatever. Absolute transparent objectivity remains impossible, but there are things that can fill its place.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Friday, 7 October 2005 11:28 (twenty years ago)

Subjectivity, for example.

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Friday, 7 October 2005 11:31 (twenty years ago)

Actually I think subjectivity (as in individual subjectivity) is the only thing I'm not talking about here. I think there's a will-toward-consensus in all of our best discussions on ILM, a desire not to simply stick to our preformed (ha ha I accidentally wrote "performed") reactions and brook no argument.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Friday, 7 October 2005 11:35 (twenty years ago)

Subjectivity, for example.

HI DERE

Ned Raggett (Ned), Friday, 7 October 2005 11:40 (twenty years ago)

I bought M.I.A., but I took it back to the shop because it sounded like Las Ketchup.

PJ Miller (PJ Miller 68), Friday, 7 October 2005 11:40 (twenty years ago)

... subjective enough for ya?

Dadaismus (Dada), Friday, 7 October 2005 11:42 (twenty years ago)


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