so sick of Shania and Celine and Whitney and AC/DC clogging up critics' all time greatest lists
― Tartar Mouantcheoux (Noodle Vague), Friday, 20 July 2012 16:17 (thirteen years ago)
n.v. i think 'unexamined ways of thinking' are probably the majority of cases of what i'm calling 'not meaning it'. also did you see that q feature on the making of the dirty dancing soundtrack because man what a snooze
― thomp, Friday, 20 July 2012 16:17 (thirteen years ago)
bangs thought 1979 was the worst year for music ever. all those guys kinda gave up on everything shortly after doors debut.
― scott seward, Friday, 20 July 2012 16:22 (thirteen years ago)
truly they were the Youtube commenters of their era
― Tartar Mouantcheoux (Noodle Vague), Friday, 20 July 2012 16:23 (thirteen years ago)
it is funny to me how so many older critics seem to hold a candle for The Doors considering that they're probably the LEAST revered big band of that era among critics now
― Barack 2 Chainz Obama (some dude), Friday, 20 July 2012 16:28 (thirteen years ago)
Yeah, but the question would be about what they missed and how much that would affect your perspective on their careers. It would have been cool if Bangs had stuck up for Off the Wall - sure.
― timellison, Friday, 20 July 2012 16:34 (thirteen years ago)
For the 1981 Village Voice Pazz and Jop Critics' Poll, Lester Bangs turned in a blank ballot, protesting the worthless state of rock and roll. "New Wave has terminated in thudding hollow Xeroxes of poses that aren't even annoying anymore," he wrote. "Rap is nothing, or not enough. Jazz does not exist as a musical form with anything new to say. And the rest of rock is recycling various formulae forever. I don't know what I'm going to write about - music is the only thing in the world I really care about - but I simply cannot pretend to find anything compelling in the choice between pap and mud."
― scott seward, Friday, 20 July 2012 16:44 (thirteen years ago)
i think 'inability to have critical perspective on own burnout' is this whole other thing y'know
is that the year he interviewed captain beefheart about retiring
― thomp, Friday, 20 July 2012 16:47 (thirteen years ago)
thanks for finding the paragraph i was gonna paraphrase, scott
― da croupier, Friday, 20 July 2012 16:51 (thirteen years ago)
also bangs admitted to wailing the stones were dead and resurrected within a single night in 1965. Scott's point is that he's tired of boomer rock critics who didn't hesitate to dismiss anything that didn't fit their limitied view, and damn right that Bangs is stellar example (even if I don't begrudge the fact as much).
― da croupier, Friday, 20 July 2012 16:55 (thirteen years ago)
see the sad thing is when i finally outlive the last baby boomer i'll have to read long articles about the legacy of wilco written by generation x people. and i might not outlive all of generation x!
― scott seward, Friday, 20 July 2012 16:58 (thirteen years ago)
no you won't, unless you want to
― da croupier, Friday, 20 July 2012 16:59 (thirteen years ago)
haha i meant "reading long articles about wilco" not "surviving gen x" but i guess that's true too
Did rap constitute a "swath" of music in 1981, though? How much do you fault the guy for a quote like this:
"I wrote in another publication: 'What I did (in 1981) was what almost everyone else...did: listened to old music, when I listened at all'. So I get a letter from one kid berating me for listing Beck, Bogert, and Appice as a listening preference over, say, X or Joy Division: 'How can you be so nostalgic? Don't you know there are all kinds of great new groups like the Fall, Fad Gadget, the Dickies, Clock DVA, and Orange Juice?'"
― timellison, Friday, 20 July 2012 17:01 (thirteen years ago)
you know, you're still allowed to think bangs was a smart, observant rock critic and still accept that other people will not be wrong find his perspective heavy on the emotion and short on perspective
― da croupier, Friday, 20 July 2012 17:05 (thirteen years ago)
haha woops at the double "perspective" but c'mon is it really hard to grasp someone having this complaint about bangs even if had a good fad gadget zing and liked half japanese
― da croupier, Friday, 20 July 2012 17:06 (thirteen years ago)
No, I have the same complaint but he was good and I thought the "dismiss large swaths of music" and "saying culture is worthless for pretty solipsistic reasons" comments were overstated.
― timellison, Friday, 20 July 2012 17:11 (thirteen years ago)
if we're going to chalk his dismissal of 1981 up to critical burnout I'd say you've standing on small semantic ground
― da croupier, Friday, 20 July 2012 17:17 (thirteen years ago)
tbh i'm not entirely sure what relevance bangs had to the wider conversation or how we ended up talking about him
― thomp, Friday, 20 July 2012 17:25 (thirteen years ago)
we were talking about rock critics in a thread about rock criticism, scott said he was sick of all the old rock critics for being so dismissive of stuff outside their purview and some folks went "SURELY you don't mean BANGS" etc...
― da croupier, Friday, 20 July 2012 17:26 (thirteen years ago)
scott said he was sick of all the old rock critics for being so dismissive of stuff outside their purview and some folks went "SURELY you don't mean BANGS" piled on the hyperbole.
― timellison, Friday, 20 July 2012 17:29 (thirteen years ago)
bangs's dismissal of the-culture-as-is wasn't a matter of reverence for the canon, though. i don't know, i have now reached the point where it's so long since i read them i can't remember which bits are bangs and which meltzer: who had the rather facepalm bit re: MAYBE THE CLASH ARE ENOUGH TO GIVE US HOPE
― thomp, Friday, 20 July 2012 17:30 (thirteen years ago)
Bangs was preoccupied with both novelty and music-as-transgression, values which I don't find particularly relevant. good writer though.
― the alternate vision continues his vision quest! (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 20 July 2012 17:34 (thirteen years ago)
Fwiw, Scott also said, "i kinda can't take them seriously about music" and I just don't happen to feel the same about the guy who wrote, say, the liner notes to the Them reissue (Bangs) or parts or The Aesthetics of Rock. Because I don't know how many music critics I take more seriously than those guys.
― timellison, Friday, 20 July 2012 17:34 (thirteen years ago)
meltzer wrote BOC lyrics so he is the greatest rock writer ever
― wack nerd zinging in the dead of night (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 20 July 2012 17:58 (thirteen years ago)
I think Bangs' '81 ballot, or thoughts about 1979, needs to be placed in the context of his life. Just about everyone who writes about pop music for a long time (Christgau being the obvious exception, and even he has his moments) hits a point where disengagement/frustration starts to creep in. Generally, re-engagement happens soon enough. The timeline is different for everybody. My guess is that Bangs' '81 ballot was just a stop along the way, and had he lived, he would have found lots to enthuse about soon enough.
― clemenza, Friday, 20 July 2012 18:11 (thirteen years ago)
was contend making a point or just expressing the same taste he always does there
― Barack 2 Chainz Obama (some dude), Friday, July 20, 2012 8:56 AM (1 hour ago)
well, i was trying to make the point that canon, in its current, informal incarnation, remains both solid and influential. this seems to be true despite big changes in tastes, values and media over the past few decades, and despite the fact that the established canon and its promoters have been subject to aggressive interrogation. i don't accept that canon is weaker in relation to music than to film and literature. it's different, sure, but the landscape in question is no less well mapped out. while popular taste may be as big a part of what establishes canon as critical opinion, one of the principal features of canon is durability. once enshrined, songs, albums and artists tend to stay stuck there for a good, long while. i love exile on main street, but i have to believe that its continued elevation in the rock canon is as much a product of its canonization as anything else.
i don't think i'm making a big or controversial point here, but that was the essence of my argument. i also spun out into pointless griping about the retrograde features of the late 20th century pop canon, but only cuz that's what i do.
― contenderizer, Friday, 20 July 2012 18:12 (thirteen years ago)
i was just joking around dude cause you never seem to provide much evidence that your taste contradicts the "rock albums by white guys are the best" philosophy you mocked
― Barack 2 Chainz Obama (some dude), Friday, 20 July 2012 18:21 (thirteen years ago)
this was not written by an intern.
http://www.salon.com/2012/07/11/the_ten_bands_i_will_be_forced_to_listen_to_in_hell_salpart//
― scott seward, Friday, 20 July 2012 18:30 (thirteen years ago)
does anyone still read salon? i have no idea.
― scott seward, Friday, 20 July 2012 18:36 (thirteen years ago)
haha a good chunk of that piece is clearly mitigated by the author proclaiming himself to be a total asshole who is going to hell
― PITILESS LIVE SHOW (DJP), Friday, 20 July 2012 18:37 (thirteen years ago)
While it’s true that one man’s hell band may be another man’s rockin’ ceiling poster, I think we can all agree that that this whiny, falsely poetic, utterly self-satisfied unit, slated to ruin every wedding from now until the name “Duritz” is struck from the connubial lexicon by writ of post-apocalyptic parliament, is an obvious candidate for The Dark Prince’s most damned playlist. They are melody made torment, choruses made grief, hooks of despondency and woe, a steamy squirt of maudlin pandering.
And I thought I was verbose.
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 20 July 2012 18:50 (thirteen years ago)
this guy is the voltron that forms when 5 middle-aged ilxors unite
― da croupier, Friday, 20 July 2012 18:53 (thirteen years ago)
Honour the hellfire.
― Trewster Dare (jaymc), Friday, 20 July 2012 19:00 (thirteen years ago)
terry adams from nrbq is in my store right now and he just told me that he hasn't heard a bob dylan album since blonde on blonde came out. he's got bangs and meltzer beat by a mile!
― scott seward, Friday, 20 July 2012 19:01 (thirteen years ago)
xp Well, that article is hits # 3 and 4 of only 83 for "fauxllectual" so there's that.
― Ignite the seven canons (Ówen P.), Friday, 20 July 2012 19:03 (thirteen years ago)
lol, yeah, it doesn't
― contenderizer, Friday, 20 July 2012 19:05 (thirteen years ago)
i don't object to people liking whatever, though. do object to the crushing over-representation of certain voices in the canon-building process.
― contenderizer, Friday, 20 July 2012 19:27 (thirteen years ago)
that's good. you should still walk the walk and listen to more, though.
― Barack 2 Chainz Obama (some dude), Friday, 20 July 2012 19:32 (thirteen years ago)
but i like blue oyster cult a lot. i mean a lot a lot. you don't understand.
― contenderizer, Friday, 20 July 2012 19:33 (thirteen years ago)
i can't argue with that.
― Barack 2 Chainz Obama (some dude), Friday, 20 July 2012 19:37 (thirteen years ago)
salon piece is so OTT hyperbolic it doesn't really bother. even when he misrepresents the Beach Boys.
― the alternate vision continues his vision quest! (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 20 July 2012 19:41 (thirteen years ago)
one of the principal features of canon is durability. once enshrined, songs, albums and artists tend to stay stuck there for a good, long while. i love exile on main street, but i have to believe that its continued elevation in the rock canon is as much a product of its canonization as anything else.
Is the argument, then, that its reinforcement through the years as canon material has been partly obligatory?
― timellison, Friday, 20 July 2012 19:50 (thirteen years ago)
i'm listening to nas right now
i don't know if i'm enforcing or upsetting the canon
― wack nerd zinging in the dead of night (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 20 July 2012 20:14 (thirteen years ago)
is that actually any good...?
― the alternate vision continues his vision quest! (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 20 July 2012 20:17 (thirteen years ago)
perhaps incorrectly assuming you were listening to the new one...
― the alternate vision continues his vision quest! (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 20 July 2012 20:18 (thirteen years ago)
um kinda? it's something! nas is insane. it's super overblown and odd in a way i can't articulate.
but i guess he's been crazy for a long time.
i mean it's not as good as his best ones.
― wack nerd zinging in the dead of night (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 20 July 2012 20:22 (thirteen years ago)
― timellison, Friday, July 20, 2012 12:50 PM (23 minutes ago)
i'd probably say both necessary and self-perpetuating. obligatory in the sense that, once granted, canon doesn't rescind its esteem quickly. again, i'm not trying to make any novel argument about the nature of canon, just saying the canon of pop significance constructed between the 60s and 90s still seems to be quite influential. the best anyone can do is to glue new bits onto its existing body, perhaps at the same rate that time and indifference pry others loose (the way punk and new wave seemed to replace elvis and the icons of the early rock & roll era). this canon, "the canon", is not easily replaced or subverted, and it doesn't seem to have been rendered irrelevant by digital democratization.
― contenderizer, Friday, 20 July 2012 20:29 (thirteen years ago)
doh, i should say the 90s seemed to occasion/accompany a gradual diminishment in the importance attached to the early rock era. rap, boy bands, indie rock, grunge: wasn't much connection from the present back. punk & new wave folks were obviously very closely connected to early rockers, the 50s in general.
― contenderizer, Friday, 20 July 2012 20:32 (thirteen years ago)
But you were talking specifically about Exile on Main Street and I didn't know if you were speculating about its continued canon presence as an example of obligatory deference as opposed to genuine current taste.
It's #11 on the Pitchfork '70s list.
― timellison, Friday, 20 July 2012 20:55 (thirteen years ago)