Yeah, the writer covered the bases:
Wet Leg, one of many mediocre British post-punk groups who you’re more or less informed that you like, because you’re into guitars, right, idiot?
― slide into my KMFDMs (morrisp), Monday, 25 July 2022 21:57 (three years ago)
I'm into mediocre British post-punk groups because I like bass, really.
― papal hotwife (milo z), Monday, 25 July 2022 22:26 (three years ago)
lol post-punk was 40 years ago
poptimism was 20
― Tracer Hand, Monday, 25 July 2022 22:33 (three years ago)
I highly suggest you try out the tracks Convincing -> Loving You -> Your Mom(!)
I think they're truly great indie-pop/whatever
― slide into my KMFDMs (morrisp)
i might but honestly i have a backlog of about a billion things to listen to, and somehow i just keep listening to _dots and loops_
maybe after i catch up on the david axelrod thread
― Kate (rushomancy), Monday, 25 July 2022 23:03 (three years ago)
Morrisp, I should admit I've only listened to the singles/advance tracks and not the whole album and was shooting off my mouth about an ILM darling. In what I've heard, I just find the the music kind of basic and monotonous and the detached vocals unengaging in a way that feels dry and enervating more than fun or catchy or droll. The humour doesn't land for me at all. But honestly, it's not really the kind of thing I generally seek out in contemporary music so I should probably not be commenting. I'm not exactly sure what postpunk this stuff is supposed to be reviving but it doesn't recall for me the qualities I enjoy in Joy Division, Wire, Slits, etc.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 03:25 (three years ago)
one obvious post-punk precursor is the Flying Lizards, fwiw,
― thinkmanship (sleeve), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 03:28 (three years ago)
(I only just realized this now, but I stand by it)
― thinkmanship (sleeve), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 03:29 (three years ago)
What's the future of the music industry?
arguing abt indie authenticity on a message board obv
as for the past...
― corrs unplugged, Tuesday, 26 July 2022 07:47 (three years ago)
Having problems parsing the manifesto style commitment of Yeah, but with no scorn against commercial or simplistic pop musicA full acceptance of all music as having a right to one's approvalwith punching up hit jobs, aesthetic or not.
― Luna Schlosser, Tuesday, 26 July 2022 11:52 (three years ago)
No implicit scorn. Case by case judgement
― imago, Tuesday, 26 July 2022 11:53 (three years ago)
the position that Wet Leg make bogstandard indie
there is nothing wrong with the bogstandard. the bog has a very reasonable standard and we of the bog strive to uphold it proudly. haven't heard wet leg but wanted to say a word on behalf of the bog
― J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 12:08 (three years ago)
i prefer fogstandard indie (music inspired by foghat)
― in places all over the world, real stuff be happening (voodoo chili), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 12:22 (three years ago)
maybe the quality of peat is different over there
― imago, Tuesday, 26 July 2022 12:25 (three years ago)
what's funny to this American is I just looked up bog standard, and it tells me it means having no or few interesting qualities
Dunno about y'all experiences with bogs but if something is coming from a bog, it sounds like it *will* have something interesting or cool about it. Maybe there are more bogs in the old country
― a (waterface), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 12:44 (three years ago)
Born on the Bogyou
― a (waterface), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 12:45 (three years ago)
I sort of imagine half of England as a giant bog.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 12:47 (three years ago)
Bog standard indie is when a perfectly preserved album made in 1992 is discovered today
― F'kin Magnetometers, how do they work? (President Keyes), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 12:58 (three years ago)
I'm endlessly fascinated by bog butter.
― peace, man, Tuesday, 26 July 2022 13:00 (three years ago)
i bet you are
― Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 26 July 2022 13:01 (three years ago)
Did ppl complain about "careerism" in rock even in the pre-punk era, or did that ethos only start around then?
Like were there bands on ESP-Disk sniffing about the Velvet Underground – "Wonder how they got on Verve, with Warhol as their 'manager'... must be nice"
― slide into my KMFDMs (morrisp), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 15:11 (three years ago)
oh in jazz that was def. a thing
― J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 15:15 (three years ago)
There were artists who weren't on ESP-Disk who thought some of the ESP artists had a whiff (or more) of careerism about them.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 15:16 (three years ago)
I prefer logstandard indie btw, which takes its inspiration from Kate & Anna McGarrigle's "Log Driver's Waltz".
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 15:18 (three years ago)
Didn't folk aficionados think Dylan was selling out by going electric? I do wonder about rock bands feeling that way about other rock bands, though.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 15:20 (three years ago)
I always love this story Archie Shepp told me when I interviewed him in 2014:
What was your relationship like with John Coltrane? You played on A Love Supreme, though the tracks weren’t released until later, and you were on Ascension, and you recorded his songs on Four for Trane. Was there a sense from Impulse! that you were being groomed as the next man in line?Oh, I don’t think so. What eventually happened was rather fortuitous for me, in the sense that I had the chance to meet John Coltrane and it was he who was the intermediary for me, in connecting me with Bob Thiele and Impulse! Records. In fact, Bob was totally negative in terms of doing that recording [Four for Trane]. I had been calling him for months, trying to get him on the phone, and his secretary always told me he was either out to lunch or he was gone for the day. [laughs]But by this time I had met John Coltrane, and John’s always been a hero to me, and was certainly very helpful in my career. I spoke to him personally and told him that I’d been trying to reach Bob, and I never could get him, and so he told me – the way he would answer was, he wouldn’t say he’d do it, he said, “I’ll see what I can do.” And the next day, after months of calling Bob Thiele, I called him again, and his secretary Lillian, whom I got to know rather well after some time, she said, “Well, Bob’s out to lunch, but he’ll be back in an hour.” [laughs]
Oh, I don’t think so. What eventually happened was rather fortuitous for me, in the sense that I had the chance to meet John Coltrane and it was he who was the intermediary for me, in connecting me with Bob Thiele and Impulse! Records. In fact, Bob was totally negative in terms of doing that recording [Four for Trane]. I had been calling him for months, trying to get him on the phone, and his secretary always told me he was either out to lunch or he was gone for the day. [laughs]
But by this time I had met John Coltrane, and John’s always been a hero to me, and was certainly very helpful in my career. I spoke to him personally and told him that I’d been trying to reach Bob, and I never could get him, and so he told me – the way he would answer was, he wouldn’t say he’d do it, he said, “I’ll see what I can do.” And the next day, after months of calling Bob Thiele, I called him again, and his secretary Lillian, whom I got to know rather well after some time, she said, “Well, Bob’s out to lunch, but he’ll be back in an hour.” [laughs]
― but also fuck you (unperson), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 15:21 (three years ago)
― J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi)
if someone's coming out of the bog with a wet leg i don't want to use the bog after them
― Kate (rushomancy), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 15:35 (three years ago)
Unless you've just changed your togs in the bog. Then it would make sense that you might have a wet leg.
― peace, man, Tuesday, 26 July 2022 15:37 (three years ago)
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r)
lol, i just recently wrote an essay saying bob dylan sold out by going electric
https://www.alanauch.org/wtob/2022/07/26/being-there/
yes, i know the stuff i say there is _very very debatable_ and if you try to debate me on it, i'll just agree with you, fair warning haha
― Kate (rushomancy), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 15:37 (three years ago)
Adopting a pop-centred framework for looking at all music doesn't strike me as particularly beneficial, empowering, or enlightening.
well, when you put it that way
I actually interpreted that statement from imago as calling into question this pop-centric thing where non-pop "doesn't count" because it's invisible, it only exists to be appropriated by pop or "underground" pop. I can't be sure what he actually had in mind (and his follow up post isn't all that illuminating). But making pop music seems fundamentally impossible, at this point- and I suspect he's trying to address that.
What would a "pop-centred framework" even look like? The only thing i can think of is the spectacle of money and the kind of scaffolding it creates.
― The 25 Best Songs Ever Ranked In Order (Deflatormouse), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 17:03 (three years ago)
And then there's this other thing, where OG "poptimism" has given way to an attitude that we all have to disown our quirky roots and show what good, unpretentious consumers we can be. Fuck that.
I'm not at all sure what poptimism meant 20 years ago. Wasn't it at least partly a recognition that futurist ideals prevalent in "underground rock" were better realized through the mainstream pop of the time?
― The 25 Best Songs Ever Ranked In Order (Deflatormouse), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 17:24 (three years ago)
I thought it was just the idea that the Rolling Stone style canon of serious rock music (mostly white and male) v. non-serious pop/dance music (often POC and female) needed to be upended and replaced with a canon that valued all music (including and especially pop music) with the same serious critical approach.
― doomposting is the new composting (PBKR), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 17:34 (three years ago)
wasn't it also challenging the criteria *of* that critical approach? like pointing out that the things rockism centered and cared about were just one possible way of looking at music? in that light i can understand the "treat all music as pop" gesture as a kind of deliberate reversal, meant to highlight the way rockism discourse treats pop music as bad because it fails rockist criteria etc etc
― Doctor Casino, Tuesday, 26 July 2022 17:42 (three years ago)
to be clear though I wasn't there and got this secondhand from later ILX, Singles Jukebox and freakytrigger posts.
― Doctor Casino, Tuesday, 26 July 2022 17:43 (three years ago)
What would a "pop-centred framework" even look like?
Off the top of my head, I would think it would privilege: the recorded medium, consumer formats and passive listening; individual tracks over larger works; song-based structures, studio production; beats, hooks, and immediacy - the earworm. It could certainly also have to do with spectacle and mass appeal but I don't think that's what was meant in a context where it is applied to all (or most) music.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 17:49 (three years ago)
I'll let imago explain what he exactly had in mind, though.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 17:50 (three years ago)
And tbc this isn't about imago - I do think a lot of newer music in a lot of genres, and a lot of music discourse, does seem like it privileges those things these days (you could add loop-based structures) and I do find it limiting.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 17:56 (three years ago)
Rolling Stone style canon of serious rock music (mostly white and male) v. non-serious pop/dance music (often POC and female) needed to be upended and replaced with a canon that valued all music (including and especially pop music) with the same serious critical approach.
wasn't it also challenging the criteria *of* that critical approach? like pointing out that the things rockism centered and cared about were just one possible way of looking at music?
I know, but I mean 20 years ago. The UK weekly music press had been divided along these lines since... at least the early 1980's? They had this out every issue p much, but were united in futurism. Like, it seems important that Ewing/FT is coming from that background and not America/RS?
passive listening; individual tracks over larger works; song-based structures, studio production; beats, hooks, and immediacy - the earworm.
oh ok- it occurred to me that maybe this is what you meant, but I did not get that from what imago wrote at all , I thought he was talking more about inventing some spectacle for yourself as a listener.
― The 25 Best Songs Ever Ranked In Order (Deflatormouse), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 18:13 (three years ago)
I do get at least some of that from what I quote below but if poptimism actually means that you close your eyes and imagine a 1975 Alice Cooper-style stage show when you hear a Balinese gamelan, I am fully on board:
It only has to succeed as songs, reallyAny song that one might call a banger, lolThe song is at the heart of popThe album is a more classical format in a sense, imoMore literary, less immediate
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 18:28 (three years ago)
lol, you're right, it's in there. I either missed that part or forgot about it.
if poptimism actually means that you close your eyes and imagine a 1975 Alice Cooper-style stage show when you hear a Balinese gamelan, I am fully on board
All I'm sayin :D
― The 25 Best Songs Ever Ranked In Order (Deflatormouse), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 18:33 (three years ago)
Bozhe moi.
― immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 18:34 (three years ago)
But also, like, I think imago is coming from that same UK weekly-influenced futurist background e.g. he thinks Wet Leg suck because they lack formal innovation.
― The 25 Best Songs Ever Ranked In Order (Deflatormouse), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 18:40 (three years ago)
(i think Wet Leg suck too ftr)
I also was thinking 20 years ago, or I guess like 17 years. What came through most clearly to my own brain/memory is the critique of rockism and a sense of exhaustion with its pretenses and its gatekeeping preoccupation with things like 'originality,' 'authenticity,' 'writes their own songs,' 'plays their own instruments,' 'deep' 'important' 'serious, the idea of an artist evolving and progressing over their career to become deeper and more important and more serious,.... etc. The way these things overlap with the social construction of masculinity, and the tendency of rock to be coded masculine and pop to be coded feminine dovetails with the idea of reclaiming and championing a huge range of listening and music-loving experiences that the rockist canon didn't take as seriously.
But I'm definitely not an expert, nor am I saying this in order to take a stand one way or the other on Wet Leg or this article... just following the tangent of 'what was/is poptimism,' and perhaps hoping to be corrected if I've had this wrong in my head all this time!
― Doctor Casino, Tuesday, 26 July 2022 20:10 (three years ago)
I was thinking a couple of hours ago that it might be a useful distinction if we thought of the assembly of pop acts as like casting a musical...somebody writes (substitute "creates" given how modern pop is as dependent on sounds as much as if not more than traditional melody/harmony/rhythm) the songs, and now it's time to find people to perform them. I loathe musicals, but that doesn't mean they're not a legit art form.
― but also fuck you (unperson), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 20:15 (three years ago)
Now that Wet Leg have showed up on Barack Obama's summer playlist we can all stop talking about them, btw.
― but also fuck you (unperson), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 20:21 (three years ago)
xp I guess you could frame it that way if you want to give all the agency to the songwriters, and none to the performers/artists
― slide into my KMFDMs (morrisp), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 20:22 (three years ago)
― The 25 Best Songs Ever Ranked In Order (Deflatormouse), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 18:40 (two hours ago) bookmarkflaglink
Nah. Before I embraced poptimism this is what I used to say. But now I say that their lack of formal innovation merely makes them not to my taste (or at least, not likely to be to my taste, given how I do occasionally root for basic stuff done well if it has that nebulous 'something about it').
What makes them suck is the hype, the coverage, the adulation. That is all that ever makes music suck. And the more that people go crazy about something, the higher a bar it has to clear to not suck. Why do you think I was laying into Bad Bunny earlier? It's harmless reggaeton in isolation. Wet Leg are perfectly serviceable indie - that one song (Angelica?) is kinda good even. But in both cases they're playing a formula that I don't think is particularly interesting, and people are going nuts for them. So, to me, they suck. It can only ever be subjective and I can only ever argue the case as I see it. I don't discount that others like these acts. But I'm allowed to not like them, and although it increasingly seems that ILM disapproves of such conduct, I'm allowed to say I don't like them.
― imago, Tuesday, 26 July 2022 21:05 (three years ago)
Whatever is not expressly forbidden is allowed.
― immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 21:15 (three years ago)
Blasting Wet Leg right now.
― immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 21:16 (three years ago)
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Tuesday, 26 July 2022 17:49 (three hours ago) bookmarkflaglink
This doesn't quite describe the sort of pop-centred framework I'm talking about.
Recorded format: yes. Passive listening? No way. Passive listening doesn't make you a poptimist, it makes you a regular human. All music nerds need to listen actively and well. At least, when they're being nerds. Individual tracks? Yeah, but albums too - it's a different sort of focus, but I think it's fair to say that albums are also subject to the tenets of responsible pop listening: willingness to meet the artist at least halfway, openness to yield to sensation while temporarily suspending judgement (beyond: 'this bangs!'), and above all never dismissing something out of hand because of what it is (yes, widespread adulation makes the bar much higher for me, but pop artists I regard as truly great will clear it effortlessly - the key is to not dismiss in advance NO MATTER WHAT IT IS) (certain exceptions apply in the case of evildoers). It doesn't have so much to do with hooks or immediacy. I've listened to the new Imperial Triumphant - avant jazz-metal - today. Not so much in the way of immediacy there (there is some!) but I wouldn't say the experience was fundamentally different to listening to a, say, Dawn Richard album and noting the profusion of bangers and general enjoyment
― imago, Tuesday, 26 July 2022 21:21 (three years ago)