pluck
― Mark G, Wednesday, 14 September 2011 21:32 (twelve years ago) link
When I was just about done with my piece I revisited this long, long, thread, but it seems like only about two people actually read the book. Not to say the discussions here aren't good. Anyone else read it? I enjoyed the book even though I disagreed with most of it.
http://www.fastnbulbous.com/retromania.htm
― Fastnbulbous, Friday, 7 October 2011 20:02 (twelve years ago) link
I can't believe how long it's taken me to read this, but I'm pretty much done. It's a victim of time - seems that as soon as it got sent off to print suddenly the music industry got its rear in gear and started making non-retro music again. Also, I agree that while it's a great read and makes some interesting thoughts, it does suffer from assumptive and often contradictory opinions.
― dog latin, Tuesday, 25 October 2011 14:53 (twelve years ago) link
seems that as soon as it got sent off to print suddenly the music industry got its rear in gear and started making non-retro music again
...uh? Could you explain?
― Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 25 October 2011 14:54 (twelve years ago) link
Like, I'll be reading a passage and thinking "Careful now Simey, careful now". Luckily, most of the time he manages to just about avoid any "when I were a lad" potholes most of the time, but you get the impression he really really wants to go off on a tirade about how music was all better when he was younger and now it's all ringtones.
― dog latin, Tuesday, 25 October 2011 14:55 (twelve years ago) link
xpost
seems that as soon as it got sent off to print suddenly the music industry got its rear in gear and started making non-retro music again...uh? Could you explain?― Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 25 October 2011 15:54 (44 seconds ago) Bookmark
― Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 25 October 2011 15:54 (44 seconds ago) Bookmark
Just, from a personal POV, 2011 seems like a bit of a creative unblocking on the whole for music (speaking very generally). We seem finally able to wave bye bye to all the garage rock and furry folk revivalists from the last decade, and maybe looking to move forward again.
― dog latin, Tuesday, 25 October 2011 14:57 (twelve years ago) link
Sorry, I'm at work and not explaining myself very well.
― dog latin, Tuesday, 25 October 2011 14:59 (twelve years ago) link
um
― lex pretend, Tuesday, 25 October 2011 15:22 (twelve years ago) link
no
2011 seems like a bit of a creative unblocking on the whole for music
like...no just no no NO
you may not have been paying attention to the uh "non-retro" music being made in 2010, 2009, 2008, 2007, 2006 et cet et cet but it was assuredly there
― lex pretend, Tuesday, 25 October 2011 15:23 (twelve years ago) link
http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/musicblog/2011/oct/20/jarvis-cocker-music-fandom
Also Tom E weighing in on the 'does technology mean music means less than it used to?' discussion from upthread.
― Matt DC, Tuesday, 25 October 2011 15:25 (twelve years ago) link
lex, i know for one you haven't read the book and therefore are not familiar with the arguments in it. for the record, i don't agree with his argument in its entirety, but i'd be interested to hear what you think is music from the last decade that is neither:
a: a revival of something from the pastb: a continuity of a style from a previous decade
Reynolds argument is that in the '60s you had rock, psychedelia, garage the beginnings of Jamaican pop; the '70s brought disco, punk, funk, reggae, glam etc; the '80s added hiphop, new-wave, synth pop; and in the '90s (or thereabouts) other movements like rave, jungle, etc were also introduced. He argues that the 2000s were largely concerned with recycling of old forms and did not really contain any mass youth or music culture revolutions in the same way as punk or rave or psychedelia. He says that even in dance music, many of the variations on house and techno were incremental and often harked back to styles originally invented in the 80s and 90s. Dubstep (prior to the time of his writing the book) had yet to emerge as a household force (he does mention Magnetic Man as a token dubstep crossover, but sweeps it under the carpet as being weaksauce).
This argument does sound like a shout at the clouds, but there's still a resonance that is hard to disprove, especially considering the old question: "Show me music that is of 1994 and something that's of 2006 and tell me the essential differences" - because other than software getting more streamlined, there've been few innovations (like the invention of the electric guitar, or the synth or music software etc) since then.
I would argue that there's nothing like a socio-political sea-change to get the creative hivemind flowing. I think that with the recent climate of global protest and economic collapse, we're seeing more people with more time on their hands to channel frustration and thoughts into their music. But that's just a theory.
― dog latin, Tuesday, 25 October 2011 15:46 (twelve years ago) link
the sound of robots fighting
― meat to pleased you (flame grilled meat), Wednesday, 26 October 2011 04:42 (twelve years ago) link
seems that as soon as it got sent off to print suddenly the music industry go
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 26 October 2011 05:02 (twelve years ago) link
this is your official bugbear now isn't it
― encarta it (Gukbe), Wednesday, 26 October 2011 05:03 (twelve years ago) link
i love the Drive soundtrack, I just think its existence and effects have been hilarious
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 26 October 2011 05:05 (twelve years ago) link
every piece of music since 1836 has been a revival of Faraday's cage
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Wednesday, 26 October 2011 08:33 (twelve years ago) link
Finished this last week.
The problem with the closing argument is that Reynolds begins to start seeing retro and derivativeness in almost everything. It's almost as though he wants a clear bolt-from-the-blue paradigm change in pop music, when that's clearly not how it works. He even points out that movements as ostensibly revolutionary as punk rock were actually routed in fifties and sixties revivalism.
He points to post-punk and rave as future-facing movements, but even these had foundations and influences from long before.
The only way a brand new music can ever exist is through a new interface; like how the advent of synthesisers helped to create electronic dance music. But it's also dangerous to romanticise the notion that one minute we were all sitting around listening to the Smiths, then someone invented the TB303 while pilling his face off and changed everything. Rave music wasn't a bolt from the blue - it was a culmination of events dating from as far back as the birth of rock music. Similarly, the post-punkers were largely art-school kids re-appropriating funk and disco licks several years after the fact.
The look, the attitude, the delivery had changed, but isn't this a bit similar to all the revivalism of the last decade that gets knocked in this book?
― Mum-Ra Gaddafi the Ever-Living (dog latin), Tuesday, 1 November 2011 11:51 (twelve years ago) link
This is why think a lot of this is about Britishness or british attitudes more than any particular changes in music. The British music experience traditionally filtered through not only a more centralized media in general but a more prominent music press..heightening perception of difference over continuity, rollover of new genres and micogenres..exaggerating notions of progress (whatever that is)
Decline the role of music press and the engine behind this becomes reduced
― post, Tuesday, 1 November 2011 12:09 (twelve years ago) link
dog latin otm
― sisilafami, Tuesday, 1 November 2011 12:29 (twelve years ago) link
I can't say I didn't enjoy the ride though - it's rare I read a non-fiction book cover-to-cover, and this one I did. As mentioned upthread, it's the little insights, anecdotes and the actual philosophical journey, rather than the polemic that makes this book worthwhile.
― Mum-Ra Gaddafi the Ever-Living (dog latin), Tuesday, 1 November 2011 12:31 (twelve years ago) link
Started reading this last week. Enjoyable, but a bit 'bloggy' so far.
― Darren Huckerby (Dwight Yorke), Tuesday, 1 November 2011 15:15 (twelve years ago) link
In part since it addresses and responds (positively!) to the book, Mark Richardson's latest Resonant Frequency:
http://pitchfork.com/features/resonant-frequency/8713-this-is-me-music-making-as-re-blog/
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 18 November 2011 20:28 (twelve years ago) link
relevant to our interests http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2012/jan/07/the-artist-retrovision-grindhouse
― piscesx, Saturday, 7 January 2012 10:09 (twelve years ago) link
more relevant: http://www.bookforum.com/index.php?pn=pubdates&id=8826
stop stanning.
― all i see is angels in my eyes (lex pretend), Saturday, 7 January 2012 10:35 (twelve years ago) link
like the roundtable thing. thanks. smarties being smart.
― scott seward, Saturday, 7 January 2012 13:40 (twelve years ago) link
I'm about 100 pages into this so far and it strikes me as an incredibly cranky book. It's almost as if every last change to occur in the past 10 years just sucks from Reynold's point of view. It's weird because I typically think of him as a fairly cheerful writer, but here he just sees negativity in everything.
I also think the whole argument suffers from the idea that things are a particular way now and we are just stuck there with no end in sight. This is odd since all the changes he catalogs came about only very recently and surely will change just as quickly.
Should I expect more of the same for the next 300 pages?
― Moodles, Wednesday, 11 April 2012 20:56 (twelve years ago) link
I just finished reading it a couple days ago and am still processing it. He gets less prickly as you get into it as the book becomes more of a warning rather than a straight-up rant.
It was interesting reading it while the new season of Mad Men was starting up. Reynolds pegs 1965 as the year the nostalgia virus breaks out and it's right around the time where the SCDP crew seems like it's losing touch of pop culture.
― Reality Check Cashing Services (Elvis Telecom), Friday, 13 April 2012 08:10 (twelve years ago) link
What's SCDP?
Popular wisdom has modern cultural nostalgia as starting w american graffiti in 71...what are his reasons for 65?
dunno if there's anything about anomie of new suburbia tied in here tho that might be a touch earlier tho
― coal, Friday, 13 April 2012 08:35 (twelve years ago) link
Reynolds is a writer to fit facts to his theories tho, not partic trustworthy as a writer unfortunately
― coal, Friday, 13 April 2012 08:36 (twelve years ago) link
popular wisdom needs to be told that american graffiti didn't come out until 1973, well after the first 'rock'n'roll' revival (eg sha na na at woodstock)
― Ward Fowler, Friday, 13 April 2012 08:39 (twelve years ago) link
Fair enough! I knew the film didn't come out till early 70s but haven't actually seen it
― coal, Friday, 13 April 2012 08:43 (twelve years ago) link
Hate the phrase 'popular wisdom' but wasn't quite sure what else to put
― coal, Friday, 13 April 2012 08:45 (twelve years ago) link
Sterling Cooper Draper Price - the ad agency in Mad Men.
It's when the demand for "newness" in British style culture outstretched the supply - the only way you could produce more culture was to start looking backwards. By early 1966, the Granny Takes A Trip shop opened up on London and became huge selling 19th century ephemera to rock stars.
The American timeline is different though, you already had Zappa's doo-wop album and Sha Na Na (Reynolds talks about them a bit, but their story seems wacky enough to merit their own book), but yah - 1973 and American Graffiti.
― Reality Check Cashing Services (Elvis Telecom), Friday, 13 April 2012 08:56 (twelve years ago) link
Yea ok I guess that Victorian schtick was kind of a thing in haight-ashbury also?
― coal, Friday, 13 April 2012 09:00 (twelve years ago) link
By setting their film O Brother, Where Art Thou before the era of the American folk revival (late 40s - late 70s), the Cohen Bros point out that the perceived "old timeyness" of music has been a selling point for a lot longer than we often remember. A lot of the country, folk and blues music that to us now seems simply "of its time" was actually nostalgic or revivalist when it was first recorded. It's hard to identify a single point at which popular culture began looking backwards in a sense that it never had before, but if there is such a point, it's certainly decades before 1965 or 1973.
― BEMORE SUPER FABBY (contenderizer), Friday, 13 April 2012 14:40 (twelve years ago) link
This should be at the top of the first post on all Reynolds threads forever really.
― Homosexual Satan Wasp (Matt DC), Friday, 13 April 2012 14:59 (twelve years ago) link
I also just finally read it myself -- was my reading on the way back from EMP! -- and I had my own problems with it, namely that it was (yeah, granted by default) white Anglo-American in focus. BARELY any discussion of if/how similar impulses play out among black artists or culture here or anywhere else, beyond a couple of quick interview bits and an quoted assertion about how there's no hip hop equivalent to classic rock radio. I count Simon as a friendly acquaintance (and he and his wife throw great parties) but I came away going "Uh?" at that.
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 13 April 2012 15:16 (twelve years ago) link
If you think of time in hour slots then at 4pm 10am is going to sound retro
If you think of time in day slots then you're going to see the similarities between 10am and 4pm not the differences
― coal, Friday, 13 April 2012 15:35 (twelve years ago) link
I sometimes wonder what people listening in 200-300 years or so will make of late 20th century music. Like, will they be able to tell what came first, Hendrix or drum and bass, or will they listen and not really hear differences, think it was all happening at the same time?
― Homosexual Satan Wasp (Matt DC), Friday, 13 April 2012 16:31 (twelve years ago) link
Did you mention this before? To me, as only a passing fan of classical music, I haven't really developed an ear for the various developments through the ages - it's all "classical" essentially until we get to stuff like Gorecki.
― Scary Move 4 (dog latin), Friday, 13 April 2012 16:35 (twelve years ago) link
Very true, but it seemed like a local phenomenon though... Almost as if the old SF Victorian architecture made everyone want to dress up like the gold miners and cowboys who were there a hundred years earlier.
― Reality Check Cashing Services (Elvis Telecom), Friday, 13 April 2012 20:13 (twelve years ago) link
and I had my own problems with it, namely that it was (yeah, granted by default) white Anglo-American in focus. BARELY any discussion of if/how similar impulses play out among black artists or culture here or anywhere else, beyond a couple of quick interview bits and an quoted assertion about how there's no hip hop equivalent to classic rock radio
I thought the chapter on Japan was pretty incisive (but to be fair, it was how Japan assimiliates white American culture )
I need to post the audio of the talk Reynolds did with Bruce Sterling a couple months ago...
― Reality Check Cashing Services (Elvis Telecom), Friday, 13 April 2012 20:19 (twelve years ago) link
But again, there'd been an olde-timey folk revival going on in NYC at least since the late 40s. Pete Seeger's Weavers had a massive hit with their version of Leadbelly's "Goodnight Irene" in 1950. The Kingston Trio were an even bigger smash towards the end of the 50s and into the early 60s with similar material. Joan Baez and Bob Dylan came up in the early 60s, both originally performing mostly traditional songs. This wasn't simply the continuation of an ongoing "living" tradition, but was instead a secondhand recreation of the vanished past. The musicians and fans of this revival were reaching back into popular culture's history for "better" and "more authentic" ideas and expressions than those they found in the culture of their moment. Dylan on why his interests shifted from rock to folk (courtesy of wikipedia):
"The thing about rock'n'roll is that for me anyway it wasn't enough ... There were great catch-phrases and driving pulse rhythms ... but the songs weren't serious or didn't reflect life in a realistic way. I knew that when I got into folk music, it was more of a serious type of thing. The songs are filled with more despair, more sadness, more triumph, more faith in the supernatural, much deeper feelings."
― BEMORE SUPER FABBY (contenderizer), Friday, 13 April 2012 20:32 (twelve years ago) link
There were still enough traditionalists around to get might pissed off when Dylan went electric though
― Reality Check Cashing Services (Elvis Telecom), Saturday, 14 April 2012 00:06 (twelve years ago) link
And don't forget that the old west and cowboys were hugely popular in the 1950s. Certainly since the advent of TV, and probably radio, the people running the stations have had their childhoods (or their parents childhoods) reflected in the mediums.
― Gerald McBoing-Boing, Saturday, 14 April 2012 00:20 (twelve years ago) link
I'd hazard a guess that astronaut/sci-fi themed culture was equal in proportion to the westerns. Also, you could interpret the 1950s-western as merely American hegemony taking a post-war victory lap or alternatively as comfort food for a spooked American hegemony in the throes of uncertainty.
― Reality Check Cashing Services (Elvis Telecom), Saturday, 14 April 2012 00:44 (twelve years ago) link
all of this shit is just making me think even more that there is no such thing as retromania its all just made up and depends where you stand on the hillside as to how far away things appear to be
― coal, Saturday, 14 April 2012 01:10 (twelve years ago) link
^ think this is p otm, though it probably comes & goes in waves, like most things
― BEMORE SUPER FABBY (contenderizer), Saturday, 14 April 2012 07:01 (twelve years ago) link