Class and race: enemies of creativity in pop?

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Flipping through the Face magazine in a bookstore in Daikanyama, Tokyo, today I came across an op-ed piece about class in pop music. Illustrated by photos of Neil Hannon, Justine Frischmann and Crispin Mills, the article suggested that whereas in the 60s all the managers were posh and all the groups low class, now it's the other way around. 'From now on, it's Coldplay all the way,' the piece concluded.

From Tokyo, where graphic design is a much more important issue in pop than class ever will be, such concerns look sadly British: irrelevant, a silly waste of time, as big a distraction from the simple business of making creative pop music as the issue of race is in the US.

Do people think these issues of race and class, which loom so large in the west, get in the way of creativity?

Momus, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Traditionally at least I think the reverse has been true. You could almost say that if the crosstown traffic across various racial Maginot Lines has been the historic engine of American pop culture, then in the UK it's the societal tension of class (and gender) that has created the friction and the bright sparks of British pop, which, at it's best is about *refusing to know one's place*. From Edwardians to Mods to Casuals, pop subcultures has offered working class boys the opportunity to live out fantasies of dressing up, while middle class kids respond by dressing down (hippy, shamblers, etc). In this way the UK's submerged cultural civil war is continued - as pantomime. You could even say the key moments - punk, acid house - are interesting in the sense that they offer benefits to both sides. More to say here, on gender and race, but maybe when I'm on my lunchbreak.

Stevie T, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

As one might expect from the Face, the claim abt the 60s class-distribution is hand-me-down rubbish anyway. Part of the Beatles' dynamic was that posh-voiced classical-music-loving George Martin came from a MORE working class background than Lennon, Harrison or McCartney.

mark s, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Sorry two more points: 1) if you think race and class are irrelevant to contemporary Japan, then you're living in a theme park delusion. 2) Maybe it's the fact that J-pop seems curiously uninhabited or haunted by any creative daemon (or hungry ghosts) that it often strikes the western pop market as fruitless exercises in pastiche and aimless play (and maybe the fact that such successful Japanese exports as Hurakami do deal with the tension and spectre of Japanese class and race is a clue to their success over here...)

Stevie T, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Sorry, that should be Murakami, obviously.

stevie t, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Steve: I didn't say race and class were irrelevant, just that they were less important in Japanese pop than, say, graphic design.

Japan has no significant racial minorities and is still a 'consensus society', de-emphasising class differences. Murakami's Superflat philosophy is precisely about this: superflat means 'devoid of perspective' but also 'devoid of hierarchy, all existing equally and simultaneously.'

Japan in a nutshell: the graphic design is flat, the social structure is flat. The music, on the other hand, is fizzy.

Momus, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Depends which Murakami you're talking about: certainly in the work of Haruki M there's plenty about class tension, betrayal of governing classes etc etc (and also a lot about Japanese racism vis a vis the rest of East Asia). But beyond the details, a lot of these ideas strike me as a more-or-less refined orientalism (much like Barthes 'Empire of Signs): presenting a cultural a cultural Other as an ahistorical apolitical wonderland of semiosis. I wonder if any Japanese readers of ILM could comment?

stevie t, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I'm by no means an expert on the region, but I suspect if I was a Korean living in Japan I might find Momus's assertion that there are no "significant" racial minorities in Japan a troubling one.

Tim, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Koreans and Japanese are racially about as different as British and French people.

Momus, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Momus, what exactly do you mean by 'race' here?

Richard Tunnicliffe, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

French/British. Is that a lot or a little?

ps "race" is totally bogus 19th-century "science" anyway. Sorry to get Ebony-and-Ivory abt it, but all humans are the SAME RACE: racism is the belief otherwise.

mark s, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

In the context of this discussion, I'm talking about race as an idea that haunts US pop music, with its strong black / white dynamic, and class as an idea with similar emotive power in UK pop. And I'm asking, are they distractions, or the very essence? I like the point about UK pop being a continuation, by pantomime, of social struggle. But even in art, struggle remains struggle, therefore a diversion of energy from things like formal creativity. Perhaps! I really don't know what I think about this, which is why I'm asking.

Momus, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Koreans and Japanese are racially about as different as British and French people (Momus)

Or British and Irish people?

David, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

By the way, isn't the fact that everyone is already concentrating in this discussion on race rather than the other term of the question, creativity, a very good illustration of exactly what I'm talking about?

Momus, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

"Creativity" is a superponcy word that no one wants to caught on-side with (less toxic descendent, I guess, of romantic theory of transcendent qualities of aesthetic genius).

"Race" and "class" are big fuck-off concepts which everyone believes they'll be CAUGHT OUT on: make the wrong assertion and HA! So you're a nazi!! (viz. David Icke with his Lizard-People-Rule-the-World theory being picketed by straight-faced anti-racist activists). The step from "race" (= bogus 19th century science) to , er, "Ethno-Cultural Identity" (or any term-shift by which you CAN generalise about, say, the diffs between Germans and Austrians) evades the problem w/o removing it, of course: cuz it either hardwires Absolute Cultural Relativism or somewhere sneaks racism-in-sheep's-clothing back thru some other door.

mark s, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Alternatively maybe people have picked up on some potentially offensive cultural essentialism... To return to the point, I think the desire to 'liberate' culture from psycho-social cathexes more puzzling than 'obsession' with race and class. Without rage, lust, sorrow, and the transformation of these impulses through wit and irony, doesn't culture become merely the manufacture of exquisite cuckoo clocks?

stevie t, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I dont understand the question. Are the people writing the Face article creating pop music?

Pop music gets created. The circumstances of its creation are interesting, but not as interesting (for me) as the circumstances of its reception. Ideas like "race" and "class" and "Japan" and "the West" and "pop" and "interest" and "silliness" and "the weather" have an impact on the reception and when writing about the reception of pop it's fun (or serious) to play around with them and deploy them.

I think generally, yeah, race and class in the terms you're talking about get too much share-of-voice in poptalk if only because it surely requires a lot of subconscious self analysis, of oneself as a representative of a race and class, and a lot of times people miss that out. We've all heard of Mailer's 'White Negro', we're all up on subcultueral theory and slumming it (Mark S's comments a few weeks ago on pop and 'cruising' were good, tho) - not sure where replacing this with, I don't know what you'd call it, 'gaijin chic' maybe, would get us....

Tom, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Mark: Creativity is 'superponcy'? A ponce is a person of embarrassingly high class, no? So even to use words like 'art' and 'creativity' is seen in the UK as taking a class position? This, to me, is pretty sad.

Momus, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Can the phrases "clever-clever" or "too clever by half" be translated into any other language? If not, my case rests.

And actually it was a diagnosis rather than a prescription (aka a massive ethno-cultural generalisation!!!)

And of course (to get uppity and offensive) the upshot has historically been that Brit would-be creatives have hightailed into nearby pop or TV, hence the (occasional, otherwise inexplicable) world-historical superiority of these zones. Superiority over contemporaneous outlander pop/TV AND contemporaneous Brit "high" art. (Trans: Radiohead are useless, but not as as useless as Martin Amis, etc etc...)

mark s, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Momus - what is formal creativity - are you saying it's without a cultural frame of reference - i don't believe in pure thought(s) ?

Geordie Racer, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I don't listen to J-pop, but here are some examples where issues of race and class appear to inspire creativity:
Ran and a short story by Yukio Mishima (don't remember the title) - the samurai code of honor is challenged
stories by Kenzaburo Oe (don't remember which ones) - derogatory comments are made about Koreans (read it as an acknowledgment that racism exists rather than an expression of it - an expression of the 'loss of faith' after WWII in the traditional, hierarchical, homogenous structure of Japanese society)

youn, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Creativity is perhaps more influenced by concerns that have replaced out-moded concepts such as 'class or race': looking good, earning money, success, coping with success, and acceptance (within their scene or beyond) The media decides what we're bothered about, more than our social environment.

K-reg, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Well it seems clear that Momus' impatience with the class-obsessed Brits is that a result of one too many review from the NME accusing him of being an ineffectual public school arty ponce, which is lazy journalism, and -judging by the social background of music hacks - hypocritical to boot. But I stand by my point that repression is - to quote John Cooper Clarke - the mother of metaphor. It's the class structure that gives us Joe Strummer, burning with rage that he's trapped in the body of a diplomat's son, AND Morrissey reinventing himself as the 'Oscar Wilde of the welfare state gentility' (actually said about Joe Orton, but never mind). Actually, I think the great lost to British pop over the last 20 years or so has been the demise of the Art School which acted precisely as a kind of liminal zone: for both too-clever-by-half proles for whom regular schools can't find a place for and would-be bohemian posh kids - both Lennon and Keith Richards, in other words. Whereas Art School exploited these tensions, the Drama School, which has replaced it in pop terms, plasters over them, creating a weird blandness which exists only maybe on Holyoakes...

stevie t, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

i think that class is such a british obsession. we can, of course, observe comparable class (con)structures in other countries, but the desire to read them as such is british. other kinds of difference are priviliged in other societies.

Jad, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

That's a very interesting point, Steve. Can anyone think of a British band that 'flattens' class, race and gender more effectively than S Club 7?

Tom, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Basement Jaxx don't have much door policy

K-reg, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

the roly poly's ;-)

Peter, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

long as you're prepared to face the consequences you should create whatever you want to explore how you connect with the world - (im still chewing over Tom's thoughts on engaging with hiphop culture - as i watch the wannabe gangsta charvas outside) - image seems to be more of a blessing and curse to pop.

Would i buy an emma bunton goes street-rap album ? - yes would i buy a eric clapton goes street-rap album ? - no

Why ?

Geordie Racer, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Mark E. Smith seen from Tokyo: can't sing, interesting avant musical ideas, great graphic designer (squiggly biro school).

Mark E. Smith seen from London: fascinatingly exotic example of proletarian 'other', bolshy northerner, love object for embarrassed public schoolboys (John Peel type). Singing skills, musical interests and design abilities seen as irrelevant. (Unjustly, I sadly add.)

Momus, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Sources, please, Momus. I've hardly read a British review of the Fall which doesn't (tiresomely) mention the "-ah" tic (singing style) and rockabilly/garage-rock/electronica-ish influences (musical interests). The "-ah" / garage rock thing is much more of a Fall cliche than any of the class/region stuff.

And also you could surely find a better example than a man who writes songs called 'Prole Art Threat' and lyrics like "I am the white crap that talks back". Should pop writers ignore lyrical/title content?

Tom, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

If you ignore the class concerns in Mark E Smith's work (certainly his early stuff), you're missing quite a lot, surely?

I don't think his singing is irrelevant. Obviously he's not a techically gifted singer (I'm on the side of the Japanese here) but his vocal style is essential.

As for the graphic design, you may be right. I love that scratchy aesthetic but it seems to be complementary to his music rather than a prime focus of interest. I'm not as interested in graphic design as I am in music, and I'll take your word for it that this is symptomatic of the culture I live in.

I live in London, btw.

Nick, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Oh, he's playing the game too. It takes two to tango-ah.

Momus, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

So Momus, you're saying that Mark Smith (for example) would have been a more creative (better? your tone seems to imply it) artist if he hadn't let all that class stuff get in the way of his creativity?

Tim, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I would agree with Momus *in principle* that journalists in the UK especially invoke race and class too often *but* I would also agree with Stevie that the driving principle behind the bad reviews of Momus's records is laziness rather than hatred; there may be an element of embarrassment on the hacks' part with having been raised in public schools or Oxford or Cambridge or wherever to live up to traditional British ideals of "intellectualism" and "achievement", and maybe they get into pop as an escape from that and therefore don't want pop music that reminds them of those criteria, but I think it's more a subconscious cultural itch (no different to that which turned me against Gorky's Zygotic Mynci and towards the Wu-Tang Clan at exactly the same time as I started resenting living in Dorset; oh yes, I did once) than a desire to weed Momus out. I *used* to agree entirely with Nick about the NME's motivations; I certainly don't now, and I think he reads too much into it.

Speaking for myself, I like the Fall because I find them creative and inspired and stimulating; what I love about Mark E. Smith's lyrics is the entire cultural mythology they've created rather than some dubious glamour of the "noble proletariat". But I would also agree with Tom that, when people start invoking phraseology like "Prole Art Threat", it's equally false and constricting to discuss them without at least *wondering* what such terminology might mean. Shaun Ryder or Ian Brown would have been far better Mancunian icons for Momus to invoke if he wanted to denigrate the idealisation of scuzzy, drugged- up hedonism.

Robin Carmody, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Tim: No, it's unclear to me whether we throw the baby out with the bathwater when we cure our neuroses (and class in Britain is just that, a neurosis) or whether we become healthy, capable of work and love.

Someone upthread said that without rage etc we have 'highly polished cuckoo clocks'. Well, I rather like those, and if the rage we're talking about is as narrow as Joe Strummer raging against his dad being a diplomat, I'd rather have the 'rustproof clockwork' of the Warp label, frankly. They're from oop north, but they don't make that the be all and end all of their work.

Momus, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

In defence of lame rock hacks: Stevie said "hypocrisy" and Robin said "embarrassment", but it's more severe (if less reprehensible) than either: it's fear, fear of being shut up uttering a small subjective truth, by a Big Objective Truth (or — rather more likely, esp.in UK, esp.re class — simulacrum thereof). So instead you somewhat fake a "hard" background, and pretty soon you're twice as trapped as if you hadn't. Rage abt misperception (or misrep) of "where [x] is coming from" (assumptions re class background) has more than once convulsed ILM: this is because who feel themselves thus misperceived/misrepped feel they're being silenced w/o being heard.

mark s, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Boy, where to plunge into all this? Especially since it's predominantly a UK-focused discussion from what I can see, with Japan handily if understandably, given who started the discussion, being posited as the semi-paradisical other.

*reflects* I guess it's a question of how intentional one is about what one creates. *shrugs* Tom asked a key question -- are the people writing in _The Face_ creating pop music? And...are they? If so, well, perhaps that's an issue that drives them. If not...all I get is an image of somebody tinkering away at her mastering software making sure that she can at least finish up the song to be sent for the initial white-label pressing. There may be issues getting in the way of creativity, but I prefer to think of the bigger issue as being getting something done and available to see what people think. If whatever drives this posited musician I'm talking about is something specifically about race/class/gender/etc., then hey, great. If it impedes her...well, who makes that decision if it does?

Says me, a guy who's not a musician at all. Figures.

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

People "free" from racial, class, or gender distinctions - white, well-off, penis - don't have to indicate meaning based on those distinctions. They are blank, free to just fill up with whatever comes in their pretty little heads. Relatively. I mean, I doubt Coldplay can freestyle. If you are, however, in the majority of the population that is defined by its "positivity" - your traits protrude, your accent, your skin - you're the definition, not the definer. Which is pretty infuriating and can drive people to extremes of creativity, among other things. But I would say that constantly justifying and attempting to transcend your objecthood def. gets in the way of "creativity" in the sense that injustice and inequality are generally less kind to the defined than the definers.

The kid who got that new guitar, that obscure Finnish EP, those weekly piano lessons might not feel very constrained by his race or class. But just declaring a space (music) as free from distinctions of status isn't enough to make it so. Even in Japan.

Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

On the question of whether The Face is creating pop music, I think Tom with his Reception Theory would have to say they are. They're at least one third in the dialogue between producers, mediators and consumers we call 'pop music'.

In the UK class is a 'structuring difference' in this dialogue, one which is out of proportion to its diminishing role in British society, (like Japan's, tending more and more to flatness)

Because pop music likes a drama, a big bold clearcut one with tons of nostalgia thrown in, we get the mediators (with the tacit approval of the artists and consumers) latching onto, say, Blur v. Oasis, which becomes a major headline on the evening TV news mainly because of class. A fond replay (with actors) of the more real class divisions of the 60s.

I'm not saying that music shouldn't be the vehicle of such dramas. Just: 'Change the record, this one's stuck'. Instead of 'pop music as class battleground', how about 'pop music as research and development department for electronic technology', 'pop music as time machine', 'pop records as flimsy excuse for cutting edge graphic design', 'pop videos as first port of call for aspiring film directors', 'pop lyrics as micro-literature' etc etc. It's surely more interesting and more relevant to see pop as a metaphor for creative endeavour than a metaphor for class.

Momus, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Oh, because god knows that literature and film have nothing to do with race and class.

I object to race/class based dismissals of any music, but not race/class based engagement.

Nick wants to seperate creative endeavor from any aspect of social reality. On the contrary, pop at it's best dives into the thick of such questions.

Sterling Clover, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

It's all a question of proportion, innit, guv'nor?

Momus, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I agree with Stevie's fundamental argument (esp. the point about art schools as a centre for creativity in the UK in the 60s and 70s) but I think he weakened it by citing that horrendously overrated chestnut Strummer as his case in point (as Nick weakened *his* argument by citing a genuine near-genius and anti-lad like Mark E. Smith rather than Ryder, Brown or Liam Gallagher). By mentioning Strummer, Stevie was playing into Nick's hands. Mention the urban liberals who came out of the art schools twisting the cherished folk music of the shires, Trousse! *Then* your argument would be flawless ...

But OTOH I agree with Nick on the driving force behind the continuing reinvocation of class in British pop (though we're onto something more specific now: Britpop); much of its sustaining myth is based around a nostalgic social setup, an internal set of reference points where the differences between people are exaggerated and intensified in terms that baffle anyone from outside the islands, so you get ancient class dramas being boringly wheeled out against a backdrop of a society which is becoming both flatter (at its "mainstream" base) and more flexible and freer (for those who feel creative / progressive urges). I'd also agree totally that pop is often at its most fascinating as a vehicle for drama and conflict but that there are hundreds of such dramas more interesting and relevant than class. My only point would be that refusal to accept the modern world and continuing to define culture around outmoded structures happens, to some extent, *everywhere*.

Robin Carmody, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

stop accusing everything of being outmoded!

ethan, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Well, there's your question. What is outmoded and what isn't? And who's doing the defining and why?

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

More to the point, if race and class weren't in the picture, what the fuck would Jay-Z rap about? Oh, and if you note the cultural dynamic of Japan -- a great deal of culture is precisely an appropriation of western culture, but placed in a context where the traditional dynamics no longer apply, and thus it is "set free" in a sense. At the same point, Japan's corporatism, for example, which pervades a great deal of the culture, similarly plays out issues of class and nationality (as opposed to race), just in a vastly different way.

Sterling Clover, Wednesday, 9 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Class in the UK is a way of dramatising/describing/euphemising/naturalising/making more fun particular economic relations, which grew out of particular social relations - it feels 'outmoded' because it doesn't describe things as perfectly as once it did. But the basis remains, I think, economic. Never been to Japan but I'm guessing economic relations are important there too.

But that's not my main point. My main point is that I'm vaguely aware that there exists a 'proper' Reception Theory which gets capital letters, but because I was a scholarship boy and they wouldnt let me have the keys to the posh library / because I am a lazy bastard (delete according to which prism you want to view things through), I have never read about it. Can anyone fill me in here?

Tom, Wednesday, 9 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Tom: For Reception Theory, check
www.unorth.ac.za/Faculty/Arts/English/virtclass/ reception/reception.htm
It's basically just that structuralist thing about the death of the author. Critics deciding to concentrate on how texts are created by their reception rather than by authorial intention. On class: Class is not just a way to describe people's objective economic relations with each other. There is also a subjective, sociological element to class. Marx called a group of people who shared objective economic interests a 'class in itself'. But only when they developed class consciousness and agreed that this divided them from others subjectively did they become a 'class for itself', and therefore potentially revolutionary. You could say that, in these terms, Japan has many 'classes in themselves' (rich, poor, management, workers) which never become 'classes for themselves' because of the national emphasis on consensus. Britain, on the other hand, could be seen as a country riddled with 'classes for themselves' (people giving themselves airs or refusing to 'know their place') which are based on subjective criteria like snobbism or inverted snobbism rather than real economic common interest. Both are, in Marxist terms, counter-revolutionary. In neither case do objective class interests line up with subjective class identities, leading to action. But UK class consciousness is divisive and energy- intensive (I disagree with you that it's 'fun'), whereas Japanese class blindness allows people to get on with other stuff. Like making rough- hewn yakimono pots or inventing Postpet, I suppose.

Momus, Wednesday, 9 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

And since evidence for reception is sometimes somewhat lacking in any OTHER form, RT often amounts to precis lists of contemporary newspaper reviews: kinda like interpeting the 80s and 90s thru the lens of Steve Lamacq's live pages... Clever academics can often be weirdly dim: ignore Ruskin on Turner (= elitist constructionism) in favour of the median 1860s hack at the Manchester Guardian (= vox pop/vox dei)

(Oh: now I'm *attacking* hacks... Sorry.)

mark s, Wednesday, 9 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Reception Theory: right, that's what I guessed it would be. The receiver "rather than" producer I'm not keen on, I prefer it as a question of differing emphases - what produces the most interesting outcome?

The subjective overlay that is 'class' is what I meant by dramatising/euphemising etc. (I don't agree that class is 'fun' either, I was just throwing out a list of how it might work, except that in the UK class is emphasised and exploited all the time for its comic potential).

Tom, Wednesday, 9 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

hey, what's all this going on about japan? of course the uk is pathetically obsessed with class, but i rarely see it mentioned in art reviews over here across the pond unless someone has created art that deals with that (like vanilla ice saying 'from the streets yo' and being outed), which seems sort of like this suspiciously wonderful utopia of art that is japan. sure, we also have all that nasty race stuff in our musical history (which, while certainly a bad thing, didn't impair us creatively), but now we're over that now and all our pop is colorblind and shiny and working outside that (cf. trl etc etc). so, other then the fact that you're momus and stuff, why japan?

ethan, Wednesday, 9 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I don’t see talking about class as the ‘English class problem’. Our obsession with letting-it-all-hang-out class-wise is a strength – externalisation and all that. Supposedly class-less structures are far more invidious – too much denial and repression… (I have had discussions with American friends who swear blind that Bill Gates is ‘middle class’.)

Guy, Wednesday, 9 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

bill gates is one of the most hated men in america.

ethan, Wednesday, 9 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

But I doubt Gates is hated purely due to his money -- I think a lot of that is to do with the quality of his software and his business tactics.

Nicole, Wednesday, 9 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

the only reason the quality of microsoft's product and business practices is so often brought up is beacause of their huge success. there are hundreds more monstrous corporations that do far worse and get by because they aren't as instantly recognisable.

ethan, Wednesday, 9 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

If you've had Windows crash as many times as most people have, I doubt you can say it's brought up mainly because of Gates' wealth.

And the reason he is attacked more often is because he presents himself as the public face of the company. You don't see the owners of Union Carbide in the press very often, do you?

Nicole, Wednesday, 9 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Anyway, more to the point, re: the US and class, is the fact that both candidates in the presidential election were aristocrats, the equivalent of which hasn't happened in the UK, for instance, since the late 19th century

mark morris, Wednesday, 9 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Nick's definition of "class for itself" seems a bit off, though in the clever way that he tends to be off. A "class for itself" according to Marx is precisely a class which grasps its historical purpose and true economic interests. We might term what Momus speaks of as a "class [aware] of itself". Oh, and artistic energy going into kulturkampf is only irritating if you find the very existance of class more or less frustrating. Which is not a slur, I don't think.

Sterling Clover, Wednesday, 9 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I'm using Marxist terminology without subscribing to Marx's belief that classes had 'manifest destinies', and that the triumph of the proletariat and socialism was a scientific certainty. Remove that (a religious faith dressed up as science) and the distinction between a 'class in itself' and a 'class for itself' becomes a matter of whether people choose to make differences in status (which are inevitable,even in communist societies), wealth and power 'structuring differences' or not.

The reason I harp on about Japan is because in some ways it's a nice control experiment for discussions about Britain. It's an island with a history of imperialist adventures, it's developed, they eat fish, they drive on the left, talented creative people go into commercial art, etc. But in Japan everyone has agreed to call themselves middle class and put petty jealousies off the agenda, which makes for a very * pleasant* atmosphere (not to mention absence of IRA bombs etc).

I asked my Japanese friends what they would do, given unlimited power, to engineer Japan-like conditions in Britain. Shizu said 'Replace Christianity with Buddhism'. (Christianity is revolutionary, Buddhism is stoical.) Chie said 'Turn the clock back to Medieval Britain, then suddenly add post-industrial superstructure.'

Momus, Wednesday, 9 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

No worry about the IRA in Japan, no. But what about cults killing hundreds with poison gas? All I'm saying here is that I think Nick has a fairly idealized connection with particular elements of Japan. If you're touristing, you can get away with this. But if you're an actual part of any particular society, it becomes increasingly difficult to retain such illusions.

Americans sometimes, I think, look towards England because the absence of the race divide (in the same way at least) seems attractive, from afar.

Sterling Clover, Wednesday, 9 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Ethan: I wasn't accusing the actual class structure itself of being outmoded, just the way media people talk about it and dramatise it as being same.

All this stuff about Japan and a consensual, settled society is interesting because Britain, in the 50s and 60s, aspired to much the same thing; the ethos of the whole setup was stability and work ethic (cf XTC's "Earn Enough For Us"), and while the old Victorian class structure still prevailed to a great extent, the emphasis was on a common identity and culture; arguably this country has shifted much more towards "classes for themselves" in the last 30 years or so. But much was hidden behind this; I believe strongly that British people feel "freer" than they ever did, and I would rather see "classes for themselves" than everyone in the UK pretending to be the same.

Nick's argument for creativity-out-of-a-stultifying-consensus-of-a- national-dream in Japan reminds me in many ways of that old played- out chestnut that growing up in such a society created the explosion of creativity in British pop music in the 60s. But I'm not sure whether I believe in societies putting on a consensual sheen (as it were), which is one reason why I'm not sure I would necessarily want to live in Japan, or feel it would suit me best (though it nevertheless fascinates me).

The Space Between, Wednesday, 9 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Sterling: I think British people sometimes look towards the US because of the apparent absence (probably also very idealised) of such a complex, multi-layered class structure (or at least, the absence of a class structure which seems so *ancient*). Jonathan Freedland's writings on this subject are *very* interesting.

Tamariu, Wednesday, 9 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Nick has a fairly idealized connection with particular elements of Japan. If you're touristing, you can get away with this. But if you're an actual part of any particular society, it becomes increasingly difficult to retain such illusions.

Well, I'm currently living in Japan, writing for a Japanese magazine (Relax), collaborating with Japanese music artists for Japan-only releases. With my Kahimi Karie hits I was actually instrumental in helping define one of the key Japanese youth movements of the 90s, Shibuya Kei, to the extent that people in the west listening to compilations of Japanese pop ('Sushi 3003' etc.) were actually listening to my image of Japan becoming Japan's (export) image of itself. I think that makes me more than a tourist, don't you?

Japan's self-image is of course in flux -- new prime minister Koizumi has declared as his goal 'a new Meiji restoration', no less. And my image of Japan will no doubt be in flux over the next three months. But I'm curious about why the idea of a society without class tensions (summed up with the image of everyone bowing to everyone else) is so hard for some people to swallow. It's as if people are saying 'That's impossible' or 'That's unfair'. It's as if they want to prescribe for Japan the race and class problems of the west just to make a level playing field.

Why not face the fact that this country *is* different in the way it deals with class and race. Some of those differences disturb westerners -- the absence of cosmopolitan racial pluralism, for instance -- but we shouldn't deny they exist, or try to force our problems on Japan just because they represent our view of what social and economic modernity should be.

Some of the differences between Japan and Britain end up being audible on CD. I bumped into Cornelius on the street in Nakameguro last night. He was on his way to a restaurant with some friends after a day in the studio working on his follow-up to Fantasma. (I'll be hearing the rushes next Thursday.) You can bet that the new Cornelius will owe a lot of its fascination (or, to some, disappointment) to the very specific atmosphere of Japan, including the fact that Cornelius and, say, Pizzicato 5 have never been set head to head in the media as caricatural members of social classes like Blur and Oasis were. (One thing they have both done is tried, on their sleeves, to make Korean graphics trendy, which goes back to my point about race / class being no more or less important here than graphic design.)

Sorry for going on so long. A very interesting thread, citizens! Up the revolution and vive la difference!

Momus, Wednesday, 9 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Korean graphics? Hm...elaborate on the differences between that and Japanese design, if you could. I'm curious.

Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 9 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Ned: Korean is a different alphabet, though it overlaps with Japanese enough to be legible. P5's 'Happy End Of The World' album uses Korean type, as does the inside of the 'Fantasma' booklet. It's part of an ongoing trend in Japan to explore and re-evaluate their Asian neighbours, until recently overlooked due to Japan's fascination with the west.

Momus, Thursday, 10 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Nick, you don't need to expand so much on your connection with Japan. I'm familiar with your work, and as I revealed recently on the "Electronica VS Country" thread, I'm a fan. So I know you work with these artists and such. And together you make good and pretty things. Yes. And maybe "touristing" is a bit harsh -- but if you're not a tourist, you've sure gotta admit you're a flaneur, and that you take pride in being such. Which is to say that you take what you want from where you find it, and then throw it together into what you want it to be. I personally love Japanese culture, though I'm mainly just familiar with Anime and musical exports. I find the Anime, which is more "readable" to me, to be largely haunted by ghosts of WWII. Elsewhere, I've lamented how constricting this feels, that I need to read such a rich culture in such a rigid fashion. But it keeps asserting itself, and I can't deny it. In fact, I can almost see your point -- that race and class divides stand in the way of formal innovation. Except that this formal innovation is largely driven by such divides (at least elsewhere in the world) and that in fact much of Japan's borrowings which seeded its culture were born of such race/class driven development. So here's a theory to chew on -- Japan's borrowing of race/class inflected culture from the west (and there's plenty) is a form of cultural dissent against corporatism -- just as brits look towards America for lacking the class divide (Robin, I was going to make that inverse point, btw, to make the whole thing symmetric, but then I got to thinking about how brits exoticize race in America and it got too complicated to sum up) well so too do Japanese look to the west precisely to find traits of difference. Of course, this borrowing doesn't inject such counsciousness into Japanese culture as a whole, but rather tends to be swallowed by it. So which culture is "better"? Damn I have a hard time being normative. Let's say that creativity finds an outlet no matter the prevailing social structures. Appreciation of that creativity comes from an engagement with the cultural product which can differ markedly from that cultural product's intended engagement with social reality. In other words, "better" to whom?

Sterling Clover, Thursday, 10 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I can't speak for either Japan or England, but class is the great shadow-play manipulator of American life--I might dare to say, equally as divisive as race (at least at this moment in history). The difference might be that whereas in many other countries, what you or your family once was is often as important as what you are now, in the U.S. it only matters where you exist on the class divide at any given tax-time. It may be true that moving across class lines is more easily accomplished in this country, but it's important to point out that one can move up--or down. At this time, more and more people seem to be moving down, thanks to politics, the "economic downturn," and other more occult forces.

The good thing is more and more citizens (one hopes) are becoming aware of the big lie that we're all one big happy middle class, contrary to what Hollywood movies and the Top Ten Countdown would have us believe. I've had to undergo more than one academic "sensitivity training" seminar focussing on problems between the races, but if the word "class" was ever mentioned, the moderators would quickly change the subject. Though I am by all appearances white, I feel closer in some ways to Exhibit A growing up on welfare (well, what's left of it) in a black or Hispanic or Cambodian housing project than to Bill Gates, Oprah Winfrey, or even your typical SUV- driving Lawnboy-riding suburbanite--and a long, long of any race--and a long, long way indeed from our own King George II and his oil empire. Also a long way from any pop stars who might like to think they're "expressing the hurt you feel, man." I grew up on welfare myself, but I guess the major difference is I somehow managed to get an education, albeit I owe my soul (as do so many scholars and artists) to the U. S. Student Loan offices. I guess this is why no matter how much I despise Eminem and pop stars in general I can understand why so many poor white kids latch on to his identification with black urban culture (both the good and the very bad).

In America we get the great majority of our cultural intake from Los Angeles, New York, and (a distant third) London. This is true no matter where you grow up; my contemporaries and I grew up almost completely unaware of my hometown's German and Irish and American Indian heritage, thanks to TV, movies, and rock music. Though Mississippi River water ran through our veins and we once had a Socialist for mayor, silly pop songs and sitcoms buzzed in our heads and motivated our adolescent rebellion or lack thereof. (So maybe mass media is the great equalizer! As long as it's dumb enough.)

So, I don't know if race or class are the most important things that "get in the way of creativity," but I certainly know money is the only thing that buys you the time to create; therein might lie your answer... Sorry to lead this topic even further astray, Master Momus--but there's one last question which I'd love to ask you: What of the Japanese once-despised Ainu population (now less than one hundred individuals, I read the other day), and what of Japan's "untouchable" class? Are they considered "middle class," too, and do they reap its benefits? Do they listen to Lolitapop, watch "Survivor," and eat McSushi? You're the expert, so speak on, oh wise one (I say without a trace of irony).

X. Y. Zedd, Sunday, 13 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

i fail to see how eminem's 'identification with black urban culture' is an inferior lifestyle choice than going off to college on a student loan.

ethan, Sunday, 13 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Oh, X.Y.Zedd, what fine words you speak.

(and I'm listening to Eve's "Cowboy", and I want to kill myself. Then don't. Then do. Then do/n't.)

Robin Carmody, Sunday, 13 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Sorry, Ethan--you might have a point there, but I fail to understand it (which might be my own witlessness). How is either one a "lifestyle choice" (ugh--can't you see that's an absurd phrase and a blatant American marketing concept?), and how was I saying that they were related at all? Certainly one does not preclude the other. There are undoubtedly many poor white, black, etc. kids out there who both love Eminem AND also owe their soul to the Loan Office's country store. (The reference is to "Sixteen Tons," by the way.) Is being forced to put oneself in hock to get a college degree somehow shameful? (It is regrettable.) Maybe you're English and don't quite understand how our system works, in which case I forgive you. Or maybe it's my fault for not making myself clear in the first place. I certainly agree with what you say about Microsoft!

X. Y. Zedd, Sunday, 13 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Excuse me, I meant "company store." The song is about coal-mining and the nefarious practice of keeping employees in debt so they must keep working for you interminably. Not so very different from working in modern America; exchange "Visa Card" for "company store."

Thanks for the kind words again, Robin!

Another day older and deeper in debt...

X. Y. Zedd, Sunday, 13 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

That Face article, to me, just seemed like dismay at discovering yet another area where the posh kids come top and don't want to talk about their privilege. As in, 'ohh, great - this is even more sewn up than we thought!' It's all part of the New Feudalism, where more abstract spaces/new industries (like the internet) are being claimed by those with the most advantages in society, after a decade where a more 'anything goes' attitude prevailed (it's feudal because it's kept en famille ever after). Cultural revolutionaries irrespective of class origins enter most creative areas first; eventually in come the cultural capitalists, shopping away. So we've already got our neo- Medieval fiefdoms with tech in every home, and people talk about the causes of bad karma instead of original sin (a silly 'progression' to an atheist like me).

People in London have a real downer about the sewn-up-ness of things right now because it's pushing up the cost of living faster than some can cope. It's really bad being priced out while feeling that this is the result of secret handshakes, etc. - instead of more basic reasons like having/not having talent or a particular gift for communication. This kind of stress is probably bad for creativity, which is why music and art here seem to be stagnating, or getting transfusions on import, or subsidies from well-off relatives. Fashion: really only do-able now if you can benefit from some kind of nepotism or patronage from New Feudalist system (just ask Stella McCartney). Our brave new multicultural world is still subject to the same old crap about origins and class - I wish I could put these issues to one side and get on with actually creating stuff but the agendas of others trying to profit from creative people or found a new corporate structure based on their labours are dictating these new, unsatisfactory terms. We're actually much closer here to the end of racism in cosmopolitan areas than news reports suggest, but this is being replaced by haves v. have-nots problems. Just ask anyone in Oxford Circus on May Day.

Maybe in Japan music (and related product) is an aspirational means of escape from the conformity inherent in the rest of the society, at least on the surface, done with less fuss because there's less for a large, moneyed middle class with recreational outlets to fuss about. And where one person sees consensus, like Momus, another will see a blinkered conformist bent. However, Japanese people of my acquaintance are just as capable of bitching about trustafarians as anyone else - the Japanese in London for two big exhibits are all annoyed about stinking rich Zen artist (and Bjork ripper-offer) Mariko Mori! And the designer Koji Mizutani, spurred to create by Tokyo student activism of 30 years ago, told me trendy Japanese are too busy shopping for new toys and clothes to be concerned about the inequalities in their own society, never mind anywhere else. But they're no different from those with privilege anywhere that takes Visa.

suzy, Sunday, 13 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

'Ainu' - asked one of my oriental associates about them and it was like some ricki lake -' my black man is too black' thing - but he said stocky and hairy.

forthcoming WWF presentation - those people who work for their money vs. those people whose money works for them - im the renegade stakeholda with 'mr pointy' sharpened.

'marx iz good on production but we iz inna consumer age'

Chomsky izza rudebwoy, Monday, 14 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Suzi, what do you mean by "neo-Medieval fiefdoms with tech in every home"?

Is this a means of suggesting that people in metropolitan areas are more aware of the internet than the rest of us?

I don't believe that's true.

Robin Carmody, Monday, 14 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

*trying to find any reference at all to rural vs metropolitan in Suze's post*

Patrick, Monday, 14 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Neo-Medieval fiefdom: I'm afraid I can only think of weird media examples to show you what this means rather than a textbook definition, sorry. We have lots of talk about dynastic succession amongst capitalists like Rupert Murdoch, or the 'courtly' systems in evidence in fashion or art. Or neo-yuppie global teens living with their parents who then underwrite, and then interfamilially own, the flats of their brats. This is just my little buzzphrase and I'm adding flourishes to it every day. That we're already jousting over it makes me think I might be on to something.

I think it's safe to say that no matter where most of the people posting here actually do live, they inhabit an abstract cosmopolitan space thanks to the wonders of what is now cheap, accessible technology. This should be liberating and creative rather than divisive and didactic. It may also act as a palliative/distraction for conscientious objector types to an outside world in the grip of New Feudalist madness.

suzy, Monday, 14 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Patrick: my initial (and now-quelled) suspicion of Suzy's statements was rooted in my paranoia of the UK media's reduction of everything to such a crude and simplistic level. Yes, I know, I know ...

Suzy: I agree entirely. I've always objected very strongly to neo- feudalist attempts to "own" the internet, to control a cultural space that should be there for all. I couldn't agree more with your feelings on capitalist dynastic succession and underwriting, and I've always tried to find another way. Quite naturally my greatest anger towards them is when they try to colonise what was born democratic.

I initially suspected Paul was a joke. I fear not, however, though rest assured that I am unconnected if he is. I couldn't imagine (read: wouldn't want to depress myself by imagining) such attitudes, but the internet is bound to surprise us. I'd be far more frustrated by it if it didn't; rather the Pauls of this world than neo-feudal colonisation.

Robin Carmody, Monday, 14 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Gareth: threads get deleted when the e-mail address used to start the thread doesn't work. It means that replies get fed back to the e- mails of the person posting them, which is a hassle. And it also clogs up Greenspun, who are kind enough to provide this service free. So that's why.

And yes, the forum is 'censored'. It's a private message board. I try to be open about the reasons. Stuff that gets deleted includes: personal abuse not linked to any music-related points, repeat posts when I catch them, posting under other people's e-mail address, racial or homophobic abuse, threats, etc. etc. So for instance you won't see Paul's mutterings about "crushing [Robin's] career" here for much longer.

ILM Moderator (Tom), Tuesday, 15 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I think the most interesting thing about class/music in britain is that the most desirable musician "properties" are those who are middle-class, but who can most successfully pass themselves off as working class. Apropos of what, I don't know....

yadda yadda.....

x0x0

norman fay, Tuesday, 15 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

READ THIS

As you may notice, there have been some posts deleted from the end of this thread. 'paul' or whatever you answer to, stop being a cockfarmer on our nice message board. Everyone else, please try not to respond to stuff like this.

(There were a few posts deleted which sort of made points relevant to the whole thread, in an effort to relate the cockfarming back to the topic at hand. I'm sorry to remove those contributions, but thought it was best since so many surrounding posts were removed.)

Josh (ILM Moderator), Tuesday, 15 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

censorship from a thread that talks about being anti-censorship. Did you know that Naomi Klien is married to Avi Lewis, twat much music dj and is teh daughter of ralph klien, whose cuts to welfare and pensions provided naomi with her education to write about 'those big nasty corporations...'

I wonder how long this is going to be on the thread!

paul, Tuesday, 15 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

and for the record, i complimented suzy......................

*stands up on soap box*

the story will not be rewritten........................

paul, Tuesday, 15 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

This is not a free-speech-unlimited forum. If that disappoints you, you're free to start a forum of your own and post whatever you like. Posts here are moderated in order to lessen the negative impact on the forum due to people who lack the basic communication and social skills necessary to exchange opinions civilly.

Josh (ILM Moderator), Wednesday, 16 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

me no understand big word that typing man do????? me wish had public school education. me no happy. : - (

paul, Wednesday, 16 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

three weeks pass...
I always enjoy agreeing with Stevie T, especially when it means he'll go and buy me another pint. But I don't think I find class a very interesting topic in pop music. (But I do take the point of what the estimable Tracer Hand said, way upthread, about what Barthes used to call 'exnomination'.) Come to think of it, I don't find race a very interesting topic in pop music either. While I kind of agree with Stevie about 'creative tensions within a culture' blah blah, those things are not what the pop music of my dreams would be about. The pop music of my dreams would be about things like love, nostalgia, places, travel, marriage, and clambakes.

the pinefox, Sunday, 10 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

The pop music of my dreams: travel and places for sure, but not the other four things Reynard suggests. Its tone would be overridingly cynical but tentatively optimistic. And it would be collaborative.

Robin Carmody, Sunday, 10 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

six years pass...

Momus, what exactly do you mean by 'race' here?

-- Richard Tunnicliffe, Tuesday, 8 May 2001 00:00 (6 years ago)

am0n, Wednesday, 28 November 2007 18:50 (sixteen years ago) link

genuinely good thread

blueski, Wednesday, 28 November 2007 18:58 (sixteen years ago) link

READ THIS

As you may notice, there have been some posts deleted from the end of this thread. 'paul' or whatever you answer to, stop being a cockfarmer on our nice message board. Everyone else, please try not to respond to stuff like this.

(There were a few posts deleted which sort of made points relevant to the whole thread, in an effort to relate the cockfarming back to the topic at hand. I'm sorry to remove those contributions, but thought it was best since so many surrounding posts were removed.)

-- Josh (ILM Moderator), Tuesday, 15 May 2001 00:00 (6 years ago) Bookmark Link

^^^this dude was jokes

Dom Passantino, Wednesday, 28 November 2007 19:00 (sixteen years ago) link

The initial post in this thread is ridiculously stupid. Artists explore issues relating to their personal lives and world; race and class happen to be big parts of that.

filthy dylan, Wednesday, 28 November 2007 20:05 (sixteen years ago) link

Would art be better if humans didn't make it?

filthy dylan, Wednesday, 28 November 2007 20:17 (sixteen years ago) link

The point was merely that race and class are over-used as themes or issues in UK music. Japan was not a particularly good comparison but still.

blueski, Wednesday, 28 November 2007 20:51 (sixteen years ago) link

this is a great thread but i think the initial q was pretty dumb

deej, Wednesday, 28 November 2007 21:28 (sixteen years ago) link

quel surprise

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 28 November 2007 21:30 (sixteen years ago) link


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