Vampire Weekend; Arctic Monkeys of 2008?

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Huh. A struck-out 4 looks exactly like a regular 4. Who knew?

contenderizer, Tuesday, 12 February 2008 21:06 (sixteen years ago) link

?

I know, right?, Tuesday, 12 February 2008 21:22 (sixteen years ago) link

I know, right?

contenderizer, Tuesday, 12 February 2008 21:23 (sixteen years ago) link

???

I know, right?, Tuesday, 12 February 2008 21:24 (sixteen years ago) link

4

Jordan, Tuesday, 12 February 2008 21:24 (sixteen years ago) link

5

Jordan, Tuesday, 12 February 2008 21:24 (sixteen years ago) link

????

I know, right?, Tuesday, 12 February 2008 21:24 (sixteen years ago) link

four

gff, Tuesday, 12 February 2008 21:24 (sixteen years ago) link

/: -[

I know, right?, Tuesday, 12 February 2008 21:28 (sixteen years ago) link

I'm late to everything.

Just listened to this record for the first time, and spent three tracks feeling guilty for liking it as much as I do. (That was never a problem with Arctic Monkeys -- I honestly don't like them.) I had to get over it, though. This record is kinda irresistible. I will put songs on mixes for people and if they have not heard the songs, they will email me and say "I really like that Vampire song!" because it's that kind of record, too, apart from also being really good.

I will read this thread now.

kenan, Saturday, 16 February 2008 12:15 (sixteen years ago) link

Ok, I have changed my mind. I will never ever ever read this thread, you people are all kind of evil.

kenan, Saturday, 16 February 2008 12:27 (sixteen years ago) link

Reading the arguments pro and con Vampire Weekend makes me believe that critics are slowly draining what little life is left in the music industry.

fukasaku tollbooth, Saturday, 16 February 2008 20:44 (sixteen years ago) link

avoid the present perfect tense as much as possible, please.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Saturday, 16 February 2008 20:54 (sixteen years ago) link

LOL.

fukasaku tollbooth, Saturday, 16 February 2008 23:22 (sixteen years ago) link

I just hate that the narrative of these indie bands rise and fall has become so formulaic: every now and then there is a new element such as myspace that temporarily feels like its put a new spin on the basic plotline. Then, almost as soon it becomes so integrated into the cliche as to feel invisible. I feel like being an indie music fan nowadays is very similar to being a soap opera fan, both fans seem to relish the predictability that has become so hardwired into the indie rock band template.

It's funny how just seven years after The Strokes and the claims of returning rock to it's seventies glory days of CBGBs we have this: Coming hot on the heels of the New York Noise book, "Turn The Beat Around" and a whole gamut of articles written recently, there seems to be a sudden mass acceptance that New York is no longer the "glorious shithole" that fostered punk, disco, no-wave and the whole art/pop cross-pollination of the downtown scene*. Vampire Weekend have been made into a trope for the fallout of the Giuliani era. The whole issue of their wealth is even more debated than it was with the Strokes, after 9/11, New Yorkers didn't want to dance*; now, apparently, they don't want to rock either.

*received "wisdom"

I know, right?, Sunday, 17 February 2008 14:34 (sixteen years ago) link

That's a roundabout way of saying I like them, they remind me a bit of a Pitchfork-ed Clang of the Yankee Reaper, to say nothing of the obvious Graceland touchstone. Popmatters managed to miss the point, mentioninging them "bigging up the dreaded reggaeton", missing the point of how alive they sound on pop radio surrounded by Kelly Rowland, Rihanna, Britney, Hot Chip (the only other indie band right now who really manage that pop effervescence), The Dream, Timbaland etc. Especially compared to a whole raft of shitty english indie-pop right now (Kate Nash, Scouting for Girls, Mark Ronson: blood lust is unexpected, and troubling).

I know, right?, Sunday, 17 February 2008 14:53 (sixteen years ago) link

"the dreaded reggaeton"

o_O

Whiney G. Weingarten, Sunday, 17 February 2008 17:09 (sixteen years ago) link

exactly

I know, right?, Sunday, 17 February 2008 17:14 (sixteen years ago) link

HEY THIS GUY IS A PARTICULARLY INTERESTING WRITER AND HE WROTE THINGS ABOUT THIS VERY BAND:

http://www.elifbatuman.net/2008/01/28/beautiful-shirts/

http://www.elifbatuman.net/2008/02/04/against-music-reviews/

tramp steamer, Tuesday, 19 February 2008 05:35 (sixteen years ago) link

the dreaded n+1

Hurting 2, Tuesday, 19 February 2008 05:43 (sixteen years ago) link

if that's you, btw, I've actually started reading your piece on Best American Short Stories and I'm enjoying it.

You'd probably like this thread:

in every 'new yorker' short story ever...

Hurting 2, Tuesday, 19 February 2008 06:12 (sixteen years ago) link

The part about music criticism is great, except for one thing: I think it presumes that music critics are mapping sociopolitical stuff onto the music in a sort of vacuum. Whereas I'd say that the seeds of it already exist in the basic teenagey self-definition stuff that people play out with music, using bands to form cliques and take social sides; the error with criticism, usually, is trying to treat that self-definition stuff as if it constitutes real, actual, concrete sociopolitical meat.

Another way of saying this is maybe that a lot of the "class" issues with this band are playing out in terms of self-definition -- the desire to take the side of grit and danger over elegance and comfort -- which means that shades of sociopolitical stuff are being acted out in the reception, but not that the music being made equates to that stuff, or is a concrete political act. (I can see how it's interesting to music criticism to write as if that's the case, as if the music actually IS the moral and social stuff it instigates, but that's just not quite right.)

There's also the weird habit of treating records as if they need to do everything at once; I guess I've also said a million times upthread that criticizing VW for lacking grit seems to me like criticizing a souffle for not being spicy enough. (And I can understand the impulse, if you feel like everyone's constantly being served souffles, but that doesn't make a particular souffle non-good, etc.)

nabisco, Tuesday, 19 February 2008 06:46 (sixteen years ago) link

HEY THIS GUY IS A PARTICULARLY INTERESTING WRITER AND HE WROTE THINGS ABOUT THIS VERY BAND:

http://www.elifbatuman.net/2008/01/28/beautiful-shirts/

http://www.elifbatuman.net/2008/02/04/against-music-reviews/

-- tramp steamer, Tuesday, February 19, 2008 5:35 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Link

haha, I wrote Elif Batuman an email after reading that piece in N+1, too. I was about to write a mock scathing of the post until I did a Gmail search.

burt_stanton, Tuesday, 19 February 2008 07:26 (sixteen years ago) link

Re; the souffle thing - I'm not seeing many people serving souffles at the moment though. There seems to be a lot of cheese on toast.

Scik Mouthy, Tuesday, 19 February 2008 09:12 (sixteen years ago) link

Thank you to whoever called me a particularly interesting writer! For the record though, I'm not a guy. xo Elif

Elif, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 01:23 (sixteen years ago) link

I think there's another explanation for whatever class resentment you see against VW, and even moreso against The Strokes. Popular music, in its ideal, mythological sense, at least, is something many people have traditionally liked to think of as the sphere of the working classes, a sphere where people from poor or modest means rise to the top on their grit and energy and honesty and fire-in-the-belly.

If VW aren't rich rich, they're certainly privileged and they certainly come off as privileged. And somehow success appears to come so quickly and easily to them, almost to the extent that you'd think one of them had a well-connected parent like the Strokes did. And they may have no such connections, but that's how they come off. And to make things worse, they actually sing about stuff we associate with privilege, and if there's an irony to it, it's not the biting irony of satire, but a more gentle, almost blank irony. So even if there's a bit of tongue in cheek, the overriding message is still "We are privileged, life is easy for us, and thus we have easily become successful even in what was once for people of other classes."

Hurting 2, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 03:51 (sixteen years ago) link

And maybe that's not a good reason to dislike a band. I kind of hear the same privileged easiness in Mozart, for that matter. But I don't like Mozart. But I could probably come up with a better example if I thought about it long enough.

Hurting 2, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 03:53 (sixteen years ago) link

good post until I hit 'message', xp

gabbneb, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 03:54 (sixteen years ago) link

gabbneb OTM. I don't hear how singing about Oxford commas, college campuses, Peter Gabriel, and girls signifies privilege.

I don't define "popular music" like you do either, Hurting, since popular music consists of music which a large percentage of its audience can buy.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 04:00 (sixteen years ago) link

Popular music ... is something many people have traditionally liked to think of as the sphere of the working classes, a sphere where people from poor or modest means rise to the top on their grit and energy and honesty and fire-in-the-belly.

This is a notion of popular music that I have to call bullshit just by definition, because it is a notion of popular music that pointedly disincludes me.

nabisco, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 05:00 (sixteen years ago) link

(P.S. It also kinda torpedoes class-warfare action versus Vampire Weekend, even in your own post -- if popular music is the sphere of the working class, and VW radiate lack of grit and privilege, then they would be naturally and unimpeachably outside the sphere of popular music, and there would be little point in applying its standards!)

nabisco, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 05:04 (sixteen years ago) link

again, about the only thing i LIKE about this band is their preppy rich boy steez, it's rad as fuck. the music just seems kind of...whatever...to me. i don't know.

nabsico yr too good at the internet, but yeah something in my nutsack tells me this band isn't that dope. i won't attempt to say why and get pwned.

damn i'm tired time for nie-nie

M@tt He1ges0n, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 05:12 (sixteen years ago) link

I don't define "popular music" that way either, I'm just saying that I think there's still a vestigial feeling that it's supposed to be a working class thing, even if the people who feel that way don't articulate it. I mean obviously there was a time when being a pop singer was almost exclusively working class and the bourgeoisie would more likely take up piano or violin or something, and initially the same was true of "being in a band." And obviously in the latter half of this century all that class stuff has gotten increasingly mixed up and the kids that would have only played violin are in bands now too, and even the ponciest of them tend to take on some of the once *gritty* affects that are now just taken for granted as part of being in a band, so it's still possible to feel a little confused by a rock band that appears to wear privilege on its sleeve.

And I'm admitting that I am a little guilty of feeling a pang of dislike for these reasons, because part of me still can't get past the idea of indie rock as soiree music even though maybe that's all it ever was.

Ok, the Oscar Peterson Trio - there's an example. Total soiree music, totally care free and I dig it.

Hurting 2, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 05:18 (sixteen years ago) link

"We are privileged, life is easy for us, and thus we have easily become successful even in what was once for people of other classes."

this is really more John Mayer's message

da croupier, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 05:28 (sixteen years ago) link

heh

Hurting 2, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 05:28 (sixteen years ago) link

though I think you're right in a lot of ways, it ties in with their "not rocking" and indie fans/scribes tending to equate "not rocking" with "pop."

da croupier, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 05:29 (sixteen years ago) link

Sometimes I think John Mayer is secretly taking the piss.

Hurting 2, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 05:29 (sixteen years ago) link

Oh I wouldn't be surprised if there was a song about watersports on the next one.

da croupier, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 05:31 (sixteen years ago) link

srsly When I first heard "Waiting on the World to Change" I was sure it was a subtle joke.

Hurting 2, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 05:32 (sixteen years ago) link

that fuck is laughing at us

carne asada, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 05:32 (sixteen years ago) link

I will admit I'd probably love that song if Randy Newman wrote it about Generation Y, but interviews make Mayer sound sincere in the message so unless he's Andy Kauffman...

da croupier, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 05:33 (sixteen years ago) link

Actually I never noticed this part:

And when you trust your television

What you get is what you got
Cause when they own the information, oh
They can bend it all they want

Which makes it pretty obvious that he's sincere and also goes well with the Ron Paul support

Hurting 2, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 05:38 (sixteen years ago) link

if vampire weekend were really evil geniuses like JM they would've made the banner ad upthread clickthru-able

tramp steamer, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 05:42 (sixteen years ago) link

I think it's very difficult not to see the massive hype of Vampire Weekend as signaling a new change in the marketplace. Just like The Strokes (who, I find it difficult not to compare them to) and their NooYawk thrift store aesthetic (cheap amps, dollar bin new wave) and the "New Rock Revolution"; I feel like we're due a college boy aesthetic of Polo Shirt chic and 90's pop-rock.

This is why people will probably hate Vampire Weekend pretty soon.

I know, right?, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 10:14 (sixteen years ago) link

Wow, reading this elif bautmann blog now. She is clever!

I know, right?, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 10:15 (sixteen years ago) link

batuman

I know, right?, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 10:16 (sixteen years ago) link

Classwise are VW any more 'offensive' to a certain mindset than Coldplay are in the UK?

Scik Mouthy, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 11:37 (sixteen years ago) link

another-u2-lite doesn't really compare to the amount of non-rock signifiers VW dally with.

and hurting's posts about offensiveness really do work better if you think of 'rock' rather than 'popular music.'

da croupier, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 13:24 (sixteen years ago) link

i almost kinda regret noting that cuz then the debate is "why should they have to rock?" when I'm much more curious about what the heck makes this good pop.

da croupier, Wednesday, 20 February 2008 13:26 (sixteen years ago) link


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