"Uh Huh Her." Thoughts on the new PJ Harvey?

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or butch dykes? if so, i think you should read 'female masculinities" by judith halberstam.

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 09:26 (twenty years ago) link

di, it's not that i have a problem with polly's drag playing at all, just that i think it leads into my view that she is not and was not adhering to trad gender attributes on rid of me, she messed with them briliantly...BUT this is not why the album was praised, but because almost inadvertently (?) she assumed several positions of embodying trad/masculine rock-crit values...and i think you are coming at me wfrom a "do you have an issue with ambiguous gender identities?" stance -which you should remember is absurd since this is *me* you're talking to!! it's almost as if we're tlking about 2 or 3 differrent things here, and i just want to bridge these gaps and come to some sort of understanding...

Vic (Vic), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 09:31 (twenty years ago) link

but there's a different subtext to me in pj harvey music that lends itself to patriarchal/masculine positioning

see this is where we have to stop for a second - cos i can, in one sense see where you are coming from, vic. but just because PJ in some people's eyes, endorses a kind of masculinity and therefore plays into the hands of patriarchy - does not mean that she's inherently endorsing patrirachy. we're talking interpretation, and how people make use of their intrepretations. in other, equally valid lights, she could easily be read as a threat to patriarchy. (in any case, masculinity shouldn't really be equated with patriarchy).

and yeah that wasn't really aimed at you, more aimed at what i perceived as your defense of momus, who is i think coming at this argument with a very different agenda to you n me.

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 09:33 (twenty years ago) link

http://www.libertas.co.uk/product_detail.asp?ID=795&CID=48

'Masculinity without men'. At first glance, I have to say that this looks like a classic example of 'me too'-ism; we don't need men to be men, we can do it better! Might this be a part of the universalising of masculine values and the erasure of feminine values?

Momus (Momus), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 09:33 (twenty years ago) link

masculinity shouldn't really be equated with patriarchy

Masculinity + power = patriarchy

Momus (Momus), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 09:36 (twenty years ago) link

um halberstam doesn't argue that women perform masculinity BETTER than men. and she certainly doesn't have a problem with female femininity. perhaps you should read the book so you KNOW what you're talking about.

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 09:37 (twenty years ago) link

The people who have read it on the Amazon customer reviews page say:

'I learned that the most interesting masculinities are not male'

and

'Halberstam would have been much better served if she had included a fem perspective in her unabashed celebration of butch subjectivity'

Momus (Momus), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 09:41 (twenty years ago) link

if you're such a fan of feminine values, momus, why don't YOU embody em?

why should halberstam address fem identity when so many other feminists have?

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 09:42 (twenty years ago) link

Oh Di,...absolutely. we agree there - i never meant to imply that i think polly can't be a threat to patriarchy, and in fact she's better interpreted that way, especially on rid of me. i'm glad you see though how i can say that she can play into the hands of trad rockcritdom's glorification of a certain masculine sound/aesthetic....and remember way up there i said i think momus may have a point in regards to symbolic ideology, and what's so wrong to discuss it? a critic's interpretation of an artist's work is independent of any original intention, pomo rule #1 of course. ... so yes, I wasn't discussing her intention at all

i think it's interesting to see how, for example, someone like karen o is also living upto rockcrit "fantasies" of the "rock-goddess" ideal, which is what many want her to be, in the hopes of making her a success to pjh

Vic (Vic), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 09:42 (twenty years ago) link

if you're such a fan of feminine values, momus, why don't YOU embody em?

Well, I'm trying. On my new album I sing in a falsetto voice, ask Jesus to 'come back as a girl' and 'save the world without too much tomato ketchup', and call for an instant ban on foxhunting.

Momus (Momus), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 09:59 (twenty years ago) link

This just in: the Other Music newsletter says of PJ Harvey's new album:

'The first record's maximized use of a minimal and brutal sonic palate of drums, guitar and feminist catharsis shone a light on the dearth of female rock presence and more importantly on a prodigious and unabashed new talent that shook up the music industry - over and underground. [...] Uh Huh Her, as its title indicates, strips the music of any superfluities and leaves only the voice and the songs. Harvey plays everything but the drums on every track and this intimate return to minimalism makes for some incredibly compelling bedroom music... A suit of songs both slight and bold emerge out of this delicate construction to create some of Harvey's most introspective and memorable work, combining the best of her previous investigations, while simultaneously returning to the vital and unadorned strength of her beginnings. [MC]'

All the stuff about PJ being 'unadorned' reminds me that I forgot to mention 'the Protestant ethic' as another thing that annoys me about PJ. This thing about 'stripping the music down to its bare, pure strength'. (I have 'catholic' and 'baroque' tastes myself. Clutter away! Surprise me!)

And to say that Polly shone a light on the dearth of female rock presence worries me. What, suddenly we realise that 'most women can't rock', but should?

Momus (Momus), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 10:06 (twenty years ago) link

how in the world can you say that pj harvey is a poor artist, momus? just because you think she is conservative, she is using traditional instruments, she is not lesbian, she is not into gene splicing, she is not a submissive asian woman etc. that is so conceited and narrow-minded. and in a way macho. you want to force your subjects onto her.

i ask myself how you listen to music. do you first inform yourself about the political and aesthetical views of the artist before opening your ears?

i think there is good guitar and good electronic music, there is exciting avantgarde and boring avantgarde, there is good music by masculine and feminine women. you are full of prejudices and preconceptions how good artists should be (like you?). you are running around with blinders. you don't let the music grip you. it's all so rationalised. the exciting thing about music in my book is that it trespasses ratio, that it has a direct emotional appeal.

catholic/baroque and protestant/pure is another interesting dichotomy for sure. i am more of the protestant side but what is really important is the mix. there are no pure dichotomies like that.

alex in mainhattan (alex63), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 10:22 (twenty years ago) link

X-post:

I've just had an interesting thought. Rock became central and normative. It went from being a way of losing control (ripping up cinema seats!) to a way of maintaining control (rock is played as your Virgin Airlines flight taxis towards the runway). We're all supposed to be rockers now. Capitalism became 'rockitalism'. Tony Blair was in a band that sounded like the Rolling Stones! etc etc.

Now, look at all these PJ Harvey songs that rock hard, and say to men 'fuck you, who do you think you are?' They're songs of jubilant rejection. It's very much a celebration of female control. Men want me, and the future of humanity lies between my thighs, but I'm the one who gets to say who goes in there. Now, in the past, in traditional societies, a woman celebrating her power in this way might have demanded that a man love her, marry her, provide for her, become a stable and responsible member of society, etc. (This is the message of songs like Gwen Guthrie's 'Ain't Nothin' Goin' On But The Rent': 'You've got to have a J.O.B if you want to stay with me') But PJ Harvey is saying something different. Women are still central, still controlling reproduction while men merely control production -- but in a time when rock and its irresponsibility is central, PJ's message is 'You've got to be a party animal and rock like a fucker to get between my thighs'. It is part of the culture of compulsory, joyless post-protestant hedonism, of dogmatic dissolution. If rock is Law, women will use rock as the main criterion in their Trials of Hercules. Woe betide the Man Who Does Not Rock. He will not reproduce.

Momus (Momus), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 10:25 (twenty years ago) link

(I will skewer the next person who uses, unironically, the term 'submissive Asian woman'.)

Momus (Momus), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 10:26 (twenty years ago) link

(By the way, could we re-title this thread 'Uh Huh Him'?)

Momus (Momus), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 10:59 (twenty years ago) link

Momus: 'I just wanna listen to people who think like I do'.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 17:04 (twenty years ago) link

I completely agree with Momus. Rock music/aesthetics/ethics should die. In fact they should have been dead long ago. Why is everybody always trying to save rock and roll (and celebrated for it)?

daavid (daavid), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 19:03 (twenty years ago) link

why is there nothing happening in this thread when i am not sleeping or busy at work? momus, why don't you answer me? you said some clever things on this thread but i have the impression you didn't convince many people. sorry about the submissive asian women. i know that it is a cliché but there is a grain of truth in every cliché. i'd like some more team spirit too at the place i am working. which is not a question of the women working there but of the general atmosphere. i wouldn't blame it on the males though it's them ruling there right now. but i don't believe that it is better in japan or any other asian country. you seem to be romantising asian society and especially asian women. i still have this idea of asian perfectionism and asian copy-catism in my head. maybe i am wrong. the only "interesting" woman from japan i ever heard of was yoko ono.

i really don't like your way of slagging off males. there are no males. we all have male and female parts in ourselves. yin and yang. you know. and rock isn't a male dominion. rock is just letting yourself loose, forgetting about all that brain stuff. having fun.

alex in mainhattan (alex63), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 19:10 (twenty years ago) link

momus is desperately trying to intellectualise that concept as I type

de, Wednesday, 9 June 2004 19:23 (twenty years ago) link

"Why is everybody always trying to save rock and roll (and celebrated for it)?" and why is PJ Harvey being acused of this? I like momus's thoughts of reproductive power but I feel he's painting Polly Harvey with Courtney's brush. (Audible on America's Sweetheart actually) Escpecially in respect to her new record. The politics are much more one on one (rather than me vs. mankind) here. and I can't believe no one has mentioned Mr. Gallo at least in terms of Polly Harvey's flirtation with conservative politics or her new songs.

danh, Wednesday, 9 June 2004 19:49 (twenty years ago) link

momus still hasn't mentioned any melodies or catchy little guitar hooks or anything.

amateur!st (amateurist), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 20:05 (twenty years ago) link

that would require actually listening to the record

J.D. (Justyn Dillingham), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 20:22 (twenty years ago) link

also, those things are so 1994, or 1894, or 1831. i forget.

amateur!st (amateurist), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 20:25 (twenty years ago) link

momus still hasn't mentioned any melodies or catchy little guitar hooks or anything.

Ahem, I said upthread, of 'Who The Fuck':

The only good thing about it is the silly backing vocals right at the end.

Momus (Momus), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 20:39 (twenty years ago) link

"i really don't like your way of slagging off males. there are no males. we all have male and female parts in ourselves. yin and yang. you know. and rock isn't a male dominion. rock is just letting yourself loose, forgetting about all that brain stuff. having fun."

this is totally true. on this thread, momus characterises women as either feminine or not-feminine, and refuses to accept and acknowledge the shades of gray. and those shades of grey are where actual women's lives and art lie - both pj, and the asian women momus so lovingly fetishizes. women's lives are internally complex and women are diverse people. this shouldn't come as a surprise to anyone who considers women to be human beings.

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 21:53 (twenty years ago) link

and re: momus and yr supposed embrace of femininity - your arguing on this thread is really, um, aggressive, and individualistic. so by your own logic, you are masculine and nobody should be listening to you.

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 21:57 (twenty years ago) link

momus: i apologize, i missed that observation. would that there could be more such!

amateur!st (amateurist), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 22:50 (twenty years ago) link

I just heard this album and can't fathom how this much conversation could be derived by the actual lyrics, sentiments expressed within. I really wish some of you were forced to back up your ideas on Harvey's "message" with actual lyrics from multiple albums. Personnally, she seems like she's hopped around between different perspectives, as is her right, being an artist and all. I sense no consistent manifesto.

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 23:05 (twenty years ago) link

If anything, Momus should be railing against the unimaginative, unenlightened media which is keeping him from listening to her albums at face value (and the new one, on initial listen, doesn't have much).

Anthony Miccio (Anthony Miccio), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 23:10 (twenty years ago) link

rrrrrrrrrrr but momus has only actually used the word 'message' once, and then in a kind of deliberate-obnoxious shorthand fashion: in fact most the entire argument is outside of the notion of a deliberately constructed "message", and christ, who cares about lyrics

i think vic is quite otm until he gets all new age and shit and i kind of want to see more people talking about 'is this desire?' and 'dance hall at louise point', although this thread is isn't called "Thoughts on the PJ Harvey albums before the one before the new one"

weird thing about momus is how much more time he's prepared to spend arguing his point than going and finding out more about it. yes everyone else noticed this in 02, i'm slow okay

tom west (thomp), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 23:22 (twenty years ago) link

confession: i only clicked on the link to the video bcz of the word "panties"

tom west (thomp), Wednesday, 9 June 2004 23:23 (twenty years ago) link

I agree with Vic's argument but I think it's really limited to *critics' presentation of polly* rather than polly herself - which is i think what Tom's getting at when he brings up Is This Desire and Dance Hall, neither of which really fit into Momus's presentation of Polly *at all*. Even on To Bring You My Love there were as many intensely quiet songs as there were intensely loud ones, and tracks like "C'mon Billy" and "Send His Love To Me" sound very 'feminine' to my ears. Certainly Is This Desire? is one of the more resolutely and explicitly 'feminine' records I can think of, and if it's not a lesbian album then at the least it seems fascinated by female homeroticism, like an inverted D.H. Lawrence or something. But I'd be sympathetic to suggestions that this is a big factor in why it's not as celebrated as her other albums.

Even when Polly was flirting with masculine imagery earlier on it was much more fluxed up than simply beating the boys at their own game. She was almost more like a male drag queen in a woman's body, and I think this gave her a really compelling indeterminacy - one never knew where the layers sotpped and the "real" Polly was hiding.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Thursday, 10 June 2004 02:32 (twenty years ago) link

Well, I'm trying. On my new album I sing in a falsetto voice, ask Jesus to 'come back as a girl' and 'save the world without too much tomato ketchup', and call for an instant ban on foxhunting.

-- Momus (nic...), June 9th, 2004.

Er, singing falsetto is one of the most masculine things a singer can do, becaus ewomen NEVER do it!

Also, foxhunting isn't very masculine is it? It has the full support of as many women as many and those who actually do it, well, they're a bunch of wimps!

mei (mei), Thursday, 10 June 2004 07:10 (twenty years ago) link

"You taught me a lesson / I didn't want to learn"

Baaderoni (Fabfunk), Thursday, 10 June 2004 08:55 (twenty years ago) link

Actually, I was joking about the song calling for a ban on fox-hunting. If you follow the link you'll find it's a song about how cool fat girls are. So it's only about banning fox-hunting in the sense that it's saying 'Don't chase foxes, fat girls are much nicer.'

Momus (Momus), Thursday, 10 June 2004 10:04 (twenty years ago) link

Sure, there is a problem with female artists that uncritically embodies rockism and 'maleness', at least in terms of the discourse of music criticism and the interpretetions of such music. Pop, being a 'female' genre, is hopelessly overlooked and criticized because of its connections to femininity. I do, however, see a similar problem with female artists that uncritically embodies femininity. I do not agree with Momus that the image of the 'nice girl' is dated, it is very much alive. The 'nice girls' of mainstream pop, for instance, inevitably end up at the far end of a madonna/whore dicotomy, while their counterparts raises discussions of morality and female sexuality. Both are, in their own way, conformist. Neither is a 'rebellion'.

Now, I don't think it matters how you position yourself against gender roles of modern culture, as long as you do it with a healthy dose of playfulness, irony, camp or queerness. I believe that, and that alone, can raise questions about gender identification, roles and the heteronormativity of Western culture. And this is something, BTW, I find Momus doing brilliantly in his art. Or Björk, for that matter. "Perversion of feminism" or "gender capitulation"? Well, in the end, feminism is about freedom of choice more than anything else.

Though, I am annoyed with the following statement: "Women suffer particularly from the shift from traditional culture to modern hypercapitalist, atomised culture, because women were formerly at the heart of traditional cultures, which were highly-integrated and social. In modern western cultures, though, men dominate", I find it being slightly revisionist. Sure, women were the "heart" of traditional cultures - but they were Hermia, the heart of the hearth. The angel in the kitchen, etc. The point being, men dominated Western traditional cultures too. Now, I like being 'free' in a sense that I can vote, walk the streets alone, being seen in public, to think and speak my mind.

Maria Jacobsson (mariajacobsson), Thursday, 10 June 2004 12:32 (twenty years ago) link

Why do you say pop is female?

mei (mei), Thursday, 10 June 2004 15:09 (twenty years ago) link

(Most of it being 'made' (written, produced, specified, even performed a lot of the time!) by men.)

mei (mei), Thursday, 10 June 2004 15:10 (twenty years ago) link

Rock music is connected to different values: it's cocky and muscular, sweaty and broad-legged, it is 'organic', 'real', 'genuine' and 'true'. It is grounded in tradition (i.e. blues, soul, folk). Pop, being the antithesis of rock, is percieved as transient, mass-produced and hence fake, plastic, constructed. Regardless of either pop or rock being performed or made by men or women, that dicotomy *is* male/female and reaches back to the discussions of 'high' and 'low' culture at the birth of modernity.

Maria Jacobsson (mariajacobsson), Thursday, 10 June 2004 15:28 (twenty years ago) link

organic', 'real', 'genuine' and 'true' seem a little more feminine, no? how are organic and fake gender related values? plus, your distinctions between pop and rock seem a little wierd.

danh (danh), Thursday, 10 June 2004 15:44 (twenty years ago) link

Timothy Warner makes the following distinctions between rock and pop:

POP <--> ROCK
singles <--> albums
emphasis on recording <--> emphasis on performance
emphasis on technology <--> emphasis on musicianship
artificial <--> real ("authentic")
trivial <--> serious
ephemeral <--> lasting
successive <--> progressive

...and Richard Hamilton defines pop art as being "popular, transient, expendable, low-cost, mass-produced, young, witty, sexy, gimmicky, glamorous, and Big Business".

Since the birth of modernism, mass-produced consumer culture has been seen as utterly female: from Madame Bovary to the female authors who wrote mass-produced, cheap novels as opposed to male artists. I mean, when I say Britney Spears, what do you think of, if not screaming teenage girls?

Maria Jacobsson (mariajacobsson), Thursday, 10 June 2004 16:07 (twenty years ago) link

dirty old men

danh (danh), Thursday, 10 June 2004 16:09 (twenty years ago) link

danh: Well, then, Backstreet Boys or Westlife. Regardless, that wasn't really my point with my first post.

Maria Jacobsson (mariajacobsson), Thursday, 10 June 2004 16:13 (twenty years ago) link

I take that back. I guess I just don't buy that Pop / Rock divide as laid out by Timothy Warner. It's a bit to simple to call pop feminine and rock masculine when i think most people are fairly blind to the distinction. It's almost like that Beatles/Stones game that Neil Young likes to play.

But I know this wasn't your intention so i'll drop it.

danh (danh), Thursday, 10 June 2004 16:34 (twenty years ago) link

"Pop, being the antithesis of rock..."

Umm...

briania (briania), Thursday, 10 June 2004 17:42 (twenty years ago) link

briania: In the dualistic system as described above, anyway. But as I said, that wasn't really my point and absolutely not what I wanted to discuss.

Maria Jacobsson (mariajacobsson), Thursday, 10 June 2004 17:51 (twenty years ago) link

...and Richard Hamilton defines pop art as being "popular, transient, expendable, low-cost, mass-produced, young, witty, sexy, gimmicky, glamorous, and Big Business".

Richard Hamilton should spend less time worrying about pop art and more time improving hs FG%.

vleeetrmx21 (Leee), Thursday, 10 June 2004 21:08 (twenty years ago) link

Is Richard Hamilton well know?
Who is he?

mei (mei), Thursday, 10 June 2004 22:44 (twenty years ago) link

Regardless of either pop or rock being performed or made by men or women, that dicotomy *is* male/female

So is your version of 'male' and of 'female' nothing to do with 'men' and 'women'?

Your 'male' and 'female' are just homphones for other words, those in commn usage?

mei (mei), Thursday, 10 June 2004 22:48 (twenty years ago) link

So is your version of 'male' and of 'female' nothing to do with 'men' and 'women'?

Not really, no. The gendered body is all about interpretations, isn't it? A body that appears to be male doesn't necessarily have to be of the male sex, and vice versa, right? And a woman can have character traits that are percieved as male ('being masculine'), right? So no, I don't think that 'masculinity' necessarily has any connections to the male body.

Then again, English isn't my first language. Perhaps I should have written "that dicotomy is that of masculinity/femininity".

Maria Jacobsson (mariajacobsson), Thursday, 10 June 2004 23:54 (twenty years ago) link


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