Class, etc Pt. 2: Indie vs. Pop Culture

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Stencil: Drag City did nothing to me--see previous statement about theories != personal preferences. I like some arid, Modernist whiteboy shit. And I really enjoy Royal Trux, who have a very weird and hard-to-isolate relationship to blues a.k.a."black music". It simply seems, in retrospect, IMHO, that DC records could feasibly have been chosen through a "no blues," "no jazz," "no funk" filter, though I am fairly sure it was not conscious. Or go ahead and make a case to the contrary.

And Darnielle is likely right--no dis taken. Can we skip the Geirness? Or maybe start an equally proiftable thread, like, Is torture moral? Or, Is lead heavier than cheese?

Sasha Frere-Jones (Sasha Frere-Jones), Monday, 21 April 2003 21:27 (twenty-one years ago) link

buttch, i'm just screwing around - no harm no foul I hope

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 21 April 2003 21:29 (twenty-one years ago) link

plus Geir has my nazi alert all lit up

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 21 April 2003 21:29 (twenty-one years ago) link

Woah--that looks all apologetic on the screen. I'm v. happy with what Ui did, nuff said.

Sasha Frere-Jones (Sasha Frere-Jones), Monday, 21 April 2003 21:30 (twenty-one years ago) link

geir's "european melodies=music, african rhythm=something else" declaration has been issued plenty lately (here, here, here, here etc) - derailing another thread over it is beyond pointless

jones (actual), Monday, 21 April 2003 21:32 (twenty-one years ago) link

This may be unpopular, but I subscribe to the view posited by Alan Licht: Calvin Johnson has ruined music for an entire generation.

can i get a short bit on the why and/or the how?

not necessarily agreeing or disagreeing... just curious.
m.

msp, Monday, 21 April 2003 21:32 (twenty-one years ago) link

SFJ, describing the Drag City catalog as "arid, Modernist whiteboy shit" is ultra-depressing to me. Given that one of the few indie labels that doesn't release "records...chosen through a 'no blues,' 'no jazz,' 'no funk' filter" is their crosstown colleagues Thrill Jockey, and everyone bitches about them, what I think we have here is a case of severe psychological conflict. Indie is either "too white" if it has little elements of "blackness" (whatever that is) or "not black enough" if it has some elements of "blackness" (again ill-defined). Seems to me like it sez more about the people doin' the critiquing (no 'ffense) than the objects being critiqued.

hstencil, Monday, 21 April 2003 21:36 (twenty-one years ago) link

plus Geir has my nazi alert all lit up

Me too, by the looks of it. No biggie.(that was not a reference to the late, overweight rapper)

buttch (Oops), Monday, 21 April 2003 21:37 (twenty-one years ago) link

No tupac!

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 21 April 2003 21:39 (twenty-one years ago) link

Take that back

buttch (Oops), Monday, 21 April 2003 21:40 (twenty-one years ago) link

(and while i was typing, for future geir-fan reference: here.)

jones (actual), Monday, 21 April 2003 21:42 (twenty-one years ago) link

Wait a minute, does not liking ANYTHING made by black artists automatically make you a racist?

Not necessarily, but it would be smelly, considering there have been black people within most genres. Dunno if there were any black prog musicians (but there probably were, and anyway, several Miles Davis albums of the 60s/70s were pretty close to prog). There definitely have been black rock acts, such as Lenny Kravitz, Living Colour and Jimi Hendrix. There was Arthur Lee of Love doing 60s San Francisco psychedelia, there was even the drummer in Britpop band Ocean Colour Scene. There was an easy listening singer (Nat King Cole) Plus several pure melodic pop acts, such as Tasmin Archer, Seal, and also those MOR oriented ones like Mariah Carey and Whitney Houston. Stevie Wonder also did a lot of stuff during his 70s heyday that (particularly several of the ballads) was clearly more "white" than "black" musically.

The most obvious rascists, however, would be those who love RATM, Beastie Boys, Eminem and Vanilla Ice while they dislike all black hip-hop acts.

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Monday, 21 April 2003 22:30 (twenty-one years ago) link

Whitney Houston is AC, not MOR

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 21 April 2003 22:35 (twenty-one years ago) link

"Ebony and Ivory live together in perfect harmony...on my piano keyboard why don't we...".

SplendidMullet (iamamonkey), Monday, 21 April 2003 22:42 (twenty-one years ago) link

Wow. I'm very happy to see that this thread got waaaaay better since I left the house this morning. That's very cool, I was sort of bracing myself for the worst when I opened it up.

Anyway, Sasha - I think you're reading me pretty well, especially given that I was pretty angry/pressed for time when I wrote what I did in this thread this morning and didn't give it as much thought as I wish I had. The questions of this thread have been running through my head all day long though, which has been a good thing.

Re: . Where else would you get "Why can't they have their own thing?" How do we know it's *their* thing? Either these cultures are distinct or they're not. They can't have their *own* thing if we're also asserting that indie is not monolithic.

Yeah, that's the problem, isn't it? It's monolithic and not all, it's different but exactly the same as everything else. I think this is just too complex to explain away without seriously disrespecting genres, artists, races, and millions of individuals who have made/are making decisions based on a lot of different things. It's a brilliant question which is a very interesting thing to think about and consider in smaller conversations, but I'm afraid that any attempts at answering the question will be clumsy and reductive. Music is so huge, I don't think any of us should presume to understand or fully comprehend it all.

Matthew Perpetua (Matthew Perpetua), Monday, 21 April 2003 23:07 (twenty-one years ago) link

heavy man

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 21 April 2003 23:10 (twenty-one years ago) link

Stiznencil!

SFJ, describing the Drag City catalog as "arid, Modernist whiteboy shit" is ultra-depressing to me. Given that one of the few indie labels that doesn't release "records...chosen through a 'no blues,' 'no jazz,' 'no funk' filter" is their crosstown colleagues Thrill Jockey, and everyone bitches about them, what I think we have here is a case of severe psychological conflict....yadda yadda

I didn't say anything about Thrill Jockey, for starters. And there's no "severe psychological conflict"--just different language to describe different things. I sensed a change in behavior in musicians, from the vantage point of my ripe old age, is all. I don't, de jure, want Bardo Pond to work with Juvenile, though perhaps I do get a twinge of essentialist hope that it would be nice if they wanted to. Maybe I just play rough with my friends, some of whom I call wack whiteboy Modernists, and they call me Robbie Nevil right back and we all go home happily and watch Space Ghost.

For the 42nd time--the mapping idea wasn't about BAD and GOOD. Black != good, and white != bad, though purple does = fly. Examples: Red Krayola, whiter than Peruvian flake, are often amazing. Large Professor's First Class, a bonafide black genius! on an indie label! And it's totally boring. And so on. Liz Phair, deeply unindebted to the African-American musical continuum = kick-ass songwriter, the "now" aside. Donnie, totally and completely black guy = totally and completely derivative faux Hathaway of staggering boringness. Smog, less boring than J. Lo, more boring than Clipse. What a wonderful world!

Sidebar: Bach is dope.

Sasha Frere-Jones (Sasha Frere-Jones), Monday, 21 April 2003 23:17 (twenty-one years ago) link

I make no pretense to having read everything in here (some of us suckers work for a living, you know), but just an honest question from someone who temporarily lost the boat completely on both indie rock and hip-hop for several years in the '90s (I mean in terms of really paying close attention to them as genres; I still heard some records I loved of course):

The discussion seems mostly to have looked at this from one direction--from the indie-rock perspective--but would it not be instructive to turn the question around, too? Though I agree with the premise that indie rockers in the '90s were "worried about looking assed-out and detaching their engines from black music so as to not get it 'wrong'" (the evidence is certainly in the--lack of--grooves), is it off-base to suggest that at least part of the reason is because hip-hop and various dance musics in the '90s (house and jungle) also by and large didn't have the same open-door policy towards rock and (primarily white) rockers that early hip-hop and late disco did? I'm not suggesting a reverse racism or anything like that, merely suggesting that it wasn't only '90s indie rock that was different from the '79-83 model that gets held up a lot around here. I'm sure lots of indie kids in the '90s loved the Wu Tang Clan, for instance, but it was something they maybe felt they had to love from a distance (which I'd argue was not nearly so much the case with punks digging Grandmaster Flash in '81) (and I *know* that Flash got booed off stage at a Clash gig, etc.). Er, help?

s woods, Monday, 21 April 2003 23:24 (twenty-one years ago) link

ooh, good post (very glad thread is back on track as the breakfast club once sang)

James Blount (James Blount), Monday, 21 April 2003 23:28 (twenty-one years ago) link

Sasha, I know you didn't bring up TJ, just that a lot of the same criticisms of indie as being "too white" seem similar to accusations that TJ isn't "black enough." My point is not that one is either good or bad, but that the "white" and "black" are useless canards here.

And hey, I hear some grooves in early Red Krayola, as I do in a lot of psych stuff. Hell, I was just listening to Can's Tago Mago on the way home, and if someone wants to argue that the music on it isn't funky even though it was made by a buncha Germans and a Japanese guy, they can kiss my white ass.

hstencil, Monday, 21 April 2003 23:41 (twenty-one years ago) link

HStencil, you're arguing against a well-established head case--I think it's best to keep a sense of humor.

Amateurist (amateurist), Monday, 21 April 2003 23:50 (twenty-one years ago) link

Sasha Frere-Jones is a well-established head case? Shit, I was gonna put his old band down, but you've done me one better!

hstencil, Monday, 21 April 2003 23:56 (twenty-one years ago) link

oh now i'm confused i thought you were arguing w/geir.

sorry sasha.

Amateurist (amateurist), Monday, 21 April 2003 23:59 (twenty-one years ago) link

haha - the one moment in history someone will confuse Sasha Frere-Jones with Geir Hongro!

James Blount (James Blount), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 00:04 (twenty-one years ago) link

I'm certainly not the guy about to put down Tago Mago. From my cold, dead hands...Oooh. I love that album.

Amateurist, count the hours, the few, the tiny hours remaining, and look out the window--SEE THOSE WINGS OF FIRE? THE JAWS OF DEADLY RESOLVE? THE GORGON HAS COME FOR THEE AND THINE...

Oh, wait, I should call the gorgon back. Sorry, Am.

Sasha Frere-Jones (Sasha Frere-Jones), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 00:05 (twenty-one years ago) link

hahaha, very clear that Sasha has a sense of humor! Yay!

hstencil, Tuesday, 22 April 2003 00:14 (twenty-one years ago) link

Someone should take up Scott Woods' question. Some of us have jobs and/or kids, so this old man is rolling home. Yeah--Bond's, 81, the showdown. It was ugly, and that's all needs be said about this well-worn moment. Real kinda Howard Beach moment, and for those who think there is no progress, I have to say I've never experienced anything like it since at a gig. (Certainly doesn't mean racism dies when people keep quiet--someone mentioned VH1, learning the PC script, Gregg Allman--but keeping quiet when you're an ignoramus sure as fuck does some good.) Are hip-hop and dance really that inhospitable now? Or aren they just coded as coolness/tuffness, so everybody has to freeze everyone else out? The friendliest people I ever met on an interview were the guys who worked at 36 Chambers, RZA's studio. (Supreme and some other guy from the American Cream Team, that chart-burning Wu offshoot.) Offered me juice and went back to their chess game. (RZA never showed.)

American Cream Team in touchy feely racial untiy shockah!

Sasha Frere-Jones (Sasha Frere-Jones), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 00:31 (twenty-one years ago) link

To backtrack a touch, I'm curious about hstencil's Madchester-Now idea. can you elaborate? I hear plenty of Madchester in Out Hud and DFA, but are you referring to other things too?

M Matos (M Matos), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 00:44 (twenty-one years ago) link

I'v asked that two times already, sorta!

James Blount (James Blount), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 00:46 (twenty-one years ago) link

here's my thing - madchester was the moment when english indie learned to swing, when 'the white man learned to dance' or whatever the tony wilson quote is. early 80s amer-underground/college/postmodern/alt/indierock had definite aspects of this - eg. yet another james chance namedrop - but lost out overall to either the r.e.m./feelies/campervan/10kmaniax thread or the sst thread. somebody stole the soul as it were. now I see a definite potential for a similar circumstance in america as existed with madchester where 'guitar based rock music' and 'dance music' weren't two different things. obv. dance music much more codified, much larger presence overall than in 89, but still for indieworld 'rock music' could = dance music, which would be small scale revolutionary, maybe even have a postive impact on 'real' dance music. That said, as much as I wanna be an optimist, I don't think it's gonna happen - I think indieamerica is pitch it's tents with the omaha crew.

James Blount (James Blount), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 00:56 (twenty-one years ago) link

the neo-post-punk rhythm'n'ning has been brewing for a couple years now, though...albeit in the deep deep recesses of the stinky old sock known as the (*shudder*) post-hardcore underground (whencefrom the rapture came.) it's due to blow up as much as the mondays were after being around for three or four years before "rave on."

jess (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 01:02 (twenty-one years ago) link

yay - as a former smiths tee wearing mallrat who called up wuog ten times a day and requested "do it better" I can only hope. still conor oberst looms on the horizon (horizon? foreground rather).

James Blount (James Blount), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 01:07 (twenty-one years ago) link

the really funny thing is that i dunno when all these guys discovered disco or whatever since around 97-98 their thing seemed to be glam/bowie...which is better than screamo, yeah, but not as good as disco, etc.

jess (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 01:08 (twenty-one years ago) link

well going from bowie to disco isn't exactly unpredented

James Blount (James Blount), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 01:16 (twenty-one years ago) link

having lots of trouble answering Woods's great question coherently, so let me throw a few things out at semi-random.

two things pop immediately to mind here. one is a quote from a raver (and ex-rocker) friend at a party when it came time to change the music. he demanded "NO POWER CHORDS!" (my first encounter w/indie guilt!) the other is going to a rave in Minneapolis 4.9.94 and Tommie Sunshine in the chillout room around 10pm dropping "All Apologies" in the middle of his set and the room erupting, and it felt less mournful than like people paying tribute to a fellow traveler, or maybe a parallel one.

also, the mid-90s were very much a keepin'-it-real time across the board: hip-hop and indie rock and rave were all going through it big-time, as I recall, in parallel. I wonder if that has anything to do with the explosion of sheer product becoming available at the time--more and larger boutique economies than ever before, something that has obviously increased even more since the Net grew to ubiquity. I've always thought people began thinking and projecting smaller because it became more feasible to do so and still make a living at it, as well as a way of preserving sanity and/or holding onto some semblance of roots. or am I repeating stuff already said upthread? if so, I apologize--I couldn't read the whole thing, either.

M Matos (M Matos), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 01:18 (twenty-one years ago) link

haha - the only 'euphoric' moments like apparently happen at raves all the time I've seen at Athens dj shows has come when dj twin powers (I am the world trade center in dj mode) drops 'holland 1945' or 'trigger cut' in a set (and you better believe I screamed with joy)

James Blount (James Blount), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 01:21 (twenty-one years ago) link

i heard a dj mix one time that put a pete rock instrumental under "summer babe" (it wasnt very good)

witnessed from the bus today: a girl with a bonnie prince billy record and a last poets lp. now only if she forms a band.

jess (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 01:26 (twenty-one years ago) link

jess the stripey bee sweater was a gift from a friend you dickless retard!! i have never heard boom box 2000, who was it

trife (simon_tr), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 01:31 (twenty-one years ago) link

blount you should go to insomnia!! or boneshakers, athens has good djs

trife (simon_tr), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 01:33 (twenty-one years ago) link

jess was she wearing kneesocks?

Amateurist (amateurist), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 01:43 (twenty-one years ago) link

she might have been (she was wearing pants) (they were cuffed tho)

jess (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 01:45 (twenty-one years ago) link

"keepin'-it-real time across the board" - Maybe this gets at my problems w/the '90s more than anything else. I think I already love the present decade way more (and usually it's supposed to work the other way around--things looking better in hindsight.)

Michaelangelo's Nirvana ephiphany reminds me also of the best review of "Teen Spirit" I've ever read (I think from '93), which was Chris Lowe calling it a "rave anthem," and singling out the video in particular as proof.

s woods, Tuesday, 22 April 2003 01:52 (twenty-one years ago) link

the progression goes 80s>00s>70s>90s>60s

jess (dubplatestyle), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 01:57 (twenty-one years ago) link

I'd say 70s>60s>80s>90s (too soon to place 00s) (and yeah, my age showing through).

s woods, Tuesday, 22 April 2003 02:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

the 1890s ROCK u r all gay

hstencil, Tuesday, 22 April 2003 02:02 (twenty-one years ago) link

No, that was the "gay nineties," u r all roxor. (Did I spell that right?)

s woods, Tuesday, 22 April 2003 02:05 (twenty-one years ago) link

Why is there this assumption that indie-rock is non-danceable?

What about slam-dancing or moshing - a profoundly homosocial and EXCULSIVE style of dance?

Michael Dieter, Tuesday, 22 April 2003 02:38 (twenty-one years ago) link

trife - I do go to boneshakers, I'll go on 'disco' nights cuz for some reason I think they're gonna play disco only I get there and they're playing pet shop boys and crystal waters - which I love don't get me wrong - but with the bruce weber and mapplethorpe on the walls it's like stepping into 1990 and I end up feeling sooooooo old (becuz I am soooooo old). plus I'm much better dancing to rock n roll than I am to hiphop or 'electronica' - with hiphop I have to get really drunk to be any good and even then I'm liable to start doing the flava flav (sad but true). on a good night I'll do the roger rabbitt or the running man. with electronica I just nod and bounce like some sort of circus freak watching pokemon. but when the rock is dropping and I'm on the floor watchout - panties will be dropping.

James Blount (James Blount), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 02:44 (twenty-one years ago) link

I actually think moshpits might be why the 'stand there and stare' stance is so de rigeur at indie shows right now. Moshpits became just absurdly silly between the first and second lollapalooza - they became completely divorced from whatever the band was playing - and the jockification of altrock certainly didn't help, but it is something I miss.

James Blount (James Blount), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 02:46 (twenty-one years ago) link

not sure it was an epiphany so much as my favorite post-death Kurt tribute, Scott. that it was at a rave made it all the more surprising and touching. so, er, maybe it was an epiphany. (and "Teen Spirit" IS a rave anthem, damn it! any chance you still have that Chris Lowe review and could send it my way, Scott?)

I'll happily take the '90s over any other decade, incidentally, not least because I lived through them (I'll hold judgment on the '00s till they're further along, but so far I'm with you guys on 'em, e.g. they're grate). but Blount's point is interesting because moshing = dancing and rhythmic propulsion = urge to dance. considering the jock contingent's hostile takeover of alternarock by mid-decade (I remember seeing people mosh at a fucking Liz Phair show in 1994), you might also argue that static rhythms on the part of indie bands were also their way of discouraging it, putting a wrench in the works--not necessarily on purpose, but instinctively, as a reaction. this isn't to discount the fact that indie rock was never exactly Deney Terrio territory to begin with, but still.

M Matos (M Matos), Tuesday, 22 April 2003 04:22 (twenty-one years ago) link


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