thread to track Poptimism 2.0

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The sum total of my thoughts about the potential social media response to anything I write is to lock my account before anything gets posted so I can at least cordon off the angry tweets about my writing ability and sometimes my appearance to a place where they do not bombard me in the office. I forgot to do this for the Grammys piece because I was too sleep-deprived, and ended up regretting it.

algorithm is a dancer (katherine), Wednesday, 7 February 2018 15:30 (six years ago) link

oh and nationalize facebook too obv

maura, Wednesday, 7 February 2018 15:30 (six years ago) link

thread to track Poptimism 2.0 katherine

Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 7 February 2018 15:31 (six years ago) link

Thread to Defend Justin Timberlake Against The Mean Millennials doesn't exist yet

algorithm is a dancer (katherine), Wednesday, 7 February 2018 15:32 (six years ago) link

ah, yes, it was definitely the rogue millennials and not the gen-xers and xennials assigning, editing and dictating the editorial visions of outlets they own and run

Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 7 February 2018 15:33 (six years ago) link

i mean if you're getting shitty dms that sucks but to me your replies from the post-grammys scrum look pretty positive? 'magnificent' and 'powerful' are pretty great compliments and ones that not many people receive

maura, Wednesday, 7 February 2018 15:34 (six years ago) link

This is where the benefits of being a niche writer covering niche music really show up.

how much do you think about a potential social media response to a piece before posting it?

Not at all.

And how have you dealt with any social media backlash you’ve had to a piece?

This has never happened to me.

grawlix (unperson), Wednesday, 7 February 2018 15:36 (six years ago) link

The sum total of my thoughts about the potential social media response to anything I write is to lock my account before anything gets posted so I can at least cordon off the angry tweets about my writing ability and sometimes my appearance to a place where they do not bombard me in the office. I forgot to do this for the Grammys piece because I was too sleep-deprived, and ended up regretting it.

See, it saddens me that you have to go those lengths to maintain a reasonable sense of sanity. And it’s terrible that people jump straight into your appearance and your writing ability rather than the content of your work. I know there was probably never a time where music discourse in a public arena was free flowing, insightful and intelligent amongst all the people taking part (I think forums like this get close, though). But this is exactly what I’m talking about. You can’t just post something you’ve worked hard on and assume it’ll be received in good faith and debated reasonably. And surely this has to impact the kind of things people feel comfortable sharing as music writers.

triggercut, Wednesday, 7 February 2018 15:40 (six years ago) link

didn't you get into a fight with some shitty nu-metal band recently lol xp

imago, Wednesday, 7 February 2018 15:40 (six years ago) link

didn't you get into a fight with some shitty nu-metal band recently lol xp

Ha! You're right - I forgot all about that. They wound up printing my piece on a T-shirt, I believe, which I thought was kind of awesome. (They didn't send me one, though, which sucked.)

grawlix (unperson), Wednesday, 7 February 2018 15:44 (six years ago) link

time for us to all take to twitter to @ that band with "send unperson the shirt, you cowards"

mh, Wednesday, 7 February 2018 15:57 (six years ago) link

The idea that young social justice forward millennials love the discursive status quo seems like a massive assumption on katherine’s part to me.

Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Wednesday, 7 February 2018 17:02 (six years ago) link

I've seen countless variations on young justice-oriented people saying "stop wasting time arguing whether Taylor Swift is a white nationalist when ICE are rounding up children in hospices", etc. There are too many cases that look like publications taking important social-justice conversations and monetising them with incendiary thinkpieces that are probably written in good faith but cynically commissioned to capitalise on the angry reaction they're going to cause, often with the kids writing them hung out to dry.

Wag1 Shree Rajneesh (ShariVari), Wednesday, 7 February 2018 17:23 (six years ago) link

Katherine, you mention getting abuse for your work *a lot* on here. Do you think you are more open about this than others? Because if being a (female) critic in 2018 means being harassed (with misogynistic bullshit I presume) for every single thing you write, it's even worse out there than I thought.

Le Bateau Ivre, Wednesday, 7 February 2018 18:20 (six years ago) link

belatedly: it's a matter of degrees. I get more of it than writers who do not write about pop artists with easily provoked fanbases -- the appearance stuff, I think, was about a Fifth Harmony review, although it could well have been for a Halsey or Jessie J or Christina Aguilera review -- but I get way, way, WAY, way less than other female writers, I think (I obviously don't have a full slate of it). And the most actively malicious actors, as far as writing about music goes, tend to... focus? (that's the wrong word, and the gruesomely wrong word) on other writers. and I probably get less overtly misogynistic stuff and definitely do not get the racist harassment others do. this disclaimer should probably go on every time I mention it.

I don't know that I'm more open about it; it just has bothered me more and more as I get older

algorithm is a dancer (katherine), Wednesday, 7 February 2018 18:47 (six years ago) link

No, you don't need to stick a disclaimer on it at all. It's still harassment, even if others may have it worse. It's a matter of degrees probably, but it's both harassment and both completely wrong. I get you'd be an easy target for bile coming from a pop star fanbase, which sucks but is probably not as invested or substantial as either critique or harassment. It's gruesome but I fear the word 'focus' is all too real in the instance you describe.

What a world, though.

Le Bateau Ivre, Wednesday, 7 February 2018 19:35 (six years ago) link

i've noticed you say that before, Katherine, and I'm sorry it happens. For what it's worth, i feel pretty fortunate to sit on the sidelines and watch music debate between those I consider to be exceptional writers and thoughtful debaters. Katherine, Maura, deej, unperson, Whiney, Tim...I know about a tenth of what any one of you know so it makes me feel like a bit of a student (or, to put a more self-flagellating spin on it, a dilettante...since I have zero commitment to any one area of music interest.)

anyway fuck those jerks, if I ever see a Katherine byline I read it.

omar little, Wednesday, 7 February 2018 20:07 (six years ago) link

Yes, good discussion.

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 7 February 2018 20:18 (six years ago) link

omar little much, much more than a dilettante imo

imago, Wednesday, 7 February 2018 20:22 (six years ago) link

https://media.giphy.com/media/6g4tyNc0VEGiI/giphy.gif

omar little, Wednesday, 7 February 2018 20:24 (six years ago) link

also, one of your threads from 13 years ago got bumped on ile today. an excellent thread about birdshit. just fyi

imago, Wednesday, 7 February 2018 20:26 (six years ago) link

Damn, that one is a classic joint from my dearly departed twenties.

omar little, Wednesday, 7 February 2018 20:32 (six years ago) link

anyway, sorry if I upset anyone

algorithm is a dancer (katherine), Thursday, 8 February 2018 20:38 (six years ago) link

Katherine I was intrigued by your comments above about feeling part of a "wave" of writers disrupting the role of legacy music critics.

Is that merely a timing thing (i.e. anyone who started writing after a certain point in time is part of the wave) or do you see your approach to music writing as meaningfully distinct?

Tim F, Thursday, 8 February 2018 22:01 (six years ago) link

the term "legacy music critics" interests me too. What does it mean in 2018 -- the equivalent of music crit tenure insofar as this is possible?

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 8 February 2018 22:11 (six years ago) link

It's probably a function of first writing about music online myself (though scarily this was now almost 20 years ago), but I feel like the gulf between what I would consider to be "my generation" and people who got their start in the 70s through 90s is at least as distinct as any gulf vis a vis Internet 2.0 writers.

Though of course there's not really "gulfs" per se, rather an endless succession of shifts which different writers alternately embrace, reject or ignore (or some occasionally convoluted and contradictory combination of all three reactions).

Tim F, Thursday, 8 February 2018 22:32 (six years ago) link

just to keep everyone informed - brad quit ilx over an incident last night - can those of you who are friends with him maybe persuade him back to ilm at least, with the promise of emo and hugs or something :(

imago, Thursday, 8 February 2018 22:33 (six years ago) link

him/them/brad :)

imago, Thursday, 8 February 2018 22:37 (six years ago) link

What incident?

Video reach stereo bog (Tom D.), Thursday, 8 February 2018 22:44 (six years ago) link

Oh never mind, I know what it was.

Video reach stereo bog (Tom D.), Thursday, 8 February 2018 22:48 (six years ago) link

It's probably a function of first writing about music online myself (though scarily this was now almost 20 years ago), but I feel like the gulf between what I would consider to be "my generation" and people who got their start in the 70s through 90s is at least as distinct as any gulf vis a vis Internet 2.0 writers.

I had a discussion about this with (I guess) former ilxor xhukh at one point, and it seems to me there were at least 3 generations of pre-internet music critics:

• Old Fucks Who Started It All (Marcus, Landau, Marsh, Christgau, Meltzer, Bangs, etc.)
• 70s Rolling Stone Crew (Cameron Crowe, Jaan Uhzelski, etc., etc.)
• 80s Voice Writers and Assorted Brits (Greg Tate et al.)
• 90s Kids (too many names to mention here, and I suppose this is where I fit in, since my first paid byline was November '96)

grawlix (unperson), Thursday, 8 February 2018 22:59 (six years ago) link

Is that merely a timing thing (i.e. anyone who started writing after a certain point in time is part of the wave) or do you see your approach to music writing as meaningfully distinct?

It's a timing and demographic thing, I'd date it to around 2010 or so

algorithm is a dancer (katherine), Thursday, 8 February 2018 23:01 (six years ago) link

My first paid byline was spring '99 but did it intermittently through 2003, after which it became a more regular freelance phenomenon. I guess I'm on the late end of the blog cycle.

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 8 February 2018 23:02 (six years ago) link

but no, I don't remotely see myself as any kind of #disruptortwopointoh, unless the thing that was to be disrupted was my own security, which, stellar job all around there to me

algorithm is a dancer (katherine), Thursday, 8 February 2018 23:03 (six years ago) link

FWIW my surprise was mostly driven by feeling very um 'close' to your writing style - as in the voice just feels so familiar to me in the best possible sense that it seemed startling to then ask myself rhetorically "is this writer in fact emblematic of a new generation that I don't fully understand?"

Tim F, Thursday, 8 February 2018 23:10 (six years ago) link

It's a timing and demographic thing, I'd date it to around 2010 or so

― algorithm is a dancer (katherine), Thursday, February 8, 2018 5:01 PM (seven minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

tumblr generation

my only overarching issue w the tumblr generation is a tendency to think they invented politicization of music writing

Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Thursday, 8 February 2018 23:12 (six years ago) link

i do think i came up in an era where you had to argue radical ideas from within a 'reasonable' frame whereas post tumblr it seems a radical approach is taken more seriously

Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Thursday, 8 February 2018 23:14 (six years ago) link

but they did invent the meme-ification of music writing, give'em that

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 8 February 2018 23:14 (six years ago) link

the term "legacy music critics" interests me too. What does it mean in 2018 -- the equivalent of music crit tenure insofar as this is possible?

It's always been weird for me, I think. If you count my grad school work at UCI, when I was also the campus paper's main music reviewer, then I've been doing work one way or another since 1992, and though I was let go as a freelancer at the AMG in 2012, I did spend almost fifteen years contributing to its database on a regular basis. But it's never been my *job* and I never thought of it or any of the other work for all the other spots I've written for over the years as what I've done in terms of my day-to-day. (Which I realize is the case for you as well, Alfred, as well as many others.) Instead -- helped by the fact that in 1993 I started talking with people via newsgroups, email and the Web in general -- it's felt more like I've just always been steadily talking here and there about things as I choose. And it's a reason why I'm terribly casual about what level of work I do or don't do at this stage of my life, I pitch as I do, chime in as I do, don't feel the need to grapple as deeply as I might have done in the past, but that's not that I'm not thinking about things. I'm just thinking about a lot of other things too. And honestly I'd rather read more thoughts from others in most cases rather than put whatever supposed imprimatur I could on a subject of discussion.

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 8 February 2018 23:27 (six years ago) link

the problem with music writing in 2018 is that the original purpose of music writing was to explain to readers what a particular piece of music sounded like and offer an opinion on whether or not the reader should try to hear it for themselves

mid-2000s music writing was especially valuable to people because online consumption of music was a disorganized and constantly changing landscape and music writers served as guides who helped readers find the best stuff there

spotify new music friday effectively drops a stack of free promo CDs on everyone's doorstep every week, and spotify themselves do a fine job of organizing new releases in such a way that helps every individual user easily find the new stuff that best suits their particular interests. pitchfork's front page can't compete with spotify's "new releases" tab. spotify already knows what you personally like to listen to and can make educated guesses about what you want to check out based on that data. what determines the way pitchfork's front page looks on any given day? most of the reviews they run every day only show up there because a publicist asked nicely. they're reviews of mediocre records that most of the site's writers don't have any interest in hearing. as a reader, it feels alienating.

i don't like the JT review, but i also can't blame young writers for trying to find a way to write about music in a way that feels important and useful. streaming has removed the need for music writing to function as a consumer guide because the audience no longer needs to spend money to hear music for themselves. it's no longer necessary for music writers to organize the chaotic landscape of online music consumption for the benefit of listeners because that landscape is no longer chaotic, and the data about listening habits that spotify and apple have access to is much a much more effective tool for organizing and recommending music than the sum total of knowledge contained in the minds of all professional music writers combined.

young music writers are not worse than old music writers, old music writers just had the benefit of circumstances that made their writing more important and useful to readers. there was a clear purpose to what they were doing that readers understood and appreciated. that's no longer the case, now.

kakistocrat, Saturday, 10 February 2018 00:10 (six years ago) link

I don't buy any of that. My interest in art criticism has never been for it to function as a consumer guide. I want to read someone who understands something. I want to read writing where someone is putting important things that other people sense about a given piece of work into words.

timellison, Saturday, 10 February 2018 00:20 (six years ago) link

^^^

I would guess that most people in this thread have always consumed music criticism to better work out how to listen to music more than to work out what to listen to.

Tim F, Saturday, 10 February 2018 00:28 (six years ago) link

streaming has removed the need for music writing to function as a consumer guide because the audience no longer needs to spend money to hear music for themselves. it's no longer necessary for music writers to organize the chaotic landscape of online music consumption for the benefit of listeners because that landscape is no longer chaotic, and the data about listening habits that spotify and apple have access to is much a much more effective tool for organizing and recommending music than the sum total of knowledge contained in the minds of all professional music writers combined.

This is simply not true. Plenty of people enjoy hearing something that sounds nothing like anything they've listened to before. Also, Spotify is terrible at "organizing new releases in such a way that helps every individual user easily find the new stuff that best suits their particular interests" if those interests include jazz, classical, music from non-US/UK countries, or basically anything that's not utterly standard mass-market Western pop. And that's before we even get into the issue of writing about music that's not available on Spotify at all (there's a lot of it, you know!) and will thus require some actual effort on a reader's part to seek out.

grawlix (unperson), Saturday, 10 February 2018 00:35 (six years ago) link

I think the biggest influence on this whole thing-we-are-discussing is a social media inspired change in how we sort and organise ourselves and what information and opinions and allegiances and signifiers we use for that.

There’s a reason why 2016 articles on Kanye vs Taylor and Bernie vs Hillary could feel startlingly similar.

Tim F, Saturday, 10 February 2018 00:36 (six years ago) link

i.e. I think it’s too narrow to frame this solely in terms of patterns of music consumption

Tim F, Saturday, 10 February 2018 00:37 (six years ago) link

who is reading about jazz, classical, or music from non-US/UK countries? who is publishing it? who is reading and publishing writing about music by writers who have great passion for and expertise on the thing they're writing about?

i do not see any evidence that there's a market for nuance, for writing that is educated and/or educational, for expertise. i see news articles that summarize tweets and rushed takes on mass-market pop from good writers who are too busy trying to make rent to spend any time at all thinking about music that isn't the stuff everyone else is talking about and therefore approving pitches for.

i'm old enough to remember what the platonic ideal of music writing was supposed to look like, and i don't see anything like it today. what i see sure looks like an industry that's on the brink of being automated out of existence.

kakistocrat, Saturday, 10 February 2018 00:57 (six years ago) link

idk, The Wire is still in business, although others could speak to what capacity it is operating as a publication

books on music still sell reasonably well, as far as books go

I have no idea what "the platonic ideal of music writing" is supposed to be, especially when music writing has always been pretty varied. Any examples there?

mh, Saturday, 10 February 2018 01:03 (six years ago) link

who is reading about jazz, classical, or music from non-US/UK countries?

Lots of people. Granted, many of them are over 30, so they really have no excuse for continuing to exist, but they do.

who is publishing it? who is reading and publishing writing about music by writers who have great passion for and expertise on the thing they're writing about?

The Wire, Jazz Times, Down Beat, Bandcamp Daily, Stereogum, Pitchfork, the Log Journal, WBGO.com...those are just the first places I thought of. There are fucking tons of outlets for serious, thoughtful pieces on music that requires serious thought. Are there as many as there were a few years ago? No, but...

i do not see any evidence that there's a market for nuance, for writing that is educated and/or educational, for expertise. i see news articles that summarize tweets and rushed takes on mass-market pop from good writers who are too busy trying to make rent to spend any time at all thinking about music that isn't the stuff everyone else is talking about and therefore approving pitches for.

You're not looking hard enough. Seriously.

i'm old enough to remember what the platonic ideal of music writing was supposed to look like, and i don't see anything like it today. what i see sure looks like an industry that's on the brink of being automated out of existence.

You're wrong. But your first question makes me think you don't actually care, anyway. You probably like whatever the algorithms tell you you should like, and that's fine. It's a big world. There's room for all of us.

grawlix (unperson), Saturday, 10 February 2018 01:10 (six years ago) link

the wire, sure, that. unforced genuine expertise presented without concern for the popularity of the thing being written about. archival work focused on music that might otherwise never be discussed or cataloged, serious and thoughtful discussion of music that never relies on conventional wisdom or Default Smart Opinions.

what is the wire's circulation? who is reading that stuff? what do you think is bigger, the audience that's looking for great writing about music otherwise might not have interested the reader or the audience that's looking for Default Smart Opinions at lightning speed they can then parrot back to their friends in real life in order to seem hip and knowledgeable?

how many of the writers who are capable of the type of great thinking and great writing that a mag like wire might publish are just giving it away for free on here or elsewhere anyway? how many examples have you come across of writers who do their good writing about the subjects they are actually extremely passionate about on their tumblr or wordpress blog for free and inferior hot takes on mediocre zeitgeist records as paid work for publications?

kakistocrat, Saturday, 10 February 2018 01:16 (six years ago) link

did you really register an account just to complain on this thread in a long-winded manner?

mh, Saturday, 10 February 2018 01:24 (six years ago) link


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