PFM Repents! for, uhh, what exactly?

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Bookmark Removed
http://www.pitchforkmedia.com

joseph cotten (joseph cotten), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:06 (twenty-two years ago)

http://members.aol.com/twh427/lawsuit.gif

gygax! (gygax!), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:12 (twenty-two years ago)

d'oh! that's funny.

hstencil (hstencil), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:13 (twenty-two years ago)

http://ffmedia.ign.com/filmforce/image/shattered-glass-poster-sm.jpg

Gear! (Gear!), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:14 (twenty-two years ago)

http://www.gemm.nl/webgemms/jayson--blair.jpg

Gear! (Gear!), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:14 (twenty-two years ago)

"Yo I made shit up, what's the harm? D-man, out."

http://www.eveprime.com/images/portfolio/hipster.1.jpg

Gear! (Gear!), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:15 (twenty-two years ago)

http://www.bostonphoenix.com/alt1/archive/books/reviews/image/Meltzer.gif

Phil Freeman (Phil Freeman), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:16 (twenty-two years ago)

so was that review a big la dolce vita homage or what?? was that the point of all that milan shit??

vahid (vahid), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:16 (twenty-two years ago)

hahaha gear! r00lz

vahid (vahid), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:17 (twenty-two years ago)

Okay, this trumps the "wizard's cap" review quite nicely.

VengaDan Perry (Dan Perry), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:17 (twenty-two years ago)

Heh, I just watched Shattered Glass last night, and that was my first thought, too.

jaymc (jaymc), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:17 (twenty-two years ago)

listen all y'all it's a SABOTAGE

vahid (vahid), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:17 (twenty-two years ago)

the scene at the kingdom:

http://www.gothamist.com/images/2003_6_nytnewsroom.jpg

rasheed wallace (rasheed wallace), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:19 (twenty-two years ago)

If that's actually PFM I'd be very happy.

Gear! (Gear!), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:19 (twenty-two years ago)

Right, that's what I figured. But why would anyone bother to invent a story about a botched interview with MEAN MAGAZINE? I didn't read the offending article, sadly: was it a Situationist stunt gone wrong?

joseph cotten (joseph cotten), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:21 (twenty-two years ago)

7) Steve Martin has never, to Brent DiCrescenzo's knowledge, "dangled [his] major artists... like carrots to the media in an attempt to blackmail press for features" on less established artists or bands.

Like, I'm so sure!

frankE (frankE), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:22 (twenty-two years ago)

"D-man just tryin to get some publicity for his new movie, man. No harm no foul. D, out."

http://www.eveprime.com/images/portfolio/hipster.1.jpg

Gear! (Gear!), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:22 (twenty-two years ago)

To The Five Boroughs [Original Pitchfork Review].</h3>


June, 1999

Viale Vittorio Veneto, Corso Venezia, Corso Buenos Aires, Viale Piave, and Viale Luigi Majno converge into a clogged traffic circle on the northeastern corner of the Giardini Pubblici in northeastern Milan. Flanked by my overpriced hotel and the park's Planetario, I punch a 26-digit number into the red Italian payphone which looks like an EMT heart resuscitator. Fiats and scooters drown the faint, distorted ringing. I check my watch. Is New York five or six hours behind? I have two hours until Clinic goes on before Radiohead.


"Hello, Nasty," the girl on the phone says.


I ask for the cellular number to Steve Martin, head of Nasty Little Man public relations. I'm supposed to meet him now at Villa Reale for a Radiohead story. They won't give me the number. It's private. Right, I know. I flew to another continent to meet him. I need that number. Villa Reale, a Renaissance mansion, hides a couple copses behind me, and there's no sign of Steve Martin, or Radiohead, or bleachers, or white semis, or fans, or any other expected Radiohead concert signifiers. They will call Steve and call me back. Look, I'm on a payphone in Milan, Italy, can you give me the goddam number? They will call Steve for me.


I hang up and watch skaters wipe out on bench grinds. I call back.


"Hello, Nasty."


Right. Brent D. Milan. Steve. Radiohead. What the fuck.


"Oh, Steve forgot to tell you that the concert was moved to Monza." Monza is a suburb 30 minutes north of Milan. I had passed it on the train from Frankfurt.


I hang up.


<center>* * *</center>


June, 1998


In one of the first "concept" reviews at Pitchfork, and one of my first for the site in general, I review Hello Nasty. I make some stupid Tibet joke, give it an 8.5, and say:


Hello Nasty is a New York salad-- diced beats, trans- oceanic influences, traffic, noise pollution, construction, b-ball speak, bold pop- culture billboards and neon, tossed well in braggadocio.


I always hated that review. I held back. Eventually, Hello Nasty would become my favorite Beastie Boys record because, for a band who had sold tens of millions, it seemed overlooked. As I age I become more and more fascinated by records by artists in the autumn of their careers. I reach for Holland and Lodger before Wild Honey and Hunky Dory.


<center>* * *</center>


June, 2004


After booking an airline and a TriBeCa hotel blocks from the Beastie Boys' studio on Canal Street, I call my editor at Mean magazine. We discuss the cover story I am to write. The editor envisions an insightful, personal look into the lives of the Beastie Boys that goes beyond the obvious press kit-based fluff pieces. Fantastic, I refuse to take typical approaches, and Mean magazine is run by people from the defunct, excellent Grand Royal magazine, so what better chance? One problem: After six weeks of planning the story, Steve Martin, the Boys' publicist, has not gotten back to us about the interview. Mean even delayed their publication to accommodate Steve Martin's procrastination.


The interview is set to take place the next business day, and I've cleared two days in New York for the story. I've also booked meetings for my film endeavors, but those will just be for five or six hours on Tuesday. Nasty Little Man will call Steve who will call Nasty Little Man back who will call my editor who will call me. Well, I leave for New York tomorrow, so could you work that out? Also, could I get the new album? When writing a cover story about an album, hearing the album typically offers important insight.


Steve Martin, presumably between bites of a Shea Stadium hotdog, initiates his chain of communication. No, the album is under tight security and could Brent please be on call this Tuesday? I'll call him an hour before he needs to show up at the Canal Street studio. He'll get an hour. With two of the three members.


I cancel the story. The Beastie Boys are a 23-year-old rap group. Despite the fact that my entire adolescence revolved around their first three albums, I could care less about squeezing out a mundane magazine piece about their new paean to New York. The city puts its garbage on the sidewalk. "In a World Gone Mad" sucked. The publicist- and press-controlled structure of the entire music industry only allows for trite magazine fluff as ad revenue; access to major artists are dangled like carrots to the media in an attempt to blackmail press for features on nothing bands like Matt Pond, PA and Ultimate Fakebook.


<center>* * *</center>


June, 1999


My night's schedule cleared, I wander the city of Milan. I shop for a watch in Gucci. I eat gnocchi under the great iron and glass atrium of the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele. After the meal, I climb to the top of the gargantuan Duomo, a cathedral that appears to have been built by the hand of God reaching down and drizzling wet sand from his fist. In the piazza below, a large concert stage is being constructed. I descend the cathedral and mill about with Italians with prams and cellphones. As twilight spreads, Caetano Veloso, one of my heroes, comes on stage and performs a free set under the stars.


<center>* * *</center>


June, 2004


On walks around Manhattan, even on sun-scorched days, mysterious precipitation falls on your head. Whether this comes from urinating birds, air conditioning condensation, observation deck spitting, or suicide jumpers breaking down into their constituent beads of bloody moisture over the long 145-story leaps from skyscrapers, I've yet to determine. The Times Square subway station has been under construction for at least four years. The majority of Village eateries I frequent do not accept credit cards. The city tobacconists all spell the first letters of "Smoke Shop" with two pipes, making the storefront signs look more like "Jmoke Jhop." As I mentioned before, garbage is laid out on the sidewalks, as real estate shortages allow for no alleys. The Mormon Temple across from the Lincoln Center has fantastic free peanut butter cookies, if you sit through one of their thinly veiled brainwashing video tours.


None of these elements of New York, which I find more indicative of the town, are mentioned on the Beastie Boys' To the 5 Boroughs. Instead, Adrock, MCA and Mike D offer obvious demographic and transit information on their "Open Letter to NYC". "Asian, Middle Eastern, and Latin/ Black, White, New York/ You make it happen," they croon together on the chorus to the centerpiece of their sixth album. "Brooklyn, Bronx, Queens, and Staten/ From the Battery to the top of Manhattan," they read like a free hotel map. What, nothing rhymed with Inwood? The song makes fantastic use of a Dead Boys sample (who were from Cleveland), but fumbles the execution with their Up With People chants.


Lyrically, the Beastie Boys fail to make a convincing justification for their hometown pride beyond slogans that could fit on a t-shirt. The answering machine message of Paul's Boutique conveyed more giddy pride in the nuances and uniqueness of the metropolis. In a trademark (or typical, or tired, depending on your perspective) deep pop culture reference, Adrock mentions Gnip Gnop, a 1970s Parker Brothers game that was like a cross of Pong and Hungry Hungry Hippos. "Jmoke Jhop" would have rhymed perfectly. In their attempt to point out the details of their city, the Beastie Boys offer little more than the view from the top of a sawn-off double-decker tour bus.


At this point in time, no measure of analysis regarding cadence, meter or goofy references will sway the pros and cons of the Beastie Boys' lyrics. They do what they do, and even my mother knows their M.O. What To the 5 Boroughs offers, contrary to naysayers who mock aging bands, are three voices showing intriguing texture from wear and experience. MCA sounds like the Harry Nilsson of hip-hop after a lost weekend. Adrock, especially, shows greater range in style. From his leisured easy-speaking on "Crawlspace" to the Eminem-like syllable play on "Hey Fuck You", he puffs his chest with laid-back economy and moves away from the stereotypical nasal whine of their younger days.


Where the true influence of New York exerts itself on To the 5 Boroughs is in the stark rhythms, which filter the cold continental-sampling breaks of rap pioneers like Jimmy Spicer and The Treacherous Three through Apple processors. The streamlined foundations both pay tribute to the crews that influenced the Beastie Boys to put down their Bad Brains and Reagan Youth aspirations and lays a hard digital direction for the Bush Youth to follow.


Unlike all previous Beastie Boys albums (with the possible exception of Licensed to Ill), To The 5 Boroughs sounds homogenous and singular in purpose-- dark, steel, and dirty like that incomplete Times Square station. Ill Communication and Hello Nasty reveled in genre-dipping, from hardcore and salsa to dub and disco. Their decision to settle into a focused hip-hop direction here seems like a sage move. The album succeeds in its seeming spontaneity. "Seeming" in that they possibly spent years making it. But whatever length of gestation, the album's easy air speaks to veteran, nothing-to-lose attitude of both the city and the group.


<center>* * *</center>


June, 1992; June, 2005


My interaction with music goes well beyond simple, academic analysis of sound. Nostalgia, emotional context, the continued story and history behind the artist, the packaging, and everything else matters in my love and fascination with music. This is why writing for Pitchfork, which prides itself on discovering unknown underground artists, means so little to me anymore. Listening to music as some form of continued, insular experiment with recording driven by faceless, MP3-based rock bands bores me. I was immediately prepared to love To the 5 Boroughs from my history with the band-- from listening to Ill while playing Atari with Andy Eberhardt, to mowing neighborhood lawns with Gregg Bernstein and Paul's Boutique in a walkman, to holding my portable CD player off the front cushion of my Buick Century to keep Check Your Head from skipping as I passed over the speed bumps in the Marist parking lot every day after my Junior year, to shooting bottle rockets from poster tubes at passing trucks on 400 off the roof of the AMC multiplex I worked at when Ill Communication came out. It is not mentally possibly for me to switch on apathy towards the group-- and immediately hate this record because the Beastie Boys associate themselves with pricks like Steve Martin and his sycophantic fleet of product pushers who fail to see the benefit of funny, creative magazine pieces.


When all is said and done, I have spun To the 5 Boroughs at least 30 times while working on some of the most rewarding and enjoyable creative work of my life in the past couple weeks, while visiting a city I love, and seeing people I missed. The album has become intrinsically linked to these experiences-- from my movie premiere this week to the surreal tour of the Manhattan Mormon Temple last week. The little number at the top of this piece reflects little of personal relation to the record. It's an arbitrary guide to how I would expect people to gauge the intent of this review. I will listen to this album for years to come. You might. Or not. It depends on your own complex web of past interaction with the Beastie Boys, linked memories to the music, or preconceived notion of how hip or not it is to listen to them in 2004.


Though I would fail to quantify the comparative "quality" of such albums, as I said before, I love Carl & The Passions as much as Pet Sounds. Divorcing the lives and backstory from the recorded product of a musical artist equates to making movies without characters. The sixth Beastie Boys album holds much more intrigue than some young dudes with bedhead thinking they're going to evolve rock and roll. I've ended up listening to it more than any other release this year. (Hey, that would make a great pull-quote for the Nasty Little Man presskit. You can add an exclamation point, Steve.)


This process has become unexciting and routine, which is why I bid the world of music writing farewell. Explaining why I love a record in the confines of its production, lyrics and instrumental "tightness" without detailing the first time I heard the band's song drifting from bowling alley in Poland or whatever confounds me. More power to those who discover new music from this site. I've figured out where I stand at this point, as have the readers. Like the Beastie Boys, I could continue to crank out divisive pieces of writing here until I go gray. I have more interesting stories to tell.


-Brent DiCrescenzo, June 15th, 2004


mcd (mcd), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:25 (twenty-two years ago)

For those who haven't seen it...

To The Five Boroughs [Original Pitchfork Review].</h3>


June, 1999

Viale Vittorio Veneto, Corso Venezia, Corso Buenos Aires, Viale Piave, and Viale Luigi Majno converge into a clogged traffic circle on the northeastern corner of the Giardini Pubblici in northeastern Milan. Flanked by my overpriced hotel and the park's Planetario, I punch a 26-digit number into the red Italian payphone which looks like an EMT heart resuscitator. Fiats and scooters drown the faint, distorted ringing. I check my watch. Is New York five or six hours behind? I have two hours until Clinic goes on before Radiohead.


"Hello, Nasty," the girl on the phone says.


I ask for the cellular number to Steve Martin, head of Nasty Little Man public relations. I'm supposed to meet him now at Villa Reale for a Radiohead story. They won't give me the number. It's private. Right, I know. I flew to another continent to meet him. I need that number. Villa Reale, a Renaissance mansion, hides a couple copses behind me, and there's no sign of Steve Martin, or Radiohead, or bleachers, or white semis, or fans, or any other expected Radiohead concert signifiers. They will call Steve and call me back. Look, I'm on a payphone in Milan, Italy, can you give me the goddam number? They will call Steve for me.


I hang up and watch skaters wipe out on bench grinds. I call back.


"Hello, Nasty."


Right. Brent D. Milan. Steve. Radiohead. What the fuck.


"Oh, Steve forgot to tell you that the concert was moved to Monza." Monza is a suburb 30 minutes north of Milan. I had passed it on the train from Frankfurt.


I hang up.


<center>* * *</center>


June, 1998


In one of the first "concept" reviews at Pitchfork, and one of my first for the site in general, I review Hello Nasty. I make some stupid Tibet joke, give it an 8.5, and say:


Hello Nasty is a New York salad-- diced beats, trans- oceanic influences, traffic, noise pollution, construction, b-ball speak, bold pop- culture billboards and neon, tossed well in braggadocio.


I always hated that review. I held back. Eventually, Hello Nasty would become my favorite Beastie Boys record because, for a band who had sold tens of millions, it seemed overlooked. As I age I become more and more fascinated by records by artists in the autumn of their careers. I reach for Holland and Lodger before Wild Honey and Hunky Dory.


<center>* * *</center>


June, 2004


After booking an airline and a TriBeCa hotel blocks from the Beastie Boys' studio on Canal Street, I call my editor at Mean magazine. We discuss the cover story I am to write. The editor envisions an insightful, personal look into the lives of the Beastie Boys that goes beyond the obvious press kit-based fluff pieces. Fantastic, I refuse to take typical approaches, and Mean magazine is run by people from the defunct, excellent Grand Royal magazine, so what better chance? One problem: After six weeks of planning the story, Steve Martin, the Boys' publicist, has not gotten back to us about the interview. Mean even delayed their publication to accommodate Steve Martin's procrastination.


The interview is set to take place the next business day, and I've cleared two days in New York for the story. I've also booked meetings for my film endeavors, but those will just be for five or six hours on Tuesday. Nasty Little Man will call Steve who will call Nasty Little Man back who will call my editor who will call me. Well, I leave for New York tomorrow, so could you work that out? Also, could I get the new album? When writing a cover story about an album, hearing the album typically offers important insight.


Steve Martin, presumably between bites of a Shea Stadium hotdog, initiates his chain of communication. No, the album is under tight security and could Brent please be on call this Tuesday? I'll call him an hour before he needs to show up at the Canal Street studio. He'll get an hour. With two of the three members.


I cancel the story. The Beastie Boys are a 23-year-old rap group. Despite the fact that my entire adolescence revolved around their first three albums, I could care less about squeezing out a mundane magazine piece about their new paean to New York. The city puts its garbage on the sidewalk. "In a World Gone Mad" sucked. The publicist- and press-controlled structure of the entire music industry only allows for trite magazine fluff as ad revenue; access to major artists are dangled like carrots to the media in an attempt to blackmail press for features on nothing bands like Matt Pond, PA and Ultimate Fakebook.


<center>* * *</center>


June, 1999


My night's schedule cleared, I wander the city of Milan. I shop for a watch in Gucci. I eat gnocchi under the great iron and glass atrium of the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele. After the meal, I climb to the top of the gargantuan Duomo, a cathedral that appears to have been built by the hand of God reaching down and drizzling wet sand from his fist. In the piazza below, a large concert stage is being constructed. I descend the cathedral and mill about with Italians with prams and cellphones. As twilight spreads, Caetano Veloso, one of my heroes, comes on stage and performs a free set under the stars.


<center>* * *</center>


June, 2004


On walks around Manhattan, even on sun-scorched days, mysterious precipitation falls on your head. Whether this comes from urinating birds, air conditioning condensation, observation deck spitting, or suicide jumpers breaking down into their constituent beads of bloody moisture over the long 145-story leaps from skyscrapers, I've yet to determine. The Times Square subway station has been under construction for at least four years. The majority of Village eateries I frequent do not accept credit cards. The city tobacconists all spell the first letters of "Smoke Shop" with two pipes, making the storefront signs look more like "Jmoke Jhop." As I mentioned before, garbage is laid out on the sidewalks, as real estate shortages allow for no alleys. The Mormon Temple across from the Lincoln Center has fantastic free peanut butter cookies, if you sit through one of their thinly veiled brainwashing video tours.


None of these elements of New York, which I find more indicative of the town, are mentioned on the Beastie Boys' To the 5 Boroughs. Instead, Adrock, MCA and Mike D offer obvious demographic and transit information on their "Open Letter to NYC". "Asian, Middle Eastern, and Latin/ Black, White, New York/ You make it happen," they croon together on the chorus to the centerpiece of their sixth album. "Brooklyn, Bronx, Queens, and Staten/ From the Battery to the top of Manhattan," they read like a free hotel map. What, nothing rhymed with Inwood? The song makes fantastic use of a Dead Boys sample (who were from Cleveland), but fumbles the execution with their Up With People chants.


Lyrically, the Beastie Boys fail to make a convincing justification for their hometown pride beyond slogans that could fit on a t-shirt. The answering machine message of Paul's Boutique conveyed more giddy pride in the nuances and uniqueness of the metropolis. In a trademark (or typical, or tired, depending on your perspective) deep pop culture reference, Adrock mentions Gnip Gnop, a 1970s Parker Brothers game that was like a cross of Pong and Hungry Hungry Hippos. "Jmoke Jhop" would have rhymed perfectly. In their attempt to point out the details of their city, the Beastie Boys offer little more than the view from the top of a sawn-off double-decker tour bus.


At this point in time, no measure of analysis regarding cadence, meter or goofy references will sway the pros and cons of the Beastie Boys' lyrics. They do what they do, and even my mother knows their M.O. What To the 5 Boroughs offers, contrary to naysayers who mock aging bands, are three voices showing intriguing texture from wear and experience. MCA sounds like the Harry Nilsson of hip-hop after a lost weekend. Adrock, especially, shows greater range in style. From his leisured easy-speaking on "Crawlspace" to the Eminem-like syllable play on "Hey Fuck You", he puffs his chest with laid-back economy and moves away from the stereotypical nasal whine of their younger days.


Where the true influence of New York exerts itself on To the 5 Boroughs is in the stark rhythms, which filter the cold continental-sampling breaks of rap pioneers like Jimmy Spicer and The Treacherous Three through Apple processors. The streamlined foundations both pay tribute to the crews that influenced the Beastie Boys to put down their Bad Brains and Reagan Youth aspirations and lays a hard digital direction for the Bush Youth to follow.


Unlike all previous Beastie Boys albums (with the possible exception of Licensed to Ill), To The 5 Boroughs sounds homogenous and singular in purpose-- dark, steel, and dirty like that incomplete Times Square station. Ill Communication and Hello Nasty reveled in genre-dipping, from hardcore and salsa to dub and disco. Their decision to settle into a focused hip-hop direction here seems like a sage move. The album succeeds in its seeming spontaneity. "Seeming" in that they possibly spent years making it. But whatever length of gestation, the album's easy air speaks to veteran, nothing-to-lose attitude of both the city and the group.


<center>* * *</center>


June, 1992; June, 2005


My interaction with music goes well beyond simple, academic analysis of sound. Nostalgia, emotional context, the continued story and history behind the artist, the packaging, and everything else matters in my love and fascination with music. This is why writing for Pitchfork, which prides itself on discovering unknown underground artists, means so little to me anymore. Listening to music as some form of continued, insular experiment with recording driven by faceless, MP3-based rock bands bores me. I was immediately prepared to love To the 5 Boroughs from my history with the band-- from listening to Ill while playing Atari with Andy Eberhardt, to mowing neighborhood lawns with Gregg Bernstein and Paul's Boutique in a walkman, to holding my portable CD player off the front cushion of my Buick Century to keep Check Your Head from skipping as I passed over the speed bumps in the Marist parking lot every day after my Junior year, to shooting bottle rockets from poster tubes at passing trucks on 400 off the roof of the AMC multiplex I worked at when Ill Communication came out. It is not mentally possibly for me to switch on apathy towards the group-- and immediately hate this record because the Beastie Boys associate themselves with pricks like Steve Martin and his sycophantic fleet of product pushers who fail to see the benefit of funny, creative magazine pieces.


When all is said and done, I have spun To the 5 Boroughs at least 30 times while working on some of the most rewarding and enjoyable creative work of my life in the past couple weeks, while visiting a city I love, and seeing people I missed. The album has become intrinsically linked to these experiences-- from my movie premiere this week to the surreal tour of the Manhattan Mormon Temple last week. The little number at the top of this piece reflects little of personal relation to the record. It's an arbitrary guide to how I would expect people to gauge the intent of this review. I will listen to this album for years to come. You might. Or not. It depends on your own complex web of past interaction with the Beastie Boys, linked memories to the music, or preconceived notion of how hip or not it is to listen to them in 2004.


Though I would fail to quantify the comparative "quality" of such albums, as I said before, I love Carl & The Passions as much as Pet Sounds. Divorcing the lives and backstory from the recorded product of a musical artist equates to making movies without characters. The sixth Beastie Boys album holds much more intrigue than some young dudes with bedhead thinking they're going to evolve rock and roll. I've ended up listening to it more than any other release this year. (Hey, that would make a great pull-quote for the Nasty Little Man presskit. You can add an exclamation point, Steve.)


This process has become unexciting and routine, which is why I bid the world of music writing farewell. Explaining why I love a record in the confines of its production, lyrics and instrumental "tightness" without detailing the first time I heard the band's song drifting from bowling alley in Poland or whatever confounds me. More power to those who discover new music from this site. I've figured out where I stand at this point, as have the readers. Like the Beastie Boys, I could continue to crank out divisive pieces of writing here until I go gray. I have more interesting stories to tell.


-Brent DiCrescenzo, June 15th, 2004


mcd (mcd), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:26 (twenty-two years ago)

SORRY -- didn't mean to post it twice!

mcd (mcd), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:27 (twenty-two years ago)

umm, dudes, my guess is that there's a pretty big canyon separating "i will retract it so you don't sue me" and "yes i actually made it up."

console lotion, Monday, 21 June 2004 20:30 (twenty-two years ago)

wouldn't they just scream "it's meta fiction, baby" rather than use the word "retraction" if they weren't scared?

CeCe Peniston (Anthony Miccio), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:31 (twenty-two years ago)

Brent D in Pitchfork resignation shocker!!
World: "Who?"

Gear! (Gear!), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:32 (twenty-two years ago)

if anything the series of retractions (all that we can't find to the writer to verify stuff) implies that PFM must have assumed Brent D's review was a genuine memoir.

CeCe Peniston (Anthony Miccio), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:32 (twenty-two years ago)

Does PFM not have a fucking lawyer for representin representin? Geez. What a bunch of pussies.

frankE (frankE), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:38 (twenty-two years ago)

High-larious.

Shakey Mo Collier, Monday, 21 June 2004 20:46 (twenty-two years ago)

Well I find this zzzzzzz.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:46 (twenty-two years ago)

maybe they should've just stuck with actually reviewing the album

Avi (Avi), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:48 (twenty-two years ago)

http://www.louisepalanker.com/interviews/robert-palmer.gif

Big Rob has Had Enuff!! (Chris Ott), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:49 (twenty-two years ago)

umm, dudes, my guess is that there's a pretty big canyon separating "i will retract it so you don't sue me" and "yes i actually made it up."

ding ding ding

also, Brent is not a party to the retraction, only PFM and NLM. (and frankE, ryan did have a lawyer mediate this)

scott pl. (scott pl.), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:51 (twenty-two years ago)

joseph "CHRIS" cOTTen

deanomgwtf!!!p%3Fmsgid%3D4581997 (deangulberry), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:51 (twenty-two years ago)

yeah but theres fuck all money in music reviewing, cut them some slack frankE, its a Major label player picking on the big ole nasty independent music critic.

chris andrews (fraew), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:51 (twenty-two years ago)

LOS ANGELES, Feb. 23 /PRNewswire/ -- For four years, Mean Magazine blazed a trail for American pop culture, then, like the brightest-burning novas -- like the one in the center of the our galaxy or was it the one on the edge or the one in one of the spiral arms, disappeared from the publishing pantheon to leave only an indelible afterimage. In June 2004 the magazine will launch its second volume with a redefined, more mature look, yet embracing the same bleeding-edge content and attitude that originally defined the brand.

Mean was launched in 1997 as an alternative to the increasingly compartmentalized nature of pop culture. With a name indicating something midway between extremes -- the number obtained by multiplying each value of x by the probability or probability density of x and then summing or integrating over the range of x the publication sought to integrate pop culture through genre mixing -- combing new with old, hip-hop with rock and everything in between -- while providing content that could broaden a cultural snapshot into a moving picture. For a social trend reemerging as retro, for example, Mean would spotlight the current fad along with a tutorial of its roots.

"True to its goal of embodying a cultural continuum, Mean didn't focus solely on the past and present; it catered to an audience thirsty for tomorrow's sights and sounds," explains publisher and creative director Kashy Khaledi. "It was so far ahead of its time that like relativity theory, it actually went backward and forward in time simultaneously."

With the re-launch of Mean Vol. 2, Khaledi seeks to reconnect with a growing readership with refined, sophisticated tastes: trendsetters in fashion, music, travel, gaming, wine-tasting, over-the-counter self-medication and events as well as urban, educated, media- savvy consumers with a desire for hot brands and lifestyle advances, like chat room socializing, botulin injection and widescreen TV-watching. "They travel on paved roads, shop in mail-order catalogs and think without borders. They blaze their own trails to the Internet, community college and shopping malls and then abandon them for new experiences, like Craig's List or snorting whip-its in the ease of an expensively furnished living room," says Khaledi, who intends to skew the magazine to a slightly older (21-36) male demographic, adding inventive photography, fashion and design.

"Mean Vol. 2 will offer American audiences 'something we've lost: a communal melting pot of ideas and trends uncominated with too much cultural salt, pepper and monosodium glutamate,'" adds Andy Hunter, the original editor of Mean.


For further information, please contact Allison McGuire Young, +1-310-248-6120, [email protected], or Heather McGuire, +1-310-248-6141, [email protected], both of B/W/R Public Relations, for Mean Magazine.

CONTACT: Allison McGuire Young, +1-310-248-6120, [email protected], or Heather McGuire, +1-310-248-6141, [email protected], both of B/W/R Public Relations, for Mean Magazine

COPYRIGHT 2004 PR Newswire Association, Inc.

Harry Klam, Monday, 21 June 2004 20:51 (twenty-two years ago)

anyway it's clear that the story was made up and meant to be taken that way, I think. That stuff is fine, it's other parts of the review that are high-lariously bad.

Gear! (Gear!), Monday, 21 June 2004 20:58 (twenty-two years ago)

haha - so Mean wants to be Vice now?

Shakey Mo Collier, Monday, 21 June 2004 21:00 (twenty-two years ago)

i am not chris ott.

joseph cotten (joseph cotten), Monday, 21 June 2004 21:05 (twenty-two years ago)

If Mean -- whatever it is -- wishes to be Vice, it will have to get a photo of that blonde-bespectacled boy-girl-thing with lots of teeth published in the New York Sunday Times or on the cover of a book that sits on a table in Tower Records.

Harry Klam, Monday, 21 June 2004 21:07 (twenty-two years ago)

"jOKes" etC.

deanomgwtf!!!p%3Fmsgid%3D4581997 (deangulberry), Monday, 21 June 2004 21:07 (twenty-two years ago)

They blaze their own trails to the Internet, community college and shopping malls and then abandon them for new experiences, like Craig's List or snorting whip-its in the ease of an expensively furnished living room

HE MEANS US

Gear! (Gear!), Monday, 21 June 2004 21:10 (twenty-two years ago)

snorting whip-its?

"you got a little metal mustache, dude"

common_person (common_person), Monday, 21 June 2004 21:19 (twenty-two years ago)

"injecting marijuana"

J0hn Darn1elle (J0hn Darn1elle), Monday, 21 June 2004 21:45 (twenty-two years ago)

"For a social trend reemerging as retro, for example, Mean would spotlight the current fad along with a tutorial of its roots."

morris pavilion (samjeff), Monday, 21 June 2004 21:48 (twenty-two years ago)

oh well this sounds like a real page-turner dunnit

J0hn Darn1elle (J0hn Darn1elle), Monday, 21 June 2004 21:51 (twenty-two years ago)

might as well post this, just as a memento:
>> RETRACTION

Last Tuesday, June 15th, Pitchfork published a review of the Beastie Boys' To the 5 Boroughs by Brent DiCrescenzo, a frequent and trusted contributor. In his review, Brent detailed experiences with the Beastie Boys' public relations firm Nasty Little Man, and its president Steve Martin, over the course of several years. Pitchfork has since determined that a number of DiCrescenzo's assertions were false, based on corroborated statements from the two parties he claimed were participating in the chain of events referred to in the review. With apologies to Steve Martin and Nasty Little Man, we have retracted the original review in its entirety, and would like to make the following known publicly, to correct any and all falsities perpetrated by Brent's review:

1) Radiohead were never in Milan in June 1999.

2) Radiohead never moved a concert from Villa Reale in Milan to Monza in 1999, 2000 or otherwise.

3) Steve Martin never "forgot to tell" Brent that the concert was moved, as it was not.

4) Neither Steve Martin, nor anyone working for Nasty Little Man, ever confirmed a Radiohead interview with Brent DiCrescenzo or Pitchfork.

5) Brent DiCrescenzo's declaration that Steve Martin had not gotten back to him or Mean magazine about a possible Beastie Boys interview after six weeks is untrue: Martin was in constant contact with Mean publisher Kashy Khaledi and editor Andy Hunter throughout that period.

6) Mean magazine never "delayed their publication to accomodate [Martin's] procrastination." Kashy Khaledi did so of his own volition in order to keep the Beastie Boys cover story Martin had confirmed and saw through with him every step of the way.

7) Steve Martin has never, to Brent DiCrescenzo's knowledge, "dangled [his] major artists... like carrots to the media in an attempt to blackmail press for features" on less established artists or bands.

Sincerely,
Pitchfork Media

Kingfish of Burma (Kingfish), Monday, 21 June 2004 21:55 (twenty-two years ago)

also, i find the Dykehouse review to be far more laughable.

Kingfish of Burma (Kingfish), Monday, 21 June 2004 21:55 (twenty-two years ago)

http://www.blacktable.com/images/0305pics/badjourno/badjournos.jpg

King Kobra (King Kobra), Monday, 21 June 2004 22:27 (twenty-two years ago)

by the way, was that review supposed to sound like they real events that actually happened? I assumed it was supposed to be parody.

King Kobra (King Kobra), Monday, 21 June 2004 22:29 (twenty-two years ago)

I thought it was serious. I'm stupid.

mcd (mcd), Monday, 21 June 2004 23:42 (twenty-two years ago)

parody of what, though? it didn't read like any review i've ever read, but admittedly that's not, you know, all that many.

i was prepared to believe it mostly. i don't read pfm reviews so much, though enough brent d ones to know that he likes to concept review, but still it sounded plausible and authoritative enough to someone who hasn't experienced music journalism first-hand that i took it mostly at face value.

common_person (common_person), Monday, 21 June 2004 23:42 (twenty-two years ago)

Brent Assfork: "I have more interesting stories to tell."

One would certainly hope. Oh, tell us the one about your birthday party? That one's so fucking special.

Good riddance to another egomaniac. Don't slip in your drool on the way out, you piss-drinking miscreant.

stonecat, Tuesday, 22 June 2004 03:51 (twenty-two years ago)

Wow.

King Kobra (King Kobra), Tuesday, 22 June 2004 04:39 (twenty-two years ago)

David Brent DiCrescenzo- basically just a chilled out entertainer.

Dom Passantino (Dom Passantino), Tuesday, 22 June 2004 07:15 (twenty-two years ago)

Next up for BdC: "Burning Down My Master's Basement"

MC Frosty Flake, Tuesday, 22 June 2004 15:20 (twenty-two years ago)

Was I alone in thinking this thread referred to Premiata Forneria Marconi at last apologizing for "Chocolate Kings" and other examples of excremental bargain bin Italian prog?

Dadaismus (Dada), Tuesday, 22 June 2004 15:25 (twenty-two years ago)

“If a good band comes to me, and says thank you Brent, for the opportunity and continued support in the music-related arena, but I’ve done that, I want to better myself, I want to move on, then I can make that dream come true, too, AKA, for you.”

common_person (common_person), Tuesday, 22 June 2004 15:45 (twenty-two years ago)

sir david of brent!

cutty (mcutt), Tuesday, 22 June 2004 15:46 (twenty-two years ago)

“You grow up, you write for half a century, you get a golden handshake, you rest a couple of years and you’re dead. And the only thing that makes that crazy ride worthwhile is ‘Did I enjoy it? What did I learn? What was the point?’ That’s where I come in. You’ve seen how I react to people, make them feel good, make them think that anything’s possible. If I make them laugh along the way, sue me. And I don’t do it so they turn round and go ‘Thank you Brent for the opportunity, thank you for the wisdom, thank you for the laughs.’ I do it so, one day, someone will go ‘There goes Brent DiCrescenzo. I must remember to thank him.’”

Dom Passantino (Dom Passantino), Tuesday, 22 June 2004 21:14 (twenty-two years ago)

haha dom i kiss u

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Tuesday, 22 June 2004 21:27 (twenty-two years ago)

I don’t look upon this like it’s the end, I look upon it like it’s moving on you know. It’s almost like my work here’s done. I can’t imagine Jesus going ‘Oh, I’ve told a few people in Bethlehem I’m the son of God, can I just stay here with Mum and Dad now?’ No. You gotta move on.

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Tuesday, 22 June 2004 21:30 (twenty-two years ago)


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