Instances where you can't separate the art from the artist. vs. instances where you can.

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The one that has hit me recently is Avi Buffalo. I really loved that first album in a way I've loved little else in the past decade and in a way that has pretty much ruled out continued listens, because I bought into the romance of it and now that's utterly sullied.

https://pitchfork.com/news/avi-buffalo-accused-of-rape-by-former-bandmate-music-pulled-by-sub-pop/

Alba, Friday, 25 September 2020 22:19 (three years ago) link

Sorry, that makes it sound like I'm the victim, not Rebecca Coleman, but you know what I mean.

Alba, Friday, 25 September 2020 22:19 (three years ago) link

Only similar case for me is Crystal Castles but the fact Alice Glass is the singer makes them not so hard to carry on listening to (not that I do very often).

Alba, Friday, 25 September 2020 22:22 (three years ago) link

FWIW, the SY sitch (and people's reactions to it) is a little more complex than simply 'OMG, can you believe a dude in a band cheated on his partner'.

Not by much imo

The nexus of the crisis and the origin of storms (Sund4r), Friday, 25 September 2020 22:34 (three years ago) link

successful marriage imo, they had decades together and made loads of great art during their partnership


Totally fair point! Anyway marriages are infinitely complex and unless you know the people intimately weighing in on who to fault is tabloid-level dumbness.

error prone wolf syndicate (Hadrian VIII), Friday, 25 September 2020 22:39 (three years ago) link

I'm probably a bad person for this thread, though, because I can't think of any instances where I am unable to separate the art from the artist.

Spirit Counsel was really good btw.

The nexus of the crisis and the origin of storms (Sund4r), Friday, 25 September 2020 22:45 (three years ago) link

Lotta willful obtuseness goin on itt wrt the purview as stated in the thread title.

OrificeMax (Old Lunch), Friday, 25 September 2020 22:47 (three years ago) link

xposts

OrificeMax (Old Lunch), Friday, 25 September 2020 22:48 (three years ago) link

More like Marriage Counsel, amirite.

Anyway, I've talked about this so much elsewhere (in relation to metal, primarily) that I'd rather not shit up this thread with my Opinion, but I will say that explicitly white supremacist lyrics are a dealbreaker for me. Otherwise, I find it quite easy to distinguish between the two.

2xp

sock solipsist (pomenitul), Friday, 25 September 2020 22:50 (three years ago) link

I responded to the question raised by the thread title!

The nexus of the crisis and the origin of storms (Sund4r), Friday, 25 September 2020 22:50 (three years ago) link

explicitly white supremacist lyrics are a dealbreaker for me

But lyrics are part of the art, not the artist.

The nexus of the crisis and the origin of storms (Sund4r), Friday, 25 September 2020 22:51 (three years ago) link

Sure, but they explicitly de-artify the art by using it as a vehicle for heinous propaganda.

sock solipsist (pomenitul), Friday, 25 September 2020 22:52 (three years ago) link

Whenever that happens, the implication always seems to be: 'listen to what *I*, enlightened citizen X, have to say about this pressing political matter'.

sock solipsist (pomenitul), Friday, 25 September 2020 22:53 (three years ago) link

Which isn't to say that the work of art vanishes in the process, it just becomes more difficult to separate the artist from their art than it might be otherwise.

sock solipsist (pomenitul), Friday, 25 September 2020 22:54 (three years ago) link

I agree but what I mean is that being unable to listen to something because of the lyrics does not reflect an inability to separate the art from the artist. It is rejecting the art because of one aspect of the artwork itself.

The nexus of the crisis and the origin of storms (Sund4r), Friday, 25 September 2020 22:55 (three years ago) link

Unless you mean that it makes you unable to listen to anything else by the artist, even if it is instrumental or has non-racist lyrics.

The nexus of the crisis and the origin of storms (Sund4r), Friday, 25 September 2020 22:56 (three years ago) link

I don't listen to "One in a Million" but the racist lyrics on that song don't get in the way of listening to "Sweet Child o' Mine".

The nexus of the crisis and the origin of storms (Sund4r), Friday, 25 September 2020 22:56 (three years ago) link

I see what you're saying, but I suppose I view that aspect of the artwork as the artist's non-artistic message, which is bound up with whoever the artist happens to be (as a public figure, at least).

2xp and no, it doesn't have a bearing on whether I'm able to listen to their other works.

sock solipsist (pomenitul), Friday, 25 September 2020 22:57 (three years ago) link

Terrific stuff, Sund4r and pom. This is exactly what I alluded to earlier when I said that *I personally* would understand why anyone would just stop listening to an act if they made the political or agenda into their entire art. Am I able to say, "Hey these lyrics about hating Black people are just words in a song and this has a solid groove, so whatevs"? No, I'm not able to personally do that.

Sorry. Work has been busy today. Just wanted to pop back in with a few more things. . .

It may be instructive for people who still aren't getting the SY sitch to note that no one itt has said anything like 'I can't abide the creative work of adulterers!' It's a weirdly myopic truncation of the situation, it isn't being applied as a blanket judgment of artists across the board, and the thread topic is inherently subjective and not meant to be an imposition of values on anyone else itt.

― OrificeMax (Old Lunch), Friday, September 25, 2020 1:02 PM

Thank you for this. And I'd like to add that my initial post drew the comparison with Thurston and Miles because of the obvious contradiction in my thoughts about those two people. Miles was much more prolific and violent in his abuse than Thurston was (in his relatively harmless by comparison) cheating on his wife. And yet: I give Miles' music the pass — WHY? <-this was my whole thought on starting a topic like this. I don't have the answer, I just wantd to discuss with you fine folks in the hopes that maybe someone could relate. So, thank you all.

(also, idk why "adultery" it's not like that's a favorite vocabulary word or anything; it's just the word I used at that moment, no extra thought behind it)

(and no, I was not raised in an especially strict or religious family — but there was rampant infidelity on both sides with my parents in their various dealings)

And, finally:

Which fulltone is it? ;)

― 📺👁️ (peace, man), Friday, September 25, 2020 11:51 AM

lol the Supa Trem Jr. It's such a killer tremolo and that's an effect I use all the time. I wanted to be all badass when that stuff first came out and smash it with a sledgehammer. . . but dammit, that's a solid trem! Like I said, I know I could get a similar one from somebody else, but I've had it for about two years now and I just vibe with it, so it's hard to think of parting with it. Besides, I had an Earthquaker Devices sticker that was the perfect size to cover it up, so I think that's funny enough to merit its' keeping by itself lol.

Totally different head. Totally. (Austin), Friday, 25 September 2020 23:17 (three years ago) link

Thanks for expanding on that, Austin, and apologies if I came across as aggressive (likewise to OL). I guess you could say that I've always taken 'Kill Yr. Idols' to heart, so I expect nothing from artists other than quality art – I'd almost invariably come out disappointed otherwise.

sock solipsist (pomenitul), Friday, 25 September 2020 23:28 (three years ago) link

The nexus of the crisis and the origin of storms (Sund4r) at 5:56 25 Sep 20

I don't listen to "One in a Million" but the racist lyrics on that song don't get in the way of listening to "Sweet Child o' Mine".

Axl and the band did remove the song from the reissue box set so they agree apparently

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 25 September 2020 23:34 (three years ago) link

I'd almost invariably come out disappointed otherwise.

I think I said something similar on another thread fairly recently in that I consider myself the worst kind of cynic: I'm not surprised by the negative outcome, but nonetheless allow myself to be disappointed by as if I were.

Never said I was smart.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Totally different head. Totally. (Austin), Friday, 25 September 2020 23:37 (three years ago) link

I have a bunch of these, on both sides, will write more later, good question and the answer is ultimately subjective IMO

sleeve, Friday, 25 September 2020 23:37 (three years ago) link

I feel like the Reynolds/Press book "The Sex Revolts" gets into this territory a little bit altho it is primarily concerned w/ lyrical conduct/nattartor posing as opposed to IRL horrible behavior

sleeve, Friday, 25 September 2020 23:38 (three years ago) link

*narrator

sleeve, Friday, 25 September 2020 23:39 (three years ago) link

that looks really good, thanks

sleeve, Friday, 25 September 2020 23:43 (three years ago) link

No worries, pom! I've just been trying to help keep discussion itt on the road as much as I'm able. And yeah, after the rash of revelations in recent years, I just expect at this point to be disappointed by all public figures in one way or another.

OrificeMax (Old Lunch), Saturday, 26 September 2020 00:02 (three years ago) link

Just to clarify, Sund4r (and others), if I'm reading a manifesto written by some Julius Evola-worshipping trve black metal dude and it contains explicitly antisemitic passages, as a general rule I'm not going to argue that it's hard for me to separate the author from his screed just because I only know (of) the former through the latter. In an artistic context (including a literary one), it's trickier insofar as the artwork is endowed with a life of its own and may thus speak for itself without necessarily pointing back to its 'creator' in the way a signed open letter published in a magazine does. Yet this does not preclude the possibility, for the artist, to embed overt political slogans into their work in order to deliberately muddy the waters.

I usually give artists the benefit of the doubt and acknowledge (more readily than most listeners, I think) that hateful lyrical material can often be attributed to an edgy theatrical persona. But if you're a notorious neo-nazi activist in your day-to-day life, chances are that you're including white supremacist discursive elements in your lyrics because you want your art to stand for your ideological beliefs. Granted, art is such that, even the most explicitly political lyrics are partly transformed by their deployment in an aesthetic context, but that only works up to a point since the artist may self-consciously choose to minimize the aesthetic dimension of their art for the sake of political sloganeering, thus aggressively testing the boundaries of what we conventionally deem to be the realm of 'art'. In such instances, it is the artist who does everything within their power to ensure that the artwork will not be separated from their ideology, in which case, yes, it becomes more difficult (albeit never impossible!) to simply say 'here is the work, on the one hand, and there is the artist, on the other'.

So if I'm listening to Burzum's 'Dunkelheit' (lyrics), it's fairly easy for me to disregard everything I know about the man's politics because neither the music nor the words need that context to make sense – the song can easily stand on its own, as an instance of Dark Neo-Romanticism or whatever. Conversely (and I've used this example in the past), when Peste Noire is literally covering the Action française's chant on an album that features lead singer Famine intoning 'Sieg heil' in addition to praise directed at 'the French race', I certainly don't feel the need to separate the art from the artist, and neither does he, apparently! The message, then, is tantamount to: 'I fucking dare you to distinguish between this music and the values we openly espouse as non-artistic, political agents!' There's no winning in such a scenario if you're exclusively committed to aesthetic autonomy (and I am almost all the time).

sock solipsist (pomenitul), Saturday, 26 September 2020 00:21 (three years ago) link

I think for me any expression of hate towards a particular group of people is one instance where I would most decidedly get off the bus with a given artist. I don't even care how much they 'mean' it: if they're putting it out in the world, others will rally around it.

OrificeMax (Old Lunch), Saturday, 26 September 2020 00:39 (three years ago) link

Tbc if I'm listening to a metal record and I realize, through garbled shrieks, that explicit white supremacist bullshit is being disseminated, I don't feel the need to double-check whether the band really is made up of 14 worders or not. But if you're raging at Jesus and his followers (also counts as hateful lyrical material, lest we forget), it's safe to assume we're in the presence of a hammy act.

sock solipsist (pomenitul), Saturday, 26 September 2020 00:46 (three years ago) link

One last thing. When I speak of the importance of giving artists the benefit of the doubt, I'm thinking of cases such as the (now totally stale) controversy surrounding the lyrics to Slayer's 'Angel of Death', which basically boils down to: 'they wrote a song from the perspective of a nazi, ergo they are nazis themselves'.

sock solipsist (pomenitul), Saturday, 26 September 2020 01:08 (three years ago) link

uhh doesn't sound like u wanna give Crass' "Reality Asylum" the benefit of the doubt there in yr previous post.

one barometer I use with this stuff is the useful punching up vs. punching down distinction. I have lots of time for "fuck Christianity" sentiments, but p much zero tolerance for e.g. anti-semitic "jokes" or sexism in my music.

sleeve, Saturday, 26 September 2020 04:32 (three years ago) link

see also: hell yes to Sun City Girls "Kill The Klansmen"

sleeve, Saturday, 26 September 2020 04:35 (three years ago) link

now that I think abt it, SCG are a good example of an artist where I choose to separate their sometimes pretty explicit anti-semitism from their often amazing music

sleeve, Saturday, 26 September 2020 04:39 (three years ago) link

Nico pretty much gets a pass doesn't she

PaulTMA, Saturday, 26 September 2020 12:26 (three years ago) link

I’m obv. cool with confrontational political lyrics that are in tune with my own beliefs. I do tend to find such songs kind of hollow, though.

sock solipsist (pomenitul), Saturday, 26 September 2020 12:36 (three years ago) link

Haven't read through the thread, but great idea. I was talking about this constantly with various friends around the time Chuck Berry died.

Generally--generally--I'm still okay with the art when I find out the person who made it did (or said, or thought) x, y, or z. When it comes down to cases there are exceptions, with many factors involved...time has a lot to do with it; the farther you recede into the past, the less likely I am to be bothered.

clemenza, Saturday, 26 September 2020 12:47 (three years ago) link

the Avi Buffalo story was gutting.

that's a good example of an act where the lyrics were enjoyably morose and cutting, and as someone with a self-loathing streak a mile wide, there's some identification at work (gulp), but then you learn something of the author's character and it colors them differently forever, as with Brand New. (who, tbh, I still listen to, but only the latter-day albums - the really emo stuff is unbearable for me now)

get a mop and a bucket for this Well Argued Prose (Simon H.), Saturday, 26 September 2020 13:13 (three years ago) link

Yeah I didn't particularly associate Avi Buffalo with self-loathing but I agree that it's the identification thing that's a big factor in whether I can separate art and artist or not. The other thing that makes a difference is that it was against a bandmate.

Alba, Saturday, 26 September 2020 14:14 (three years ago) link

Time is of course the other big thing, both in terms whether the offence/offensiveness occurred contemporaneously with the art, and just the distance at which you're seeing it. I'm surely more relaxed about enjoying Gauguin's paintings than I would be if he was born 100 years later.

Maybe if I discovered Avi Buffalo's music in 2070 rather than now I could appreciate it.

Alba, Saturday, 26 September 2020 14:21 (three years ago) link

When I was a teenager, I strongly identified with the bands I looked up to, an attitude that progressively mutated into partial identification with the persona(s) being projected by the music itself. Fwiw I've never wanted to meet my favourite artists, since it's their art I care about in the first place.

sock solipsist (pomenitul), Saturday, 26 September 2020 14:26 (three years ago) link

once i was walking near my old apartment in brooklyn and bob dylan jumped out of the shadows and yelled "boo!," startling me and causing me to fall backwards and suffer a concussion. still like his music but you know

treeship., Saturday, 26 September 2020 14:50 (three years ago) link

This seems to be tied so much to vocals. I don't think I've ever heard anyone say they wouldn't listen to a Phil Spector production because he left a gun lying around so that a houseguest carelessly tripped and fell onto it murdered someone, yet his sonic fingerprint is all over Be My Baby etc. The guy's an absolute monster, yet people are worrying more about Thurston Moore because they feel like he was their friend or something.

your response will be deleted unread (Matt #2), Saturday, 26 September 2020 15:00 (three years ago) link

I feel like an this point I've read at least a book's worth of post about people rationale for listening listening to Burzum or not. remember being pretty blown away when I got curious and was like THIS is what people tie themselves in knots about?

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 26 September 2020 15:06 (three years ago) link

Do you like black metal at all?

sock solipsist (pomenitul), Saturday, 26 September 2020 15:07 (three years ago) link

I avoid Phil Spector stuff (fortunately it’s pretty easy).

Scam Likely (morrisp), Saturday, 26 September 2020 15:08 (three years ago) link

xpost not that much here and there something sticks

I will say Burzum's Nazism is kind of brilliant marketing because it tends to obscure the fact he's a sociopath and murderer

not a monster on the scale of Thurston Moore but still

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 26 September 2020 15:17 (three years ago) link

Brand New. (who, tbh, I still listen to, but only the latter-day albums - the really emo stuff is unbearable for me now)

― get a mop and a bucket for this Well Argued Prose (Simon H.), Saturday, September 26, 2020 6:13 AM (two hours ago) bookmarkflaglink

what really ruined the whole thing for me was relistening to “jesus”

mellon collie and the infinite bradness (BradNelson), Saturday, 26 September 2020 15:19 (three years ago) link

xp lol

Vikernes no longer describes himself as a nazi, he's just an Odinist now. Phew, crisis averted!

Anyway, I've also said this elsewhere but: I would never purchase Burzum merch, let alone wear any. And while I do still listen to his stuff (including his later albums, which mostly suck), I neither buy nor stream anything by him.

pomenitul, Saturday, 26 September 2020 15:22 (three years ago) link


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