A Paler Shade of White---Sasha Frere-Jones Podcast and New Yorker article Criticizing Indie Rock for Failing to Incorporate African-American Influences

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The Decemberists covering Maggot Brain in it's entirety?

Mr. Que, Thursday, 18 October 2007 18:31 (sixteen years ago) link

The Shins covering "Let's Pretend We're Married"?

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 18 October 2007 18:39 (sixteen years ago) link

i'm waiting for his follow-up article "the indie-mulatto ideal: tv on the radio, black kids and har-mar superstar"

LaMonte, Thursday, 18 October 2007 18:50 (sixteen years ago) link

Where would the civil rights movement be without rock critics?

rockapads, Thursday, 18 October 2007 19:00 (sixteen years ago) link

Where would the civil rights movement be without rock critics?

The "I've had a preview of the new album' speech.......

sonofstan, Thursday, 18 October 2007 20:16 (sixteen years ago) link

"I have a dream that someday little indie-rock girls and boys ..."

Jess Harvell's Idolator thing was pretty funny (Ned linked to it above), and Simon Reynolds nicely catalogues all the 2007 doom and gloom articles and postings-- (Deej linked to it) and offered his take on SFJ's piece. I don't think critic/blogger Carl Wilson's Slate piece is out yet.

curmudgeon, Thursday, 18 October 2007 21:14 (sixteen years ago) link

I don't think critic/blogger Carl Wilson's Slate piece is out yet.

The Trouble with Indie Rock
It's not just race. It's class

Jeb, Thursday, 18 October 2007 22:33 (sixteen years ago) link

The societal aspect of music isn't particularly interesting unless the music has a message thats linked with society, or a 'function' like dance music. If the person making it is stultified by the societal considerations, then they're ignoring the fact that making music before distributing it is essentially an insular practice, and as soon as you tailor it to an outside force you're diluting whatever 'natural' conception of it you have. I can see where it's a problem that people feel this pressure either way, to stay 'white' or to incorporate 'black' influences more overtly as an homage, but talking about race, and I guess in this other article, class, is just halting people from making purely aesthetic decisions.

trashthumb, Thursday, 18 October 2007 22:43 (sixteen years ago) link

that assumes a vision of the artist as existing outside the "societal considerations" that have formed and influenced that person to be who he or she is

max, Thursday, 18 October 2007 22:46 (sixteen years ago) link

i mean which is just another way of saying that any time you write a song you're tailoring it to a whole variety of socially-determined forces (whether or not those are "outside" forces is not something i can speak to)

max, Thursday, 18 October 2007 22:47 (sixteen years ago) link

unless the music has a message thats linked with society

What kind of message isn't linked to society?

purely aesthetic decisions.

There's no such thing (I hope)

sonofstan, Thursday, 18 October 2007 22:47 (sixteen years ago) link

xpost - obv.

sonofstan, Thursday, 18 October 2007 22:48 (sixteen years ago) link

That Carl Wilson article is sharp as hell.

dad a, Thursday, 18 October 2007 22:50 (sixteen years ago) link

Are we supposed to long for the days when Zeppelin and the Stones fetishized fantasies of black manhood, in part as a cover for misogyny? If forced to choose between tolerating some boringly undersexed rock music and reviving the, er, "vigorous" sexual politics of cock rock, I'll take the boring rock, thanks—for now.

... where Wilson unintentionally elucidates exactly what’s wrong with today’s rock critics. Does he think his readers feel the same way? I sure as hell don’t.

Jeb, Thursday, 18 October 2007 22:53 (sixteen years ago) link

That Carl Wilson article is sharp as hell.

Well, he had 900+ ILM posts to draw inspiration from.

Jeb, Thursday, 18 October 2007 22:54 (sixteen years ago) link

"The diminished street-level faith in an integrationist future means there's not as much optimism about integrationist music. What's more, racial lines in the United States no longer divide primarily into black and white. When "miscegenation" does happen in music now, it's likely to be more multicultural than in Frere-Jones' formula, as in rainbow-coalition bands such as Antibalas and Ozomatli."

this is rather on point

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:00 (sixteen years ago) link

I'm not sure about the Springsteen-Arcade Fire passage -- that line, white working-class culture once had a kind of significant berth in rock 'n' roll, too.

I mean, they still do, no? Matchbox 20, Nickleback, Hinder, etc.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:01 (sixteen years ago) link

hoos i am enjoying watching you come up with new ways to say "otm"

max, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:01 (sixteen years ago) link

What's changed is that "white working-class culture" is no longer so white.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:02 (sixteen years ago) link

The brands of "authenticity" that both punk and hip-hop came to demand. . . tended to discourage the cross-pollination and "miscegenation" of musical forms.

Interesting.

LaMonte, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:04 (sixteen years ago) link

white working-class culture once had a kind of significant berth in rock 'n' roll, too.

xpost to A, LS

Still does in UK indie - Arctic Monkeys, The View many more - not so much in US, no?

sonofstan, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:06 (sixteen years ago) link

hoos i am enjoying watching you come up with new ways to say "otm"

-- max, Thursday, October 18, 2007 11:01 PM

first they came for my "^" key...

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:08 (sixteen years ago) link

jeb OTM

Dandy Don Weiner, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:15 (sixteen years ago) link

What kind of message isn't linked to society?

i meant a purposeful message, aimed at change or criticism, rather than personal 'relationship' music thats focused more on individuals. while i think its fine to reference musicians in these debates i don't like the whole reforming thrust of all these essays

purely aesthetic decisions.

if the music doesn't have lyrics, then why does it have to have a dialogue that involves things other than influences, skill, and composition. suddenly race and class are pulled in, and sure i find it interesting when somebody without a lot of resources makes good music. i unfairly want to impose a bubble on people and assume they don't have to take those factors into consideration. i just think musicians should incorporate what they like and divorce themselves from prescriptive dialogue about race unless they're specifically motivated by that.

trashthumb, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:20 (sixteen years ago) link

If forced to choose between tolerating some boringly undersexed rock music and reviving the, er, "vigorous" sexual politics of cock rock

on today's rock radio, you can have both at the same time!

da croupier, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:20 (sixteen years ago) link

wayyyyyy better article, btw

da croupier, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:20 (sixteen years ago) link

i'll say.

scott seward, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:21 (sixteen years ago) link

i just finished the slate article, it's definitely on point. i guess after being in so many lit and poli sci classes at uni that i've become insular and wanted my musical rhetoric to be more on a micro level, theory rather than culture, but i guess they have to be incorporated, oh well

trashthumb, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:28 (sixteen years ago) link

Trashthumb - to even think about creating the space you talk about, the bubble where musicians 'don't have to take those factors into consideration' is political. And just because music doesn't have lyrics doesn't cleanse it of meaning

xpost to your previous post, sorry

sonofstan, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:29 (sixteen years ago) link

While it's possible to cherry-pick exceptions ever since, Frere-Jones does so selectively, overlooking the likes of Royal Trux or the Afghan Whigs in the 1990s,

why do I suspect that if this line had come from the SFJ article he'd presently be getting raked both ways over the coals for citing Royal Trux as counterexample to the "does not swing" trend

J0hn D., Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:30 (sixteen years ago) link

poor sasha been down so long it looks like up to him

M@tt He1ges0n, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:31 (sixteen years ago) link

(excepting what would be a self-cite obv)

J0hn D., Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:31 (sixteen years ago) link

it's kind of amazing what you've been reduced to pointing out in this save-a-ho gambit, john

da croupier, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:33 (sixteen years ago) link

i can't remember EVER looking to indie rock for any kind of "blackness" or sounds of blackness. these days i don't look to indie rock for anything at all. once or twice a year a band sticks out and that's about it. i do pine for the days when new wave and new wave/dance acts and post-punk bands stole like hell and took anything that wasn't nailed down from any and every culture on earth. those were the days. and electroclash didn't do anything for me. and by new wave i mean everything from talking heads on up to whatever. but maybe my definition of indie rock is screwy. there isn't an indie band alive today who could conceive of or execute this gem:

http://youtube.com/watch?v=QOoZAyJrB-8

it's amazing to me how many pasty new wave boys had disco, like, DEEP in their bones. it was like a part of them in such an organic way.

scott seward, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:34 (sixteen years ago) link

I think you mean "that" you've been reduced to anthony but don't let writing sentences get in your way man

J0hn D., Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:36 (sixteen years ago) link

again

da croupier, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:36 (sixteen years ago) link

seriously dude I know it makes you feel clever to bust out the "save-a-ho" trope but I'm just pointing out that Royal Trux are hardly bringing the funk now or ever and it's weird/annoying how partisan everybody (even/especially you) is that such an egregiously bizarre cite won't get a callout because it appears in a piece tilting against the windmill we've all agreed to charge

J0hn D., Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:37 (sixteen years ago) link

keep zingin' though man I'm sure it feels rad

J0hn D., Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:38 (sixteen years ago) link

sasha is silly to bring up devendra. his entire vocal persona is based on nina simone, ella jenkins, and billie holiday.

scott seward, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:40 (sixteen years ago) link

Trashthumb - to even think about creating the space you talk about, the bubble where musicians 'don't have to take those factors into consideration' is political. And just because music doesn't have lyrics doesn't cleanse it of meaning

I'm aware that 'everything is political' or rhetorical, or academic, or any way you want to say it, and yes it's an active choice to be apolitical. And instrumental music certainly has meaning, but I think it's a lot more difficult to include explicit societal dialogue without them. Abstract art needs a placard, and instrumental music needs at least some declaration of intent unless it's overt, liner notes, for any politicizing to be something other than guesswork. It's still going to have a feeling, which gives it a personal or human meaning, and if you use a structure from 'black' music you're going to evoke that tradition and that culture, but I feel like this kind of talk marginalizes the sound, but what criticism doesn't, more noise surrounding the purpose of music, listening to it.

trashthumb, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:40 (sixteen years ago) link

John, I just think its funny that ever since Jess cockblocked you and Mr. Que (for not offering IDEAS, ironically), you show up every 200 posts to point out the one half-way off-key complaint about SFJ's piece (i.e. that he isn't ASKING the arcade fire to get fonky, just that he wanted to hear some groove after six of their songs) or declare some one-liner "the best thing on this thread. Now you're going "royal trux? O RLY?" in the face of an article so obviously greater than the one you're not even really defending. I know you're grateful for the exposure he gave you, but its time you ask yourself what he's done for you lately.

da croupier, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:42 (sixteen years ago) link

that shoud be (complaining that I wasn't offering IDEAS, ironically)

da croupier, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:43 (sixteen years ago) link

sasha is silly to bring up devendra. his entire vocal persona is based on nina simone, ella jenkins, and billie holiday.

yeah that one struck me as really weird, there's all kinds of coded/racinated stuff going on in db's vocal delivery - some of it so over-the-top that I've always been a little surprised that more people don't dwell on it (lots of T. Rex comparisons around the time of the first studio album but any Al Jolson refs? 'cause that's kinda who he sounds like) but there's all kinds of weird genre stuff going on just in the way devendra sings

xpost anthony I basically read the last ten posts and see what I have to say. Your accusation that I'm somehow repaying a favor is off-target, but I'm sure it makes you feel good about yourself, so fuck you.

J0hn D., Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:44 (sixteen years ago) link

...and for you to be accusing anybody of nitpicking is, y'know, some pot/kettle shit

J0hn D., Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:45 (sixteen years ago) link

Not to butt into the clash of the titans, but when I read that line in the Slate piece I was like, "Yeah, Trux, obviously!" Not that they're primarily a funk band but (a) they were on at least one two-drummer show I saw and (b) they were certainly coming out of all manner of 70's bluesy rock that SFJ rightly points out is way funkier than most 00's rock.

dad a, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:46 (sixteen years ago) link

I'm just trying to assign your inexplicable cherry-picking of what to acknowledge on this thread a motivation I can understand/sympathize with, John. Has nothing to do with my ego.

da croupier, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:46 (sixteen years ago) link

whatever dude

J0hn D., Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:48 (sixteen years ago) link

Is John D.. you know...

trashthumb, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:48 (sixteen years ago) link

Trashthumb....

I really don't know where you think you can draw a line between the 'personal and human meaning' and the political, and i can think of plenty of abstract art that's part of an explicit social dialogue..... but its late on my side of the Atlantic, so if the conversation is still anywhere in this neighbourhood in the AM, I may have more...

sonofstan, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:49 (sixteen years ago) link

yes (xpost)

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 18 October 2007 23:49 (sixteen years ago) link


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