Archive for the ‘criticism’ Category

Quote of the day

Sunday, December 26th, 2010

“…great art offers a necessary alternative to an over-mediated culture. Art writers should use the internet to counteract the dematerialization of a hyper-connected world, not encourage it through false promises.”

—James Panero in The New Criterion

Worth reading in full.

Stop this train

Wednesday, December 22nd, 2010

Maura Johnston and Christopher R. Weingarten eviscerate “Hey, Soul Sister”. I had no idea it was based on a fantasy of hippie chicks dancing around a bonfire at Burning Man, and I can’t possibly describe how much more that makes me hate it.

Finishing the Hat

Wednesday, December 22nd, 2010

The intro from Stephen Sondheim’s new collection of lyrics with commentary includes a simple, charmingly self-deprecating primer on lyric writing, and explains why good poets make lousy lyricists. Learn from the best, my friends.

What’s wrong with Bruno Mars?

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

Nitsuh Abebe does a great job with the paradox of Mars: an obvious talent with a somewhat serious edge dulled by a too-eager-to-please streak wider than some oceans. That’s why I find Mars so fascinating—there’s a tension, almost a war, between his pop sensibilities and his more serious sides, and both want to capture and use his talents to the fullest (right now, the pop side seems to be winning). Everything I’ve heard from his first album is a mess in one way or the other, but it’s going to be interesting to see what he comes up with next.

Two makes a trend, right?

Monday, October 18th, 2010

Two tweets in a row from Pitchfork make almost the exact same comment about two different albums.

Andrew Gaerig on A Sunny Day in Glasgow’s latest, Autumn, Again: “more concise and less wily than its predecessor”

Tom Breihan on Bay Area garage-poppers the Fresh & Onlys’ latest, Play It Strange: “more focused, easier to digest”

It’s a movement!

Listen to This

Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

Largehearted Boy interviews Alex Ross about his new book, and Ross provides a short playlist of records that emphasize the book’s “principal theme—the interconnectedness of far-flung musical realms.” Selection number one: Beethoven’s Third Symphony. Selection number two: Pere Ubu’s “30 Seconds Over Tokyo”. My kind of guy. Ross’s audio guide to the book is here.

GaGa and Paglia

Monday, September 20th, 2010

I have to admit to being somewhat perplexed by all the fuss over Camille Paglia’s critique of Lady GaGa in London’s Sunday Times (behind a paywall, unfortunately). For one thing, I didn’t think anybody (at least among the punditry) paid much attention to Paglia anymore. Not that she isn’t worth paying attention to, but simply because Paglia herself hasn’t been doing much to attract any. She still writes a regular column for Salon, but she’s only written two books since 1995, one a monograph on Hitchcock’s The Birds for the BFI film series (kind of a 33 1/3 for films), and the other a collection of critical readings of poetry, neither the kind of thing to raise much notice in the public press. The long-promised second volume of Sexual Personae still hasn’t appeared, and though I assume she’s still working on it in some way, I don’t expect to see it until her literary executors finally get it out five or so years after her death—which could be a long time yet.

What perplexes me even more about the reaction, though, is that no one seems willing to admit that, though she gets a good deal wrong (her writing off of social networks is a terrible mistake, though it will still be a few years before it’s proven so), she also gets a good deal right. When she calls Gaga a sexless blank, she’s absolutely right, even if, as Kira Cochrane has suggested in The Guardian, GaGa does this intentionally. She’s also right that GaGa represents some sort of turning point in the representation in pop of sexuality. But Paglia’s negativity about this seems misplaced. GaGa may very well represent the end of the 20th Century’s sexual revolution, as Paglia suggests, but one revolution is always supplanted, or replaced, by another. The revolution that GaGa started, or is perhaps clearing space for, hasn’t yet cohered into anything that anyone could give a name, or even suggest a direction, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t brewing.

But it doesn’t mean that it’s going to be an improvement, either, which would make Paglia’s pessimism prescient. It’s interesting to see how’s Paglia’s attack on cell phones and iPods fits in with Cochrane’s references to the distancing effect of GaGa’s costumes. If the new sexual revolution adds up to nothing more than a world full of sexting and virtual bisexuality, then I want no part of it either. But I don’t think that’s going to happen, or what GaGa’s suggesting. I have no idea what’s going to happen, and neither, I think, does anybody else. It seems foolish to worry about it.

I also agree with Paglia that Madonna is a ridiculous comparison to make to GaGa. The roots of this, as far as I can see, have to do with the obvious musical influences (but then, name a dance-pop singer of the last twenty years who isn’t influenced by Madonna) and the fact that she changes her clothes a lot. But Madonna’s changes in image from album to album or video to video really was just a change of clothes: she was always Madonna and only Madonna; the force of her personality came through no matter what she was wearing, and her career through the 80’s was a steady climb in a single direction, focusing and refining the themes of her music until they reached their ultimate expression in Erotica. GaGa’s outfits, meanwhile, are a replacement for personality, an intentional façade that changes as rapidly as the settings of a dream, an armor, as Cochrane suggests, that allows her to face the world on her own terms for as long as she can keep it up. For the moment, at least as far as the public is concerned, GaGa has no personality.

Paglia trips up, though, when she downplays any comparison of GaGa to David Bowie. To me, the connection seems obvious. Like Bowie, GaGa is a rummager through the pop past whose music, at least at this stage of her career, is largely pastiche, but who is more than willing to name-check her influences and give them credit. When Paglia puts GaGa down for lacking avant-garde credentials, she forgets that Bowie’s own credentials, at least in his early years, consisted mostly of being a Velvet Underground fan, referencing his musical and cultural heroes in his songs, and wearing heavy makeup and a dress. The only thing avant-garde about his music was the limp-wristed wispiness of its sound, which made even the most blaring rock and roll sound somehow decadent and effete. And, just like GaGa, Bowie had no real public personality, just a series of parts that he played from record to record. Where GaGa will go with her music is anyone’s guess, but experimentalism is bound to happen once she exhausts her original inspiration, and there’s no reason to think she won’t turn to the avant-garde herself.

What’s oddest about Paglia’s criticism is that she either doesn’t recognize, or is unconsciously denying, the influence that her own work appears to have had on GaGa’s thinking. Considering their surface similarities, I find it impossible to believe that GaGa hasn’t had some exposure to Paglia’s work, if only through curiosity concerning a controversial woman who in many ways is just like her—both Italian-Americans from New York State (though Paglia grew up in Saratoga Springs, not in NYC), both precocious children steeped in Catholic ritual, art, and fashion, both tightly-packed bundles of energy (if I’m not mistaken, they’re even the same height: 5’2”).

When I first saw the “Bad Romance” video I thought of it as something taken straight out of Paglia’s dreams, especially the ending, where the woman’s sexual power causes the man, who thinks he own her, to spontaneously combust. I suspect that part of Paglia’s irritation with GaGa is that she’s seeing her own ideas reflected back at her, almost as farce, and worries that it casts her entire theory of culture in doubt.

It doesn’t. I know that it’s a fun game among some critics to write off Paglia for her occasional social and feminist faux pas (most of which occurred almost twenty years ago), but at the heart of her thinking is a serious, carefully constructed theory of art and culture which, if not always right (when Paglia infamously said that if women ruled the world we’d still be living in grass huts, she forgot to consider that if men had complete control over the world, we wouldn’t even have the huts), is right often enough to take seriously and approach seriously. That includes her opinion of Lady GaGa.

Follow the chacona

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

In a preview of Listen to This, Alex Ross traces an elemental bass line from 16th cent. South America to Led Zep. I cannot wait for this book.

Why most artists (even great ones) should avoid talking politics

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

Because they come out sounding like idiots:

Anybody who is called the government is right. And anybody who isn’t called the government is not right… And you know, all governments are connected to Google, and all governments can shift their search engines so only what they want you to see comes up… I want kids to be aware of this digital circumstance… Everyone on the Internet is like, “Oh my God, come and join Facebook!” They’re all so optimistic… and really, everyone is fucking you up behind the screens. And I don’t like that. It makes it difficult for me to interact with my fans knowing that. Google and Facebook were developed by the CIA, and when you’re on there, you have to know that.

—M.I.A. in Nylon

Don’t even get me started on her Believer interview with Joshua Clover. Sheesh.

90%

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

A couple of days ago, Michaelangelo put up a note on his Tumblr blog, quoting a wonderfully pretentious line from the new Ted Leo and the Pharmacists album, The Brutalist Bricks. Sometimes I find myself in the mood for a good piece of pretentious nonsense, so I gave the album a spin on Rhapsody (yes, I know that’s an anachronism–sue me). It more than met any expectations Michael had created. It’s just about the funniest collection of late ’70s new wave cliches I’ve heard since, oh, the late ’70s. I was especially fond of the song that shifts from a Nick Lowe rip into an Elvis Costello rip and then back again. The Jam rip may be even better, since it not only lifts their music, but their overwrought political phrase slinging as well. All that’s missing is a cod reggae track. It’s all so intensely sincere. I haven’t laughed so hard at a record in months.

But then, tonight, I’m looking at The AV Club, and I see they’ve reviewed the album and given it a B+. Hmm. Fair enough, I think, but what kind of B+? An honorable B+, or a somewhat cynical, this gets a fairly high grade because it’s so wonderfully ridiculous B+? I was expecting the latter, but surprisingly, what I got was the former. The reviewer, who I’m not familiar with, considers it a good, if not great album. Even more surprising was the comments section. The AV Club has some the snootiest, most cynical commenters on the web, and in the case of this particular piece of flapdoodle I thought they would deliver their best. Instead I got oodles of Ted Leo love, including sincere comparisons to The Drive-By Truckers (huh?), Yo Lo Tengo (as if), and The Clash (oh, fuck you). I expected cynics, and found fanboys—fanboys who can’t tell the difference between Ted Leo and The Clash.

I’m not upset or surprised by this so much as confused. Actually, I’m not even confused, just stunned once again by further evidence that whoever it was that said 90% of everything is crap was referring to the audience, as well. 90% of the audience is crap. There. I’ve said it, and I’m glad.

(Oh, and critics, too. Don’t forget the critics.)