Friday, March 19, 2010

Radiohead

I try to stay current, I really do. 25 to 35 are critical ages, where it is all too easy to slip, little by little, into the comfort of your CD collection/MP3 playlist as a shunt against the time and effort required to assimilate new input from a musical landscape that is necessarily shifting away from the comforting sounds of your developmental years as more and more of your time is devoted to the messy churn of proto-adult becoming. And it is possible to underestimate the deeply-ingrained Tunguska-like impact of whatever happens to be popular when you're 13. There are people running around out there right now with a soft spot in their heart for Papa Roach because that's what happened to be playing in the half-lit basement the night the slutty girl from the flag team let them slide hard into third base for the first time. That's the thing about Proustian sense memory: it doesn't discriminate for quality. Ever eaten a madeleine? You probably have, but just don't remember. Bo-ring.

Conscious of this, as I said, I have made an effort to stay current. It was pretty easy for me considering Too Much Joy haven't put out an album in over a decade. A lot of new stuff fits in that conspicuous void.

All that is to say, look, I'm not just a complaining old dude. I listen to stuff. New stuff even. Stuff maybe that I wouldn't ever necessarily buy or listen to voluntarily if I had any kind of control over the slacker.com streaming web station that is played very loudly three cubicles over from me at work. I know all the words to more than one Daughtry song, for example. Like many facts about myself (irrational fear of mice, clown porn fetish, my "Jimmy Carter" mole), it's not something I'm particularly proud of; it just is.

Now that my objective popular culture bona fides have been unarguably established, I can say with clarity and purpose that Ke$ha must be stopped.

It isn't that hard to see the genealogy of this awful, awful phenomenon. Whenever something successful occurs, all sorts of vaguely similar things are dredged up from the rightfully-ignored sludgy bottom of the cultural river in its wide, frothy wake.

I actually kind of like Lady Gaga. There's really nothing about warmed over disco and her club-kid-meets-Pekingese look to recommend in particular, but the relevant details all come out in the execution. Yes, sometimes she's a grown woman wearing a cape made out of a polar bear, but "Bad Romance" is catchy as all hell.

So Lady Gaga sells a bazillion copies and hey! Here's this other semi-weird-looking blonde girl willing to walk out in public wearing face paint and a buffalo head-dress while lip-syncing to a fully computerized Auto-Tuned track. Ridiculous? Sure. But because of the long Gaga coattails, people buy up something samey out of... I don't want to say laziness... Newtonian social inertia? Yes, that's more polite.

I just want to say, beware. I know slippery slope arguments are specious and fairly Fox News-y, but if we keep it up with the blondes-with-no-shame theme, the next stop? Heidi Montag. No culture can survive that. That's what killed Rome. Well, that and the Hun.

11 comments:

Anonymous said...
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kittens not kids said...

and you're a fan of Fall Out Boy, right?

I'm slowly getting accustomed to Lady Gaga (musically. visually, I was already down with drag queens, so she's nothing new).

what *I* want to know is, WHERE does one find new music once one has crossed over to being in one's 30s????

Poplicola said...

Actually, the place I usually find new music? Magazine music reviews. You're a professional reader: know what you like and know what it is they're trying to tell you. I've found more than one band through Entertainment Weekly, of all places. The Onion AV Club (at theonion.com) is a good source for some more obscure stuff, both in their reviews and in their regular features (their end of the year round-up of the best albums of the year is a treasure trove of information and a fair amount of sanctimonious poseur douchery).

Also, streaming web music providers like Pandora and Slacker.com will play things you've never heard of based on your tastes. I've found several new things that way as well.

Katherine Zander said...

I own an iPod so I don't have to listen to country/western while driving near Blythe. Blythe is bad enough, mix it with C/W, I break down and cannot see to drive through the tears.

Call it a safety issue. It also has the added benefit that my only exposure to pop culture is Yahoo news, SJ, you, and whatever pop topic Stuff You Should Know decides to put in a podcast.

Related to my inbred musical exposure, I am prepared to debate ad nauseum just who, or rather what, is Triangle Man.

Once again, a comment totally about me, because I simply cannot relate to anything you just wrote - especially the clown fetish thing.

Poplicola said...

Triangle Man? I thought that was settled science. He's a metaphor. You can't take it literally. He's meant to stand in for all people identifiable as a geometric shape. It could just as easily have been Rhombus Man if it were more musically agreeable to the ear.

Katherine Zander said...

Oh, sure, you can go with what the Giants SAY is triangle man, just some big-chested cretin one spotted once.

But, no, a metaphor for the shape of people? Should definitely be globular man, I would think. Or, in the case around here, pear man.

Nah, Triangle man is Delta, the mathematical symbol for change, entropy, chaos as it were. All things change, like particle man, and most certainly person man. Only Universeman can control Triangleman. Or, perhaps, more likely, a magnet, which would do a fine job at erasing Triangleman from my iPod.

Hmmm, you know what? Maybe I'm not prepared to debate ad nauseum who or what Triangleman is. I bore me with this. I'm right, everyone else is wrong. Case closed.

Still, catchy tune. Better than that tune I made up for Soul Sister.

Larry Jones said...

Wow, you're right: Kesha really sux. It was cool, though, that the camera operators got into the spirit, with those angled shots and zooming in and out and stuff. Trippy!

I do love the Gaga, but I've given up trying to act like I want to discover new music. I admit I don't get it. That stuff I grew up with will have to do.

Poplicola said...

Kay-Z: Anything you made up for a Train song automagically beats the original.

Jones: Oh, Grampa...

mrgumby2u said...

I thought this was going to be about Owl City. Not sure how I feel about things now.

I liked Kesha's (nice how she already has the porn star name lined up for her next career) fist pumps. Had nothing to do with what she was singing, but she saw somebody do it on a video once and thought it looked cool.

Heidi Montag and the huns would be a good name for a trivia quiz team.

kittens not kids said...

so i finally watched some of that Kesha thing and OH MY GOD IT'S THE END OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION.

THAT is what is wrong with American education. And America in general.

"Blah blah blah" as song lyrics?
oh no.
making Blah Blah Blah "rhyme" with "car"?
travesty against the Queen's English.

jesus christmascake. the horror of this will live with me for a long time.

Poplicola said...

Gumbo: I'm still not certain Owl City isn't a children's band. That song is about a guy talking to dancing bugs. I'm pretty sure there's a lesson in there about grammar as well.

KnK: I wish I could say I didn't warn you. But I did.