When I was stuck at my grandma's house a couple weeks back, I unearthed my well-worn copy of the 4th edition of the Trouser Press Record Guide. It was published in 1991, just before the alternative rock scene went mainstream. In those days before information on obscure indie and punk bands was a mere Google search away, the Guide was an invaluable resource when it came to deciding which albums and artists to keep an eye out for at the local record shops.
There was a time (back when I rode the Christian Herter scholarship gravy train) when my mornings were spent copying out promising leads from the Guide onto index cards and my afternoons were spent wandering from one used vinyl store to another in search of the objects of ephemeral desire. As a result, my copy of the guide is, how you say, "beat to shit," missing its cover, its spine bent into a c-shape, and the pages stuffed with clippings and photos of interest to me at the time.
Eventually I migrated to The Guinness Who's Who of Indie and New Wave Music and a number of microgenre directories as my sourcebooks of choice, as they better matched my specific musical interests and covered artists not included in Trouser Press. The fact that the writing in those other directories was a little more even-handed was also played an important factor, because as handy as Trouser Press was for determining release dates and album titles, the commentary and capsule reviews in the book frequently reached toxic levels of "jaded hipster" and "rockist" attitude.
Certain bands were especially singled out for critical maulings in which informational content took a back seat to self-satisfied rants permeated with the phony idolatry of rockist mythology, where the mythic (and false) aura of authenticity is all that matters. I noticed it back in 1993, but it was even more obnoxious to revisit fifteen years later, as my tastes have shifted and broadened and I've gained a bit more knowledge about the artists, the ideologies, and the music involved.
It's all very silly and pointless. What you may claim to be the pinnacle of pop genius, I might find to be kind of pedestrian, and vice-versa. Our individual tastes are our own, and that's nothing to be ashamed about...unless you are a Katy Perry fan, in which case I hope the Fates are kinder to you in your next incarnation. Savaging INXS for not being Elvis Costello might make for some unintentional laughs, but it's also quite pathetic. (Besides. I'd rather listen to Kick than Armed Forces any day of the week.)
Here are some excerpts from some of the more egregious rockist rants from my copy of the Trouser Press Guide, deliberately chosen with certain readers of this blog in mind.
Orange Juice:
Glasgow's insufferably coy Orange Juice, de facto leaders of the Scottish neo-pop revolution, typified a UK trend towards clean, innocent looks that unfortunately spilled over into the music.Orange Juice - Falling and Laughing (from You Can't Hide Your Love Forever, 1982) - It's true. MTV and Smash Hits ruined everything. God forbid that someone who knows how to tune a guitar and doesn't look like a refugee from a Bowery methadone clinic becomes a chart success.
Oingo Boingo:
This eight-piece LA outfit (with three-man horn section) started out trying to be a West Coast answer to XTC and Devo, but suffered from studied wackiness/quirkiness and managed to hide solid cleverness behind overproduction and hamminess.Oingo Boingo - Wild Sex (in the Working Class) (from Nothing to Fear, 1982) - Wow. That's reading an awful lot into what I always thought of as pretty entertaining party music.
Conflict:
In the real/rock world, only the young and the gullible expect their favorite bands to abide by lofty personal standards.Conflict - The Guilt & The Glory (from It's Time to See Who's Who, 1983) - I don't entirely disagree with the above statement (in an otherwise positive write-up) about the stalwart anarchopunk outfit, except that the "real/rock" part makes me want to punch somebody and for the fact that Minor Threat, the most generic-sounding hardcore band ever, was praised for wearing their hearts on their sleeves in their Guide entry.
Pet Shop Boys:
The in-joke references and self-amused esoterica strewn thoughout songs like "West End Girls" and "Opportunities (Let's Make Lots of Money)" should have precluded their general popularity, but evidently the laxative-smooth synth backing has utilitarian value for clubgoers. Ghastly, depressing and offensive.Pet Shop Boys - Suburbia (from Please, 1986) - Pop sensibility and synthesizers are anathema to rockists....until some cherished rock idol appropriates them for his own use, at which point there's only a 50% chance the purists will howl for his blood.
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In other news, there's a new post up at pronounced WOO-BIN on the subject of local geography.
4 comments:
Robbins and his coterie represent the absolute dregs of old school rock criticism. I totally agree, the TP Guides were very useful for discographic info and almost totally useless otherwise. There are endless amounts of reviews that tell you absolutely nothing about what you should expect to hear on any given record. Christgau is much, much worse in that regard, but he worked under the assumption that his readership was familiar with the records in question. Robbins presented his drivel as some sort of consumer resource, when it was absolutely nothing of the sort.
And Trouser Press was a shit magazine. I only ever bought it when Creem was sold out.
I probably have the same edition at home. It's good because it has a lot of off-the-cuff opinions from Ira A. Robbins.
Discogs.com is a great resource. This is great for punk stuff:
http://www.fuzzlogic.com/flex/
Emerson
oldpunks.com
PS: I've compiled a bunch of synth new wave and punk cds - all free at my site. Hit the link for Analog CyberPunk.
That write-up for Pet Shop Boys was the type of thing that made me turn my back on alternative music, even before it went mainstream. It seemed too often that reviewers would complain about the artificiality of the music, and after a while, it seemed like code for complaining that they're gay. (I was probably oversensitive to it, being in my late teens around this time, but I think the complaint was a valid one.) After a while, I got so sick of the idea of "authenticity" that I just started listening to disco, show tunes, (so stereotypical!)whatever I could to divorce myself from the idea of the authentic, and certainly as far as I could get from the Rock music norm.
Like Andrew, I spent a lot of time making lists of records to look for that I read about in the TPRG. My pet peeve about Ira Robbins was that he compared every band he liked to his beloved Cheap Trick. He also had an axe to grind against the record-buying public that didn't make big stars of Holly and the Italians.
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