Sunday, September 28, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Sunday1 September 28, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pc~ge Five Rock and Rock and Roll Will Stand, edited by Greil Marcus. Beacon Press, $7.50 (Paperback BP 341, $2.95). By LITTLE SUZY FUNN Literary Editor WHEN IT REALLY happened was when Snooky Lanson stood up in front of one of those ridiculous cardboard sets on "Your Hit Parade" in front of millions of tube watchers and started singing "You ain't nothin' but a hound dog" with that ridiculous smile plastered all over his creepy face. At that point the battle was over. Rock had arrived. Not even all the machinations of the American Tobacco Company could keep it off the charts and out of the airwaves. But wait! Something was wrong! Snooky Lanson, the boy wonder who built up the Neilsons with his spectacular versions of "Shrimp Boats A-Coming" and other such shuck looked like even more of a complete schlemiel than ever when he tried to smile his way through "Blueberry Hill." Ratings were crashing. "Your Hit Parade" slid off the air forever. Wil "Why?" you ask. r"Sex !" I respond. Rock music is sex. Pure and simple sex. In fact, when a bunch of old white disk jockeys named the new hard rhythm and blues "rock and roll" because those words seemed to show up in every song they set a bunch of young black kids to laughing in the streets. "Rocking and rolling" being what you call a euphemism for just what you think it's a euphemism for. Little post-pubescent girls didn't turn up at Elvis Presley concerts to hear his songs or listen to his lyrics. They just wanted to feel the pound pound pounding of the beat and watch him squirm and hope in their hearts of hearts that just this once his jeans will rip. And somehow I can't believe that any post-pubescent girl in her right mind would stand around split his chinos. 0 0 k b 0 0 k s By LIZ WISSMAN The Moment of Cubism and. Other Essays, by John Berg- er. Pantheon Books, $5.95. .JOHN BERGER has written a book of essays which can- not be described without the terms "history" and "art" - and here all our difficulties be- gin. Because we have all, guilt- ridden children of the age, sub- mitted ourselves to that peculiar form of penance called "History of Art." You 'know the scene: the dim vault into which a thousand-thousand of the starv- ing, the Kultcha. crazed, h a v e been heaped around a stage in varying degrees of blindness, suffocation, and impotence. Meanwhile, upon that stage, Six Centuries of the plastic and architectural arts are traversed with all the delicacy of Sher- man's march to the sea. This is not to confer a particular blame upon the History of Art Department - the University itself is a process of making One out of too-Many, lopping off any spare feet, buttocks and too often brains which will not fit into the space-time avail- able. But all of this is precisely Berger-territory, as he probes the problems, the horror and banality which attend knowing about art in the contemporary world. His discussion of a r t museums is easily extended to the University: "They conserve - in the full sense of the word - what is already there; and some of them acquire new works in- telligently. It is not useless but it is inadequate. It is in- adequate because it is outdat- ed. Their view of art as a self- evident pleasure appealing to a well-formed Taste, their view of Appreciation being ultimately based on Connois- seurship - that is to say the ability to compare product with product within a very narrow range - all this de- rives from the eighteenth cen- tury. Their sense of heavy civic responsibility - trans- formed into honorary pres- tige - their view of the pub- lic as a passive mass to whom works of art, embodying spir- itual value, should be made available, this belongs to the nineteenth-century tradition of public works and benevo- lence. Anybody who is not an expert entering the average museum today is made to feel like a cultural pauper receiv- ing. charity, whilst the phe- nomenal sales of fifth-rate art books reflect the consequent belief in Self-Help." The museum possesses its art works, the University its know- ledge; both are convinced that there is some product which it is their province to own and 'kultcha The possession of and knowledge BERGER DEVELOPS h i s other essays-occasional pieces on topics from Che Guevara to Vermeer-according to these premises. A work of art is a responsibility, for viewer as well as creator. It is impossible to separate art from other, on- going, forms of seeing and knowing-or, at least, the at- tempt to separate can only re- sult in indifference among both the public and the artists. Thus, an art museum is responsible for illuminating the epistemo- logical and cultural problems which surround the art display- ed. Perhaps, Berger suggests, by grouping a painting with others which have tried to cap- ture the same material but with less success, the spectator may become more actively aware of the choices and peculiar ar- rangements which the successful artist has made. There remains the problem, of course, of what shall determine "success" and how we can de- cide upon t h e most valuable, most coherent "groupings." Ber- ger is over-confident when he assumes that "good" and "bad," "then" and "now," are categor- ies which we can all easily agree upon. There is a contradiction between these traditional as- sessments and his description of modern relativity - "the result of our constantly having to take into account t h e simultaneity and extension of events a n d possibilities." But granting him this as his point of departure, Berger is consistently illuminat- ing in his connections between social and technological condi- tions and individual art works. He contrasts brilliantly the meaning of death in Rem- brandt's "Anatomy Lesson" and in the famous "pieta" photo- graph of Che Guevara's corpse. And, as often as not, his criti- cism of art is used in reverse; to define the "moment" through its art - "In the second half of the twentieth century the aes- theticism of sex helps to keep a consumer society stimulated, competitive and dissatisfied." IN THE SECOND half of the twentieth century, it is rare to find art critics willing to face the consequences of this cen- tury. Mr. Berger is, eloquently, one who does. waiting for Snooky Lanson to AND, AS A. C. NEILSON will tell you, none of them did, What they did do was drool over Elvis on Ed Sullivan and start getting into Little Richard and Chuck Berry and loud loud music. Not that they stopped listening to regular old garbage like Snooky used to shine on, they just put it in second place. I mean, Pat Boone was warbling while Elvis was gyrating. You can see it in the beat of the music and you see it in the words but you can see it best in the fans. The kids start really getting into rock when they hit puberty and they start drifting away when they get married or start shacking up or whatever it is these crazy kids do these days. They take their drives out on the dance floor and running up the aisles at the concerts and In fantasies inside their heads. Which brings me around to this book hock and Roll Will Stand, which, if it really means anything to you, is a bunch of essays byS seven different guys that first appeared in sheets like "Good Times" and "Rolling Stone" and other rock rags. And which has the right idea (as the title tells you) but sort of misses the point. All the writers are from Berkeley or Frisco and they all show that Berkeley bias that louses up a lot of otherwise good stuff that comes out of it. Which is to say, the guys get so hung up in politics that theyJ forget where they're going. Just as Berkeley is the only city that could have a local band like Coun- try Joe and the Fish that mixes politics with rock, so Berkeley is the only city in the country that could put out a book that focuses (when it does focus) on that least typical of all bands, the Fish themselves Which isn't to say that this is a lousy book or anything like that. In fact, it's a pretty good book-about half a cut above most of the stuff that's pouring off the printing presses on rock this fall. When it steers clear of the politics of rock, it's sometimes great. But it's a real shame to look at the dustacket on this book (which is what got me off on this in the first place) and see the photo of Peter Townshend of the Who making love to his guitar (metaphorically, of course) and then read the book and find out that the writers missed the point that the picture makes so well. Which is that rock and roll will stand, even though Snooky Lanson and Pat Boone and Country Joe and the Fish are going to fall by the side of the path. And that it will stand because every year a whole new generation goes through puberty and starts looking around for an outlet. And every year they turn to the rock that their older sisters (and some of their brothers) are grooving on and find out that that's where the action really is and that that's where there's sex you can feel and talk about without getting thrown in jail or grounded for a week or pregnant or marrled STUDENT ASSEMBLY TUESDAY-7 P.M. SEPTEMBER 30 1018 Angell Hall ALL LS&A Students Welcome ELINORE RIGBY WE Could Have Helped You! We are I.D.S., a computer dating service, founded at the University of Michigan and designed for you, the college stu- dent. We enable you to meet the kind of people YOU want to meet. Our questionnaire was specially designed by social to dispense. Berger points out the contradictions in this con- viction, since art and know- ledge as well> is a process, which cannot __without atrophy- be reduced to a safe, delimited, commodity. As Berger sees it, in The Moment of Cubism (and, es- pecially, his title essay it is no longer possible for one to maintain an antique simplifi- cation about "static" objects, or beings, or even events. Mo- dern communication makes us aware of the vast number of people and events which must be considered when we try to evaluate our own lives. Modern physics can no longer guarantee a set of changless laws for space and time. The complexity and uncertainty (or, at least, lack of finality) of modern know- ledge created a challenge which Cubism, between the years of 1905 and 1915, faced and met in a temporary burst of "revolu- tionary" forms. But the early optimism of Cubists (and Ber- ger includes Apollinaire as well as Braque and Picasso), their certainty that they had resolved all dilemmas, faltered as they became more aware of the dif- ficulties and subtleties of mo- dern life. Burger stresses that Cubism was only a "moment" in the history of art: a moment which has dissolved into the strident and helpless subjectivism of most contemporary work. While admitting that some of the forms are new (happenings, junk sculpture, sandpiles and rooms filled with foan), Berg- er is convinced that they are conventional expressions of anxiety and frustration. T h e modernity of Cubism was its re- fusal to eschew the responsibil- ity of cummunication and con- tinuity with the whole com- plexity of lif°. The revolution- ary artist must avoid even the fixation of his own point of view. "The lproposition that a work of' art it a new object and not simply the expression of its subject, the structuring of a picture to admit the coexist- ence of different modes of space and time, the inclusion in a work of art of extraneous objects, the dislocation of forms to reveal movement or change, the combination of hitherto separate and distinct media, the diagrammatic use of appearances - these were the revolutionary innovations of Cubism." Today's Writers . .. LIZ WISSMAN is a semi- reluctant candidate for a PhD in Literary criticism here at the University. She is a regular contributor to BOOKS and a frequent debating partner of LITTLE SUZY FUNN, the Daily's own teeny-bopper in residence. 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