The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Wednesday, March 28, 2007 - 5A From folk to punk and back LACH, THE MOLDY PEACHES AND THE BIRTH OF ANTI-FOLK By ANNA ASH Daily Arts Writer It was the early '80s. Reagan was screw- ing around in Beirut, Mick Fleetwood was filing for bankruptcy, "Fraggle Rock" was instilling a love for radishes in children everywhere and a scrawny young song- writer named Lach was getting kicked out of folk clubs all over Greenwich Village. Their reasoning: He was too punk. That was all it took - just a little rejec- tion for Lach to take the initiative in mak- ing his music heard. If his occasional profanity, occasional intensity and con- sistent unorthodoxy wasn't folk enough to play in folk clubs, well, he'd just have to create his own club. And when the Dylan worshippers had their annual New York City Folk Festival, Lach and his Dylan- meets-the-Sex-Pistols friends inaugurat- ed an entirely new genre upon launching the New York City Anti-Folk Festival. The name is misleading - anti-folk isn't a genre opposed to the style and structure of folk music itself, but more accurately to the established folk music scene and the expectations and definitions that are tagged onto folk musicians. Now after 22 years, the term anti-folk has sprawled out to include essentially anything that sounds remotely akin to a bastard child of punk and folk. Take, for example, The Moldy Peaches. If you're a fortunate soul, you may have caught Adam Green and Kimya Dawson donned in Peter Pan and bunny attire opening for The Strokes or Tenacious D a few years back. Unfortunately, the group is currently inactive, though Dawson claims that this does not mean they are gone forever. Regardless, their 2001 self- titled debut is enough to spark anyone's interest in both the artists themselves and the genre they boast. After the first two tracks of the album, the reserved listener sighs - entertained by the quirkiness, amused by the simplic- ity and secretly relieved by the absence of unwonted anti-ness. But in classic anti- folk fashion, the acoustic, love croons of "Jorge Regula" are merely a prelude to Dawson's painful screams of "take me to your leader" in "What Went Wrong." By the time the album reaches the vul- gar blues shuffle of "Downloading Porn So aloof - so anti-folk. With Davo" and the flute-accompanied spoken-word poetry in "These Burgers," the reserved listener is at a loss for words - offended by the obscenity, baffledby the absurdity and completely enthralled by the transition, or lack thereof, into "Steak and Chicken," a tune reminiscent of an acoustic Wesley Willis backed by a cynical Neko Case with a slight crack problem. It isn't the mere addition of messy elec- tric guitar riffs to vulgar narratives that make The Moldy Peaches indicative of the anti-folk genre, though that may be a gen- eralized assessment. In addition to these musical characteristics and low-fi produc- tion, the anti-folk world is a place where an entire song dedicated to crack cocaine and a ballad of Helen Keller and Rip Van Winkle are warmly embraced. Essentially the only musicians who would probably be refused acceptance. OK, so maybe he took the whole just-got-out-of-bed look a little too seriously. into Lach's New York anti-folk commu- nity, or London's well-established anti- folk collective, would be those who either take themselves too seriously or those who sell their souls to the man. While the subversiveness and self-mockery of anti-folk are innovative and humorous, unless you're hip to New York's Sidewalk Caf6's underground music scene, you have to work pretty damn hard to get yourself acquainted with anti-folk. All too often the self-mockery of an anti-folk musician overshadows the attempts at self-promo- tion. This leaves brilliant projects like The Moldy Peaches in the anti-folk shad- ows of mainstream musicians like Regina Spektor and Beck, whose early music was rooted in and influenced by New York's anti-folk scene. Even if the anti-folk community seems to enjoy its underground dwellings, how can the audacious music-listener not track down and revere an electrified "Lit- tle Bunny Foo Foo" lullaby or a mournful tune about chasingthe Lucky Charms lep- rechaun? Everyone s a critic t ou didn't like the movie. You could just say so, but if you think about it, your dislike says something about the movie, not just about yourself. And who are you to know anything about German silent films from 1923? Or about films at all? You've never held a boom or memorized a script. Might as well stay as silent as the movie. Maybe this has never crossed your mind about anything showing at the multiplex, but might you feel this way at a run-in with Chinese cal- ligraphy? Or Welsh clogging? Or a Renais- sance painting? There are safe ways to ABIGAIL B. have opin- COLODNER ions and to -- -- express them. In tomorrow's B-side writers will discuss those who make a career out of well-defended opinions. One of your surest bets for talking criti- cally about something - which is a lot more interesting and specific to what you've just seen than "it was good/bad" - is to ask the following question: Does it accomplish what it sets out to do? Judging a work on its own terms is the most basic and fair way to look at it critically. It also makes the fewest assumptions, paring down the realm of things that can be criticized. It prevents viewers from writingoff things they sim- ply don't like as invalid. Sonnets may not be your cup of tea, but that doesn't mean individual son- nets are bad, or lazily done, or not thought through. They work with- in a system, and maybe succeed brilliantly at it. The complaint that poetry itself is lame is a complaint about how you receive it rather than how it's presented to you. And if the discussion is about the piece itself rather than a genre, general- izations are irrelevant. Not all art comes with its own translation of sorts, but many do in some form. The placards accompa- nying art in museums hold clues, as do program notes at performances. Sometimes the artist spells his goals out for you, making it easy to frame yoi The Nt buildingi and steel the unass al exterio space wit by huge c photogral light and] above a w ent music through t museum. As thoi didn't alr( ent," the: for his vie son home behind th people wi of a divin and assur had been these inte place. ThE moments A robe( boy press elephant' meditativ elephant: meditativ A youn ened eyes echoingtl next to he ness with wildcat s being wra keep it fri ar opinion. his art succeeded. I wanted to like madic Museum is a it. But as it stood, I couldn't have a made, essentially, of paper positive opinion of it. It failed on its cargo containers. Inside ownterms. uming and unconvention- A work of art's own goals are r is a cavernous arched usually more embedded and more h one long aisle flanked subtle than that. But because works olumns; the sepia-toned of art (no matter the genre) are the phs bathed in golden product of decisions, not random- hanging eerily in midair ness - they are created - they're 'hite pebble floor. Ambi- made of conscious decisions that ,mostly choral, echoes suggest the artist's intentions. he temple - I mean Finding those decisions is the fun part. ugh those design features Tchaikovsky's classic roman- eady scream "feel rever- tic ballet "Swan Lake" hinges on artist included a pamphlet heartbreaking duets between ewers that drove the les- doomed lovers. One such duet is . It described the vision set to an achingly slow violin solo. Le photographs, all of The violin edges upa scale by ith wild animals. It spoke half-notes, climbing and falling e communion with nature repeatedly. During this the prima ed viewers that nothing ballerina gets hoisted up in the air. superimposed - that all over and over. Traditionally, this ractions had really taken piece is essentially a showcase for e artist was just capturing one pretty move. of interspecies epiphany. Butin a contemporaryversion d Tibetan-looking by choreographer Matthew Bourne ed his face against an of the 19th-century ballet, the s trunk, his face quietly dance is entirely different - not e, his eyes closed. The least because the dance takes place looked, um, generally between two men, who are not e, too. going to be lifting each other above g girl closed her enlight- their shoulders. Without those and crouched ina tree, lifts, the duet was danced at about he pose of the wildcat three times the traditional tempo. r and asserting her one- And the music was transformed the animal world. The - or rather, resurrected. Instead howed its oneness by of the poor soloist agonizing over ipped tightly in cloth to each note, he sent out soaring trills om tearing her eyes out - the musicbecame a showcase for the virtuosic musician, and it was suddenly obvious that that was the proper pace. The music was How to simply written to be played quickly. Unequivocally, then, to my mind iluate art on this later choreography succeeded and crystallized Tchaikovsky's own terms. creation the way no version of the ballet had yet. Art should not doa disservice to itself. It shouldn't be its own redator claws. enemy. When it is, it doesn't mat- tist's claim to capture ter if it's a blockbuster movie or if ous moments of com- it's consummately obscure. And it vas obviously false doesn't matter if you've grown up ly so. He could have just with it or never encountered any- c at the pictures for what thing remotely like it before. With y are: contrived. Beauti- attention to the intentions behind worldly, utterly untrue. art, anyone can have their opinion ated goal was something and share it, too. NOA SA A With more than 90 graduate degree and certificate programs available, nationally recognized Oakland University offers a challenging, affordable, high quality education in thriving Oakland County. 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