Page 8- The Michigan Daily-Thursday, January 10, 1991 From trite to excellent: the best of the rest by Annette Petruso second of two parts "Popular music is a big subject and it needs to be looked at from a variety of angles - otherwise you end up with the three blind men feel- ing up an elephant. One is in the front and says it's a snake. One's feeling a leg and says it's a tree. And I honestly can't remember what the one at the other end thought it was. Because their perspectives were so narrow and because they weren't talking to each other, they weren't able to pool their info and conclude what they were dealing with was an elephant...." Charles Shaar Murray and the state of the "rock book" These are the allegorical words of Charles Shaar Murray, author of Crosstown Traffic during a phone interview from his home in London, discussing the worth of even the most banal book about popular music. Crosstown Traffic is arguably one of the best books on popular music. Most "rock books" are pathetically written and tedious. "There's probably nothing worse than a bad critical rant because it doesn't contain useful information. Where a bad biography can yield a few bits of information which can be illuminating to someone who's do- ing something else. I mean a lot of the information that I found invalu- able when writing Crosstown was information that the people who originally gathered it plainly didn't understand," Murray continued. Murray has a point: even amidst the worst dramatizations sometimes shine one or two nuggets of knowl- edge. But most of the worst books written on popular music, replete with those few hidden gems, are on rock. Jimi Hendrix is the firstfigure who could be categorized as a rock (post-1965) star who has received a good dose of productive analysis in Murray's Crosstown Traffic. The Beatles and Elvis have been taken apart limb by bloody limb many times, but the best-written books on popular music focus on various forms of Black music. I asked Murray why this seems to be true. "A lot of the best writing on music has actually been about jazz and I would say much of the writing on Black music, even if it's not specifically about jazz, has absorbed something of the more exacting standards of jazz writing," he said. "Much of the writing about Black music, old and new, is rooted in jazz criticism which means it has to take a certain amount of social history and a certain amount of musical knowledge." "When you are talking about lives of Black musicians or Black artists in any sphere, the author has to at some level deal with the prob- lems that these people have con- fronted with specifically because they are Black. In other words, they have to deal with a very rough ride from society which in itself affects their lives and work. And to write with integrity about artists like this, you have to examine this aspect of their lives which in turn means the author has to do more than have a large pile of cuttings to hand," he continued. Relatively, the sociological im- plications for white artists seems obvious. The trashy recounting of the daily existence of an arena rock band's life, without looking at the music or the artist's background or the band's audience, makes for obvi- ous it-all-sounds-the-same-how- many-groupies-did-he-fuck? kind of book. No matter what kind of white rock-type band it is, it seems to be next to impossible to write a good book about an artist who is still ac- tive and has been around less than about 15 or 20 years. The first books about an artist nowadays are usually published during their career, to take advantage of their popularity, and are tailored to fans (like those of New Kids on the Block). The infor- mation - there is generally little critical analysis - quickly becomes old news. These books contain few pieces of information that might be useful to future critical authors. A definite problem for authors is keeping up with current music Rap is a good example and Murray ex- plained why. "It's also that rap is changing so much. There's a bit in the book (Crosstown Traffic), if you want to check out what the Black underclass are listening to, you need to be lis- tening to Run D.M.C. and L.L. Cool J. Well, in terms of what's currently happening in rap those guys are ancient history," he said. Neither extinction or longevity guarantee good books; neither of those artists nor genres such as disco and heavy metal have been written The Village People were downright wierd yet catchy for their time, a twist on disco that even rollerskaters loved. Yet no one has ever written on critical book on them and their music and influence. about in an a successful critical fash- ion to date. Considering how much disco has influenced current trends in popular music among such groups as Deee-Lite and Adamski, this seems wrong. What did the role playing and play on conventional life of the Village People mean as well as their musical statements? Heavy metal is still a viable force today, with some of its more famous stars, like Aerosmith and Ozzy Os- bourne, proving as popular as the Rolling Stones and the Who. While these groups have surpassed their peak, they remain influential. Murray said he thinks one reason heavy metal is not critically analyzed might be the prejudices which exist within the publishing industry. "I don't think publishers believe heavy metal fans can read. They're just convinced these people don't buy books and people who do buy books don't want to read about this stuff," he said. "Same for rap," he continued. "On one level rap and metal are the most interesting sub-genres around. I was told that twenty-five, no forty percent of all album sales in the U.S. at the moment are of records that can be classified as metal, so it's a huge market. So where are the books about Van Halen and Guns 'N' Roses? Where are the books about Public Enemy and 2 Live Crew? They ain't there because the publishers think the people who support that music don't read books or buy books." Another reason certain types of artists get more written about them is that they were at their height dur- ing the mythical '60s, a decade widely covered. The artists and kinds of music that were the most popular and/or most respected were either Black, like Motown, Stax and other soul types, or influenced greatly by Black music such as the blues or R&B, like the Rolling Stones, the Doors and the Beatles. The genera- tion that grew up with that music now controls the economic forces of society and publishers believe they would be more likely to buy books on these artists. Murray said, "One reason is for '60s fetishes, the analysis was its boomers who have the money. It's like people who are seriously into, say, Public Enemy don't necessarily buy books, they buy records. There are books about and/orby James Brown, Marvin Gaye, Ray Charles, Mary Wilson's Supremes book, Miles Davis, B.B. King, these Black artists are the subject- of books and the reason is that publishers think there is a readership out there who will buy this book. I don't know if publishers would be convinced that there would be a market for a book, say, about 2 Live Crew." But even if the artist is from said idolized decade, it does not guarantee a book will come out that will do his or her career or influence justice. Take for example The Rolling Stones: the latest book about them, A.E. Hotchner's Blown Away: The Rolling Stones and the Death of the '60s, rehashes the same tragedies, Mick Jagger's arrogance and how Jagger and Keith Richards pushed Brian Jones out of the band. Hotch- ner interviewed such Stones "friends" as Marianne Faithful and Ian Stewart and used quotes to tell their version of what really happened. Murray said Hotchner's attitude towards certain people's lifestyles de- tracted from the book. "I think he is a horrible old sexist and his com- ments about Anita Pallenberg and Marianne Faithful are an old sex- ist's.... I thought he seemed censo- rious towards women he seemed to think hadn't lived the way they 'should have done."' Hotchner doesn't talk about the music, just how the Stones' rise and peak af- fected the band and a few others' life. The problem with most books on rock artists, even those from the '60s, are they are usually limited to straight biographies. Biographies, unlike some books on Black genres of music, don't look at these artists in the context of their musical movement or try to make new com- parisons. Authors like Peter Gural- nick, Gerri Hirshey and Nelson George have written books which critically analyze R&B, Motown and other parts of Black music in a provocative and productive fashion. The reader learns something more than who was fucking whom. Murray said he thinks the prob- lem could have something to do with the style of journalism em- ployed. "Much of the writing about white pop and rock stars seems to have its roots in very conventional celebrity journalism.... It's like an article in People magazine which is somehow gotten grotesquely bloated out to four hundred pages," he said. A prime example of this phe- nomenon is Stephan Davis' biogra- phy of Led Zeppelin, Hammer of the Gods: the Led Zeppelin Saga whic sensationalizes the entire careerp the band. Davis seems critical of ep at many points, especially when dis- cussing their lifestyle on the road, yet, simultaneously, he seems to oy joy their music, for the most part. He makes excuses for his judg ments as he sees fit. His objectivity is sporadic; Hammer of the Gods could have been serialized in Th National Enquirer. "And these rumors (about Zep be ing dangerous to groupie's life) weren't even so bad, considerig Southern California, 1968," Davis writes. "Nixon in the White Houe; genocide in Vietnam; Charles Ma- son out in Death Valley, frustrated by the music business, waiting to send one of his rat patrols of fieL hippies into Beverly Hills to kii record producers and chop them y. These were witchy times. Led Zp- pelin's antics were merely the sadi4r tic little games of young Engli4p artists loose in the United Sta$s with dirty minds and unlimited re- sources. They set an unattainalg standard of depravity, mystique, l- ury, and excess for the rock bans that tried to follow them, but by tl cold light of day they were all really nice gentlemen. Not only is the grammar atro- cious, this paragraph is exemplaryf the value judgements that predont inate in the book. These judgements don't convey anything critical about the music or, for that matter, supply any facts about the band. Straight biographies of musician don't have to be this condescending or uninformative, but they don't a l have to be Crosstown Traffic either. "I'm not suggesting even foir a moment that the way that I wrote Crosstown is the only way to write a book on popular music or populr culture," Murray said.;"a "It was what worked for the agenda I had and the subject I hal. And if it hadn't been for a lot f books written differently, I wouldit have had the raw information which enabled me to do my job.... But p the other hand biographies like. David Ritz's Divided Soul about Marvin Gaye, take a very classical, biographer's approach, are useful'in. illuminating. It's all down to the how, not the what. You can write virtually any kind of book, from oralS history to the conventional biogra- phy to the critical rant, and a good one is a good one and a bad one'' bad" ~F Sp?!Y {y Jy:vy'v',};:j:lI;;, ."W f$ '#:/'} ";,Y4:; I .gan ":fbrv"f.v{:;$.'.!+. +° jj+vr 'Y:ra *, ;'~+t /~".,y,+. =f 10 Id~ *.*I I MUSICIANS ! PERFORMERS I I SANDUSKY, OHIO: Friday, Jan. 4 Cedar Point Park Attractions Office Rehearsal Studios Registration: 1:30 - 4:30 p.m. COLUMBUS, OHIO: Thursday, Jan. 10 Ohio State University Drake Union Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. BEREA, OHIO: Friday, Jan. 11 Baldwin-Wallace College Kulas Musical Arts Building Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. TECHNICIANS DECATUR, ILLINOIS: Tuesday, Jan. 22 Millikin University Richards Treat University Center, Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA:f Wednesday, Jan. 23 Indiana University Memorial Union - Solarium Registration: 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. MUNCIE, INDIANA: Thursday, Jan. 24 Signature Inn Corner of McGalliard & Bethel Rds. 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