A Celebratory Thing

I read another write-up on M.I.A. and was struck by her final quote:

“I don’t know why it’s not a celebratory thing, the fact that I just know about a lot of fucking shit. That’s all. Yeah so I know how billionaires live in America, and I know how poor people live in Sri Lanka, and I know how soldiers are, and I know what it feels like for your dad to throw hand grenades out of your bedroom window, I just know that. I’m not going to be able to change any of those things, and ultimately I believe in creativity. You get out what you put in, and it’s not like I only put one thing in.”

You may remember a NYT Magazine article from earlier this year that had all sorts of negative things to say about M.I.A. One of those things was that she’s a sellout for marrying rich and living in LA, and that she can’t talk about her years of living poor in London and Sri Lanka anymore. Which, as she points out in this quote, is bullshit.

She’s had years of various experiences, and she’s perfectly entitled to talk about any and all of them, just as the rest of us are. Pretending you are still living an underprivileged life is very different from continuing to speak up about the conditions of that underprivileged life, and M.I.A. is doing the latter. She has strong (and controversial) political opinions and she’s using her fame and music as a forum for talking about those opinions and drawing attention to issues she believes are under-addressed in mainstream media and hip-hop.

She knows how music works, she knows how fame works, she knows how growing up in a civil war works, she knows how art school works, and she’s weaving all these parts of her past life into her current and future life. If we’re self-aware enough, we’re all doing the same thing with our own lives; sorting through which experiences and ideas are still useful to us, which aren’t, and which we still need to process in order to determine where they fit in our life story.

I can’t argue that M.I.A. is looking to make a buck, but I’m getting so sick of people railing against musicians and authors for that. We are all trying to make a buck, and generally those artists who make a lot of money use it to continue making art. Whether the art becomes good or bad isn’t related to the fact that they made money, but what they chose to do with it once they made it. A sellout uses money to shut down their creativity, whereas a financially successful artist uses money to fuel it.

So she isn’t selling out, she’s synthesizing her life experiences into her art and creativity. We should all be so lucky. As she says, it’s “a celebratory thing.”

The Music Don’t Lie, Part 2

This time, it was a message of quityerbitchin. I was driving my it-probably-cost-more-to-fix-this-than-the-car-is-actually-worth-but-I-fixed-it-anyway car back to Chicago from Michigan, and I was late for a concert that I most definitely did not want to be late for. I’d had a wonderful, relaxing weekend, but the car costs and coming work week were creeping back into my consciousness. I’d run into two bouts of seriously bad traffic already and was coming up on another one, and I was shouting in frustration.

And then two in a row, courtesy of 97.1 The Drive: “Long Way Home” and “Take It Easy.” Okay, fine.

Turns out I was even early for the concert, and I sang along to the radio the whole way there.

Pitchfork Music Fest 2010

The Pitchfork Music Festival is in its fifth year, and I’ve been to four of them, so you could say that I’m pretty into it. I don’t actually read the main Pitchfork site all that much, since I can’t seem to get into the writing style of most of their critics, but every time I do head over there, I’m greeted with about 150 artists I’ve never heard of, about 40 of whom I’m likely to really enjoy. Those are some good numbers right there! Pitchfork is at the forefront of making music groups of all sizes and levels of fame more available to the Internet masses, and that’s a great service. These efforts culminate in the annual music fest, which takes place at Union Park in Chicago, IL over the course of three hot summer days.

I worked all day Friday and went straight to the park, just in time to hear the energizing opening chords of Robyn‘s set. This woman is fantastic! She writes or co-writes all her songs, and what songs! Upbeat, perfectly danceable love songs. I put one up yesterday (sorry, I didn’t realize the sound was so bad). Here’s another:

I chose these videos in particular because they’re from Friday’s performance; you can see how much joy she finds in dancing and singing and inviting everyone else to do the same. When she started those wide-flung arm movements, it looked like she took the dancing we do in front of the mirror and put it on stage, as if to say, “Look, just move your body any way you want!” I followed that suggestion so well that a photographer started snapping pictures of me, I suppose because I looked so into the music. But really, when you’re dancing and singing along wholeheartedly, you don’t exactly look photogenic; you look goofy. So if you see a photo out there of me looking like this…

hippie goofy dance

I wasn't even on anything (photo via http://www.picturehistory.com/product/id/13056)

…just move along.

After watching Michael Showalter‘s painful on-stage breakdown, I thought about going back to Broken Social Scene, but then Eugene Mirman came on and killed. I think my favorite part was that he was making pro-choice jokes that were actually funny. That’s exactly what we need, is someone reminding people that abortion is something you can talk about and even make jokes about, because hey, it’s a real thing in this world and not just a political flashpoint. (Does my choice of the word “killed” earlier ring a little untasteful in this context? Oops. Oh well, I’m keeping it. Oops, there, I did it again!)

I wandered in late on Saturday, but I was in time to see Wolf Parade rock out most wonderfully. I like on-stage banter if it’s done well, but sometimes I just want to hear the music. Spencer Krug seems to feel the same way; after their first song or two, he said, “We’re not going to talk much, we’re just going to play as much music as we can in the hour they gave us.” Worked for me. Similarly, LCD Soundsystem barely paused between songs but just played one driving beat after another, while James Murphy wailed melodically on top. I didn’t stop moving for over an hour.

And finally, Sunday, which was definitely the most humid of these very hot and humid days. So it was with great pleasure that I laid back and listened to two bands perfectly suited to a lazy summer day — Girls and Beach House. Girls have a jangly sort of sound, and a singer who sounds like Elvis Costello and looks like Darryl Zero:

Bill Pullman as Darryl Zero

Bill Pullman as Darryl Zero (Zero Effect is a great movie, btw) (photo from http://www.billpullman.org/film/zero/z30.jpg)

I heard a bit of Surfer Blood and Local Natives both, but the crowd at that stage was packed tight, and it was simply too hot to hang around without passing out. I couldn’t get into the noise of Lightning Bolt, but it sure had some people in a frenzy. When I left the festival, it was with a grin on my face as Big Boi ripped through “Ghetto Musick” at top speed.

I saw other bands during the weekend, but the last one I’ll mention is the energetic Major Lazer. The hype man and two main dancers certainly had people going, and it was fun to dance to Diplo DJing, but I felt kind of uncomfortable the whole time. You’ve got this white guy, Diplo, presiding over the whole stage, while Skerrit Bwoy and two nameless women dancers, all dressed in very little, shake and scream and dagger below. Major Lazer is the brainchild of Diplo and Switch, two white DJs who decided Jamaican dancehall is where it’s at, and they needed to be in on it but had to have a cartoon black man as their front man. They get all this credit for being DJing geniuses and true to the Jamaican clubbing scene, but while I know that they’ve had a lot of black artists perform vocals on their recordings, it still feels a whole lot like appropriation. “Ooh, look, this is the authentic artistic scene! I will take it now!” It’s the ultimate hipster move.

Also, side note, Diplo’s an asshole. I don’t know if you heard about the M.I.A. interview with the New York Times Magazine last month, but basically, Lynn Hirschberg wrote a long feature article on how M.I.A. is politically naive, musically untalented, and a huge sellout. (Note, M.I.A.’s reaction to the article, Tweeting Hirschberg’s phone number, was not only wrong but dangerous — printing personal information opens people up to physical harm.) For the article, Hirschberg didn’t interview M.I.A.’s current boyfriend at all, but rather her ex, Diplo, who had quite a bit to say on how he basically made the best parts of M.I.A.’s records and she did nothing herself. As commenter Andy at comment 11 on this great Tiger Beatdown post notes, what kind of authority does Diplo have to make these kinds of statements as if they were facts? Why is his the last word as opposed to, I don’t know, M.I.A. herself? And she’s said more than once that she’s upset with Diplo getting all the credit for Kala, as if she weren’t heavily involved in its entire production. (If you’re interested, there are two more really great posts on this issue, one at Pitchfork and one at Change.org.) Diplo’s doing it again on M.I.A.’s latest (which he helped produce), distancing himself from it as it’s less successful than expected, and calling her unmotivated and untalented. Basically, I’d like Diplo to shut his asshole mouth and just make good beats.

Anyway! Pitchfork 2010! It was good times, and I had a lot of fun hanging out with friends, drinking my weight in water, and dancing along to music made for the joy of it. Check back next year to see who sounds good in 2011.

New Music Summer 2010 Mix

Well, I didn’t get any barbeque this holiday weekend, unfortunately, but I’m going to trust that you did, and therefore, as promised, here’s a bonus post for this week.

It’s your New Music Summer 2010 Mix! That’s not to say this music is all new; some of it is several years old. But it’s all new to me via one particularly music-savvy friend, Patrick (with the exception of the Michael Beauchamp track — he’s a Michigan artist and played my friend’s wedding). Patrick introduced me to a vast amount of new artists, and I’ve picked some of my favorites for a summer mix that starts out bouncy and bright in the park and meanders into sleepy and content on the porch. Enjoy!

(NB: Lala no longer exists and imeem is now owned by MySpace, so I currently have no way to play the mix for you, but I’ve included some videos to give you an idea. Please do go on out there and listen to the artists on their websites, and support with download/CD purchases.)

Oh Christine – The Cave Singers

Outside Looking In – Papercuts

Bernadette – Arrah and the Ferns

Masterplan – jj

Deadbeat Summer – Neon Indian

Orchard Fair – Wye Oak

Ruby Go Home – Thee Oh Sees

Love Is an Unfamiliar Name – The Duke Spirit

Brazen – Heartless Bastards

If We Can Land a Man on the Moon, Surely I Can Win Your Heart – Beulah

The Lucky Ones – Viva Voce

Sunday Noises – Califone

Golden Cloak – Marmoset

Buried in Teeth – Mariee Sioux

The Rest of the Day – Bedhead

Last Song of the Night – Michael Beauchamp

Light Up the Night – The Besnard Lakes

Your Spring Mix 2010

Greetings, dearest fellow travelers! It’s Just- spring, the trees are in bud, the ground’s squelching into mud, and the goat man’s afoot. Time for some tunes! Here’s your Spring Mix 2010. Guaranteed to have you warbling like the robins in the trees as you bounce down the street with daffodils in your hands and a grin on your face.

If you sign into Lala, you’ll be able to play the music and see how you like it (sorry, I can’t embed the playlist here; WordPress doesn’t support it): http://www.lala.com/#playlist/5493P107114

Spring in Your Step 2010

Warmer—Beulah
Laura—Girls
I Can’t See Nobody—Nina Simone
Be My Baby—Ronettes
Never Forget You—Noisettes
Love Me Til the Sun Shines—The Kinks
Two Weeks—Grizzly Bear
Louie—Ida Maria
Wanderlust King—Gogol Bordello
Holiday—Vampire Weekend
When Water Comes to Life—Cloud Cult
Ambling Alp—Yeasayer
Blue Sky—Joan Baez
Town Called Malice—The Jam
1901—Phoenix
We Came to Dance—The Gaslight Anthem
Searching for the Ghost—Heartless Bastards
I Wish, I Wish—Cat Stevens

Bonus: A (NSFW if your work is against nonsexual nudity) video for Yeasayer’s “Ambling Alp”:

Spotlight on… Emily

Dearest fellow travelers, you know I like to keep you apprised of good tunes. This here is another installment of Music You Might Very Well Enjoy, and it has the added benefit of being made by someone near and dear to me — my sister. My entire family is talented in many ways, and as I’ve mentioned before, we’re all musical. But today, let’s focus on Emily, the songwriter and performer among us. Dad taught Emily the guitar when she was in eighth grade, and only one year later, she’d written her first hit, “Whoever Said.” She’s been writing songs ever since, and performs at open mics and the like in whatever town she happens to live in, be it Ann Arbor, Avignon, or New York City.

I’m sure that writers of every kind get tired of being asked where they get their ideas, what they think about when they’re writing, and what their process is. The answers even remain mostly the same — ideas come from a small seed somewhere and get under the writer’s skin, the writer has to give over to what wants to be written when they’re sitting down with paper and pen, and they have a pretty good sense of when it’s working. But the variations on that theme are still interesting, and if you’re a writer yourself, often informative.

I asked Emily to write a bit about how she writes the wonderful songs she writes. I’ve included videos of some of my favorite tunes — “Release Me,” “For You,” and “A Story.” As she says, they’re all love songs, and they’re all ones you’ll want to listen to again and again. Enjoy!

“Songs — I like writing ’em and I like singing ’em.  I write the song that gets stuck in yer head; the one to which each person in the audience can relate.  My favorite kind of song is the one that makes your mom (or dad!) cry but it’s written right for you and your heart.  I like to write love songs — the love that grows, the love that changes, the love that ends.

“I’m no poet like Bob Dylan or Carole King but I write what I know and I write from experience.  So there isn’t a single song in my repertoire that doesn’t make me think of a person or an event or a potential or something like that.  I guess each song is its own story for my bag of memories.  Which is nice, as I have the worst memory in history so if I have something written down with a tune, I can carry that with me always.

“My songs are written in both ways — with words first or with music first, it really just depends.  Sometimes it depends on the challenge I’m setting for myself… whether I need to fit a certain chord progression in or rhythm… whether I’m trying out a new trick with finger picking or not.  Then I lace words into the music and figure out the song from there.  Other times I get a line (usually something cheesy) stuck in my head that runs in a loop until I finally get other lines to go with it.  Once that’s secured that’s when I’ll get out the guitar and see what fits with it.  Sometimes the melody I start with becomes the song’s chorus or bridge or it’s thrown out altogether for something completely different and that is so exciting.”

ETA: I can’t believe I didn’t get into this earlier, but watch the videos, because as good as Emily’s songs are (and they are good), they are transcendent when she sings them. Her voice is strong and beautiful, and although she prefers harmonizing over singing the melody in just about everything she sings, she sticks to the main tune in these videos.

Valentine’s Day 2010

For the past couple years, I’ve made my friends a Valentine’s Day mix CD. I am not attached to the “holiday” as such, so instead of anxiously hunting around town for a man to date so I have someone to buy me chocolates and flowers, I spend that time putting together a great mix of tunes instead. Past years have included a mix of all happy songs, and then a dual set of happy and sad love songs. I’ll post them another time.

But this year! Ladies and gents, I may not buy into Valentine’s Day as a special day for love and material possessions, but I am always willing to celebrate a day devoted to the S, the E, and the X. So I give you a mix that is devoted entirely to having a verrrry good time. Yes, it includes not only Barry White but also “Let’s Get It On,” and yes, it is as awesome and mood-setting as it seems. Enjoy!

BODIES: a sensual experience
Valentine’s Day 2010

Stay – Maurice & the Zendaks
Rockin’ Chair – Gwen McCrae
Can’t Take My Eyes Off of You – Lauryn Hill
Never Never Gonna Give You Up – Barry White
Feel Like Makin’ Love – Roberta Flack
Shake That Ass on the Dance Floor – Vicious Vicious
Let’s Get It On – Marvin Gaye
Your Love is King – Sade
So in Love – Curtis Mayfield
A Long Walk – Jill Scott
I’m Still in Love with You – Al Green
Your Ship – Enders Room
4 Leaf Clover – Erykah Badu
Inside My Love – Minnie Riperton
Smooth Operator – Sade
Didn’t I Blow Your Mind this Time – The Delfonics

Happy Valentine's Day! image courtesy of a Google image search

Literature is Everywhere

I’m researching my next blog post, and I have The Last Waltz on, when suddenly I’m in junior year of high school again: some dude is standing on stage between sets of The Band’s last concert, reciting the opening stanza of The Canterbury Tales in Middle English. Looks like it wasn’t just ELHS that assigned its students to commit Chaucer’s prologue to memory forever and ever. This man’s English teacher would be proud for spreading the literature love. “Whan that Aprill, with his shoures soote,” indeed.

By the way, this movie is as awesome as I’d heard. Joni secretly singing background vocals on Neil Young’s “Helpless” is my favorite so far.