Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Avril Lavigne reveals herself as the Ed Wood of Rock n' Roll


Have you ever seen a train wreck? Remember how you can't look away from the carnage? well I just watched Avril Lavigne's  music video for her new song Rock n' Roll… It was the same thing. Here’s a link to it. I want all of you to watch and listen to it, because thanks to Avril, I now hate the world and want all of you to be unhappy.

I have tried really hard this past year not to dish out too much judgment to musicians I don’t like, because I recently learned that girls don’t like it when you call their favorite “artists” vapid, Protools abusing, attention whores, but this particular crime against the senses clocked me like a surprise haymaker to the ear. So I just had to share that wonderful experience with you, my faithful readership of 6. 

You see, I expected it to suck. I watched it with the express intent of rolling my eyes and telling my buddies how bad I thought it was later. Wow… when I write it out that sound awful… Maybe I’m a bad person… but that isn’t really the point right now.

My point is; this song and it’s video are worse then awful. They are an abomination against rock, and I cannot stand by silently!

The music itself is standard Avril. Happy little pop punk guitars are drowned under a sea of electronic base and topped off by her trademark, “I’m a punk rock gurl, really, I promise!” whiney vocals.
It’s the same troupe she’s been using since whenever that Skater Boy song came out, and I can’t blame her, 'cuz it’s a formula that’s made her rich.

It’s just everything else about this song that pisses me off.

If you’ve clicked the link above and watched the video, you already know it starts with a couple of pointed jokes about the futility of pop songwriting and product placement.

At this point, in a tiny corner my mind where hope still lived, a small voice, barley perceivable, is whispering, “that was sort funny and self conscious, maybe this won’t suck after all.”

And then the hope center of my brain died.

What followed should have been glorious: a verbal assault pop music, an homage to rock n’ roll tradition and a comic book themed montage of bounty hunting babes with saw blade battle axe guitars.
HOW COULD THAT SUCK?
Oh, right. Its an Avril Lavigne video. It has all of the smarminess and self-righteousness of punk rock without any of the substance.

I'm not sure my heart could take it if I did a word for word analysis of her lyrics, but it was like she couldn’t even see the contradiction between the themes she wanted to address in this song verses her catty lyrics and soulless delivery.

I think Avril, or whomever writes her music, thought, “I’m going to turn the idea of the rock n’ roll anthem into a something terrible and pathetic and evil... like a sharkbear.”

The video even has a lesbian kiss… because of course there’s a lesbian kiss. After the incredibly self aware opening sequence, she says, "To hell with that crap, I want to be a pop tart again."

In the end, Avril Lavingne singing a rock anthem is a bit like Ed Wood film. She tried really, really hard, but there just no soul in the work and no ability to grasp the irony of her terrible creation.

A finial thought: I will be listening exclusively to Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley and The Rolling Stones for the next 24 hours just to get the feeling of auditory excrement from my ears and remind me what the hell this Rock n’ Roll stuff is supposed to be.

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Death

A few months back I got a bootleg copy of an album called For The Whole World To See. It’s a collection of proto-punk tunes written in the early 70s by trio of brothers who called their band Death.
It’s a pretty awesome album. Tighter then the Stooges, with a perfect balance of fury and melody, the brothers Hackney were obviously way ahead of their time.
When I first heard the album all I was told was that Death was were black dudes from Detroit playing rock n’ roll. For those of you who haven’t dedicated an unhealthy amount of their lifetime learning the history and impact of popular music, let me explain something: Black dudes from Detroit were not allowed to play rock n’ roll in the 70s… at least not if they wanted to make any money doing it.
Between their badass tunes, their flagrant middle finger to the established music scene of their day, and my admitted bias toward unheard of bands, Death soon became a personal favorite of mine.
The recent documentary, A Band Called Death, chronicled the amazing tale of the brothers’ journey from jamming in a tinny, second-story bedroom, to their short-lived bid for fame and subsequent break up, to the death of guitarist and visionary bandleader David Hackney, before finally culminating in the resurgence of their music in underground clubs and in private collections 35 years after its recording.
The last 20 minutes or so of the documentary show the band reformed and touring.
The surviving members are reportedly writing music for a new album, which I will buy and force all of my friends and family to listen to. 
It’s a great watch not only for the fact that it gave good press to one of rock n’ rolls best kept secrets, but also because it had the balls to show something few Rock Docs will: a story of faith.
Despite the fact that the Hackney brothers are now hailed as pioneers of Punk, where bands with names like Agnostic Front and Bad Religion, made their bones by mocking the religious institution, the Hackney brothers spoke openly about their salvation through Jesus Christ throughout the movie.
Whatever your views on religion, you have to admire their candor. The secular music industry isn’t exactly the friendliest place for “Christian musicians”
After all, for 60 years rock n’ roll in it’s purest form has been the anthem of rebels, a champion of social change and at all times a middle finger tossed in the face of whoever happened to be in charge. (Just for fun, here’s a clip of Frank Zappa sticking it to congress.)
So on one level it makes sense, if God is supposed to be in charge, rock music should stick it to him as well, right?
Maybe, but I get the feeling that most artists these days are just perpetuating the hate on religion thing because they feel it’s the thing to do, to which I reply, “Bhaa, Bhaa.”
That’s probably an unfair generalization, but I’m still going to give Death props for saying what they believe without fear or reservation. In my book that makes them some of the biggest punks out there. 

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Cycles


I’ve been listening to Queens of the Stone Age a lot lately. They’ve got an excellent new album out that has drawn me back into the band’s distinguished catalog. 

             Front man Josh Homme sways seamlessly between meathead menace and a sort of classy southwestern falsetto croon, the juxtaposition weirdly reminiscent of Jim Morrison.

            Homme’s voice sinuously, almost hypnotically weaves dark tales, like the serpent whispering honeyed lies into Eves innocent ear, while the band jams in a place between dirty grooves and grungy racket.
It’s good shit. 
Plus Make it Wit Chu unassailably cool, possibly the coolest song written so far this millennium.
It’s great to get back into a good band I haven’t really thought about in a while. It’s been a couple years now since I really listened to a QOTSA album all the way through, and its nice to be reminded that the modern hard rock genre isn’t a complete wash.
I tend to listen to music in cycles. There might be a six-month period where I’ll listen to the Stones every day, while changing the station every time the Beatles come on, because John’s voice is pissing me off for some reason. Then one day I’ll be in some pretentious coffee shop procrastinating on a writing assignment and hear Rocky Raccoon, after which I’ll listen to every Lennon/McCartney recording in a week. (I just want to go on record as saying Youtube has terrible videos for this song.)
 When I got Cage the Elephant’s first album I left it in my car stereo playing nothing else while driving for like 3 months straight. My senior year in high school I listened to either Pink Floyd’s The Wall or Dark Side of the Moon every single day.
Sometimes these temporary obsessions turn into ruts. I mean as awesome as Jeff Buckley was, one can only listen to his sole studio album so many times before going a little nuts.
Even so, I see my cyclical tastes as a good thing. Hell, it’s probably half the reason I know as much about music as I do. I obsess about a band for a couple weeks learn all I can about them and then move on for a bit.
After all I know I’ll be stuck on them again soon enough.
I wonder what I’ll be stuck on next to next.
I want to know what bands you obsess over. Have you listened to the entire Johnny Cash collection beginning to end? Can you Rap every Run DMC Lyric word for word? Tell me about it in the comments section.

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Art from an uneducated man’s prospective


For years I’ve made the joke that I can’t use a brush worth a damn, but I’ll paint you a masterpiece in prose. I’ve always said it tongue in cheek, because I’ve never really considered what I do art. In fact, if you had asked if I was even an art lover I’d probably have laughed.

I mean, I’m a working class guy. My family isn’t rich. I scraped by in high school, dropped out of community college, worked construction, washed dishes and enlisted in the Army.
In my worldview, blue-collar guys like me don’t “appreciate art.”
That’s ridiculous of course. Everybody “appreciates art.”









Ok, so the Smithsonian art museum in D.C. didn’t turn me on, (I  have no idea if this painter was brilliant or lazy) but I love music, and I love the written word, obviously both of these are art forms, though I never really thought of them as such.

I didn’t realize how much I truly loved art until I helped teach a basic photography class a few weeks ago.
 As a journalist I was responsible for taking all of the photos included in my news stories. At best, I’d consider myself a competent news photographer. I do not have the raw talent needed to become a truly great photographer, but after thousands of hours of practice and with a few disastrous shoots along the way, I can say with confidence that I will always get the shots I need. I worked my ass of to become as good as I am, and on occasion I’ll take a photo that I can be truly proud of.

It was in the midst of explaining this to a group of aspiring photographers that I realized what I do with a camera is art. 



My photos will probably never hang on the wall of a museum and I doubt anything I shoot will ever make me rich, but I know my pictures have made a lot of soldiers (and their mothers) happy. (By the by if anybody from papers in the Colorado springs area read this and need a writer or photographer, drop me a line. Experience in writing, photography and getting shot at.)


Isn’t the basic point of art to share beauty with the rest of the world? To express your feelings about everything that is going on in the world around us, maybe even ask a question.


That’s exactly what I try to do with my writing, its what I strive to do with my photos.
Maybe this revelation shouldn’t come as a surprise for me. On many occasions my editors or colleagues have rolled their eyes and called me an “artist” with air quotes due to my inability to stay emotionally detached from my work. 



After working as a writer for almost exactly 5 years now, with hundred of articles under my belt, I still get pissed every time an editor cuts into one of my stories, redirecting the narrative from what I feel it should be.
The way I see it, if I stop caring I’ll probably start writing crap. Maybe I should have listened to the haters, it seems I’ve been an artist all along.