Monday, November 10, 2008

Leisure Rock

Posted by Eric Grandy on Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 2:10 PM

Today, I found myself listening to Blur's Parklife on David Schmader's itunes (Schmader, though he wouldn't brag about it, has the best mp3 library in the Stranger offices, although it limits to five listeners a day, so you have to be early). It's the first time I've listened to the album in a bit, and it got me thinking about the grim economic (although politically hopeful) times we face and what that might mean for music. There is, of course, a popular notion that bad times—politically, economically, or otherwise—are necessary for great music, or at least that more great music comes out of such times. But I think that's bullshit, hindsight casting a nostalgic glow on the Reagan years because of punk rock and the like.

The '90s were, by most acounts, a great time to be American or British—dot coms and economic prosperity and rising tides blurring (urg) the disparity between haves and have nots, making even slacker jobs—say, civil service—relatively comfortable and attractive and bohemian; everyone could enjoy the bank holiday together. The guy who turned me on to Blur along with a host of other bands in the '90s, something of a mentor, seemed to perfectly exemplify this type: He worked a slacker job, had a great apartment on Capitol Hill, sported an Artists for a Work-Free America t-shirt and meant it, and just generally seemed like a man of leisure. And men of leisure need leisure rock like Blur. But it's hard to maintain a life of leisure in a great depression, and while we might get a lot of blistering punk rock in the coming years (or, shit, fingers crossed some green public works really will solve employment and environmental problems in one fell swoop), what will happen to the leisure rock of the world? Sure, the actually privileged leisure class may continue to make the stuff, but so what if us proles can't actually enjoy it? And what then to make of all this Blur reunion talk?

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Comments (8) RSS

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1
the 90s, by most accounts include a whole lot before dotcoms and the economic expansion. Like grunge and a slumping economy.
Posted by josh on November 10, 2008 at 3:06 PM
2
Okay, okay, the mid-to-late '90s I suppose? My experience with the early '90s economy consisted of a paper route.
Posted by Eric Grandy on November 10, 2008 at 3:11 PM
3
Just got back from "RocknRolla" thinking about how the best rock and roll uses elements of being a layabout/semi-criminal urban parasite. That vibe comes from the Stones' "Monkey Man" and even through their later period "Hang Fire." Ritchie picked it up for his three mod cons flicks, using The Stranglers and other dark bedsit nasties, and there is a whole milieu of people who knows that the stories The Specials tell on their first album is just as important and maybe a little more meaningful than the topics on most punk "classics." This is a bit off topic from where you're at, though, Eric, though I think there is some connection (Ritchie based his aesthetic in his own 90s Vrit slacker lifestyle, infused with 60s/late 70s fetishism). Oh, and the best punk rock was recorded BEFORE Reagan, so all that shit about adversity building musical character is ill-founded.
Posted by Chris Estey on November 10, 2008 at 5:03 PM
4
I lived in the Home Counties when Parklife came out, and it will forever be associated with preteen childhood goodness. Walking home with my cousin one day, his friends got into an argument over who was better, Blur or Oasis? I was the only kid who answered Blur, and nobody beat me up! London loves!
Posted by matt grundy rutledge on November 10, 2008 at 8:59 PM
5
Jim DeRogatis's terrific assessment of the press battle between Oasis and Blur is available in the new book "Rock & Roll Cage Match." Jim has some interesting assertions about class in it. Great read.
Posted by Chris Estey on November 11, 2008 at 3:42 AM
6
Essential reading: Jim DeRogatis chronicling the Blur-Oasis press "battle" in the 90s collected in the new "Rock & Roll Cage Match" book.
Posted by Chris Estey on November 11, 2008 at 3:51 AM
7
Wow, that's weird -- I thought my original comment had been eaten by the void so I tried it again. Forgive the repetition.
Posted by Chris Estey on November 11, 2008 at 3:52 AM
8
I love the way Blur tapped Mod icon Phil Daniels (Quadrophenia) for Parklife. For me, that just brings it all home.
Posted by K.C. Fennessy on November 11, 2008 at 11:39 PM

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