I love music reviews because they try and capture the ineffable / sketch out an interior world that can be lost by stream-of-consciousness listening of music. They are also inherently tied to the culture and have the task of connecting their writing to the context of the present which requires a keen social awareness & the knowledge of just a ton of details. I love this because I enter a world, not merely accumulating information. I see patterns, I see the world of music expand, see mentions of disco, funk, Al Green, as well as the literary world, Kafka, Hugo Ball, etc...
I see a lot of hate for this book which makes me question my unfiltered absorption of this book but I also find that the criticisms are beside the point. The criticism is that it is too esoteric or solipsistic, but I feel like the whole point of this review as stated by the author was to offer his interpretation of the album & his relation to it (which is what a lot of music appreciation is– why you like a song is for the large part subjective). This increases empathy for the music as well as increasing a new dimension of appreciation for it. The author is not beneath critiquing himself as well (and his younger self's initial opinions of the album). Also, this is an album by the Talking *Heads* after all... I think it is perfectly legitimate for an analysis to go deeper than the surface level. (Although the ultimate conclusion is to move your body, it takes a while to get there) Finally, isn't it a compliment if an author speaks to the reader as an equal, not having to labor over every explanation?
I may be praising the emperor's new clothes, but I think Lethem is sort of a genius writer. I appreciate the 33 1/3 series b/c each album review has a different author and a completely flexible format, chosen by the author, or should I say, auteur. Auteur Lethem weaves the analysis of each song with interspersed chapters which take a step back to address questions concerning the album and artist. His power is metaphor, which is never ambling, but builds different structures, immersing the reader using second person, whether he is speaking of the album cover's texture or song's soundscape. He can speak to abstract ideas such as the mind but deft with describing what he personally enjoys about the music, while also in constant dialogue with the views of his younger teenage self who initially got into the album. Yet he does not present his opinions matter-of-factly but builds his arguments with logical fluency, considering opposing points of view. This stuff is seriously multidimenisonal!! He has such a great arsenal of vocabulary at hand, none of it vain, superfluous, or hackneyed but serving to serve the images of his work. Aka the author's got an actual voice!!!
I think the core of the author's love for FoM is this very art punk sensibility of a desire for clever, sharp social commentary, no BS, and the purity of fear. Yeah, a particular 'brand of fear...mingled in your environment and neural habitat simultaneously...[resembling] thought itself' (137) with the idea that b/c this band knew this fear, it 'reconquer[ed] those dark towers' (136). I saw hints especially contrasting his mention of the gimmicky science fiction of ELO v.s. the keen analysis of the future by the Talking Heads (also see the 'skeletal ferocity' Gang of Four). This shows that the music of this album is not just music but tied to a specific emotional disposition (fear). Apparently, when this disposition became divorced from the artists, the performance of the music lost their true meaning. But inevitable, because artists can change, they are people. It has something to do with the integrity of music, something like that.
Although I heartily prefer TH's later stuff as they got bigger, especially the jubilant sounds of Speaking in Tongues, I can now appreciate/recognize the darker cousin, the apotheosis of the foursome with FoM (and the apotheosis of their punk). Though, the author would think my artful appreciation a violation of truly 'getting it.'
Overall, the book is a bit dense, I admit, but I read on with the feeling that I was circling the parameters of something really alive and marvelous, multifaceted. Dense like a cake not like a textbook. And I actually got the album. Sort of.
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Dilution of the song summaries: the journey (from p.134):
'I Zimbra' (no-mind, non-sense)
'Mind' (not a working number)
'Paper' (old methods doubtful)
'Cities' (flee, dance)
'Life during Wartime' (quit dancing, find barricades)
'Memories Can't Wait' (party and war are in your mind)
'Air' (no release on earth)
'Heaven' (release from mind only in death)
'Animals' (no dignity in bodily release)
'Electric Guitar' (doubt rock)
'Drugs' (f up the mind)
Epiphanies:
'I didn't want to write about FoM, I wanted to write FoM. Once begun, I found that the more I invited other stories inside that LP-sized circle...the less I was able to make my own language for what I heard. In our age of information and access, getting off-line is already a commodity...What's less clearly valued...is the value of what Donald Barthelme called 'not knowing': the manifold mercies of ignorance when setting out to do or say nearly anything.' (12)
'If writing about music is, in Frank Zappa's memorable phrase, 'dancing about architecture'...then the act of analyzing lyrics is self-incrimination for that crime, the writer being drawn to the writerly aspect of his subject matter: dancing about the blueprints, instead of the building...Yet an interest in language, in names, categories, and concepts is more than a writer's tropism– it's a human one.' (34)
Keen analysis of music:
'Yet as much as its obnoxiously dry lyrics begs to be taken literally, even 'Big Country' contains a trace of back-door negotiation with what it denounces: the slide guitar, a self-conscious gesture for a punk or even new wave band in 1978...The slide-guitar can be taken two ways: a satirical gesture, furthering the song's atmosphere of scorn by framing a sound that's emblematically 'corny,' or a preemptive musical apology for the slight' (41) Can we talk about the metaphor 'back-door negotiation'??!! D; so good
'Is FoM science fiction? Sure, but only because Kafka is too, and the entire twentieth century. And no, not at all, since... it barely glances at the iconography, the kit of endearing devices and ingrown references.'
'But the sound preceding, the sound of that struggle just before it was solved, generated a field of meanings with an unstable but permanent power.'
'Yet mean and scary as things want to be, the whole drama is enacted within a sympathetic amplitude which keeps clear of 'Animals' territory. Bottom line: he gets the joke – the joke of subjectivity, the joke of paranoia, the inside-outside problem of trying to make an effective observation of anything in particular when the specimens keeps shifting and sliding under the microscope, and the lens keeps reflecting your own face back to you.' (129) Also the prose/metaphor in this.... !!!!!
–really fascinating to read about the Dada-like, 'Frankenstein'-like construction of 'Drugs' btwn Byrne & Eno
Prose (general & in ref to music):
'The names of the downtown nightclubs 'CBGB' and 'Mudd Club' are parochial chocolate chunks lodged in the widescreen allegorical peanut butter.'
'In a world of radio formats and movie soundtracks and headline writers seeking to sound cool, these artifacts float loose of their album surroundings, to drift even beyond the band's name and fame into a constellation of context-reduced cultural 'things' burnished by use as non- or semi-sequiturs...While these could never plausibly exhibit a coherent relation to one another, all feed talismanic juice back to the phrase's source.'
'[the guitar is] laughable, yet, in its modularity as a figure floating in aural vacuum, the squiggle points forward to the spatial palace of 'Drugs.' There, such lost sounds will act less as distress calls than as a kind of mental sonar, taking measure of an uncannily vast interior.' !
'The producer clears out all distortions to frame the little guffaw in sonic clarity, as if the singer had managed to stick his head out a window and gargle with a mouthful of fresh air.'