"People who write about music are just bitter that they themselves can't play it."

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I saw a quote to this effect on another message board yesterday. What do ILXors feel about it: *are* music scribes merely frustrated musicians?

Personally, I write about music because it's where my skills lie - now that I've tried to write/perform music myself, I know how hard it is to actually come up with something good. At the same time, I don't think you need to know a note of music to be able to determine a recording's strengths and weaknesses.

Comments?

mike a (mike a), Thursday, 20 February 2003 15:50 (twenty-two years ago)

Such sentences usually translate as: "People who write about music are just bitter because they themselves don't agree with me."

Marcello Carlin (Grade 8 piano, Grade 8 clarinet), Thursday, 20 February 2003 15:55 (twenty-two years ago)

I agree.

Nick Southall (Once strummed an 'e' chord on a guitar when pissed) (Nick Southal, Thursday, 20 February 2003 15:56 (twenty-two years ago)

Are sports writers just frustrated atheletes? Are theatre critics frustrated actors? Are art critics frustrated painters?

It just seems to be the knee-jerk reaction from an artist who can't handle constructive critiscism of their work.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Thursday, 20 February 2003 15:56 (twenty-two years ago)

So is it just the eternal artist v/ critic war playing itself out on a smaller field? Could be.

mike a (mike a), Thursday, 20 February 2003 15:57 (twenty-two years ago)

If criticism was meant to be purely 'constructive' then ppl wouldn't sign their name to it

dave q, Thursday, 20 February 2003 15:59 (twenty-two years ago)

that's actually backwards: musicians are just frustrated critics and are bitter because they can't write theses

M Matos (M Matos), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:01 (twenty-two years ago)

i think there IS an element of truth to the quote though...there can't be many music writers (or indeed sports writers, theatre critics and art critics) out there who didn't at some earlier point want to be the subject written about rather than the one WRITING about...most of them realised they didnt quite have what it takes or they decided it would be a better life writing about it for whatever reasons?

i do love it when critics end up becoming the artists written about though and do a fantastic job of it (i never read Neil Tenant's reviews but i doubt they were as good as the Pet Shop Boys pop music)

stevem (blueski), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:02 (twenty-two years ago)

Are sports writers just frustrated atheletes? Are theatre critics frustrated actors? Are art critics frustrated painters?

Would it be pique if I said "yes"?

Note: frustrated /= pathetic

Amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:02 (twenty-two years ago)

personally i find it a bit weird when you have music critics who don't have SOME musical ability themselves or at least believe they do when they dont

stevem (blueski), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:03 (twenty-two years ago)

i never liked the 'those who can do those who can't teach' statement though, its such an insult

stevem (blueski), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:04 (twenty-two years ago)

Playing music is about the only aspect of being a successful pop musician I don't envy!

I have occasionally wanted to try making music (in the same way as I sort of wish I could cook more) but I've honestly never wanted to make records or 'be a musician'.

Tom (Groke), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:04 (twenty-two years ago)

I definitely think there's a grain of truth to it. I realized at an early age I had more of a way with words than songs, so I started a zine instead of a band. Of course, doing a halfway-decent zine is hard work, too...just like a halfway-decent record.

mike a (mike a), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:04 (twenty-two years ago)

Actually that isn't strictly true - if there's one record-maker I admire/envy it's Paul Morley when he masterminded ZTT, Art of Noise, Frankie etc. I think that was a one-off opportunity but I think I wouldn't have had the guts to take it, too, and I envy that.

Tom (Groke), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:07 (twenty-two years ago)

i quite admire Tony Wilson for the same reasons...but does the man have any artistic ability or was he just born a svengali/critic? surely not...

stevem (blueski), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:10 (twenty-two years ago)

and judging by Steve Lamacq's book, with him it was a case of realising/believing he couldnt be a musician very early on so jumping into the sports and music-writing as the next best thing - i guess thats what most do

stevem (blueski), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:13 (twenty-two years ago)

People who criticize people who write about music are just bitter that they can't write about it themselves.

nabisco (nabisco), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:15 (twenty-two years ago)

It's funny, because the statement could have a ring of truth to it if not for the "bitter" part -- why assume they're bitter? What if they just like music and like being involved in it? What if, at some early point, they figure out that they're better at talking about it than actually doing it, and they happily run with that?

nabisco (nabisco), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:16 (twenty-two years ago)

Nabisco is OTM. I think most people who write about a given art form do or did have some frustrated inclincations to making art themselves. But not everyone has the talent or temperament to do so. And it goes without saying that many or most artists would not have the talent or temperament to be critics. I guess the more relevant question is whether you hold art-making about criticism.

Amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:19 (twenty-two years ago)

"Frustrated" meaning, abortive or unfulfilled. Agreed that this does not mean pathetic or bitter.

Amateurist (amateurist), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:19 (twenty-two years ago)

no one should ever feel guilty for registering a feeling they had while experiencing a piece of music/a film/book/cookie wrapper/delete as necessary

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:20 (twenty-two years ago)

Bollocks! (first time I've ever used this word.)

I would have sorta agreed with this a few years ago, but Tom & FT opened my eyes. Tom wrote something a couple of years ago, mabye it was on Blue Lines, I'm not sure, about why criticism matters & that essay changed my thinking. I can't remember the details, but it had something to do with criticism making private thoughts public, as a way to share experiences about something that you find terribly important (music, in this case.) Wanting to write about something that makes you happy & makes you think doesn't mean that you want to "be" that thing! It's about engaging with the music instead of the personality behind it (although the latter can be fun, too.)

Mark (MarkR), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:20 (twenty-two years ago)

I think being both musician AND music critic would completely hamper your ability to remain objective when assessing someone else's work.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:20 (twenty-two years ago)

I make WAAAAAAAY more money writing about it than I would playing it, yo.
And I make a lot of money, whoo-hoo. Lots.

Horace Mann (Horace Mann), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:22 (twenty-two years ago)

I have artistic inclinations and they're frustrated and I'm bitter about them but it's not to do with music. If I'm being absolutely 3-in-the-morning honest with myself I would like to write creatively but don't have the self-belief/balls to do so I write (because writing is what I like doing) but stick with writing about music because it's what I'm used to.

(Also I think it's worthwhile and fun etc etc)

Tom (Groke), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:24 (twenty-two years ago)

Who is this masked (Horace) Mann?

Mark (MarkR), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:24 (twenty-two years ago)

It's Jim DeRogatis Mark. He denies it but we all know.

Tom (Groke), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:26 (twenty-two years ago)

I think being both musician AND music critic would completely hamper your ability to remain objective when assessing someone else's work.

But doesn't this only to apply to someone who's noticeably successful at both? I think loads of people both play music and write about it: the difference is just that one of those activities actually goes somewhere and the other doesn't.

nabisco (nabisco), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:30 (twenty-two years ago)

If anything, I'm more frustrated that my music-writing-whor-o-rama takes too much time away from my *serious* writing. But as of yet, no one's willing to pay me for my fiction, nor do I have the time between interviewing hosebag rocko's to develop the kind of human interest features I used to be really good at.
But I will be making my stand-up debut before June.

I refuse to address any further DeRogatissorrie allegations

Horace Mann (Horace Mann), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:31 (twenty-two years ago)

Things that can "completely hamper your ability to remain objective when assessing someone else's work": what the weather's like, what you had for breakfast, whether it's Monday or Friday, what your lover likes, whether you have a lover right now, what you read the day before, etc etc.

Tom (Groke), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:33 (twenty-two years ago)

I have had that phrase spit back at me often during my now-dormant "career" in music criticism/journalism, and somehow it surprises me every time. I mean, I understand why people say it (the defensive tone is a dead giveaway), but I was hopeless at guitar lessons and piano lessons--I hated to practice. I had those jumping-around-on-the-bed-playing-tennis-racket-guitar moments like most kids, I guess, but I think even then I realized they were no more likely to result in tangible reality than fantasies about being a super-spy or some such. From the 5th grade on, I was all about writing. The fact that I also happened to be obsessed with music simply gave me something to write about obsessively.

Lee G (Lee G), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:37 (twenty-two years ago)

Actually, I suppose it is true that I make a heck of a lot of money from music writing. I just got my 1099 form for my AMG work for last year -- yow.

Anyway, I'm frustated only in the sense that I have no patience and would like all the random songs and noises in my head to appear perfectly mastered and ready to go without me having to do anything else. But I have no patience, so I'll just write.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:46 (twenty-two years ago)

I've always been obsessed with music (or whatever pop-cultural thing occupied the better part of my imagination for the years between 8 and 13, comics, baseball, movies, TV, whatever) but I wanted to be a writer from the time I was five years old. Reading old-school crits (you know the names) excited me just as much as discovering Dylan/Beatles/Prince/James Brown/techno/whatever did, because they were so close to the way I thought about things and I identified with them more than I did with most of the musician-interviews I also read. I liked those, too, but it was so much more entertaining to read people go to bat for what they loved, or disparage what they didn't like. And it was probably closer to my reality, since I was always extremely opinionated and not at all interested in learning technique in re: anything at all. (My early writing career was a horribly disfiguring time since I had no fucking discipline and it took me the better part of a year to gain some. Thanks again to my editors for putting up with me.)

Side question: I've long had a pet theory that Siskel & Ebert's TV show is one reason there's such a glut of culture critics right now. (The other, obviously, is the glut of culture itself.) For an opinionated kid who liked to talk about what I liked and why I liked it at length, it was my favorite TV show. Any other critics have this experience, or something like it?

M Matos (M Matos), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:48 (twenty-two years ago)

Since when can't you comment about something you're not proficient on? I guess I can't weigh in on that botched transplant at Duke University Hospital because I'm not a doctor.
Frankly, I've always felt that non-musicians have more interesting and unbiased things to say about music than do the "artists" themselves. Musicians are especially tedious and boring when they attack critics. Funny, I never hear them complain when they get good reviews.

Jazzbo (jmcgaw), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:48 (twenty-two years ago)

"That four-star rating TOTALLY missed the point!"

Horace Mann (Horace Mann), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:50 (twenty-two years ago)

right, and you're NOT derogatis...

gregory caught, Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:51 (twenty-two years ago)

I think the trick is that anything you do -- making music, being a music critic, cooking, etc. -- can be raised to an "artform" if you're really dedicated, passionate and talented enough. The "hack" aspect of music criticism (like all criticism) might come from the whole frustrated pop star/musician aspect. I can think of many times when music critics fall into the whole enamored with their ability to dicate taste, or think that they are -- but that's no different than a musician/pop star who's lost the plot and is just going thru the motions.

Anyway, if this were true, than musicians would make the best music critics. As said above, I'm also not sure if they do.

Aaron W (Aaron W), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:53 (twenty-two years ago)

I was a musician first, became a music critic by accident. I'm frustrated that I'm not BETTER at being a music critic, so perhaps I am jealous, yes.

Sorry, I've been thinking about this a lot lately, it's part of the focus of my next column (well, that and being offered sexual favours for reviews) - WHY am I not better at writing about the people who MAKE music rather than the music itself, why am I shit at being on the receiving end of interviews, stuff like that.

I guess what I find more annoying are music crits who are frustrated *writers* themselves rather than people who geniunely love and want to gush about music. Though some of my fave critics ever have fallen into this category.

I can't concentrate and I've not had any lemsip in too long so I can't really comment.

kate, Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:54 (twenty-two years ago)

my personal perspective is i love music and am not bad at writing (though my posts on ILM may not indicate that much) but as a lover of music I also want to MAKE it and I have dabbled in that just as much as I have with the writing. if i hadnt been so (perhaps more) interested in art and design then maybe i would be writing a lot more and be getting paid for a music critic - i think to make music requires a GREATER plunge in a way, you have to work at it 24/7 to really make it for years - i couldnt cut off my other interests to the extent where i could pursue music to the appropriate level so it will always now just be an amateur hobby rather than a profession - and that goes for music writing too now i guess

stevem (blueski), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:57 (twenty-two years ago)

I can play music and sometimes write about it. And if could make any kind of living playing my music, I would drop my day job and do it. However, I would probably still write about music because it's fun (though probably not as frequently as I do now).

dleone (dleone), Thursday, 20 February 2003 16:58 (twenty-two years ago)

When you sip coffee in a restaurant after a fantastic meal, do you feel bitter and angry because you can’t cook something as tasty? Or do you think, “That was a great meal – I’d like to come back here again & maybe I’ll tell my friends about it”?

Mark (MarkR), Thursday, 20 February 2003 17:00 (twenty-two years ago)

I usually go back to the kitchen and bitchslap the cook if I really like something. Put his hand on the stove or something, really fuck that sous-chef up.

Horace Mann (Horace Mann), Thursday, 20 February 2003 17:02 (twenty-two years ago)

Maybe Horace Mann is Mark David Chapman?

Mark (MarkR), Thursday, 20 February 2003 17:06 (twenty-two years ago)

And then the chef says, "You're just jealous because you can't cook the same meal." And he posts on the Sous-Chef message board about what an asshole I am.

mike a (mike a), Thursday, 20 February 2003 17:06 (twenty-two years ago)

sous chefs of the world, cower!

M Matos (M Matos), Thursday, 20 February 2003 17:07 (twenty-two years ago)

I never mentioned this in public before, but I'm in the Residents. My band is hugely popular, with critics, at least, so obviously I'm not frustrated and bitter about my lack of success. Despite all this, writing about music, not playing it, is where it's at. Take it from me, one of the guys in the Residents.

Mark (MarkR), Thursday, 20 February 2003 17:13 (twenty-two years ago)

As another member of the Residents, I now have to ask why you're blowing your cover.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 20 February 2003 17:16 (twenty-two years ago)

matos OTM about siskel & ebert, at least in my experience

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 20 February 2003 17:18 (twenty-two years ago)

I think people who have experience making music are going to listen to music differently than people who only know the listening mode. I think it helps to have an understanding of how music is actually made. Of course, there are lots of different kinds of music that are made in different ways, so it helps to have experience with the particular kind that you are reviewing. Some types of music naturally appeal more to people with an interest in the craft of music - such as jazz and prog - because the structures are more complex. It would be hard for someone to review that type of music without at least some background, unless they're just going to review it as a sociological phenomena, but that seems rather reductive, and you end up with something like "Wow, check out those muso nerds" - which is not very enlightening. On the other hand, in other types of music, chops are secondary at best, and attitude, image, lyrics, etc. take the front seat. These kinds of music require a different critical approach. Needless to say, there is a lot of grey area in between these types, and there is room in criticism for different approaches. However, perhaps the more "sociological" critics have a reflexive tendency to disdain "technical" music and the "technical" critics likewise disdain the music that gets over on attitude and style.

o. nate (onate), Thursday, 20 February 2003 17:19 (twenty-two years ago)

As another member of the Residents, I now have to ask why you're blowing your cover.

He's jealous that he never made the top 40 -- just like all the phonies making "avant garde" music. Avant garde a clue is more like it.

dleone (dleone), Thursday, 20 February 2003 17:19 (twenty-two years ago)

before i start,i should point that both in terms of my technical knowledge of music (none whatsoever) and my understanding of the more theoretical/philosophical side of criticism i am completely out of my depth here,so excuse me if what i say makes little sense,but i have a few comments...

amateurist,i don't think you should apologise for your stance,i actually wanted to here more from your point of view

i think the problem is that your view was instantly set up as the opposite of dan/neds,ie you either have to listen to music completely in isolation,or know consider it in terms of how it was created,etc,so there was no room left for anyone to express a more moderate opinion (such as mine)
i certainly agree that you shouldn't have to know about an artist to enjoy their music,but i also think that you shouldn't insist that the only way to listen to music is to know nothing about the circumstances it is created it
basically my point is that you don't have to take an ideological stance when listening to music-it is possible to listen to ludacris and not give a fuck about how the music came about,what the creators thought about it,or even to completely disagree with their worldview and still enjoy the music,but it is also possible to listen to the velvet underground and find the scene they were part of interesting,be interested in what the band have to say for themselves,etc

fuck while i was writing this nabisco made my point more succinctly,but i suppose i may as well post it anyway

robin (robin), Friday, 21 February 2003 00:06 (twenty-two years ago)

another quick question-is there any type of music that you think requires some sort of technical knowledge,and if so does this make the music better or worse
i mean,i have no knowledge whatsoever about the technical side of music,and no capacity for understanding it,so i wouldn't,for instance,know an interesting time signature or chord progression if it announced it presence using a klaxon,a blackboard,and a diagram drawn in multi coloured crayons
so am i missing out?

i got the impression while reading the liner notes of an ornette coleman cd that i was,or at least that the person writing them enjoyed the music in a completely different way to me,but were they just describing what i heard technically,or,as i suspected,were they getting more pleasure from the music as an intellectual exercise for those in the know that just from the sound of it?

robin (robin), Friday, 21 February 2003 00:11 (twenty-two years ago)

To use a screwdriver (which can be used for many non-screw-related purposess, such as prying the lid off the jam jar and poking out someone's eye) you don't have to know that it was designed for screwing screws in and out, but you might want to know this anyway. And if you review it by saying "This sucks: I tried to open four bottles with it, only got one of them open, and jabbed my arm in the process. C MINUS," you probably haven't written the most insightful review.

I can't imagine reading the posts on this thread and not in some at least rudimentary and often unconscious way picking up clues about what the posters are trying to say and what they make of the world that they're trying to say it in. And it's natural to do this with music as well as writing, again often unconsciously (as in watching a movie scored by Ennio Morricone and unconsciously learning as the movie goes on that some of the "sweet" sounds signal dangerous events in the offing). But this doesn't mean you should write about this in reviewing music. But knowing something of the music's world of origin (esp. if that world is far different from your own, e.g. Sun Ra's) doesn't exclude your thinking (and concentrating on) how to use it in your own; in fact, might enrich your doing so. So these aren't separate "approaches."

Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Friday, 21 February 2003 00:28 (twenty-two years ago)

one thing i find interesting is that i recently read a (very)basic introduction to literary theory,and was quite put off by the emphasis on the 'text' as being autonomous,whereas while,as i said above,i dont think music has to be listened to in a vacuum, so to speak, the idea that it can be doesn't strike me as so ridiculous

robin (robin), Friday, 21 February 2003 00:32 (twenty-two years ago)

As for the original question, the only way I can see some writer being bitter because he himself can't play music is if you take "can't" as meaning "not allowed to." So if a musician thinks he's really good but can't get gigs because no one will book him, and meanwhile he earns money writing about music, he could be bitter and this could affect his writing (not necessarily in a bad way; this guy could be a great bitter critic, even if he's always thinking, "This shit got recorded, while my work languishes").

Frank Kogan (Frank Kogan), Friday, 21 February 2003 00:37 (twenty-two years ago)

I think it comes down to a difference of temperament. Musicians are activists embracing action, writers are slovenly and contemplative and think too much to have the balls to dedicate themselves to the activity of making music. There are less risks involved in writing about it.

But in both pursuits, there is not so much the haves and have-nots (talent) but a sliding scale and different proficiencies at different things. The cream rise and the dregs are shat upon and the majority are just plain mediocre.

(Mediocre guitarist/songwriter/critic)

jizzmeister, Friday, 21 February 2003 03:40 (twenty-two years ago)

Frank, your analogy post doesn't make sense. How would listening to an Ennio Morricone score on your stereo tell you that something dangerous is about to happen in the film it comes from when the "sweet" music plays? Furthermore, in general a musical soundtrack is there to enhance the movie rather than the movie being there to enhance the soundtrack; what are you getting out of that situation beyond a better understanding of nonverbal cues in the movie? Also, what does the soundtrack's use in the movie tell you about the composer and the environment he is in? It's a completely different context from the one being debated (namely, you must understand the musician's intent and personal context in order to form a valid opinion on their music).

Maybe I'm making an artificial distinction between "a review" and "an article", but when I read a review, I only want to know what the music sounds like. I read articles to get artist background, context, intent, etc. It maybe be that for the people who write them, the only difference between a review and an article is the word count.

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Friday, 21 February 2003 03:43 (twenty-two years ago)

I just realized I anticipated Dan's response in one of my patented parenthetical posts, to wit:


(I.e. why do I cry when I hear this particular drum fill? Where does that drum fill come from? What cultural baggage or physiological impact does it carry with it that might explain my response? I mean, the brain is not a passive receptacle. We are always striving to "understand" what we're hearing/viewing even if it doesn't come out as criticism per se.)

More later. I need to make dinner.

Amateurist (amateurist), Friday, 21 February 2003 04:27 (twenty-two years ago)

This seems like the right thread to post a thought I had the other day: There IS a wrong way to listen to music. For example, as an appropriate soundtrack to conduct mass murder to. Which is to say we pass moral judgements on what people do, and b y implication on music to the extent it is suited for, calls to mind certain activities. Intent is part of this as well, because we pass judgement on music based on why it was made and have to decide if the intent of the creator is the same as what was produced, or maybe how they differ.

An argument for the "right" way to listen to music is an argt. for the "right" way to live, and an argt. over the intentions of a creator is similar. And for people to listen to music, I think they're constantly if not consciously making judgements about the "right" way to listen and constructing a view of the creator as well (otherwise pop personalities wouldn't be such an issue). But also I agree with chuck that process and product are different (but this can a lso be "how did they get that cool squelchy sound" and product can also be the personality we see as opposed to the chain-smoking hard-swearing unglamerous whatever offstage) and also I agree with frank that the two are inseperable, and knowing what the a rtist was trying for is a hellova shortcut to getting a bead on what you can try to get out of it.ˇˇ

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Friday, 21 February 2003 06:31 (twenty-two years ago)

There IS a wrong way to listen to music. For example, as an appropriate soundtrack to conduct mass murder to.

Buffalo Bill had the wrong idea the whole time??

Ned Raggett (Ned), Friday, 21 February 2003 06:32 (twenty-two years ago)

There IS a wrong way to listen to music. For example, as an appropriate soundtrack to conduct mass murder to.

no, that's an inappropriate way to conduct yourself as a human being.

M Matos (M Matos), Friday, 21 February 2003 10:52 (twenty-two years ago)

I loved writing because it combined two things I loved: promoting (selling) and music.

nathalie (nathalie), Friday, 21 February 2003 11:35 (twenty-two years ago)

Amateurist, the "cultural baggage or emotional response" you're talking about is coming from you, not the music.

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Friday, 21 February 2003 13:06 (twenty-two years ago)

Amateurist, the "cultural baggage or emotional response" you're talking about is coming from you, not the music.
-- Dan Perry

Fair enough, Dan, but is there the same kind of inborn faculty that hears certain combinations of notes/rhythms as a psychological grammar, just as we seem to be born with an ability to appreciate grammar itself (I'm no Chomsky expert, but this appears to be a pretty accepted insight)? So when I listen to something like one of those bossa nova tunes, that incessant chromaticism evokes a response in me that comes from me and not the music? Explain...

frank p. jones (frank p. jones), Friday, 21 February 2003 13:52 (twenty-two years ago)

This thread is really interesting to read as a muso whose never aspired to write about music.

The closest I've ever come was being really high one night and writing random imageries and word-clusters to a live Medeski Martin and Wood recording. If only my abstract prose had turned out as well as their version of King Sunny Ade's "Moti Mo".

nickalicious (nickalicious), Friday, 21 February 2003 14:05 (twenty-two years ago)

There are some people who really love rock music, while others love dance music. Why?

If you can answer that question, Frank, I think you've answered the question you've posed towards me.

The intent of the musician is best communicated where the musician and the audience share a context; remove that context and the audience will often interpret the music in a manner that has very little to do with what the musician/composer/songwriter intended. Extending that to musicians and critics isn't a vast logical step, IMO, and can be very valuable for the musician to see how people outside of his/her context will react to the music.

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Friday, 21 February 2003 14:40 (twenty-two years ago)

Dan--

So if I listen to Jobim--he's my current obsession--on a winter day in Buffalo, I'm going to interpret what he does, formally, in a different way than I would if I were on the beach at Leblon, or at Destin for that matter? Do you think place is a part of context (dancefloor vs. living room)? So, music as a shared experience--those rednecks went nuts, smashed up the place, when the DJ played techno instead of Skynyrd!--is what you're talking about? OK, but now we're talking about social interaction and not music, because if you listen to music objectively, which is fairly impossible, why would you get angry because something has a different beat than the one you expected?...if someone did something very dance-oriented about a place called The Jug and girls named Linda Lou, what would happen then? I do think that perhaps we're all better off with a little demystification of the rock experience, and an awareness of historical context, but then it wouldn't be fun any more, you wouldn't have rock to begin with if Scotty Moore really understood how to play the guitar...and had a "context" beyond his very limited understanding of "jazz" or "blues" or "country." So, we're back at the whole "inspired primitive" approach to things which is fairly resistant to any analysis and which, once removed from its context, is revealed to be...what?

I agree with you, Dan, but I'm just trying to think of some real-life situations in which we put the idea of "context" to the test.


frank p. jones (frank p. jones), Friday, 21 February 2003 16:04 (twenty-two years ago)

Whenever I hear a musician say the quote of this thread, I immediately lower my expectations for whatever will follow it. Over the years, it's saved me a lot of exasperation.

It doesn't matter than I can read music, play scales on a half dozen instruments, studied music theory in undergrad, played (albeit offhandedly) in bands, etc. I've never had the ambition to be a professional musician, but it doesn't mean that I can't play it. BFD. The only reason I write about it professionally is because I love music and want to share my enthusiasm about it with others. Which hopefully, is exactly the same reason a professional musician would want to make a career out of it.

don weiner, Friday, 21 February 2003 16:11 (twenty-two years ago)

I don't follow how you went from "social context" to "location".

My point (which has been shifting as the discussion has gone on) is really that a musician's intent is going to be clearest to people who share a context (ie, are on the same page) with him/her. People outside of that context are less likely to "get it" and will bring references that hadn't occurred to the musician to the music. All of this was an attempt to address Shakey's point about critics missing the point when they point out "obvious influences" that the bands in question have never heard; the fact that that wasn't the musician's intent does not preclude it from coming across to the critic and the fact that the musician didn't intend the similarity doesn't automatically mean that the similarity isn't there.

But to answer your new questions, I think place can be a big part of context but isn't necessarily tied to it; for example, I listen to a ton of dance music but I never go out to clubs. Hearing a piece of music in a new or unexpected location can change the way you think about it and how you react to it, but that doesn't have to happen (and, in fact, it rarely happens to me at least in terms of how I view the music; usually the way I feel about the place I'm in is changed by hearing a particular song there, not the other way around).

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Friday, 21 February 2003 16:17 (twenty-two years ago)

Dan, this is ex. what I'm talking about re. "complex interaction of historical [i.e. "why do I like techno and not calypso?"] and cognitive factors"... I think we're actually agreeing.

Amateurist (amateurist), Friday, 21 February 2003 16:57 (twenty-two years ago)

Ha, wouldn't be the first time that's happened to me.

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Friday, 21 February 2003 16:59 (twenty-two years ago)

very much off topic, but I hate it when I stumble onto a thread that interests me but I'm several hours too late. Happens all the time, and I'm not willing to wade through 175 posts or so to get the gist.
But just to briefly address an earlier point. I make my living as a sports writer, but I've never aspired to be a professional athlete.

Bruce Urquhart (Bruce Urquhart), Saturday, 22 February 2003 06:44 (twenty-two years ago)

I know how ya feel, Bruce.

Alex in NYC (vassifer), Saturday, 22 February 2003 08:17 (twenty-two years ago)

God, I completely know what you mean, Bruce. It's like saying, "Jeez, Warren Moon can't throw anymore," and being attacked by a bunch of people who are all saying, "Well, I'd like to see YOU do it." As if that's my job. As if I have no right to expect more from Warren Moon. As if, as if, as if.

For the record, I don't even own an acoustic guitar. But I damn well know good music when I hear it.

Kenan Hebert (kenan), Saturday, 22 February 2003 08:20 (twenty-two years ago)

one year passes...
I stumbled on this thread too fucken late too, and I'm annoyed because I'm in the minority on ILM as a musician who isn't a critic/music writer. So it sucks I came into the room late, and it sucks I don't have some great wisdom to impart from "the other point of view."

For the record, I don't even own an acoustic guitar. But I damn well know good music when I hear it.

At the risk of starting up the tedious discussion of "what is art," I'm of the opinion that music is meant to be heard, and therefore anybody with a functioning sense of hearing is technically qualified to be a critic. (Whether or not they're a good writer is another thing altogether, of course.)

I own several guitars and a room full of equipment, but I've never made a damn dime writing about music even though I've dabbled in writing reviews of shows and records. (And yes, I have made decent money as a musician and as an engineer recording other musicians.) If anything, I feel my ability to write about music is compromised by the way I hear it a lot of the time. Like, I think Spoon's Telephono is an incredible record, but I swear the only thing I ever want to rave on about when discussing it is how fucking amazing the guitars sound. If I were to write a review, it would just sound like a guitarist or an engineer gushing about someone else's recording technique.

martin m. (mushrush), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 23:33 (twenty years ago)

One of my favorite things lately is when people talk shit about critics around me because they only know me as a musician and not as a writer, so they think I'm totally with them: "Fuckin' critics, man. They're just bitter," etc.

jaymc (jaymc), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 23:51 (twenty years ago)

Writing about music is like dancing about architecture, which, sometimes, is sort of fun.

Declan McManus, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 23:54 (twenty years ago)

(In reality, though I make no claims to be great in either role, I actually feel more kinship to critics than I do to musicians.)

jaymc (jaymc), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 23:55 (twenty years ago)

which, sometimes, is sort of fun.

Which is key, I think. I like writing about music precisely because music is so indescribable a lot of the time; it's an interesting challenge to translate the ineffable into actual prose.

jaymc (jaymc), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 23:57 (twenty years ago)

I think the biggest trap some music writers fall into is forgetting that what they do is not the thing iitself. A novel is the thing istelf, as is a song. But music writing can't exist without the music, therefore it's just always going to be a tier below. Also, some music writers seem to need to be reminded how subjective it all is, ultimately.

shookout (shookout), Thursday, 6 January 2005 01:28 (twenty years ago)

"A novel is the thing istelf, as is a song. "

bull hockey. songs and novels are about stuff too dude. except when they're not. just like reviews.

chic on speed, Thursday, 6 January 2005 01:48 (twenty years ago)

I agree more or less with the gist of everything you said except for the word I have emphasized in your statement:

But music writing can't exist without the music, therefore it's just always going to be a tier below.

I'm not saying I think it's a tier above or even a tier to one side. I just disagree that it has to be a priori below.


xpost

martin m. (mushrush), Thursday, 6 January 2005 01:48 (twenty years ago)

Come to think of it, I have read a good number of reviews that I think are way better than the album they are reviewing.

martin m. (mushrush), Thursday, 6 January 2005 01:50 (twenty years ago)

And not just because the album in question is bad or because the review was humorously panning it. Some of them are simply amazingly written reviews about fine, fine records.

martin m. (mushrush), Thursday, 6 January 2005 01:51 (twenty years ago)

besides all music is about music too you know. by shookout's creative logic music must get progessively worse all the time since it too could not possibly exist without the music that came before it right?

chic on speed, Thursday, 6 January 2005 01:55 (twenty years ago)

All music isn't about music; all music is music.

shookout (shookout), Thursday, 6 January 2005 02:22 (twenty years ago)

i think chic's right

"If I were to write a review, it would just sound like a guitarist or an engineer gushing about someone else's recording technique."

martin i'm dyin to read this dude! seriously. i don't know anything about that stuff. i mean, if you could gush about it in a way that made any sense to non-gearheads it would be terrific and unique.

You've Got to Pick Up Every Stitch (tracerhand), Thursday, 6 January 2005 02:40 (twenty years ago)

But some music, which is music, is about music, like Arthur Conley's "Sweet Soul Music" and George Jones' "Who's Gonna Fill Their Shoes."
(x-post)

Bruce S. Urquhart (BanjoMania), Thursday, 6 January 2005 02:46 (twenty years ago)

but all music is music.

shookout (shookout), Thursday, 6 January 2005 06:29 (twenty years ago)

all words are words.

blount, Thursday, 6 January 2005 06:30 (twenty years ago)

When I used to see The Trouble With Sweeney play, I couldn't help but look at critic/musician Joey Sweeney and think "This guy is trying to have it both ways, it doesn't work like that." Coincidentally or not, after he stopped full-time music criticism (which I don't know if he's gone back to or not), I started to enjoy his band more.

Hurting (Hurting), Thursday, 6 January 2005 06:38 (twenty years ago)

I can't agree w/that simply because John Darnielle compels me so much both a critic and a musician. There are probably others I feel the same way about but he's the easiest and most obvious one to bring up, esp. since I think he still lurks a little bit. (Hi John!)

Matos W.K. (M Matos), Thursday, 6 January 2005 10:31 (twenty years ago)

Julian Barnes says something like: you don't want a eunuch's advice about sex, but you don't want a nymphomaniac's either.

There's a right amount of music knowledge, neither too much nor too little, that can be helpful in criticism. And you have to apply it in ways that are going to be useful to your reader.

For example, knowing major from minor might help you describe the mood of the music. But how useful is it to tell people that a guitarist "relies perhaps too much on the Mixolydian mode"? That's just showing off. For another, you might want to tell people that a given record has a lot of tricky time signatures, which is useful to know if you like that sort of thing. But do you really need to tell them that a certain song is in 9/8 or 5/4 or whatever?

I write for a living (though not about music). Playing music is as close as I get to religion. (I'm not sure I'd do it for a living even if I could.)

Every field of human endeavor seems to be infested with little petty snobberies--published writers look down on unpublished ones; creative writers look down on journalists; journalists look down on PR people; writers for mass-market magazines look down on people who write trade magazines. Etc. This seems like a species of that.

Agreed that "bitter" in the original quote is misplaced. How the hell do you know whether someone is bitter or not? The reality is that only so many people are going to be able to make a living playing music. And only so many people are going to be able to make a living writing about it.

Personally, if I'm bitter about anything, it's that I can't get paid for lying around the apartment drinking beer and eating Fritos. But that's just me.

The Mad Puffin, Thursday, 6 January 2005 15:20 (twenty years ago)

In the case of the ones who started writing about music during the punk revolution of the late 70s, this is true. They were jealous of the prog musicians having more skills than them.

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Thursday, 6 January 2005 15:29 (twenty years ago)

For example, knowing major from minor might help you describe the mood of the music. But how useful is it to tell people that a guitarist "relies perhaps too much on the Mixolydian mode"? That's just showing off. For another, you might want to tell people that a given record has a lot of tricky time signatures, which is useful to know if you like that sort of thing. But do you really need to tell them that a certain song is in 9/8 or 5/4 or whatever?

well, it depends. there are some writers (jon pareles and especially alex ross come to mind) who are able to use their extensive technical knowledge to get to the bottom of what music actually sounds like, and they know how to explain what they're talking about along the way. which is to say, if alex ross ever uses mixolydian in a sentence, (a) he'll probably be dead-on, and (b) you'll know exactly what a mixolydian scale sounds like before the sentence is over.

and there are some writers who don't know that stuff and don't need to. you don't need to know major from minor to describe the mood of the music. what you need to know is moods.

fact checking cuz (fcc), Thursday, 6 January 2005 15:32 (twenty years ago)

I'm jealous of just how fucking hatstand insane Geir is and yet still retains enough motor skills to use a PC. It must be great to live in his gibbering tower of total lunacy.

Sick Mouthy (Nick Southall), Thursday, 6 January 2005 15:34 (twenty years ago)

For example, knowing major from minor might help you describe the mood of the music. But how useful is it to tell people that a guitarist "relies perhaps too much on the Mixolydian mode"? That's just showing off. For another, you might want to tell people that a given record has a lot of tricky time signatures, which is useful to know if you like that sort of thing. But do you really need to tell them that a certain song is in 9/8 or 5/4 or whatever?

With a couple of caveats (What if you're writing for a musically-sophisticated audience who wants to know that the majority of the work is in mixolydian and dorian mode or what time signature the piece is in? On the other hand, perhaps you need to be able to identify those things so that you can more intelligently write on a generally-accessible level about music?) this is OTM.

The Ghost of Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Thursday, 6 January 2005 15:35 (twenty years ago)

(xpost: Yeah, that was necessary.)

The Ghost of Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Thursday, 6 January 2005 15:36 (twenty years ago)

three years pass...

conversely, quite often they're ignorant of how easy it is to make music tho amirite.

banriquit, Tuesday, 8 April 2008 21:19 (seventeen years ago)

Yeah shit musicians make interesting music much more often than shit writers make interesting writing.

Noodle Vague, Tuesday, 8 April 2008 21:22 (seventeen years ago)


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