Lester Bangs was a fucking idiot with zero taste in music.

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fuck this guy.

Aaron Zanders (AaronHz), Thursday, 5 May 2005 11:58 (twenty years ago)

I read his biography. I wasn't interested.

But perhaps I am peonic, after all, many people seem not to have the personality or talent (it's an asset!!) to pull off 'gonzo'.

If he is gonzo, of course.

I would not fuck him. In a very real sense, he is Yours.

Lucretia My Reflection (Lucretia My Reflection), Thursday, 5 May 2005 12:33 (twenty years ago)

ok, do better then.
seriously, this is like saying bukowski was a shit writer.
neither are bad, they were both just unfortunate to have developed a style which was easy to copy badly and extremely hard to do well.
too many bad imitators have made bangs lose his lustre (and not everything he did was good at all), so it's easy to criticize now, but this doesn't dtract from the fact that he wasn't "a fucking idiot" and did do some pretty groundbreaking work.
he's an easy target, too: a sacred cow in some circles, can be seen as "rockist" (not always the terrible thing it's made out to be) in some ways and, crucially, dead, so unable to reply to moronic posts on internet messageboards.

stelfox, Thursday, 5 May 2005 12:45 (twenty years ago)

Is it important that I don't really like Captain Beefheart in this debate, Stelfoxx0r?

Lucretia My Reflection (Lucretia My Reflection), Thursday, 5 May 2005 12:48 (twenty years ago)

no, i don't either!

stelfox, Thursday, 5 May 2005 12:50 (twenty years ago)

I don't like Bukowski AT ALL, but Bangs was so much the better artist.

I'm afraid you'll have to tell us why he sucks, Aaron.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Thursday, 5 May 2005 12:50 (twenty years ago)

a little cough syrup might calm aaron down

strng hlkngtn, Thursday, 5 May 2005 12:54 (twenty years ago)

I prefer his stuff to when ppl try to write about music.

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 5 May 2005 12:55 (twenty years ago)

In terms of how he lived his personal life, he certainly was an idiot, otherwise he'd still be around.

As a writer I probably need a ten-year moratorium on reading any of his work, so that I can rediscover it and see why people were drawn to it.

But as a nerdy teenager in the '70s, his NME three-parter on the Clash was writing I looked up to with great awe. And his requiem for Peter Laughner and the piece on Astral Weeks are two of the most moving pieces of music writing I've read by anyone anywhere.

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Thursday, 5 May 2005 12:56 (twenty years ago)

Of course he had taste in music -- it's all right there in black-n-white where Bangs was coming from. Now if you disagree with his taste in music, the ball's in your court.

brianiac (briania), Thursday, 5 May 2005 12:56 (twenty years ago)

Zero taste? He liked Coltrane, Iggy Stooge, Astral Weeks, Lou Reed, the Clash, Peter Laughner, No Wave, Slade, Count Five, Richard Hell, Mingus, etc. He had better taste than you.

xxxpost

mcd (mcd), Thursday, 5 May 2005 12:57 (twenty years ago)

But as a nerdy teenager in the '70s, his NME three-parter on the Clash was writing I looked up to with great awe. And his requiem for Peter Laughner and the piece on Astral Weeks are two of the most moving pieces of music writing I've read by anyone anywhere.

i still think 90% of 'psychotic reactions...' makes for great reading whether you're familiar with the subjects or not... i certainly wasn't, first time i read it, and i enjoyed as much if not more than the last (umpteenth) time i read it, when i mostly was.

and the 'gonzo' thing is great on pieces like the early stooges stuff, the playing-saxophone-at-the-landlady thing (still my favourite piece), the -b-movies-on-tv piece, etc - but i actually prefer the gentler, more complex, more reflective stuff, like the 'racism in punk' piece, or the laughner piece, or the miles davis piece in the second (and much inferior) collection. the biog is a big piece of shit from a big piece of shit who's totally jealous he could never write like lester, trying to make a grand tragedy out of a guy who just never quite sorted his life out, like the majority of his subjects and, i dare say, the majority of his readership. but give me the softer lester of the late 70s over pretty much everyone writing today.

stevie (stevie), Thursday, 5 May 2005 13:05 (twenty years ago)

He didn't have better taste than me.

Pashmina (Pashmina), Thursday, 5 May 2005 13:11 (twenty years ago)

I like Bang's taste fine, altough it doesn't match up with mine exactly, but I don't understand criticizing a critic by crying bad taste. If s/he can write, who cares? Some of the critics I enjoy reading the most have taste that, as far as I'm concerned, is absolutely batshit.

Not Thaat Chuck, Thursday, 5 May 2005 13:15 (twenty years ago)

"dudes check it out i just found that music critic website-- i'm gonna post something that'll really stir them up!"

Nick Sylvester, Thursday, 5 May 2005 13:22 (twenty years ago)

His evaluations of the Stones' mid 70's albums, Bowie's "Station to Station," and Stevie Nicks' "Belladonna" (to pick three random examples) are probing criticism at its best; you'll find very few Bang-isms in these pieces. In the midst of my adolescent Bowie infatuation, Bangs was the first person I read who eviscerated Bowie's pretentions.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Thursday, 5 May 2005 13:24 (twenty years ago)

I read him years ago, and I gave away my copies of his two compilations a while back. I read him just like I read Pauline Kael--admire them for trying their best to get to the heart of whatever matter it is, am alternately appalled and amused by their obsessions, admire their styles even as I realize what their styles are trying so desperately to cover up/validate, whatever that was. As a model for a writer, I'm not sure if Bangs (or Kael) is any better or worse than Christgau or Marcus or Andrew Sarris, you know? I do think it's important to remember how it was when they were writing--all that gentility, which both of them fought against. That only goes so far, in my opinion, re-asserting the vitality of the Troggs over James Taylor, or Peckinpah over Sir David Lean. Very important, but once you get that point, you've gotten what they did, seems to me. It's valuable to have a guy like Bangs, in his otherwise dull piece on Beefheart in his second collection, at least trying to get Van Vliet to admit to his own need to play silly games, and even if you don't like Beefheart that's something to learn from Bangs's piece, right, that that extraneous stuff isn't really at the heart of what Beefheart (or many another artist) did? For those two writers, movies and music were just their entire world and their attempts to relate music to the world-at-large are admirable, obviously doomed--since worrying about the "honesty" of anyone trying to make art is gonna drive you crazy. If I were, god forbid, teaching some class on rock and roll and its writing at some community college in Ohio, I'd be happy if students got the big points that one-big-point writers like Bangs, Meltzer, Tosches and Marcus were trying to make, and just encourage them to write as well, lucidly and even grammatically as they could--screw trying to imitate Lester Bangs, unless you just wanna do it as an exercise.

His taste? Well, he listened to a lot of stuff and seemed to like much of it, and that's enough "taste" for a rock critic, seems to me. My taste has certainly changed, I've become far less doctrinaire than I used to be; ten years ago I wouldn't have been caught dead listening to Yes or Jean-Luc Ponty or Zappa, now I go, well, that has its merits, I enjoy it, and I still got my sense of humor about ultimate importance. I'd still rather listen to Jerry Butler sing "Hey, Western Union Man" than Yes do "Heart of the Sunrise," but what this says about the state of the world, I have no idea.

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Thursday, 5 May 2005 13:30 (twenty years ago)

"ok, do better then."

that's not really an argument, now is it? you can dislike someone's output, even if you don't have his/her talent. that said, i don't think i can ever trust mr zanders because obv he's a bit of an idiot. ;-) i ab-so-lu-te-ly revere/adore/admire lester bangs but i still like richard m better. there used to be a time i wanted to emulate both (oh the shame!), esp lester b. as marcello said, his pieces on aw and pl are ace.

he liked stevie nicks and no wave, how can you say he has bad taste in music! ;-)

nathalie in a bar under the sea (stevie nixed), Thursday, 5 May 2005 13:31 (twenty years ago)

He didn't have better taste than me.

Ha ha, me neither.

mcd (mcd), Thursday, 5 May 2005 13:32 (twenty years ago)

I like Lester Bangs, but he's a bad influence on people.

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Thursday, 5 May 2005 13:33 (twenty years ago)

He wasn't an idiot at all, but he wasn't perfect either. I can't completely agree with someone who dismisses everything by Jethro Tull and ELP. I understand he was champion of the underdog and all that, but still.

ghost rider, Thursday, 5 May 2005 13:36 (twenty years ago)

"Very important, but once you get that point, you've gotten what they did, seems to me."

You're OTM, edd, until this sentence (if I'm misreadin' you, please holla). I reread Kael all the time, as I reread any of my favorite artists, even if I'm no way in love with "Nashville" or Louis Malle. Same with Bangs. Not only did they write persuasive, thoughtful prose, but these two make me laugh out loud. All the time.

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Thursday, 5 May 2005 13:37 (twenty years ago)

What critic is 'perfect'? Why would you want a critic to share your music tastes?

(xpost)

Alfred Soto (Alfred Soto), Thursday, 5 May 2005 13:37 (twenty years ago)

Zero taste? He liked Coltrane, Iggy Stooge, Astral Weeks, Lou Reed, the Clash, Peter Laughner, No Wave, Slade, Count Five, Richard Hell, Mingus, etc. He had better taste than you.

He called Curtis Mayfield "nigger music". He can rot in hell for all I care.

Stupornaut (natepatrin), Thursday, 5 May 2005 13:40 (twenty years ago)

Alfred, that's a reasonable adult position to expect. Not so for kids just getting into their teens just getting into music. It's not that they want the critic to agree with everything they like; it's that they want to like everything the critic does. I'd say, due to his cachet, Lester more so than most.

ghost rider, Thursday, 5 May 2005 13:42 (twenty years ago)

He called Curtis Mayfield "nigger music".

context crucial here.

i liked that interview with Kraftwerk he did that somebody linked to on ILM once.

$V£N! (blueski), Thursday, 5 May 2005 13:52 (twenty years ago)

I like Bangs but he could have stood to be a bit more cynical about his adolescent enthusiasm. He's a rather tragic figure to idolize. My favorite part in Let It Blurt is when he looks at his nephew's library and realizes he could use one of those.

miccio (miccio), Thursday, 5 May 2005 14:03 (twenty years ago)

context crucial here.

And what was the context? Was he drafting a parody of Elvis Costello?

Stupornaut (natepatrin), Thursday, 5 May 2005 14:14 (twenty years ago)

best thread ever

ilm's for lovers, Thursday, 5 May 2005 14:16 (twenty years ago)

wait Nate, you mean you don't know the context and you're still acting pious about it?

miccio (miccio), Thursday, 5 May 2005 14:17 (twenty years ago)

A while back I posted on here about good music books, and someone recommended Psychotic Reactions. I'm halfway through James Taylor Marked for Death, and whether or not the leg touching-math class thing has anything to do with the Troggs, it's sharp

WillS, Thursday, 5 May 2005 14:26 (twenty years ago)

his rants on lou reed are still inspiring to me. that stuff's hilarious.

katie hasty (katie, a princess), Thursday, 5 May 2005 14:34 (twenty years ago)

Ha, I don't think Bangs has better taste than me either!

I don't really care about Bangs' work, but I totally hate the way his influence has manifested itself in some of the most hackish, obnoxious music criticism currently going.

Matthew C Perpetua (inca), Thursday, 5 May 2005 14:36 (twenty years ago)

a little cough syrup might calm aaron down

That, plus a ticket to a T-Dream concert.

I totally hate the way his influence has manifested itself in some of the most hackish, obnoxious music criticism currently going.

Hey, that sounds just like the influence Lou and Iggy had on music.

walter kranz (walterkranz), Thursday, 5 May 2005 15:02 (twenty years ago)

" ' Very important, but once you get that point, you've gotten what they did, seems to me.'

You're OTM, edd, until this sentence (if I'm misreadin' you, please holla). I reread Kael all the time, as I reread any of my favorite artists, even if I'm no way in love with "Nashville" or Louis Malle. Same with Bangs. Not only did they write persuasive, thoughtful prose, but these two make me laugh out loud. All the time. "

I re-read Kael, just to find out about a movie I might've missed, and she's entertaining. She's over the top, just like Bangs. They do make me laugh. I guess what I meant was that I, when I first read them, took it the wrong way, probably--I don't regard their stuff, now, as any kind of totally reliable guide to anything. And sure, you could say the same about any critic, but the terrain they explored was fairly new, no one really had the guts to say that the Troggs were as "important" as the Yardbirds or whoever, just like Kael was so strenuous in her championing of, say, "Nashville" (a great movie, but also a drag) or late Peckinpah. The bigger point seems to be that they were getting their licks in on some kind of critical establishment, they were pioneers. But that viewpoint seems to leave out a lot of stuff, you know, just like Tosches and his insistence on "no theory" and so forth. When you start championing the ephemeral, the half-realized or the gleefully barbaric, that's sure necessary, but I stop way short of saying that's all there is, even in rock and roll, and basically always have. But they were sure persuasive, and engaging, and of course, dangerous in that respect, and all you can do when someone toes that party line is to hope that one day they'll see all the great stuff that doesn't conform to it. I feel the same way about Christgau, sometimes--like why doesn't he get Latin music, why on earth would a 60-year-old still worry about the Clash or the New York Dolls, as fine as their music was. Too bad Lester Bangs died before he could articulate that, and I think he was obviously heading in that direction.

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Thursday, 5 May 2005 15:17 (twenty years ago)

"I don't really care about Bangs' work, but I totally hate the way his influence has manifested itself in some of the most hackish, obnoxious music criticism currently going. "

no offense dude, but i am SO VERY SICK of this line of bullshit.
you know, a lot of people have never read lester bangs and never will. that said, just cause somebody writes like somebody else, doesn't mean anything. for some reason, anybody with a remotely wild voice must be a lester bangs inspired hack. it's as if there's three paths one must take... either you're a stiff academic, an ad copy repeater box, or a lester bangs wannabe. i would wager that most of us out there wouldn't want any of those three pinned to our work. i just think that the body of writerly influence is much, much bigger than rock writing. pinning poor lester with the sins of The Fan Dude is just either a) just unfair or b) giving him too much credit.
m.

msp (mspa), Thursday, 5 May 2005 15:44 (twenty years ago)

1. msp and stelfox hit the nail on the head.
2. Stuponaut your critique is worthless what with you taking the term out of context and applying your revisionist standards which ignores the intent of what Bangs, successfully or unsuccessfully, was trying to communicate.
3. Carlin, how Bangs lived his life has nothing to do with the quality of his work or intelligence -- you show little understanding of addiction.
4. Perpetua, you could certainly use a little Bangs spark in your work, speaking of someone who writes like they are seeking a career as a label publicist or music magazine shill.
5. I realize history in general has been thrown out with the baby, the bathwater and the bathtub as far as some ILMers are concerned, so please disregard my "wrong thinking."

Leonard Thompson (Grodd), Thursday, 5 May 2005 15:53 (twenty years ago)

Perpetua, you could certainly use a little Bangs spark in your work, speaking of someone who writes like they are seeking a career as a label publicist or music magazine shill.

OH SNAP

mike a, Thursday, 5 May 2005 15:59 (twenty years ago)

"I like Bangs but he could have stood to be a bit more cynical about his adolescent enthusiasm. He's a rather tragic figure to idolize."

Yeah, I really don't know if I buy this, Anthony. This is the Meltzer line on Bangs and to me it sounds more like Meltzer condescendingly saying, "Oh, stupid Lester couldn't give up on that rock and roll garbage." Lester was a music critic; that was his job. And he was freaking passionate about it -- good for him! He was one of the greats! He had personal problems, but being passionate about music was not one of them.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Thursday, 5 May 2005 16:24 (twenty years ago)

Perpetua, you could certainly use a little Bangs spark in your work, speaking of someone who writes like they are seeking a career as a label publicist or music magazine shill.

Maybe so, but that's not at all the kind of "spark" that I would want. I conciously approach music criticism in a way that rejects a lot of what I find useless and distasteful in post-Bangs music writing (or more specifically, in old zine writing and pre-Plagenhoef Pitchfork). I have little interest in whining about music that I don't enjoy. That's a total waste of my time and it's helpful to no one. My main interest is in shining a light on obscure tracks and putting them in a critical context that could get people interested in listening to the music. It's entirely evangelical in nature and I have no illusions about that. I don't give a fuck about hacks trying to make talking about music into some kind of bastard art form. I just want to be helpful. I don't get that sense from Bangs and his imitators at all - they are more selfinvolved and seem to have a contempt for the casual reader that I could never have.

Matthew C Perpetua (inca), Thursday, 5 May 2005 16:30 (twenty years ago)

To get a better idea of the kind of writers I'd rather be like, my two big music writer heroes are Douglas Wolk and Sasha Frere-Jones. Bangs and his ilk can't touch those guys.

Matthew C Perpetua (inca), Thursday, 5 May 2005 16:32 (twenty years ago)

I mean adolescent enthusiasm my foot. Why shouldn't a 60 year old still love the New York Dolls and the Clash for chrisssake?

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Thursday, 5 May 2005 16:34 (twenty years ago)

Who are the alleged Lester Bangs wannabes, by the way? I wouldn't mind hearing some names.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Thursday, 5 May 2005 16:37 (twenty years ago)

I never got this feeling of "contempt" from Bangs...he seemed more like a guy that wanted to talk and talk and talk and talk about his favorite stuff...Carbeurator Dung seemed very welcoming to me when I read it in college. It was probably my first exposure to "serious" rock criticism/essay stuff.

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Thursday, 5 May 2005 16:38 (twenty years ago)

When I actually finally sat down and read Bangs a couple years ago, I was surprised at how much joy there was in his prose. I mean, "evangelical" is definitely a word I'd use to describe him! The dude got seriously giddy about Kraftwerk and Anne Murray and Metal Machine Music. That's a lot of what makes him fun. Of course, I don't want a steady diet of Bangs, but I make room for him.

jaymc (jaymc), Thursday, 5 May 2005 16:38 (twenty years ago)

(Anyway: most useful AaronHz meltdown thread?)

jaymc (jaymc), Thursday, 5 May 2005 16:38 (twenty years ago)

I have little interest in whining about music that I don't enjoy.

I don't think Bangs ever did that.


My main interest is in shining a light on obscure tracks and putting them in a critical context that could get people interested in listening to the music. It's entirely evangelical in nature and I have no illusions about that.

That describes Lester Bangs perfectly. It's pretty much all he ever did.

they are more selfinvolved and seem to have a contempt for the casual reader that I could never have.

I don't feel any contempt from Bangs' writing. He always seemed pretty populist to me.

walter kranz (walterkranz), Thursday, 5 May 2005 16:39 (twenty years ago)

Perpetua, you could certainly use a little Bangs spark in your work, speaking of someone who writes like they are seeking a career as a label publicist or music magazine shill.

http://www.newgrounds.com/bbs/user_images/pics/1/4931000/ngbbs42647bf49168c.jpg

Dom Passantino (Dom Passantino), Thursday, 5 May 2005 16:41 (twenty years ago)

Yeah, one thing that Bangs showed was that the line between "critic" and "fan" is v. blurry. (I get this sense esp. in his on-tour-with-the-Clash pieces.)

jaymc (jaymc), Thursday, 5 May 2005 16:42 (twenty years ago)

He made we want to check out Jethro Tull, which was by no means a "hip" thing at the time he was writing or the time I was reading.

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Thursday, 5 May 2005 16:42 (twenty years ago)

vegemitegirl otm, and one thing that really strikes me about bangs (and ties into the 'zero taste in music' part of the thread title) is that at the time his peers treated his taste or what he championed as a joke or eccentricity or contrarianism, that someone could prefer white light/white heat to say sgt. pepper's or something was seen as him trying to prove a point, some sort of sophistry. i think marcus writes something along the lines about how (very loose paraphrase here) 'bangs so needed to believe in rock n roll that even when the well went dry in the early to mid seventies he managed to convince himself and even a few of his readers that the stooges and black sabbath were great bands'. yet thirty years later the 'crazy' stuff bangs was by far the loudest and most prominent advocate for - the stooges, krautrock, "sister ray" - is seen as OBVIOUSLY great and meanwhile the question 'what the hell was joy of cooking?' may never be truly answered. his taste was betraying him or starting to go more than his style towards the end (although even here not totally - the last band he did missionary work for were the mekons)(marcus and xgau agreed with him about them) and i don't think he really had it in him to be like meltzer and be able to get off on how 'everything' had gone to hell - bangs did need to believe in rock n roll - but you never know, i don't think his humanist turn could've been predicted so who knows what would've been in store. i do know that even though he had alot of flaws and alot about the work is problematic whenever i see an anti-bangs screed it tends to piss me off.

j blount (papa la bas), Friday, 6 May 2005 06:57 (twenty years ago)

Ironically I'm full of red wine right now so I'm not at full capacity, but I tend to agree with Blount's supposition that Bangs followers are few and far between. Byron Coley, maybe? Maybe.

I *have* always seen Chuck as a Bangs descendent, both in the sense of cockeyed passion (I-want-my-own-'There's-a-Riot-Goin'-On') and in their respective acceptances of bubblegum, nerf metal and other supposed crap as glorious noise. Come to think of it, Bangs' assertion that the Banana Splits theme tune would remain "in my head unto the grave" isn't far wrong, given the fact of 'Dare!' on his turntable on April 30, 1982.

Rickey Wright (Rrrickey), Friday, 6 May 2005 08:04 (twenty years ago)

In fact, is ILM's hive-mind lurve of Air Supply and other bottom-of-the-barrel trash Lester's truest testament of all? I mean, that Russell guy or whatever his name is makes LB fave Anne Murray sound like Poly Styrene. I wanna see a sea of hands out there!

Rickey Wright (Rrrickey), Friday, 6 May 2005 08:07 (twenty years ago)

I don't read every thread, but Air Supply?

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Friday, 6 May 2005 08:39 (twenty years ago)

And one on Sha Na Na too!

Lester Bangs, Pauline Kael and Tom Wolfe were the holy trinity for me as a teenager in the 70s. Inspired and inspiring, reading their electric prose and absorbing their obsessive engagement w/popular culture made me want to be a writer. But I think a lot of journalism is tied to its time and context, so when I read my onetime idols now (not very often) they feel like anachronisms: startling limitations and misjudgements leap out of their still-scintillating sentences.

I believe Bangs was reacting to what he saw and heard around him, his alternative canon-building (VU Stooges Eno)kinda happened by accident. But make no mistake: he may be the only cultural critic of the 20th century who ideas/theories/opinions sparked an enduring mass artistic movement -- punk. I wasn't an English major but I don't THINK Edmund Wilson inspired a school of popular novelists.

topics for futher debate:

influences of New Journalism VS the Beats in the Bangs approach.

the Lester Counter-factual: had he lived would he be a)a windy neo-conservative "humanist" novel-writer (a la Wolfe) b)a despotic music editor who manipulates a string of Lesterette followers (a la Kael).

m coleman (lovebug starski), Friday, 6 May 2005 09:11 (twenty years ago)

Well, mebbe not "hive-mind," but I was still shocked to see even a few heads say they thought that group was OK. I mean, it's not like they were Michael McDonald or something . . .

Rickey Wright (Rrrickey), Friday, 6 May 2005 09:25 (twenty years ago)

He liked Magma too! And the Godz!! And Amon Duul II!!! Face it, he invented ILM!!!!!!!!!!!!

Dadaismus (Dada), Friday, 6 May 2005 09:25 (twenty years ago)

Air Supply, however, were melodic.

Comstock Carabinieri (nostudium), Friday, 6 May 2005 09:32 (twenty years ago)

There is no way in a million years I could write like Bangs or would try to but for the cadences of the earlier stuff and the humanism of the later I love him.

Tom (Groke), Friday, 6 May 2005 09:42 (twenty years ago)

Absolutely OTM.

VegemiteGrrl (VegemiteGrrl), Friday, 6 May 2005 13:01 (twenty years ago)

Fuk a Matos for hating on Air Supply!

Defend the Indefensible: AIR SUPPLY

J (Jay), Friday, 6 May 2005 13:16 (twenty years ago)

'he may be the only cultural critic of the 20th century who ideas/theories/opinions sparked an enduring mass artistic movement --punk'

is that really true m and if so how did it work? Instead I get the pic that he wz one of the few that embraced punk straight away once it happened, by not only giving his seal of approval but also writing convincingly about it -- it never ever looked like a form of contrarianism. He ended up doing a v similar job to other "cultural critics" like adorno (12-tone) and greenberg (abstract expressionism)?

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Friday, 6 May 2005 13:20 (twenty years ago)

He was focused on it straightaway - first published piece was a review of Kick Out the Jams. Was certainly the most prominent voice talking about the Stooges, how great the Count Five/Question Mark and the Mysterians/Troggs/etc. were in the early seventies.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Friday, 6 May 2005 14:18 (twenty years ago)

going back to the machismo thing, i guess why i feel like defending some of these writers (even hunter) is that spencer is totally right, there is a machismo in their writing, but i don't think that's necessarily bad. if anything, i see it more as a working out of phantasies that, in a way, makes these writers far different than just ordinary macho assholes. yes, hunter/meltzer/bangs/et al (whomever you wanna lump in this, really) were "bad guys" to an extent: they took a lot of drugs, they weren't always the nicest guys, they could be racist/sexist/homophobic, yes to all those things. however, i still think that what they did, by virtue of what it is, makes them more complicated and harder to write off. they were about showing everything, which is something that i think is sort of admirable, even if it reveals the writer to be, well, an asshole. and if writing is this realm where people should be free to explore their phantasies, why should it be any different for, say, hunter s. thompson?

also i'd say whomever mentioned capote upthread is right, i think he and norman mailer probably have to answer for "gonzo," if anyone does, heh.

hstencil (hstencil), Friday, 6 May 2005 14:33 (twenty years ago)

I know that he got onto things quicker than most and I've read the marcus ed collection, but m seems to be saying his 'ideas' directly inspired the punk movement rather than something like debord or whatever (haven't read 'lipstick traces' so correct me if i made a mistake here) whereas what I'm saying is that bangs gave it his thumbs up and saw the vitality in punk which was lacking elsewhere...which is just like adorno arguing for webern against stravinsky or greenberg arg for pollock et al. xp

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Friday, 6 May 2005 14:34 (twenty years ago)

bangs was prolly more important for us punk, which in turn i think was important for uk punk (at least more than debord, tho i won't deny that as an influence - just that it was more of one on mclaren than anybody else).

hstencil (hstencil), Friday, 6 May 2005 14:43 (twenty years ago)

Bangs was a prominent figure. I'd imagine that punk wouldn't have happened like it did in the states in the seventies if it hadn't been for Creem helping to create some sort of demographic of people into Lou Reed, Iggy Stooge, etc.

How many English punks knew of Situationism? I guess McLaren did?

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Friday, 6 May 2005 14:47 (twenty years ago)

McLaren was a punk?!?!??

Dadaismus (Dada), Friday, 6 May 2005 15:17 (twenty years ago)

He was the manager of a punk rock band.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Friday, 6 May 2005 15:38 (twenty years ago)

this thread is very enjoyable.

anyway, scott woods asks me the bangs-or-xgau question here, fwiw:

http://www.rockcritics.com/popped/talkeddy/eddy2.html

xhuxk, Friday, 6 May 2005 15:38 (twenty years ago)

Bangs v. Christgau == Dionysius v. Apollo.

We need 'em both. (As he groans under the weight of his record shelves.)

Sang Freud (jeff_s), Friday, 6 May 2005 15:57 (twenty years ago)

McLaren was the prentious Kim Fowley.

Leonard Thompson (Grodd), Friday, 6 May 2005 16:04 (twenty years ago)

God said: I salute thee, O Gur, in the name of Jehovih, Creator. Behold Apollo!
http://images.villagevoice.com/issues/0351/giddin3.jpg

miccio (miccio), Friday, 6 May 2005 16:10 (twenty years ago)

Stence, I agree that they were not necessarily bad writers or bad people. I mainly brought that up because some of the critics who do appeal to me (as in I identify with their approach and tastes) seem to revere Bangs and others who I find problematic.

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Friday, 6 May 2005 16:22 (twenty years ago)

I'd answer the New Journalism v. Gonzo thing by saying I consider Gonzo a subset of NJ--at least by the lights of The New Journalism anthology from '73 (which has no Bangs . . . but does have Christgau!)

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Friday, 6 May 2005 17:49 (twenty years ago)

And Didion, yo. Which goes back to why I'm uncomfortable with the "gonzo" term getting strongly attached to Bangs: I feel like people are always using it as a way of describing his prose style, whereas the term itself only really has to do with the placement of the writer in relation to the topic, and the level of subjectivity and writer-persona that's involved in the text itself. It means something in regard to Bangs-as-character in his writing; it doesn't mean much in terms of "subjectivity," which is more of a given with criticism; it means nothing at all in terms of his actual prose, except insofar as it compares to his contemporaries. In the proper sense most of his shorter reviews tend to be not-so-gonzo-at-all.

nabiscothingy, Friday, 6 May 2005 20:31 (twenty years ago)

the term itself only really has to do with the placement of the writer in relation to the topic

I always assumed it also described (not exclusively) the prose style too?

Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Friday, 6 May 2005 20:33 (twenty years ago)

I should note that the Christgau piece isn't about music; it's a reported piece about a woman who died of a macrobiotic diet taken to an unreasonable limit, and it's beautifully done; it's also very little like his later work.

nabiscothingy articulated the underlying point in my last post for me, yay.

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Friday, 6 May 2005 20:33 (twenty years ago)

"Gonzo is a style of reportage, film making, or any form of multimedia production in which the reporter, filmmaker or creator is intrinsically enmeshed with the subject action (rather than being a passive observer)."

?
m.

msp (mspa), Friday, 6 May 2005 20:41 (twenty years ago)

I was just watching the Muppet Show last night and trying to figure out if Gonzo is a Hunter Thompson reference or what. Does anyone know? Jim Henson certainly referenced a lot of other weird countercultural stuff so it wouldn't be surprising.

walter kranz (walterkranz), Friday, 6 May 2005 20:43 (twenty years ago)

several x posts

Julio I'd say Bangs anticipated and shaped the punk movement when he championed the Count 5 over James Taylor, proselytized for Lou Reed and Iggy when few cared, lent an ear to teenage faves like Black Sabbath and Grand Funk Railroad. So he didn't invent punk, but he articulated the general sensibility -- and many of the musical specifics -- and put them in print several years before 1977.

m coleman (lovebug starski), Friday, 6 May 2005 21:08 (twenty years ago)

dr. teeth is totally dr. jon, janis = janis, etc.

yeah, gonzo as subset of nj is totally correct. i'd tend (if i was a big categorizin' type) to put bangs and didion in nj and meltzer and hst in gonzo.

hstencil (hstencil), Friday, 6 May 2005 21:10 (twenty years ago)

The only gonzo pieces in Carburetor Dung are probably that "Women on Top" piece and the Sham 69 review? Maybe "James Taylor Marked for Death?"

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Friday, 6 May 2005 21:30 (twenty years ago)

More than that, I'd think; I'm just not sure it's what people always really mean when they describe him that way. Spencer, I think there's a prose style that gets associated with prime-era gonzo, and sometimes it's useful to use the term that way, but the word itself doesn't necessarily encompass that; its main thrust has more to do with the traditional objectivity of proper journalism, and the way certain writers put their own personas and subjective thoughts and agendas into their pieces. (The line on that between New Journalism and its gonzoid subset is, yeah, kinda blurry.)

nabiscothingy, Friday, 6 May 2005 21:47 (twenty years ago)

I consider Gonzo a subset of NJ--at least by the lights of The New Journalism anthology from '73

I agree. In college I actually made up my own essay topic that very thing. A whole lot more fun than the assigned questions they were offering! Even now it doesn't seem like that much of a stretch to link the two, I don't think. Omitting Lester from the NJ anthology strikes me now as a little odd, perhaps deliberate? Maybe he was more in the gonzo camp. In fact, right now, I'm thinking gonzo. He's too loose to be NJ.
Shrug. Babbling...

VegemiteGrrl (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 7 May 2005 00:55 (twenty years ago)

Lester wasn't a very well known writer at that point, though. And he was writing exclusively about music (well, basically), which almost ensured him not getting in since the book was more about long, deeply reported general-interest magazine pieces. Christgau's thing is in there because it was in New York, which Wolfe had done lots of writing for (wasn't he on staff there?).

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Saturday, 7 May 2005 21:00 (twenty years ago)

Wolfe was on staff at New York in the 60s when it was the Sunday supplement in the NY Herald Tribune. It spun off into an independent magazine when the newspaper folded, but I think Wolfe had hooked up with Rolling Stone by then. And yeah Lester was NEVER well known outside of the rock&roll ghetto, at least not in the 70s. Look at the bibliography in Bangs' bio (only part I've read): other than maybe one thing in an LA newspaper he was writing exclusively for music magazines and the "underground press" (which included the Voice and Rolling Stone back then). Well into the 80s most mainstream media either ignored pop music or treated it diffidently, i.e. assigned it to writers who didn't know wtf they were doing.

m coleman (lovebug starski), Saturday, 7 May 2005 21:26 (twenty years ago)

Kind of a shame. Maybe they need to do a revised edition of the New Journalism Anthology. Is there anyone else other than Lester who'd deserve an entry? Or is that totally dumb idea....

VegemiteGrrl (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 7 May 2005 23:33 (twenty years ago)

It's a great idea but first we'd have to decide if New Journalism still exists or if it died out along w/disco, ludes & leisure suits. There's an anthology out now on the "New New Journalism"

idos/tg/detail/-/140003356X/qid=1115514391/sr=8-1/ref=pd_csp_1/104-0411839-2955117?v=glance&s=books&n=507846

I haven't read it but judging from the blurbs it sounds more like a survey of the status quo than a report from the cutting edge.

m coleman (lovebug starski), Sunday, 8 May 2005 00:16 (twenty years ago)

sorry that link didn't take. the book is:

The New New Journalism : Conversations with America's Best Nonfiction Writers on Their Craft by Robert Boynton

So I guess it's actually not an anthology but a book of interviews.

m coleman (lovebug starski), Sunday, 8 May 2005 00:19 (twenty years ago)

But does it have to still be in existence, even? I'm pretty sure it isn't, at least not in the form it was then. I was thinking more of a retrospective revision, rather than bringing it up to date with current writers. I may need to think on this more. I'm sure I'll change my mind again.

VegemiteGrrl (VegemiteGrrl), Sunday, 8 May 2005 00:33 (twenty years ago)

Looking at my copy now...well I don't know either. Getting back to Lester I'm not sure how he would fit in here. Terry Southern is probably the closest thing he'd have to a confrere in this crowd.

m coleman (lovebug starski), Sunday, 8 May 2005 00:40 (twenty years ago)

thinking on it more, I think Matos is right...plus New Journalism was more about doing things outside the normal field of journalism, rather than just a different style of writing. Bangs was still being a rock critic, he just made the subject matter more personal. Which is definitely part of New Journalism, even part of Gonzo...but he'd stick out like a lump on a log if one of his pieces was included.

Did you know 'The New Journalism' is out of print? That kind of bums me out. I mean, heck, I don't even know if there's a ton of people out there who read it, let alone cared about it for very long, but it was a fun book, I thought.

VegemiteGrrl (VegemiteGrrl), Sunday, 8 May 2005 01:08 (twenty years ago)

it's OOP but used copies are amazingly easy to find in Seattle, at the Capitol Hill Twice Sold Tales especially

Matos-Webster Dictionary (M Matos), Sunday, 8 May 2005 02:06 (twenty years ago)

I'll have a poke around here in Sac, there are a couple of reliable used-booksellers who are bound to have a copy floating around.

Heh. Bound. Geddit?

VegemiteGrrl (VegemiteGrrl), Sunday, 8 May 2005 02:13 (twenty years ago)

HOLY FUCKING SHIT GUYS I WAS JUST KIDDING! HAHAHAHAHA.

Aaron Zanders (AaronHz), Sunday, 8 May 2005 04:09 (twenty years ago)

"I prefer his stuff to when ppl try to write about music."

y'all stop for a minute and respect this for perhaps the most wise thing I've ever read here. also a perfect epitaph for my lurking.
goodbye ILM.

milton banks, Sunday, 8 May 2005 04:26 (twenty years ago)

oh, right, aaronhz is a psychotic bunghole, could you ban him too please.

-- John (johndahle...), January 23rd, 2005.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

If I started behaving the way you do, I'm sure she would.

-- Aaron Hertz (aaronh...), January 24th, 2005.

j blount (papa la bas), Sunday, 8 May 2005 04:42 (twenty years ago)

HI JAMES DID YOU LIKE YOUR SONG?

it's gonna be "George Bush Sucks" on the actual CD, OF COURSE.

Aaron Zanders (AaronHz), Sunday, 8 May 2005 05:52 (twenty years ago)

funny that richard hell said KEROUAC KEROUAC KEROUAC and ppl stopped and cooed somewhat over hell as he said it and here we are and still no one else remembers to think KEROUAC KEROUAC KEROUAC

if i liked coltrane more i'd say the coltrane of writing: so i'll say an IDEA of the coltrane of writing, and there lies the good of it and there the problems also

mark s (mark s), Sunday, 8 May 2005 11:28 (twenty years ago)


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