k-punk
Spectres of Mark
Tim F said:"Fair enough, but what WOULD be mindless consumerist entertainment then? No-one is suggesting that even the worst pop doesn't 'produce all kinds of emotions and thoughts in people', but so do tabloid newspapers, pornography... "
"Mindless consumerist entertainment" = a lie we tell ourselves about other people's enjoyment. After all, basically all musical styles and cultural pursuits have been faced with this charge. The issue therefore is not "how does one define and/or identify mindless consumerist entertainment?", but rather "on what basis can we <i>categorically</i> disprove the assertion with regards to a certain style of or moment in music?" (a debate which we've had several times here, and one which I do not propose we rush to rehash).
OK... lots here.
1. "Mindless consumerist entertainment" = a lie we tell ourselves about other people's enjoyment.
Not necessarily; it can be the way we describe our own enjoyment.
If I spend a night watching poor quality television programmes, as I often do, I would not object to it described as 'mindless consumerist entertainment'. Because I accept that I can make stupid and bad choices, that much of my time is spent wastefully etc. I suspect that, despite the best efforts of cultural studies, many other people are often prepared to describe their enjoyment in much the same way.
Now take, for example, the following person, quoted in the Pillbox comments box.
'...listening to Radio 1 for a week... I realised one thing: Radio 1 cares about music. God help it.
Someone has clearly misunderstood the target age group. In fact, the number of 15- to 24-year-olds who really care about music is much too small to base an audience on. Today, albums are for 50-quid blokes and Katie Melua fans; the single is cheap, easy and disposable. We want to listen to it, and we want to dance to it, and we might want it as a ringtone. We don't want to talk about it. There isn't really very much to say...'- Grace Fletcher-Hall, 18
If you like, you could nuance something into what she is saying so that her account of her enjoyment doesn't fit the description 'mindless consumerist entertainment', but she wouldn't necessarily thank you for it. Of course, you could entirely redescribe her, or my, own accounts of our enjoyment - but if you DID that, wouldn't you be guilty of the same alleged sin that Marxists, vanguardists etc are guilty of?
2. After all, basically all musical styles and cultural pursuits have been faced with this charge. The issue therefore is not "how does one define and/or identify mindless consumerist entertainment?", but rather "on what basis can we categorically disprove the assertion with regards to a certain style of or moment in music?" (a debate which we've had several times here, and one which I do not propose we rush to rehash).
Yes, all musical styles and cultural pursuits have been faced with this charge. But just because some pursuits that were accused of this charge wrongly, doesn't mean that there has never been a case of a pursuit that is without merit.
Tim F said:Some might hold to the notion that "vanguardism" (and its associated themes of some sort of socially transgressive/disruptive/transformative force within the music in question) is a really existing property inherent within a given piece of music, but this is surely one of the most de-contextualized, ironically <i>desocialized</i> approaches to music one could concoct, sort of like New Criticism married to comforting lefty sentiment.
Yes, that's why it's always handy that there's a Ben Watson around if you're a Popist.
I hope that Mark would agree that vanguardism is really a social matrix which a given piece of music gets swept up in: it is only insofar as music is <i>situated</i> within a social, historical and political context that its formal sonic attributes take on some sort of political lustre (I say "hope" because some of Mark's previous arguments regarding the inherent transformative properties of music suggest a position contrary to this).
I think my position was that you cannot REDUCE all sonic effects to the social. As I recall, I distanced myself from the Underground Resistance position that sounds can be inherently transformative. (Btw, I don't neccessarily want to defend 'vanguardism' as a term or position. )
This is not to devalue the music's sonic properties, only to note that were we somehow able to remove ourselves from social context and consider all music objectively ("under the aspect of eternity") the notion of vanguardism wouldn't really make sense (indeed, under the aspect of eternity music itself doesn't really make sense).
I'm not sure that 'seeing music objectively' is the same as seeing it 'under the aspect of eternity'. The objectivity of scientific experiments does not entail that they see things under the aspect of eternity, for instance.
In this sense for me the perception of vanguardism can only exist internal to the acceptance of a certain social matrix. And it's circular too: the acceptance of the matrix entrenches it.
Yes, that's what you call a social process.
(cont'd below)