More iD spreads and covers that walk the sightly / unsightly line below
More on the style press
More on the secret thesis

successor to Shock and Awe whose feed no longer seems to be working properly - original blog + archive remains here: http://shockandawesimonreynolds.blogspot.com/ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ the blog of the Simon Reynolds book about glam and artpop of the 1970s and its aftershocks and reflections to this day
More iD spreads and covers that walk the sightly / unsightly line below
More on the style press
More on the secret thesis

Ever the performer, President Trump has lately been putting
on a show of indifference.
…..Beneath all that bluster and makeup, he’s sweating.
-
Frank Bruni
The NYT sees itself not as a defender of journalistic
principles or a champion of democratic values, but rather a theater critic for
political actors.
There are no real-world consequences here, no pain or
suffering for the common people who aren't in their social circles. It's just a
parlor game
-
Kevin M. Kruse
[to Sec. of “War” Hegseth]
You’re an actor. You’re playing Secdef. At least
try to play a good one
-
Adam Kinzinger
Everything is operatic emotion and bitter grievance.
Politicians fail to recognize and adjust for that at their peril.
- Frank Bruni
Frank Bruni / Bret Stephens dialogue, NY Times
Bruni: It’s called seizing a big, fat opportunity. Between
Trump’s disgraced former labor secretary, disgraceful health secretary,
demented F.B.I. director and bottomlessly avaricious brood of children, it’s as
if all the president’s minions are staging some opera buffa about the Seven
Deadly Sins, with different cast members jockeying for different depredations.
I call gluttony! You’re doing envy.
Stephens: Pete Hegseth alone could audition for wrath, lust,
pride and verbal flatulence.
So Trump gave a
speech today at the Villages in Florida. I just watched it so you wouldn't have
to. You're welcome.
…. It's so bizarre how he's always talking about his people
coming "from central casting." He constantly brags that people in his
administration and cabinet are from central casting. He's more impressed with
what they look like than what they can or can't do. (Like it's some kind of
fucked up beauty pageant or something. Very strange.)
… The funniest thing about Dr. Phil coming on stage was when
Trump introduced him and called him up he told him to speak no longer than 2
minutes. Then Phil went on for much longer than 2 minutes and Trump was
standing behind him giving him dirty looks and swaying back and forth.
…. It's always disturbing to watch him at these things, but
what was even more disturbing today was the audience cheering on every lie and
fucked up thing he said. It was a pretty small audience today tho and he kept
talking about all of the "front row Joes" and others who go to every
one of his rallies who were there today. So the real audience was even smaller.
Of course Trump claimed that the small room and small crowd didn't mean
anything because there was an "overflow arena full to the limit" and
"thousands of people watching on monitors outside." He had to lie
because clearly the small crowd upset him. I just love that for him.
-
Mindy Fischer
Hauteur Theory #1: Unfamiliarity breeds Contempt
Hauteur Theory #2: Declensions of Duncan
Hubert Parry: "in true folk-songs there is no sham, no got-up glitter, and no vulgarity"
Folk is associated with naturalism - the idea that there is no artifice involved, no element of show.
Performance, stripped of performativity or exhibitionism. The singer as the ego-less vessel or conduit for the people's consciousness.
Green Gartside on Anne Briggs: "The beautiful melodies Anne sang unaccompanied were profoundly affecting, her unornamented voice a precursor to the anti-professionalism of DIY."
Folk would be the Quaker option, the nonconformist option (in the religious and Puritan-ical sense).
Everybody equal in this society of friends; the liturgy, barebones, stripped of ceremonial flatus.
(Whereas opera, or heavy metal - at least in the 70s - is obviously Catholic. Pomp rock).
The Puritans despised and feared the theatre.
The diagram below relates to anti-theatricality - and the idea that some sorts of performance (the folk mode and the art approach) can actually be "real". That reality can be brought on to the stage, either through the performer as representative of a community, or the artist expressive of their inner self, their emotional reality.
(More on the Diagram below)
Peter Sellers’s spoof on Lonnie Donegan: Benny Goonagain (starts at 4.30 minutes into this satire of a current affairs show):
I created this diagram as a teaching aid. It depicts the discursive space of pop music - it's about talk and rhetoric, rather than praxis and genre per se.
- how fans and critics imagine and understand the music…
- how artists explain what they do, to others and to themselves.
(But could there be a fourth side, making it a square? See if you are as clever as some of my students)
Some artists are firmly established on one side or other of this triangle, and stay there.
But the most interesting careers either involve an artist located somewhere between one axis and another (Roxy Music exist between Art and Showbiz but are nowhere near Folk).
Either that or they are equidistant between all three sides (can't think of a good example here).
Or even more interesting, when the artist goes on a trajectory within this triangular space, starting in one place and moving to another (Dylan is archetypal, moving from Folk to Art, and then creeping back a bit, at times). Some veer all over the place, doubling back, and contradicting / erasing the previous location: consider the literally careering careers of John Lennon and David Bowie.
Some of this 1984-85 iD i magery is genuinely cool, really chic e.g. this one below Or just fun But some of it is a hot mess ' And ...