Home Sweet Home
Some musicians are like itinerant farm workers or traveling salesmen. They have to hit the road to make a living. So thoughts of home are important. When you’re away, thinking about home can be your happy place, the one that keeps you going. When you finally make it home, it can give the grounding that you need to let you’re imagination run free and be creative.
For Jocelyn Morlock, the idea for Bird in the Tangled Sky flew into her mind when she looked out the window where she composes in Vancouver. It was the birds flitting through the telephone wires. The inspiration for New Era Dance by Aaron Jay Kernis came from the energy of his neighbourhood in New York City. It’s very urban with sirens and gun shots – that can be the downside of big city living – but the overall feel is high energy and fun. I remember standing on the corner of 5th Avenue and 42nd Street when I lived in New York. The mass of humanity buzzing around always pumped up my energy level.
Victoria’s Beast and Superbeasts bring love to life in “If I Was A House.” Just don’t threaten to leave, because the possessive side of that structure can be scary. On the lighter side, I Am Robot and Proud let’s you make music using the houses on his webpage. I also thought it was pretty funny to hear the Strung Out String Quartet do an unplugged version of Arcade Fire’s “Neighbourhood #3 (Power Out).”
The home you grow up in can have a huge impact on the kind of music you make when you’re older. You can really hear the self-confident country boy in Royal Wood’s studio session. He even phoned in to tell us how great it was to grow up on a farm – not even a town, just a rural route. In “We Dreamt of Houses,” The Awkward Stage makes a song for the insecure little person hiding inside each of us. And then there’s CocoRosie. A stranger childhood I can’t imagine. Their mother was on the compulsive side – moving them back and forth across the country – for no real reason. Their father was an itinerant teacher who dragged them along on his peyote hunts each summer. The sisters lost track of each other when the parents split and the rebellious years took over, but they hooked up again in Paris and recorded their first album in a bathroom.
The romantic idea of the tortured genius struggling to create is still a big part of our collective concept of what makes important art. I can appreciate that and we celebrate it on The Signal, but I’m glad I can go home and feel the warmth of family in my happy place.
I also promised a link to The Violet Archers (and here’s a link to “the” Violet Archer.)
Remix-Reposted!
In contemporary music, this has been going on since the late 70s. Luciano Berio’s amazing tour-de-force, his “Sinfonia,” is a great example and on the other side of the spectrum is John Oswald’s Plunderphonics. He was obviously an early adopter on the non-classical side and he paid for that, when the industry didn’t really know how to deal with what he had created – and chose to make him take it off the market. Since then, the whole DJ genre has evolved, based on using records that already exist, as a way of creating new music in a new context.
Remixing and re-making is nothing new, but it just seemed to hit me when I was working my way through the music for this weekend’s shows. There’s a maturity and depth to some of these musicians who aren’t just using bits and pieces that already exist, but are building the foundation of their craft on this idea of renovating art. Early on Friday night, we’ll hear Tortoise and Bonnie Prince Billy doing Elton John’s “Daniel” and right afterwards, its Margaret Leng Tan’s quirky version of “Eleanor Rigby.” They’re just a warm-up for Four Tet and his awesome re-thinking of Caribou’s “Melody Day.”
But the real shocker for me was learning that the Montreal band Misteur Valaire are releasing their CDs under The Creative Commons Copyright license. This is a whole new way of thinking about what we create. It goes way beyond so called “fair use” or peer-to-peer sharing. It assumes that we can make use of things that already exist, while it continues to recognize the role of the original creator. Up to this point, most remixing has been done in a rigidly controlled environment, often to give new life to music that’s already sold itself silly in the market. The results can be great, like Psapp’s take on Astrud Gilberto’s “Bim Bom” from the new Verve Remixed 4, that’ll show up in the first hour of Saturday’s show. But think about Aphex Twin’s famous 26 Mixes For Cash. At that point, the industry was chasing him all over the place, because an Aphex Twin remix had the potential to rejuvenate a career with the same kind of certainty that appearing in a Quentin Tarantino movie would for an overexposed actor.
In the end it’s probably all about the money – as usual. Our consumer culture has given us access to the whole world of art. All we have to do is watch the commercials and put up with the banner ads. But as we move into the new on-demand world, somebody has to come up with a new way of making sure the artists get paid. For their part, artists have to learn to accept that once they’ve finished their creation that it might take on a life of its own. Think about the Rolling Stone’s iconic anthem “Satisfaction.” How many times have you heard it used to sell stuff on TV? On the other hand, listen to Prince’s take on Joni Mitchell’s “A Case of You” or Stina Nordenstam’s re-think of Prince’s “Purple Rain.” For me, they’re in the same league with Glenn Gould’s interpretations of Bach. Blasphemy? Maybe, but they all present compelling artistic statements that reflect the “remixing” artist as much or more than they do the originals.
There are still lots of new original voices appearing in our world – despite what we might think after a particularly bad run of TV shows. I’ll just give one example. CocoRosie have a new single out for download and it’ll kick the show off on Saturday night. But this idea of renovating music that already exists is appealing. It’s no different aesthetically than taking an old house with good bones and completely overhauling it, so you can have a to-die-for bathroom or kitchen. I might not do it to a Frank Lloyd Wright original, but you have to be a pretty special person to live in a house that unique anyway.
So I welcome the remixers. They’ve already taken on classics like Messiaen’s “Quartet for the End of Time” and Handel’s “Messiah.” I think this new “genre” is just beginning to spread its wings.
July 8, 2008 at 4:08 am
Laurie: Last Monday you made the comment that sadness is contagious. At that very moment I was editing a page in a novel I’m writing that contained the following paragraph:
The military were of course delighted. Sadness, being part of human nature, could break out anywhere at any moment. The enemy was potentially anyone because anyone is bound to feel sad at times and, since states of mind are contagious, everyone is a potential agent of sadness or, to use the official term, a ‘sadnessist.’ The Puppet Infotainment Ministry was aware that the term lacked impact and other candidates had been suggested such as ‘downerist’and ‘demoralist.’
July 21, 2008 at 6:45 pm
db: that is wonderful. I”m going to use that term: a sadnessist?!?!?!?
Laurie