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235 Pages·1987·1.6 MB·English
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The Triumph of Vulgarity Rock Music in the Mirror of Romanticism ROBERT PATTISON OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS Copyright © 1987 by Robert Pattison Published by Oxford University Press, Inc., 200 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016 Oxford is a registered trademark of Oxford University Press All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without prior permission of Oxford University Press. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Pattison, Robert. The triumph of vulgarity. Bibliography: p. Includes index. 1. Rock music—History and criticism. 2. Music, Influence of. 3. Music and society. 4. Popular culture. 5. Romanticism in music. I. Title. ISBN 0-19-503876-2 (alk. paper) PREFACE “Is not every civilization bound to decay as it begins to penetrate the masses?” Sixty years have passed since Michael Rostovtzeff, the historian of the ancient world, asked the question, all the more ominous for his assertion that “our civilization will not last unless it be a civilization not of one class, but of the masses.” Caught between the certainty that the vulgar will join civilization and the probability that civilization cannot survive vulgarity, can we escape the fate of Rome? The young soul rebels are already at the gates shouting, “For God’s sake, burn it down!” This book examines rock, the pervasive music of contemporary vulgarity, as a way of describing the convergence of elite and mass cultures in our age. Chapter one defines vulgarity and points out that rock is the perfect expression of everything the classical world meant by the word. Its admirers want to make rock appealing by making it respectable. The thing can’t be done. Rock is appealing because it’s vulgar, and an appreciation of it requires a defense of vulgarity. This defense is implicit in the Romanticism and pantheism that have been staples of refined culture for the last two hundred years, and chapter one examines how, against its better judgment, the case for vulgarity has already been made by the elite culture of contemporary civilization. Romanticism and pantheism have generated their own myths about the world. These myths may be historical or imaginative, so long as they encapsulate Romantic or pantheistic ideas in narrative form. Whether a myth is objectively true is of no importance to its believers. A myth is tested against the emotional needs of the living, not the objective events of the past. I have described several myths in this book, from that of the sexual potency of rock stars to the Satanic predilections of their fans. In chapters two and three I look at the myth of rock’s black and primitive roots. In these chapters, I am less interested in the historical facts about rock’s foundations in black or primitive cultures than in what people believe about those foundations. Rock could never have come to rest on the foundation of black music unless it had first been launched on a tide of white ideas about the primitive. My suggestion is that there is good reason to locate the origins of rock in modern, Western ideas that found their classic expression in the nineteenth century. This suggestion will, I think, prove unpopular because it challenges an assumption shared alike by rock’s friends and enemies. But the myth deserves a dispassionate examination, if not in the name of free inquiry, then in the cause of more honest racial perceptions. In the case of rock, the white man foists his own conception of the primitive on the unexplored facts of black life. In these two chapters I have thought it best to err on the side of candor and skepticism rather than allow the myth to pass unchallenged. The elite schools of modern art share a Romantic heritage with the mass culture of popular music. Vulgarity divides them, but a common set of conventions unites them. From top to bottom, our civilization has a mythic unity that was absent in the classical world. The triumph of vulgarity does not mean the extermination of elite culture but the reinterpretation of that culture in a popular mode. Chapters four, five, and six explain how rock expropriates Romanticism’s refined traditions of self, sex, science, and social organization and suggest a method for translating the elite conventions of Romanticism into the vernacular of popular music. What threatens our refined culture is no alien barbarism but its own vulgar reflection. If vulgarity is without redeeming features, then civilization is lost, because the triumph of vulgarity is assured, and vulgarity is nothing but a mirror image of what now passes for elite culture. But vulgarity has all the strengths of the Romantic pantheism that justifies it, and in chapters seven and eight I have put the case for vulgarity as a social and aesthetic power. This is no easy job, not because there’s nothing to say on behalf of vulgarity but because there’s no language to say it in. There is an unacceptable language to justify vulgarity, though, and rock is it. These chapters explain the language of rock as the manifestation of an inarticulate social and artistic creed. Aaron Copland said, “If a literary man puts together two words about music, one of them will be wrong.” He was being charitable. This is not a book about rock as music but about rock as idea. It’s worth noting, though, that rock as music is no simpler than rock as idea. The philistine in the Modern Museum looks at a Jackson Pollock painting and says, “Anyone could do that—it’s just a bunch of oil hurled on the canvas.” The philistine listener approaches rock in the same spirit: “Anyone could play that. It’s just a lot of noise. It’s only five blues chords repeated again and again. All it takes is a guitar and a drum kit.” These observations are largely correct, both as applied to Jackson Pollock and rock, with the exception of the philistine’s premise that “anyone could do that.” Consider the case of the Hollywood soundtrack artist Lalo Schifrin, who in the 1960s and 1970s tried again and again to produce suitable rock accompaniment for the bikers, hippies, and drug fiends inhabiting the crash pads and nightclubs of the B-movie scripts for which he composed the scores. Practice did not make the otherwise highly professional Mr. Schifrin competent in rock. His attempts to duplicate the sound of Led Zeppelin or the Grateful Dead always sounded like the marriage of Dizzy Gillespie with a mariachi band. If so respected a professional consistently failed to achieve even the semblance of rock, what credence can there be for the philistine who thinks he could produce a successful rock album given an afternoon off from work? Rock is the available music of our culture, but available is not easy. What musical quality makes rock inimitable by those who do not share the rock spirit lies beyond my very limited musical competence to describe. I have tried instead to explain the world of thought in which the rocker lives—a world literally unthinkable to Lalo Schifrin. I have relied to a great extent on the lyrics of rock to make my case. I think there are few points I make that could not be illustrated by a score of additional lyrics. I have tried to use those lyrics which illustrate the points with the greatest wit and diversity, but I’d be surprised if knowledgeable readers couldn’t find a dozen of their own examples for each argument. There are those who believe that rock lyrics are incidental to the music, that few people really listen to them, that at best they are chosen for sound or effect, and that no genuine conclusion can be derived from them. If rock lyrics were merely an embellishment to the music, there would presumably be more rock songs that dispensed with words altogether. But a straight instrumental rock song is an oddity. Rockers want to write lyrics and their audiences want to hear them. The perennial outbursts of middle-class indignation at the content of rock lyrics demonstrate that at the very least sanctimonious adults listen to them. College freshmen who can’t recall a line of Shakespeare can cite line after line of rock lyrics and will usually display critical contempt worthy of a Housman for anyone so ill-informed as to misquote Bruce Springsteen or John Cougar Mellencamp. Rock lyrics and variations on them are a favorite source of graffiti. I have seen ordinary citizens buying breakfast in the deli at seven in the morning who found some kind of solace in singing the lyrics of Foreigner. I would no more want to be the one to tell the English scholar Christopher Ricks that the lyrics of Bob Dylan, which join the poetry of Milton and Keats as objects of his critical estimation, were a verbal antimacassar on Dylan’s threadbare guitar-playing than I would want to inform the devotees of Ratt that their heroes’ “Lay It Down” would please them equally were it called “Play It Down” or “Weigh It Down.” I hesitate to think whose reaction would be more violent or just. The words count in rock just as much as in refined poetry. Rock lyrics may be trite, obscene, and idiotic—which is to say, they may be vulgar—but they are certainly not incidental, and the proof of their importance is their consistency. Many would deny that rock has consistency. They claim that it’s useless to discuss rock as if it were a single movement when in fact rock is a warren of subcultures and historical cults which can only be understood separately, socially, and in historical context. Like sportswriters and sociologists, rock critics suffer from a baseball-card mentality. The game disappears in a welter of distinctions. At one extreme, Casey Kasem tantalizes the audience for his weekly Top Forty Countdown with questions like, “What is the record for the number of weeks in which there was a different number-one song on the pop charts every week?” At the other extreme the righteous critics of the more obscure fanzines can detect countermovements within rock movements on an hourly basis, Many books mentioned in the bibliography to chapters two and three give summaries of the facts and subspecies of rock. I have tried to provide something different: an understanding of what holds the various kinds and periods of rock together as an intelligible whole. I have taken my examples as broadly as possible, so that Brian Eno and Ted Nugent find themselves used to support a single argument about rock, a procedure that will seem to rock purists what using Ignatius Loyola and Jerry Falwell as the exemplars of the composite Christian would seem to an Episcopalian bishop. If readers find this portrait of rock useful, the procedure will be justified in the result. But I would give it as a rule that the two most dissimilar rock songs have more in common than do any rock lyric and the song most like it in another musical genre. Rock distinguishes itself from all other music by a shared ideology that crosses all its internal divisions. Believing in this consistency, I have escaped the rock critic’s usual compulsion to make his book absolutely up-to-date. Whatever is now or to come in rock is inherent in what has passed. If the key words of this argument were capable of quick and ready definition it would have been unnecessary to write the book. I have generally allowed the book to define terms like Romanticism and pantheism as it proceeds. But rock itself is a vague term and one of the aims of the book is to give it better definition. I start with the Vincentian postulate that rock is that which has been called rock everywhere, always, and by all rockers. Elvis is rock, the Beatles are rock, the Rolling Stones are rock, Iggy is rock, the Clash are rock, Bruce Springsteen is rock, the Fall are rock. Rock, like the ideology out of which it grows, is a subjective phenomenon. To be rock, music does not have to be played on guitar or drums. It does not have to use blues chords. It does not have to be electronic. It does not have to have hillbilly roots. It does not have to have a black pedigree. It does not have to be sung by teenagers. None of these conditions is either necessary or sufficient because each is a mere objective correlative of what is first and always an idea. Frank Sinatra singing “My Way” is old-fashioned pop in a regressive jazz tradition, but Sid Vicious singing the same song is rock, pure and simple. The Sinatra version is an old man’s song whose mature theme is the acceptance of life as it is. The Vicious version is a young rebel’s denunciation of everything old, smug, and wistful. The words, accompaniment, and all other objective criteria might be the same in each version, and yet one would be rock and the other not. I have tried to describe the idea of rock. This is an American book, and those who believe that the British invented or reinvented rock will find little comfort either here or in the facts. Without much hesitation the Englishman Wordsworth declined the opportunity to become the father of modern vulgarity and so of rock. The American Whitman accepted the same invitation with alacrity. Wordsworth’s opinion of the vulgar is examined in chapters one and four, the relation of British and American rock is discussed in chapter three, but the poetry of Whitman necessarily finds a place in every chapter. I think the ideal reader for this book would be an intelligent twenty-year-old American who likes rock and reads books. Older readers may find something here too. Many people who have not been teenagers for some time wonder how to account for the durability and omnipresence of rock. I have tried to provide them with an introduction to the subject. Scholars and social commentators have examined the relation of mass or popular culture—what I call vulgarity—and traditional letters and learning—what I call refinement. The book has something to say about this. There is a growing body of academics who specialize in deciphering the social and cultural message of popular music. They may find some of the conjectures here of interest. And historians of Romanticism may be interested in a theory that purports to show the continuation—I would say the victory—of nineteenth-century pantheism in the shopping-mall culture of the late twentieth century. If my argument is correct, I think it would tend to support the following statements: Ours is a more homogeneous culture than we generally allow, in which elite and popular cultures subscribe to a single set of ideas. Prominent among these ideas is Romantic pantheism. In its pure form, Romantic pantheism encourages vulgarity. American democracy provides an ideal setting for the growth of romantic pantheism. American democracy necessarily grows more not less vulgar. Poe’s Eureka and the Velvet Underground are products of a single cultural force. What separates elite from popular culture is its unwillingness to embrace the vulgarity inherent in its own premises. There is more ideological vigor and consistency in the music of the Talking Heads than in the paradoxes of the academy. Nineteenth-century Romanticism lives on in the mass culture of the twentieth century, and the Sex Pistols come to fulfill the prophecies of Shelley. Vulgarity is no better and no worse than the pantheism and the democracy out of which it grows. Believing in Whitman, the democrat should also glory in the Ramones. What follows explains these contentions in more detail. Greatest thanks to Roger Rawlings of the Alter Boys for information, criticism, and advice the whole way through. Many thanks to Steve Allen for sharing with me his parodies of rock lyrics, to Maury Webster and the Radio Information Center for kind help with the figures on audience distribution in American radio markets, and to Jorge Garcia-Gomez for advice on pantheism. R. P. Southampton, NY May 1986 Chapter One THE TRIUMPH OF VULGARITY Rock and Romantic Pantheism This is the age of vulgarity. School’s out forever. They’re dancing in the streets. Love has gone to a building on fire. What’s happening? Vulgarity has triumphed. Champions of refinement remain. In 1980 Barbara Tuchman issued a blast against the decline of quality in the pages of the New York Times Magazine. But what effect can this anguished cry have when published in gray type next to the tan young flesh in the underwear ads? The genteel build themselves neo- Georgian mansions, but the fortunes that support their Augustan airs are made in sitcoms, drugs, and cheeseburgers. On both sides of the Atlantic, knights of the New Left and the Old Right prepare for the last great battle in the West, in which refinement will go forth to slay vulgarity. But the struggle is over. The dragon has long since won the victory. Vulgarity finds itself condemned on all sides by enemies as disparate as President Reagan’s Secretary of Education, who wants to restore the legacy of cultural refinement, and the Marxist critic Theodor Adorno, who looks to socialism to purge the world of its capitalist crudities. But vulgarity by its nature is impervious to condemnation. The point is not to condemn it, which has been done without success, but to describe it, which has yet to be undertaken. Since we live in a vulgar world, and since the world seems likely to become more not less vulgar, the time has come not only to say what vulgarity is but to enumerate its benefits alongside its sins. Rock is the quintessence of vulgarity. It’s crude, loud, and tasteless. Rock is vulgarity militant, and modern vulgarity is one incarnation of Romantic pantheism. This is a book about the nature of rock and about the contours of Romantic vulgarity. VULGARITY Horace, the least vulgar of poets, opened the third book of his odes with an incantation against the uninitiate mob: “Odi profanum volgos et arceo,” I hate the vulgar mob and keep my distance. Let the tongue be silent. I am the Muses’ priest And sing a song not heard before To youth. Horace borrowed the language of Roman religious ritual to sanctify his hatred of the ordinary. His is the classical definition of vulgarity. Everything common is profane. No beauty is possible without shunning the unrefined multitude. A new generation of cultivated taste must bring to life the same rule it has learned in the temple: “Let the tongue be silent!” Horace’s word for the mob comes into English and French with little change of form and none of meaning. David Hume, writing in 1757, might have been composing a gloss on Horace’s definition of volgos: “the vulgar, that is, indeed, all mankind, a few excepted.” In vulgarity, there is no east or west. The vulgar includes almost everybody. It embraces the “them” of “us and them.” Only a handful of mankind has the refinement that rises above vulgarity. This handful may be lopsidedly aristocratic, but membership is not confined to any one order. Horace himself rose from the ranks of the lower orders. A hundred years ago, Matthew Arnold devoted the better part of Culture and Anarchy to developing Horace’s attitude into a principle of social organization. All social classes are equally defective. The populace is raw, the middle classes philistine, the aristocracy barbaric. Only those who practice “sweetness and light” and find “their best selves” can overcome the inherent vulgarity of the human condition. Let the genteel few who have risen above the common herd rule the world. Vulgarity is common. The great mass of men who lack refinement are vulgar. But inside a man vulgarity is not a presence but an absence. Vulgarity is the absence of cultivation. All men are born with the emptiness of vulgarity inside them; few ever fill the void. “The vulgar” is the language of the people, the language ordinary men learn without education. The Vulgate was once the Bible of Greekless Latin speakers. If lack of cultivation is the inward mark of vulgarity, delicate authors agree that the outward and visible sign of this deficiency is noise, the mingling of sound without rational order. “Let the tongue be silent!” Horace admonishes youths who would transcend vulgarity. The cultivated man thinks, speaks, and acts with reasoned restraint. The furthest remove from vulgarity is perfect silence, Horace’s sacro silentio. Man in his natural state is a selfish ranter. Thersites, the only commoner among the aristocratic Greeks who fought at Troy, is an ugly, self-seeking lowlife. But before Homer presents his physical deformities, he has identified him as a vulgarian by his speech. Thersites talks too much. His words are akosma—ranting, undisciplined, chaotic. “Rank Thersites,” Shakespeare called him. Noise, unchecked by the contemplative powers of inner cultivation, is a reminder of the chaos before creation. The

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The Triumph of Vulgarity in a thinker's guide to rock 'n' roll. Rock music mirrors the tradition of nineteenth-century Romaniticsm, Robert Patison says. Whitman's "barbaric yawp" can still be heard in the punk rock of the Ramones, and the spirit that inspired Poe's Eureka lives on in the lyrics of T
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