Picture 1

First came Definitely Maybe of course, which is a great album, so good I don’t feel capable of writing about it just yet. But as everyone knows, it’s something of an anomaly in the Oasis canon. The artistic standards are consistently high, the lyrics are pretty good on the whole (sometimes exceptional) and, crucially, for all the rock classicism, it mostly sounds like it was released in 1994, which is the year it was actually released in. Contrastingly, all of Oasis’ subsequent records sound like archeological fragments from bygone epochs. It isn’t quite as if you could say that Heathen Chemistry (in actual fact released in 2002) sounds like an album made in 1969, more as though the record has emerged from some bizarre Terry Gilliam-like alternative universe in which history has collapsed, and a sinister dystopian government is trying to confuse the populace with a horrible machine that sounds like 1980 one minute, 1965 the next, then 1976, then 1989, and so on and so forth. Put another way, Heathen Chemistry is, in common with all the other post-Definitely Maybe offerings, a quintessential postmodern record. Oasis were the band the postmodern age deserved, right enough.

The incredibly culturally damaging/boring process was initiated in earnest with their 1995 long-player What’s the Story Morning Glory? a work for which the epithet ‘zeitgeist-defining’ hardly seems adequate. From the Austin Powers-esque, pseudo-retro-nonsense of the title downwards, this is an album which establishes new standards of anti-meaning. Gary Glitter somehow manages to turn up on opening track ‘Hello’, which sets the tone for the rest of the record, an hour-or-so in which childish inanity is driven to such a peak of intensity that paedophilic is perhaps the only word. Read the rest of this entry »

Beastie Boys & Paul's Boutique (1989)

OK, in the broadest sense of the word, all post-Jailhouse Rock popular music is postmodern. Over fifty years ago, rock’n’roll arrived into a post-Auschwitz, post-Hiroshima world in which all the old essential truths and Enlightenment certainties had been blown to smithereens. Rock’n’roll was the cultural expression of a historical moment at which history itself seemed to have collapsed, a blast of feral noise at a time when human civilisation had self-destructively brought itself to the brink of barbarism. It was post-Christian, post-Freudian, post-Einsteinian, and hence also postmodern by default. It was also (on a less melodramatic level) unmistakably the progeny of America, that vast node of the postmodernist worldview; rock’n’roll/pop was the loudest, most visible product of a USA entering its Augustan phase, just beginning to discover in earnest the consumer capitalist ethos that would be its neo-imperialist raison d’être in the ensuing half-century. Ephemeral, playful, and for the most part anti-didactic: it would be difficult to find a more archetypically postmodern form than the musical entity we have come to call pop music in the years since Elvis first dropped.

However, for all that pop music may have always been postmodern at its core, for a long while it existed at odds with, rather than as an adjunct to, ‘classical’ postmodernist art (if that isn’t too much of an oxymoron). Warhol, Reich, and Pynchon might have seemed like the kindred spirits of Dylan, The Beatles, Motown and punk in innumerable superficial ways at the time, but in retrospect they can also appear as polar opposites. The pop musicians of fifties, sixties and seventies were, for all their blasé youthfulness, engaged in establishing a completely new, vital, modernistic tradition (or, to use the less stuffy term advocated by pop-journalist Simon Reynolds, a continuum). By contrast, mainstream, or highbrow, postmodernist art was predicated on the notion of belatedness in relation to long-standing traditions of Western art, concerned primarily with bathos and the multitudinous colourful refractions that can be got out of ironic, nostalgic engagements with an obsolescent culture. While pop music was enjoying a spectacular High Renaissance-like period in the sixties, seventies, and early eighties, postmodernist literature, architecture, and visual art was giving expression to an end-of-history relativistic bleakness; compare Beckett’s elegiac post-religious explorations of the void or James Stirling’s wry, nostalgic architecture with the earnest, optimistic, juvenescent confidence of an Aretha Franklin, a Marvin Gaye, or even a Joe Strummer. In contrast to postmodernist high culture’s riffs on belated absence, pop music offered a powerful and emphatic presence.

But by the late-1980s, pop music had without doubt, in characteristically accelerated fashion, arrived at its own postmodern moment. Since its inception, rock’n’roll had been engaged in a process of continual self-reiteration: witness The Beatles’ ‘Get Back’ traditionalism of 1969 after the convulsions of ’67 and ’68, or glam rock’s fifties-influenced retro-futurism. However, throughout the eighties, as the modernism of punk and post-punk dissipated, the tendency towards revival snowballed, to the point that pop music had caught up with the dominant cultural mode of the age. It was now no longer a marginal or underground alternative to mainstream culture so much as a classic expression of its defining consumerist-postmodernist ethos. Read the rest of this entry »

Picture 1

Sorry to have to plunge headlong into pretentiousness, BUT …

Has the postmodern era come to an end? Commentators have been queuing-up to offer this conclusion for decades. However, in the last few years this argument has seemed more and more justified. One of the encroaching cultural impulses throughout the noughties has been a sense of weariness with hyper-reality, irony and relativism, a hankering after simplicity and back-to-basics essentialism that, for a change, didn’t seem conservative and reactionary, but rather rational and progressive – an antidote to the convoluted postmodernist ethos that has increasingly underwritten globalised consumer capitalism. At the end of the decade Obama is talking in rather essentialist (even paternalistic) terms about maturity, hope, responsibility. We’ve come a long way from the 1960s and Derridean ‘free play’.

For me, the song that most encapsulates this mood, this subtle yet marked shift away from the postmodernist worldview is Midlake’s near-perfect 2006 single ‘Roscoe’, a tune to which you might (if you happen to be a pseudo-intellectual twat like I am) want to attach labels such as new primitivist, new serious, new traditionalist (or how about invoking Phillip Blond’s interesting notion of a radical communitarian ‘Red Toryism’?).

Sure, backward-looking pastoralism is as old as music/art itself. The Band, Neil Young et al were treading over very similar ground in a pop musical context over 40 years ago, while postmodernism’s own version of this tendency, of course, was framed in terms of pastiche and nostalgia. But ‘Roscoe’ seems to me to be coming at retrogressiveness from a very different, distinctively late-’00s angle.

Take a look at the lyrics. The refrain is an almost hyperbolically subdued call to insurrection: thought we were due for a change or two around this place. But at the apex of an era of Bush and high capitalism, what will this ‘change’ involve? A soixante-huitard, MC5-style youthful rebellion? Emphatically not. For lyricist Tim Smith, the quiet revolutionary impulse comes from another place entirely: Read the rest of this entry »

 

©2009–2010 The Grain