OVER the last year or two, I've given myself a crash course on social criticism -- wonderfully grim and eloquent books by Bell, Ehrenreich, both Packers (Vance and George) and various "mass culture" theorists of the '50s. I hope to get into some of them over the next few months.
One of the best of them is Christopher Hayes' Twilight of the Elites: American After the Meritocracy. I'm often stirred or intrigued by a book, but it's not often that one really changes the way I think. Hayes's book, which looks at the meritocracy that followed the WASP establishment, is one of a very short list. He considers how a system that supposedly rewarded talent and intelligence helped lead us into the Enron debacle, the mishandled Middle Eastern Wars, the Great Recession, baseball's steroid scandal and the mess that is the Catholic church.
I should say that the premise of this book very much goes against my grain: I've thought over the years that belief in a meritocracy was what my family had instead of religion or a sense of ethnicity. But reading Hayes argument and reflecting on how nasty the 21st century has been made things look different. (The book has recently been released in paperback.)
If you still have bitter memories of Judith Miller, Dick Cheney, Bernie Madoff, the cardinals who looked the other way during the pedophile scandal, and so on, Twilight of the Elites will help you make some sense of it all. They're the new "best and brightest," and just as fatuous and dangerous as Halberstam's gang that got us into the Vietnam War.
HERE is a Salon Q+A with the author by my friend David Daley.
Monday, August 26, 2013
Monday, August 12, 2013
Willie Nelson at the Hollywood Bowl
SOME years, concerts at the Hollywood Bowl become the highlight of the summer. I know I'll miss a lot of things about Los Angeles whenever we end up departing, but these night with the sun setting and the scent of eucalyptus from the canyon will be very near the top of the list.
This year, we've only been twice so far. We saw the fireworks on the 4th of July, a show at which I learned that Josh Groban is not the anti-Christ (and you can quote me on that.)
Our second visit was for Willie Nelson's show on Saturday night, which was devoted mostly to 1978's Stardust album. I know I'm not breaking any news to say that the show was damned good -- Willie has long been one of the most consistent major artists. Even with what at times could be heavy orchestration (conducted by Beck's father, who has a smile and body language eerily like that of his son), the richness of Willie's voice came across quite well. (The tones of his battered classical guitar, which makes Glenn Hansard's Takemine look brand new, came and went during the first song or so, but showed up quite well thereafter.)
Stardust, of course, was Willie's throwback standards record, a real about face after albums like The Red-Headed Stranger. We are now, 35 years after its release, about as far from Stardust's original appearance as it was from the American songbook -- "Blue Skies," "All of Me" -- that inspired it: It's doubly retro. The highlight for me may've been his reading of "Moonlight in Vermont." Some non-album tracks -- "All the Things You Are" -- were also strong. One of my favorite of his songs -- "Funny How Time Slips Away," the brilliance of which I was recently reminded by the L.A. band Spain -- seemed rushed. This is a number about regret and the perspective time offers. It needs room to breathe.
This said, that was about as good a show by an 80 year-old as any of us deserve. What a titan.
Texas troubadour Lyle Lovett opened. Your humble correspondent has been an admirer, in theory, of Lovett for a long time. But I've always wanted to like his recordings -- which represent an attention to detail, a worship of Townes Van Zandt, a literate take on the country-folk tradition, etc. -- more than I do.
The Bowl show really won me over. Part of it was Lovett's banter and stage presence -- here's someone who really loves doing this, and was especially honored to be opening for St. Willie. I loved his fingerpicking as well. But to large extent it was the way Lovett handled his band -- a bunch of great players, and everyone got room to take a brief solo on almost every song. It was like a great jazz band playing country -- Western swing at its best.
What the hell happened to the shuttle bus back to the LA Zoo, though? Something clearly went terribly wrong.
This year, we've only been twice so far. We saw the fireworks on the 4th of July, a show at which I learned that Josh Groban is not the anti-Christ (and you can quote me on that.)
Our second visit was for Willie Nelson's show on Saturday night, which was devoted mostly to 1978's Stardust album. I know I'm not breaking any news to say that the show was damned good -- Willie has long been one of the most consistent major artists. Even with what at times could be heavy orchestration (conducted by Beck's father, who has a smile and body language eerily like that of his son), the richness of Willie's voice came across quite well. (The tones of his battered classical guitar, which makes Glenn Hansard's Takemine look brand new, came and went during the first song or so, but showed up quite well thereafter.)
Stardust, of course, was Willie's throwback standards record, a real about face after albums like The Red-Headed Stranger. We are now, 35 years after its release, about as far from Stardust's original appearance as it was from the American songbook -- "Blue Skies," "All of Me" -- that inspired it: It's doubly retro. The highlight for me may've been his reading of "Moonlight in Vermont." Some non-album tracks -- "All the Things You Are" -- were also strong. One of my favorite of his songs -- "Funny How Time Slips Away," the brilliance of which I was recently reminded by the L.A. band Spain -- seemed rushed. This is a number about regret and the perspective time offers. It needs room to breathe.
This said, that was about as good a show by an 80 year-old as any of us deserve. What a titan.
Texas troubadour Lyle Lovett opened. Your humble correspondent has been an admirer, in theory, of Lovett for a long time. But I've always wanted to like his recordings -- which represent an attention to detail, a worship of Townes Van Zandt, a literate take on the country-folk tradition, etc. -- more than I do.
The Bowl show really won me over. Part of it was Lovett's banter and stage presence -- here's someone who really loves doing this, and was especially honored to be opening for St. Willie. I loved his fingerpicking as well. But to large extent it was the way Lovett handled his band -- a bunch of great players, and everyone got room to take a brief solo on almost every song. It was like a great jazz band playing country -- Western swing at its best.
What the hell happened to the shuttle bus back to the LA Zoo, though? Something clearly went terribly wrong.
Friday, August 9, 2013
The Runaways: Queens of Noise
THESE days I am digging Queens of
Noise, the new book by Evelyn McDonnell, onetime Village Voice rock critic now
settled in Los Angeles. The book, subtitled The Real Story of the Runaways,
looks at the ‘70s LA punk/hard-rock band best remembered, probably, for a teenaged Joan Jett, the
song "Cherry Bomb," and some pretty amazing feathered hair.
I’ve admired McDonnell’s work for two
decades now, and have since gotten to know her a bit, and for a year taught
more-or-less alongside her at Loyola Marymount University, where she is a professor
of journalism.
Here’s my conversation with McDonnell
about Queens of Noise, which she will discuss at Book Soup on Wednesday.
What drew you to the story of the
Runaways?
It's a great rock'n'roll story that
had only been told in parts, and seemed well past due for a complete treatment.
I also saw it as a narrative that's bigger than music: It's a coming of
age story about young women crossing boundaries and expressing themselves —
their sexuality, their anger, their rebellion, their fears — in ways that
hadn't really been done before. There were girl bands before the Runaways, but
none of them had the kind of exposure (so to speak) and global experiences that
these musicians did, at a pretty young age. It's also a peek into a
fascinating, rich time and place: Southern California in the mid-'70s. There
are all the elements of a great story, period, in Queens: tragedy, comedy,
mystery, drama, sex, drugs, crime, etc. With an awesome, under-appreciated
soundtrack. As a woman just a few years younger than the Runaways, with
my own California roots, and a deep love of music, I also personally related to
their saga.
You describe the band members as
creatures of the Sprawl. Give us a sense of what early-70s Southern California
– the world that made the Runaways – was like.
This was a period when the
California dream epitomized by the Beach Boys was wearing thin — fault lines
were rupturing. Decades of incredible population and economic growth had slowed
precipitously; there was Watts, Manson, smog, overspeculation, etc. The members
of the Runaways lived miles apart from each other in this car-dependent
Exopolis. They were suburban girls, from the Valley, Orange County, Long Beach.
But LA also had Hollywood, which was not just a place of Tinseltown fantasies:
it was a bohemian mecca for all the outcasts and weirdos, for the queer kids
and the runaways (small and big R). It was a place for experimentation (with
drugs and sex), for hedonism, for liberation and libidos, and for exploitation.
It was a place to escape those suburbs, and it's where the Runaways came
together.
How much access did you get to the
musicians and to band manager Kim Fowley? Did all the major characters speak to
you?
Kim Fowley, Jackie Fox, and Vicki
Blue gave me quite a bit of time explicitly for the book. I also interviewed
Joan and Lita, once each, for the book. Cherie would not do an interview for
the book, but I had interviewed her a couple of times for the Sandy West
thesis/article that was the root of the book. I never interviewed Sandy before
she died but I talked to her family. I also had interviewed Joan and Lita for
other articles over the years, and I was able to draw on that material, some of
it never published before. Plus all the other interviews listed in the back.
Within the first few chapters of the
book, you write about the debate between architecture scholar Reyner Banham and
art critic Peter Plagens on the nature of LA, and get into the work of Joan
Didion, William Gibson, and others. What’s the right amount of context in a
book like this?
As I said, I saw this as more than
just the story of one band: I also saw it as an important, emblematic piece of
cultural, social and feminist history. Those contextual pages are a tiny sliver
of the book. I think they give the book a bigger, broader meaning and
perspective, but some critics seem to feel you can't take a band like the
Runaways that seriously. It's an anti-intellectualism that seems strange to me
as a fan of Greil Marcus, Ellen Willis, and Jon Savage, but is rampant in
rock-critic criticism.
How do the Runaways fit into the
history of women in rock?
They were clearly pioneers, in terms
of the scope of their accomplishments at their age and in a relatively short
period of time: five albums, multiple national and international tours,
magazine covers and hit records (in some countries). Obviously, there were girl
vocal groups that preceded and outsold them. And there were other bands where
women played instruments — some great ones, like Fanny and Isis. But the Runaways
achieved a level of at least notoriety, and also genuine success, that had
eluded other bands. Obviously, some of that was based on the fact that they
were not shy in their sexual presentation, and in that sense, their legacy is
mixed.
Looking back, almost four decades
later, what is the band's long-term influence or legacy?
Because of Joan's and Lita's
subsequent success, the Runaways have been taken more seriously in retrospect
than they were during their brief career. Whereas some of the early female
punks repudiated them, later generations — from Riot Grrrls to the Donnas to
Miley Cyrus — have been more sympathetic to the barriers they faced and how
they faced them. They were a key transitional figure in the evolution of both
punk and hair metal, particularly in Los Angeles. They were friends with and
peers of the Sex Pistols and the Ramones. But although those bands were clearly
just as Svengali-driven and gimmicky, they always get taken more seriously. I
think the Runaways' legacy is up there with those bands, and deserves to be
acknowledged.