Authors: Greil Marcus
4
Vue,
Vue
(Sub Pop)
This young San Francisco band has rather bizarrely rediscovered the unrepentantly cheesy sound of the post-Beatles, pre-psychedelic San Francisco Bay Areaâa sound perhaps summed up better by the name of one of its exemplars, Peter Wheat and the Breadmen, than any actual records, though “âLittle Girl,” by San Jose's Syndicate of Sound, is close. Thanks to Jessica Graves' implacably pokerfaced, two-fingered organ riff, Vue's “Girl” (principal lyric, ecstatically groaned by Rex Shelverton: “Oh, girl”) is closer.
5
Robert Mugge, director,
Hellhounds on My Trail: The Afterlife of Robert Johnson
(Winstar video)
Talkers and players gathered at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame for a celebration of the '30s Mississippi bluesman, and this documentary includes too many fat white guys with nothing to say. But there are lucid, stirring passages from keynote speaker Peter Guralnick; there is Johnson's childhood friend Willie Coffee, crying over his memory of “Sweet Home Chicago” (“I don't like to talk about him too much”). Alongside any number of sclerotic or florid readings of hallowed Johnson tunes by singers black and white, there's skinny white guy Chris Whitley's queer, atonal revision of the previously uncoverable “Hellhound on My Trail,” ludicrous in its first notes and a dead man walking, a thing in itself, by its end. And in the power trio Gov't Mule there are fat white guys slamming their way through a don't-let-it-end-yet assault on “If I Had Possession Over Judgment Day”âwith
the Rolling Stones' “Stop Breaking Down” and Cream's “Crossroads” the most exciting claim on a Johnson song I've ever heard. Don't go looking to Gov't Mule's own records, or Chris Whitley's, for anything similar; their performances here take place outside their careers.
6
Chumbawamba, “Tony Blair” (ActiVator)
The chest-thumpingly anarchist English amalgamation recently put out “The Passenger List for Doomed Flight #1721,” in which it gleefully fantasizes the deaths of, among others, Bill Clinton, Tony Blair and Gerhard Schroederâapparently not considering Joerg Haider sufficiently evil to be worth mentioning. Infinitely more interesting is Chumbawamba's fan-club single “Tony Blair,” which the band should make generally available before it chokes on its own righteousness. Following the Clash's 1979
London Calling
, the sleeve mimics the left-to-bottom pink and green lettering on Elvis' first album, the 1956
Elvis Presley
: in place of the delirious Presley of the original jacket, though still placed right next to Elvis' bassist Bill Black, is Blair. His face split by a smile, he's lightly picking on an acoustic guitarâas if backing up the sweet-voiced young thing on the record, who steps lightly over sock-hop piano triplets while pining away for the dreamboat who promised her “something new” but dumped her as soon as he got what he wanted. “Now you date/All the girls you used to hate,” she sighs; “oo-wah-oo-wah-oo,” says the chorus. Even though she says, “I'm not that kind of girl,” you just know she'd fall for him all over again. That's not the message Chumbawamba means to send, but it's what happens with good records: they say what they say, not what they're told.
7
Clambake
revisited, in William Plummer, “Sensing His Moment”
(
People
magazine, Jan. 31)
In a recent column, Molly Ivins argued that no one can be elected president without an Elvis component, and confessed she could find no such thing in Bill Bradley, whom she nevertheless spent the rest of her space adoring. Bradley apparently got there ahead of her: “A notoriously dozy speaker,” Plummer reported, “he once studied Elvis movies at the Library of Congress to get a clue to the King's charisma.” And still couldn't win New Hampshire: I admit I haven't tried it, but watching Elvis movies at the Library of Congress sounds like eating ribs with a fork.
8
Eternal return on
The Sopranos
(HBO, Jan. 30)
The episode kicked off with a jumping piece of old, East Coast, for all I know New Jersey-specific doo-wop pulsing through a pizza joint run by a man in his 50s; it ended with teenage Meadow Soprano and her friend Hunter cooking at home and singing along to New Jerseyan Lauryn Hill. As events, the songs were more than 40 years apart; in the way the words of both were more interested in themselves than in addressing any listener, in the way they slid off of each other's sounds, the songs were almost the same.
9
Bob Dylan, “Things Have Changed,” from
Wonder BoysâMusic from the Motion Picture
(Columbia)
Taking phrases out of the air (from the Carter Family's “Worried Man Blues,” Duane Eddy's “Forty Miles of Bad Road”) to completely inhabit “I been all around the world, boys,” a line from scores of old mountain songs and white blues, Bob Dylan the person thus begs leave to inhabit a fictional construct in which he imagines what it would mean to outlive oneself: to retain all of one's faculties and decline to use them. Melville created his clerk Bartleby to define rebellion as withdrawal, his manifesto “I would prefer not to”; using all of his faculties, Dylan guides the receding narrator from the 1997
Time Out of Mind
into a long step back, letting him look over the whole landscape of that work with an expression composed of a querulous grin.
10
Bill Clinton, State of the Union address (Jan. 27)
“We remain a new nation,” Clinton said. “As long as our dreams outweigh our memories, America will remain forever young.” “Could Reagan have said it better?” asked a friend, and the answer is, No, he couldn't have said it better, or half as well. Reagan couldn't have brought off the Dylan reference as if it were his own. And I
doubt if Reagan would have done what Clinton did just a paragraph earlierâwhen, caught in the coded metaphors of American speech, he had a Founding Father (“When the framers finished crafting our Constitution, Benjamin Franklin stood in Independence Hall and reflected on a painting of the sun, low on the horizon. He said, âI have often wondered whether that sun was rising or setting. Today,' Franklin said, âI have the happiness to know it is a rising sun'â”) naming a brothel in New Orleans. Or, as another friend put it, “Cue the Animals.”
FEBRUARY
22, 2000
1â3
The Beatles, “A Day in the Life” from
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
(Capitol, 1967); The Handsome Family,
In the Air
(Carrot Top) and
Down in the Valley: A Treasury of Their Most Willowy and Haunted Songs
(Carrot Top, 1994â2000)
Thirty-three years ago, the Beatles marshaled every studio trick to form a collage meant to enclose all modern existence in the arms of absurdity and alienation; the result was stupendous. It made those already passé '50s shibboleths seem so new you couldn't tell the threat from the thrill. The Beatles excavated the habitual in a car crash and the routine in art. They revealed the visionary possibilities of a commute. They threw in what sounded like complete symphony orchestras, echo chambers, electronic distortion and, to end it all, the return of the lost chord. Two-thirds of a century's worth of avant-garde experiments from cubism to futurist noise to Eduardo Paolozzi's post-war “Pop!” assemblages were boiled down into a pop song meant to last forever. The world reeled, then; today, when the seams and stitches of the piece may be more immediately apparent than the whole, it still sounds like a miracle, or an accident.