The Required Amount at the Prescribed Rate (Handcrafted From the Finest Corinthian Leather)
An Ominous Jazz Heuristic
My rule-of-thumb for jazz is this: if there are lyrics, it probably sucks . . . and this holds true for a song I heard on WBGO this afternoon, Rosemary Clooney singing "If Swing Goes, I Go Too" . . . on top of the lousy lyrics, this song has the added irony of negating itself, the song actually wills itself out of existence-- making it all the more odd that WBGO continues to play it-- because Clooney claims that she can live without breakfast and polkas and soap operas, but if swing music falls out of favor, then she'll just up and die, which she did-- swing music faded (aside from a brief revival spearheaded by the Squirrel Nut Zippers) and Clooney lived up to her promise and kicked the bucket in time with her favorite music, she lived from 1928 until 2002-- and this is a grim reminder of just how ephemeral pop music is, the sounds you just can't imagine living without-- whether it's The Cure or Black Flag or The Beach Boys or Hector Berlioz-- they will soon pass from favor, then be regarded as antiquated, and finally disappear from the public consciousness entirely.
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A New Sentence Every Day, Hand Crafted from the Finest Corinthian Leather.
4 comments:
Two words: Ella Fitzgerald. And you’ve made this jazz lyrics assertion before, either here or at GTB and I disagreed then too. Chuck Klosterman also wrote something similar about popular music—march tunes were popular 150 years ago but the only such musician we all mnow today is Sousa. Klosterman says Chuck Berry will be the Sousa of rock n roll 150 years from now.
chuck berry not weezer? i guess i shouldn't care-- i'll probably be dead (or my digital avatar will be able to live in whatever age i choose . . . even the digital 90's).
The 1890’s?
fin de siècle fun
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