ext_380265 (
dubdobdee.livejournal.com) wrote in
poptimists2006-09-13 02:35 pm
utterly forgotten but NOT OBSCURE
by terming david byrne "obscure",
alexmacpherson touches the exact, interesting nerve i think -- maybe even more than with his legendary "why SHOULD i have heard of john wayne?" argument
which is that in every generation (wait, that's how BUFFY starts!! -- er er focus) in every generation there are figures very well-known to all who have just VANISHED from mainstream radar by the next cycle
it's not that they're still popular but currently unfashionable; it's more that "what they meant" is no longer part of the pop discussion -- is that right?
so why has byrne vanished this way? or is it just not making "the right kinds of records" any more?
(disclaimer: i LOVED LOVE LOVED early TH and have i think every record they made --- BUT i went off them INCREDIBLY fast, round abt "true stories", and it took me years to rediscover any fondness)
which is that in every generation (wait, that's how BUFFY starts!! -- er er focus) in every generation there are figures very well-known to all who have just VANISHED from mainstream radar by the next cycle
it's not that they're still popular but currently unfashionable; it's more that "what they meant" is no longer part of the pop discussion -- is that right?
so why has byrne vanished this way? or is it just not making "the right kinds of records" any more?
(disclaimer: i LOVED LOVE LOVED early TH and have i think every record they made --- BUT i went off them INCREDIBLY fast, round abt "true stories", and it took me years to rediscover any fondness)
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This is a major step down in fame for Byrne who was, as Mark suggests, famous and spoken of in the 80s WAY beyond his record sales.
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One mistake he made - even if only in terms of being Known By The Lex - is backing the wrong Brazilian horse: he went for quirky post-Tropicalia stuff instead of (say) baile funk or even drum n bass - entirely reasonable given that what he likes is quite Heads-ish but he missed a niche to carve himself.
Yr story about liking TH reminds me of the very rapid fall-off in my liking REM (I have not yet got back to 'fondness') and that makes me realise that STIPE will surely be one of these suddenly forgotten figures.
Who were they for me I wonder? We'd be looking at contemporaries of Bowie who fell off the radar, I guess. Alex Harvey maybe? FRAMPTON? I remember being quite surprised to find that Stevie Wonder had ever been an official genius but I don't think he ever became obscure in this way.
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"people whose now-forgotten importance you were surprised to discover"
or some such
i am trying to come up with some for ME but i think i am so old that i predate the dawn of art or something
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I think the sun has set on Alex Chilton, though I don't know how famous he was.
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There is not much rhyme or reason to the Old Popstars I have heard of/heard/like.
I have never heard of Alex Harvey or Frampton. I have heard of Stevie Wonder and like what I have heard from him (not a great deal) v much. To date I prefer all Stevie Wonder samples in modern r&b to the originals though.
Do you like the Tori Amos Chas'n'Dave covers?
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I'm finding it interesting to think over who the '90s/'00s equivalents might be - Bjork, Jarvis Cocker maybe? I imagine a lot of people today and in the future would be pretty unaware of them, and yet ten years ago they were household names. Also, they were famous as much for their personalities (okay, for being a bit weird) as they were for their music, bit like Byrne.
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Mark E Smith in 10 years time
Re: Mark E Smith in 10 years time
it is surely only a matter of time...
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(not for me obv)
i think anyone i name will likely be a pre-rock figure -- jim reeves for example
one of the interesting dimensions of punk is that it was the last moment that rock culture wasn't niche-divided safely off against itself, so in the year-zero-fication of everything, EVERYTHING came back into play to be rejudged (apparently)
except for a handful of oddball one-hit-wonders maybe (thunderclap newman; python lee jackson; andy fairweather-low) -- who were none of em more than nine-day-wonders in the shadow of something else anyway, i don't think
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(i would probbly place p.sarstedt here if his one-hit-wonder weren't so MASSIVE still)
jacques brel?
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what about peej harvey? she disappeared and took "shouty wimmin with a guitar" shaped pop with her, didn't she?
Huggy Bear, yesterday
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another PJ
Re: another PJ
Re: another PJ
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But I think the micro-subcultural level on which all this takes place (despite Jeays having memorable tunes and well-crafted words; see also Momus, at least on the words front) actually proves your point that this tradition has been - in the US and UK at least - erased from pop.
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(nb i have never heard him perform his own songs)
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another of the effects of the "punk --> niche marketing" evolution in the late 70s was to dig back before the dawn of "rock" (1965?), to re-evaluate and re-establish forgotten or under-regarded precursor modes (exccept this may be less an "effect" of punk than a "cause" actually)
weird example of how it was in the later 60s = shanana at woodstock
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Bono: 2,510
David Bowie: 630
Elvis Costello: 549
David Byrne: 191
KRS-One: 126
Michael Stipe: 111
Kate Bush: 105
Rick James: 70
Nick Lowe: 35
John Lydon: 13
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John Wayne: 914
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i guess this is a way of asking you to be more elaborate about the various possible causes.
also i think british/american asymmetries are complicating this discussion.
I find this discussion confusing
(1) Please. David Byrne was never a household name anywhere. Ever. Jeesh.
(2) Influence and name-recognition belong to different species. May also belong to different genuses and families.
(3) The phrase "what David Byrne meant" is not self-explanatory; I have no clear idea whether "what David Byrne meant" is or is not part of the current pop discussion. Does "being part of the current pop discussion" mean being discussed on message boards? Does it mean being wrestled with by musicians, producers, and songwriters? Certainly can be both.
(4) Elvis Costello rose to prominence as the frontman of an act called "Elvis Costello." David Byrne didn't rise to prominence as the frontman of an act called "David Byrne." This could have something to do with why Lex had heard of Costello but not Byrne. (Obv. sometimes frontman's name can equal or overshadow band's; e.g. Janis and Big Brother, Courtney and Hole, Jim Morrison and Doors; but here we're talking about cultural gods and goddesses and devils and shamans; Byrne was never remotely close to this category.)
(5) Given Byrne's relatively low name-recognition and relatively nonoverwhelming impact in his time, I think he's probably stayed on pretty well both as a public figure and a musical influence.
Anyway, I once met a "curator" who referred to David Byrne as an important "composer." (I suggested to her that James Brown was a more important composer.) Talking Heads' music also got played in discos and at college mixers and on mainstream rock stations. This is a pretty wide cultural range. I don't think name recognition for "David Byrne" followed across this range. (Mostly would have stopped with the curator.) Where Byrne did have his greatest impact and greatest name recognition was among new wave rock bohemians and among dance-club bohemians. This is why it's surprising that Lex hadn't heard of Byrne. I wouldn't be surprised if a lot of the performers Lex has played and a lot of dancers he's played for have heard of Byrne. As Lex says, it's probably owing to chance that he'd heard of Debbie Harry but not David Byrne.
Hard to say what Byrne's actual influence was. He was a singer in a rock band that moved in an r&b/funk direction, but he sang in neither a rock-tough nor an r&b-soul voice. Rather he sang in the voice of a harried white civil servant. This is where he still has a large ongoing impact, even if the impact doesn't come with his name attached. Not that people are copying his voice so much as they're using various white dorkboy voices that they might not have felt free to use if Byrne and a few others (Mark Mothersbaugh? Fred Schneider?) hadn't jumped to white dorkboy voices back in the '70s. To give a few examples that might surprise you, when I hear Bowling for Soup's "1985" and the Jonas Bros.'s "Year 3000," I hear Byrne in the vocals' ancestry, though I doubt that anyone would say, "Oh yeah, Jonas Bros. and Bowling for Soup: Talking Heads imitators."
Re: I find this discussion confusing
I agree and am heartened by all of your post. I also still think the fact that DAVID BYRNE is a really ordinary name is a factor! If an article or person mentions Elvis Costello or Green Gartside or Ari Up or Exene Cervenka in passing these are names which will stick in my mind even if I don't have a particular interest in them. David Byrne is, like, one step up from John Smith. There are CURRENT bands I love whose singers' names I forget because they're boring!
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(Anonymous) 2006-09-14 09:35 am (UTC)(link)BIG logic gap.
i'm only about two years older than lex and I KNOW WHO BYRNE IS. and HAVE DONE SINCE I WAS LITTLE.
hkm
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(Anonymous) - 2006-09-14 10:07 (UTC) - Expand(no subject)
Perhaps I have too high a bar for what meets the definition, but...