[identity profile] freakytigger.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] poptimists
I pulled this out of the ILX EMP thread. It's by Scott P, who is a senior editor at Pitchfork (he edits my column, conflict of interest fans). He's summarising a current hot topic.

"...To an emerging generation of kids, music criticism is 24-hour news and leaks and mp3s and ratings and getting to things first. It's not about digesting music and it's not having meaningful conversations about it or reading someone else's ideas about it. Indeed, it's barely having conversations about it all. The democratization of music crit-- on mssg boards, mp3 blogs, etc.-- seems to not be resulting in ppl sharing more ideas with one another, but falling over another just to plant flags. And now many (specifically indie) fans seem actively suspicious of anyone who talks at length about music.

P4k's very act of printing longform reviews** and attempting to share ideas about music is, quite oddly, resented and seen to many as us cramming our opinions down someone's throat or inherently self-indulgent because ppl don't look to music writers for ideas, merely for suggestions on what to download. It's resented and kicked against because music crit is, to many of them, seemingly merely used as a tipsheet and now they can just 'listen to an mp3 and make up their own mind.'

And I fear that with mp3s giving people v. little tangible to grasp onto (no album art, liner notes, photos-- no product), the internet eliminating the need to hunt for info or sounds about/from an artist (let alone make choices about who to literally invest in), the rise of DVDs and video games as products that kids cherish, collect, and participate in w/o other distractions, and music almost exclusively something you do while you're doing something else (a background/lifestyle item) that there is little myth-making or magic in pop music these days, and as a result fewer ideas and conversations and arguments. In short, the future of writing about music, or whatever Amy's panel was called, is pretty grim because the future of getting people to invest their thoughts in music seems grim, too.

** Put it another way: P4k and its peers and contemporaries could be the first and last eZines. If the future of music crit is online, then the old print mag format-- followed by P4k, Stylus, Dusted, Drowned in Sound, CMG, etc.-- is almost N/A. Maybe I'm off but I can't recall a new eZine starting in the past few years. It's all blogs, and lately all that means is posting music or videos. The energy and ideas that departed the Voice, for example, seem to primarily have gone to writing for retail (eMusic), MTV Urge, or writing about single tracks (the very good PTW). I don't blame anyone-- you'd be foolish to start an eZine now-- but what does that say about sustaining lengthy word counts, which was the very thing the internet and the first wave of blogs got right, let alone expressing and communicating ideas?"


Thoughts? Comments? This is a huge topic, obviously.
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Date: 2007-04-25 01:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] katstevens.livejournal.com
Curse of the short attention span. I blame turkey twizzlers.

Date: 2007-04-25 01:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pot80.livejournal.com
I always get this maybe irrational feeling of guilt when I read points like this because I feel like I'm partly responsible for nudging things in a direction I don't really like at all.

I don't know if I'd be so doom and gloom about this, though. I think a lot of the things Scott is observing is just symptomatic of larger problems in the United States regarding anti-intellectualism, laziness, and amorality in young people, and it carries over into a lot of things, not just music.

Date: 2007-04-25 01:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alexmacpherson.livejournal.com
I kind of agree in that it's how I feel about music now, the not entirely pleasant sensation of it all being a race, but I think this is partially a function of reviewing new stuff all the time/having that neophiliac hipster gene.

And now many (specifically indie) fans seem actively suspicious of anyone who talks at length about music.

I don't think this is to do with the internet at all. Well, I do, but it's to do with how the internet was first used rather than what it is: it didn't inherently stymie long-form crit, it helped it! To the extent that anyone could get a blog and do as much long-form crit as they wanted. And as 90% of it was a thousand times lamer than the worst excesses of print criticism, it's no surprise that scepticism about it has become prevalent.

And I fear that with mp3s giving people v. little tangible to grasp onto (no album art, liner notes, photos-- no product), the internet eliminating the need to hunt for info or sounds about/from an artist (let alone make choices about who to literally invest in)...that there is little myth-making or magic in pop music these days

However this is bollocks, and is actually one of the most liberating things about these new methods of consumption - the tangible stuff and the info and the context is all there (equally at your fingertips) if you wish to point and click, and it's so much easier to find than before, but I absolutely LOVE not necessarily being bombarded with it before you hear the song. Myth-making or magic?! These words get recycled to death in all articles I've seen about the internet and music; wtf do they even mean? For me the myth-making and magic is still present, right where it's always been and right where I think it should be, in the sound I hear.

interesting

Date: 2007-04-25 01:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] blue-russian.livejournal.com
This should all be true for film criticism, too, shouldn't it? There has long been a tradition of academic film criticism that has relatively little to do with the market. Music has just been lucky (?) for the past forty years that it hasn't been taken particularly seriously as an "art" form and therefore there was space for "popular criticism."

I'm a little surprised -- if it's true -- that Pitchfork longform reviews are "resented" per se. Isn't the resentment more about its (perceived) commercial influence, the idea that its canon and values, although different from Rollling Stone or the NME's, are just as rigid?

Date: 2007-04-25 01:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lockedintheatti.livejournal.com
I 100% agree with you on the second point - one of the joys of the new way of doing things is to be utterly liberated from baggage and preconception about music.

Date: 2007-04-25 01:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] katstevens.livejournal.com
In fact, I'm already more interested in Scooch flying the Eurovision flag the wrong way up in their video (see Popjustice for further details). It's a bad omen!

Srsly though: might it be true that most of the interesting things to say about pop music have already been said by various music writers over the last 30 years, and ver kids are intimidated by their legacy? I'm sure Frank would disagree with me here! But the only thing I feel I could write about at any length is my own personal experience, and that's boring for everyone else to read :-)

Date: 2007-04-25 01:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] blue-russian.livejournal.com
Part of the reason I came over to poptimists was a perceived higher standard of discussion - ie., no trolls. I think Pitchfork would have a hard time leading conversation even if it wanted to.

Date: 2007-04-25 01:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jeff-worrell.livejournal.com
Taking the proposition in paras 1, 2 and 4 as read (I don't have the evidence to judge if it's true or not, but it feels right), the question is - does it matter?

To which my answer would be: only if the trend is permanent. I think it's still too early judge whether this is the case, given where we are right now on the technology cycle. Downloading is still a new thing for many (and uploading even newer). So we're at the point now where hanger loads of music history has suddenly become available and shareable to more people with more access to the internet than ever before. It's understandable that there will be a tendency towards flagplanting in this environment. Once the technological learning curve reaches a more stable state (and once most music worth re-hearing has been championed), my guess is things will settle down and there will be a swing back towards consideration of the bigger picture.

The stuff in para 3 feels off-base to me.

the freedom to be brief

Date: 2007-04-25 01:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dubdobdee.livejournal.com
length is also a response to a commercial pressure -- just an out-dated one (it doesn't pay to publish a one-sentence book)

when amy p. made this point at the final discussion, there was a visible recoil from the way she put it -- i responded by saying (something like) in an infinitely expandable medium where everything lasts as long as the oil lasts, there's room for a lot of other levels of response... also i said something abt kids frisking noisily on the surface while dark grey ageing sharks circle below them in the darkness

what i didn't say wz that the visible recoil is a manifest proof of the existence of other desires than amy's for the totality of a frenzied now: what's disliked abt her world and attitude will (has already) created a reactive community

i don't know which i'm in -- the anti-amyites seem a bit alex-in-nyc

Date: 2007-04-25 01:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alexmacpherson.livejournal.com
Yeah I agree, though I'm also aware that the pockets of the internet I frequent are (DEAR GOD I HOPE) not representative of any wider trend.

Date: 2007-04-25 01:51 pm (UTC)
koganbot: (Default)
From: [personal profile] koganbot
I definitely disagree as to your personal experience being boring for people to read. And I think we old critics have left our ideas unfinished and that the territory is wide open for smart young critics (and smart old critics) to say new things and to finish up what Meltzer and Xgua and Marcus and Frith et al. fumbled away.

Date: 2007-04-25 01:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] braisedbywolves.livejournal.com
Also the idea that music is the only thing that kids multitask on = WTF.

It did remind me of your position that there is or should be nothing difficult to get about music, nothing that needs explaining. And I can see that a lot of things on EG Freaky Trigger is less "you should like this" than "if you know this, here's something to think about, a connection you might not have seen" - over everything rather than just music (okay, on a sliding scale, with Art at the other end).

unclear me

Date: 2007-04-25 01:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dubdobdee.livejournal.com
"this point" that amy p.made = a more provocative version of what scott sed, not abt length = commercial pressure, that wz me

Re: unclear me

Date: 2007-04-25 02:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] braisedbywolves.livejournal.com
Who's Amy P? I sort of hope that it's AMP's friend superstern Amy Prior, but that does seem unlikely.

Re: unclear me

Date: 2007-04-25 02:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dubdobdee.livejournal.com
sorry, amy ph!ll!ps
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