[identity profile] byebyepride.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] poptimists
[[personal profile] koganbot  has been answering this question, originally posed by [profile] poptasticuk , in his column here, and talking about it on his journal here. I thought it might be in order to continue the conversation today. Personal anecdotes welcome! I'm off out, but I'll be back to talk after 2.]

When I was 12 I was a member of a Scout troop based on a housing estate a little way from the comfortable middle class suburb where I lived. I was just discovering music, and particularly loved the Beastie Boys. (Obviously my mum never let me steal a VW badge, but I was allowed to write and ask for the little replicas they gave out in an attempt to keep kids away from their cars.) For a while I was allowed to share this enthusiasm with other members of the group, until one day they decided that as a 'square' kid from a posh school, I wasn't supposed to like the Beastie Boys, and clearly was only doing it to 'fit in'.

Around the same time my dad was a director at a merchant bank in the city. One day he overheard a much younger colleague saying 'you know Mr T******? You'd think he was into, you know Vivaldi or something. But he likes Iron Maiden!' (And WASP, Helloween, etc. it transpires. Partly because he was lending money to a company that was involved with those acts, but hey, why spoil a good story!)

A year or so later I was in my first year at boarding school, and I had (via my dad -- not how this is supposed to happen!) got into metal. I remember one of the older boys (who subsequently ended up as a maths teacher at the school, I wonder where he is now?) walking past, noticing that I was listening to 'Kill 'em All' and saying 'Metallica: pretty hev (heavy) for a junior'. This time not liking what I was supposed to like was a good thing, and he let me have free run of his cassettes to learn up on all that other heavy stuff. (Result! Cheers Simon!)

Obviously this still goes on -- I think a large chunk of the 'poptimist' experience is about this: deliberately liking what you're supposed to dislike; finding yourself in transgression of 'supposed-to's of various sorts; and of course encoding new 'supposed-to's. (Aren't all the polling and games intended to recognise and disrupt the natural formation of 'supposed-to's?) Most of my IRL pals in Edinburgh like what they're supposed to like (although I think everyone has a couple of things they like that don't fit -- maybe this is the limit of the 'supposed-to' model), and are happy like that. [But I was playing tunes when we had people round for C's birthday and pretty much every track prompted a 'what! you can't play this' from someone -- but there was always someone else who thought it was ok to play it, so clearly all sorts of 'supposed-to's were clashing in the room.]

Anyway what annoys me most about music radio for example is how obviously it enshrines 'supposed-to's: you know, Radio 1 is for 'new music', as long as that doesn't include too much dance music etc.; 6music for 'music that matters'. But then I guess that 'supposed-to's are how the cultural industry works -- fixing and solidifying the 'supposed-to's that are already there in the social world. So the battle for autonomy is the battle against 'supposed-to's?
From: [identity profile] jauntyalan.livejournal.com
"; finding yourself in transgression of 'supposed-"

sort of. i think my take on this poptimist crusade with the world in general is to make it known that YES it is possible that to like (appreciate, etc) Girls Aloud, Spice Girls and be sane and reasonable. because ppl assume so much about who you are - badging you up with the supposed-tos - making them aware when they are wrong.

it's 'consciousness raising' akin to tilting at prejudice in the more general sense. oh noes, i will lead to musical political correctness gone mad

more unhelpful analogies

Date: 2007-06-29 11:53 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dubdobdee.livejournal.com
like sid vicious wearing a sw4stik4 cz he WASN'T a n4zi!

Re: more unhelpful analogies

Date: 2007-06-29 12:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jauntyalan.livejournal.com
we're not trying to shock for the sake of shock. we might actively provoke to make it known. we could have t-shirts printed "I LIKE POP - ASK ME HOW" :-)

contrariwise, sid wasn't saying 'i like hitler' (though my may actually have SAID spoken-action it TO SHOCK too)

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