Can you hear me now? Güt.

The Notwist

Magic Stick, Detroit, April 10, 2003

By now, the firewall separating IT from DIY has been effectively dismantled. It’s no longer a red flag to step up in the club and see a laptop or a sampler sharing space onstage with Marshall stacks, electric guitars, or a sparkly Pearl drum kit. Version 1.0 of this aesthetic might have been Kraftwerk, even if the laptop wasn’t yet invented in the mid-1970s. But as technology has raced forward, rock and roll has kept pace, and today groups like Radiohead, Stereo Total, Grandaddy, and Le Tigre regularly and without pretense mix monitors with monitors, and PowerBooks with power chords.

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Elephantiasis

By any measure—particularly financial ones—General Electric is a big company. It employs over 300,000 people in some 100 countries. Its 2002 revenues were $131.7 billion. It places number 5 on the Fortune 500 list. Its total 2002 assets are $575 billion. We’re not talking a small company here. It is huge. General Electric consists of 13 business units. There are Aircraft Engines and Plastics; Consumer Finance and Power Systems; Industrial Systems and Transportation Systems; Medical Systems and Specialty Materials. And all of these (and more) are sizeable in and of themselves.

So, what does this have to do with music?

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Bettie Serveert: Last Night a Dutchman Saved My Life

Bettie ServeertIn August of 1992, I arrived at Tiny Private College in Nowhere, Wisconsin with a record collection built of cassettes. It was my prized possession — even if half of it was swill. But soon, I fell in with a group of similarly naïve know-it-alls, and together we began discovering, diving into, and discarding musical genres in a cycle that would last all year. The crew featured all the usual clichés. There was the smirking, neckbearded white guy who spent his freshman year ineffectively growing dreadlocks; a lime-green haired student of classical guitar who transformed his dorm room into a smoking parlor; and the fellow Chicago transplant who clung to her Naked Raygun leather jacket as if its folds and chains would protect her from the college’s impossibly staid surroundings. Together, we dove headlong into everything. There were forays into industrial and space-rock that led to an infamous run-in with Psychic TV’s Genesis P-Orridge outside Metro in Chicago. Third-wave ska seemed cool for about a week. And the entire first winter was spent indoors, away from the skin-pealing wind whipping across Lake Michigan, listening to Uncle Tupelo’s March 16-20, 1992, pretending to understand its tales of murder, moonshine, and hope. It was like kicking out the panels in an old farmhouse’s walls. Each time a plank was pulled up or punched out, shafts of light would shoot through the openings. The big, giant thing called MUSIC on the other side would come closer in to tune, but still would loom too large to fully understand. That first year of school, three albums helped me bring the farmhouse’s wall all the way down: Beat Happening’s You Turn Me On; Buffalo Tom’s Let Me Come Over; and Palomine, from Holland’s Bettie Serveert.

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Metallic Tusks: The White Stripes’ Elephant

The White Stripes ElephantBe wary of an album that leads off with its best track. “Seven Nation Army,” a furious slide guitar-propelled rocker and an anthem for the best music on The White Stripes’ new Elephant, opens the new disc just as it opens a new window into the mind of John Gillis. Yes, before there was a Jack White, before Gillis ever heard the blues he’s paid homage to on three previous studio albums, he clearly listened to the same music that raised the rest of our generation: heavy metal.

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He’s Got Style, Miles and Miles

A recent New York Times article discusses the recurrence in our culture of melodrama and earnestness, especially since 9/11. The writer was focusing on recent movies like “Far From Heaven,” that despite appearances, have steered away from ironic distance and ended up engaging their subjects with impassioned seriousness. (At least, that’s his argument about “Far From Heaven,” which he initially found tongue-in-cheek and not earnest enough.) In passing, he mentions Beck’s “Sea Change” and Wilco’s “Yankee Hotel Foxtrot” as other examples of the new seriousness.

It may be, and I have no quarrel with saying goodbye to too much ironic cleverness. But there’s a new example of “straight,” non-ironic presentation in the media that I don’t think I can tolerate. Stephen Malkmus has done a cheesecake shot to promote his new cd, “Pig Lib.” The Village Voice has a photograph of him lying on a bed, his arms thrown over his head, his face turned langorously toward the camera. It looks like any old handsome, empty Calvin Klein model till you tip the paper sideways and there’s his face! His intelligent, chiseled face that used to wear its beauty so casually! He used to not even seem to realize he was exquisite! Suddenly he’s using it and exploiting it and even seeming to enjoy it!

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Rock and roll can change your life.