Posts Tagged ‘Alice Bag

24
Dec
11

Covered: The Tom Tom Club

A perk to becoming a feminist media scholar is encountering two different books that argue Barbie’s queer merits. For class, I recently re-read the introduction to Erica Rand’s Barbie’s Queer Accessories. It begins with Rand putting together a lecture and debating whether to include a cover photo from On Our Backs of a woman inserting the doll into her vagina (side note: I especially like that her lesbian colleagues advised her to consult her horoscope). While proctoring an exam, I read a portion of Alice Bag’s memoir Violence Girl where the author recollects using the iconic figurine as a masturbatory aid. I love my job.

One of Rand’s major points–which Bag reinforces–is that in the process of recollection, adults reshape their childhood experiences. At some point, I plan on diving into ethnographic research. One thing I’m especially interested in sussing out is how race and gender shape generic affiliations, something I’ve encountered time and again as a music history instructor for Girls Rock Camp. I’m particularly interested in how non-fan and anti-fan practices around pop music and riot grrrl are informed by race and gender. But I wonder how much of myself I’m putting into such a project and whether I’m interfering. I keep thinking about the unreliability of memory and how people often embellish or exaggerate their childhood fan practices to make themselves appear intelligent or subversive, either for themselves or for a researcher.

But these recollections are also in the service of developing a larger set of truths we puzzle through as we get older. I don’t know why I took my Ariel doll on a date to see her own movie as a kid. But my intense fan identification with The Little Mermaid so informed my fantasy world that I put together a children’s book that staged mermaids in various tableaux to form all 26 letters of the English alphabet (mom’s Erté books helped too). I also spent multiple summers flitting around the deep end of the neighborhood swimming pool. As a preteen, I couldn’t quite articulate why I felt compelled to rescue a bundle of discarded Barbies and Disney princesses from my closet and put them in various sexual positions, nor could I explain why I reproduced mermaids and Fantasia‘s naked fairies and topless centaurettes in countless drawings. One year, I drew a mural of these unadorned mythological female creatures and gave it to my mother for Christmas. I thought I was honoring the nude form. Now I think I just wanted to see some breasts.

Of course, I didn’t just draw sex scenes and lagoons. I often drew outfits because I imagined I’d grow up to be a famous designer (pity I never learned to sew). But I especially loved creating panoramas that took weeks, if not months, to complete. They were filled with various characters and involved every crayon, map pencil, and marker in the box. I’m sure part of this was the result of being a shy only child. I often drew myself some friends who were cruising the mall, gossiping between classes, living in the Old West, or hanging in a spaceship. Usually I talked to them as I formed them into being. It’s weird to me now that whenever I encounter a blank canvas, I want to fill it with saturated color planes and abstract geometric shapes. As a kid, I was obsessed with drawing people. They all had V-shaped heads, most of them were girls, and sometimes they had purple skin. But I was equally interested in placing them in painstakingly-detailed settings. If I put a group of schoolgirls in a library, it was just as important to establish each girl’s individual characteristics as it was to realistically depict the room’s layout and the spine and cover of each book. I was an indoor kid for sure.

Tom Tom Club (Sire/Island, 1981)

The colors and character detail in artist James Rizzi’s cover for the Tom Tom Club’s self-titled debut are what resonate most with me. In the sixth grade, I happened on “Genius of Love” while listening to 104.1 KRBE some Saturday night. Houston’s top 40 station ran a dance program called “The Beat” which they’d broadcast live from a local night club. Though I wasn’t comfortable dancing in public until college, I was obsessed with the show and would often shimmy and shake alone behind closed doors, pretending I was older and in some place far away from my childhood bedroom in Alvin, Texas. I immediately connected with the hook and was fascinated by the singer’s breathy soprano. I also wondered what all the business about cocaine and James Brown was about. The song seemed kind of novel and a little bit dangerous, like I shouldn’t be up dancing to it. I’d find out soon after that the Tom Tom Club was a side project of that band that wrote that song about arson my parents kind of liked. Then Mariah Carey sampled “Genius of Love”, but by then I was totally over her and listening to Björk.

Since this post has been all detour at this point, let me issue a corrective. First of all, the chubby girl dancing in the “Fantasy” video is better than an army of Bee Girls. Actually, I wore out my Music Box cassette and was so totally not over Mariah Carey by seventh grade. It’s just how I wanted to be perceived. Even though I prided myself on being smart enough to locate the sample, I didn’t know that “Genius of Love” was (and remains) one of the most sampled tracks in pop history. I also had no idea who Ol’ Dirty Bastard was at the time, but I’d learn. I couldn’t admit it at the time, because I was reading Rolling Stone and claiming to hate pop music, but I was secretly thrilled that Carey loved “Genius of Love” enough to sample it. This is why I didn’t protest when the girls in my junior high P.E. class insisted on using “Always Be My Baby” for our aerobic routine, why I perform “Honey” and “Shake It Off” at karaoke, why I just belted “All I Want For Christmas” in my car the other day while running errands, why I wish I were young enough to have my heart broken by some eighth grade scrub when “We Belong Together” comes on, and why I’ll always defend “Vision of Love” and “Someday.” The woman is responsible for “Anytime You Need a Friend”. Let’s take it to church.

As I grew older, my love of the Talking Heads and the Tom Tom Club would develop simultaneously. In part, this is because I ultimately think you can’t have one without the other. I know David Byrne and Brian Eno so dominated the studio process that it necessitated bassist Tina Weymouth and drummer Chris Frantz forming the Tom Tom Club to have another creative outlet. But it’s hard not to hear the interplay between punk, reggae, soul, and dance music on tracks like “Cities” that so defines each member’s omnivorous approach to pop music.

I’m also aware that their cerebral, global-minded pop music is not without its problems. White privilege and class privilege are often twined and embedded within musical eclecticism. Often the same folks who can afford a richly diverse record collection or are given the opportunity to record in the Bahamas or attend art school occupy ascendant class positions. This is certainly true of both bands. Yet I like that both groups attempted to do absorb and endorse popular music from various parts of Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean. The first Tom Tom Club record was co-produced and engineered by Talking Heads’ contributor Steven Stanley, and also boasted Uziah “Sticky” Thompson on the drums and former Wailer Tyrone Downie on the keys. Borrowing from Don Letts’ recollection in his documentary Punk: Attitude it is also upsetting to me how the video to “Wordy Rappinghood”–a song about the malleability and seismic impact of language–was once denied airplay on MTV because, even though the clip was a cartoon based on Rizzi’s design, the network assumed the hip hop-influenced track “sounded too black”.

What I appreciate most about the Tom Tom Club’s first record is that it attempted to be inclusive and made that seem fun to all involved parties. The Talking Heads’ rhythm section played alongside a few reggae greats, King Crimson guitarist Adrian Belew, and Weymouth’s sisters. Their debut album may have been recorded in the Bahamas but the album–which still sounds contemporary–feels like it’s unfolding in your basement with you providing backup vocals. The Tom Tom Club made it seem like you could cut a similar record that was just as much fun to make with your friends. That doesn’t mean the results weren’t as problematic as the band’s name, which simultaneously references Frantz’s kit and recalls colonial appropriation. Appropriation is problematic, but it’s also messy and not necessarily one-sided. Tom Tom Club may have originally been pitched to the gallery crowd. But “Genius of Love” has been incorporated and reassembled so often that it doesn’t belong to anybody. Good art can do that, especially when it uses every crayon in the box.

31
Dec
09

Patti Smith, documentary subject

Patti Smith with Steve Sebring; image courtesy of gerryco23.wordpress.com

Before I went on vacation, Kristen at Act Your Age told me that PBS was going to show Dream of Life, a 2008 documentary by Steven Sebring about Patti Smith. Then yesterday, as I was sorting out my house, my friends Jacob and Melissa reminded me that it was going to be on later that night. It should be noted that I received reminder messages from them within the span of five minutes. I’m fine with being the music geek friends send these sorts of notices to. Thanks, everyone.

First, a disclaimer. I’m not a Patti Smith fan. What I mean by that is, I don’t know Smith’s music very well. Several of my friends got to know her through her music, perhaps developing their feminist and/or queer identities as a result. I’m sure the same could be said for readers of this blog I don’t know personally. This isn’t to say I’m not open to listening to her work. I’m just not very familiar with it. If there is interest in subsequent posts wherein I listen to her albums in chronological order and document my thoughts about it like Carrie Brownstein did with Phish earlier this year, show me the way.

Next, a confession. I haven’t until recently been interested in listening to Patti Smith’s music. While I haven’t listened to Horses in its entirety, I am familiar with her, and the ways in which I’m familiar with her give me pause. Here is why.

1. Each time I see a documentary where she is discussed, the opening chords to “Gloria” fade in and a bunch of musicians wax pretentious about how her music melded the sacred with the profane, or that she was not a musician but a poet and I get pissy. Not because of the song, but because of the purple prose being recited over it. I actually hadn’t heard the song in full until I was well into college.

2. With some exception, these superlatives tend to come from men: Glenn Branca, Thurston Moore, Legs McNeil, Patti Smith Group guitarist Lenny Kaye, Richard Hell, Bruce Springsteen, Bono, and Michael Stipe are but a few names. I remember Alice Bag talks about her influence in the supplemental feature about women in punk in Don Letts’s Punk: Attitude and I know riot grrrl pioneers like Kathleen Hanna were inspired by her, but the praise mainly comes from the men. Established or well-regarded rock and roll dudes. Legends, if you will.

3. In some of the things I have read on Smith, she wasn’t very kind to the women and girls around her. Blondie’s Debbie Harry talks about how dismissive and unfriendly she was during their CBGB’s days in Please Kill Me, an oral history on New York punk collected by Legs McNeil and Gillian McCain. It was also reported in Mark Spitz and the late Brendan Mullen’s L.A. punk oral history We Got the Neutron Bomb that Smith was nasty to The Runaways after they tried to visit her backstage after a concert, leaving a baby Joan Jett particularly crushed. Now, oral histories are tenuous at best and Smith is not asked to comment about any of this. Also, Bebe Buell speaks favorably of Smith in Please Kill Me. Kim Gordon has a prolonged friendship with her as well. But this, coupled with the fact that she doesn’t identify as a feminist makes me feel weird about her status as a feminist rock icon.

4. Add to this the very apparent sense of malecentric hero worship Smith evinces and I feel really weird about her. While I like that she likes Maria Callas, The Ronettes, and Christina Aguilera, I don’t get the sense that she had much use for women. She cut her hair to look like Keith Richards. She learned to hail a cab by watching Bob Dylan in Don’t Look Back, a man who would later tune her guitar. That same guitar was a gift from Sam Shepard. Tom Verlaine apparently has the most beautiful neck in rock music, though her husband Fred “Sonic” Smith of MC5 possessed something altogether else. Pablo Picasso made inimitable art until Jackson Pollack created paintings out of the drippings from Picasso’s Guernica. Willem de Kooning’s paintings made her want to touch the art in museums, an “offense” she gleefully committed on more than one occasion.

In addition, Smith’s most well-known for covering songs by men, reclaiming Them’s “Gloria,” Jimi Hendrix’s “Hey Joe,” and Nirvana’s “About A Girl.” Of course, she redefined those songs by singing them as a man without changing the male-female pronouns or amending them to be about Patty Hearst or Kurt Cobain. And, as I’m sure my friend Curran would be quick to point out, Smith often aligns herself with queer men like Arthur Rimbaud, Robert Mapplethorpe, Allen Ginsberg, William S. Burroughs, and Michael Stipe. Curran may also posit that this makes Smith more closely as a transgendered person, which makes sense given Smith’s commitment to androgyny and sexual ambiguity.

However, I’ve always felt that Smith’s indebtedness to men has aligned herself at with a more liberal feminist, at times heterosexist view of how women play the game of rock (i.e., play the man’s game). While I get how others believe that she’s expanded how women can look and sound in rock, to me it still feels more like she’s abiding by male definitions of performance and sound rather than redefining it for female artists, a group she may not in fact feel that she is a part of. 

To be clear, I don’t need her to be feminine. I’d like it if she were a feminist, but I’d be happier if it just seemed like femaleness wasn’t so burdensome or powerless or safe to her. However, this is how it’s often seemed to me that Smith views or once viewed my sex category, and with it my gender, and this has always been our wedge. I’ll let her state her case.

Of course, this outlook may evince some potential transphobia on my part. I also might be privileging binaristic norms around gender and sexuality instead of championing fluidity. This nagging feeling keeps me coming back to Smith as an idea. But maybe I should get to know her better. And with that, the documentary.

I’ll be blunt again. For the most part, I found this documentary to be indulgent yet slight. Smith of course is the subject, but I was disheartened by how much she seemed to dictate the narrative (I find it just as frustrating when men do this, though I did like when Smith ordered filming to cease backstage before a performance). I would have liked more context.

I also would’ve liked to have been surprised by it more. I didn’t learn much about the artist or the person behind her mythology. I also didn’t get much of a sense of time and place. I could deduce the passing of time by watching her children mature. I understood when we were watching her tour the Trampin’ album because she was speaking out against the Iraq War and the Bush administration. I gather that dancing on the beach in Coney Island with Lenny Kaye was fun, but don’t know why it needed to be shown in slow motion. I know that losing her husband and her friend and long-time collaborator was traumatic because she said so. I don’t know how she felt about the loss of her parents during the 2000s. I saw that she loved playing with her guitarist son Jackson, who toured with her, but I know very little about her daughter Jesse past a gender-bending pubescent trip to the bathroom and, later, a carriage ride with her mother. And past some previously captured interview footage of Smith, I don’t know why she left mundane New Jersey to become a punk poet in New York, though I think I can imagine why.

That said, there were little snatches of Patti Smith the daughter and the artsy gender rebel that I enjoyed and did help me get to know her better. Seeing her eat hamburgers at her parents’ time-warp home. Seeming both proud and embarrassed when her father admits that he can’t go to his daughter’s concerts anymore because he lost his hearing at the earlier gigs he did attend while wearing one of her concert t-shirts. Trading chords with Shepard. Reminiscing about eating hot dogs in Coney Island with Maplethorpe. Holding up her children’s baby clothes and proudly declaring their cleanliness and her refusal to use bleach. Talking about how wanting to touch original paintings in museums is easily satisfied by making your own art. Playing woodwinds with Flea on the beach and swapping stories about how expertly both musicians can pee into bottles while traveling. And seeing her performances and hearing her words, her songs. I wish I was given a timeline to find out when all of these works were created, but I’m content to find out for myself. Let’s start by revisiting ”Redondo Beach.”





 

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