Robert Christgau's Music Criticism Blog - Expert Witness - MSN Music

The Extra Lens/Todd Snider

Narrative Strategies

By Xgau Feb 1, 2011 5:38AM

 

The Extra Lens: Undercard (Merge)

Twelve songs in 34 minutes by John Darnielle on "vocals, instruments" and Franklin Bruno on "instruments, vocals," and as someone who's long felt Darnielle was trying too hard, I'm so glad he's cut himself some breathing room. Ofttime Mountain Goats keyboardist Bruno deserves very nearly half the credit, less for his three-and-a-half songs (which Darnielle sings, so where are Bruno's "vocals"?) than for the keyboards enveloping "Programmed Cell Death," the piano undergirding the Randy Newman cover, and for all I know the guitar splattering "How I Left the Ministry." If the verse-chorus-verse of these gorgeously understated, quiet but hardly grooveless artsongs makes your teeth hurt, Grizzly Bear will give you something to suck on any year now. A MINUS

 

Todd Snider: Todd Snider Live‑-The Storyteller (Thirty Tigers/Aimless)

His second live album in eight years lacks the full functionality of the first, which doubled as a better best-of than the studio one Hip-O put out two years later. But Snider's hang-loose performances are so infectious they reproduce on record even when he's showing the crowd how two unconscious people sprawled into a perfect T across a fondly and farcically remembered stage. So though the songs are from his much improved studio albums of the past decade, most worth owning in themselves, the "storytelling" isn't just in the songs. There are stories proper galore, plenty more than the three tracked as such, and every one is worth hearing‑-always as narrative and usually as music, where Snider's acquired drawl provides a species of musicality akin to that of prime rapping, especially over a vamp. Snider's promise: "If everything goes particularly well this evening we can all expect a 90-minute distraction from our impending doom." Pondering the Comcast power grab and the perils of democracy in super-Saharan Africa, I wasn't fully distracted. But Snider's stoned-humanist humor eased my soul. A MINUS

 

414Comments
Feb 8, 2011 3:39PM
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"I don't think I said Jimmy Cliff has 'no fiching talent.' He had a fair amount. I think I said 'he's not good enough.'"

Well, Bob, of course I wasn't there. But I was impressed by the audacity of the quote (to be fair to the departed George, the discussion seemed to be as much about editorial turf as it did musical talent). It was drawn from my memory of Kevin McAuliffe's The Great American Newspaper: the Rise and Fall of the Village Voice (1978). But damned if I can find my copy. I will, however, obtain another one and get back to you.

Okay, the passage I remembered reading 33 years ago goes as follows:


He [new Voice editor-in-chief and publisher Clay Felker] went up to Robert Christgau one time, saying, “There aren’t enough stars in the paper. What’s hot?” and looking through the latest copy of Variety until he came across an ad for the hit Jamaican movie The Harder They Come starring reggae [sic] singer Jimmy Cliff. “This guy Jimmy Cliff. Can we do a feature on him?”
“No,” said Christgau.
“Why not?”
“Because he’s not going to be a star,” Christgau said.
“Why not? Why not?” Felker was poking his finger at him.
“Because he doesn’t have enough talent, that’s why,” Christgau told him, watching a look of horror cross Felker’s face.
(The Great American Newspaper pg. 413)

So I badly misremembered it. Which is what happens when you reach back three decades in your mind and don’t check the source. I feel a bit less bad about not checking the source because, thinking harder about The Great American Newspaper, I recalled that when I first moved to Cambridge MA I was too broke to buy books and that I had read it as a new paperback in the Central Square library. So I never owned a copy to check. Until now.

 

Highly recommended piece of journalism history.

 

(Glancing through the book, it seems to do a particularly fine job of showing why Richard Goldstein was an important writer and presence.)

 

Finally, I read that author Kevin Michael McAuliffe had passed away but have been unable to find out any details. Anybody know what happened?


Feb 5, 2011 7:39AM
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Kenneth C:  Didn't mean to bypass your Rose City music memories.  Did you hear that Berbati's closed to music this last year?  Saw The Mekons there once in a show that had tables knocked over in the audience.  Got my album cover of Fear and Whiskey autographed that night.

 

And then once, miracle of miracles, The Wrens came all the way from NJ for a one-nighter at Berbati's and played The Meadowlands for us all.  A great group of guys.  More autographs.

 

That Mississippi Studios show was the first time I'd seen Marshall live.  I did have tickets for an early tour.  '83, '84, maybe.  Bad girlfriend juju that night and didn't make it.

Feb 5, 2011 7:29AM
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NMM:  I get your logic and knew that it was there, hidden in my argument even when I was making it.  Yet somehow it doesn't ring entirely true to me, since that would cause me to also overlook the intention of art that did deliver.  Since I'm not an art scholar I can't get into a painting, sculpting or even writing dialogue on the subject, but since "Guernica", "The Last Judgment" and "The Pieta", "Cry, The Beloved Country", "Oliver Twist", and "The Emancipation Proclamation" clearly do deliver, then yes, I do think we can know and care about that.

 

And I also think there is a more subtle point here too.  We're taking about art that "delivers", as if it were a clear light switch decision.  Yep, that makes it; nope that one doesn't.  It's never that precise.  All human outcome is flawed to one degree or another, so sometimes, yes, the effort itself counts.  Not at the expense of a decision about the artistic accomplishment, but as a companion to it.

 

EDIT:  Maybe this will be the spot we truly diverge, but I think most of Springsteen's stuff from The Rising to The Promise, is exactly what I'm referring to.  None of it is artistically flawless; some people don't like any of it.  To me, the material I like, roughly half of Magic for example, takes on an extra gleam because of what he is grasping at but not reaching -- some kind of pop music distillation of Poor Richard's Almanac, the Bible, "Wild In The Streets", "Mr. Smith Goes To Washington", and "Battle Hymn of the Republic".  To me, although I'll grant perhaps not to you or others, it sets a noble target and fights the good fight in that direction.  The fact that he doesn't completely "deliver", as we're using the term, is only part of the final judgment.

Feb 4, 2011 10:19PM
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"But I also believe that there is a category of artistic achievement above and beyond greatness that can only be accomplished with a sincere heart.  That an artist may attempt to reach that but fail to do so is not so much a strike against him or her in my book, but more like one's reach exceeding one's grasp."

Yeah, but the big problem is that after a while, nobody can know or, really, care about that.

Let's take painters. How sincere was Titian? Michelangelo? Bosch? Whoever did The Sorcerer of Lascaux? How can it possibly matter?

I would love to hear about any work of art that is venerated for the excellence of what it meant to achieve rather than what it delivers. Other than like, you know, Romain Rolland. I guess I should say any work that endures.
Feb 4, 2011 8:43PM
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"I don't think I said Jimmy Cliff has 'no fiching talent.' He had a fair amount. I think I said 'he's not good enough.'"

Well, Bob, of course I wasn't there. But I was impressed by the audacity of the quote (to be fair to the departed George, the discussion seemed to be as much about editorial turf as it did musical talent). It was drawn from my memory of Kevin McAuliffe's The Great American Newspaper: the Rise and Fall of the Village Voice (1978). But damned if I can find my copy. I will, however, obtain another one and get back to you.
Feb 4, 2011 3:16PM
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The golden ratio - 1:1.62~ - is the most pleasing to the eye (I'm sure you all know this, anyway?!). I designed my whole blog on this format - from text to line-height (white-space between sentences), column width and picture width! Type 'japan

alechan blogger' into Goo... Bing and it's the first one..! ;p I don't know how it holds up in a 1024x768 screen - I have a 1280x800 widescreen..?!

1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89?!
Feb 4, 2011 1:12AM
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I had to revise that post amazingly thanks to the filter.  It originally had the first fifteen numbers in the sequence.  The thing wouldn't budge.  Grumblecakes.
Feb 4, 2011 1:12AM
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Tribonacci numbers are more aesthetically pleasing thanks to there being three spacial dimensions. Add the previous three numbers with zero, zero, and one beginning the sequence.

Uhhhhh, sorry.  Mathematics major right hurr.

Your post was blocked because it appears similar to spam or automated messages. If this is not the case, revise your post and try again.
Feb 4, 2011 12:53AM
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Really, we shouldn't be aiming to get the 100th post - we should be aiming to get the Fibonacci numbers (then all will be harmonies in the universe?!)

& 2 same thing backwards - (not to be a dick) I don't care what anyone one tells me - Taylor Swift has a **** track record..!
Feb 4, 2011 12:35AM
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Let's not get too down on the Donnas around here. If you can find something called "Soundtracks and Rare Tunes", you'll discover the best scrummages ever of Kids in America and Wig-Wam Bam, as well as a killer inversion of Roll on Down the Highway that has a new line: "I'd like to have a Jack but it's not in this song" that sums the Donnas up. And just to be sure, that's Jack Daniels she's talking about. BTO wanted a jet.
Feb 4, 2011 12:15AM
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I know size matters--just couldn't resist the joke. Thanks to all you guys.
BTW, "guys"--Stacey tells me she'll be back
CBOF album too Donnas for me, and how sad that that's become a mild insult. I really think the EP's a lot better. It happens. Stay tuned.


Feb 4, 2011 12:02AM
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BurtM-- Yes! or the Avengers, or the Clash. 
Feb 3, 2011 11:59PM
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Burt, oh my god, maybe I should finally get around to listening to the Care Bears On Fire album.  Awesome.
Feb 3, 2011 11:55PM
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Care Bears on Fire = The Donnas minus the layers of sluttiness and sludge. I hope they grow up to be Sleater-Kinney. Or, better yet — http://bit.ly/h0IM8e — Le Tigre.
Feb 3, 2011 11:46PM
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Will be interesting to see how many posts this blog gets when Xgau bestows an A PLUS.
My guess it doubles at least.

Feb 3, 2011 11:41PM
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What do I win? Gift certificate from Applebee's?

While we're awarding prizes, I think BurtM won the List contest.
Feb 3, 2011 11:37PM
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GMort-- Anna is not on board with what this is all about (although the more Barr bodies around here the better), but I told her that you folks liked what she said. She told me I should tell y'all about Care Bears on Fire (which I downloaded and burned for her and her sister-- age 9, reads a lot, will not talk to any of you-- as a Christmas stocking gift based on Xgau's tip). I told Anna that all of you already know about CBOF, and that this was where I found out about them. I read Xgau's reviews to her, which of course was a stupid thing to do. Her face got cloudy for a second, then she got a big smile on her face and said "He likes them!"
Feb 3, 2011 11:20PM
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While we're awarding prizes, I think BurtM won the List contest.
Feb 3, 2011 11:16PM
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401 is a prime number so you won Dean. And size matters in NBA (I'm watching the spurs!!).
Feb 3, 2011 11:12PM
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Since we're numbers crunching, Cam's Anna is now at 26 Thumbs Ups.  Might be a while before that record is broken.
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about the blogger

Robert Christgau

Starting in 1967, Robert Christgau has covered popular music for The Village Voice, Esquire, Blender, Playboy, Rolling Stone, and many other publications. He teaches in New York University's Clive Davis Department of Recorded Music, maintains a comprehensive website at robertchristgau.com, and has published five books based on his journalism. He has written for MSN Music since 2006.

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