Long Road out of Eden era |
This is really a rejonder to the general press’s reactionary response to the Eagles. Obviously the band don’t need me or anyone else to defend them but that won't stop me.
‘And still all the critics keep saying/Are they still
around?/When are they gonna stop?’
(‘The Road’, The Kinks, the rest of the song is also pertinent)
(‘The Road’, The Kinks, the rest of the song is also pertinent)
I’m struck when I read the press reviews of the Eagles UK
gigs that no one is saying very much. They’re very short and somewhat
grudgingly appreciative but the common tenor is that the band have just been
going too long. I was originally going to write a review but this rant got too long so I'm going to publish it as a separate blog.
'I was happy in the haze of a drunken hour/But heaven knows I'm miserable now' ('Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now', The Smiths) Miserable and not afraid to sing about it! Plus you can't knock a song with the lyric 'What she asked of me at the end of the day/Caligula would have blushed'
Prior to this tour, I read a really negative piece (worth
reading for the cutting ripostes in the comments) in The Guardian (one of my
least favourite papers) championing the new over the old and advocating that
the Eagles, Fleetwood Mac and the Rolling Stones, if they couldn’t do the
decent thing and chuck it all in to let the new bands have a chance, should at
least pay a tax to finance the development of such bands. It is possible to like old and
new bands. So-called 'old' music does not prevent so-called 'new' music from
existing. Much of the new music sounds like either generic rock posturing or is
unimaginatively derivative. Friends go crazy for the Scissor Sisters, Arcade
Fire and their ilk who ‘are all about fun’ and the current stand seems to be
that you can't be any fun unless your songs are a melee of different styles,
all rehashed with a sardonic ‘aren't we clever, look what we’ve done?’
knowingness, with a general emphasis in the lyrics on ‘having fun’ as if, if you don't say it every second, you're suddenly miserable and being miserable is a crime. They sound
anything but original but are more like a fusion of several styles I never
particularly cared for in the first place. The word that always comes to mind is ‘ersatz’.
I think hell's just about to freeze over |
(Glenn Frey, HOTE documentary)
But why should liking current bands prevent anyone from
appreciating older ones? After all, although of its time, truly great music is
timeless. It isn't finite. There’s always room for more. If someone is
successful, it doesn’t stop someone else being successful. Instead of
criticising the Eagles who have created (and we hope will continue to make) so
many beautiful songs, how about noticing the fact that much of popular music these days is lyrically drivel and musically limited? Most
songs that get to Number One have the same words rearranged plus some often quite
objectionable and/or childish rap inserted for the sake of it. I’m not saying
it’s all like that but shouldn’t we fight against this endemic deterioration in
standards, where there’s a sample of a previous song (sometimes a good one –
not so bad – at least it’s bringing it to another generation) and if we’re lucky
one original but ever so slight melodic refrain? See my previous blog for more on this, and, in particular, the Black-Eyed Peas.
Anyway, who’s to say what’s new or old? If it’s new to you, does it matter if it was made in the 60s? What’s that got to do with whether it’s worthwhile or not? I’ve just discovered Poco and Gene Clark as well as more recently, Citizen Cope, Christian Kane, Shakey Graves. None of these acts have had the acclaim or success they deserve but I’m sure they don’t blame the Eagles for this.
Anyway, who’s to say what’s new or old? If it’s new to you, does it matter if it was made in the 60s? What’s that got to do with whether it’s worthwhile or not? I’ve just discovered Poco and Gene Clark as well as more recently, Citizen Cope, Christian Kane, Shakey Graves. None of these acts have had the acclaim or success they deserve but I’m sure they don’t blame the Eagles for this.
Morrissey |
‘I decree today that life/Is simply taking and not giving/England
is mine - it owes me a living’
(‘Still Ill’, The Smiths, a band that seemed
totally different to anything that had gone before, replete with passion and pathos,
memorable tunes and witty, evocative, thought-provoking lyrics)
I fear this bleating, which is typical of the wishy-washy,
bleeding-heart liberals at The Guardian, always ready to jump on the next
musical bandwagon but always a couple of years behind the times; they just
about grab onto it as it disappears into the sunset and the credits roll, as
with Jackie Leven or the Fleet Foxes, or just after an act has become a parody
of itself and ever so quick to denigrate something they think is passé, is all
part of this ‘the world owes me a living’ attitude. It doesn’t.
It’s not only journalists who indulge in this kind of carping. Robert Plant (of Led Zeppelin) says he knows why the Eagles still tour: ‘It’s not about the money. It’s because they’re bored.’ Always amazes me when somebody has the gall to claim they understand someone else's motivation. Henley (never a shrinking violet) has hit back at this in Rolling Stone but also at the London shows when he said they don’t do it because they’re bored but because it’s the best job on the planet or words to that effect. Sort of reminds me of when Oasis and Blur gloved up in the 90s.
It’s not only journalists who indulge in this kind of carping. Robert Plant (of Led Zeppelin) says he knows why the Eagles still tour: ‘It’s not about the money. It’s because they’re bored.’ Always amazes me when somebody has the gall to claim they understand someone else's motivation. Henley (never a shrinking violet) has hit back at this in Rolling Stone but also at the London shows when he said they don’t do it because they’re bored but because it’s the best job on the planet or words to that effect. Sort of reminds me of when Oasis and Blur gloved up in the 90s.
‘You don't want to work, you
want to live like a king/But the big, bad world doesn't owe you a thing’ ('Get Over It', Eagles)
It’s always
been difficult for new artists to break through and the talented don’t always
thrive while the screechers and flavours of the day (according to the papers)
such as Paloma Faith and Ed Sheeran (although I do like ‘I See Fire’) make it.
Whether they do or not has nothing to do with whether Fleetwood Mac are touring
or not. The two are not mutually exclusive.The Mac |
So I say ‘live and let live’. Stop bitching and moaning. Good music is good music and it will endure. That’s not a fault, that’s a virtue. I like this comment on The Guardian article from MickGJ: ‘If it wasn't for these old acts there wouldn't be any 30-year old records for them to sound a bit like.’ I’m discovering new and old music all the time.That's how it should be.
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