09.02.2006, 09:20 AM | #1 |
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Longtime Rock Critic, Christgau, Axed at 'Village Voice' in Latest Layoffs
By E&P Staff Published: August 31, 2006 4:30 PM ET updated 8:30 PM ET NEW YORK The cuts at the Village Voice in New York City continue, with another eight let go by the New Times management, including Robert Christgau, chief rock critic at the weekly for more than three decades. He wrote a letter to friends posted at the Gawker site:
"It is now official--Village Voice Media fired me today, 'for taste,' which means (among other things) slightly sweeter severance. This despite the support of new music editor Rob Harvilla, who I like as a person and a writer.
"We both believed I had won myself some kind of niche as gray eminence. So I was surprised Tuesday when I was among the eight Voice employees (five editorial, three art) who were instructed to bring their union reps to a meeting with upper management today. But I certainly wasn't shocked--my approach to music coverage has neverbeen much like that of the New Times papers.
"Bless the union, my severance is substantial enough to give me time to figure out what I'm doing next. In fact, having finished all my freelance reviews yesterday, I don't have a single assignment pending."
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09.02.2006, 09:44 AM | #2 | |
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Quote:
do you think thurston will crack open a beer to celebtrate?
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Sarcasm[A] is stating the opposite of an intended meaning especially in order to sneeringly, slyly, jest or mock a person, situation or thing |@ <------- Euphoric brain cell just moments before expiration V _ \ / _ PING <-------- moments later / \ http://media.tumblr.com/tumblr_ljhxq...isruo1_500.gif |
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09.02.2006, 09:46 AM | #3 |
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I believe they already made nice.
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09.02.2006, 09:54 AM | #4 |
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seriously, isn't that like the doors firing jim morrison or something? |
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09.02.2006, 11:01 AM | #5 |
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.............
Aaaahhhh Let That Shit Die.
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09.02.2006, 12:49 PM | #6 |
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Find out the new goal.
Christgau could get a new job, easy. He's something of a legend. |
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09.02.2006, 12:50 PM | #7 |
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he;s also something of an asshole.
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09.02.2006, 12:51 PM | #8 |
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We all have to be sometimes.
Dickface. |
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09.02.2006, 12:52 PM | #9 |
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cocksucker.
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09.02.2006, 12:52 PM | #10 |
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I know you are, but what am I?
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09.02.2006, 04:57 PM | #11 |
100%
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Not a very level-headed guy.
you should absolutely NEVER bring your personal business public. that's just not very smart from a strategic view either. regardless if he was wrongfully terminated or not, people will see him as someone who is at times irrational and that will probably scare more people off than attract. i'm sure he's a fine critic and he probably was bitter in being fired, but he's got to be smarter than that. if you were an employer, would you hire someone who publicly badmouthed his previous employers? nope, because you know if it didn't work out, you would be badmouthed too. didn't the village voice first give SY a bad review? |
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09.02.2006, 05:01 PM | #12 |
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hence the song "kill yr idols"
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09.02.2006, 05:04 PM | #13 |
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http://72.14.209.104/search?q=cache:QEsdXpmoEJgJ:en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonic_Youth+%22christgau%22%2B%22sonic+youth%22&hl =en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=9
...This early edition of the group (Sonic Youth) found themselves described as "Pigfuck" music, a term coined by Village Voice writer Robert Christgau; other Pigfuck groups were Big Black, the Butthole Surfers and Pussy Galore. (In some ways these groups are very different from each other, but they're all to varying degrees abrasive, noisy and confrontational.) Based on this classification, and on a negative live SY review by Christgau. A feud developed between Moore and Christgau, and Moore renamed "Kill Yr Idols" "I Killed Christgau With My Big Fucking Dick" (Azerrad, 246) before the men sorted out their differences amicably. --- http://72.14.209.104/search?q=cache:Xjk_cFk7wM4J:www.wired.com/wired/archive/13.04/play.html%3Fpg%3D3+%22christgau%22%2B%22sonic+yout h%22&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=10 "The first time I ever heard of someone making a mix tape was in 1978," says Thurston. "Robert Christgau, the 'dean of rock critics,' was writing in The Village Voice about his favorite Clash record, which just happened to be the one he made himself: a tape of all the band's non-LP B-sides. One aspect really struck me - Christgau said it was a tape he made to give to friends. He had made his own personalized Clash record and was handing it out as a memento of his rock-and-roll devotion." |
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09.02.2006, 05:05 PM | #14 |
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Rock & Roll &
Rather Exhilarating The best band in the universe do their Brecht thing with hooks by Robert Christgau June 6th, 2006 3:58 PM Forget "edge," or whatever the edgy are calling it these days. I wish we could forget their non-youth in the bargain, but that wheeze will remain with us—they create from what they know. So let me put it this way: Sonic Youth are the best band in the universe, and if you can't get behind that, that's your problem. They haven't made a bad album since Kim Gordon, Thurston Moore, and Lee Ranaldo found perfect drummer Steve Shelley in 1985, and (forget Radiohead, forget Wilco) have released more good ones in the past decade than anyone in rock except—this is funny—Neil Young. That definitely includes the brand-new Rather Ripped, a light-seeming, unprecedentedly hooky thing that could prove one of their best. Ignore it to your spiritual detriment. Sonic Nurse, the band's last record, and last of three with avant-young fifth member Jim O'Rourke, was noticeably direct and tuneful—but not, as it turned out, concise (eight of 10 tracks over five minutes), nor as bracingly aggressive as Goo or Dirty or Daydream Nation. Excellent, but hedged. On Ripped, seven of 12 tracks clock in under four minutes, and three more under five. But the radical departure is the new album's appearance of simplicity, especially regarding what means most with these guys: guitar sound. Most SY guitars are thick, dirty, doubled, the better to amplify and complicate the weird scales that underlie music you can get lost in and quite often hum. On Rather Ripped, however, guitars are cleanly articulated, given over to tunelets and quasi-arpeggios that cycle through the songs like the good little hooks they are, so much so that when Moore and Ranaldo clash and rumble old-style—two minutes into "Sleepin' Around," on the Ranaldo horror movie "Rats," or the Gordon reverie "Turquoise Boy"—the effect is a reassuring return to normalcy. In other words, the Brechtian distance their dissonances stopped guaranteeing long ago is provided instead by super-catchy mock-pop devices—which eventually, sly devils, prove stranger harmonically than first impressions suggest. The singing, while not even mock pop—by normal standards of vocal intonation and soulful drama, this may be the least gifted great band ever—nudges their recitative tendencies toward a sweet, breathy, sincere counterpart of the guitars. Simple word choices and frequent repetitions make lyrics whose meaning never comes clear seem just out of reach. All of which I find pretty exhilarating. Of course, you may not. When Murray Street came out in 2002, non-old Amy Phillips notoriously asserted in this very newspaper that since Sonic Youth hadn't made a good album since (1995's) Washing Machine, they should break up already. Who's to say her opinion isn't worth as much as mine? Me? Well, yeah. One concept the non-old have trouble getting their minds around is the difference between taste and judgment. It's fine not to like almost anything, except maybe Al Green. That's taste, yours to do with as you please, critical deployment included. By comparison, judgment requires serious psychological calisthenics. But the fact that objectivity only comes naturally in math doesn't mean it can't be approximated in art. One technique, which I've just illustrated, is to replace response reports ("boring" and all its self-involved pals, like my "exhilarating" or Phillips's less blatant "dull") with stimulus reports. Here's another instance: Boring or not, 1998's A Thousand Leaves unquestionably marked a turn toward the quietude, ruminative structures, and general fuzz level always implicit in their unresolved tunings and Deadhead-manquéjams—tendencies tersely deployed on 1994's Experimental Jet Set, Trash and No Star and fulsomely indulged on Washing Machine's sandbagging 20-minute "The Diamond Sea." On Leaves, melodies were softer, lyrics kinder, instrumentals more atmospheric, and 2000's NYC Ghosts & Flowers ran away with the freer tendencies of that approach. But ever since then, starting withMurray Street and working through Sonic Nurse and now Rather Ripped, Sonic Youth have reinvested in songform. It's so much more reliable than a 401(k). Another objectivity aid is consensus, as indicated by record guides, online compendia, and of course critics polls. These establish that Murray Street is well liked, A Thousand Leaves and Sonic Nurse only a little less so. The dud by acclamation (perhaps even the "bad album" whose existence I deny) is NYC Ghosts, which Phillips acknowledges as the true inspiration for her kill-yr-idols hissy fit. Granted an excuse to replay every Sonic Youth album I own, I've found these judgments justifiable. Murray's song-soundscape fusion, which at the time I didn't quite get, sounded strong, while NYC Ghosts, whose meanderings had captivated me in their ambiently environmental way, never fully reconnected. Leaves, long my eccentric fave, proved marginally less entrancing as it sopped up its 74 minutes under lyric-parsing scrutiny. I'm disappointed in myself—I take pride in knowing when I've reconciled taste and judgment, and don't often get records wrong. But I still think the consensus is too extreme—and probably, given the way these things go, reactive, pumping Murray Street to make up for dismissing NYC Ghosts. Thurston Moore claims Rather Ripped "isn't particularly different from any previous Sonic Youth releases," but that's just his fealty to his band's tunings talking—to a sonic signature that, having pretty much launched an alt-rock generation, is now counted boring by many non-old. Fact is, every Sonic Youth album varies within the broad boundaries of their guitaristic practices. In that capacious context, A Thousand Leaves did mark a turning point, which reflects not just the deterioration that afflicts human bodies as they turn 40 into 50, but also, if you'll pardon some biography, Kim and Thurston's absorption of the parenthood they undertook in 1994: the extra pressure, the lost time, the future that subsumes your own, the messy roommate you love to pieces. Concomitantly, the words of that album, insofar as they make sense, evoke a maturing marriage in a lyrical phase, with Kim's "Female Mechanic Now on Duty" adding essential sex appeal. On Ripped, which shares its name with a legendary Berkeley record store, a similar union may be rather riven, or may not. The non-old clearly aren't obliged to care about these things. But critics of any age ought to recognize that they're there. Sonic Youth have certainly written lyrics that stick—for my taste, most often about music ("Dirty Boots," "New Hampshire") or politics ("Kool Thing," "Youth Against Fascism"). But where their opposite numbers Yo La Tengo put Ira and Georgia's love life on the public record, Sonic Youth don't seem to sing about Kim and Thurston. It's that Brechtian distance thing again, magnified by vocal deficiencies they play as strengths. Does Kim have a girlfriend on the side? Is her "What a waste/You're so chaste" directed at "Turquoise Boy"? How about Thurston's "Sleepin' Around"? In the end, I don't much care. What matters to me is how these unresolved intimations are allayed and disarmed by the uncharacteristic lightness of music that nevertheless gets strange when you listen hard. Edges dull; the shock of the new gets old. But great bands keep creating from what they know, and figuring it out as they do. Try to see 'em at CB's Tuesday. They'll come up with something you don't expect, guaranteed. http://www.villagevoice.com/music/06...,73468,22.html --- another Christgau write-up (for WM) http://72.14.209.104/search?q=cache:z4EH7i7KZiUJ:www.robertchristgau.co m/xg/music/sonic-rs.php+%22christgau%22%2B%22sonic+youth%22&hl=en&g l=us&ct=clnk&cd=1 |
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09.02.2006, 05:32 PM | #15 |
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Christgau and Thurston "made up" a long time ago. But I don't think there was ever anything beyond an expected harsh reaction to bad reviews. He didn't like their first few CD's, so Thurston wrote the song. Somewhere around EVOL Christgau converted and started giving them great reviews. I've always liked the guy, and I'm sad to see him go. Though I don't keep up with his reviews or anything, so it's not like I'll be missing anything.
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09.02.2006, 06:29 PM | #16 | |
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he's not dead! jesus.
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