I Can Speak American
During the taping of the last AP podcast, Scott Heisel accused me of being elderly because I allegedly used "ancient references." He played this cultural arrogance card because I referred to Hayley Williams as "a teen Holly Hunter in a frightwig." Apparently he doesn't know who Holly Hunter is. Although I take partial blame because I totally blanked on the name of the show she stars in (Saving Grace returns mid-July on TNT), it didn't stop me from wanting to snap a microphone stand over his head. (What, nobody saw A Life Less Ordinary? Come on, people! That soundtrack has "Deadweight," my favorite Beck song.)
So while Scott was giving me crap about my seemingly arcane references, I started thinking about the cultural malady of tabula rasa. "Tabula rasa" is Latin for "clean slate," which essentially posits that all one knows about the world is what he/she experiences personally. If you were a little kid, you wouldn't know the dangers of putting your hand near a running mower blade unless an adult explained it to you. If you don't know about it, it doesn't exist.
Now I'm the first one to demand each generation must create and define their own culture. These days, it seems said culture is defined by the same five bands. Now before you think I'm merely a grumpy-assed jamoke, please realize I am not alone. In last year's podcast with Underoath, Tim McTague called me (and AP) out for not writing about bands he thought were exceptionally creative, specifically Sigur Ros. When I told him we did a multi-page feature on the Icelandic outfit in support of their Takk disc to virtually no response, all he could do was shake his head sadly. I recently hung out with an up-and-coming band who had no time for Panic At The Disco's Ryan Ross and his proclamations of maturing to the sounds of the Beatles and the Beach Boys. "You're supposed to listen to those bands when you're a kid, so you realize the possibilities of what you can do with music," said one of the members of the anonymous upstart band. "Not at 19. They're still better than Third Eye Blind, I guess." Ever wonder why certain members of bona fide ass-stompers Every Time I Die prefer Bjork and Massive Attack to some assembly-line screamo outfit?
Music listeners shouldn't just "settle" for what's given to them (that's the kind of thinking that made those assclowns in Nickelback millionaires). If you don't demand that the bar be raised, you are going to be forever saddled with crap so lame, it will drive you back toward your parents' Led Zeppelin discs. If you are in a band, you have a responsibility to not only avoid sucking, but the good sense to delve deeper into the history of your craft. Don't wait for a car commercial to show you what you've been missing: Go see what's out there!
I promise this will be the only time I blog while listening to Sky Eats Airplane.





















