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- Comments: Gated by NETNEWS@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU
- Path: sparky!uunet!europa.asd.contel.com!paladin.american.edu!auvm!MITVMA.BITNET!MHB
- Message-ID: <ALLMUSIC%92122216264913@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.allmusic
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 16:12:40 EST
- Sender: Discussions on all forms of Music <ALLMUSIC@AUVM.BITNET>
- From: "Michael H. Bloom" <MHB@MITVMA.BITNET>
- Subject: Epistemology 'R Us
- Lines: 202
-
- From: gmgettie@THAMA1.APGEA.ARMY.MIL
- Subject: ALLMUSIC compilation tape
-
- > Has there ever been an ALLMUSIC compilation tape made?
-
- I believe there was one made in 1991 some time-- it was just before I joined.
-
- > 22 songs, 20 of them I've never heard before. I will be buying *atleast*
- > 5 new CDs because of listening to this tape. It is a brilliant idea.
-
- It'd be easier for the metal list; they're thematically oriented. An ALLMUSIC
- compilation would range from Queensryche to Orlando di Lasso to Lightnin'
- Hopkins-- and while I would dig it, I suspect some of our local special
- interest groups would cringe.
-
- From: Leonard Watkins <ISTS024@UABDPO.BITNET>
- Subject: Re: ALLMUSIC compilation tape
-
- > Let's see the heavy metal tape was $4 .....hm...hm.....Does that mean they
- > pay you $4 to listen to it or do you pay them $4 to listen to it.............
- > either way you got ripped off...(just some lame humor).....:-)..L.W.
-
- Ipse dixit. Not only is it lame, Lenny, this is the kind of slope-browed
- one-liner that gets you talked about.
-
- From: Dave <USTS060@RUST1.DPO.UAB.EDU>
- Subject: Fave Xmas tunes
-
- > David Malbuff (sorry I deleted yer post before I decided to
- > respond) correctly stated the real heart of Lenny's question and
- > consequently the source of artistic debate for the past few years.
- > The heart of this debate (as paraphrased by me) is: Why
- > is it that some symbols and images are sacred and others not and who
- > determines whose are sacred?
-
- "Sacred" has a specific meaning: an object of religious reverence. Now, one
- of the things artists do is document the human condition, which has problems.
- And entrenched religions are responsible for more than their share of these
- problems (especially when you consider what they *claim* to stand for), so
- if art didn't take on religion on occasion, it wouldn't be doing its job.
-
- The other generalization I think it's fair to make about art is that it deals
- with the manipulation of symbols. Now, when you start to mess with religion,
- you very quickly begin to run into people who can't seem to distinguish the
- symbol from the concept the symbol stands for-- something artists do all the
- time as a matter of course. So if I tear up a photo of a Pope or urinate on
- a crucifix, it's a much harsher statement in the language of religion than
- in the language of art-- which I think is something to blame religion for.
- Same deal with patriotism, BTW: the moment you tell me I can't burn the flag
- is the moment the flag deserves it, because then the ideals the flag stands
- for evaporate and the flag becomes just a piece of cloth in a dorky pattern.
-
- Artists do have concepts they hold in comparable reverence, and they include
- a lot of the things I revere: freedom of speech, unimpeded use of language
- and symbol, political independence, etc. If Jesse Helms had written a book,
- "Piss First Amendment," and launched it out into the marketplace of ideas,
- I think the net response in the artistic community would have been "What an
- ugly bunch of ideas," but very few people would have objected to its being
- written or published or sold-- just like the ACLU says American Nazis have
- the right to their parade. But Helms cheated and invoked government power,
- and took it out of the realm of civilized debate and into the realm of law,
- which (sorry Marsha) really isn't civilized :-)
-
- From: Leonard Watkins <ISTS024@UABDPO.BITNET>
- Subject: Re: Lenster and the Big Guy
-
- > I have a problem with a bottle of piss being art, if that's art you should
- > have seen the masterpiece i dropped this morning.
-
- If you can get someone to believe your turds are art, then I can't disprove
- it. It's been the better part of a century since Marcel Duchamp hung a urinal
- in a museum and convinced Paris it was art. (The French have been weird ever
- since :-) But I know something about Duchamp's justification for calling the
- urinal art; I don't know anything about yours. You should post your grant
- proposal :-)
-
- Zappa says all you need to do to make art is arrange something and put a
- frame around it. You might also want to study John Cage's writings.
-
- > I personally have no problem with an artist (applied lightly) wants to stick
- > a bullwhip in his ass and call it art, but being a taxpayer i don't want to
- > fund his perverted excursions.................L.W.
-
- Ah, now here you begin to get into one of the most interesting public policy
- questions about art, IMHO. Let me first of all remind you that it has been
- estimated that your average American kid sees myriads of murders and acts of
- violence on TV the time he's 18. Now is this really good for the children of
- America? Is this the lesson you want your kids to absorb? Is this the lesson
- God wants your kids to absorb? (Hint: why didn't King David build the Temple
- in Jerusalem? Why did God insist on putting it off until Solomon's reign?)
-
- But according to the religious right and its cats' paws in power, that's all
- well and good-- but the most basic symbol and expression of love between man
- and woman, the whole "be fruitful and multiply" bit, is verboten. What kind
- of logic is that, that we show death and torture and hide love and pleasure?
- What kind of lesson do we expect kids to draw from it? And how hypocritical
- is it to subsequently be surprised at the current level of gang violence?
-
- Of course, I don't necessarily get off on having a leather probe up my ass,
- nor do I expect most people to agree with Mapplethorpe on this one-- and I
- certainly remember enough freshman biology to understand that the bullwhip
- has nothing to do with being fruitful and multiplying :-) But here we have
- your canonical slippery slope. I prefer to make the Mapplethorpe photos
- available to them as want them, even though I don't find them interesting
- (I don't really care for any of his work, the pictorial values of fashion
- photography being rather opaque to me), so I can get the nude GIFs of Amy
- Denio that do get me off :-)
-
- I don't insist that the taxpayer pay for it. But if there's going to be any
- taxpayer-funded art at all, I insist that the decisions on what to fund be
- made by people with artistic expertise rather than politicians, who simply
- don't know what they're doing and will make stupid decisions-- not unlike
- how if scientists had been allowed to override the political appointees in
- NASA, the space shuttle wouldn't have blown up.
-
- From: David Malbuff <SPGDAM@UCCVMA.BITNET>
- Subject: Re: Lenster and the Big Guy
-
- > So if there's room for Danzig (or Serrano, for that matter) in your world,
- > is there room for Skrewdriver, too?
-
- Well, there's another slippery slope: the extent to which your speech is a
- goad for actions which are clearly harmful-- the "fire in a crowded theatre"
- problem (which, BTW, was an asshole decision: the defendant was exercising
- his Constitutional right to free speech to convince people not to register
- for the draft, and Oliver Wendell Holmes decided the supply of cannon fodder
- was an overriding social benefit).
-
- I confess that I feel a lot better about Skrewdriver now that I've been
- told they decided the National Front was just using them and broke away.
- Wert, you're free to provide further details.
-
- From: Leonard Watkins <ISTS024@UABDPO.BITNET>
- Subject: Re: Lenster and the Big Guy
-
- > I couldn't agree more, i just hate the use of a man of "color" as an example
- > because even though it was needed to get the point across, whenever you say
- > any thing of that nature you become branded as a racist, which i am not...L.W.
-
- Methinks thou dost protest too much. Len, the first things I can remember
- you saying when you first made yourself known to ALLMUSIC were that the
- blues was the apex of human emotion and that you had to be black to play
- it properly. As soon as you set up skin color as a prerequisite for some
- other human function, you're saying you believe there is meaning in racial
- distinctions, by definition. You don't have to beat people up to be racist,
- all you have to do is believe there's some sort of innate difference beyond
- melanin production. Sorry, Len, but that's the exact definition of racism.
-
- From: Leonard Watkins <ISTS024@UABDPO.BITNET>
- Subject: Re: Lenster and the Big Guy
-
- > Keep in mind this was not a "racial" statement by any means, One album cover
- > or song would not be a society it would just be some deranged rock-band
- bashing
- > minorities (women,.....etc). I agree that God can defend himself, but if you
- > respect and beleive in someone you will usually come to their defense, whether
- > they need it or not...............L. "My Car Died" W.
-
- God doesn't need your defense, He's all-powerful. And am I reading too much
- into, say, the Sermon on the Mount if I say that Jesus would much rather you
- come to the defense of those that can't defend themselves?
-
- Here in my office we're having a somewhat parallel discussion on a related
- topic, so I may be mixing my arguments here. Consider it the spirit of the
- season :-)
-
- From: Another message from Rosemary! <RWARREN@TOPAZ.CONCORDIA.CA>
- Subject: Re: Glass and Christmas music (not related!!! Ugh,
- what a thought! )
-
- Why shouldn't Glass be used as Xmas music? One of the things that drew me
- to minimalism in the first place was that it sounded kinda churchy...
-
- > on a more secular note, i also enjoy "Jingle Bell Rock",
-
- Have you ever heard the flip side of the original Bobby Helms (no relation
- to Jesse, I trust) single? It's called "Captain Santa Claus and his Reindeer
- Space Patrol," and the premise is that the sleigh breaks and the elves cobble
- together a rocket ship so Santa can deliver his payload of toys in a timely
- fashion. It's got great sound effects-- I think they simulated the takeoff
- by flushing a microphone down the studio toilet. It's a hoot!
-
- More recently, I'm surprised to discover how much I like _MAS! A Caribbean
- Christmas Party_, a compilation on Rykodisc of seasonal songs from places
- where they just don't have white Christmases :-) There's reggae star Jacob
- Miller's version of "Deck the Halls," where he wants them decked with ganja;
- there's Lord Nelson's calypso about throwing a big party for Santa; there's
- a tune by Claudette et Ti Pierre about how Santa's largesse never seems to
- make it to Haiti, a gorgeous tune; there's self-taught Bahamian guitarist
- Joseph Spence's version of "Santa Claus is Coming to Town" that's got Mark
- Ribot beat at his own game; etc.
-
- Hmm, did I talk about both of these already?
-
- From: Jeff Preston <bt979@CLEVELAND.FREENET.EDU>
- Subject: Re: This page is unintentionally left blank
-
- > Not to be argumentative with the Bloomster, but _Shadows & Light_ contains
- > NO cheese, and is, in fact, 100% cholesterol-free. Maybe a sprinkling of
- > saccharin, but absolutely dairy-free. Tastes great, less bloating, too.
-
- Balderdash. Pat Metheny plays on that record. He's schlager to the core.
-