|
Review:
|
|
A few months ago, my brother-in-law and I spent
an hour passing the time on MARTA discussing the Aging Mechanics
of rock stars. It sounds like an odd thing to do, perhaps, but
the conversation was actually pretty much on-topic for the evening.
We were on our way down to Phillips Arena at the time, headed
to a Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young show, although to be perfectly
honest the two of us, like most of that night’s concert-goers
of our age, were really going to see a Neil Young show at which
Crosby, Stills, and Nash were also in attendance.
So, on the way down, we start discussing Neil Young, and how
he’s the only member of the performance that night that didn’t
get “rock star old”. Getting “rock star old” means, generally,
being a once-relevant (or at least semi-relevant) performer
in the American pop-rock universe who has aged far beyond relevance
or the ability to carry on a rock-n-roll lifestyle yet who still
tours and releases “new” material in order to suck as much dosh
out of a similarly aged fan base as humanly possible. The Eagles
are the Platonic form of “rock star old”. The Rolling Stones
and Aerosmith are right up there with them, as are David Crosby,
Steven Stills, and Graham Nash.
But not Neil Young.
And there in lies the crux of the conversation. We were wondering
how certain artists maintain that level of je ne c’est quoi
while the rest erode into meaninglessness and vampiric half-lives.
We came to the soft conclusion that there must exist a level
of performer one step above “rock star”, in the American pop
psyche, a level of being within that world as far above Pearl
Jam or Creed or whatever your notion of “rock star” is as those
bands are above Blink 182 and the like. We dubbed this super-class
of artistic existence “icon” (yes, we know that certain elements
of this terminology is already in use, but we’re talking about
meaningful use here.)
And we decided that Neil Young was an icon, a true icon in
our new terminologies, while Crosby, Stills, and Nash, not to
mention Jagger, Tyler, and Henley were merely rock-n-roll’s
own sick version of the unholy undead.
We then started talking about who else would be an icon, and
who wouldn’t. The only name we could agree on was Springsteen
(and I made a bit of a fuss about that one.) We thought about
the Madonnas and Elton Johns of the world, but they were tossed
out rather quickly. We decided that you can’t be an icon in
our use of the word if you’re dead so Hendrix, et al were summarily
discarded. (No, I’m not convinced a Jimi that survived would
not be pelting poor ears everywhere with Steve Vai-esque claptrap.)
We were left with the lonely two, in fact. Then we went and
watched the show.
I mention all of this because I want to think of Billy Bragg
as an icon. I want to think he represents bodily the very spirit
of anti-folk and politicized music that doesn’t suck. And I
want everyone else to agree with me. Unfortunately, they don’t
always do that. And to complicate matters, Billy keeps releasing
albums that, while not uniquely bad, don’t further his
stature in my desired eschatological hierarchies.
1996’s William Bloke, for instance. And to a
lesser extent, this year’s England Half-English.
Now, I like both of those albums well enough, but when compared
to Back to Basics or Talking With the Taxman
About Poetry, they’re both found lacking in some ephemeral
something or other. The songs on England Half-English,
for example, are pretty solid, and they’re all clear examples
of an artist continuing to evolve and create after 30. But they’re
all missing something, all the same. I like Half-English,
the song, and sing along to it all the time, as I do with the
album’s opener, St. Monday. And I really like Take
Down the Union Jack from both an aesthetic and political
standpoint, but in the end everything always gets compared to
a song like Ideologies or Which Side Are You On,
or but for the grace of God, Greetings to the New Brunette,
and they all fail on some level when those comparisons get made.
And this is the burden of the proto-Iconic, I suppose. To continue
producing new material despite the weight of your own back catalogue
must be an ever-daunting task, and it undoubtedly requires a
staunch willingness to expand and move away from the well-known
(those staccato, near-militant chord strikes from early Bragg
songs) and into something else entirely (the Hammond organs
Bragg has picked up from his Mermaid Avenue collaborations
with Wilco.) And it will inevitably involve false steps along
the way.
While England Half-English isn’t a misstep, per
se, it is also not the firm-footed offering we’d expect from
a near-Icon making his way on up the mountain. Though, in fairness,
it might tell us something about the overall quality of an artist
that his pseudo-missteps are themselves worth at least looking
over for signs of greatness.
In the end, I think Bragg will find his way through and clear
and regain his rightful place as the spokesman of the real left,
as well as the place of a great song-writer who manages to capture
the everyday in songs about strike law policy. In the end, I
think he’ll be the Icon I want him to be. After all, even Neil
Young had Trans. In the meantime, I and his many
fans will simply bide our time, supporting releases like England
Half-English while keeping Back to Basics
always near-to-hand of the CD changer. And that’s enough for
me.
|
|