REVIEW

Music Review: Pere Ubu's Why I Hate Women and a Review of Music Reviews

Written by John Owen
Published September 04, 2006


Over the past decade and a half, I have probably written a couple hundred reviews of albums by artists from Sam Cooke to Samhain. When the PR firm handling the fifteenth album by the formerly Cleveland-based new wave band Pere Ubu, Why I Hate Women, asked me for a review, I agreed to give it a shot. I'm a big fan of Pere Ubu frontman David Thomas, and his last couple projects have been right up my alley. But as I sat there staring at the blinking cursor on a blank field of black, I tried to write a straight review and found I just couldn't do it.

What I turned out instead was (very kindly) kicked back to me by an editor, who asked in essence, "um, this is very nice... what is it?"

Well, long story short, I love music, but I'm damn sick and tired of writing music reviews.

The usual formula goes as follows:

"Band X formed in Year A and influenced Y1, Y2 and the incredibly obscure Y3, who had one single on the Kankakee, MI based Fancypants label. Their newest album, X', is a (adjective) non/departure from their previous work. Adjective, adjective adverb quality assessment, subordinate clause hedging previous assertions. X' is recommended to fans of A, A', and A'', but is not as essential as classic album X''. "

There's a lot you can do with that basic template, and a quick glance back through my Blogcritics archive will reveal a number of (if I do say so myself) pretty good variations on that classic theme. Unfortunately, templates are limiting. If you'll permit me to disappear up my own bunghole for a thousand words or so...

The novel form was stale as long ago as the 1760s, when Laurence Stern broke all the rules of narrative and continuity in The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman. Ever read that book? It's awesome. Ostensibly the autobiography of Tristram Shandy, the 900-odd page novel only gets up to recounting the events of a few hours after his birth before Shandy (Stern) gives it up and quits.

The entire book is a sort of deconstruction of the novel form, as well as a very smart parody of the eighteenth-century penchant for flowery apologies. I mean, the first four or five chapters are an extended explanation-by-way-of-apology for his parents' moods at his moment of conception, followed by a chapter following young sperm-Tristram on its journey to meet egg-Tristram!

The rest of the book is a study in digression, with fake-but-accurate musings on noses, names, women, and tragic groin injuries, and every so often an entire chapter apologizing for not ever getting to the point of writing about his life. That book was written a good hundred years and more before Dickens and Hardy would perfect the English novel, and already the form was done!

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John Owen was born in the rust flats of Northeastern Ohio, where he was kidnapped and raised by a small tribe of Oldsmobiles. Currently residing on the rockbound coast north of Boston, he is the editor of the academic journal, Review of Arcane Minutiea and its companion lifestyle glossy, The International Obscurantist. His ill-considered front porch maunderings may be found at The Ministry of Minor Perfidy.
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Music Review: Pere Ubu's Why I Hate Women and a Review of Music Reviews
Published: September 04, 2006
Type: Review
Section: Music
Filed Under: Books: The Writing Life, Music: Indie Rock, Music: Punk Rock
Writer: John Owen
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Comments

#1 — September 4, 2006 @ 17:22PM — Connie Phillips [URL]

You hit the nail on the head when you talk about music evoking emotion. And both your story/review and this one gets to the heart of it.

Nice job!

#2 — September 4, 2006 @ 17:48PM — Mark Saleski

well, i don't think you've jumped the shark (although i don't think Lester Bangs did either).

But how do you make what you feel about the music relevant to the album, without tipping too far over into mere masturbatory autobiography?

take a look at my blogcritics back catalog. some of it pretty much defines masturbatory autobiography. see, i never really bought into that whole "objective reviewer" concept. it's all subjective.

by the way, nice writing..er...review...uh...whatever.

;-)


#3 — September 4, 2006 @ 19:46PM — John Owen [URL]

Mark, I wonder myself whether and when Bangs jumped the shark. In my less charitable moments, I think it's the mid seventies when his stuff became schtick, although he was still turning out some good stuff at the time. In my downright misanthropic moments, I think it would be the moment he took his last breath and accidentally became the exact kind of self-parodic self-indulgent drug casualty he didn't have much time for.

Even though I never read any of his stuff until well after I started my "career" writing about music (I'm only 32 so was still playing with Tinker Toys when Bangs checked out), I owe him a lot. He was inspirational, maddening, brilliant, repetitive, full of shit, full of piss and vinegar, and the punk rockest rock reviewer ever to vomit on a brick wall, and I (like many others) stole some of his best ideas when I was running dry.

#4 — September 4, 2006 @ 21:17PM — Mark Saleski

i read a lot of Bangs when it came out. much of the time, i had no freaking idea what he was talking about. still, the one thing the man did not lack was passion....something i think is missing from a lot of modern criticism.

part of the reason that i started doing reviews was that i just plain got tired of (as you mention) "the template". particularly when it comes out of the Pitchfork school of "i hate everything". very boring stuff, if ya ask me.

#5 — September 5, 2006 @ 16:28PM — zingzing

the pitchfork school of "i hate everything..."

hrmm. people bash pitchfork for the wrong reasons. they don't hate everything. i'd like to think they have their hearts in indie heaven, which is where mine resides (most of the time), and it's not that they hate everything, it's that they view reality from a skewed perspective. see the prince review today for what i am talking about. if you want to bash them, bash them because their taste does not correspond to yours. and then realize the hypocrisy of that. i'm not saying they can't be bashed for some reason or another... but it certainly isn't because they "hate everything." because it's clearly not the case.

the main problem is that they go on far too long. it's not that the writing is bad, but i don't always want to read all that mumbo jumbo and it is impossible to find the meat of the review sometimes. still, pitchfork is a good source of information and news and should be taken with a grain of salt, just like any other review site. except amg, which is god-like.

#6 — September 5, 2006 @ 16:30PM — Mark Saleski

i should have been a little more clear about that....maybe Pitchfork shouldn't have been used to label what i was getting at: which is the tired sort of jaded review where the writer hates just about everything and just sits around with a thesaurus, coming up with clever ways to put stuff down.

#7 — September 5, 2006 @ 17:16PM — Tom Johnson [URL]

I'm just tired of Pitchfork's completely unreliable nature - one thing they go completely insane over, something else they give 0.3 to. They rank with modern Rolling Stone for how realistic and reliable their reviews are - and they will soon be ranked by everyone else with them, too if they keep it up. Too much of their writing drips of cleverness for the sake of cleverness, or snark just to be snarky, with no actual substantial, quality criticism going on behind it. They've also had at least one (and possibly two - I forget now) instance during which a writer (Brent DiCrescenzo) fabricated stories - the only one I can recall at the moment was about meeting Radiohead for an interview prior to a show there and it turned out that the band wasn't even playing in the city where this interview was supposed to have taken place. I've given up reading PFM because of stuff like that - you can read here at Blogcritics my criticisms of PFM, just do a search.

That said, I can't get behind fictional pieces "inspired by" albums as reviews - I don't think it does the reader any good because everyone comes away with a different impression. But here's the thing - a piece like this HAS gotten me curious about Pere Ubu, much moreso than the fictional piece mentioned would have (had I even bothered to read the whole of the fictional thing, and, to be honest, that would be unlikely.) This is the kind of reading I want to see - it not only talks about music, it talks about the writer and in doing so talks about why the writer likes the music. It's done its job - it got me intrigued.

It's funny that I read this now - just after I wrote a very long, meandering Overlooked Alternatives post that spends more time talking about why I love Iron Maiden than the fact that their new album is actually out today. Same idea, I guess.

#8 — September 5, 2006 @ 17:38PM — DJRadiohead [URL]

What I find annoying about Rolling Stone and others is how one reviewer can give U2's Pop 4 or 4.5 stars when it is released and then when All That You Can't... comes out some other critics for the same magazine acts like Pop was uniformly criticized and hated. I'm thinking, "Do you even bother to read your own magazine?"

Sure, different critics have different tastes and the like but I have seen writers for RS and other places talk out of both sides of their mouth. They'll hail it today and trash it tomorrow. I get tired of that.

#9 — September 5, 2006 @ 20:03PM — John Owen [URL]

Tom, I completely grant you your point about the uber-subjectivity of 'short story' reviews. What they do, I suppose, is privelige the subjective over the objective completely and without pretense, and maybe that pretense of objectivity makes all the difference.

Hell, I dunno. I doubt I'll write a review much like the short story again, much less write this review again. Sure as heck wouldn't get published in Pitchfork, that's for sure.

And as for pitchfork, I think the main problem is that they're young kids with an overabundance of music knowledge and confidence. I personally don't give a dead skunk's ass whether the new Deerhoof record a 7.8 or an 8.2, but I'm glad they're out there thinking about things. Much better than Rolling Stone, who can apparently bend 3 stars into anything from "flawed but brilliant" to "snooze" to "essential" to "avoid! avoid!"

Y'know? Frank Zappa once said "sometimes you can't write a chord ugly enough to say what you want so you have to rely on a giraffe filled with whipped cream." I guess, The Flaming Lips can't play "Feeling Yourself Disintegrate" without Wayne Coyne getting fake blood all over his head and putting on a nun puppet glove to sing into a pinhole camera on his mic stand. I guess sometimes what you need to say about an album involves a car wreck on a New York highway.

#10 — September 5, 2006 @ 20:40PM — Mark Saleski

snarky. yes, that's exactly what i meant.

as far as Pitchfork, or honestly, any publication...what really bugs me (on top of the snark factor) is the false competition set up between this music vs. that music.

a person can certainly say that their preference is indie rock over, say, classic rock (though that's a bad example, but i'll use it anyway). but to just shut out possibilities is what i find disappointing.

many times, a review's "outcome" is written before the new cd is even cracked open.

#11 — September 8, 2006 @ 12:40PM — Connie Phillips [URL]

Congrats! This article is an Editor's Pick this week!

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