Is music headed towards a beautifully vegetative state where boundaries are ready to be broken down, now that the big record companies have less impact on what we are supposed to be listening to?  It kinda feels that way to me lately.  It’s either my blindness to the ‘actual’ state of music or there really does seem to be a blurring of the categorical genres that the record companies created in order to properly feed us whatever rubbish they chose to place in said categories.  The fact that a band as genre-defying as Gnarls Barkley being in the super-mainstream seems to point to a blurring of what’s cool and what isn’t.

This article on one of the better new bands, MGMT, was refreshing to see.  Here are a couple quotes from the boys in the band:

“We have pretty good taste,” says founding member Andrew Van Wyngarden. “We’re fans of the Grateful Dead and psychedelic music. We have crazy jams in our rehearsal space and we’re trying to eventually bring that out more on stage.”

“I think that pretty much everybody in MGMT secretly loves jambands — well, not so secretly. We always have,” Richardson admits. “Around 2000 or something, everybody really wanted to be ‘indie’ and now it’s just swinging back, I guess. I don’t know if that’s true, but I hope it is. I just want to break down those barriers. Segregation has existed too long between the jambands and the artsy-fartsy bands, and it doesn’t need to be there.”

Now isn’t that kinda nice to see that these young guys who are hotter than hell in the ‘Indie’ scene would rather just everyone got along.  Animal Collective is another Indie darling group which has admitted to all being Dead-heads as young men.  Well, it just so turns out that these are the type of groups that I end up liking, and I don’t think it’s because I also like the Grateful Dead…because these guys are making music that is nothing like the Dead.  But they are making good and interesting music that fits just outside of any genre or scene.  Shit, check out Of Montreal playing “Shakedown Street” at Langerado.  So I think what I like is the fact that these bands are playing music because they love making music and care less, if at all, about making scenes.

I’d like to think that music is heading into a new post-ironic Renaissance, where if you say you like Journey, you don’t have to asterisk the statement with a “I only like them ‘cuz they’re gay” type of qualification.  I’m sure that I did that at some point, but I’ve come to a place where I refuse to qualify my taste.  Goddammit, ‘I like Kiss’, period.  ‘I love Yes, actually’.  Or any other number of examples (Phish probably having several examples on their own).  Sure, I dig plenty of music that is considered hip and/or smart or what have you, but there’s also plenty of music that is considered hip and/or smart that I just don’t connect with.  It’s okay with me if it’s okay with you.  I think emotional levels transcend anything external or cerebral.

Unfortunately, some of the people that consider themselves the most liberal sort, can create the harshest boundaries for what is good and bad in art.  I realize that this is probably because they are people who are artists or very wrapped up in art in some way, so you can’t help talk about what you love.  Shit, it’s unnatural how much I talk about music.  But the over-analysis of music seems to keep the boundaries in place, because when we talk about music we can’t help but compare and rank things.  And once we come to a super-well-though-out ideal of what is ‘good music’, we defend it by propping up the qualities that we approve of and ripping apart the things that work against the ideal that we’ve constructed.

And since the record companies are dying out, there is the opportunity for us to let the boundaries break down, as we don’t have these companies to package things to what they think our tastes are.  I think it’s up to us bloggers and networks of friends to keep things all loosey-goosey and nurture diversity in musical taste.

Remember hearing all the stories from the 60′s and early-70′s about how concerts would be so random and cool?  The bill would consist of something like Cream, Melanie, and the Chambers Brothers.  Maybe we’re seeing that again with these festivals, like Bonnaroo and Coachella, that keep growing year after year.  These festivals bring together fans of Widespread Panic, Metallica, Prince, MGMT, Cat Power, Robert Plant, Kanye West, and so on and so on.  As the music industry as we know it, dies…live music thrives.  Here’s a cool Times article about just that.

Music will never die.  To me it’s the reflection of the underlying beauty of the imperfection of human life.  Thank goodness we’re all so flawed.  It makes the music so sweet!  What we’re witnessing is the sloughing off of the big business that had become too bloated and corrupted by maximizing profits by tapping into the life-giving roots of peoples’ emotions…the people creating the music and the people appreciating the music.  This is the same big business which has tried to bait the two emotionally-involved parties against each other, and in a lot of cases, succeeded.  Now the greedy middle-man obstructing your view is being escorted out of the venue for being drunk and disorderly.  Love wins out over greed.  I hope.

What do you guys think?

All right now. I just sat down at the ol’ Macbook with a fresh cup of coffee after a nice restorative sleep last night and yoga session this morning, and I’ve noticed that a lot has happened over the last few days. I was camping in the Catskills with friends and caterpillars, but mostly caterpillars. We had some heavy rain on Saturday, that we waited out and weathered and ended up having a rockin’ good time in trout country. We saw the world’s largest kaleidoscope ™ and even swung by Woodstock to make sure nobody was slacking on the drum circle. If a drum circle happens in Woodstock and no one is there to hear it…maaaaahhhhhn. Anyway, let’s look what happened in the less-trippy world outside of Woodstock. I know that a ton of rock fans (as well as fans of Jack Johnson) did some camping in Manchester, TN over the weekend for the country’s biggest music festival ™, Bonnaroo. Let’s check out some stuff…

Pod Stump

Winning Bonnaroo’s biggest-douchebag award looks like it was, hands-down, Kanye West, who had already forced organizers to change his time-slot to late-night so that he could take full advantage of his ‘amazing’ glow-in-the-dark set. With the later time granted, it seems he still couldn’t even get to the stage on time. I think it would be you though, that would be Bonnaroo’s biggest DB if you would wait till 4:30 am for a hip-hop show. It just couldn’t possibly be interesting enough to warrant that kind of wait!

After hitting Bonnaroo on Thursday night, Vampire Weekend played to a soaking-wet Central Park Summerstage crowd on Saturday. Both of these videos are very much worth watching…1) this Bonnaroo video has some good festival footage and a hilarious MGMT interview at the end (which shows us how young the MGMT boys are), and 2) in this one from Saturday with Andrew WK, I’m kinda like, c’mon VW, just play the Petty song and stop making an excuse for liking Petty since your Columbia friends think he’s ‘frat rock’!

Here are some great Bonnaroo pics on Pitchfork.

I just gotta say that for some reason, my Sh*t L*sts post featuring the lovely Duffy, got around 1000 hits over Saturday and Sunday. She didn’t play Bonnaroo, but maybe it’s because she won the Mojo award for Song of the Year. No Rock & Roll Fun seems less than thrilled about the list of winners, although it doesn’t look so bad to me…but I’m also an easily-amused Yank!

No Rock & Roll Fun also posts this Duffy live video, against it’s will. I guess Britain is just inundated with Duffy and tired of the hype, but listen to her sing! Beats the shit out of American fave, Fergie!

Bob Lefsetz continues to know everything about everything in the music world. Which is sometimes very insightful and other times a bit annoying. Bob should see Dave’s math on the pressing of vinyl though!

Just in, Carrie Brownstein at NPR’s Monitor Mix is also opposed to the new wave of British soul singers, and she’s not even British! What do you think, is this genre just too derivative?

Ben Folds does ‘Bitches Ain’t Shit’ at Bonnaroo, for the last time.

And on a random note, here’s an interview with Nick Drake from 1971.

More fairly-solid Phish rumors (yet still rumors).

Crystal rocked Round 10 on NewmRadio Rock Trivia, and will soon receive her booty, and Round 11 will start some time this week. Be prepared.

Here’s some stuff for all you lovers out there today…and all you unrequited lovers! What have all of you been up to this winter?

Here’s a decent pic I took at the Liars show last Saturday night…

Liars at Warsaw

First of all, being Rock Trivia buffs (we are buff, aren’t we?), you have to take this ‘Name The Guitarist’ quiz. And tell us your score in comments. I’ll withhold my score for now.

Some more RT at RS

Amy Winehouse rips a line of coke onstage. Who said she’s a fuck-up?

A new great trippy mix from our favorite psychedelic blog band, We’re Late For Class. Get it…it’s free!

Chris Rock to play the big ‘What’ stage at Bonnaroo this summer.

Lebowski scene comes to life in Florida. Not as funny in real life!

A great piece on Lead Belly.

Fiery Furnaces and Democracy in action. Now if they’d only let us vote on whether their live shows should continue to suck.

What else, ya’ll?

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