In one of those delightfully poignant surf transitions that reminds you who you are and what you believe in, I found myself last night (on the recommendation of
rhodri) watching with appalled fascination the vlogs and cartoons of Steve Sutton, an American 3D animator whose calming voice and banal observations exist at a midpoint between The Dullest Blog in the World and Andy Warhol, with perhaps a touch of Daniel Johnston and David Lynch thrown in. The more I watched him, the more I began to see little traces of Dick Cheney in there too, and maybe a bit of Bob Ross in the hypnotic quality of Sutton's voice. Put it all together with the disturbingly suburban animation series Clover Beach and you get an archetypal piece of schizoid, deeply dysfunctional Americana. I followed up the suttsteve videos with some GG Allin performances and found Sutton the more psychopathic of the pair.
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Imagine my relief, then, to find, next, Asa-Chang and Junray's excellent video for their track "Hana". The setting wasn't much more elaborate than Steve Sutton's bedroom, and yet the sense of sterility, anomie and sadness that seeps from his vlogs was completely absent. Here we were in a house -- and a culture -- which gets object relations substantially right. And this music was more than just a freakshow, an ever-more-spectacular demonstration of the pointlessness of human life (the message I get from both Steve Sutton and the late GG Allin). It was experimental in a warm, inviting and intriguing way. Asa-Chang (who used to be in the Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra) manages to combine emotional, empathetic sounds (here, a string chord sequence as touching as the one Massive Attack used in "Unfinished Sympathy") with radical structural experimentation I can only compare with the post-Fluxus experiments of his countryman Tomomi Adachi. Tabla hits are grouped (electronically, using his own Jun-Ray-tronics sound system) with vocals in a way that changes the fundamental relationship between words and music. It should jar, but it doesn't. Instead, a whole new way of marrying voice to sound opens up, and -- without sacrificing warmth and empathy at all -- instantly makes more trad songsmithery look like fusty hackwork.
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I must say I hadn't paid much attention to Asa-Chang before, despite hearing my friends in The Nelories praise him to the skies back in the 90s (he produced one of their albums, Starboogie). But last night he burst through to the front rank of my musical heroes. And oddly enough, in a purely negative way, Steve Sutton and GG Allin are partly responsible; without their sadness and alienation I would never have felt that palpable rush of relief -- that feeling of "Phew, I'm coming home!" -- when "Hana" kicked in. A bit like switching from a Diane Arbus freakscene to the refined feelings spread across a wall of photographs by Rinko Kawauchi. One turns you into a rubbernecker, fascinated by lurid dysfunction and, ultimately, death (GG Allin's heroin overdose). The other signposts values that might ensure a future -- both ethically and formally. GG Allin's boring three-chord thrash certainly didn't waste any time paving the way formally for the future. As someone comments under his Outlaw Scumfuc video, "there's a man who hated existence". Asa-Chang seems to love it.
[Error: unknown template video]
Imagine my relief, then, to find, next, Asa-Chang and Junray's excellent video for their track "Hana". The setting wasn't much more elaborate than Steve Sutton's bedroom, and yet the sense of sterility, anomie and sadness that seeps from his vlogs was completely absent. Here we were in a house -- and a culture -- which gets object relations substantially right. And this music was more than just a freakshow, an ever-more-spectacular demonstration of the pointlessness of human life (the message I get from both Steve Sutton and the late GG Allin). It was experimental in a warm, inviting and intriguing way. Asa-Chang (who used to be in the Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra) manages to combine emotional, empathetic sounds (here, a string chord sequence as touching as the one Massive Attack used in "Unfinished Sympathy") with radical structural experimentation I can only compare with the post-Fluxus experiments of his countryman Tomomi Adachi. Tabla hits are grouped (electronically, using his own Jun-Ray-tronics sound system) with vocals in a way that changes the fundamental relationship between words and music. It should jar, but it doesn't. Instead, a whole new way of marrying voice to sound opens up, and -- without sacrificing warmth and empathy at all -- instantly makes more trad songsmithery look like fusty hackwork.
[Error: unknown template video]
I must say I hadn't paid much attention to Asa-Chang before, despite hearing my friends in The Nelories praise him to the skies back in the 90s (he produced one of their albums, Starboogie). But last night he burst through to the front rank of my musical heroes. And oddly enough, in a purely negative way, Steve Sutton and GG Allin are partly responsible; without their sadness and alienation I would never have felt that palpable rush of relief -- that feeling of "Phew, I'm coming home!" -- when "Hana" kicked in. A bit like switching from a Diane Arbus freakscene to the refined feelings spread across a wall of photographs by Rinko Kawauchi. One turns you into a rubbernecker, fascinated by lurid dysfunction and, ultimately, death (GG Allin's heroin overdose). The other signposts values that might ensure a future -- both ethically and formally. GG Allin's boring three-chord thrash certainly didn't waste any time paving the way formally for the future. As someone comments under his Outlaw Scumfuc video, "there's a man who hated existence". Asa-Chang seems to love it.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 11:35 am (UTC)Q: You act sad and depressed. Are you?
A: No, I'm just stoic.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 12:27 pm (UTC)And there's a very telling -- and probably autobiographical -- moment in one of the Clover Beach episodes where the young boy arrives at a new school in Florida and is so bright he's advanced two years. All the kids in the class look like they're about to beat the shit out of him when the teacher announces this, so the boy says "No, no, actually I'm really dumb".
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 12:28 pm (UTC)Time for bed.
re: Clover Beach
Date: 2007-10-30 12:29 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 12:39 pm (UTC)If I were a more well-rounded individual I'd probably do yoga instead, but watching Steve Sutton guide me through his drawer full of old audio tapes just makes my anxieties evaporate.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 12:48 pm (UTC)See Bob Ross I think comes from an America that's still relatively healthy, a 1970s America that still has some humane core. But Steve Sutton comes from a much darker America, a place of social fragmentation and psychological scarring. Somehow it's no surprise that this is the number one film there this week:
You know, people hammer me for pointing this stuff out, but I wish it weren't so, you know. I'd love for Bob Ross's America (or Jimmy Stewart's, or Jimmy Carter's, or Orson Welles') to suddenly reappear.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 12:57 pm (UTC)You know, if the lighting was better in his room, and if his decor wasn't quite so drab, and his clothes weren't all so similar, we'd probably have a vastly different perspective on his outpourings.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 01:00 pm (UTC)As for the sense of "sterility, anomie, and sadness" inherent in Mr. Sutton's vlogs, I think that's deeply rooted in the work of North American filmmakers such as David Lynch or David Cronenberg, who both expertly dissected the danger - or, to be less over, "duality" - of the uniquely American sense of suburban safety.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 01:09 pm (UTC)Re: the former, you are setting aside plenty of context here. The rise of the East as a world economic power is but one more source of frustration to the American South. It's clear to see in our politics, the division of "red" and "blue" and how easily the "red" feed off these frustrations as the Democrats once did with regards to the US Civil War. It is especially prevalent in a state like Georgia where - if you'll allow me to work under the assumption that Mr. Sutton is, indeed, from Georga - the state's inability to function seamlessly with the prosperous, industrialized North for the past century, as well as growing shifts in production and - more recently - a severe freshwater shortage are serving to reinforce exactly the type of identity crisis we see in (as mentioned below) the duality of "secure, stable America" and our tendency to pay $10 on a weekend to watch gruesome torture with our neighbors and girlfriends.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 01:11 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 01:23 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 01:26 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 01:31 pm (UTC)Anyway,
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 01:41 pm (UTC)As I said, I must rest, but the discussion is appreciated, and I always enjoy the read.
花らしい
Date: 2007-10-30 02:18 pm (UTC)Anyone who enjoys Hana might also enjoy this track I've uploaded (http://www.megaupload.com/?d=CAY71330) composed by Takayuki Aihara & Nobuyoshi Sano called "Route D". I'm sure a lot of music savy people read this blog, but I can almost guarantee none of you have heard it. Give it a listen, it's a beautiful track.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 03:10 pm (UTC)It is.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 03:15 pm (UTC)I won't hammer you for it. I have the same affliction. It gets worse as you get older - "why when I was a boy..."
And the neocons have built a platform on an idealized past that never existed.
I try not to look back and I try to focus on what's on the other side of this darkness.
But ahh the good old days... (http://www.ifilm.com/video/2816011)
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 03:16 pm (UTC)Thanks, I think I'll watch that again, now.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 03:34 pm (UTC)http://www.amazon.co.jp/%E3%82%8F%E3%81%9F%E3%81%97%E3%81%AE%E3%81%86%E3%81%9F-%E7%95%A0%E5%B1%B1%E7%BE%8E%E7%94%B1%E7%B4%80-ASA-CHANG-%E3%83%96%E3%83%AB%E3%83%BC%E3%83%8F%E3%83%83%E3%83%84/dp/B000UVXIGC/ref=sr_1_2/250-0953095-6431462?ie=UTF8&s=music&qid=1193758375&sr=1-2
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 03:38 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 03:44 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 03:58 pm (UTC)For an art project (http://www.2dk.net/urbanlenz/artists/e-Momus.html) I once extracted all the violence from a Takashi Miike film and exhibited what was left in a gallery. It was a scene, lasting approximately two minutes, of people sipping noodles.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 04:12 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 04:18 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 04:35 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 04:47 pm (UTC)and .. speaking of japan . i'm inclined to think that if you actually removed all the, ok, not violence, but intensity that is behind that violence you'd probably be left with little more than sipping noodles. (the type that are left too long in water that's just a few degrees below boiling point. )
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 04:50 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-30 04:51 pm (UTC)but i love those two Asa-Chang videos!!! especially the second one, the way it uses a 3-camera sitcom or game show setup for purposes very different (and the same) from typical "coverage". It's a performance!
(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-01 08:55 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-02 01:04 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-03 05:34 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-11-03 05:34 pm (UTC)