I'll be honest with you. My very favorite thing to do in the summer is get the hell out of my own pasture and explore somebody else's way way greener one. But most of the time, there's nothing for it but to just hang around town and try to appreciate the charms of your own little piece of the planet, however bland and horrid that may be. And it turns out there’s a great many of interesting things in the
Computer History Museum in Mountain View, including an abacus, an IBM 1401 Data
Processing system, a self-driving car and a giant globe that you can play fun
games with Google Earth on. For me, however, by far the most poignant is a diorama honoring
the invention of the MP3. It consists of a giant photograph depicting a record
store in 1979, under which there is a small selection of those old world
platters known as vinyl in racks meant to simulate the experience of record
store shopping.
computer history museum display |
The racks are real, and so is the fun of flipping through
them, but talk about history being written by the winners! That display can make you feel a little bit nauseous, much like the ones you see in museums honoring the Old West with a statue of a Native American warrior in full tribal dress, i.e. proud,
dead, and completely conquered, their perfect image frozen in a time before the
battle was so decisively won. The MP3 exhibit had that exact same edge to it,
triumphant while at the same time grudgingly nostalgic about a past it can't stop itself from admiring.
It is also, alas,
pretty accurate about the era which saw the demise of the form, all the way up
through the records (vinyls) they’d chosen for display in a ‘typical’ rack
beneath the photograph. There were titles by the Eagles, Devo, the Stones, Duran
Duran, Huey Lewis, Rod Stewart, Gerry Rafferty, Peter Gabriel, Steve Miller. I
flipped and flipped, hoping for a record by a black person or a woman, but no.
The entirety of jazz was represented by a single artist, David Sanborn, thus capturing much that is wrong with this kind of archiving. On the one hand, the selection
was spot on. On the other – well, yuck.
The rack looked so grim that I decided to re-curate it. After
a little thought, I chose the five records I thought were worthy of display:
Elvis Costello’s My Aim is True, the
first Marshall Crenshaw record, the Waitresses, Chipmunk Punk (because they at least do a cover of the Ramones),
and Jackson Browne’s Hold Out. JB
only made it in there by the skin of his teeth, in part because it felt like
honoring the ghost of Nico, and in part because I had a ticket in my pocket to
see him perform in San Jose at the City National Civic that night.
my choices |
Do you know that word ‘mood’ that kids say today when they
feel something too deeply? Jackson Browne is a mood, and when I was very young,
he was also bigger than you can possibly imagine. Wikipedia says he sold 18
million records, and at his height I didn’t know a single person who didn’t
have at least one. Old punks, sorority girls, parents…he crossed all boundaries
of fandom. Even some of the hip and groovy Paisley Undergrounders I knew in the
late 80s grudgingly admired him because of his connection to the Velvet
Underground. You can mock him if you want to, but I don't know why: his biggest single, “Somebody’s Baby,” underpins the scene in Fast Times At Ridgemont High, where
Jennifer Jason Leigh loses her virginity to a callous older guy, and so evocative
was its use therein that it’s hard for me to separate the scene from the song
now. It’s like the opposite of when a product uses a song to sell itself:
instead of fusing the song to the movie, “Somebody’s Baby” has replaced the
screenplay in entirety, becoming shorthand for a particular type of high school
experience in the early Reagan era. That the experience wasn’t a good one is exactly what makes the song so resonant – that is, what makes it ‘such a mood.’
Truthfully, his whole metier is one long paean to regret and regrets? I got a few.
Jackson Browne cast a long shadow in the late 70s but by the time the 1980s came around with its rap and its punk and its new wave and its cynicism, he was easy to make fun
of, both for his extreme earnestness and personal commitment to lost political
causes, and also the way that his sound – which his pals the Eagles monetized
into a mushy stew of crappy lyrics and turgid tempos — seemed like the antithesis of
everything one liked about rock. Also, there is something vexing about him that
I can only describe as his weirdly stubborn inability to be truly
intersectional in spite of almost monumental efforts to be so. For example,
although he clearly loves and admires world music, you never heard anyone say
the word “corazon” with a more gringo accent (although that’s probably pretty
much how I say the word too). And the
whole paradigm of the handsome solo artist surrounded by virtuoso musicians,
and the female backup singers (inevitably women of color) standing 20 feet from
stardom, is hard to defend, especially if, like me, what you really prefer is a
really ugly band like the Afghan Whigs putting four really loud guitars up front and
singing songs about fucking.
And yet...?
And yet, going to see him perform this summer was required of me, in the same way that not being in Portugal anymore was required of me. You can't deny your place in the world. So I returned to Jackson Browne on this night with no
expectations, and the second he began, at 8 pm on the dot, with a new song
called “Some Bridges”, I was thrown into the past, like the proverbial
boat born back against the current. “Some Bridges” reintroduced Jackson
Browne’s sound to me — it, like his visage and haircut, has not changed (at
least if you’re not wearing your glasses, which I wasn’t), but it was only on
the second song, “That Girl Could Sing,” that the ubiquity of his role in my
mental playlist sank in. My cousin Jennifer took out her phone and started
Shazaming and I put my hand across hers. No need, actually, because when it
comes to this shit I am the human Shazam. I can name that song in 3 notes –
except in the case of “Doctor My Eyes,” which I named in ONE.
Pretty much what he looks like without my glasses on anyway |
In truth, the music of JB is a little TINY bit older than my
peak era, such that I actually remember that when this song came out, I thought
it was called “Dark To My Eyes,” and I still secretly sing it to myself that way. Indeed, listening to him retrospectively, I see how Jackson
Browne really keyed me to a particular way to think about and even hear music
and lyrics; to focus in on them alone, and to vaporize the thrumming lap steel
and other accompaniments such that they seem natural and unimportant by
comparison. They aren’t, but that’s what the best singer-songwriters can do. Many
of Browne’s best tunes and lyrical images in his work seem simple and true and
beautiful, the musical equivalent of Raymond Chandler prose or Ed Ruscha
paintings, steeped in a vision of California that I lived very deeply, in
another world, a long time ago. Hearing anything from Late From The Sky, Running On Empty or The Pretender reminds me of the California of my youth: of driving
all over the state in the back of a station wagon to diving meets in places
like Woodlands and Visalia and Escondido and Petaluma, of a thick carpet of golden
rippling down hillsides and poking in and out of forests, of the ocean and the
sand and the smell of water and chlorine and something else that I would now
recognize as the smog-free scent of an endless summer.
In addition, Jackson Browne’s best work raised the kind of questions
and stakes that the majority of popular music out there today won’t go near.
After all, “The Pretender” is a song about the shortcomings of what Walter
Benjamin called the dream state of capitalism, or as he put it, the hell space
the sits between “the longing for love/and the struggle for the legal tender,”
while “For A Dancer” and “For Everyman” are as haunted by grim death as the
most shell shocked of murder ballads. And of course there is his masterpiece
“These Days,” one of the best beloved and most covered songs for literally
generations of musicians. Written when he was 17, it is the song Holden
Caulfield would have written if he’d wandered Manhattan two decades later,
crystallizing that specific angst he felt into 3 minutes of musical perfection.
2 comments:
I wandered into this post to take in your visit to the computer history museum, and left wishing I shared your evening listening to Jackson Browne. Kudos for maknig it so vivd! I can't wait for more.
Thanks Jan. Sorry to see you’re up so late - miss you at practice!
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