« “The Bass Player”
» “Untitled Fragment #8″

Late Night Musings

Is It Over?

Seth Eagelfeld | 04.29.08 | 6 Comments

“Give me back the Berlin Wall, Give me Stalin and St.Paul, I’ve seen the future, brother: it is murder.”

–Leonard Cohen

Urban Outfitters may not be the best place to act as a bellwether for American culture, but if chains can’t represent us, what’s left? The store, which sells t-shirts and other light couture, oddly shaped furniture, various novelty items, and numerous books, is–like most things in malls–aimed directly at the Gen Y dollar. What’s interesting about this is that it’s t-shirts don’t feature current artists and icons, but those of decades ago. The furniture is not designed in some modern style, but are modeled on the retro looks of the seventies. The books, if not some coffee table gimmick, are retrospectives on the work of Andy Warhol, Jimi Hendrix, and Burt Reynolds. The few things that are representative of something new, are of a completely, purposefully, ironic and disinterested attitude, as if to say: Isn’t it funny how awful everything is now?

But I can’t point fingers at a corporate chain for trying to hang on indefinitely to the past. After all, what else is there to hang on to? I’ve realized lately that I, a twentysomething, when not listening to Opera of centuries ago, can usually be seen carrying an iPod filled not with the latest tunes or the newest bands, but with the music of my father’s day. Paul Simon, Harry Chapin, Leonard Cohen, and the Stones: All seem to have been far more interesting and far less dull in their and our time than anything produced today. The radio and current hit-list are filled with crooning, screaming, crying, and shouting, but none of it seems to transcend it’s dead-on-arrival dullness, not matter how violent or sexual it gets. The only movement of any interest in modern music, tends to be the remixes or “Mash-Ups” of, again, much older works.

Read any good books lately? I haven’t. In fact, I don’t think I own a book written after 1990. Those few contemporary works that I’ve attempted to read, possessed much the same attitude as Urban Outfitters: Isn’t it funny, and ironic, and–please God–completely unimportant! The same with modern film, where a 16 sixteen year old has the cynicism of a 60 year old and seems herself to know that ‘it’s just a movie, nothing important’; or there’s the ‘torture porn’ where we watch, usually disinterested, as characters face excruciatingly meaningless pain and unimaginable, but also meaningless, cruelty. No one is willing to take anything seriously anymore, not because there’s nothing to take seriously, but because we’re afraid of committing to anything. We look around and see more-and-more lost battles and decide we’d rather sit and point and laugh at both sides, than to be a loser.

It seems that for a decade–if not longer–things have been ground to a halt. It seems as if we’ve lost something. Music, Art, Film, Literature: none seem willing to move beyond irony and artifice. Is this a generational funk or is it just over?

Have you considered Subscribing to all of this madness?

6 Comments

have your say

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. Subscribe to these comments.

No disagreeing with Seth, nor arguing with him. He's always right.

You can use these tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

:

:


« “The Bass Player”
» “Untitled Fragment #8″