one of the interesting things about winehouse was her relationship with
music from the past, and the way she brought that into relationship with
contemporary music.
there are lots of nostalgia acts without much else going on but nostalgia.
but winehouse was more ambitious than that. and mark ronson, her producer,
is very skilled in all manner of sounds.
when i was growing up, rock and roll was growing and changing and still
vibrant. the rock of the fifties sounds quite different from that of the
sixties and seventies. and then the 80's new wave changed it again. but it
has pretty much been all rerun since then, as far as rock and roll goes. dub
and rap have been the only really popular musics from the last twenty or
thirty years that sound different. but they're kind of palette cleansers.
musically, they're very dull. the lyrical content is the interesting part.
toward spoken word. the more interesting contemporary musics, it seems you
have to go out looking for it cuz it just doesn't show up on the radio or
tv. like at soma.fm, the music they play.
consequently, the issue of relationship with the music of the past becomes
more important than it has been in previous times where the driving force of
mainstream music emphasized a singularly contemporary sound.
and that's where winehouse really excels. in exploring how that relationship
with the past can work today. but not simply be nostalgic.
ja
http://vispo.com
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