GREG TATE, Flyboy In The Buttermilk: Essays On Contemporary America
The Wire, spring 1992
By Simon Reynolds
One
of the most intriguing phenomena in recent years has been the rise of
the postmodern black. From hardcore punk rastas Bad Brains, through the
Kraftwerk influenced Afrika Bambatta and Derrick May, to rap's strange
infatuation with heavy metal (Motley Crue-fan Ice T's Body Count) it's
become apparent that racial tourism is no longer just a one-way traffic,
with whites spoiling the black scene(ry). As a staff writer for Village Voice,
Greg Tate has spent the last decade formulating a critical language to
deal with this anything's-up-for-grabs state of play. (He's also been a
co-founder of the Black Rock Coalition, which really got the crosstown
traffic goin' on).
Tate's writing is produced out of
interesting tensions: between his academic/radical background and his
yen to be down with street culture, between his gung-ho fervour for
African-American art and his fondness for some white artefacts (his fave
LP's of last year included My Bloody Valentine, Nirvana, and bizarrely,
Van Halen). The most crucial, productive tension comes from his desire
to build a bridge between black cultural nationalism and
post-structuralism; Tate wants his criticism to be proud-and-loud, but
not to succumb to any fixed notions about what constitutes "authentic"
black culture. This is probably why Miles Davis is such a totem for him,
Miles being the example par excellence of the black artist who could
incorporate white arthouse ideas and riffs (Stockhausen, Buckmaster)
into his groove thang, and make them baaaad to the bone. Miles is the
paradigm of the black innovator (see also: Hendrix, Sly Stone, George
Clinton, the artist Jean-Michel Basquiat) who fused the superbad
Stagolee tradition with an intellectual sophistication that white high
culture couldn't deny. Their threat lies in being 'neither one thing nor
the other': they're neither naively, instinctively passionate (the
trad, racist ideas about black creativity) nor do they conform to the
arid, restrained proprieties of white highbrow culture. Tate sees
"signifyin'" -the ability to disguise meaning, to appropriate and
remotivate elements from hegemonic culture - as a survival skill
intrinsic to the black American tradition.
Tate
inscribes this "neither/nor" factor in a style that mixes in-your-face
blackness with po-mo riffs. Sometimes the onslaught of 'muhfukhuh's and
'doohickeys' can be a little alienating (possibly the point). The idea
is probably similar to the old Lester Bangs/Richard Meltzer notion of
rock'n'roll writing that throbs like the music. Tate wants to write with
the swank of a Bootsy bassline, and more often than not succeeds. Some
of his neologisms are inspired: I particularly like "furthermucker", an
inversion which manages to combine the swaggering Stagolee persona and
the far-out cosmonaut of inner/outer space tradition, thus becoming the
perfect term for Miles, P-Funk, et al.
A hefty portion
of "Flyboy In The Buttermilk" consists of stimulating essays on black
culture--theorists like Henry Louis Gates, writers and artists like
Samuel Delany and Basquiat. There's even some pieces on the occasional,
honorary Caucasian, like novelist Don de Dillo, who's acclaimed for
documenting the paranoiac death throes of white American culture. But
for Wire-readers, the most interesting essays are about music. In
some of his earlier pieces, Tate has yet to shed reified notions about
musical "blackness". In the 1982 piece on Clinton's Computer Games,
he's flummoxed (as an unabashed Santana fan well might be) by the
phenomenon of black kids turning onto electro's "Monochrome Drone
Brainwash Syndrome beat". At this point, he seems to share Chuck D's
view of disco as soul-less, "anti-black" shit. This notion of black
music as hot, sweat, funky and frictional, is uncomfortably close to the
white stereotype, and it's a fix that black youth have being evading
throughout the Eighties. I wonder what Tate thinks of acid house or
Detroit techno?
Elsewhere, though, Tate acknowledges
that Bad Brains were most authentic and innovative when playing
ultra-Caucasian hardcore thrash, but totally jive when they tried to
play roots reggae. And in his piece on the Black British but not "black"
sounding A.R. Kane, he acclaims their radically polymorphous swoon-rock
for opening up the possibility for a black avant-pop that isn't "in the
pocket" but out-of-body. The Kane boys acknowledged only one influence,
Miles Davis, who coincintally is the subject of Tate's best two essays,
"The Electric Miles", and the elegy "Silence, Exile and Cunning". The
former is the best piece on Miles' most feverishly creative, least
understood phase I've yet encountered, with Tate anticipating the now
emergent critical doxa that the late Sixties to mid-Seventies albums
constitute the alpha and omega of furthermucker music, pre-empting Can,
Eno/Byrne/Hassell, Metal Box, even dub and late Eighties
freak-rock. Miles and his floating pool of players explored "a zone of
musical creation as topsy-turvy as the world of subatomic physics".
Tate's metaphors are vivid and precise: "He Loves Him Madly" is an
"aural sarcophagus", Dark Magus sees Miles "scribbling blurbs of
feline, funky sound which under scrutiny take on graphic shapes as wild
and willed as New York subway graffiti". To say that he's only mapped
the surface of Miles' planet, not probed the demonic, unclassifiable
emotions that seethe at its core, is no diss to Tate, only a tribute to
the inexhaustible nature of the music, of how far we still have to go
(there will alway be "further" when it comes to Miles).
An excellent book.
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