LETTER FROM NYC: outlook for '93: grim
Melody Maker, December 1992
by Simon Reynolds
Melody Maker, December 1992
by Simon Reynolds
Since it's that
time of year when everyone's looking to the
future, let me weigh in with my two cents worth: not
predictions, so
much as patterns for '93 in American rock. This much is obvious:
the major labels are still fixated on that delusory figment,
"the
next Nirvana".
Having signed most of Nirvana's grunge peers, and
scraped the bottom of that barrel, they're currently
harvesting the
next crop: bands whose development has been (mis)shaped
by the success of "Nevermind".
So if you thought the first, "authentic" wave was dire enough,
gird thy lug-holes for the likes of Kyuss, Stone Temple
Pilots, and
Wool. These
neo-grungers occupy a constricted triangle of terrain
whose points are Black Sabbath, Black Flag, and Helmet. Their
vocalists all bellow in that godawful Soundgarden/Alice In
Chains
pseudo-blues style, like Joe Cocker being crushed between
two slabs
of conrete. Kyuss'
"Blues For The Red Sun" LP, for instance, is
a dismal slog of down-tuned guitars and sluggish
tempos. The video
for the single "Thong Song" is set in some kind of
sallow-lit
dungeon, while the song itself oscillates between a
stop-start,
crippled riff and ineffectual blasts of rage, like a
prisoner in
solitary trying to escape by using his head as a battering
ram.
If Kyuss are singing the modern blues, as the LP title seems to
claim, this is the blues as sung by Ozzy Osbourne and
filtered
through Henry Rollins.
Rollins' agonised throes of failed, flailing
masculinity, as first and best heard on Black Flag's
"Damaged", were
a seminal influence on Nirvana. And Rollins' recent song "Low Self
Esteem" captures the (dis)spirit of grunge
perfectly. Musclebound
but impotent, grunge is masculine, but never macho in a
flamboyant
Jagger/Plant/Axl way.
Grunge isn't the new cock rock, it's the
castration blues.
And so bands like Kyuss don't swagger, they strain: their
riffage sounds strenuous, like it's perpetually on the verge
of
sprouting a hernia. In a recent issue of Details, Rollins
writes
eloquently about his almost mystical attitude to working
out. He
sees "The Iron" as his only true friend:
submitting to its regime,
he learns to channel his aggression and confront his own
limits.
Like Travis Bickle in Taxi Driver, Rollins is a
survivalist, a One
Man Army, at war with himself. If Rollins is parted from his
weights for any prolonged period, he sinks into a morass of
despondency, like a career soldier who's been demobilised
against
his will. With
Rollins, Kyuss, et al, rock is a kind of spiritual
work-out, a fortification of the self in order to face the
minefield
of everyday life.
There's another strain of US rock activity, bands who don't
fight abjection but succumb to it: Come, Swell, Codeine,
Toiling
Midgets, and other inhabitants of the abyss. Where the turgid toil
of Rollins-rock is eventually numbing, this music is plain
numb:
Come should really call themselves Coma. Again, "the
blues" are
waved around by some as a reference point, but I can't hear
it,
except in so far as this music is black-and-blue with
emotional
bruises, blue like the rigor mortis of an overdose victim.
If there's a gleam of brightness on the bleak horizon of US
rock, it takes the form not of positivity but peculiarity:
the
absurdist rock of lo-fi art-punks like Royal Trux, Thinking
Fellers
Union Local 282, Cul de Sac, Sun City Girls, Fantastic
Palace, Wall
Drug, and others.
Operating somewhere to the left of Pavement and
Mercury Rev, these bands are heavily influenced by the
warped and
wired fractures of The Fall, the fissile soundscapes of
Faust and
Can, and Sonic Youth's oldstyle guitar-reinvention. Although
they
have a similar experimental approach to the British
avant-rock
fringe (Moonshake, Earwig, Bark Psychosis, Disco Inferno,
Papa
Sprain etc), the US weirdos are still somewhat restricted by
their
guitar-fetishism. US
rock has yet to embrace the psychedelic
possibilites of sampling: it still thinks disco sucks. The two
Brit-rock pinnacles of the Nineties-Primal Scream's
"Higher Than The
Sun" and MBV's "To Here Knows When"-could
never have happened
without rave culture.
But even with their lo-fi Luddite tendencies,
these art-punks know how to marvel, rather than wallow in
the mire
of moroseness.
[footnote: now i would much rather listen to the mire-of-morose bands of that era - Alice of Chains above all, but probably Kyuss and possibly even Wool whoever the fuck they were - than any of them lo-fi record-clerk collector/zine-ed type bands]
[footnote: now i would much rather listen to the mire-of-morose bands of that era - Alice of Chains above all, but probably Kyuss and possibly even Wool whoever the fuck they were - than any of them lo-fi record-clerk collector/zine-ed type bands]