Xgau SezThese are questions submitted by readers, and answered by Robert Christgau. New ones will appear in batches every third Tuesday. To ask your own question, please use this form. May 22, 2024[Q] I have a question about your name, "Christgau." I looked a little and apparently "gau" is German/Danish (they share small border) rooted, meaning "land," while "Christ" of course is what it is. So, I was wondering if perhaps that kind of far-reaching humanism and compassionate virtues associated with Christ, and of course that you were from a born-again Christian household, influenced your democratic sensibility, your politics, your own humanism, etc. The values I feel in your writing. Maybe I'm too stressed out to formulate a concrete question out of this. Just a reflection. I'm sure you get it. -- Piotr, Manhattan [A]
I have no doubt that my Christian upbringing played an active role in
shaping my humanism. "Love thy neighbor" was definitely a watchword at
First Pres even if not all the parishioners lived by it. Also, my
church library was one of the first places I found books about ideas,
and I read several of them, which helped make me an intellectual,
though I always preferred both fIction and books about baseball. But
given the extent to which the leftist humanism of dozens upon dozens
of my Jewish friends moved me in that direction, I identify more with
that strain of secular humanism. As for the name "Christgau," there's a
Danish brand of coffee
called Christgau--an empty bag of it hangs from my office door. Then
again, so does the remains of an envelope addressed to Rabbi Robert
T. Christgau. In either German or Danish or maybe both the suffix
"gau" seems to mean something like region or county, and I seem to
recall that under Hitler certain states or geopolitical entities were
called "gaus."
![]() [Q] Hi, I'm currently enrolled at Dartmouth College and I recently noticed that you went here as well. How was your time at Dartmouth? Any specific interesting memories? Did you participate in Greek life? Did any classes here make you want to go into music criticism? -- Joseph T. Kuester, Atlanta, Georgia [A]
An entire chapter of my memoir,
Going Into the City, is about
Dartmouth, and I assume you would find it enlightening. In NYC I was
only allowed to apply to three colleges plus a CUNY, and I no longer
remember whether Cornell and Hamilton wanted me, but Dartmouth gave me
a scholarship, maybe because I had a great-uncle who attended on a
football scholarship, didn't graduate (blew a knee, for one thing),
then became an alumni association heavy of some sort; he was also a
drunk who was run over by a bus in Cooper Square a few blocks from
where I've resided for half a century. So he might have helped. In
addition my College Boards were off the charts though my high school
grades weren't, and math chairman although not-yet-prexy John Kemeny
called me in to bawl me out for choosing the "gut' Math 3-6 option
instead of Math 1-2 because it was the easiest "science" "sequence"
and all I wanted to do was study literature and philosophy, which I
then did for four years. My grade average was good-not-great because I
have no knack for foreign languages--cum laude and Phi Bet but not by
much. But I absorbed a lot of literature and philosophy there and made
a few lifelong friends in English Honors and on the fringes of what
passed as the undergraduate bohemia. I was the youngest member of my
class.
[Q] A couple of years back I was going through a Vampire Weekend phase propelled partly by your writings. During such time I came across young Ezra's blogspot page titled Internet Vibes, in which he aimed to "categorize as many vibes as [he] can." The web page offers plenty of insight into the young man's character, his humor and quirks, his musical and intellectual inquietudes--and it did turn me on to some interesting music. On October 12, 2005, he posted "CRITICAL BEATDOWN," defending Billy Joel's music and sensibility against your judgements, going through some of your Piano Man reviews, and concluding that you are a "1-ST CLASS POSEUR," a "CLASSIC TYPE-A HATER," and that "GRADING ALBUMS like HOMEWORK is LAME," amongst other reflections about criticism in general. No antagonizing intended, I just wondered if you were ever aware of this, and about your view of Ezra's maturation and development as a songwriter, human, etc. which I understand seeps as subject of your reviews of his. -- Ignacio Nuez, Santiago, Chile [A]
What can I say? It's the rare artist who has any feel for criticism as
a craft or calling and I'm even better at mine than he is at his,
about which I've often written positively plus there's a
big piece about his band in
Is It Still Good to Ya? Maybe you
should buy yourself a copy and Xerox the VW piece and send it to him
even if you don't like it, which I'd make a 50-50 proposition.
[Q] What are your favorite albums of 1968 and would any from my list below make yours?
[A]
We have similar tastes. Doing a best of '68 list would be a week's
work I am reluctant to undertake, but I can say that the only album on
the list I think of as way overrated is Cream's Wheels of Fire
and a replay might conceivably change that (and I'm not a big fan of
Jefferson Airplane's Crown of Creation either). But the only
ones I'm pretty sure I've played for pleasure or something like
it--usually what I'll call unnecessary research comparison--since say
2015 are, in guesswork descending order: Cheap Thrills,
Beggars Banquet, Electric Ladyland, The White
Album, At Folsom Prison, and conceivably Songs of
Leonard Cohen. Not sure I own or therefore know In the
Groove. (Motown didn't mail out review copies back then.)
April 17, 2024Pick hits: Margret Drabble and Marshall Berman. Must to avoid: Smashing Pumpkins at Lollapalooza '94. Plus: Radio time (or lack thereof), Dave Marsh (disco mix), and old & new instant excitements. [Q] If you are not a music critic, you must be a good literary critic. You ranked The Mars Trilogy sixth, between Mumbo Jumbo and A House for Mr. Biswas, on your list-in-perpetual-progress of favorite 20th-century novels. Do we get the full ranking? -- Debbie Chan, Shenzhen, China [A]
I'd rather not for several reasons, though I suppose might change my
mind. But there's a brief novel by
Margaret Drabble, a UK author
I generally respect more than I admire, that I
read at Carola's urging when we first
got together. It's called The Millstone and I recommend it to
everyone I know even though I understand childbirth is a less
universal theme than some might imagine. I wrote about it in Going
Into the City. It's both soulful and exquisite.
[Q] Which book by Marx is a must-read, The Communist Manifesto, Das Kapital, or the 1844 Economic Manuscripts? -- Terry Tan, Hong Kong [A]
I'm not the guy to ask, since The Communist Manifesto is the
only one I've read. Instead I strongly recommend an essay collection
by my dear friend the late great
Marshall Berman: Adventures
in Marxism. I'm probably not supposed to say this given what I
haven't read, but Berman's prose is a lot easier on the cerebellum
than Marx's. So I should add that circa 1967 I read and admired Marx's
18th Brumaire. It was regarded as something of a potboiler
albeit a revolutionary one as I recall, but for just that reason goes
down easier.
[Q] Hi, Robert. Maybe you've been asked the following questions before. However, here goes. Have you ever tuned into Dylan's Theme Time Radio Hour? If so, what is your assessment of Dylan's tastes in music, assuming he chose those tunes not just because they fit the given theme, but also for their musical value. Thanks! -- Keiro Kitagami, Kyoto, Japan [Q] Dave Marsh once said "I don't know that [punk] was any more important than disco" and believes hip-hop is more significant than punk in musical history. Do you agree with this? -- Lance Rocke, California [Q] Bob, I've enjoyed your work for many years. You've written about your process of putting new music on in the background to see if it grabs you. My question: can you recall some albums that have blown you away on the first listen--work that inspired something like immediate astonishment, and that you immediately knew was A or A+ stuff? Perhaps a related question (or perhaps not): do you remember your reaction the very first time you heard the Clash or Ramones? The very first spin of Sgt. Pepper's? Thank you! -- Kent, Brooklyn [A]
I don't think "blown me away" is a very useful way of putting
it. Rather I'd say something like "excited me" or "commanded my full
immediate attention." In 2023 there were a number of such, several of
which I recognized as terrific right off but also could soon discern
were clearly limited in one way or another:
Gina Birch would be a perfect
example--not for everyone at 69 and understandably so.
Olivia Rodrigo's Guts
might be an exception--terrific from first spin but also clearly
calling out for deeper analysis and further elucidation. I couldn't
get enough of the 2023
Lewis Capaldi for the first
day or two, although that's an album few admire as much as I do, and
the same probably goes for
Dolly Parton's Rockstar,
which I crowed about to Carola track by track first play but soon
recognized wasn't for everyone on a first-to-last basis, and rightly
so at that. Having already seen the Ramones a bunch of times when
their debut surfaced I played it immediately and never seem to get
tired of it. Then there were my first two rock album buys,
The Beatles' Second
Album and
The Rolling Stones Now!
Both are still play-it-again faves around here. As for
Sgt. Pepper, I sat around with a bunch of journalists and
listened to it for hours before its official release, still play it
occasionally. and now resent anyone who puts it down "Within You
Without You" notwithstanding.
[Q] As someone who's thoroughly read and philosophized upon your words, I figured I'd ask about your review of Smashing Pumpkins' 1991 LP Gish. I know that a * review is by no means negative, but, aside from highlighting an occasionally-aired promo single, your review was relatively dismissive. I know of your thoughts on metal ("What am I supposed to say about the latest in meaning-mongering for the fantasy fiction set?"), but the lyricism and guitar acrobatics on this album cannot be denied. Hell, it might be kind of arty, but not that arty. Not enough that it loses its relatability. This mild dismissiveness of usually beloved records would include your reviews of Elliot Smith's Either/Or, Bjork's Homogenic, and, in a more extreme case, Radiohead's Kid A and Amnesiac. I'm not asking you to love ATUM, Zeitgeist, CYR, or Machina/The Machines of God. I don't like half to 99% of the music on those records. Just please reconsider. Even the same response with reasons would be enough. -- Morgan C, New Hampshire [A] I am genuinely flattered that you believe I'm so diligent and open-minded I can be expected to replay an album by an artist not one of whose releases I came close to enjoying as opposed to respecting. But I'm not. In fact the only one of the six artists you name I admire more than that is Bjork, and even in her case the positivity doesn't extend so far that I'm about to figure out how to insert the appropriate umlaut into her name. Many serious aesthetes among rock fans admire these artists you name. I don't, because none of their aesthetics make enough room for pop fun or African-derived grooves, both of which are gold as far as I'm concerned. With Smashing Pumpkins my disillusion arrived early in their career, at a doomed 1994 rock festival in Rhode Island whose performance I described thusly:
I am proud to note that after this passage was published I was
approached in a restaurant by a bizzer I knew who worked for Smashing
Pumpkins. He thought it was a riot.
March 27, 2024Hip-hop lyricism, the year of the woman circa 2018, very best vs. all-time greatest, Underoath vs. depression, in praise of Kim Stanley Robinson and Swedish socialism, remembering David Schweitzer. [Q] Hi Robert: In your 2023 Dean's List piece you name a predominance of older artists as the year's "significant anomaly." What interests me the most, however, is the relative lack of black music--hip hop in particular. Sure there's some, but ignoring the various African releases compiling decades old music, you can almost count black artists on two hands. I seem to recall you having voiced reservations about current tendencies within hip hop, so my question: Assuming you agree with my analysis, do you think the lack of hip hop on the list is just a coincidence (just a lackluster year in that regard), or is there a deeper meaning to it? Just a curious observation: Your highest ranked hip-hop record of the year (by black artists) is Scaring the Hoes, and it's among other things a frontal attack on the hip hop scene of the current moment. Danny Brown: "Niggas don't rap no more they just sell clothes/So I should probably quit and start a line of bathrobes." -- Adam, Denmark [A]
That's a fair question and I haven't come close to figuring out why it
pertains. I expect it has something to do with trap as an approach to
rhythm that I don't understand, don't cotton to, or don't like at all,
though I'd begin by venturing that it's not hooky enough in the pop
sense, which is something I've always valued in hip-hop myself. The
thing about Danny Brown is that he definitely has ambitions as a
lyricist, and except for a few of what I'll call the New York
intellectuals--Wiki, say, or especially second-generation Marxist
Billy Woods--that's becoming rarer near as I can tell.
[Q] While reading the lists of recent years' Grammy winners, I found your review of Kacey Musgraves's album The Golden Hour, and I was really intrigued by the passage where you refer to that year (I presume 2018) as "the rock era's biggest yet quietest year of the woman to date." Could you elaborate on that? Also, do you still stand by that assessment after five years? -- Gaetano, Siena, Italy [A]
Looking back on
2018's Dean's List, I find 16 women
in the top 30: Noname, Bettye LaVette, Pistol Annies, Tierra Whack,
Cardi D, the Paranoid Style featuring Elizabeth Nelson, Maria Muldaur,
Kah-Lo, Wussy featuring Lisa Walker, Janelle Monae, Elza Soares, Amy
Rigby, Amanda Shires, tUnE-yArDs, Hinds, and the transgender
Sophie. So without doing any handstands, that looks to me as if it
qualifies as a yes--there just weren't that many women getting respect
back then. So 16 in the top 30 deserved some sort of plaudit.
[Q] Not a question but a comment regarding the Very Best of the Shirelles. I own their 25 All Time Greatest Hits on the Varese Sarabande label, 1999. The fidelity is great. It contains "The Things I Want To Hear" and "It's Love That Really Counts" which was omitted from Very Best Of; it also has "Boys" and "Foolish Little Girl" and "I Met Him on Sunday" and "Don't Say Goodnight and Mean Goodbye" plus "A Thing of the Past" which is all on Very Best. -- Steven Goldman, New York City [Q] Hello, I've been reading your reviews since my teen years in the 2000s and you've had a huge impact on my musical trajectory. I wanted to ask you about a record from that time that you never reviewed (frankly because it is far outside your typical wheelhouse): Underoath's Define the Great Line. It's a record that has stuck with me for a long time through my deep depression as a continual comfort, source of emotional exhilaration, and even a light of insight in my darkest times. -- Grace Brown, Salem, Massachusetts [Q] I think you share the same political philosophy as Kim Stanley Robinson. Are you a democratic socialist who supports the Swedish model? -- Meng Dang, Nanchang, China [Q] I was looking for information on my old NYU friend Dave Schweitzer, who founded the rock newsletter Hawaiian Punch while there (he and I used to do a Blind Date record column), and was saddened to find that he died at the age of 44 in 2012. At the same time, I was grateful to see that, at the time he died, he was your assistant. The Dave I knew at NYU would have been thrilled to know that he would assist you one day. -- Dawn Eden Goldstein, Washington, DC [A]
David was one of my first assistants, recommended as I recall by Riffs
contributor and NYU prof
Perry Meisel. He had a
very good brain and was a pleasure to be around. I learned of his
death, which as I recall was heart-related and took place when he was
pursuing a graduate degree in English in Texas, via the earliest
iteration of the commenting community that grew up back when the
Expert Witness blog generated a de
facto discussion group that dubbed itself the Witnesses. He was
mourned; it was a shock for all of us.
February 22, 2024Some thoughts on Eminem, trying (and failing) to get into Neutral Milk Hotel, Chicago blues (Chess and otherwise), A+ best-of albums, pretty good live Stones, and the affordability of CDs. [Q] As a fellow boomer and long-time consumer of your words, just thought I'd acknowledge how 100% right on and right you are on the topic of Eminem. I pity the fools who begrudge that generation their Stones/Dylan/whatever that makes sense and irritates parents. -- Bernie Kellman, Mexico City [A]
Anyone who's really interested in my take on Eminem should find what
The Believer called "The Slim Shady Essay," which is available
on my site and also collected in
Is It Still Good to Ya? It was
assigned and paid for and then left hanging as a minibook by someone
who'd been led to believe by the late
Dave
Hickey that I might write
something worthy of his recommendation. But there was only one Dave
Hickey, and it definitely wasn't me.
[Q] Hi Bob! Huge fan, even if (especially IF) we disagree on certain records because I'm a huge fan of getting an alternate viewpoint. A critic will never make me stop liking what I like, but a critic who can write well will ABSOLUTELY make me give something a second listen, and your reviews have certainly pushed me out of my gen-x, rockist comfort zone. I'll stop kissing ass now. That being said, are you ever tempted to revisit reviews based on the changing landscape of popular acclaim? For example, you gave Neutral Milk Hotel's In the Aeroplane Over the Sea a solid "Meh," which (I say this as the target audience) is totally defensible (and not . . . too far off from other reviews at the time) but it's become kind of the Sgt Pepper's of people born between 1972-1987 (I picked those numbers out of my ass, and I'll stand by them). Is there an urge (or a responsibility) to re-review a record when its place in music history has shifted radically? No wrong answers! -- Matt, Boston [A]
I have tried to get into that admittedly beloved Neutral Milk Hotel
album on at least three separate occasions. Many love it and are free
to do so, yourself included. Not me. I'm older than you and would at
this point in my life would almost always rather devote my
ever-fleeting hours to something I like already.
[Q] Hi Bob, Any opinions on the lesser known Chess blues artist Jimmy Rogers? Of course, I play Muddy and the Wolf more but whenever I pull Chicago Bound or The Complete Chess Recordings off the shelf, I enjoy them just as much. Rogers' voice may not be as distinctive as Waters or Wolf but the same band rocks behind all those Chess records. I'm wondering if you consider any of his collections A-worthy. -- Phil, Columbia, Missouri [A]
I do like Rogers but have never explored him. The only incidentally
Chess Elmore James's
The Sky Is Crying,
assembled by the late
Robert Palmer for Rhino, is one
of the great single-artist compilations, and see my other
James reviews as well. I play
Sonny Boy Williamson as much as
Wolf or
Waters myself. And original
Alligator Records mainstay
Hound Dog Taylor, who did do a
few Chess singles as well.
[Q] Who's an A+ artist that never released an A+ album in your opinion? I'd guess James Brown or Chuck Berry, if you don't count best-ofs. -- Kyoko M., Orlando [A]
But I do count best-ofs. Why not? So pin
The Shirelles' Greatest
Hits up in there. And Tom Ze's
Brazil Classics IV.
Definitely Franco's
Francophonic,
both volumes. And note
that when Blender did a GOAT thing, sometime in the '00s as I
recall, it put none other than Madonna's
Immaculate Collection at
the top of the list. Plus, absolutely, the James Brown box
Star Time.
|
|