Either-Or: 70s Brit Punk or 80s US Hardcore
Posted: Mon Jul 31, 2006 7:36 pm
How can music be "once-relevant"? Music is a timeless art form, and, generally speaking, the bands I love are not seeking to make records that have as their chief interest the fact that they mirror the sociological aspects of a certain era.
I guess I could see how one could consider Sonic Youth "once-relevant" if you're talking about their novel approach to guitar tunings. That was something that hadn't really been seen under the sun until they came along (at least in the context of a rock band); though I may be wrong, and I welcome any other examples of that sort of thing occurring before Sonic Youth's advent. Of course, since the '80's, a number of bands, most notably Pavement, have utilized different tunings.
But I still go back to Sister and EVOL, and the music sounds just as fresh to my ears as it must have once sounded to people who grew up seeing them live. They truly were a unique band at that point.
Having said that, I do feel like they slipped badly for a number of years after those records. A Thousand Leaves, however, is a great album.
I guess I could see how one could consider Sonic Youth "once-relevant" if you're talking about their novel approach to guitar tunings. That was something that hadn't really been seen under the sun until they came along (at least in the context of a rock band); though I may be wrong, and I welcome any other examples of that sort of thing occurring before Sonic Youth's advent. Of course, since the '80's, a number of bands, most notably Pavement, have utilized different tunings.
But I still go back to Sister and EVOL, and the music sounds just as fresh to my ears as it must have once sounded to people who grew up seeing them live. They truly were a unique band at that point.
Having said that, I do feel like they slipped badly for a number of years after those records. A Thousand Leaves, however, is a great album.