Brett Eugene Ralph wrote:I have never been a fan of The Carpenters' music. I don't hate it, but I see/hear no reason to hold it any higher regard than John Denver or Helen Reddy. Actually, I don't think that I've heard a Carpenters song that I like as much as "Angie Baby." But I digress . . .
I have yet to hear any John Denver songs or recordings that can stand up to the depth of the carpenters as far as song craft, production, and arrangement. As far as personal expression, I find John Denver more up front with his words and not as interesting. There is less mystery I guess. As for Helen Reddy, I have only heard radio hits from her... never spent the time listening to her music.
Brett Eugene Ralph wrote:
Although it's impossible to know why a person likes a certain musical act (unless s/he tells you--if s/he even knows), I am uncomforttable with what I perceive to be the motivations behind championing the Carpenters' music. More than one person has suggested to me that the Carpenters are brilliant precisely because they made vapid pop songs that almost wholly kept hidden the fact that this music was made by a deeply conflicted closeted homosexual and a gawky drummer who was slowly but surely starving herself to death. Therefore, a song like "Top of the World" achieves a kind of massively tragic irony that totally eclipses its lameness as "music."
I agree... ironic love for music seems to be purposeless. I do not in anyway think of the Carpenters music as vapid. I find it very full in may ways... "Top of the World" is one of the exceptions for me... I do not care for the song nor do I buy anything in it.
Brett Eugene Ralph wrote:
I am not a fan of this kind of listening, which seems to me to amount to a kind of aesthetic vampirism: "Let's listen for clues to how miserable they really were! Let's read Sylvia Plath's poems and look for encrypted suicide notes!" I don't think the back story should become more important than the art itself, though I realize that they're inextricably linked. Still, knowing how fucking crazy Brian Wilson is doesn't make me like the Beach Boys anymore, nor do I think I'd be seduced by the coke-addled wife-swapping that informs Rumours if I didn't like the music already.
I think there is music made by tragic figures that sucks and some made by tragic figures that speaks to me. I do not think by definition such a thing is good or bad. The Carpenters did make very good and interesting music in my opinion regardless of their back story. The back story surely adds to my perception of their body of work... but certainly does not outshadow it. The odd sunny melancholy you hear in the music comes from the music, not from your knowledge of their personal lives.