I certainly don’t agree with the notion that in order for music to be any good it has to be resistant to the uses to which Real World producers and ad executives want to put it. How many times have you heard Mozart in a car commercial or Beethoven in a crappy film? That’s a very old-school, modernist idea that in order for art to be any good it has to confuse and repel 99.5% of the population, and I don’t buy it. The fact that a song enhances the allure of a product is not the song’s fault—although constant TV and radio play can no doubt transform anything from novel and pleasing into where’s my razor blade.
I also don’t think it’s necessary to reach for the most esoteric or challenging instance of a genre in order to argue its legitimacy. That’s like hauling Melt-Banana before the judge in order to justify rock and roll. I’m actually somewhat indifferent to non-dance, non-club electronica, so I’m gonna try to make the case with my favorite group of 2007, Justice.
Justice is a French electronic duo that has created some astonishingly complex yet infinitely appealing compositions that you can fucking dance to. They have an exhaustive knowledge of funk, house, synth soundtrack music, r’n’b, rap, 90s and 2000s electro, and a fondness for Metallica, all of which they put to use in creating coherent music that shrugs off many techno orthodoxies and that rocks. And their debute album,
Cross, took a long-ass time to make. I’m not sure how helpful this will be if you don’t know some French, but it might give you a sense of the thinking that goes into the music:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=wFrAp-EKUQ4
I do think there is something to be said about the caliber of a group being reflected in the audience it attracts and excitement and devotion it initially inspires. I used what meager disposable income I had from my internship stipend to fly from Albuquerque to Seattle to see Justice in October, and spent the evening dancing next to a fellow who had flown in from Alaska. Mackro was at that show, and his description of the event is great:
Mackro wrote:Yes, I saw that show at Neumo's. Having seen Daft Punk just months before, the stage thing didn't really excite me as much. (Big white flashing cross, ooh) however the crowd energy was really really great. It's the most energetic crowd I've ever been in where no one was a douchebag -- at all! and no PLUR either. It was kinda dancing, kinda shoving, like an air popper of pop corn in slow motion. It was just this hunger for volume, whatever whoever made it.
[fuck, I keep missing typos]