More Ashlee. I try to do right by the craftsmanship and the poetry. (Thanks to Nia for inspiration.) I also pose a question that I suppose is really "Why do we care about artistry?" Any thoughts?
The Rules of the Game No. 11: Toothpaste and Coffee
EDIT: Here are links to all but three of my other Rules Of The Game columns (LVW's search results for "Rules of the Game"). Links for the other three (which for some reason didn't get "Rules Of The Game" in their titles), are here: #4, #5, and #8.
UPDATE: I've got all the links here now:
http://koganbot.livejournal.com/179531.html
The Rules of the Game No. 11: Toothpaste and Coffee
EDIT: Here are links to all but three of my other Rules Of The Game columns (LVW's search results for "Rules of the Game"). Links for the other three (which for some reason didn't get "Rules Of The Game" in their titles), are here: #4, #5, and #8.
UPDATE: I've got all the links here now:
http://koganbot.livejournal.com/179531.html
no subject
Date: 2007-08-17 01:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-17 04:23 pm (UTC)Haven't tackled your question above, btw, but...why wouldn't we care about artistry? Even if a music exists to celebrate a "lack" of artistry, doesn't it become its own sort of artistry with its own conventions and standards of beauty? (One question I have re: Ashlee dismissal is usually what standards of artistry are being employed -- it seems to me that the standards are often picked AFTER the decision has been made to dismiss, as you've made clear in several of your columns.) I don't think Ashlee's artistry is questionable, but you also have to understand the terms she and her genre are setting, both of which can be a barrier for people that have never given the music a chance.