Metro Australia – July 2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
somemillion­dollarmass­entertainmentproductforitstime­
killing validity(as opposedto contemporaryfilm criticismand
reviewing,whichfeellikebeinga stringeronthesuperhero­
moviebeat); instead,you’reexpectedto flag overlooked,
underheard,deep­in­the­undergroundgems.Often,music
critics– and/orradiopresenters!– arefetedas‘tastemakers’,
a labelthatputsforwardtheideathatone’smusicalprefer­
encesandrecordcollectionarebarometersoficonoclastic,
individualtaste.MusicwriterCarlWilson’sveritabledisserta­
tionLet’sTalkAboutLove, itselfa studyin themythofcritical
objectivity,tacklesthishead­on:in a collectionofbooks(the
33 ⅓series)ostensiblydevotedto‘classic’,alwayscredible
albums,heinsteadunpacksCélineDion’s 1997 albumofthe
samename,whichis bothcriticallyreviledandoneofthe
biggest­sellingalbumsofalltime.A 2014reissueofthe 2007
bookexpandedontheidea,evensupplantingitsoriginal
subtitle,A Journeyto the End of Taste, withan ironic one:
WhyOtherPeopleHaveSuchBadTaste.^4
Possessing‘good’taste has led me to a long-simmering
loathingofmusicdocumentaries.A perenniallypopularstaple
of film-festivalprogramsand streaming-servicemenus,the
‘rockumentary’is almostalwaysanartless,inherentlyun­
cinematicaffair. It marshalsthe most tired tropesof nonfic­
tion storytelling– banal direction,stock-footageB roll, static
talkingheads,illustrativeimagery,thesamescanthandful
of archivalimages– in serviceof what’s,usually,sheer nos­
talgia:anairlessorationofhowgreatthepastwas,told
fromthecomfortandsafetyofthepresent.Assomecod
rockhistorian– usuallyHenryRollins,ThurstonMooreor
Bono – offers endlessvariationson the pontification‘before
[artistX],no­onewasdoinganythinglikethis!’,we’retreated
tonarrativesthatseeknottochallengeorprovoke,butto
packageunderappreciatedmusiciansin easilyconsumable
formats,pastrebellionwillinglysubmittedtocontemporane­
ous commodification.In his wry essay collectionCensorship
Now!!(inwhichhedismissesdocumentariesas‘bad­looking,
unnuanced,propagandistictellingsofevents’thatplay‘like
audio-visualpresentationsin a gradeschool’),critic Ian F
Svenonius– otherwiseknownastheelectricfrontmanof
bandslikeNationofUlysses,TheMake­Up,WeirdWarand
Chain& TheGang– mocksrockumentariesas‘dullvenera­
tion’,‘desperateadvertisements’outnotsimplytoburnish
legacy,buttoselloldproductstoa newaudience.^5
There are examplesof filmmakersdeliberatelydistancing
themselvesfromthisestablishedmodel,likeKiwioddball
FlorianHabicht,whoturnedPulp:A FilmAboutLife,Death
& Supermarkets(2014)intoa workofabsurdism,in part
becausehefelt,rightly,that‘[m]ostdocumentariesabout
bandsarereallyboring[...]Theyfeellesslikeartworksthan
promotionalvideos.’^6 Even iconicfilmmakersfall victimto
thatpromotionaltendency:MartinScorsese’sRollingStones
documentary,Shinea Light(2008),is anutterlyuncritical
concertmoviein thralltoitssubjects’celebrity.Closerto
home,localScorseseacolyteKrivStendersmaymaintaina
criticalcynicismwhendepictinghypochondriacsorhitmenin
fictionfeatures,but when it comesto makinga documentary
aboutTheGo­Betweens(2017’sThe Go-Betweens: Right
Here), he just turns into a stan.

Previousspread:BanjoButler,MamaKin,Airling,EccaVandal,
VeraBlueandMontaigneinHerSound,HerStoryAbove:SuiZhen;
a crowd at Gizzfest, bothinNow Sound: Melbourne’s Listening


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