I get what Pitchfork is doing with its Best of the 70’s listing of key songs from that decade. They’re encouraging healthy debate and, much like their usual M.O. with reviews, disdain. They’re hoping most people don’t get it, crying out, “No Steve Miller or BTO? Man, fuck these clowns!”
I do like
the inventiveness of a lot of their selections.
They’re way off base with so much reggae stuff, and it’s revisionist
history to place African artists in this higher context. If you were into African music in the 70’s,
you were way ahead of some major curves that would become more prominent in the
80’s. Rest assured, your average
Pitchfork editor in 1978 wouldn’t have given a shit about Fela Kuti. As with most critics, he would have
name dropped Fela in a Talking Heads review and not known what he was writing
about. But it’s always nice to imagine
yourself as prescient.
What I’ll do
here is offer my take on some of the issues I noticed in the list. Odd omissions and such, things they purposely
didn’t get right because they want to rewrite history. I can’t blame them: all dictators want to revise
history to conform to their take on it.
Most music critics are wannabe dictators, although their domain is taste
as opposed to political power. I can’t
blame them for trying. But it will never
change the fact that Captain & Tennille ruled 1975.
*
There’s
plenty of disco and 70’s R&B, most of it unbelievably asinine and
questionable, but not one song by The Bee Gees, KC & the Sunshine Band,
Barry White, or massive hits like “Rock Your Baby” by George McCrae or “Rock the
Boat” by The Hues Corporation. For that
matter, there’s no Village People. It
would seem that in the context of revising the 70’s, a gay-themed band
dominating the charts via subterfuge and silliness would have been right up
their alley. But apparently not. “Da Ya Think I’m Sexy” by Rod Stewart? They include one of the songs he ripped off
(“Taj Mahal” by Jorge Ben, although Stewart stole the synth line in his hit from
the string arrangement on Bobby Womack’s “If You Want My Love Put Something Down On It”). I’m surprised they
recognize The Rolling Stones with “Miss You.”
(Keep in mind, Sticky Fingers
and Exile on Main Street came out in
the 70’s … recognizing numerous tracks from these albums would be un-hip. Not sure why they gave a nod to “Wild Horses”
save for the Gram Parsons connection.)
“I Will
Survive” by Gloria Gaynor was a crucial disco song, not to mention perfectly
constructed and executed. It reached
across racial and sexual barriers, and now across generations. But it wasn’t one of the best 200 songs of
the 70’s? Not even “Native New Yorker”
by Odyssey which set a perfect tone for that city’s involvement with the disco
movement. August Darnell, frozen out
completely, although that album by Dr. Buzzard’s Original Savannah Band was
ingenious in terms of crossing genres (in this case, Big Band, jazz, pop and
disco) … “Cherchez La Femme” a monster hit that sounds timeless now. They’ll include an obscure track like “Kiss
Me Again” by Dinosaur, which reeks of hipster revisionism. There are dozens of underground disco tracks
from that time period just as worthy (and just as irrelevant … ask your
fiftysomething, disco-loving relative if he remembers “Kiss Me Again” … unless
said relative was frequenting gay NYC dance clubs, probably not).
I’m glad
they got Chic, but you knew they would.
“Heart of Glass” by Blondie deserved to be in the Top 10: a perfect
pop song that turned the world upside down and crossed barriers between new
wave and disco that were nearly as impassable as those between rock and disco. I grasp the importance of "I Feel Love" by Donna Summer ... but why not "Funky Town" by Lipps Inc.? It was a major hit in 1979 and took the electronic/dance formula even further. It makes no sense why one song is on the list, but not the other.
Prog Rock
did not exist in Pitchfork’s world. Another
instance of Pitchfork writers showing their asses. I get it … it’s uncool to champion prog, even
now. But there are plenty of great 70’s
Prog Rock tracks that still resonate. No
solo Peter Gabriel for that matter, too.
Trust me, Pitchfork writers too young to grasp this or do your research,
Peter Gabriel was hot stuff with critics in the 70’s. Pink Floyd?
Not hardcore prog, more pop prog, if you ask me. I love “Wish You Were Here” but the entire
Pitchfork staff should throw on Animals
and see where it takes them. Supertramp would make just as much sense in this context in terms of popularity and influence, but good luck running those gentle hippies through the hipster litmus test. (And, no,
fucking Can or Neu doesn’t count here!
I’m surprised these assholes didn’t throw in Van Der Graaf Generator and
Hawkwind for good measure.)
Hard rock
(hesitant to call it heavy metal as it wasn’t called that yet) is
under-represented, and only by obvious choices (Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin, Thin Lizzy and
the one Blue Oyster Cult track appearing in numerous horror movies over the
decades). “Smoke on the Water” by Deep
Purple was a song known by every struggling garage rock band in America at the
time. AC/DC was what real punks in America
in the 70’s listened to and used to fuel their sense of rebellion. It wasn’t punks, per se, mohawks and safety
pins in noses. Punks in America in the
70’s were an anomaly and a bit of a joke, thanks to the over-hype of The Sex
Pistols' arrival in America. If you were
a white American teenager in high school in the late 70’s, and in trouble with
the authorities, AC/DC was your band, among a host of other hard-rock
bands. That’s the kind of things critics
never pick up on long after the fact (because it doesn’t serve their purpose or
suit their taste).
No Philip
Glass or Steve Reich. Brian Eno was
pretty much it for experimental composers in the 70’s. Not true, but what the hell, he works for
lazy bastard critics. I barely have my
feet wet in this genre and know what utter nonsense it is to champion Eno in
this company.
I’m
wondering how on earth they came up with “The Immigrant Song” and “When the
Levee Breaks” by Led Zeppelin. I gather
it’s consensus, people voting for favorite tracks … but how in the hell do these
two tracks get chosen over “Stairway to Heaven” or “Kashmir” or a handful of
other more famous, more worthy tracks? I
seem to recall Jeff Buckley covering Levee, but no idea how Immigrant
penetrates this melee of hipster critics.
No singer
songwriters (barring Judee Sill and maybe Elton John). Karen Dalton was virtually unknown in the
70’s, so I’m not even going to get into that.
I understand wanting to take a dump on James Taylor: many of us have
been doing it since coming across that white-faced Greatest Hits album in dorm
rooms one time too many.) I guess the
concept of taking someone like Cat Stevens or Carole King seriously doesn’t
register with people like this. Not sure
why Nick Drake does other than car commercials? Jackson Browne? Solo Paul Simon? I know, I'm wasting my time. But if you think both those artists don't have a dozen songs a piece that would make sense on any 70's Best of list, you're just being standoffish, not cool.
The only
Folk music that mattered in the 70’s was Nick Drake. Even though about 36 people knew who he was
at the time. Never mind that there was a
resurgence in British Folk and Celtic music throughout the decade. Don’t you know this was the dreadful music
punk “saved” us from in 1977? Johnny
Rotten, thank you for saving us from Sandy Denny! If only you had killed Richard Thompson with your bare hands at the same time! American counterparts? Forget it, whether it was the poppy stuff like Jim Croce or Harry Chapin, or more lasting artists like Loudon Wainwright III, who along with Leonard Cohen was writing songs of such adult emotional depth and honesty they've yet to be rivaled. Joni Mitchell gets a nod, and I'm assuming in doing so gets all the folk and California references that people like Pitchfork writers are willing to dole out. And a major shout-out to Joan Armatrading! Wait a minute, she's not on the list either.
“Street
Hassle” by Lou Reed? “Walk on the Wild
Side” is a painfully obvious choice, as is “Perfect Day.” I’m glad to see they included “Rock and Roll”
and “Sweet Jane” by The Velvet Underground.
A lot of what Lou Reed did in the 70’s was mediocre, but when he got it
right, he got it very right, and that started happening more as the 70’s wore
on. The song “Street Hassle” is a tour
de force, a gritty street poem backed by a string quartet. (Is there any precedent for this?) On a similar note, “Wild in the Streets” by Garland Jeffreys surely deserves a nod, too, but most critics take that express
bus right by his work.
No Mott the
Hoople/Ian Hunter. Ask Mick Jones of The
Clash how important “All the Young Dudes” was to him. It was just as important to American rock
fans, and a deeply influential track. On
a similar note, how does a track like “Metal Guru” get selected for T. Rex in
the presence of “Get It On (Bang a Gong)”? It
doesn’t make sense. It would be like
selecting “On Top of the World” for Cheap Trick instead of “Surrender.”
No New York
Dolls. Unbelievable that “Personality
Crisis” didn’t make the list. Hugely
influential. Punk in the United Kingdom
would not have existed without this band to serve as a sonic template for The
Sex Pistols. Punk in the U.K. would not
have existed without what happened in the East Village in the early 70’s. To give Richard Hell his due (which he surely
deserves for that one song) makes sense, and Television, and The Ramones, and
Patti Smith. I’m amazed they only
granted The Talking Heads two tracks.
Would the exclusion of Frank Zappa be indicative of the contributors having little to no knowledge of comedy-leaning artists and comedians, or simply that they came of age in a time where Frank Zappa albums were harder to find due to estate issues and the availability of his catalog? Or maybe they just don't consider anything he did in the Top 200 of the decade? Zappa was a huge presence in the 70's, but I guess now he's being penalized for his catalog having so many issues over the years. (Ditto, Bob Seger, although I wouldn't expect anyone at Pitchfork to acknowledge his presence.) Comedy albums were huge in the 70's, but I guess it would be hard to narrow down to track choice, but you better believe people like Richard Pryor and George Carlin had a very large influence on rock audiences and the overall culture.
Would the exclusion of Frank Zappa be indicative of the contributors having little to no knowledge of comedy-leaning artists and comedians, or simply that they came of age in a time where Frank Zappa albums were harder to find due to estate issues and the availability of his catalog? Or maybe they just don't consider anything he did in the Top 200 of the decade? Zappa was a huge presence in the 70's, but I guess now he's being penalized for his catalog having so many issues over the years. (Ditto, Bob Seger, although I wouldn't expect anyone at Pitchfork to acknowledge his presence.) Comedy albums were huge in the 70's, but I guess it would be hard to narrow down to track choice, but you better believe people like Richard Pryor and George Carlin had a very large influence on rock audiences and the overall culture.
No Southern
Rock. A glaring omission that pretty
much tells you where Pitchfork writers are at.
You mean to tell me The Allman Brothers didn’t have one track that
merits inclusion in this list? That’s
foolish. Never mind Lynyrd Skynyrd: I
can understand critics blowing off a band that deeply southern (although they’d
be just as wrong to do so). I can’t see
why they include a track by The Grateful Dead (admittedly, a pretty boring
choice that makes no sense given a surplus of great early 70’s tracks). Jam bands would not exist without these two
bands hitting their stride in the early 70’s.
You think it would be a better world without jam bands? Possibly so.
But the world would be just as well off without EDM, so let's deep six Joy Division and Giorgio Moroder while we're at it. The things that fill stadiums now … were done
much better and much more subtly in the 70’s.
And that’s hard to believe given how unsubtle most of the 70’s were!
Very little
country, more accurately, only critically-approved country. While the Pitchfork editors are busy deep
mining reggae and African music, they skim over country. I can understand skimming over Blues, Jazz
and Classical from the 70’s (although, again, it’s a mistake born of critical
miseducation), but I gather most of these critics have never been culturally
predisposed to understanding or even liking country music, save for token
gestures to “outlaw” country and female artists who hung around a few decades,
the sort of shit people with far too many tats and a studied penchant for Pabst
Blue Ribbon will punch up on a jukebox in a faux redneck bar. Give it a break … put on a Johnny Cash album
from the 70’s. If you can handle that,
then we’ll talk! (To be honest, I can’t
handle that, just making a point.
There’s a reason “One Piece at a Time” is the only 70’s Cash songs that
resonates with me.)
Let me put
it this way with jazz: I’d take even an average Keith Jarrett track over
anything Gil Scott Heron did. I grasp
the hipster quotient (in light of hiphop years later). But if you’re going that route, I’d skip the
jazz angle and go with The Last Poets.
Nothing
happened in New Orleans in the 70’s according to Pitchfork.
No
Carpenters. Huge mistake indicative of
critics who just weren’t around then and don’t have a clue. While The Carpenters didn’t invent “soft
rock” their chart dominance at the time, and the quality of their production,
songwriting and Karen Carpenter’s voice, created core production values for
early 70’s pop, for better or worse. I
understand that Pitchfork wants to disregard certain chart-topping genres, but
they don’t seem to grasp that there were quality/sustainable artists working in
those genres. I’m far from the only one
to recognize this!
Aside from
Elvis Costello, no major English new wave artists, namely Graham Parker and Joe
Jackson. Squeezing Out Sparks was one of
the best albums of the 70’s, and you could pick any number of Parker songs for
this list (I’d have gone with “Don’t Ask Me Questions.”). Joe Jackson simply for his minor hit, “Is She Really Going Out with Him?” which made new wave seem so much more palatable to
American kids raised on AOR radio.
Granted, Jackson would hit his stride straddling the 70’s into the early
80’s, but that song is important. I
wouldn’t expect Pitchfork to champion Rockpile or solo Nick Lowe and Dave
Edmunds (despite more than a few worthy tracks), but skipping Parker and
Jackson makes no sense.
There’s way
too much late 70’s punkish/new wave shit on their list that just didn’t
register then and still doesn’t now. The
Slits were a bit of a goof at the time … Chrissie Hynde (The Pretenders don’t exist
on this list, but they were cusp of the 70's) was a much better role model, and that first album was hugely
influential. The Raincoats? O.K., I get it, but Top 200 songs of an entire decade? Not quite. I suspect if you spoke candidly with all those 90's Riot Grrrls, you'd hear more about Pat Benatar, Joan Jett and Debbie Harry than The Raincoats.
No
NRBQ. You can tell how old most
Pitchfork writers are: not old enough to have been around for the 80’s
deification of NRBQ as America’s great lost 70’s rock band. And they were. “Riding in My Car” would make the Top 20 of
any worthwhile 70’s song list.
Big Star but
not The Raspberries. The Raspberries
were what Big Star wanted to be.
“Overnight Sensation” is as worthy as any song in the Big Star
canon. Again, critical revisionism at
work here, although plenty of people have given The Raspberries their due in
the interim. I am glad to see Big Star
tracks included in the list.
I can
understand why Van Halen wasn’t on the list, but their first album rejuvenated
a genre that was in dire need of a swift kick in the ass, bringing it back to
shorter songs and a sense of fun. Again,
if you were a punk in America at the time, a real punk having severe issues
with authority figures, chances are you were listening to Van Halen … not The
Slits, for crying out loud.
The Eagles
vs. Gram Parsons. You have to give them
credit: aside from one Grateful Dead track and a smattering of Neil Young, they
completely ignored country rock and Gram Parsons in particular … which is a
travesty to most critics. But I tend to
agree with them. Parsons was riding that
60’s wave of country rock bands with The Flying Burrito Brothers. His solo albums were good with a few great
tracks. And he only made two. He hated The Eagles? I’m sure his logic was “I’m more authentic
than they are” … but the reality was “they had a far better pop sense, a great vocalist and harmony/background singers, and were
good songwriters, too.” Hotel California
was an important album and song; that album is more fully realized than anything Gram Parsons ever did. I know,
acknowledging as much for your average Pitchfork editor would be like voting
for Trump.
There’s no
DEVO on a list like this? It’s senseless
in the context of their hipness. In terms
of American bands getting that out there in terms of song structure and image,
they were way out in front of everybody.
I’m also surprised not to see Pere Ubu.
It makes me doubt the veracity of Pitchfork critics. Are they really that young that they just don’t
have any cultural reference points for bands like this? They need to have this spoon-fed to them by
older critics and movie/TV show references?
Silly shit like The Slits make it while Pere Ubu doesn’t?
It’s just wrong, but it helps me understand how this process works Most critics aren't historians; they just follow the easy path placed in front of them via older critics, savvy film makers using cool, lesser-known music in movies and TV shows, the occasional hiphop sample and apparently recent deaths. (That's the only way I can explain "Life on Mars" being their top pick and any Prince song from the 1970's being anywhere on the list, much less in the Top 10. It would have been gauche to acknowledge Glenn Frey's passing, even though The Eagles clearly had a massive influence on what mainstream country would become two decades down the road.) If a band like Pere Ubu doesn't fall under those auspices, someone not alive at that time and following indie music most likely isn't going to grasp their meaning as they haven't been hyped by the usual suspects. What dissuaded me from really getting into music criticism? The realization that most music critics were even worse than sports writers in terms of their mediocrity.
It’s just wrong, but it helps me understand how this process works Most critics aren't historians; they just follow the easy path placed in front of them via older critics, savvy film makers using cool, lesser-known music in movies and TV shows, the occasional hiphop sample and apparently recent deaths. (That's the only way I can explain "Life on Mars" being their top pick and any Prince song from the 1970's being anywhere on the list, much less in the Top 10. It would have been gauche to acknowledge Glenn Frey's passing, even though The Eagles clearly had a massive influence on what mainstream country would become two decades down the road.) If a band like Pere Ubu doesn't fall under those auspices, someone not alive at that time and following indie music most likely isn't going to grasp their meaning as they haven't been hyped by the usual suspects. What dissuaded me from really getting into music criticism? The realization that most music critics were even worse than sports writers in terms of their mediocrity.
The plus
sides of their list? I can’t believe
they went with “Lola” by The Kinks. Then
again, the song plays into currently popular gender themes (for the record,
listed as my favorite song in my high-school yearbook). I can’t believe “Bohemian Rhapsody” by Queen
placed so high on their list (#15). The
lame critical take on what the song “really meant” is complete and utter
horseshit, but I’m glad hipsters now can recognize how mind-blowing the song
was. Glad to see “I’m Not in Love” by
10CC make the cut: deserves it for production values alone. While The Roches scared me when I first saw
them on Saturday Night Live, I must
admit, they were way out in front of a few things that would come later. “What a Fool Believes” by The Doobie
Brothers? OK, I’ll go along. Is this some odd type of yacht rock
vote? I’m sure the guys in Steely Dan are
wondering what sort of ass-backwards universe Pitchfork critics are living in
to have their legacy be roughly no more or less than The Doobie Brothers.
And I have
to respect weirdness like that although, again, what I learn from a list like
this: if you weren’t alive at the time, you really don’t know what in the hell
you’re writing about. It pains me to
recognize the same about myself with decades earlier than the 70’s, but it’s
true. There’s clearly little to no
context for a lot of these songs selections; it’s just crazy shit that somehow
got a foothold with X number of critics decades after the fact. It would be like me falling in love with
obscure Frank Sinatra album tracks from his albums from the 1940’s and 1950’s,
going up to someone who was alive at the time and a huge fan, and describing to
him what my favorite tracks are. Sure,
he’d know the songs that I was talking about, but he’d be thinking, “This guy doesn’t know his ass from a hole in the ground when it comes to Sinatra.”
I think
Pitchfork prides itself on not knowing its ass from a hole in the ground.
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