DJ Spooky doesn't have a lot of fans on the Tree, but I didn't feel like being dyspeptic (again). I kind of want to like him, but he's such a pedant. Rereading what I wrote about him a few years back (scroll down), damned if that "architecture is frozen music" line isn't in there.

- tom moody 4-01-2004 7:50 pm


I had wanted to like him too.
He says a lot, I just wish he would slow it down and stop trying so hard to impress. I am sure the line was in there, but that is the problem I think, too many lines are in there. He is like a dictionary of quotations minus the linking thread, at least he was last night...
- selma 4-01-2004 8:19 pm [add a comment]


oh and tom I learned the inventor of musak was a retired army general named George Owen Squier.
- selma 4-01-2004 8:54 pm [add a comment]


I think he used that one too.
- tom moody 4-01-2004 8:56 pm [add a comment]


Yeah, Spooky has always struck me as a poseur, but it’s always good to check things out for oneself, though most of us get to a place where we don’t have the time and energy to devote to anything but our own passions, leading us to miss good stuff along with the bad.
As far as blather goes, I guess it’s always part of the game, but some artists have more need than others. Two voices can cite the same sources and spout the same buzzwords, and one may be profound while the other is just full of it. The only way to know the difference is to actually study the sources for yourself, but artists are often too busy with art to do that in depth. As an impressionable youngster it was important for me to realize that for all the verbiage being slung around, very few critics, and fewer artists, actually proceeded from a consistent, programmatic application of a specific philosophical or critical methodology. More often the words came afterwards, as a means of justifying a gut-level recognition of what it was one liked. There’s a difference between following the zeitgeist and following instructions. It’s ironic that today someone like Spooky seems desperate for intellectual validation, while the art establishment seizes on him as a representative of the “authentic” vitality of popular culture, a validity they are equally hungry for.
In the 70s, continental theory was just beginning to take over academia; many of the important texts hadn’t even been translated. A generation later, students are awash in the stuff, and often without much guidance or sense of history. I would point them to the nuts and bolts of formalism and structuralism first of all; a lot of the problems come with post-structuralism, which is more of a critique than a platform. In an anti-intellectual age this has led to the even more vulgar realm of identity politics. I hate being in the position of agreeing with many of the points made by practitioners of these trends, but having to watch them throw the baby of Western culture out with the bathwater of human fallibility. Voices like Spooky’s also smack of intellectual bullying; a pretense at knowing everything. But as suggested elsewhere, it’s been a while since anyone could do that.

- alex 4-01-2004 10:01 pm [add a comment]


Paul D. Miller and MIT Press.
And, I hear he is now being represented by Paula Cooper Gallery and has his first show coming up!
- selma 4-15-2004 8:27 pm [add a comment]


Home of Minimalist Relics...and DJ Spooky.

- tom moody 4-15-2004 8:42 pm [add a comment]





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