Straightedge, Hardcore,
Minor Threat, Fugazi, Dischord Records. Do these words mean anything
to you? If they don't, they should. Google them, get a Minor Threat
or Fugazi Album. (I recommend 1995's "Red Medicine" or
the Minor Threat discography) or watch Jem Cohens amazing
documentary "Instrument." Then you might understand what
Ian MacKaye is all about. Conversations about him elicit words like
passion, integrity, sincerity, and independence.
He's a born leader, a thought-provoking musician, a watchdog
for genuine quality in the punk rock community. I've loved his music
since the first time his voice screamed "What happened to you!?"
at the beginning of "Filler" into my young ears. I continue
to respect him like few other artists on this planet. I am honored
that he granted me the time to respond to the 5 Words project.
Time.
The first word that comes to my mind is shade. I think that shading
the kind of shading that time has on things
. It affects
in tints and colors, peoples perceptions of why they do what
they're doing and all sorts of things. It also -- I think sometimes
people hide in the shade of time. They use their longevity or their
age as something to hide in. But also just as a nebulous concept,
period, time is such an elusive fucker.
Love.
A much abused word
I think that the word love has been incredibly
co-opted by the marketplace and perverted and twisted by the marketplace
as it's wont to do. I mean, that's what it does, I mean, it's trying
to figure out ways to poke people in a way that will result in them
coughing up money and love is a particularly obviously, it's
a particularly vulnerable subject and a very emotional subject and
therefore its part of people's deep insecurity and I think that's
where the marketplace really likes to trail out at times. But, if
you ask me about love, you know, I see it as something that is
and I mean, I'm not using this in a Christian sense at all, but
it is something that is -- it's holy. Love is something that is,
again, it's so removed from our sight and yet is completely surrounding
us, and it is such an intense driver.
Anthem.
It's strange, I was just in a rehearsal and we were discussing
anthems and their vocal parts. I guess an anthem in terms
of popular music, I think an anthem is some sort of timber or tonality
that kind of gets people fired up or something, I'm not exactly
sure. And it's something that can be manipulated you can
use it to manipulate people. Of course it would support the idea
of the national anthem, which you know ultimately it feels like
those pieces of music have somehow been anointed as sort of sacred
music and are sort of sacred forms and they trigger this sort of
sense of patriotism or whatever it is, but basically it makes people
sort of stand at attention. And I am actually staggered when I think
of this in terms of most of the anthems I've heard, most dense,
weirdo, wandering pieces of music they're puzzlers
and again I think that it's like the puzzler concept can work so
well because you actually get to thinking about well, what the hell
are we doing here? We just woke up on this piece of land
this just happens to be where we woke up. What does this have to
do with the nation? Nothing.
Service.
Funny, I was just talking about this today. I was talking to somebody
who works here as a social worker. She was talking to me about
well, she's an activist and she does a lot of community work
and she was talking about philosophical differences that she finds
in social work. She's been doing this for many years but suddenly
it is becoming increasingly more evident to her that in her mind,
the work that she does she works with teenagers that
her work is really to assist kids in their work it's largely
an art group and basically just making resources and materials
and space available to them, but she also sees other people who
approach social work as service, and sort of a service industry,
so, in other words, its mostly that we're providing a sense
of community by getting kids off the street, which is really twisted.
I was thinking about service because its the idea of being
'servile' and thinking about the kind of schism within social work
and the people who are doing that kind of work and it's really a
rut. And I had never thought about the distinction in the way people
might approach these things. I would think, you know, that everyone
would think that it's great that youre doing social work,
but even within that there are these really intense philosophical
approaches and I would imagine that in that the government is really
-- the whole issue of whether or not you should help people or not
help people is just somewhere in there theres a service
industry -- I cant figure that out, anyway, it's really a
baffler. But the word service has really been on my mind, I've been
thinking about it, so it's odd that you asked that.
Wisdom.
Earlier today I was driving my mom died last summer
and I was driving today listening to her talk. My mom, in the seventies
especially, she started to tape record herself not even really
herself. You would come into a room and she'd be talking to a friend
and there'd be a Panasonic cassette deck taping and a lot of time
the family would be sitting there talking or even just making a
jigsaw puzzle or something and she'd just run the deck and I used
to think it was really kind of nice, you know, that shes taping
us so she can listen to us all talking while we're out doing other
things. And then, now it occurs to me that she was never making
those tapes for her to listen to. She was making them for us to
listen to. That's wisdom.
The Evens' (Ians band with Amy Farina of The Warmers) new
album can be purchased for $10 postage paid at www.dischord.com.
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