Retromania is easy to spot. Simon Reynolds coined the term to lambast the
current state of popular music. He claims that ‘Instead of being about itself, the
2000s has been about every other previous decade happening again all at once’.
Evidence
is all around us. The NME is now
promoting the ‘1990s Renaissance’, while this year’s biggest two hits have gone
beyond retro and into the world of homage: Daft Punk’s ‘Get Lucky’ wears its
debt to Chic in the most obvious manner, while Robin Thicke’s ‘Blurred Lines’
is caught up in a copyright infringement case with Marvin Gaye’s estate. One
recent example that stood out to me came in the review of the latest Arctic
Monkeys album AM in Q magazine. They praised Alex Turner for
‘citing relatively modern influences: Dr Dre and the processed “ex-girlfriend”
R&B of Aaliyah’.
Relatively
modern? Aaliyah died in 2001 and Dr Dre blueprinted his production techniques
with The Chronic, an album that was
released in 1992. If sounds made 20 years ago are still considered up-to-date,
this is as damning for R&B as it is for indie music. And there is evidence
that the rate of progress is slowing down. The 20-year time period from
1953-1973 encompassed a whole cycle of popular music, from the rock ‘n’ roll of
Sun Records to the post-modernism of Roxy Music. The period from 1973-1993 saw
another turn of the wheel, encompassing punk, post-punk, hip-hop, synth-pop,
house music, drum and bass, et al. The period from 1993-2013 has encompassed,
well, what exactly?
There’s
certainly been much talk of newness.
As a consequence, innovation and originality should also be easy to spot. Unfortunately, ‘new’
has become one of the most loosely and overused words in popular music. The
term is most problematic when used to justify programming policies or the
supposed altruism of the music industry. BBC Radio 1 uses the banner ‘in new
music we trust’, and I’ve heard its DJs state that they are fans of ‘new
music’, as though this were a genre. Meanwhile, record companies have used the
fact that they are investing money in ‘new’ music as a means of justifying
punitive recording contracts and (in a previous life) the high cost of CDs.
The
difficulty with all of this, as Simon Reynolds is well aware, is that just
because an artist is newly signed or newly promoted on the radio, it doesn’t
mean that their music is reaching beyond formulas that are already in place. In
fact, it is the backward-looking nature of so many newly signed acts that
makes retromania seem such a virulent strain. Although it wouldn’t necessarily win them any listeners, a
more admirable slogan for Radio 1 would be ‘in modernism we trust’. Record
companies, too, would be more likely to win sympathy if they were to apply
modernist criteria: to search for artists who push boundaries, who play with
form, who might even dare to be unpopular.
Instead,
what radio and record labels are excelling at is nowness. Like any dominant ideology this can be hard to detect when
you are living in its midst. And yet every pop era has it – a way of producing
records, a way of singing songs, a lyrical focus, an adoption of technology –
that is absolutely its own. Although I agree with Simon Reynolds' thesis that
this is an era in which retro abounds, I don’t agree with him when he says that
‘the pop present [has become] ever more crowded out by the past’. 2013 might
not be bursting with radical innovation, but it certainly has a prevailing
aesthetic.
Or, rather, it
has a number of prevailing aesthetics. It also has something that helps us to
spot these different types of nowness: market segmentation. This is an era in
which different tastes are identified and catered for. In an earlier post I
mentioned the changing demographics of popular music consumption: in the UK in 1976 over 75% of all records were
bought by 12-20 year olds; this can be contrasted with last year when 13-19
year olds accounted for just 13.8% of the music purchased on the internet. In
2012 the largest market share belonged to 35-44 year olds, but each age bracket
between 13 and 64 was fairly similar, ranging between 11% and 20% of the
market. One effect of this is that to have a truly big
hit you have to appeal to each of these age groups, hence the success of an
album such Adele’s 21 or the
pan-generational dancing that ‘Gangnam Style’ occasioned. The reverse is that
each age group is segmented, targeted and marketed.
This
can be witnessed most clearly at the BBC. Back in the 1970s, when record buying
was dominated by the tastes of teenagers, radio followed suit. Simon Frith has
written of the oddity that, although the majority of Radio 1’s daytime
listeners were older people, tuning in in 'factories and shops, on building sites and motorways', what
they were listening to was chart music centred on teenage consumption. The
compromise reached by the BBC was that, although their playlist was based on
the charts, they would ‘select from within each genre the easiest-to-listen-to
sounds: […] easy listening punk, easy listening disco, easy listening rock’.
Things
are different now. Radio 1 has a brief to alienate older listeners. In the
words of the station’s music policy director, Nigel
Harding, they do this by analysing ‘the age of the artist’s primary audience.
We always try our best to select tracks that are truly relevant to our core
demographic of 15-29 year-olds’.
They
are successful at it too. I am now safely outside Radio 1’s demographic
and I find most of its broadcasting unlistenable. It’s not that I don’t like
the songs; it’s the overall sound of the station that is ill-matched with my
taste. To tune is to receive the shock of the now.