Penny Lane

Penny Lane, played by Kate Hudson

 

Rockers get to be Dionysian. It’s their thing. No one expects them to add the Apollonian, though they must to cre­ate music objects, or cre­ate as indi­vid­ual artists. They must. But the Dionysian is what their fans want, see, expect — in con­certs, at least. Do they expect the same things when they sit at home, alone, lis­ten­ing to records of the same singer, the same band?

Right now, as of 2009, it is prob­a­bly true that musi­cians can com­bine the Dionysian and the Apollonian bet­ter than any other kind of artist. Chaos, trance, ine­bri­a­tion, intox­i­ca­tion of one or more forms, group cel­e­bra­tion and loss of the self, the dying of the self in that group cel­e­bra­tion and swoon­ing fall out. The lone gui­tar hero, fight­ing the sys­tem, stand­ing out­side the sys­tem, for­ever. Making his or her own name against the odds. Creative destruc­tion on stage, in hotels, on the road. Create and destroy. Love, burn down, inflame, burn out.

Some poets, in ages past, wanted what Rockers have. Rimbaud preached the derange­ment of all senses, and he would have been doing so on a stage in front of tens of thou­sands in our time. Creating musi­cal bac­cha­nals, flip­ping off the crowds and the record execs, while he laughed and snarled. It might have saved him from the gun-​​running and the loss of his muse. Another Morrison, Hendrix or Jagger, but one with true lin­guis­tic genius.

Of course, those who know the his­tory of Classical Music might object to the sin­gling out of Rock Stars. In their own day, the geniuses of the Classical Era had their legions of fans, their swoon­ing groupies, too. Women threw them­selves at Mozart’s feet, among oth­ers. Perhaps it’s just music. Perhaps noth­ing trans­ports us more, or gets inside our emo­tions so quickly, lifts us up and throws us down. The other forms take more time, in gen­eral. Reflection, con­tem­pla­tion, repeated view­ing, read­ing, seeing.

Music. It cuts right through our defenses, our shields. Even our lay­ered civ­i­liz­ing forces. Which is why the Establishment has always feared it. Those who want to con­trol us and shackle us and sti­fle our own cre­ative and pri­mal impulses/​spirits — because, yes, YES, to cre­ate is pri­mal! Remember, it wasn’t that long ago that “the author­i­ties” cut off Elvis at the waist. Thinking that would stop it. Thinking that would hold back the cul­tural forces so many Rockers had begun to unleash …

Sadly, some parts of the Establishment learned all too well how to con­trol those forces. Co-​​opt them. Sign the Rockers up to fat con­tracts and try to herd them into pens as much as pos­si­ble. Keep them on reser­va­tions. Bring them out on spe­cial occa­sions, like the finale of American Idol.

Always that bat­tle between the pri­mal, the exu­ber­ant, the youth­ful, the cre­ative, the wildly unique … and the norm. The Establishment. The “way things are.” Which means, wor­ship­ing at the altar of the Business Model. The busi­ness estab­lish­ment learned how to herd their new sheep, but they’ll never learn how to bring out the genius inside those pens. Genius can’t be bought and remain genius. All too often it repeats what the masses thought they wanted. Repeats it and repeats it, dries up, dies.

It’s not as sim­ple an equa­tion or dynamic as:

Every gen­er­a­tion needs to recre­ate the First Moment, the First Yeah!

But it’s close. Trouble is, we’ve been caught up for too long in the Business Model. More than a gen­er­a­tion, and it’s killing us. It’s killing art. Commodification, accepted, taken for granted, internalized.

Which new gen­er­a­tion will break free? Where are the new heroes of vig­or­ous, proud, joy­fully unique voices and views? Who will leave the reser­va­tion of the com­mod­ity, the mar­ket­ing ploy, the trained seal?

Russell, in Almost Famous, drunken, on Acid, as inar­tic­u­late as he was when sober, stum­bles into a ges­ture on the right path …

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