I read a blog post last week called “The Year of the Boss”
about a guy who tried to focus on listening to more Bruce Springsteen this year
than normal. I’m not sure from the post
how much of the Springsteen catalog he made it through in the year…Born to Run,
usually considered Springsteen’s best album, wasn’t mentioned and Human Touch,
usually considered Springsteen’s worst album, was mentioned.
So, I wrote down some thoughts after I read his post. I'm not sure exactly how to label what is below. Some (all?) of my thoughts are in agreement
with what he says, some overlap, some may be subtle pushback (Springsteen is
hit and miss?). I’m not
guaranteeing a complete or coherent thought, the internet allows you to be lazy and not have a summarizing thesis statement.
But, first I'll back up and take a running start…
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But, first I'll back up and take a running start…
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“The equivalent of writing a hit song = something familiar,
something new.”
- Bruce Springsteen paraphrase
(Danny Clinch: Still Moving)
“Something familiar,
something new.” In the many ways of
thinking about what great artists do, I think those four words summarize a key
answer to the mystery. To stereotype for
a moment - Some artist focus on the “something familiar” side, these fine folks
show up frequently at the Grammys and in all sort of marketing, consumeristic
situations that shoot judgmental-ness intravenously into my blood stream.
Other artists focus on the “something new” side, and,
although the internet world is making changes, they are seldom heard until
someone on the MTV side of the equation sites their influences and introduces
the world to them.
At times, I wonder…perhaps there is a genius to be had in
both of these categories? Maybe the rock
star icon, the imagery, the facade, the marketing is actually more of a part of
the art formula than we realize. And, on
the other side of the tracks, maybe we need to do better at taking the time to process
art that we don’t (yet) understand.
But, maybe some of the greatest artists feel so true and
helpful to our souls because they pull us into their world by saying, “I get
you”. And, then, they teach us something
while we are there by saying, “don’t stay but move forward”. They move us along and it feels right,
because we’ve started off at a safe spot - they feel what we feel. “Something familiar, something new”. Or, in more of Springsteen’s own words, “Be
able to keep two completely contradictory ideas alive and well inside of your
heart and head at all times. If it doesn't drive you crazy, it will make you
strong.” Familiar and New…they are not
synonyms, but more like contradictory ideas.
If something like this is true then there are a variety of implications. For example…
If something like this is true then there are a variety of implications. For example…
- I strongly respect anyone trying out a new
artist every year. I respect it, because
it ends up allowing a broader range of influences to feel familiar to the
person, which opens them up to even more journeys of familiar-to-new, presumably
making you a better person. In other
words, my hunch is that when the author of that blog post spends his next year
listening to Bob Dylan, the Springsteen familiarity-base will make more of the
Bob Dylan catalog more quickly familiar / accessible. Both Bruce and Bob have helpful insights into
the world around us…so, getting more quickly onto the familiar > new pathway
will more quickly release new, helpful, life-transforming thoughts about life.
- But, I think this concept also implies that it
would not be possible to understand Springsteen’s music (or any artist’s music)
in a year. If what I’m saying about
familiar > new is true, the only situation where you could ever appreciate a
large music catalog in a year would be with an artist who grew up just like you,
listening to the same type of music as you, read the same books, etc.
Using Springsteen to dive deeper on that thought, it would be impossible to “get” all his music without a familiarity with Bob Dylan. …but, more than that, without a familiarity with Woody Guthrie (to understand Dylan or the Boss, actually), without a familiarity with Elvis Presley, James Brown, Sam & Dave, Mitch Ryder, Reaganomics, 9/11, westerns, Robert Mitchum movies, the Beatles, etc.
I think there are two points to be made here. One, it’s naive to think that any artist can be fully understood without understanding what they are responding to and being influenced by in their music. And, two, part of the reason an artist like Springsteen can take so many people on their path from familiar > new is the diversity of his influences.
- The last implication I'll point out is - I think there is integrity to artists taking this familiar-to-new path in their artistry. The artist needs to be taking the familiar-to-new path themselves, and, then, they invite us in on the journey. If this is true, it makes me hesitant to over critique musicians (or any artist).
The artist’s job of moving people is a difficult one. On one side, they are criticized for making the same album over and over again (which may be the most legitimate criticism since it may just reveal a fear of the familiar-to-new journey). But, on the other side, they are criticized for not hitting the sweet spot of a theoretical familiar-new ratio. Some jump too far away from the “familiar”, upsetting their fans. Or, others find out after they’ve taken the jump that the “new” place they jumped to wasn’t as stable as they thought it was. Either way, they are doing a noble thing by trying to make the jump, because as they make that jump, I make that jump.
Here’s some irony to close out everything written
above. Essentially, I’m totally
unfamiliar with Russ Ramsey and his ‘catalog’.
So, what business do I have interacting with his blog post. Should I first go back and listen to
everything he’s listened to, or read everything he’s read? Or, should I just jump in and post some
mental processing and see what happens?
Maybe in the midst of Russ’ post and this post, I was privileged to have
someone take me from someplace familiar and drop me off at some place new…?