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     Rock 'N' Theory: Autobiography, Cultural Studies,
     and the "Death of Rock"

     Robert Miklitsch
     Ohio University
     miklitsc@oak.cats.ohiou.edu

     © 1999 Robert Miklitsch.
     All rights reserved.
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  1. The following essay is structured like a record--a 45, to be
     exact. While the A side provides an anecdotal and
     autobiographical take on the origins or "birth" of rock (on the
     assumption that, as Robert Palmer writes, "the best histories
     are... personal histories, informed by the author's own
     experiences and passions" [Rock & Roll 11]), the B side examines
     the work of Lawrence Grossberg, in particular his speculations
     about the "death of rock," as an example or symptom of the limits
     of critical theory when it comes into contact with that je ne
     sais quoi that virtually defines popular music ("It's only rock
     'n' roll, but I like it, I like it"). By way of a conclusion, the
     reprise offers some remarks on the generational implications of
     the discourse of the body in rock historiography as well as, not
     so incidentally, some critical, self-reflexive remarks on the
     limits of the sort of auto-historical "story" that makes up the A
     side.

     A Side: The Birth of Rock, or Memory Train

          "Don't know much about history"
                             --Sam Cooke

  2. In 1954, one year before Bill Haley and the Comets' "Rock around
     the Clock," what Robert Palmer calls the "original white rock 'n'
     roll" song, became number one on the pop charts, marking a
     "turning point in the history of popular music" (Rolling Stone
     12, emphasis mine); and one year before Elvis covered Little
     Junior Parker's "Mystery Train" (then signed, under the expert
     tutelage of Colonel Parker, with RCA); in 1954--the same year the
     Supreme Court ruled racial segregation unconstitutional--the
     nineteen-year-old and still very much alive Elvis Presley walked
     into the Memphis Recording Service and cut Arthur "Big Boy"
     Crudup's "That's All Right."

  3. Elvis recollecting Phillips's recollection of a phone
     conversation with him: "You want to make some blues?"

  4. Legend has it that Elvis immediately hung up the phone, ran 15
     blocks to Sun Records while Phillips was still on the line...
     and, well, the rest is history: by 1957, one year before Elvis
     was inducted into the Army, Chuck Berry, Fats Domino, and Little
     Richard had crossed over to the pop charts, and the "rock 'n'
     roll era had begun" (Palmer, Rolling Stone 12).

  5. The irony of the above originary moment--at least for me--is that
     I somehow missed the Mystery Train. Over the years I've come to
     appreciate Elvis's music, especially the early Sun recordings
     (and, truth be told, later kitsch, cocktail-lounge stuff like
     "Viva Las Vegas"); however, to invoke the storied lore of "family
     romance," Elvis is a formative part of my sister Cathy's life in
     a way that he'll never be for me. Though she's only a year older
     than me, Elvis for her is it, the Alpha and Omega of rock. For
     me, Elvis has always been more icon than influence, and a rather
     tarnished one at that.

  6. The seminal musical moments in my life are both later, post-1960,
     and less inaugural. For instance, I can still remember sitting
     with a couple of other kids in the next-door neighbor's backyard,
     listening to a tinny transistor radio (one of the new
     technologies that transformed the music industry in the 1950s),
     and hearing--for the very first, pristine time--"Johnny Angel"
     (1962). I'm not sure what it was about this song that caught my
     attention--the obscure, angelic object of desire does not, for
     instance, have my name, as in "Bobby's Girl" (and "girl group
     rock," as Greil Marcus calls it, was mostly about "The Boy"
     [Rolling Stone 160]),[1] but I'm pretty sure sex, however
     sublimated and pre-pubescent, had something to do with it.

  7. I can also distinctly remember watching Shelley Fabares sing
     "Johnny Angel" on an episode of The Donna Reed Show, a
     program--like The Patty Duke Show--that was de rigueur, i.e.
     "Must See TV," at the time. Though Ricky Nelson performed
     regularly on The Ozzie and Harriet Show (and even Paul Petersen
     had his fifteen minutes of fame with the lugubrious "My Dad"
     [1962]), Fabares's small-screen version of "Johnny Angel"--sung,
     if I remember correctly, at a high-school dance--remains a
     touchstone of sorts for me.

  8. Indeed, "if you were looking for rock and roll between Elvis and
     the Beatles" (as I no doubt was at the time), girl groups
     were--as Marcus says--the "genuine article" (Rolling Stone 160).
     Who can forget "hokey," genuinely hokey, "teen morality plays"
     like the Shangri Las' "Leader of the Pack" (1964), which my
     sisters, all four of them, would listen to over and over again on
     my cousin Karen's plastic portable record player? Or the sublime
     teen romanticism of Lesley Gore, whose songs I still listen to
     (on my Sony CD player), returning to some fugitive, long-lost
     source of pleasure, replaying it over and over again like any
     good arrested adolescent.

          "Suck--suck your teenage thumb...."

  9. In the interregnum--between, that is, Elvis and the
     Beatles--there were of course other standbys, like the Four
     Seasons and the Beach Boys (East Coast and West Coast,
     Italian-American doo-wop and So-Cal surf music respectively), but
     all this changed--forever, as it were--in 1964 with the British
     Invasion. In his Rolling Stone contribution on the topic, Lester
     Bangs contends that the Beatles phenomenon--set off by their
     first, tumultuous appearance on American television (February 9,
     1964!)--was a belated, libidinal response to the national
     mourning and melancholia that ensued in the wake of JFK's
     assassination (169).

 10. Indeed, it's hard to imagine two more dramatic and diametrically
     opposed moments than the "depressive," wall-to-wall television
     coverage of the JFK assassination and the Beatles' first "manic"
     appearance on Ed Sullivan. The '60s, in all its liberatory excess
     ("sex, drugs, and rock 'n' roll"), is born, like some
     Frankensteinian thing, out of this vertiginous moment.

 11. Though Elvis had already appeared on Ed Sullivan--Ed's now
     notorious reservations notwithstanding--with a "sneer of the lip"
     and a "swivel of the hip" (Guralnick 34), the Beatles, with their
     hook-happy songs and shaggy telegenic appeal, were made, like
     JFK, for network television. For one thing, unlike Elvis, or
     later the Stones, you didn't have to shoot them from the waist up
     or expurgate their lyrics.

 12. But even as the Beatles were producing pop-romantic masterpieces
     like "Yesterday" (1965), the Stones were making up for lost time
     fast with songs like "Satisfaction," their seventh--count 'em,
     seventh--U.S. single, which not-so-subtly hinted that rock 'n'
     roll was not, in the final analysis, about romance but, as Mick's
     snarling voice insinuated, that down-and-dirty thing: sex. If the
     lyrics of "Satisfaction" mime the slow, painfully pleasurable
     climb of sexual arousal ("Cause I try, and I try, and I try...")
     only to climax with one of the most exhilarating anti-climactic
     lines in the history of rock ("I can't get no..."), the
     rhythm--set by the steady four-in-a-bar beat--totally subverts
     the negation, aurally delivering what the lyrics ostensibly
     deny.[2]

 13. Not that the lyrics were superfluous, mind you, since I spent
     many an hour listening to this song, trying to determine whether
     the third verse was, in fact, "about a girl who wouldn't put out
     during her period" (Christgau 192).

 14. Given that they're still rockin' (the 1997-98 Bridges to Babylon
     tour came complete with "tongue," inflatable girls, and "lewd,"
     big-screen video cartoons), the Stones would probably be a
     convenient and appropriate place to conclude this, the
     auto-anecdotal part of this "record"; however, I would definitely
     be remiss if I did not at least touch on the third element in the
     holy trinity of post-'50s "youth culture": drugs.

 15. If the first wave of rock 'n' roll ends, according to received
     wisdom, around 1957, the second period--rock and roll (without
     the apostrophes fore and aft)--reaches its musical and
     psychedelic apex in 1967 with Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club
     Band. Some thirty years later, I can still remember retreating to
     the basement of my parents' home to play Sgt. Pepper's for the
     first time. I spent hours gazing at the cover, Elvis one face in
     a sea of famous faces, but the song that kept haunting me, dÈjý
     vu all over again, was "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds": with its
     surreal lyrics and trippy melody, it sounded like nothing I had
     ever heard before. For some reason, perhaps the color of the back
     cover, I always associate it with the color red, the color of
     revolutionaries, and Sgt. Pepper's, vinyl turning round and round
     on the turn table, turned me upside down, transporting me--like
     LSD later--to another, phantasmagoric world.

 16. 1967 was also the year a next-door neighbor--I can still recall
     his name, Donnie Glaser, if not his face--turned me on to Jimi
     Hendrix's Are You Experienced? in the basement of his parents'
     house, basements being the preeminent place of domestic refuge in
     the late '60s, pre-mall suburbs. Hendrix was subversive not so
     much because of his psychedelia (though I certainly registered
     this aspect of his music) but because Donnie's parents were
     racists, albeit the classic sub rosa Northeastern sort. In other
     words, it was a black and white thing. It was also, needless to
     say, a sexual thing, since I can vividly remember Donnie telling
     me about seeing Hendrix live in concert in Buffalo and how he
     would look at the white girls in the front seats. I wasn't
     exactly sure what all this meant (I was thirteen, altar-boy
     Catholic, and definitely not "experienced"), but like Sgt.
     Pepper's, Are You Experienced? spoke of mysteries of race and
     sexuality elusive as that sky-diamonded girl, Lucy.

 17. Since rock, especially punk, is inseparable--as Dick Bradley
     reminds us--from the culture of amateurism (13, 15-16), I would
     also definitely be remiss if I did not somehow mention that I
     spent many hours in the mid-'60s playing drums on an incredibly
     cheap drum-kit (one snare, one bass drum, one non-Zildjian
     cymbal--no tom tom, no hi-hat), and that one of the things that
     the kid behind me in high school endlessly talked about
     (Miklitsch, Miniccuci... ) was Mitch Mitchell's drumming on
     "Fire," which percussive effects we would try to duplicate, no
     doubt to the consternation of our long-suffering Franciscan
     instructors, on our ink-scarred desktops. Given the rapid-fire
     drumming, it's not surprising that this song became our standard.
     The point is: part--a very large part--of the kick of rock music
     for me was the "beat." How else can one explain the fact that
     years earlier, at recess, out on the asphalt playground at St.
     Pete's, my grammar school, I wanted to be Ringo: think of it, not
     John or Paul or even George, but Ringo!

 18. I might add by way of a musical-historical peroration (and before
     I turn to the "B side" and the subject of the "death of rock"),
     that by 1970, even as Elvis was beginning to make his glittery
     way in Las Vegas, Hendrix was dead, the Beatles had disbanded,
     and the Stones--post-Altamont--were all "black and blue."

     B Side: Rock in Theory, or Paint It Black

          Much like rock, [cultural studies] has always been for me
          empowering and enabling, and like rock, it is always fun.
          --Lawrence Grossberg, Dancing in Spite of Myself

 19. The Stones aside (though it remains almost impossible, when
     talking about rock, to set the Stones aside for very long), it
     would not be until that annus mirabilis, 1977, the year that
     Elvis finally left the building for good, that the world of
     popular music would begin to understand what had come to pass in
     the preceding decade--which is to say, in the 1970s, now freshly
     immortalized in all its sleazy glory in Boogie Nights (1997).
     "Sister Christian" anyone?

 20. 1977 was not only the year that the Sex Pistols celebrated Queen
     E's Silver Jubilee with their outrÈ version of "God Save the
     Queen," the lyrics of which ("God save the Queen, the fascist
     regime....") couldn't be further from the faux-pastoral sentiment
     of Elton John's threnody to Diana, "Candle in the Wind" ("Songs
     for Dead Blonds," as Keith Richards put it [31]); it was also the
     year that Lawrence Grossberg first began teaching classes on rock
     music. This segue is not, needless to say, a little bathetic
     (i.e., from the national punk-sublime to the academic
     pedagogical-pedestrian), but it underscores an important
     theoretical moment in the discourse of cultural studies, a moment
     when--as in Resistance through Rituals (1976) and Subculture
     (1979)--British cultural studies began to examine the impact of
     popular music on "culture and society."[3]

 21. More to the point perhaps, while numerous critics associated with
     the field of cultural studies have written on popular music and,
     in particular, rock (too many in fact to name), Grossberg--unlike
     a lot of his American cohorts--not only studied at the Birmingham
     Centre (with Hall and Hoggart),[4] he is now arguably the
     theoretician of rock in Anglophone cultural studies. As Neil
     Nehring remarks with not a little irony, even disdain, in Popular
     Music, Gender, and Postmodernism (1997), Grossberg is the "dean
     of academics writing on popular music" (47), the "CEO of cultural
     studies" (67). Though Grossberg cannot, of course, stand as some
     sort of synecdoche for either cultural studies or popular music
     studies (if the latter has only recently achieved any semblance
     of disciplinary coherence, the former remains a model of inter-,
     not to say, anti-disciplinarity), his writings on rock are
     nonetheless symptomatic, or so I want to argue, of a certain
     unexamined "death drive" at work in cultural/popular music
     studies.

 22. In Dancing in Spite of Myself (1997), a recent collection that
     gathers together Grossberg's work on popular music, he
     persuasively argues that rock is a necessary object of critical
     investigation because it has frequently been mobilized, often
     negatively (as in the neo-conservatism that he critiques in We
     Gotta Get Out of This Place [1992]),[5] as a discursive token in
     the ideological contest over what he calls the "national popular"
     (9). Thus, in "Another Boring Day in Paradise" (1984), he
     contends that it is only with Born to Run (1975) and Darkness on
     the Edge of Town (1978) that Bruce Springsteen emerges as a
     national popular sign of the body and sexuality as well as motion
     and mobility, a set of signifiers most economically constellated,
     according to Grossberg, by the figure of dancing: dancing not
     only bespeaks the body, it embodies release, from boredom, from
     ennui and anomie--from, that is to say, the sometimes repressive,
     imprisoning routines of everyday life. It is not for nothing,
     then, that the title of Grossberg's collection on rock invokes
     the trope of dancing--dancing in spite, or despite, one's
     self--since as he says in "I'd Rather Feel Bad Than Not Feel
     Anything at All" (1984), "someone who does not dance, or at least
     move with the music, is not prima facie a fan" (87).

 23. Still, given Grossberg's fascination with the body in motion, or
     what I think of as the "body in dance,"[6] one of the
     retrospective ironies of his reading of Springsteen--virtually
     the only "close reading" in all of his work on rock--is that it
     somehow neglects to mention the infamous moment when the Boss,
     live onstage in St. Paul performing his top-ten single, "Dancing
     in the Dark," pulled a pre-Friends Courteney Cox out of the
     audience and, in an MTV moment, became a fully-fledged
     pop-idol-cum-sex-symbol.[7] Later, writing in the aftermath of
     the 1984 presidential election (when "Born in the U.S.A." was
     opportunistically appropriated by Ronald Reagan's campaign
     handlers), Simon Frith concluded that Springsteen's Live (1985)
     was a rock monument, but--and this is the postmodern twist--a
     monument to the death of the "idea of authenticity" (98, 101).

 24. I invoke the above MTV instant not to rehearse the familiar,
     now-dated critique of Springsteen, but because Grossberg, like
     Frith, has frequently seized on this national-popular moment in
     Springsteen's career to deconstruct the idea of authenticity,
     replacing it with what Grossberg calls "authentic inauthenticity"
     (We Gotta Get Out 230). In fact, Frith's account of the end of
     authenticity points up, if only by inversion, the privileged
     place of authenticity in Grossberg's account of rock--say, the
     way in which early rock 'n' roll, drawing on the liberatory
     sexual subtext of rhythm & blues (itself a not-so-latent critique
     of white, "I-like-Ike" America), offered a highly effective
     cultural compromise formation, a way to both rock against, and
     roll with, the times.

 25. Now, if rock assumed this particular existential function in the
     1950s, it consolidated this position in the '60s, so much so that
     the proper, analytical object of study for Grossberg is not so
     much rock music as the culture of rock, or what he calls the
     "rock formation": "the entire range of postwar, 'youth'-oriented,
     technologically and economically-mediated musical practices and
     styles" (Dancing 102). Although Grossberg has typically been more
     concerned, true to the Deleuzian-Foucauldian cast of his project,
     to chart the spatial element of this formation, I want to focus
     here on the temporal or historical register of his project
     because in his most recent work, such as his contribution to
     Microphone Fiends (1994), "Is Anybody Listening? Does Anybody
     Care?," he has been "obsessed" (his word) with the "death of
     rock."

 26. To be fair, in the revisionary introduction to Dancing in Spite
     of Myself, Grossberg observes that the proposition "rock is dead"
     is not so much an evaluative judgment about "particular musical
     practices or variants of rock culture" as a "discursive haunting
     within the rock formation" and (a crucial, if somewhat
     contradictory, afterthought) a "possible eventual reality" (17).
     Indeed, as Grossberg himself seems to recognize, his speculations
     about the death of rock are neither especially new nor news
     (Dancing 103). In 1971, for instance, in The Sound of the City,
     Charlie Gillett had asserted the death of "rock 'n' roll," if not
     "rock and roll" or "rock" per se.[8] And, rather more recently,
     in "Everything Counts," the preface to Music for Pleasure (1988),
     Frith composed the following epitaph:

          I am now quite sure that the rock era is over. People will
          go on playing and enjoying rock music... but the music
          business is no longer organized around the selling of
          records of a particular sort of musical event to young
          people. The rock era--born around 1956 with Elvis Presley,
          peaking around 1967 with Sgt. Pepper's, dying around 1976
          with the Sex Pistols--turned out to be a by-way in the
          development of twentieth-century popular music, rather than,
          as we thought at the time, any kind of mass cultural
          revolution. (1)

     For Frith as for Gillett, rock is now all but dead as a
     mass-cultural force because for all its revolutionary "energy and
     excitement," anger and anarchism, it has finally succumbed to
     those twin demons: capital and technology.

 27. Given that rock has not historically dominated the popular-music
     market (see, for example, Dave Harker's analysis of the '70s
     which convincingly argues that the "representative" sound of the
     era was not, say, punk but Elton John), one might counter that
     Frith's reading here of the death of rock is predicated on a
     substantial misreading of the music industry. (Consider, if you
     will, Garth Brooks, who is not only the third top-selling act of
     all time but whose most recent CD, Sevens [1997], had the
     second-highest first week sales in the 1990s.[9]) Frith's claim
     about the death of rock also betrays, it seems to me, a
     not-so-residual romanticism where, as in the ideology of high
     modernism, the artist-as-rocker steadfastly refuses the
     Mephistophelian commercial temptations of late capitalism.

 28. This said, it might be useful--before I broach a critique of
     Grossberg's claims about the "death of rock"--to review his
     account of the present "state of rock." As Grossberg sees it,
     rock's original historical conditions of possibility have
     undergone a radical transformation over the last forty years. Not
     only has the liberal quietism of the fifties, a political
     consensus that underwrote the affluence and conspicuous
     consumption of the period, been superseded by a
     neo-fundamentalist conservatism intent on destroying the last
     vestiges of the welfare state (one hyper-visible target of which
     has been rap music: think Ice-T[10]), but also youth
     culture--once the ground of the performative ethos of
     communitarianism--has been subjected to the micro-differentiation
     and super-fragmentation of the contemporary media-market. Call
     it, with appropriate adcult brio, Generation Next.

 29. As for the "structure of feeling" (which in the '50s could be
     summed up by one word, alienation), postmodernism has arguably
     gone from being an emergent to the dominant cultural-political
     formation, so that now everything--including and especially
     rock--has come under what Grossberg calls, courtesy of Benjamin,
     the "antiaura of the inauthentic" (117): in other words, not
     alienation but simulation, not parody but pastiche.

 30. Finally, in the industrial-technological sphere, even as the
     "indies" enjoy a less contentious relation with the majors (to
     the point in fact where leisure-and-entertainment multinationals
     have come to view independent labels as their "minor league"
     [Negus, Popular Music 118]), revenues derive less and less from
     sales and more and more from merchandising and secondary rights
     associated with related "synergetic" sources such as film, TV,
     and advertising.[11] Put another way, in an age of digital
     reproduction (not LPs but CDs, or CD-ROM), rock has become a
     commodity like any other commodity, at best a depoliticized form
     of fun and, at worst, Muzak to divert you while you're home
     shopping.

 31. A number of these transformations--including the paradigm shift
     from aural-print to cyber-visual culture, not to mention the
     consequent lack of, for Grossberg, "any compelling images of
     rebellion" (Dancing 55)--are reflected, albeit with a perverse,
     "hermeneutic" twist, in the Beavis and Butt-head phenomenon.
     Beavis and Butt-head not only mirror the politics of
     neo-conservatism (in reverse, ý la Lacan), they arguably embody
     the enlightened cynicism associated with the ideology of MTV. I
     mean, what could be more postmodern than a couple of loser,
     latchkey kids who when they're not loose in school or on the
     streets, sit around and crack wise on bad music videos?

 32. Still, the irony of this example (which, oddly enough, seems lost
     on Grossberg) is that Beavis and Butt-head also represent, in
     however twisted or demented a form, the continuing vitality of
     rock. That is, if Beavis and Butt-head can be said to dramatize
     the demise of what Grossberg calls the "ideology of authenticity"
     (We Gotta Get Out 205), it's pretty obvious that for all their
     benumbed, dumb-and-dumber behavior, they can hardly be said to be
     affectless when it comes to the subject of rock.

 33. To be sure, the concept of affect as it is appears in Grossberg's
     discourse is not simply a synonym for emotion or feeling, since
     it is a function of, among other things, cathexis and libidinal
     quantification (as in Freud and Nietzsche respectively).[12]
     Moreover, for Grossberg (as for Deleuze and Guattari), affect is
     a "structured plane of effects."[13] Affect in fact is the key to
     what he calls "mattering maps," or the maps people fabricate in
     order to articulate what matters most to them in their everyday
     lives. Rock is therefore a fundamental "affective articulatory
     agent," not least because--to recollect one of his favorite
     maxims--it "helps us make it through the day" (Dancing 20).

 34. While Grossberg's theorization of everyday life here, together
     with his neo-Gramscian elaboration of affect and the rock
     formation, represents, it seems to me, an important contribution
     to the critical discourse on rock,[14] the irony--in this case, a
     critical, not to say fatal one--is that his writing on popular
     music tends to be extraordinarily "abstract and speculative"
     (Dancing 30). Or, in a word, affectless. Grossberg has freely
     conceded--too freely, for my money--the limits of his project,
     observing in the apologetic preface to Bringing It All Back Home
     (1997) that "almost everything he has written on rock music,"
     operating as it does on a "particularly high level of
     abstraction" (16), is "too theoretical" (27); that his work has
     become a "constant detour deferring the concrete."[15]

 35. One manifestation of this pervasive theoreticism is his
     persistent neglect of issues of race and sex-gender.[16] Although
     John Gill's and Angela McRobbie's critiques of, respectively,
     "gay" disco and subcultural theory (to adduce only two
     examples[17]) indicate that rock is by no means a function of
     identity politics, I think it's fair to say that Grossberg's
     preemptive, categorical disregard of gender has also blinded him
     to recent transformations in rock music. To wit: Beavis and
     Butt-head may be a "negative," comic-parodic instance of what
     sometimes seems like the hard-wired masculinism of rock (though
     as Robert Walser has shown, even heavy metal is not without its
     moments of "gender trouble"), but Riot Grrrl music suggests--if,
     say, Patti Smith or Joan Armatrading hadn't already--that women
     can rock too.[18]

 36. As for race, though Grossberg has summarily discussed the role of
     "Black music," in particular R & B, in everyday life (Dancing
     151-52), he has had surprisingly little to say about, for
     instance, rap. I say "surprisingly" because rap has been viewed,
     rightly or wrongly, as the "new internal site of authenticity"
     and/or "heir to rock's vitality and potential as a nascent act of
     resistance" (Dancing 104). Accordingly, if it is in fact true, as
     Grossberg himself has claimed, that he is less interested in the
     death of rock than in "rock's becoming something else" (Dancing
     22), it strikes me that his work, "abstract and speculative" as
     it is, would benefit from a more thorough consideration of the
     specific preconditions and continuing longevity of rap and, more
     generally, hip-hop culture.

 37. History is instructive in this regard, since the very first rap
     records--such as The Fatback Band's "King Tim III" and the
     Sugarhill Gang's "Rapper's Delight"--appeared in the immediate
     wake of the so-called punk apocalypse and can therefore be seen
     as part of the rebirth of post-"rock" popular music.
     (Significantly, both of the above rap records were released in
     1979[19]). Though it would not be until well into the next
     disco-driven decade that Run-D.M.C. would catapult "rap into the
     crossover mainstream" (Perkins 14) when their Aerosmith-flavored,
     rap-'n'-rock "Walk This Way" (1986) became hip-hop's first MTV
     hit, thrusting rap "strategies of intertextuality into the
     commercial spotlight" (and, not so incidentally, rap music "into
     the hands of white teen consumers" [Rose 51-52]),[20] rap, it is
     clear, has irrevocably altered the rock/pop landscape.

 38. The point is, from Afrika Bambaataa, one of the seminal
     old-school Master of Ceremonies, to Run-D.M.C. and "new school,"
     pre-"Walk This Way" rap-'n'-rock tunes such as "Rock Box" (1984)
     and "King of Rock" (1985) to, most recently, Sean Combs and his
     Police-inspired ode to the Notorious B.I.G., "I'll Be Missing
     You" (1997), rock has been part and parcel of that eclectic mix
     that is rap, a musical melange forever memorialized in the lyrics
     of "Payoff Mix": "Punk rock, new wave and soul/Pop music, salsa,
     rock & roll/Calypso, reggae, rhythm & blues,/Master, mix those
     number-one tunes."[21]

 39. A recent exchange between Puff Daddy and Rolling Stone confirms
     the intimate/extimate relation between rock and rap. Rolling
     Stone: "What bands do you like now?" Puffy: "Radiohead" (78).

          "Suck--suck your teenage thumb...."

 40. I hasten to add that if the relation between rap and rock is not
     one of simple exteriority (as the above parenthetical is intended
     to suggest), this is not to claim, as Grossberg does, that "for
     practical purposes," there are "no musical limits on what can or
     cannot be rock" (We Gotta Get Out 131, emphasis mine). On this
     particular score, one must, I think, be vulgar: rock is, first
     and foremost, music--with the critical proviso that, to
     paraphrase a parody, if a little formalism turns one away from
     history, a lot brings one back to it.[22]

 41. I'm not talking about musicology here, useful as it is
     (especially in the proper hands).[23] Nor am I suggesting that
     the issue of reception, or even fandom, is negligible, since one
     of the real virtues of Grossberg's work is its extensive
     investigation of the various, extra-musical contexts of rock
     reception. I am suggesting--as it were, to "bring it all back
     home"--that it's difficult to talk about rock or popular music in
     the 1990s without engaging the issue of genre and production.

 42. On the constitutive difference between rock and the pre-"r&r"
     tradition of popular music, Robert Palmer has, for instance,
     written:

          Today's popular music could hardly have evolved out of "Your
          Hit Parade" and the pre-r&r popular mainstream.... Rap,
          metal, thrash, grunge, have different attitudes towards the
          organization of sound and rhythm. Their distance from
          pre-r&r norms cannot be explained by advances in musical
          instruments and technology alone. Far more than musical
          hybrids, these sounds proceed from what amounts to a
          different tradition, different from the old mainstream pop
          and different right on down to the most basic musical
          values. (Rock and Roll 9)

     Given Palmer's riff here on rock's "traditional" difference from
     the "popular music" that precedes it (e.g., the late, great Frank
     Sinatra or, before him, Bing "The King of Croon" Crosby), it is
     clear that although one can speak of rock as a species of popular
     music, one cannot make the opposite claim (i.e., not all popular
     music is rock).

 43. Such a distinction would seem commonsensical enough, but "rock
     imperialism," as Keith Negus has demonstrated, is pervasive in
     English-language writing on popular music. The problem with this
     approach--of which Grossberg's work is a paradigmatic example (as
     the above assertion about "musical limits" indicates)--is that it
     ignores, as Negus notes, "vast numbers of generic distinctions
     made by musicians and audiences across the world" (Popular Music
     162, emphasis mine). The net result of this "imperialist"
     position, paradoxically enough, is a "rockist" methodology that
     is at once inclusivist and exclusivist, inclusivist because
     generically-different kinds of music (such as rap) are included
     as rock, exclusivist because generically-related kinds of music
     (such as country) are reflexively excluded.

 44. This problem is compounded when the universalist category of
     "rock" is applied to popular music in the global context,
     so-called "world beat" or "world music." (Examples of this music
     are the South African Ladysmith Black Mambazo, who are probably
     best known for working with Paul Simon on Graceland [1986] or,
     more recently, the Pakistani Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, who sang with
     Eddie Vedder of Pearl Jam on the soundtrack for Dead Man Walking
     ([1995]). Thus, if it is true, as Negus states, that there is a
     lot of music "being listened to by the 'youth market' that would
     be described using a label other than rock," it's equally true
     that "for many music fans across the world, there are numerous
     musics that cannot be rock" (Popular Music 161). One of the
     negative byproducts of this "methodological strategy"--of, that
     is to say, the "global" deployment of rock--is that it tends to
     reproduce the "classic" division between rock and pop, where rock
     refers to the "musical and lyrical roots that are derived from
     the classic rock era" and pop to rock's "status as a commodity
     produced under pressure to conform by the record industry"
     (Friedlander 3).

 45. The way this particular binary plays out in the context of the
     "rock/world music" opposition is, alas, all-too-predictable:
     North American, Western-style rock is "impure" and/or passÈ (or
     passÈ because impure), while virtually all, non-Western popular
     musics are "authentic" and, therefore, "vital." Not so
     surprisingly (especially if one remembers that rock was
     originally black slang for "having sex"), this sort of
     racial-ideological thinking is a product of a not-so-residual
     colonialist mentalitÈ. As Timothy D. Taylor flatly puts it in
     Global Pop (1997): "rock music, which used to be pure sex, has
     lost its grinding energy; musics by others (read: people of
     color) still have something to do with sex" (20).

 46. Still, the real political-economic paradox, if you will, is that
     although world musicians are considered inauthentic if they begin
     to sound too much like their Western counterparts, they are
     effectively doomed to a discourse of authenticity, "since the
     structures of the music industry exclude virtually all world
     musicians from the venues, visibility, and profits that might
     make them appear to be sellouts to their fans" (Taylor 23). This,
     then, is the bottom line of the asymmetrical relations of
     production that subtends the global music marketplace. Due to the
     concentration of capital in a handful of multinational
     corporations (that are located, in turn, in a handful of "core"
     countries), Western popular music is increasingly available in
     the traditional peripheries, but the (semi-) peripheries do not
     have the same access to their own music. Hence the distinctly
     inequitable system of distribution that currently obtains, where,
     say, "it is much easier to buy... Madonna in China than Cui Jian,
     the leading Chinese rock musician, in the US" (Taylor 201).

 47. I will return to these issues below in the context of
     contemporary youth culture, but this might be an appropriate
     place to mark the limits of the classical-Marxist account of the
     mode of production and propose, instead, what I take to be a more
     immanent, constructive model of the music industry. An innovative
     work in this regard--innovative because it draws equally on both
     reception and production studies without the theoretical baggage
     of either approach--is Negus's Producing Pop (1992) which, in
     displacing the methodological emphasis from the "production of
     culture" to the "culture of production" (61-64) retains a role
     for what Marxists used to call the "primacy of production" even
     as it demarcates a space for what Negus calls the "cultural
     practices of personnel" (press officer, A & R person, studio
     producer, etc.).[24] Noting that writing on popular music often
     works from unexamined predicates about art and commerce,
     creativity and capitalism, Negus contends that such an approach
     not only tends to "overlook the temporal dimension which cuts
     through the production of commercial music," it also tends to
     radically underestimate the extent to which the various personnel
     involved in producing music are actively "contributing to the
     aesthetic meanings employed to appreciate the music," thereby
     defining the contours of what in fact popular music means at any
     given time (153).

 48. The value of this approach is that by concentrating on what
     Bourdieu calls "cultural intermediaries" (qtd. in Negus,
     Producing Pop 62), it usefully blurs the typical, hard-and-fast
     distinction between labor and leisure, production and
     consumption. Rather more to the point, Negus's perspective
     emphatically re-accentuates the music in the "music business,"
     foregrounding the sorts of music that people in the business
     actually listen to. To tender such a claim is not, of course, to
     proffer a covert defense of the music business, since one of the
     very real strengths of Negus's work is that it provides an
     "inside" critique of the way in which the "recording industry has
     come to favor certain types of music, particular working
     practices, and quite specific ways of acquiring, marketing, and
     promoting recording artists" (and here issues of race and
     sex-gender re-materialize in all their social-institutional force
     [Producing Pop vii]). Simply put, Negus's culture-of-production
     approach--attuned as it is to both the cultural and industrial
     demands of the music industry--elucidates the intricate,
     conflictual "web" of relations out of which popular music is
     wrought.

 49. In Grossberg's anxious swerve away from anything that smacks of
     Marxism or economism (which sometimes appear to be the same thing
     for him), he has been intent to develop what he calls a "spatial
     materialism" (Dancing 10). While this spatial-materialist
     perspective might conceivably offer a novel way to talk about the
     production and consumption of popular music, the aggressively
     theoreticist cast of Grossberg's approach is evident in his
     inordinately "thin" description of his project: "to find a
     radically contextual... vocabulary that can describe the ongoing
     production of the real as an organization of inequality through
     an analysis of cultural events" (24). Put another, more critical
     way: if Grossberg's analytical focus on space in rock provides a
     valuable complement to the general underdevelopment of spatiality
     in the discourse of Marxism,[25] this very same valorization also
     comes at the direct expense of a proper consideration of the
     dialectical other of spatiality--temporality or, more precisely
     yet, historicity.

 50. Bluntly, it will not do, on one hand, to ruminate about the death
     of rock and, on the other hand, to confess that one has "given
     too little attention to the changing shape of the rock formation
     across space and over time" (Dancing 19). Given this performative
     contradiction, though, what, one wonders, is driving Grossberg's
     "obsession" with the death of rock?

     Reprise

          "Drivin' around in my automobile..."
                              --Chuck Berry

 51. The above, not simply rhetorical question about the end or "death
     of rock" brings me abruptly back full-circle to the beginning of
     this essay--to, that is, the "birth" of rock and the formative
     popular-musical influences in my life. My life aside (for the
     moment), I want to submit that detailed, medium-specific
     attention to the temporality and spatiality of rock indicates
     that it has by no means died but has merely become, among other
     things, "more geographically mobile" (Negus, Popular Music 163).

 52. The interest of this "geographical" perspective is that it
     assumes one of Grossberg's signature Deleuzian themes, what one
     might call the mobility of rock (as almost any Chuck Berry song
     attests, "classic" rock 'n' roll is frequently about
     auto-mobility), and situates it in a particular,
     national-historical context. In other words, it's not simply that
     rock has become part of transnational capitalism (though this
     proposition is undoubtedly true and has any number of
     implications for the present "rock formation" [vide supra]).[26]
     Rather, it's more that a certain form of rock may well be dead,
     or at least embalmed, in the U.S. or North America but is alive
     and kickin' elsewhere--say, in Cuba or China, Argentina or South
     Africa, Eastern Europe or the former Soviet Union.[27]

 53. As for the U.S. or North America, it seems pretty clear that some
     form of post-"rock" music is here to stay, at least for the
     foreseeable future, given that it has become an indispensable
     part--along wth TV, movies and, most recently, the personal
     computer--of contemporary "youth culture." I've already suggested
     that one, flamboyant manifestation of this culture is the Beavis
     and Butt-head phenomenon, where this particular "franchise"
     comprises not only an animated series (that comprises, in turn,
     music videos--mise-en-abÓme, as it were) but a profitable feature
     film, both of which mass-media "texts" have spun off various
     other commodities such as books, soundtracks, etc. But if Beavis
     and Butt-head and, more generally, MTV (as opposed to, say, VH1)
     is "youth-skewed," what does it mean to invoke the category of
     youth today, late in the 1990s?

 54. I raise this question here because although there is obviously a
     statistically-determinate audience--"defined by age"--for
     rock/pop music (say, conservatively speaking, 14-24), the idea of
     youth, as Donna Gaines comments, is simultaneously a "biological
     category," a "distinctive social group," and a "cultural context"
     (47). Though there is little doubt that age-driven demographics
     drive corporate marketing and advertising, it's also no secret
     that in an age of Viagra, cosmetic surgery, and hyper-"health &
     fitness," the "signifier 'youth' has gradually been detached from
     the age-grade and made available to everyone" (Weinstein
     82)--which is to say, to anyone who has the desire and requisite
     economic resources.

 55. One consequence of this process of "democratization" is that the
     concept of youth today retains only a residual, even vestigial,
     connection to its "biological" referent. In fact, the rapidly
     changing cultural construct of the term since World War II--from,
     say, "youth culture" to "counterculture" to "youth subcultures"
     (the last with a decidedly post-Parsonian emphasis)--has
     radically de-differentiated its social distinctiveness. On one
     hand, the category of childhood--of which youth is the
     "antithesis" and adulthood the "synthesis"--is "shrinking":
     "people as young as eight or nine years old are sharing in the
     youth life-style in terms of consumption of products such as
     clothing, leisure activities from video games... to record
     purchases, and knowledge of the 'real world'-- sexual, political,
     ecological, etc." (Weinstein 20).

 56. On the other hand, the social idea of youth is rapidly expanding,
     so much so that it might not be too much to say, as Deanna
     Weinstein does, that young people "have become marginal to the
     idea of youth itself" (73). Since the "central feature" of youth
     culture, at least in the United States since the 1950s, has been
     music, rock music (Weinstein 69), this trend--what one might
     call, after Grossberg, the colonization or reterritorialization
     of youth--has had a profound influence on contemporary music. In
     an epigram: "Rock, like youthful looks, is no longer the province
     of the young" (Weinstein 75).

 57. As in some grade-B werewolf movie, the rock-around-the-clock
     teenagers of the '50s have become the "classic rock" baby-boomers
     of the '90s, and the latter "constituency," in turn, a prime
     grade-A target for the increasingly competitive music industry.
     More specifically, since the youth market cannot sustain
     long-term artistic development (and therefore new artists are no
     longer simply aimed at youth in the restricted, "biological"
     sense [Negus, Producing Pop 68]), there are powerful economic
     imperatives to cross-over and attract the expanding "class" of
     middle-aged consumers. In fact, data on consumption patterns
     circa 1993 suggest that while the "purchase of rock music
     declines with age," this decline is "gradual across ages 25-44"
     (Negus, Producing Pop 100). With this in mind, it might not be
     too much to say--at least if these figures are any indication
     (and I think they are)--that rock is no longer simply the "music
     of youth" (Negus, Producing Pop 100).

 58. Of course, "young people"--however one defines the term--have
     also actively resisted the wholesale appropriation of their
     subcultures. Sometimes this has involved distancing themselves
     from "adulterated" discourses such as, precisely, rock. (Hence
     the pejorative epithet "rockist.") In other cases, it has
     involved a complex process of re-appropriation of the
     popular-cultural terrain. (Witness the revival of swing and
     lounge or "martini" music.) In general, it has involved the
     formation of subcultures that entail a determinate dialectical
     relation not only with the dominant "parent" culture (itself in
     the process of being made over in the eternal image of youth) but
     with the dominant, corporate-sponsored youth culture.

 59. The "good news," as it were, is that "genuine" youth subcultures
     have emerged by "marginalizing themselves from the leisure
     culture's free-floating definition of 'youth'" (Weinstein 83).
     (SNL aside, the new "goth culture" in all its queer mutability
     is, it seems to me, one instance of this resistance.) The "bad
     news" (as if the double alienation consequent on the above
     self-marginalization were not enough) is that young people are
     now free to choose from among an "array of confrontational youth
     subcultures" (Weinstein 82). In this overconsumptivist scenario,
     "free-floating" is not so much a term of liberatory potential,
     however slim, but a euphemistic signifier for the "forced choice"
     that is postmodern consumer capitalism. In a nutshell (to sample
     an Entertainment Weekly cover story): Hanson/Manson.

 60. Although one might argue that the current musical culture is
     merely yet another moment in the ongoing cyclical history of
     pop/rock (where, to revisit the late '50s and early '60s, the
     choice between the Crystals and Chiffons, Ronettes and Shirelles,
     or--to adduce the "boy groups"--the Four Seasons and the Beach
     Boys was, for some, no choice at all), the difference between the
     immediate post-"rock-'n'-roll" period and the present moment is
     the sheer volume of (recorded) music that is now available. For
     instance, in 1962, before the advent of the British Invasion
     (which is to say, pre-Beatles and pre-JFK assassination), "total
     industry sales were under $1 billion" (Goodman 29); now, circa
     1998, "they're almost 40 times that figure" (29).

 61. That the impact of this economic and popular-musical "boom" on
     youth culture has been enormous goes, I think, without saying.
     Most obviously perhaps, the almost exponential increase in the
     production of rock/pop music has resulted in an almost infinite
     "array" of musical (sub-) genres from which people, "young" or
     otherwise, can "freely" choose. A recent postcard survey
     distributed by Atlantic Records illustrates the extraordinary
     range of music that one can now purchase: Children's / R & B /
     Pop / Rock / Dance / Singer Songwriters / Traditional Jazz /
     Contemporary Jazz / New Age / Ambient / Classical / Country /
     Metal / Alternative / Rap / Theatre Music / World Music.

 62. About this list, I would make only two observations. First, rock,
     it is important to note, is only one genre or category among a
     host of genres and categories; equally or more importantly, most,
     if not all, of these genres can be further subdivided. (Thus, to
     take just one genre, "New Age/Ambient" can--and probably
     should--be divided into two separate categories, where Ambient
     or, more properly perhaps, Electronica can then be divided into
     various subgenres such as Techno, Jungle, Trip Hop, Drum and
     Bass, or sub-subgenres such as Illbient and Ambient Dub). Second,
     in an informal survey that I conducted at Ohio University using
     the above survey (I chose a class composed of "freshmen" since
     they effectively straddle the teen/college music audiences), the
     participants answered--almost to a person--that they not only
     listened to rock but that they felt it remains a "viable form of
     music."[28] In other words, the combo "youth and rock" may not be
     as tight as it once was, but "rock"--or what Grossberg calls the
     "rock formation"--still means something to young people.

 63. Although the concept of "youth" is crucial, it is clear, to any
     future discussion of the "death of rock," another, perhaps more
     pointed way to reframe this issue--to return to the larger,
     historical shifts in the meaning of "youth culture" (as well as
     the A side of this essay)--is to reconsider the generational axes
     of rock. Thus, to re-cite Frith, conventional wisdom has it that
     rock was born around 1956 with Elvis, peaked around 1967 with
     Sgt. Pepper's, and died around 1976 with the Sex Pistols. Or, as
     Negus metaphorically puts it, in the mid-1970s, "the blooms start
     wilting, the body decays, and rock starts dying" (Popular Music
     148).

 64. This late-Spenglerian vision--Verfallsgeschichte made
     flesh--offers a peculiarly seductive image for some of the
     history of rock, with rock consuming itself, never mind Nirvana,
     in one final catastrophic conflagration with punk. Indeed, with
     the late Elvis and Sid Vicious in mind, the one bloated from food
     and drugs almost beyond recognition, the other an early
     poster-boy for heroin chic, it would appear, if only in
     retrospect, that the banks of flowers on the cover of Sgt.
     Pepper's were funereal after all, florid intimations of rock's
     mortality or, to echo the Sex Pistols, "flowers in the
     dustbin."[29]

 65. But could it be, given that Grossberg began teaching rock in 1977
     (when, presumably, the corpse was still warm), that the
     historical claim about the death of rock is, as it were,
     auto-biological; that, not to put too fine a point on it, the
     mantra about the death of rock is merely a projection of the
     white male baby-boomer's rapidly aging body?

 66. To endeavor to be fair to Grossberg, he is by no means unaware of
     the paradoxes and potential pitfalls of writing about rock if you
     are old enough, now, to remember seeing Elvis on Ed Sullivan in
     1956, or the Beatles on the same venue, as I did, in 1964.[30] In
     "Rock and Roll Is Dead and We Don't Care," the Rubinoos-inspired
     conclusion to "Another Boring Day in Paradise," he speculates
     about a baby-boomer imaginary haunting the real of Generation X,
     remarking that "images of youth and change" have been replaced by
     images of boomers trying to "deal with responsibility and 'middle
     age'" (61). Grossberg's reading here of the vampiric relation
     between the generations represents, it seems to me, discursive
     haunting with a vengeance, the return of the corporeal repressed,
     where the historiography of rock and roll is infused--like some
     ghost or specter--with all the ways of the flesh.

 67. However, as Negus's meta-organic metaphor makes clear ("the
     blooms start wilting, the body decays..."), it is probably
     inadvisable, critically speaking, to interpret musical genres
     such as rock "as if they were living bodies which are born, grow,
     and decay" (Popular Music 139). When it comes to contemplating
     and composing the history of rock, one would do better to attend,
     as Barthes advises, to the form of the music, a "turn" that
     inevitably returns one to history, to the form of history and the
     history of the form. While the former, "historiographic" locution
     signifies the various, sometimes radically divergent histories
     (such as rap) that have generated what Robert Palmer calls the
     "rock tradition," the latter "formalism" refers to
     historicity--say, the "gospel," blues-based, call-and-response of
     soul--in all its gross materiality.

 68. Grossberg himself declares in the preface to Dancing in Spite of
     Myself that rock is "material" since it is lived, as he says, in
     the "body and soul" (15). However, if this is in fact the case,
     it must also I think be said that his work on rock--studiously
     attentive as it is to the body and dance, affect and
     sexuality--is surprisingly soulless.

 69. But what's a body of work without soul? It's like rhythm without
     the blues. Rock without the roll. It's dead, deader than dead
     Elvis.

 70. If writing on rock in cultural studies is to matter today, it
     seems to me that it must remain alive to a veritable "forcefield"
     or constellation of factors--to the "culture of production," at
     once micro and macro; to the body--raced, sexed, and gendered; to
     the various histories of rock with all their zigs and zags,
     swerves and curves; and, of course, to the music itself. As for
     theory, if it too is to matter, if it is to rock, it must not
     only continue to move with the times, it must also somehow
     remember that as in dancing or cruising (and this is the
     trickiest part), the point is, as Chuck Berry says, that there's
     "no particular place to go."

                         Department of English Language and Literature
                                                       Ohio University
                                          miklitsc@oak.cats.ohiou.edu

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                                   Notes

     1. However, for the girls' POV, see Bradby.

     2. For my sense of this song, see Whitely 88-89.

     3. For an informative and critical overview of this period of
     British cultural studies, see Middleton, "Subcultural Theory"
     155-66.

     4. On Grossberg's intellectual itinerary, see "Another Story," in
     Bringing 22-29.

     5. See, in particular, the second section of We Gotta Get Out of
     This Place, "Another Boring Day in... Paradise: A Rock Formation"
     131-239.

     6. On the "body in dance," see the introduction to my From Hegel
     to Madonna 9-36.

     7. See Marcus, "Four More Years," Ranters 269.

     8. In "The Sound Begins," Gillett argues that in "tracing the
     history of rock and roll, it is useful to distinguish rock 'n'
     roll--the particular kind of music to which the term first
     applied--both from rock and roll--the music that has been
     classified as such since rock 'n' roll petered out around
     1958--and from rock, which describes post-1964 derivations of
     rock 'n' roll" (1).

     9. On Garth Brooks, see Brunner, "By George, He's Got It" and
     "Winner of the Week."

     10. On Ice-T and Time-Warner, see, for example, Ross on "Cop
     Killer" (1992) and Madonna's Sex (1992) in "This Bridge Called My
     Pussy." With respect to the rhetoric of the "death of rock," it's
     worth noting that after Ice-T decided to pull "Cop Killer" from
     Body Count (1992), "it was only a matter of time," as Ross notes,
     "before an organ of record [i.e., the Source] announced the death
     of rap" (Microphone Fiends 3).

     11. On social consumption and copyright revenue, see Negus,
     Producing Pop 12-14.

     12. See, for example, Grossberg, "Affect and the Popular," in We
     Gotta Get Out of This Place and "Postmodernity and Affect" in
     Dancing, 79-87 and 145-65 respectively. As Grossberg comments in
     the introduction to the former text, "My studies of rock
     convinced me of the importance of passion (affect) in
     contemporary life" (2).

     13. Grossberg provides a concise and popular-cultural gloss on
     his sense of affect in "Rockin' in Conservative Times," the
     penultimate essay in Dancing: "the affective logic, which I have
     described... as being at the center of rock culture,... is being
     reorganized and redeveloped in the service of a specific agenda
     [i.e., neo-conservatism]. What was... an empowering machine is
     turned (as in Star Wars' image of 'the force' being turned to the
     dark side) into the service of a disempowering machine" (257).
     For a recent restatement of Grossberg's understanding of affect,
     see the introduction to Bringing 28.

     14. For a critique of Grossberg's notion of affect with respect
     to rock (albeit one that tends to flatten out the positive,
     cultural-populist elements of his use of the term), see Nehring,
     Popular Music 47-52.

     15. For a more elaborate take on the "detour of theory" (Marx),
     see Grossberg, "Cultural Studies: What's in a Name?" (1995), in
     Bringing 262-64.

     16. Grossberg is adamant on this point: "In truth, I do have
     theoretical reservations about theories of identity and
     difference and strategic concerns about the efficacy of a
     politics organized around investment in cultural identities.
     Nevertheless, the mere absence of a topic from a discussion,
     however important, does not, in my opinion, necessarily
     constitute a serious weakness" (25). For Grossberg's sense of
     identity politics, see, for example, "Identity and Difference" in
     Bringing 356-63; and "Difference and the Politics of Identity,"
     in We Gotta Get Out of This Place 364-69.

     17. See McRobbie, "Settling Accounts with Subcultures," first
     published in Screen Education (1980); for the Gill, which is in
     part a response to Richard Dyer's "In Defense of Disco" (1979),
     see, for example, "Nightclubbing." For a succinct overview of
     these issues, see Negus, "Identities," in Popular Music 99-135,
     esp. 123-30.

     18. On the Riot Grrrl movement, see White, "Revolution Girl Style
     Now" (1992), reprinted in Rock She Wrote; and Gottlieb and Wald.
     More recently, see Nehring, "Riot Grrrls and Carnival," Popular
     Music 150-79; and McDonnell.

     19. On The Fatback Band's "King Tim III," see Toop 81-82. For an
     update on the Sugarhill Gang's "Rapper's Delight" (which has
     recently been re-recorded by Redman, Keith Murray, and Erick
     Sermon), see Brunner, "Birth of Rap."

     20. I might add that in terms of what one might call the
     semi-autonomy of rap with respect to rock music, Nelson George
     has pointed out that although Run-D.M.C. "recaptured a piece of
     the rock audience" with "Walk This Way," they were able to do so
     "without dissolving themselves... into white culture" (194).

     21. Afrika Bambaataa on the Bronx hip-hop scene in '84: "I used
     to catch the people who'd say, 'I don't like rock....' I'd throw
     on Mick Jagger--you'd see the blacks and the Spanish just
     throwing down, dancing crazy. I'd say, 'I thought you don't like
     rock!' They'd say, 'Get out of here!' I'd say, 'Well, you just
     danced to the Rolling Stones'" (cited in Toop 66). On "Payoff
     Mix," Double D and Steinski's mastermix of, inter alia,
     G.L.O.B.E. and Whiz Kid's "Play That Beat, Mr. DJ," see Toop
     153-54.

     22. I am alluding here to Barthes's "Myth Today," in Mytholgies
     12.

     23. See, for example, Midddleton, "'Change Gonna Come'? Popular
     Music and Musicology," in Studying Popular Music 103-26; and the
     section on musicology and semiotics in On Record, in particular
     McClary and Walser 277-92.

     24. The seminal text for the "production of culture" perspective
     is Peterson; for another, more recent example of this approach,
     see Crane.

     25. For something of a corrective to this theoretical poverty,
     see Soja.

     26. On rock and capitalism, see, most recently, Taylor, "Popular
     Musics and Globalization," Global Pop 1-38. For a survey of rock
     with respect to media and cultural imperialism, see Negus,
     "Geographies," Popular Music, in particular "Music and the Modes
     of Media Imperialism" and "Feeling the Effect: Cultural
     Imperialism and Globalization," 168-71 and 171-80 respectively;
     and, in general, Robinson et al.

     27. On Cuba, see LÛpez; on China, Argentina and South Africa,
     see, respectively, Brace and Friedlander; Vila; and Martin. On
     Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union, see Ramet and Ryback.
     In general, see Denselow.

     28. This survey was conducted during the Fall 1998 quarter; the
     class, titled "American Popular Culture," was composed of 19
     students, 11 of which were "female," two "African American." The
     other questions, in addition to those already mentioned (i.e.,
     "Do you listen to rock?" and "Do you think rock, however one
     defines it, is still a viable form of music?"), were: "What is
     your favorite kind of music?," "What, for you, is an example of
     rock music?," and "Is rap a form of rock music?" Typical answers
     to these questions were, respectively, rock, pop, rap, and
     alternative; Beatles, Rolling Stones, Aerosmith, and Guns 'n'
     Roses; and "no" (e.g., "I think rap is a whole different genre").
     The majority of "negative" responses to the last question
     confirms Negus's observation about fans' sense of generic
     distinctions; as one student wrote about the difference between
     rap and rock: "A lot of music that is generalized (or promoted)
     as rock should fall under other categories."

     29. See Nehring, Flowers in the Dustbin.

     30. In the introduction to Dancing, Grossberg acknowledges that
     his "faith that rock is at the center of the relevant formations
     is probably more the result of [his] own position as a fan, and
     [his] particular generational identity as a baby boomer, heavily
     invested, in different ways and at different times and places, in
     rock" (15).

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Référence: http://jefferson.village.virginia.edu/pmc/text-only/issue.199/9.2miklitsch.txt