Being halfway 'round the world and therefore chronically nescient of au courant vagaries in the common culture - in just one recent example, I hardly knew young troubadour Robert Kelly had now moved into making the operetta "Trapped in the Closet" - word has only now reached my Oriental covert about the jesters contriving their own brand of chortles with the Yacht Rock project.
This serial manages to tickle, mauger low levels of thespian prowess and shoddy aural reproduction. But naught for mere irony nor reference back to former jukebox platters of our salad days. We, my compatriots, have swam into a new ken (forgive me, Keats) of "Heracles comedy" in which jokes cease to be things within themselves, but mere reflections upon the preposterous and astounding efforts of the creators. Just as Colossus at Rhodes bewildered ancient Greeks solely through an intimidation of size, our delight with Yacht Rock must stem from the makers' incredulous erudition about extremely unctuous popular songs (in their cant, "smooth") verdant in the mid 70s to the early 80s - including such bygone hitmakers as Steely Dan, the Doobie Brothers, Toto, Hall & Oates, and Loggins & Messina.
Whether it be rockist sensibilities denouncing all deviation from the traditional neo-lyre/bass-lyre/kettledrum arrangement or an objective disapprobation of the songs' hollow constructions, this genre has fallen out of favor, like Leon Czolgosz in Anarchist circles post-Buffalo, out of sight and mind, with nary a paladin coming forward to bequeath a posthumous legitimacy. First and foremost, unlike punk and prog and new wave, this Yacht Rock field created few scions in the fag end of the century. Not even a plash of this production vocabulary carried on into later musical evolutions, nor did bastards materialize to carry the tricot into the dawn without official blessing. A comparison to the "Soft Rock" of the 60s may be apropos, but the Grover Cleveland beards, overall malaise of the stagflated political and social climate, and embarrassing transgressions of the movement's alumni tend to put posterior eulogizing beyond the pale. (We now apperceive Kenny Loggins as the man sailing into the Top Gun "Danger Zone" - not as the dapper youngster on a docked yacht singing with Jim Messina.) For anyone with aught sense of risibility, Christopher Cross would be the butt of myriad jokes - if we could remember who in Hades he was!
Indeed I laugh at the queerness of the "smooth" oeuvres and their newfound classification - a celebration of our Linnean prowess to attribute sporadic cases of a terse past outbreak as a new strain of consumption, dengue, or impetigo. But moreover, I go goobers over the very idea of excess knowledge about the mundane, that someone out in the world would fashion and form plot details based on true-life Yacht Rock trivia - e.g., that Van Halen was produced by the Doobie Brothers' producer, a morsel used in Episode Nine. Bully to anyone who can remember that Michael McDonald was mercilessly pommeled on SCTV and then employ this historical crumb to attribute human motivations for Toto "pacifying" Michael Jackson with "Human Nature."
In our futurity, we may decline to relish craft, and instead, rejoice from these new International-Network wonders of the human spirit. Yacht Rock's Toto may not be funny in toto, but the idea of such blithe dedication to forlorn music may keep us exulting in the morrow.
either this is brilliant golden shovel work or I really have no idea wtf you are talking about.
Posted by: Chris_B at June 7, 2006 9:20 PMSo what makes this work (look at these funny-looking dorks and their intense passion for bad music) is a lot like what makes gaijin tarento successful (look at this funny-looking dork speak our useless language!). The audience simultaneously pities and stands in awe of the performers in each case.
Anyway, I kind of forgot how much Van Halen ruled.
Posted by: adamu at June 8, 2006 1:29 AMWow you finally shut up the regular commenters... not even Momus is weighing in this time! Does that mean you've won?
Posted by: Adamu at June 8, 2006 10:21 AMDon't egg them on. They will find my hell-bound chauvinism somewhere in these words.
Posted by: marxy at June 8, 2006 10:31 AMThe reason I'm not commenting is that Japan-related stuff is the common ground I can have with Marxy; when he does his "American" stuff, the old chestnut about Britain and the US being "two nations divided by a common language" rings true.
For instance, I'm sure Marxy wouldn't comment on a story I ran about Brian Appleyard, a character played by British comedian John Shuttleworth. Appleyard is a rock sociologist, fixated on the 70s, who makes up unlikely stories about the origins of things like prog rock and stagediving. In other words, he's doing a British version of the Yacht Rock concept, and he's been doing it for at least five years. And yet, humour being such a culturally-rooted thing, I doubt Marxy would chuckle much at Appleyard, just as I wouldn't chuckle much at Yacht Rock.
Posted by: Momus at June 8, 2006 8:39 PMOK watched a few of those videos and tried to reread what you wrote. I still dont get it. That guy doesnt look old enough to be nostalgic for this music. Is this kitch? A craving for retro of ones older brother? Whats with the yacht schtick anyways?
The only thing I related to on this the fact that the very first instance of digitzed audio I ever heard was a Van Halen clip that someone had encoded on an Apple ][ floppy. I guess its great that people can make things put it on the net and find other people who enjoy it.
momus, I'm american and I dont get this so maybe its not just cultural, maybe its just funny for some people.
Posted by: Chris_B at June 8, 2006 10:14 PMThe host guy is a music journalist (who murders homeless women), so he's sort of paid to be a nerd about this stuff.
If you don't get it, maybe you just haven't spent enough time in American supermarkets or among people who actually like this shit to appreciate the legacy of "smooth" music (I found myself starting to like James Taylor after a few weeks on the night shift at Stop n Shop). Marxy is right that there was never a Yacht Rock revival, but it's certainly not without its fans (mostly at the Muzak Corporation it would seem).
If Kenny Loggins and Hall & Oats were actually like that maybe it would help explain why their lame-ass music was so popular.
Posted by: adamu at June 9, 2006 4:02 AMYacht Rock is THE JAM.
Posted by: Rory P. Wavekrest at June 9, 2006 12:00 PM