tarbox23 wrote:Personally, I have always loved the complete artistic confidence and even arrogance that comes across in interviews with stars like Kenya, Hook, Morrissey, et al --- it is punk rock to me. I love reading old New Order interviews from the 80s for the often outrageous Hooky comments.
I'd be quite happy not to read any more interviews by Hooky or Morrissey for the foreseeable future, the older days were different because they were (generally) better times for each musician. They've been saying the same thing over and over in interview for years and I don't need to read it a 50th or 60th time; Hooky feels shafted by "New Odour" while Morrissey feels woefully undervalued by record labels. Also, in comparison with their earlier days the wit and laugh-out-loud moments seem to have faded. Maybe it's because of their current bitter circumstance(s), they're getting older or
I'm getting older. Or all three. John Lydon's still very entertaining though.
tarbox23 wrote:And, seriously: do Hooky's interviews and recent comments affect how you perceive Joy Division songs? If like me, they do not, then why do you apply that same absurd standard to Kanye's music?[/size]
Lazy comparison. Joy Division were four people, one of them long deceased and the last time they were active was 33 years ago so why would Hooky's interviews nowadays impact my opinion? I listened to Ian Curtis interviews and he came across as a nice bloke. At worst I think Hooky bangs on about JD a bit much these days but generally I agree with him, they were a great band. Kanye West is one person very much writing and recording in the here and now so what he says impacts what people might think of him here and now. It's not an "absurd standard" it's a perfectly viable barometer for someone to gauge whether they should get into a musician's work or not.
We agree that a bit of cockiness and entertainment in interview is exciting but the trick is to intersperse it with some humour, wit and a dash of humility. If you've got proper charisma you can get away with saying outrageous things and people still like you; something New Order, Morrissey, John Lydon, Anthony H. Wilson etc generally do/did very well. West never has, it's just unchecked ego running a mock hence why South Park felt it necessary to take him down a peg or two. I bet he fucking hated it too.
Anyway this topic's veered way off course already. Nice sparring, Tarbox
Edited by user 19 September 2013 02:23:20(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified