Noise/Experimental Rock in the Digital Era
William Sundwick
I didn’t realize, until doing some research, that today’s
popular music streaming services are at least partially owned by the
traditional major
record labels – Sony, Universal, Warner. While Internet streaming can, theoretically,
be a path for “DIY
music,” the exposure of the
services to placement of bands signed with major labels is inescapable. There
are also “artist
aggregators,” like CDBaby and TuneCore, who will charge artists an
annual subscription fee, or per-track fee, to handle digital distribution – becoming,
in effect, streaming labels.
Apparently, digital music streaming, now the primary means
of distribution for new bands, has altered the history of rock music. True,
indie labels and DIY all have some access to the streaming services, but not
all access is equal. Changing fashions are still dictated by major labels.
Today’s biggest pop music trends are hip-hop and EDM (electronic dance music). How does anything that used to
be called “alternative” or “experimental” get played?
It will likely be a major label that determines whose music
gets promoted. Indie labels try to compete, but the market segmentation of
audiences that existed for AM/FM terrestrial radio has largely disappeared,
replaced by Sirius/XM and Pandora who have services based on genre “channels”. But
Spotify, Apple and Amazon (the biggest streaming services) do not. Hence, the
majors promoting artists by name once again have all the market clout.
Alternative rock has now become a meaningless category.
Perhaps all “genres” have disappeared, leading some critics to claim that rock,
itself, is dead.
Yet, new bands keep coming. They all have been inspired by some
previous artist. Their motivation can be creative just as much as commercial.
Two very different bands, both legitimately rock-oriented, both artistic, have
sprung up in this new digital distribution environment. AWOLNATION (they prefer
all caps) and Deaf Wish have chosen to pursue separate styles, while tracing their
lineage from former rock genres that an aging aficionado like me can appreciate.
They are both edgy, if not truly angry. Aaron Bruno’s AWOLNATION mixes Bruce
Springsteen’s “industrial” rock ballad sound with a predominately EDM beat, and
Australia’s Deaf Wish emerges directly from noise and metal, from Sonic Youth/Velvet
Underground roots.
AWOLNATION
Bruno signed early with Red Bull Records, an indie label,
and released his first AWOLNATION album, Megalithic Symphony, in 2011 (a megalith
is a very large rock). One single from the album, Sail, went
platinum. It gave the band early visibility (along with their label). It has since
been licensed for TV commercials, and some dramatic TV series episodes. It’s a
straight-up rock ballad, “Blame it on my ADD baby” is the chorus – apparently a
personal reference for Bruno. But, the tone is clearly one of struggle, whether
from ADD, or some unnamed cause. “Maybe I should kill myself” appears in one
line. Heavy bass, driving beat, all electronic – good for slow dancing, with a labored
tempo. Yes, it’s angry. “Maybe I’m a different breed.”
Three other tracks on that first album illustrate the
group’s range. Reviewers attribute the “group” to being basically Aaron
Bruno “and friends.” It is firmly in the EDM tradition -- all
production, little solo artistry. Burn It Down and Soul
Wars use drums as the foundation for the beat, simple rhyming
lyrics, rapper style in Burn It Down, punk style in Soul Wars. Both songs have
very fast tempos, hard to imagine them as dance music, but perhaps that’s
because I don’t know what dances look like anymore!
Burn It Down’s first verse starts:
“If you’re feeling like I feel then run your life like it’s
a dance floor/And if you need a little heat in your face, that’s what I’m here
for”
and second verse:
“If you’re feeling like I feel throw your fist through the
ceiling/Some people call it crazy well I call it healing”
chorus:
“So burn it down, burn it down.”
This is EDM as it’s meant to be! Soul Wars uses a similar
drum-based format for the rapid-fire beat, but substitutes a whiter vocal
style, reminiscent of old-time rock-and-roll, like Jerry Lee Lewis. In fact, it’s
probably inspired by Bruce Springsteen. The chorus, “I’m on fire,” is a famous
Springsteen song title, which AWOLNATION covered for the sound track of the
2015 film, Fifty Shades of Grey.
Finally, Jump on My Shoulders
explores a secondary AWOLNATION theme, Christian allegory. It may have been a
commercial gamble, as Mumford and Sons, and Robert Plant’s Band of Joy made their appearances at about the same time, but it is
present on AWOLNATION’s third album, Here
Come the Runts, as well.
The song begins:
“There’s a mad man looking at you/And he wants to take your
soul./There’s a mad man with a mad plan/And he’s dancing at your door. Oh/What
to do, oh …”
then:
“There’s a mad man with a mad plan/And he waits for us to
stumble.”
Soon we hear the chorus:
“Oh, but our eyes are open/Yeah, they’re really open/(Five,
four, three, two, one)/I say we rob from the rich/And blow down the door./On to
the next/To dance with the poor./Jump on my shoulders./You can jump on my
shoulders.”
Not angry music here, but joyful -- a real change.
Here Come the Runts,
AWOLNATION’s latest album, was released last February. It opens with the title
track, a theatrical zombie march of runts, martial in tone – you can
visualize them coming over a hilltop on the horizon, in formation. It’s an
invasion of runts! But, in the end, “Okay I am a runt/Baby you are a runt/Baby
we are the runts” – indeed! It makes a great electronic pump for the rest of
the album.
Three short tracks
illustrate the experimental nature of the album, compared to their earlier
work, and to most of what we hear in the mainstream pop choices. Sound
Witness System is a very short rap number (2:22), with electronic
finish, almost a sound check, but unquestionably qualified as avant garde in my
book. Cannonball and Tall
Tall Tale are conventional punk and heavy metal tracks,
respectively. Cannonball reminds me of The Ramones, but with an “E” for
explicit lyrics (hence, listen at your own risk). Yes, obscenity is anger, and
is still avant-garde in pop music. Tall Tall Tale grabs the heavy metal baton, even
featuring a synthesizer in a few bewitching chords. These tracks make AWOLNATION’s third studio
album far more adventurous than the relatively cautious, mainstream Megalithic Symphony. Is this where
they’re going? I hope so!
They can do “pretty,” too. A wonderful slow dance number,
perhaps another Springsteen inspired creation, also appears on this album. I
consider Seven Sticks of Dynamite
to be possibly their finest piece ever. Listen:
“Who wants to dance who wants to slow dance”
“Lipstick like dynamite, seven sticks of dynamite”
and, finally:
“Fuse the morning, fuse the night/Give me seven sticks of
dynamite.”
A brilliant song, suspenseful, mysterious, sweet, catchy
tune, but ending with an amped up electronic flourish. If this represents a new
genre of rock music, I’m in!
Deaf Wish
From their home in Melbourne, Australia, Deaf Wish has come
into the streaming community by signing with alternative music icon, Sub Pop
– still an indie label, technically, but much bigger than Red Bull Records.
This band traces its style directly back to Sonic Youth and noise
rock. They take heavy metal
and gift it with cacophonous noise in place of a simple punk-style beat.
And, the lyrics are very angry. Sub Pop may have been
reminded of Nirvana when they signed Deaf Wish.
Two tracks from Lithium
Zion, their fifth studio album (second with Sub Pop) are Easy
and FFS. Both are characterized
by monotone electronic feedback for the rhythm line, nihilistic lyrics sung by
Jensen Tjhung in the former song, Sarah Hardiman the latter. The duo,
much like Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore and Kim Gordon, have a darker outlook on
life, depressed and angry (like Kurt Cobain?). Their first Sub Pop album, Pain, was even more brutal – as heard in
Dead
Air -- here, Hardiman mouths the only vocalization of the entire
6-minute track at its opening:
”In my heart there is blood, in my heart there is only
blood.”
The remainder is all electronic feedback – noise, in the
best SY tradition, or perhaps Lou Reed’s Metal Machine Music.
The band entered the world strictly as a new noise group, with their 2014
single, St. Vincent’s.
They were consciously in the mold of Sonic Youth which had disbanded three
years earlier.
It’s good to know that somebody still finds this kind of
music worthy of production. And, it’s good to know that a label as established
as Sub Pop is willing to take a chance on them.
When I first conceived the pages for Warp & Woof, in early 2017, I defined the “Beats” page as an
exploration of the music I liked, which I asserted in my original Welcome
piece had ceased to be created at least ten years earlier. I was wrong. I have since
discovered both AWOLNATION and Deaf Wish. There is great “alternative” and
“experimental” rock still being produced. It is not even that hard to find!
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