There are great albums that stand as
collections of the finest songwriting and performance that their makers have to
offer. There are great albums where the studio and production techniques have
been used as tools to take the basic musical material and transform it into
something greater than it was when performed in the studio itself. And then
there is this great album, which is neither of those things.
Negativland is an avant-garde group
- calling what they do “music” is stretching it; “audio-based art” is more
appropriate - founded in the Bay Area in the late 70s. In their recordings,
they find (and seek) audio from mass media, from field recordings, from pirate
radio signals, from sampling of existing records, and from myriad other sources
(yes, including actual music performed by the group sometimes) and make audio
collages - often referred to as the style known as “Plunderphonics” - that are
strange, funny, noisy, and particularly with this album, cuttingly satirical
about mass culture.
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“Helter Stupid” kicks off with a
prologue, mostly taken straight from a local news report that picked up their
story from the press release suggesting that a Minnesota murder investigation
may have ties to “Christianity Is Stupid,” seemingly without any questioning or
fact-checking, and ran with it as a lead story. The reporter flatly states
“They say federal authorities asked them to cancel a long-planned 17-city tour
and eliminate live performances until the conclusion of the investigation”
followed immediately by “Negativland’s music is highly critical of the mass media,
nuclear war, and handguns.” Only one of these statements is true. The group
then launches into its exploration of how the media exploits sensational
stories, about the oversaturation of media in our lives, and, as they say in
the liner notes, keeping in mind that “any media experience consists only of
one-way, edited representations of reality.” It’s a tour-de-force of audio art,
loaded with humor and an incisive view of TV's obsession with sensational
stories.
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The album follows their great, more
song-like Escape From Noise (which contains “Christianity Is Stupid” and
is highly recommended in its own right), and presages what might be their
greatest work, the U2 EP, which landed them on the receiving end of a
lawsuit from Island Records, U2, and Casey Kasem (who appears here repeatedly
throughout “The Perfect Cut”), and though it’s way out of print, is well worth
seeking out. But as an album, Helter Stupid stands as their finest work,
and one of the most entertaining and humorous examples of the intersection of
pop culture and avant-garde art out there.
-
Patrick Brown
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