On Tuesday this past
week, "Rekyavik Rocks" appeared on the cover of the New York Times.
Open to the Arts section and there was a large feature on the Icelandic
music scene, with lots of attention paid to Sigur Ros. I'm pleased to
see this, truly, as video outlets like MTV, VH-1, coupled with the
commercial radio outlets (mainly those posing as alternative) are
absent minded when it comes to fresh, exciting movements in new music.
It's nice that the New York Times will feature something like this, as
these budding scenes should not go unrecognized. Reading further
through the article, I'm somewhat disturbed when I find my former boss,
Leigh Lust quoted. Lust was my boss at Capitol in A&R, now he works
for Elektra in A&R, and he still doesn't get it. The man's a great
man, but he talks about how the Icelandic bands should collaborate with
English writers so their songs can be done in English, thus making them
more commercially viable abroad. Is he that much of a buffoon to think
that the people of Iceland don't already know English and choose to
sing in Icelandic?
Hearing somebody sing in their native tongue and
reading along with translated lyrics in a booklet is like watching a
foreign film with subtitles while having the songs re-done in English
is like watching a foreign film dubbed. A person like Lust has been so
involved inside the music biz for so long, that it seems he's forgotten
what art means. Score 1 for the NY Times, 0 for the major-label music
industry.
Sigur Ros on the cover of the NY Times(?)
- Written by: Staff
- Parent Category: Opinions & Editorials
- Category: Deep Thoughts
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