Friday 15 February 2013

The Surface of the Moon



Scratched CD (image from wikipedia)


So I wanted to write something about Neil young’s Harvest Moon, a record that I’ve become peculiarly attached to over the past couple of years. I say peculiarly not because the album isn’t generally highly thought of (it is), but because I tend to have a pretty low tolerance for bluesy, folksy Americana with lyrics about Harleys, hound dogs, and prairie grass. So why do I like this LP? I think it’s because, while it initially comes across as ‘timeless’ and ‘effortless’ (or, as a more cynical listener might say, rote and generic) you can, if you listen more closely, hear Young wilfully and not always successfully struggling to divorce himself from the here and now, an effort which invests the record with a weird tension that I find both fascinating and moving. When Young claims he’s just doing what comes naturally (‘Here I am with this old guitar / Doing what I do’) he’s being at once basically truthful and deeply disingenuous, and the graft that’s gone into making everything sound assured, serene and spontaneous imbues what might otherwise have seemed like a pastiche with a King Canute-type pathos.

As wikipedia will tell you, Harvest Moon is generally considered a sequel to 1972’s Harvest, and was recorded in the early ‘90s, in the wake of a bout of tinnitus Young incurred while cementing his status as patron saint of grunge. Heard out of context, however, you’d probably think it dated from around the same time as Harvest - indeed, I’ve had conversations with people who love and have long owned the record but had no idea that it was released in 1992. For one thing, this presumably means they missed out on the superb photo of Young and band in the booklet packaged with the CD version I have (which photo I tragically can’t find online): not only is everyone looking pretty ravaged, but the preponderance of tie dyed tees and denim cut offs locates us squarely in the 1990s. For another, it suggests they haven’t listened too closely to the lyrics: opener Hank to Hendrix, for example, namedrops Madonna (‘From Marilyn to Madonna / I always loved your smile / Now we’re heading for the big divorce / California style’).

The Madge reference highlights the tension that make the album so interesting for me: is la Ciccone being conjured as avatar of all that’s wrong with contemporary culture (as she is in Roger Kimball’s adorably flustered postscript to Tenured Radicals), or is Young positing an equivalence? Does the comparison impose continuity on pop cultural history (yesterday, Marilyn; today Madonna - plus ca change, plus c’est la meme chose), or is it meant to describe a trajectory from the authentic to the ersatz? Such moments highlight the contradictions inherent in adopting a reactionary stance* - the problem, for example, of reconciling the desire to believe certain things are natural and essential and will always be with the conviction that right now we’re going to hell in a handbasket - and disrupt the attempt to keep things cosily nostalgic. We become uncomfortably aware that someone probably had to invent Harley Davidsons and guitars at some point; that they used to be - ugh! - new.

Speaking of technology, later in Hank to Hendrix there’s a verse that I can only hear in terms of Young’s notorious antipathy to digital music formats (so inveterate is Young’s hatred of CD and MP3 that he’s begun touting his own file format, ‘Pono’ - named, naturally, for the Hawaiian word for “righteousness”). It goes:

Sometime it's distorted
Not clear to you
Sometimes the beauty of love
Just comes ringin' through.

The same theme’s engaged in more explicit terms in the closing track, Natural Beauty. Here which Young sings about having ‘heard a perfect echo die / into an anonymous wall of digital sound’ before asserting ‘a natural beauty should be preserved like a monument to nature.’ It’s here that the consonance between what’s happening sonically (the desire to create something hushed, pure and lilting, catalysed by tinnitus and rendered tougher by the quavering reediness of the ageing Young’s vox) and what’s happening lyrically/thematically (the desire to conjure a mythic never-never-America, compromised by Young’s inability to avoid references that locate us in the abject present) are strongest.

Ironically, what the results most remind me of is a hard disk drive - a device that, incidentally, has more in common with a ‘proper’ analogue record player than you might think. Sealed off in a hermetic container in the bowels of the computer, the HDD comprises a series of platters made from highly finished aluminium or silicon, onto which data is written in clusters comparable in size to blood cells and anthrax spores. Read by drive heads that skim micrometres above them on cushions of air, these platters are exquisitely vulnerable to smudges, scratches and faults - and in this respect they resemble Young’s artfully evoked fantasy USA. Listen carefully (as a paranoid audiophile, searching for evidence of digital signal compression, might) and a series of flaws - the catches in Young’s voice, the ‘anachronistic’ references to digital media and MTV - compromise the comforting idea it’s still 1972, tarnishing the illusion.

The effect is strangely reminiscent of Borges’ story Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote - an account of a writer who attempts not merely to translate or copy Cervantes’ masterpiece, but to recreate it ‘word for word and line for line.’ For Borges’ narrator, Menard’s 20th century Don Quixote ‘infinitely richer’ than Cervantes’ (identical) 1602 version. This is because what are, in the mouth of a seventeenth century Spaniard, mere rhetorical commonplaces, doxa and formulae, become, coming from ‘a contemporary of William James,’ audacious, ‘astounding’ conceits. Likewise, to release Harvest in 1972 is one thing, but to release Harvest Moon in 1992 is quite another. While I’m aware that championing futile acts of heroism is an activity with dubiously conservative overtones, I find I’m with Borges when it comes to which is more fascinating.




*Young’s, of course, traditionally been way too interested in and conflicted about the technologically and culturally new to be tagged as a straight up luddite (witness Trans)...



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