{"title":"Reconfiguring authenticity: Eurythmics and the aesthetics of new pop","authors":"S. Hill","doi":"10.1386/ts_00019_1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This article looks at how the British pop culture of the 1980s changed the way authenticity was conceptualized in popular music. I will argue that ‘new pop’ and the televisual aesthetic of MTV challenged the division between British and American codes of authenticity. This distinction is marked by the use of the term rock in America, to describe popular music of generalizable importance, of which authenticity is the key talisman. By contrast, in the United Kingdom, pop is less of a pejorative term, and the preference for authentic modes of address is tempered by the playful sensibility of the carnivalesque. As a barometer of this, I will be focusing on the work of the British duo Eurythmics, whose creative output spanned the decade, and for whom MTV was pivotal in breaking the American market. In particular, I will suggest that the band’s propensity to bend genre as well as gender, positioned North American ‘rock’ as a contingent discourse: a free-floating signifier around which competing notions of authenticity coalesce. In this direction, the terms rock and pop can also be read against discourses linked to both sexuality and national identity. Indeed, the Britishness of Eurythmics and the camp sensibility of their music videos are central to how rock authenticity is re-positioned as a more plural construct. Emblematic of this paradox of authenticity is both the duality of Dave Stewart and Annie Lennox’s identity as Eurythmics and the diversity of their musical output. Encoded in this are some very specific strategies for listening that draw upon the legacy of British Art schools in the 1950s and the Independent Group. Revisiting this legacy is pivotal therefore in understanding how 1980s pop music culture reverberates in the twenty-first century. The pertinence of the work is underscored by the induction of Eurythmics into the US Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2022.","PeriodicalId":326068,"journal":{"name":"Soundtrack, The","volume":"14 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Soundtrack, The","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1386/ts_00019_1","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
This article looks at how the British pop culture of the 1980s changed the way authenticity was conceptualized in popular music. I will argue that ‘new pop’ and the televisual aesthetic of MTV challenged the division between British and American codes of authenticity. This distinction is marked by the use of the term rock in America, to describe popular music of generalizable importance, of which authenticity is the key talisman. By contrast, in the United Kingdom, pop is less of a pejorative term, and the preference for authentic modes of address is tempered by the playful sensibility of the carnivalesque. As a barometer of this, I will be focusing on the work of the British duo Eurythmics, whose creative output spanned the decade, and for whom MTV was pivotal in breaking the American market. In particular, I will suggest that the band’s propensity to bend genre as well as gender, positioned North American ‘rock’ as a contingent discourse: a free-floating signifier around which competing notions of authenticity coalesce. In this direction, the terms rock and pop can also be read against discourses linked to both sexuality and national identity. Indeed, the Britishness of Eurythmics and the camp sensibility of their music videos are central to how rock authenticity is re-positioned as a more plural construct. Emblematic of this paradox of authenticity is both the duality of Dave Stewart and Annie Lennox’s identity as Eurythmics and the diversity of their musical output. Encoded in this are some very specific strategies for listening that draw upon the legacy of British Art schools in the 1950s and the Independent Group. Revisiting this legacy is pivotal therefore in understanding how 1980s pop music culture reverberates in the twenty-first century. The pertinence of the work is underscored by the induction of Eurythmics into the US Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2022.
这篇文章着眼于20世纪80年代的英国流行文化如何改变了流行音乐中真实性的概念。我想说的是,“新流行音乐”和MTV的电视美学挑战了英国和美国对真实性的区分。这种区别的标志是在美国使用“摇滚”一词来描述具有普遍重要性的流行音乐,真实性是其关键的护身符。相比之下,在英国,流行不是一个贬义的词,人们对真实的称呼方式的偏好被嘉年华式的戏谑情感所缓和。作为这方面的晴雨表,我将把重点放在英国双人组合Eurythmics的作品上,他们的创意成果跨越了十年,对他们来说,MTV是打入美国市场的关键。特别是,我认为乐队倾向于扭曲流派和性别,将北美“摇滚”定位为一种偶然的话语:一种自由浮动的能指,围绕着它,相互竞争的真实性概念融合在一起。在这个方向上,“摇滚”和“流行”这两个词也可以被解读为与性和民族身份相关的话语。的确,体操的英国性和音乐视频的坎普感性是摇滚真实性如何被重新定位为一种更多元的结构的核心。Dave Stewart和Annie Lennox作为体操运动员的双重身份,以及他们音乐输出的多样性,都是这种真实性悖论的象征。其中包含了一些非常具体的倾听策略,这些策略借鉴了20世纪50年代英国艺术学校和独立团体的遗产。因此,重新审视这一遗产对于理解20世纪80年代流行音乐文化如何在21世纪产生影响至关重要。艺术体操将于2022年入选美国摇滚名人堂(US Rock and Roll Hall of Fame),这突显了这项工作的针对性。