The Artist as Tortured Genius

Image from http://www.wiw.pl/biblioteka/muzyka_cook/04.as

What really pisses me off is this idea that I am this tortured artist. That is something based on flimsy evidence which is endlessly being projected back onto us. It is just reductive and dull. In order to be creative there has to be a distance from you and the thing itself. It is only when the distance gets confused that things go wrong. If you actually start to believe that you are what you write, then you have f***ing had it. You have had it and you ain't coming back. To assume that everything is about somebody's life is to assume that that person is inherently stupid and isn't capable of absorbing anything else. The whole point of creativity is that you spend your whole life absorbing things almost to where it is unbearable. The way you deal with it is (to) get out.

-Thom Yorke of Radiohead, in an interview with Pulse, quoted in Kid A by Marvin Lin.

The media has created an image of Thom Yorke as tortured artist and genius. They have done this with a wide range of people, from Phil Collins to Mozart, and are moving beyond Beethoven to others like Schubert, and including performers (Glenn Gould comes to mind, as does the craze around David Helfgott when Shine came out about 10 years ago).By Goldberg ((Goldberg)), via Wikimedia Commons

Do we need to have this mystique of the artist/performer as a tortured soul to help explain their music, to give it some authenticity? Why are we continuously attracted to this story, even though historians have shown that Mozart and Beethoven, for example, weren't as tormented as we believe?

Lady Gaga has said that "Music is a lie. It is a lie. Art is a lie." Is that any different than what Thom Yorke said? Should we, as artists and performers, believe that art is a lie?

Share your thoughts below!

Related post: Is Lady Gaga Wrong? (Is art a lie?)

Compared to What - Dee Dee Bridgewater

By Alexandra Spürk (Alexi) (Own work), via Wikimedia Commons

One of the things I like about YouTube is its suggested viewing list. I don't even remember what I was watching yesterday when I saw the following suggested to me: the Vietnam-era protest song "Compared to What" in a great video by Dee Dee Bridgewater.

It's probably better-known in the version by Les McCann, and was also recorded by Roberta Flack and more recently by John Legend and the Roots, but I like this version for the story told through the mix of 2D and 3D pictures. And, of course, Ms Bridgewater is amazing.

Musical Advent Calendar Christmas Day Bonus

My Mission: One holiday-themed, non-carol song every day between now & Christmas. It's my own version of an Advent calendar. I may succeed, I may fail, but there will at least be some good music posted ... music you won't hear at the mall, that hopefully won't make you end up looking like him. ----->

Christmas Day Bonus: "This Little Babe" from A Ceremony of Carols by Benjamin Britten. (A Ceremony of Carols was written for treble voices and harp; this movement is based on a text from the late 16th century.)

(You can see previous songs here. Email me or comment below if you have a tune suggestion!)

Musical Advent Calendar, Day 25: Joy

My Mission: One holiday-themed, non-carol song every day between now & Christmas. It's my own version of an Advent calendar. I may succeed, I may fail, but there will at least be some good music posted ... music you won't hear at the mall, that hopefully won't make you end up looking like him. ----->

(image via www.bostonherald.com)December 25th - Merry Christmas & Happy Holidays! "Joy," Mvt III from Awakening by Joseph Curiale. (See also a YouTube video of concert band transcription.)

Best wishes to everyone for a safe, happy, and blessed holiday season!

(You can see previous songs here. Email me or comment below if you have a tune suggestion!)

Musical Advent Calendar Christmas Eve Bonus

My Mission: One holiday-themed, non-carol song every day between now & Christmas. It's my own version of an Advent calendar. I may succeed, I may fail, but there will at least be some good music posted ... music you won't hear at the mall, that hopefully won't make you end up looking like him. ----->

(image via wikipedia.org)Your Christmas Eve Bonus: "Turkey Lurkey Time" from Promises, Promises, by Burt Bacharach & Hal David. (This performance is taken from their Tony Awards performance. Make sure you watch the version from the campy film Camp, which is almost completely true to the original choreography, and where I first fell in love with this song. See below for some great commentary on it from Seth Rudetsky.)

You also can't pass up Seth Rudetsky's great deconstruction of the above film clip:

(You can see previous songs here. Email me or comment below if you have a tune suggestion!)