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4Feb/105

Lemme See Yer Gavel

When, at age 20, I first started working at Freaks – the punk boutique formerly found on the East Village's renowned St. Mark's Place – my manager and I got into a conversation regarding embarrassment of one's own taste in music. Rob, who was in his 30s, told me he enjoyed the first wave of emo. I immediately responded “and you … openly admit that?” He explained that no one with a sense of self-worth should ever be ashamed of owning up to their taste. Who is anyone else to judge what you receive enjoyment from? Who worth knowing would peg an individual as a worthwhile human being based on how they like their pop music?

I can't say that conversation miraculously cleansed me of prejudice. I still harshly judge people based on their preferred genres (along with just about anything else), but I now have a little voice in the back of my head rendering me unable to ignore my own snobbery and constantly reminding me of my own guilty pleasures. I try to remember that someone who listens to – in my opinion – disposable trash may have tastes which are, for whatever reason, unrefined. Not everyone makes the time or the effort to sort through the reams of mediocre music out there. Or, god forbid, music might not be particularly important to them. I find my own habits an unreliable yardstick because I'm an obsessive, at best. If they have made conscious choices that do not meld with my own, I try to keep in mind that doing so is a respectable act in and of itself.

I guess what I'm trying to say is: listen to whatever you want and enjoy it all the same. And if you genuinely love music, feel absolutely free to be a snob! But a respectful snob. Turn your nose up at the music, not the individual inflicting it upon you.

As a sort of act of contrition for my by-gone days of judgmental prickdom (which some would say I am still smack in the middle of; all the more for writing the above) I present a guilty pleasure of which I can't get enough:

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  1. The party don’t stop til I walk in.

    I had my pretentious music-snob phase from 14-17. Keep in mind that I was an precocious kid with a reliable Internet connection and a shitty family that fueled genuine angst thanks to genuine Circumstances, so I educated myself fast. And then I worked at FYE for several months, and found myself bopping my head to just about everything. I think the real breakthrough came however, around age 19, when my metabolism caught up with me and I started working out. I realized that none of my pretentious bullshit music was halfway decent to work out to, and that everything I’d dismissed (and associated with everyone I hated in high school) was fantastic for it. Now that I’m in graduate school with two jobs, I actually have *A LIFE* and no time to sit online, posting on forums and discovering bands that just got started 5 hours ago. Nor am I interested in pseudo-intellectual nazel-gazing — I see enough of that working at and attending a college all day. I already know which artists are good for musical meat and potatoes, and right now, I just want some musical cotton candy to get me pumped up and make me smile.

    Oh, and I’m thoroughly obsessed with Gaga for various reasons. Doesn’t help that my sex life has oddly begun to mirror some of her songs.

  2. Ha, I meant to say “start”. Fuck, I’m tired.

    I kick ‘em to the curb unless they look like Mick Jagger.

  3. I think it’s perfectly fine to be such a snob, Y-man, as long as it’s acknowledge that you’re doing that as well, and aren’t the objective arbiter of what’s right and good.

    I wonder what it is about Lady Gaga which has “allowed” so many I know of as snobs (self-aware or not) to consider her at least a guilty pleasure.

  4. Is that Gunter from Gunther and the Sunshine Girls (oooh you touched my tra la la) fame?

  5. @Lauren Nope! It’s whoever the hell this guy is.


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