David Byrne Offers Advice on How to Enjoy Music
What is it about place that makes music special? The rock star dissects what he enjoys about what he hears, from opera to jazz to radio hits
- By Seth Colter Walls
- Smithsonian.com, September 12, 2012, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
But I don’t think it was a unique moment. I think it happens a lot.
Still, you do lament the contemporary rise of the commercial radio conglomerate Clear Channel, which you basically blame for turning the mass airwaves into pablum. What affect do you think that has had on musical adventurousness?
People can find their way out of that walled-in thing. But it just makes it harder. You have to really go looking and make a decision that you’re walking away from that. Which is not just walking away from a radio station, it’s walking away from a social network. All your friends know those songs, and everybody hears this new song when it comes out. And if you’re walking away from that to go somewhere else, it’s kind of like you’re not sharing the values of your friends anymore.
That’s more difficult than just being curious, I think. The big kind of corporate cultural things kind of prey on that we’ll all be happy when we all like exactly the same things. [Laughs]
You mention in the book that the best-kept secret in the New York cultural scene is the bounty of fantastic Latin-American music here, which is hard to argue with.
It’s incredible. You know some of the best musicians of that style in the world are all here. But there’s this willful ignorance of all that; we don’t want to hear about that. There’s just this incredible richness of music, great popular stuff and great kind of sophisticated stuff. So I find there’s a kind of boundary there, [and] I crossed that boundary some years ago. And I alienated a lot of fans. But oh, whatever! [Laughs]
I don’t think you’ll find a lot of the bands in Brooklyn talking about [that music]. There might be more awareness of Xenakis and Ligeti and stuff like that.
What’s impressive is your optimism, throughout this book—even as you grapple with changes in musical culture that are disturbing or that the jury is still out on.
Byrne: To some extent, yeah. I want to accept things; I want to be realistic about what’s going on, and what’s being done to us and what’s changing. But I don’t want to just rule something out and say, oh it was better in the old days. That’s just death.
Interview has been condensed and edited.
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