|
John Leland,
author of
Hip:
The History
_____________________________________________
John Leland's Hip: The History is the story of an American obsession.
Derived from the Wolof word hepi or hipi ("to see," or "to open one's eyes"),
which came to America with West African Slaves, hip is the dance between
black and white -- or insider and outsider -- that gives America its unique
flavor and rhythm. It has created fortunes, destroyed lives and shaped the
way millions of us talk, dress, dance, make love or see ourselves in the
mirror. Everyone knows what hip is.
Leland tells the story of how we got here. Hip: The History draws
the connections between Walt Whitman and Richard Hell, or Raymond Chandler
and Snoop Dogg. It slinks among the pimps, hustlers, outlaws, junkies,
scoundrels, white negroes, Beats, geeks, beboppers and other hipsters who
crash the American experiment, and without whom we might all be listening
to show tunes.
Along the way, Hip: The History looks at hip's quest for authenticity,
which binds millions of us together in a paradoxical desire to be different.
Because, as George Clinton said, "You can't fake the funk." #
Leland pariticipates in a January 3, 2005 discussion about how an underground
idea -- "hip" -- has shaped American culture.
Interview Topics
Was writing this book an act of hip?
The origin of the word hip
The elements of hip
The importance of everyday
hipsters
The gender of hip is female
The layers of
the intellectual framework of hip
Bohemia's first outpost
The Golden Age of Hip
The civil rights movment and
hip
Pulp fiction
and private eyes as early models of hip
The hipster's fear of
domesticity
The early cartoons as
a vehicle for hip
The connection of hip
and dangerous drugs
The marketing of hip
Expressing hip through the
Internet
The immediate future of hip
About John Leland
Marlon
1966
by Andy Warhol
_____
"For something that is by definition subjective, hip is astoundingly uniform
across the population. It is the beatitude of Thelonious Monk at the piano,
or the stoic brutality of Lou Reed and the Velvet Underground, performing
songs of drugs and sadomasochism as a projector flashed Andy Warhol's films
on their black turtlenecks. It is the flow of Jack Kerouac's 'bop prosody'
or Lenny Bruce's jazz-out satire, or the rat-a-tat tattoo of James Ellroy's
elevated pulp lit. Walt Whitman was hip; Lord Buckley was hip; Karen O of
the Yeah Yeah Yeahs is too hip for her own good. Hip is the way Miles Davis
talked, dressed, played or just stood -- and the way Bob Dylan, after his
own style, followed in kind (though both men strayed into injudicious leather
in the 1980's). The streets of Williamsburg in Brooklyn or Silver Lake in
Los Angeles comprise a theme park in the key of hip. Its gaze is the knowing,
raised eyebrow of Dawn Powell or Kim Gordon, bassist in the downtown band
Sonic Youth - skeptical but not unkind."
- John Leland
*
- Listen to Chet Baker play,
Let's Get Lost
_____________________________________________
JJM Writing your book, Hip: The History,
was quite an endeavor. To have an opinion about who or what is hip and who
or what isn't is one thing, but to create a volume of work around it and
successfully articulate its path is quite another. Was writing this book
an act of hip?
JL I don't know. It might have been an act
of unhip, because it asks a lot of the questions we tend not to ask in everyday
life. What is hip? How do we feel about it? Where does it come from? We don't
ask these questions because it would be unhip to ask them. So, maybe writing
the book is the antithesis of being hip. I didn't feel very hip as I was
writing it.
JJM In a way, though, part of the beauty of
the hipster is their constant interest in growing as an individual through
enlightenment, a function your book serves.
JL I hope the book does that. I hope it is
informative, and I hope it gets people to think. I want it to be provocative
in that sense -- to probe and provoke thought -- and to question this thing
that is in our lives and has strange effects on us. It affects the way we
think about musicians and it affects what we listen to. It also affects the
way we view the self-destruction of many of the people we look up to. It
affects so many other things as well; the way we talk, the sunglasses we
choose to wear, how we dress
JJM And who markets products to us as well.
JL Yes, and who markets them to us and how.
| JJM
In the introduction to your book, you wrote, "Clarence Major, in his
study Juba to Jive: A Dictionary of African-American Slang, traces
the origins of hip to the Wolof verb hepi ("to see") or hipi ("to open one's
eyes") and dates its usage in America to the 1700's. So from the linguistic
start, hip is a term of enlightenment, cultivated by slaves from the West
African nations of Senegal and coastal Gambia." This has been questioned
by Jesse Sheidlower, editor-at-large of the Oxford English Dictionary,
who believes that etymology is incorrect -- that the origin of the word "hip"
is actually unknown, but that it first appeared at the turn of the century.
Finding the origins of this word couldn't have been very easy. How did you
determine the accuracy of hip's origins?
JL Sheidlower is right in one sense, that
there is disagreement among etymologists about the origins of the word. I
looked at what there was, and found that the Wolof etymology made the most
sense. It is sort of disappointing that Sheidlower doesn't present any
information or any evidence for his criticism and for his claim. Otherwise,
I thought it was a respectful piece, and I quite liked it. I love arguing
over the nitty-gritty of words, but I felt that there was an important story
here, which is the influence and the transit and the changes of African elements
in American life that tend to be unexamined or operate below the surface.
JJM Right, and how we borrow from it, or some
would even say steal from it.
JL That's right, and by denying the African
origins of this word, we were, in a way, repeating that story.
JJM
What elements form the foundation of hip?
JL The main element is the peculiar enlightenment
of the outsider. Again, I go back to that word, "hipi" or "hepi," meaning
"to see or to open your eyes," which comes from the Wolof tribe of West Africa.
Who uses this word first? It is the ultimate outsider group, the enslaved
Africans, who use it to communicate with one another in the presence of the
mainstream population -- the white people. It then gets borrowed and stolen
and used by white people for their own purposes. They in turn are parodied
by the Africans for their own purposes. So, what is hip in all this? It is
the enlightenment of the outsider, and that sense of borrowing and crossing
over into knowledge that you are not supposed to have or use. Those are the
basic building blocks of hip. |
Library of Congress
Former slaves, 1862
"Blacks imitating and fooling whites, whites imitating and stealing
from blacks, blacks reappropriating and transforming what has been stolen,
whites making yet another foray on black styles, and on and on: this is
American popular culture."
- Cultural historian Ann Douglas
*
Emancipated slaves
"For slave owners, who worried about what slaves were saying, it
was important to try to follow each coinage; this, in turn, prodded blacks
to invent still newer codes. This process goes on today; it is the essence
of hip invention."
- John Leland
_____
I Don't Mind The Weather If The Wind Don't Blow , by Jim Henry |
photo by Matt
Pinto
"
a vast unorganized array of discrete individuals who live
and think differently from the mainstream but who participate in its daily
activities."
- Harvard historian Eugene Taylor's definition of America's
shadow culture
*
Lou Reed
"Only a small fraction of the population at any time lives in full
commitment to hip; for most of us, work, school, family, rehab or the alarm
clock gets in the way."
- John Leland
_____
Walk On The Wild Side , by Lou Reed |
JJM What is the difference between "cool"
and "hip?"
JL The terms are used pretty interchangeably,
so it is almost pedantry to think there is a difference between them. They
do have different roots. If we say that "hip" comes from this word meaning
"to see" or "to open your eyes," it is a kind of enlightenment. "Cool" is
a behavior arising from that, or hiding it. Robert Farris Thompson at Yale
traces across these African linguistic spectrums and found that "cool" is
a kind of non-reactive behavior.
JJM
While reading your book, I constantly tried to define what and
who is or isn't hip. Frankly, some of the people you define in your
book as being hip -- Lou Reed, for example -- are not particularly hip from
my view of the world. So, making this determination seems all so arbitrary
and probably based on our own personal childhood experiences. Do you remember
who you considered to be hip when you were a kid, and do you still look for
the characteristics these people had in who you consider to be hip today?
JL I think the folks I named as my heroes,
the anti-hero type, Joe Pepitone, Walt Frazier, Muhammad Ali, Joe Namath,
were who I considered to be hip.
JJM Sure, these guys had characteristics that
many of us would consider hip. In fact, do you remember when Namath's hair
got so long that it used to hang out the back of his helmet, and how cool
that looked?
JL Yes.
JJM Okay, but what I mean to ask is, was there
anyone on the playground of your school, for example, who may have dressed
differently or had certain characteristics you would now define as being
hip, and how important are those people to us when we define who is hip in
the wider culture?
JL Very important. They should always be
the ones who we think of as being hip, rather than the public figures I write
about. Celebrities are convenient subjects because I can talk about Lou Reed,
for example, in a way I can't talk about Pete Brock, a boy I went to grammar
school with who I thought was pretty hip. Yes, public figures are useful
in telling this story because most people -- no matter where they are --
know who Lou Reed is, but we cross paths with people in our everyday lives
who are easily defined as "hip." They are real people we work with or live
down the street from but who never have time to talk to us because they are
too busy doing something cool we wish we could a part of. There are certainly
instances where many of the people we considered to be hip in our junior
high school never got beyond that peak. That was as hip as they ever got. |
| JJM
You wrote, "If hip has a gender, it is female." Can you
explain that?
JL I want to be careful to not make
generalizations about the female sex when I answer this. The idea of femininity
is a kind of construct we all deal with. What is "hip?" It is something
to be looked at, which is a feminine quality. I am not saying that women
are to be looked at, but I am saying that femininity makes most sense when
it is looked at and appreciated. Hip has a mystique to it, and it speaks
with double meaning. Hip is comfortable with the idea of image as value,
and that is a part of this construction of femininity that we have, and it
is opposed to the way we think of masculinity.
JJM You wrote, "The hip felicities -- the uncapped
solos of bebop and hip-hop, the gnostic blur of the Lost Generation and the
Beat generation, the indie purism of Chapel Hill or Olympia, the altered
consciousness of the drug culture -- all built on the principles they threw
down." The "they" you refer to are Emerson, Thoreau, Whitman and Melville.
How did these writers lay down the intellectual framework of hip?
JL Think about some of the things they said
about nonconformity as a formal ideal; they believed in respect for the
individual rather than the collective needs. Also, there was a sense of eroticism
in their work, and they valued nature and independence. They felt America
had its own rough-hewn street language, and they valued that over the formal
language.
JJM The church was so important in that era.
You suggest that the sermons of the nineteenth century served to inspire
hipsters.
JL The preachers of the nineteenth century
worked the frontier. Because they traveled from town to town, they were often
the people who brought information and news to communities. They created
a transition from the upright, puritan style with which the nation had begun,
to a more flamboyant, individualistic, highly emotive style that has informed
American arts ever since. |
"
the only true America is that country where you are at liberty
to pursue such a mode of life as may enable you to do without"
excess.
- Henry David Thoreau
*
Preacher Edward Thompson Taylor
"An account of an 1845 sermon at Concord observed that 'black and
white, poet and grocer, contractor and lumberman, Methodist and preachers,
joined with the regular congregation in rare union.' "
- John Leland, an an 1845 sermon by Rev. Taylor |
©William Gottlieb
Theolonious Monk, Howard McGhee, Teddy Hill, Roy Eldridge outside
Minton's Playhouse
"At the end of each workday, they had to reconstruct their identities
in the world of leisure. The working world called for an antithesis or escape.
Hip germinated in the off hours."
- John Leland
_____
Well You Needn't  , by Thelonious Monk
*
Jack Kerouac
"If the future could be erased at the turn of a key, it didn't
make sense to sacrifice the present for its rewards. For the white hipsters
of the Beat generation, no one seemed to live more wholly in the present,
with less regard for the past or future, than their African-American
counterparts."
- John Leland
_____
We
Real Cool , read by poet Gwendolyn Brooks We real cool. We
Left school. We
Lurk late. We
Strike straight. We
Sing sin. We
Thin gin. We
Jazz June. We
Die soon.
|
JJM
What was the first outpost for Bohemia?
JL As far as I can tell, it was a beer hall
on lower Broadway in New York called Pfaff's. Walt Whitman hung out there,
and the New York Saturday Press publisher Henry Clapp and his circle
of friends also hung out there. One imagines them smoking French cigarettes
there -- which of course they didn't -- but they did discuss things like
radical politics, sexual revolution, and humor, and combining all of those
elements.
JJM Physical gathering places are very important
to hip, whether it be Pfaff's, or the White Horse Tavern, where Dylan Thomas
used to hang out, or Minton's, where bebop was born.
JL Yes, and people also needed a place where
they could run a tab. {Laughs} I am sure that has something to do with the
stability of location. I don't know if places extend tabs now.
JJM
Why do you refer to the forties and fifties as the "Golden Age of Hip?"
JL It was the era of the beats and the beboppers,
when so much energy was being created. Their crossing of paths was really
interesting. The beboppers brought more resources to American music than
any population before them.
JJM The beboppers created art outside the
mainstream that writers of the period admired...
JL Yes. Two very distinct, powerful, alluring,
educated, artistically adventurous, late-modernist populations -- the beat
writers and the bebop musicians -- created their art during the repressiveness
of the post-War/Cold War years, which worked as a foil for them. All the
elements for hip were right.
JJM The beat writers' admiration for the work
of black artists during the Cold War era differed greatly from the white
admirers of the Harlem Renaissance artists, didn't it?
JL Yes, very strongly. They were much closer
to them, and much more romantically attached to them. They weren't looking
for jazz musicians to revitalize the center of society, they were looking
to them as an "out" from the center of society.
JJM The differences are pretty striking. During
the Harlem Renaissance, people like James Weldon Johnson felt that black
Americans could achieve intellectual parity through the creation of literature
and art "inside" mainstream society, whereas the bebop musicians, as you
mentioned, looked at advancing through the creation of art considered "outside"
the mainstream.
JL One of the big differences between the
fifties and the sixties is that during the sixties, there was hope of
revitalization, whereas in the fifties, there was not. Beats felt that the
center of society was corrupt and decaying. They were reading Spengler's
The Decline of the West, and they believed there was this collapse
in the center. So, rather than save the center, it was time to get off the
ship, and in jazz, they found another ship to jump in. |
| JJM
The civil rights movement provided such a breeding ground for
hip, and the actions of Martin Luther King was an impetus for many whites
-- including myself -- to not only appreciate their work, but to also join
their fight in our own way. Yet, you placed no real emphasis on politicians
or leaders of the civil rights era as models for hip. Why not?
JL It's a funny thing. The civil rights movement
of the sixties was so effective, in part, because it was so incredibly square.
Its leaders were nicely dressed preachers who were so upright and honest
that, in our eyes, they clearly had justice on their side. They were not
rebel renegades, instead, they were really the conscience of America. Think
of the students that integrated Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas,
and think of Rosa Parks -- they were unblemished, upright American citizens.
King himself was an unblemished individual, as pure as you can be. So, that
is one reason I placed so little emphasis on them. The black power movement
was, in some ways, more hip-related.
JJM You mean personalities like Stokely
Carmichael, H. Rap Brown, Huey Newton
JL Yes.
JJM Well, they certainly fit into your theory
concerning the mingling of outlaw behavior and hip, and especially how the
outlaw is one person removed from the hipster. When I was a kid during the
sixties, I remember being faced with certain choices that put me on the edge
of being an outlaw, and they were choices people I considered to be models
of hip were making all the time. For example, should I pick up this rock
and throw it at the bank as part of my protest? Or, should I move to Canada
to avoid the draft? Whether that sort of thinking is part of hip is something
one could argue, and perhaps there was more opportunity for these kinds of
choices during that era than there are now
JL I don't know. I keep thinking that we
will get back to that, but it hasn't happened. |
©
Abernathy
Family Collection
Ralph David Abernathy, Martin Luther King, and the integration of
the lunch counters
_____
We
Shall Overcome , a speech by MLK
*
Huey Newton
"At an elemental level, the hipster is a vicarious form of the
outlaw. Hipsters are criminals once removed, intimations of crime without
the thing itself."
- John Leland
_____
Black Panther leader
Bobby
Seale comments on the death of Martin Luther King, April, 1968
|
"Hammet gave murder back to the kind of people that commit it for
reasons, not just to provide a corpse; and with the means at hand, not with
hand-wrought dueling pistols, curare, and tropical fish. He put these
people down on paper as they are, and he made them talk and think in the
language they cusomarily used for these purposes. He had style, but
his audience didn't know it, because it was in a language not supposed to
be capable of such refinements."
- Raymond Chandler
*
"
on the whole, pulp objected less to women than to male roles
-- the drabness of the domestic hubby, or the foolishness of the lover who
sacrifices everything for a little action. For the hard-boiled detective,
home and hearth seemed as deadening as a corporate career. The threat to
hip was not women but domesticity."
- John Leland
_____
Big
Town , by Laurindo Almeida |
JJM Pulp fiction and the private eye were early
models of mass hip...
JL Reading all of these books was one of
the best parts about writing this book. The private eye was a character who
lived by his wits and talked his own talk. This language that had never been
spoken before was suddenly coming out of the mouths of characters like Phillip
Marlowe, Sam Spade, the Continental Op, and Race Williams. They were hard-boiled
detectives who were such an American invention, and so very different from
the Sherlock Holmes-type characters. They were under-spoken men in action,
and their translation into film noir of the thirties and forties just spread
their hip archetype into the masses in ways that wouldn't have been possible
without their ambiguously moral personas.
JJM
You wrote about pulp fiction, "On the whole, pulp objected less to
women than to male roles
the drabness of the domestic hubby, or the
foolishness of the lover who sacrifices everything for a little action. For
the hard-boiled detective, home and hearth seemed as deadening as a corporate
career. The threat to hip was not women but domesticity."
JL That is a running theme of the book, that
many things seem overtly sexist -- much of pulp, for example, is very close
to sexism -- but the hipster has less a fear of women than a fear of domesticity,
that they will be trapped within the confines of a consumer economy. That
has been behind so much of what Barbara Ehrenreich calls the male revolt
in America, which took place for most of the last century. It expresses itself
often in terms that are either misogynistic, or looks exactly like misogyny,
but I don't think misogyny is at the heart of it.
JJM I don't think so either. Even though
Jack Kerouac said, "Pretty girls make graves," I am sure that comment was
meant to communicate that it is important to be careful about what you commit
to. Commitments are threats to the hip lifestyle, and what they valued in
their lives was time. This approach to life left women out, in a way, because
if their man was living this way -- without commitments to work or home --
she was going to have to be the responsible one.
JL Right. The significant thing Kerouac is
saying is that domesticity is a grave, and secondarily that pretty girls
are a temptation toward domesticity. I don't think he sees women as the problem
themselves. So much of the pursuit of hip comes at the expense of whoever
is willing to take responsibility, and that often meant women -- especially
during the beat period, when men were running around, often leaving children
behind. Their women were willing to bear that weight. |
| JJM
How were the early cartoons a vehicle for hip?
JL The chapter on cartoons is my favorite,
and it was the most fun to write. They got to undo all the rules that hip
wanted to break. They got to sass authority, and they got to bend the rules
of gravity and gender and ethnicity. Everything could change in the course
of a seven-minute cartoon, and the early animators, especially, took advantage
of that. It was wide open to ideas. The behavior or Felix the Cat, for example
-- he truly was a cat. He was a hip cat. He got to do all the things audiences
would not have accepted from a real life character. Bugs Bunny is a classic
example; he was smarter, wiser, and more enlightened in a hip sense than
anyone else in his cartoons, and that is why he prevails. That he does so
with style makes him lovable forever, and that he does so with the persona
of a great New York ethnic is even more appealing.
JJM So many racial stereotypes were played
out in cartoons
JL Yes, minstrelsy was such an important
part of cartoons because it was the model that existed for the cartoonist
to build on. Minstrelsy was not merely a blip in American popular culture,
it was actually one of the foundations of it, and it was one of the forms
-- stereotypes included -- that the earliest cartoonists had to draw on.
In the production of early black and white cartoons, it was easier to make
a black figure visible than it was a white figure, as you can imagine, so
the technology lent itself to African American figures from the start. But,
that was just a template that the animators had to work with, and at times
they did so lovingly, and at other times in a spirit of ridicule. Early animators
like the Fleischer Brothers were still trying to understand where they fit
in ethnically in America, and how ethnicity worked in America, and one place
for them to explore these questions was in their cartoons. |
View the entire 1943 Merrie Melodies cartoon,
Coal
Black and de Sebben Dwarfs
(may be offensive to some viewers)
*
"In a 1920's culture buffeted by mechanization, urbanization and
war, cartoons treated mayhem and discontinuity as entertainment. Since order
could no longer keep up with the speed of life, animation made speed itself
a principle of order, and made disorder the status quo."
- John Leland
_____
Felix
the Cat, fishing
|
©William Gottlieb
"About the hippest anyone has gotten so far, I suppose, is to be
permanently on the nod."
- Terry Southern
_____
Star Eyes , by Charlie Parker |
JJM The connection between hip and dangerous drugs
is indisputable
JL The two tend to go together rather than
one being the cause of the other. I don't think the use of drugs itself is
a hip act, but there is a population that wants more from life, more
enlightenment and forbidden knowledge, and a disproportionate percentage
of those people will experiment with drugs to attain this. A number of these
people will become romantic figures in a way that Charlie Parker and Kurt
Cobain did, which ultimately inspired an allegiance of imitators.
JJM You wrote, "What dope offers, and what unites
these disparate types, is a suspension of responsibility, a fuckup's version
of grace."
JL One of the stories I tell in my book that
always gets me is that of the saxophonist Frank Morgan performing on stage
when he hears that Charlie Parker has just died. He calls a break, he and
his band go backstage, and they shoot up. He said they were going to do it
anyway, but they decided that is how they wanted to pay tribute to Parker. |
| JJM
The marketing of hip is fascinating. When did marketers begin treating
hip as a consumer choice?
JL The advertising business went for this
revolution in the early sixties. Thomas Frank writes really well about this
in his book, The Conquest of Cool. There was a recognition among the
marketers of the goods corporate America produces that all the things that
hip wanted -- nonconformity, individualism, swift revolution in style --
were the same things the market wanted as well. They became reasons to buy
new things. As early as the twenties, the Greenwich Village bohemian Floyd
Dell said that bohemia had a commercial element to it, and that the things
hip wanted were commercial things. Dell wrote, "The American middle class
had come to the end of its Puritan phase; it had its war profits to spend,
and it was turning to bohemia to learn how to spend them."
JJM Blues singers were among the first images
of hip to be commercially exploited.
JL Yes, it's a funny thing, because these
singers were itinerant performers who sang all kinds of songs. They sang
everything from Tin Pan Alley tunes to popular folk songs of the day, but
when they got into the recording studio, they became blues singers rather
than the wide-ranging entertainers that they were. Blues fans still don't
know what to make of Robert Johnson's recording of "Hot Tamales," because
it doesn't ring true to their idea of what a blues singer does. But a performer
like Johnson might have had all sorts of pop tunes or Tin Pan Alley songs
in his repertoire; it is just that the record industry needed images to sell
records, and the blues singer worked very powerfully as an image.
JJM Yes, the marketing of music and musicians
has always been at the front lines of hip. The record industry's marketing
of jazz as art on their album covers was particularly effective with me.
What I find fascinating is how hipsters keep ahead of the marketers who sell
hip trends, and how the marketing of these icons may affect their image.
For example, does Miles Davis continue to be hip once he has been on an
advertisement for The Gap, and how does this kind of exposure affect his
appeal among hipsters?
JL Well, Miles Davis is pretty indestructible.
He has done the worst things and survived them -- if he can survive the album
We Want Miles, he can survive an ad for The Gap. There has always
been that population who thinks they can buy "hip" in the store, even though
they never could. To that extent, the game hasn't changed all that much.
Hip is not about what you can buy or what you can wear, it is about what
you know or how you work the language of fashion or slang or style. It has
always involved a creative act, not a consumptive act.
|
Dick Waterman
Son House
"This is how hip works, attaching stories to one thing and not
another -- usually in accord with unseen needs of the economy. In the pantheon
of hip characters, the blues singer was one of the first images concocted
as image in the service of mass production."
- John Leland
*
©
Lee
Tanner
Miles Davis
"Mailer was right when he said that the hipster was a white Negro
-- but he neglected to point out that the Negro model the hipster imitates
is the product of white imaginations."
- Kenneth Rexroth
_____
Only A Pawn In Their Game
, by Bob Dylan |
JJM
It was interesting to read the chapter in the book about how the Internet
has transformed the boundaries of hip. How important is the culture of the
Internet to a person's ability to express hip?
JL The important thing the Internet has brought
is the end of the idea that there is an "inside" and an "outside." The Internet
just flattens everything out -- every passion, every avocation, every fetish,
and every age group, all work in exactly the same way.
JJM Regarding those choosing to work for an
Internet start-up company, you wrote, "To work for the new media companies
that were opening this frontier was to be part of the undermining of old
authority."
JL That's right. In the early nineties, people
were leaving blue chip companies in the fields of banking, law, journalism,
and leaving behind promising educations to work for themselves, or in tiny
little Internet start-up companies. You didn't need the old network to get
money, and you didn't need the college degree. Basically, the Internet didn't
require you to have the things that the old gatekeeper did.
JJM The Internet has opened up a tremendous
avenue for people who you describe as "Boho Entrepreneurs."
JL Yes, it has.
JJM
What cities best reflect the values of hip in today's culture?
JL I hope it is a place I don't know about
-- towns that are bubbling up in cool ways I have yet to discover. There
are some pretty obvious places for hip, New York being one of them -- although
the cost of living is so high that it has chased a lot of the riff-raff out,
and it has forced people to work so incredibly hard just to be able to afford
their homes that it doesn't allow much time for hip. I believe Toronto is
becoming a very hip place. The life there is a little bit slow, and it has
an immigrant population from all over the world. The film industry there
has added a lot of creativity to the city. I would look at that as a coming
town.
JJM Canada is a nonconforming country, also.
JL Yes, that's right. Other places I like
a lot are Chapel Hill, Austin, Seattle and Portland.
JJM I see it in Portland everywhere, and from
the traveling I do around the country, there seem to be pockets of hip of
varying degree just about everywhere.
JL Yes.
JJM We are now in the midst of a very conservative
political era where the climate for hip may be pretty hostile. Of course,
that may just mean there is a vast breeding ground for nonconformity. What
is your sense about the immediate future for hip? Is this a good time for
it?
JL Hip is still in greater danger from its
friends than its enemies. I think that the incredible corniness of something
like Queer Eye for the Straight Guy must create a lot of confusion
to a person, as does the support of the major record companies -- now these
global international conglomerates -- for anything that is a little bit off-beat.
Despite the recent election, I don't think we are in an artistic, repressive
crackdown. Hipness is still threatened more by its friends than by its enemies,
more by MTV than by the president.
_____________________________________________
photo by
Cornell
Capa
Savoy Ballroom, Harlem, 1939
__________
"At its most pure, hip is utterly mongrel. Which is to say, purism has
no place in hip. Instead, hip comes of the haphazard, American collision
of peoples and ideas, thrown together in unplanned social experiment: blacks,
whites, immigrants, intellectuals, hoodlums, scoundrels, sexpots and
rakes
Born in the dance between black and white, hip thrives on
juxtaposition and pastiche. It connects the disparate and contradictory."
- John Leland
*
Darktown Strutters Ball , by the Chick Webb Orchestra
__________
Hip:
The History
by John Leland
About John Leland
JJM Who was your childhood hero?
JL I loved sports as a kid, and I grew up
in the late sixties/early seventies, which was really an anti-hero period.
The players I liked were the anti-hero athletes like Joe Namath, Joe Pepitone,
Muhammad Ali, and Walt Frazier. I loved the Corleone family in The
Godfather, and if there was anyone I wanted to grow up to be, it was
Michael Corleone, the Al Pacino character.
JJM The sports figures you mentioned could
be classified as "hip athletes," couldn't they?
JL Yes, they could.
*
John Leland is a reporter for the New York Times and former editor
in chief of Details, and he was an original columnist at SPIN
magazine. Robert Christgau of the Village Voice called him "the best
American postmod critic (the best new American rock critic period)," and
Chuck D of Public Enemy said the nasty parts of the song "Bring the Noise"
were written about him. He lives in Manhattan's East Village with his wife,
Risa, and son, Jordan.
John Leland products at Amazon.com
_______________________________
This interview took place on January 3, 2005
*
If you enjoyed this interview, you may want to read our interview with Can't Find My Way Home: America in the Great Stoned Age, 1945 - 2000 author Martin Torgoff.
_______________________________
Other
Jerry Jazz Musician interviews
# Text from publisher.
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