Navigation Salon Salon Arts & Entertainment email print
.Arts & Entertainment
Books
Comics
Health & Body
Media
Mothers Who Think
News
People
Politics2000
Technology
- Free Software Project
Travel & Food
_______
Columnists

 

- - - - - - - - - - - -

- - - - - - - - - - - -

Search Salon


  
Advanced Search  |  Help

- - - - - - - - - - - -

Recently in Salon Arts & Entertainment

Music
The finest children's album ever made
Of three new Carole King reissues, it's "Really Rosie" -- a "Tapestry" for the under-10 set -- that stands out.

By Douglas Wolk
[05/25/99]

Music Review
Sharps & flats
Jazz pianist Monty Alexander's gutsy vision stirs up Bob Marley's greatest hits.

By Philip Booth
[05/25/99]

Home Video
City of angles
Art Carney and Lily Tomlin sleuth among the low-lifes in a scuffed-up L.A. noir.

By Charles Taylor
[05/24/99]

Column
La vie en "Melrose"
Amanda/ You came and you gave without taking/ And I need you Mondays/ Amanda.

By Sarah Vowell
[05/24/99]

Music Review
Sharps & flats
Homespun avant-gardist Bill Frisell explores the unfolding saga of the American West.

By Seth Mnookin
[05/24/99]

Complete archives for Arts & Entertainment

- - - - - - - - - - - -

- - - - - - - - - - - -




Photograph of Tom Ze

The politics of plagiarism
Why Beck, Stereolab, Tortoise, the High Llamas and Sean Lennon are all fascinated by Tom Zé.

- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Jeff Stark

May 26, 1999 | NEW YORK -- Tom Zé's eyes are large and dark, a pair of polished acorns. He is 62 years old, which you wouldn't know but you can actually kind of tell when you stare at the creases. He smiles a lot, like he's always laughing at his own absurdist in-joke. Sometimes, when he looks at you, his pupils are so bright that you can see a ghost of yourself. Other times he drops his head to consider a question. His features -- the patchy beard, big nose, diminutive frame -- are strikingly human. His eyes never wander.

His attention is remarkable. There are a million things happening at once in this shabby Victorian parlor, downstairs in the Irving Plaza concert hall. Later tonight, Zé is performing a rare U.S. show with the Chicago post-rock band Tortoise. Right now, the room is loud and complicated with the kinds of things that have to happen before concerts. A small television crew is interviewing David Byrne about Zé (pronounced Zay), whom the former Talking Head tracked down more than 10 years ago in Brazil. A photographer from a Brazilian newspaper is pacing impatiently, waiting for a chance to take Zé outside in the rain. And a stressed-out record company guy keeps coming into the room and looking over the translator's shoulder. There are things to do. Sound checks. Photographs. Brazilians who need nonexistent tickets. Dinner. Strangers to hug. And Zé's eyes never wander.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Tom Zé, who has made some of the most beautiful music in the world, is not a purist. Purists are boring, especially world music purists. The best contemporary musicians know this. That is why artists like Beck, Stereolab, Tortoise, the High Llamas and Sean Lennon are all fascinated by Tom Zé and Tropicalia, the 1960s Brazilian pop movement that he helped create. Beck et al. have looked beyond American-Anglo pop for inspiration and incorporated elements into their own work. They, like Zé, are not purists either.

If world beat is a genre of music loosely based on the idea of marrying native sounds with foreign influences or musics from other cultures, Zé made world beat music long before it went Deep Forest. In some ways, the Tropicálistas -- including principally Zé, the young Gilberto Gil, songwriter Caetano Veloso and a strange, obscure and wonderful band called Os Mutantes -- can be understood as corollaries to the dirty hippies jamming psychedelic music in the States. The Tropicálistas' movement was both political and social, set against injustice, restrictive sexuality and a military dictatorship. (Imagine Nixon's tenure, under martial law.)

"We speak about the government, the people that conspire with the government, the big corporations," says Zé, half in English, half with the help of a Portuguese translator. "If you live in a country like that, you have politics everywhere. You can't imagine."

Working with Brazil's rich rhythmic heritage -- dense with the music of Portugal, the Caribbean, Africa and indigenous America -- the Tropicálistas layered their pop songs with Brit psych, modernist poetry, found sounds and phrases ripped off wholesale from the Beatles and the Stones. Like most musicians, they were combining influences and reinventing in their own language. At the same time, there was never a question of where the components originated. Listen to the old Tropicalia records and you hear parts connected to parts connected to parts. It's some of the most angular, confusing and ecstatic pop music ever recorded.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Oddly enough, it's the riff from "Smoke on the Water" coming through the P.A. onstage at Irving Plaza. Zé turns to the guitarist and stops the set. There is something that he wants to say to the audience.

"I want to make a partnership with you," he says, "to take plagiarism into your home."

It is difficult to understand Zé because his English is so poor. He's trying to convince the crowd that the melody of "Hey Jude" is almost the same as the Brazilian national anthem. He has split the audience into halves and has them humming each song separately at the same time. It's hard to know what he's talking about.

For Zé, plagiarism is political. A liner-note essay from his 1998 record "Fabrication Defect" explains how the third world can cannibalize the first, settle a score and put an end to the notion of the traditional composer. "The esthetic of the fabrication defect will reutilize the sonorous civilized trash ... It will recycle an alphabet of emotions contained in songs and musical symbols of the first world, that sealed each marked step of our affective and emotional life. They will be put to use in small cells of plagiarized material. This deliberate practice unleashes an esthetic of plagiarism ... that ambushes the universe of well-known and traditional music."

Back onstage, the guitarist rips into "Smoke on the Water" again. Conga drums come in. He switches to the Stones' "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction." Zé smiles. The music wanders everywhere, but he is unswerving.

. Next page | The ear of the dollar



 

Salon | Search | Archives | Contact Us | Table Talk | Ad Info

Arts & Entertainment | Books | Comics | Life | News | People
Politics | Sex | Tech & Business | Audio
The Free Software Project | The Movie Page
Letters | Columnists | Salon Plus

Copyright © 2000 Salon.com All rights reserved.