I always find it entertaining to watch a movie at home with
a Millennial or GenZ. (What’s not to like about the term “Generation Z” and its
variants for the latest wave of HS students and younger, by the way? It sounds
like the zombie apocalypse.) There are at least three electronic devices
competing for their attention: the TV, an open laptop with a game in progress,
and a smart phone open to the net and continually buzzing as new texts arrive. There
might even be music-emitting earphones around the neck that slide up onto the
ears for any dull spots in film, game, or text.
I don’t multitask as well as that. I like to think I “focus
better than that,” but in truth it’s a mix of both. Some of this is
generational, but a lot of it is surely a personal trait: I just am distracted
easily. I don’t even like the car radio to play when I’m coping with heavy
traffic, though the radio is enjoyable on an open road. In high school and
college I sometimes read and studied with the stereo playing, but not loudly
and not any old record. I could deal with the Grateful Dead as background
music, for example, but not Jimi Hendrix. Jimi would pull my attention away
from the books. Nowadays I generally prefer full quiet when reading, but there
are rare exceptions. The exceptions usually are an accident.
A recent exception involved thumbing through David Hume’s Essays while Garbage played on the
stereo. I meant no commentary by that particular combination. The Garbage CD
just happened to be playing when I picked up the book, got caught up in it, and
then was too lazy to walk across the room to turn off the music. (Laziness has
had a profound impact on my life in ways both large and small.) On this
occasion the effect was pleasant.
After the bromidic Seneca (See earlier blog Polonius on the Tiber), the Scottish
philosopher David Hume (1711-1776) was a refreshing breath of breezy 18th
century air. Hume is fashionable in philosophic circles at the moment, probably
because of his religious skepticism. Yet his more important message was
religious toleration – and political toleration. Hume lived in fractious times,
as we do today, and his assessment of political factions sounds all too modern:
“Those who either attack
or defend a minister in such a government as ours, where the utmost liberty is
allowed, always carry matters to an extreme, and exaggerate his merit or
demerit with regard to the public. His enemies are sure to charge him with the
greatest enormities, both in domestic and foreign management; and there is no
meanness or crime, of which, in their account, he is not capable… On the other
hand, the partizans of the minister make his panegyric run as high as the
accusation against him, and celebrate his wise, steady, and moderate conduct in
every part of his administration.”
So too.
The source of his tolerance
(other than his personal disposition) was his belief in the limits of reason.
Unlike Descartes and most of the ancient philosophers who insisted on the
primacy of reason, Hume regarded reason as more of a tool than an answer. He
saw all too clearly that people – especially in political, religious, and moral
matters – believe something first and then employ reason to justify their
belief. When negative proofs are impossible – as they usually are – most people
are impervious to reasoned arguments. They can rationalize right back at you.
They must be persuaded, if at all, by appealing to their sympathies – to their
emotions. They will see logic in a new belief only afterwards. Recognition of this
human foible made Hume a skeptic with regard to all beliefs including his own.
It’s hard to be both a self-skeptic and a zealot.
As for popular music, the
sounds from one’s youth are notoriously dear
to the heart, which in my case primarily means basic blues-based rock-and-roll
and its variants. Rarely do the five receptacles in my CD tray not contain at
least one disc that meets the description, whether a classic band such as the
Animals or a contemporary one such as Dorothy. But I do play other artists and genres
originating both before and after my teen years. Bands from the ‘90s (high tide
for GenXers) in particular occupy an outsized quantity of space on my CD shelf:
Offspring, Radiohead, Guns’n’Roses, Soundgarden, etc. One experimental band I
liked at the time was Garbage, which deliberately mixed genres so thoroughly
that it really couldn’t be pigeon-holed. Lead singer (and Hume’s fellow Scot)
Shirley Manson once called it sci-fi pop, but she didn’t stick with the
description. Whatever it is, it combines ‘50s Beat coffee house-style lyrics
with synthetic sounds and traditional instruments to interesting effect.
Garbage has disbanded
and reformed several times over the years, but is currently together and
performing. Their most recent album, the 2016 Strange Little Birds, is worth a listen (one track posted below) and served as the background music mentioned above.
Thumbs up to book and
band. Though the two worked well together for me on this occasion, I think that
is because neither was new to me. If encountering either for the first time, I recommend
them in sequence, not in concert.
Garbage – Magnetized
I by and large prefer silence while reading, unless I'm reading over a period of time then I'll break it up with some soft type jazz or something. Right now some Diane Schuur, which is just coming over the TV (radio) station at the moment.
ReplyDeleteI was never a big Garbage fan although I've got their first CD. I'm always up for something different and their first effort just didn't last long for me. I do like Portishead, mostly Dummy and the self titled. I heard this new band the other day called Vinyl Williams that I kinda liked: https://vinylwilliams.bandcamp.com/album/into
I thought the lead singer was female when I first heard it the other day, but it's a male. Still for the most part those type albums require active listening.
Thanks for the link. My default genre is R&B and blues-based rock, but something new sometimes catches the ear. Something old too. As a teen I disdained 40s-era music because my parents played it, but nowadays I'm more likely to play Glenn Miller, the Andrews sisters, Ella Mae Morse, Harry James, etc. than they were. Good stuff.
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