cambridge.org

‘… This little ukulele tells the truth’: indie pop and kitsch authenticity | Popular Music | Cambridge Core

  • ️Thu Feb 20 2025

Abstract

Indie pop, like rock and other independent genres more generally, has had a complicated relationship with mass culture. It both depends upon and simultaneously deconstructs notions of authenticity and truth. Independent genres have invited scholarly analysis and critique that often seek to unmask indie as ‘elite’ or to show the extent to which indie musics are, ironically, defined and shaped by consumer capitalism. Using songwriter Stephin Merritt's music and career as a case study, this essay explores the kinds of authenticities at work in indie pop. Indie pop, I argue, is a genre especially adept at generating ‘personal authenticity’. It is useful to turn to the concept of kitsch, understood here as an aesthetic and not a synonym for ‘bad’. Kitsch functions to cultivate personal attachment in the face of impersonal mass culture; it is this aesthetic, I argue, that indie pop has cultivated through its lo-fi and often nostalgic sound world and through its dissemination, which has relied upon dedicated collectors. The ‘honesty’ of this music does not arise from an illusion of unmediated communication, but instead from the emphasis on the process of mediation, which stresses the materiality of the music and the actual experience of listening.

References

Adorno, T. 2002. Essays on Music (Berkeley, University of California)Google Scholar

Alberti, J. 1999. ‘“I have come out to play”: Jonathan Richman and the Politics of the Faux Naïf’, in Reading Rock and Roll, ed. Dettmar, K. and Richey, W. (New York, Columbia University Press), pp. 173–90Google Scholar

Bannister, M. 2006. ‘“Loaded”: indie guitar rock, canonism, white masculinities’, Popular Music, 25/1, pp. 7795CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Barker, H., and Taylor, Y. 2006. Faking It: the Quest for Authenticity in Popular Music (New York, Faber & Faber)Google Scholar

Barthes, R. 1990 [1977]. ‘The grain of the voice’, in On Record: Rock, Pop, and the Written Word, ed. Frith, S. and Goodwin, A. (New York, Routledge), pp. 250–55Google Scholar

Baudrillard, J. 1994 [1968]. ‘The system of collecting’, in The Cultures of Collecting, ed. Elsner, J. and Cardinal, R. (London, Reaktion Books), pp. 724Google Scholar

Benjamin, W. 1969. ‘The work of art in the age of mechanical reproduction’, in Walter Benjamin: Illuminations: Essays and Reflections, ed. Arendt, H. (New York, Schocken Books), pp. 217–52Google Scholar

Broch, H. 1969. ‘Notes on the problem of kitsch’, in Kitsch: the World of Bad Taste, ed. Dorfles, G. (New York, Random House), pp. 4976Google Scholar

Butler, M. 2007. ‘“Some of us can only live in songs of love and trouble”: voice, genre/gender, and sexuality in the music of Stephin Merritt’, in Oh Boy! Masculinities and Popular Music, ed. Jarman-Ivens, F. (New York, Routledge), pp. 235–59Google Scholar

Castiglione, B. 2002 [1528]. The Book of the Courtier, trans. Javitsch, D. (New York, W.W. Norton)Google Scholar

Coyle, M., and Dolan, J. 1999. ‘Modeling authenticity, authenticating commercial models’, in Reading Rock and Roll: Authenticity, Appropriation, Aesthetics, ed. Dettmar, K. and Richey, W. (New York, Columbia University Press), pp. 135Google Scholar

Fonarow, W. 2006. Empire of Dirt: the Aesthetics of and Rituals of British Indie Music (Middletown, Wesleyan University Press)Google Scholar

Frith, S. 1981. Sound Effects: Youth Leisure, and the Politics of Rock ‘n’ Roll (New York, Pantheon Books)Google Scholar

Frith, S. 1978. The Sociology of Rock (London: Constable)Google Scholar

Grossberg, L. 1992. We Gotta Get Out of This Place: Popular Conservatism and Postmodern Culture (New York, Routledge)Google Scholar

Keightley, K. 2001. ‘Reconsidering rock’, in The Cambridge Companion to Rock and Pop, ed. Frith, S., Straw, W. and Street, J. (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press), pp. 109–42CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Kruse, H. 2003. Site and Sound: Understanding Independent Music Scenes (New York, P. Lang)Google Scholar

Kulka, T. 1996. Kitsch and Art (University Park, Pennsylvania State University Press)Google Scholar

Leach, E.E. 2001. ‘Vicars of ‘‘Wannabe’’: authenticity and the Spice Girls’, Popular Music, 20/2, pp. 143–67CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Mazullo, M. 2000. ‘The man whom the world sold: Kurt Cobain, rock's progressive aesthetic, and the challenges of authenticity’, Musical Quarterly, 84/4, pp. 713–49CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Moore, A. 1998. ‘U2 and the myth of authenticity in rock’, Popular Musicology, 3/6, pp. 424Google Scholar

Olalquiaga, C. 1998. The Artificial Kingdom: on the Kitsch Experience (Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press)Google Scholar

Paddison, M. 1982. ‘The critique criticized: Adorno and popular music’, Popular Music, 2, pp. 201–18CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Sanneh, K. 2004. ‘The rap against rockism’, The New York Times, 31 October; reprinted 2007 in The Rock History Reader (New York, Routledge), pp. 351–4Google Scholar

Sheinbaum, J. 2008. ‘Periods in progressive rock and the problem of authenticity’, Current Musicology, 85, pp. 2951Google Scholar

Sontag, S. 1990. ‘A symposium on kitsch’, Salmagundi: A Quarterly of the Humanities and Social Sciences, 85/86, pp. 201312Google Scholar

Stewart, S. 1993. On Longing: Narratives of the Miniature, the Gigantic, the Souvenir, the Collection (Durham and London, Duke University Press)Google Scholar

Zanes, R.J.W. 1999. ‘Too much mead?: under the influence (of participant-observation)’, in Reading Rock and Roll: Authenticity, Appropriation, Aesthetics, ed. Dettmar, K. and Richey, W. (New York, Columbia University Press), pp. 3771Google Scholar

The Langley Schools Project, Innocence and Despair. Bar/None Records. 2001Google Scholar

The Magnetic Fields, The Charm of the Highway Strip. Merge Records. 1994Google Scholar

The Magnetic Fields, I Don't Believe You/When I'm Not Looking You're Not There. 7”. Merge Records. 1998Google Scholar

Various Artists, All's Fair in Love and Chickfactor. Enchanté Records. 2002Google Scholar

Various Artists, Songs in the Key of Z: The Curious Universe of Outsider Music. Gammon. 2002Google Scholar