Vampire Weekend "Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa"
At one point during Vampire Weekend’s set here in Bloomington last Saturday opening for Celebration, singer Ezra Koenig fondly remembered the last time the band came to our fair college town, opening for the Dirty Projectors a few months ago. Koenig’s wistful reminiscence could have been taken directly from a dewy period piece: he recalled the crisp fall weather, his knowledge that a new semester was starting at the University, and the sight of a guy throwing a football out of a fraternity window, to another fraternity guy in the front lawn. He must have noticed, as I did, an audience staring back at thim that, more likely than not, defined itself in stark subcultural opposition to everything he was describing, but if so, he didn't show it, and the band started into another song.
Maybe the song they played was “Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa,” which I heard at some point that evening; I can't remember when. One of the more memorable moments on their debut EP from a few months back, the song rhetorically transplants a Congolese dance rhythm from a few decades ago to a location whose upper-middle class, educated, white demographic might just lead many toward the idea of indie-style colonialism. Or, perhaps, a distant cousin of what Bruner and Kirshenblatt-Gimblett called “tourist realism” in “Maasai on the Lawn.” Their account is of a British-run tourist trap in Kenya that hired and paid local tribesmen and women to perform their traditional rituals, every day, for rich visitors who watched them while drinking tea, and then took a bus back to Nairobi. Everything was framed for the tourists’ amateur photographic lenses, which, for the authors, permanently fixed an essentializing gaze upon the tribespeople. These Maasai, as a sort of fascinating aside, had a job that they seemed to like, which required them to clock in and out each day before and after performing a highly stylized version, more or less, of themselves.
At first blush, “Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa” is the same sort of thing. It’s a nostalgic song, like a lot of Vampire Weekend’s music. It’s an interesting sort of nostalgia, however: one that, like the band’s on-stage garb of tucked-in Oxford shirts and deck shoes, purposefully plays with vanilla, upper-crust symbols of category membership. Within its first two verses, for instance, the song rhymes “Louis Vuitton” with “reggaeton,” and documents (like “Rusted Guns of Milan” and a thousand other songs), an awkward, lusty, teenage experience. This one happened to be soundtracked by Peter Gabriel.
The phrase “Kwassa Kwassa,” of course, is to be taken metaphorically in a similar way that “rock and roll” originally was. This, of course, carries with it (for those who care to look) a swarm of issues surrounding the co-optation of black music by whites. Koenig is no dummy here, either: when he sings the word “Benetton,” and the lyric “but this feels so unnatural/ Peter Gabriel too,” he’s explicitly laying at critics’ doorsteps the opportunity to run wild with theories about this fucking Ivy League motherfucker and how all he knows about Africa he learned from magazine ads and by listening to Us. Or how this kid is creating the same sort of snow-globed, slickly-realized cultural cosmopolitanism that tourist companies and hotel chains make billions of dollars from.
In his retort to Sasha Frere-Jones’ New Yorker piece regarding the perceived whiteness of indie rock, Carl Wilson noted, “(SFJ's) consistent mistake seems to be to talk about musical issues as if they were nearly autonomous from larger social dynamics. It's the blind spot of a genuine music lover, but it grants music culture too much power and assigns it too much blame.” What SFJ misses, Wilson rightly argues, is class: “the particular kind of indie rock Frere-Jones complains about is more blatantly upper-middle class and liberal-arts-college-based, and less self-aware or politicized about it.” This sort of music “shows off its chops via its range of allusions and high concepts with the kind of fluency both postmodern pop culture and higher education teach its listeners to admire.” Yet it’s this exact context that also leads to the sort of gumbo that Vampire Weekend creates in “Kwassa Kwassa,” which SFJ currently ranks as his #10 song of 2007.
The song is (ugh) “miscegenated,” through and through, no question about it. At the same time, though, Koenig ensures through his strategic cultural references that it’s also bookish and ironic, the sort of “coffeehouse indie” of Wilson’s description. Most importantly, it’s also purposefully “white,” and, I would argue, “self-aware.”
In his Stylus review of the band’s EP, Mike Powell wrote:
I’m also not trying to say that Vampire Weekend is ammunition to shoot holes in Carl’s essay; he never says this sort of thing is impossible, and certainly theories come with exceptions. What I am saying, is that Koenig’s own virtuosic performance of clueless bougie cosmopolitanism underscores the fact that larger social dynamics can also show through indie music in ways that confuse the assumed wisdom about how they’re supposed to operate. After all, Vampire Weekend isn't alone in their appreciation for a certain trendy bagmaker: fittingly, Wilson wraps up his piece with a reference to the self-proclaimed “Louis Vuitton Don.”
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SFJ links us to a great review of another VW track, which finds that critic also struggling with his own pleasure principles ("Why do I like this?") in hilarious outline form. He references the Specials, which I noted to myself while the band played "K-Punk" the other night, and the aforementioned Mr. West, in the section sub-titled "Strings."
Maybe the song they played was “Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa,” which I heard at some point that evening; I can't remember when. One of the more memorable moments on their debut EP from a few months back, the song rhetorically transplants a Congolese dance rhythm from a few decades ago to a location whose upper-middle class, educated, white demographic might just lead many toward the idea of indie-style colonialism. Or, perhaps, a distant cousin of what Bruner and Kirshenblatt-Gimblett called “tourist realism” in “Maasai on the Lawn.” Their account is of a British-run tourist trap in Kenya that hired and paid local tribesmen and women to perform their traditional rituals, every day, for rich visitors who watched them while drinking tea, and then took a bus back to Nairobi. Everything was framed for the tourists’ amateur photographic lenses, which, for the authors, permanently fixed an essentializing gaze upon the tribespeople. These Maasai, as a sort of fascinating aside, had a job that they seemed to like, which required them to clock in and out each day before and after performing a highly stylized version, more or less, of themselves.
At first blush, “Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa” is the same sort of thing. It’s a nostalgic song, like a lot of Vampire Weekend’s music. It’s an interesting sort of nostalgia, however: one that, like the band’s on-stage garb of tucked-in Oxford shirts and deck shoes, purposefully plays with vanilla, upper-crust symbols of category membership. Within its first two verses, for instance, the song rhymes “Louis Vuitton” with “reggaeton,” and documents (like “Rusted Guns of Milan” and a thousand other songs), an awkward, lusty, teenage experience. This one happened to be soundtracked by Peter Gabriel.
The phrase “Kwassa Kwassa,” of course, is to be taken metaphorically in a similar way that “rock and roll” originally was. This, of course, carries with it (for those who care to look) a swarm of issues surrounding the co-optation of black music by whites. Koenig is no dummy here, either: when he sings the word “Benetton,” and the lyric “but this feels so unnatural/ Peter Gabriel too,” he’s explicitly laying at critics’ doorsteps the opportunity to run wild with theories about this fucking Ivy League motherfucker and how all he knows about Africa he learned from magazine ads and by listening to Us. Or how this kid is creating the same sort of snow-globed, slickly-realized cultural cosmopolitanism that tourist companies and hotel chains make billions of dollars from.
In his retort to Sasha Frere-Jones’ New Yorker piece regarding the perceived whiteness of indie rock, Carl Wilson noted, “(SFJ's) consistent mistake seems to be to talk about musical issues as if they were nearly autonomous from larger social dynamics. It's the blind spot of a genuine music lover, but it grants music culture too much power and assigns it too much blame.” What SFJ misses, Wilson rightly argues, is class: “the particular kind of indie rock Frere-Jones complains about is more blatantly upper-middle class and liberal-arts-college-based, and less self-aware or politicized about it.” This sort of music “shows off its chops via its range of allusions and high concepts with the kind of fluency both postmodern pop culture and higher education teach its listeners to admire.” Yet it’s this exact context that also leads to the sort of gumbo that Vampire Weekend creates in “Kwassa Kwassa,” which SFJ currently ranks as his #10 song of 2007.
The song is (ugh) “miscegenated,” through and through, no question about it. At the same time, though, Koenig ensures through his strategic cultural references that it’s also bookish and ironic, the sort of “coffeehouse indie” of Wilson’s description. Most importantly, it’s also purposefully “white,” and, I would argue, “self-aware.”
In his Stylus review of the band’s EP, Mike Powell wrote:
“The question of whether or not four Columbia grads have a right to clumsily approximate African rhythms misses the point. Better that they exist in all their postcolonial glory if it means one less boring rock band. Furthermore, because they probably grew up in houses whose owners spun Graceland a lot more often than Can records or early disco, they come by their sound honestly—and, if not unpretentiously, under a pretense that a lot of people can probably share.”I agree with Powell’s idea that calling out Vampire Weekend’s cultural authenticity is off-base, and I’d add to it that calling out this band for their (currently hip) African appropriations is just another form of genre gatekeeping. Yet while I can also sign off on the guys' affective engagement with this music coming from an "honest" place--just like Koenig's in concert reminiscence the other night--I also believe that Koenig knows exactly what he’s doing when he writes his lyrics. He’s speaking, like a lot of us typerly types are trained to do, in simultaneous dialects of ethnography and irony, playing with charged ideas that are bound to get people into two types of tizzy: the type of tizzy that calls the band a bunch of candy-ass indie-colonialist assholes, or my current tizzy, which struggles with whether Koenig wants the first tizzy to happen. Now, I’m not saying that Koenig’s sort of wise-assedness—a geekier take on the private-school brand that the Strokes and Walkmen work so well—makes Vampire Weekend great, or that this sort of coyness doesn’t bother me (which it does). It’s just that I don’t think it’s giving a seeming purist like Koenig too much credit to infer that he thinks Peter Gabriel and Paul Simon watered down African music to fit within a Western pop template, and in the process made sappy pap that’s impossible to fuck to in your parents' beach house.
I’m also not trying to say that Vampire Weekend is ammunition to shoot holes in Carl’s essay; he never says this sort of thing is impossible, and certainly theories come with exceptions. What I am saying, is that Koenig’s own virtuosic performance of clueless bougie cosmopolitanism underscores the fact that larger social dynamics can also show through indie music in ways that confuse the assumed wisdom about how they’re supposed to operate. After all, Vampire Weekend isn't alone in their appreciation for a certain trendy bagmaker: fittingly, Wilson wraps up his piece with a reference to the self-proclaimed “Louis Vuitton Don.”
------------------
SFJ links us to a great review of another VW track, which finds that critic also struggling with his own pleasure principles ("Why do I like this?") in hilarious outline form. He references the Specials, which I noted to myself while the band played "K-Punk" the other night, and the aforementioned Mr. West, in the section sub-titled "Strings."
9 Comments:
Hey, stop looking through my months-old unfinished write-ups! (I'm starting to sound like a mix of Joe Gould and Valerie Solanas when talking about this band.)
The problem with this band, ultimately, is that for all the self-awareness and inherent cultural brouhaha they're really fucking dull.
It’s just that I don’t think it’s giving a seeming purist like Koenig too much credit to infer that he thinks Peter Gabriel and Paul Simon watered down African music to fit within a Western pop template, and in the process made sappy pap that’s impossible to fuck to in your parents' beach house.
This is clutch.
my favorite part: typerly types
Okay, Vampire Weekend is everywhere.
I don't get the whole "African Beat" thing. Is it because they use bongos?
Didn't Guster use bongos?
Just a thought.
The key moment for me was the point that you share with Powell about cultural authenticity and genre gatekeeping. I feel awkward about arguing a point that supports Vampire Weekend, because I don't really like them (like J says above - really fucking dull), but those who accuse them of indie-colonialism miss a big contradiction: that the entire history of rock is a process of appropriation and genre-mashing. Consequently, they seem to be cutting African musical traditions out of that history prior to Paul Simon and Peter Gabriel, even though the whole thing started because of the mixing of African and European music.
Anyway, loved your essay and even posted on it. Cheers.
This growing discussion about the influences and background of Vampire Weekend brings to mind something a friend of mine said back when The Strokes were breaking. In response to the characterization of The Strokes as a bunch of privileged scenesters ripping off the musical movements that happened before they were born, this friend said, "Yes! And that's part of what makes them so great." I took this to mean he liked their songs, and he appreciated everything that went into influencing how they were presented.
I agreed with the sentiment with regard to The Strokes and it rings true with Vampire Weekend as well. If one likes the songs (and I really do), I don't see the validity in watering down the experience by challenging how/why they were created. In fact, I'd argue that critics have no business looking into whether motivations are pure or not, and that they only do so to protect themselves from being lumped into the judgements made by other critical folks--like enjoying music from a band with a motivation that one is opposed to somehow is a contradiction of one's values. The motivation is irrelevant. The song/band can be a ripoff, AND the song/band can be good. The song/band could be made by a preppie, a thug, a Nazi or a psychopath, AND the song/band can also be good.
I think we need to consider inter-textuality for this band. No one criticizes Stoppard for using direct block quotes from Hamlet in "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead." We are advanced too far as a race to concern ourselves with the source material and base our opinions off of the basic functional usage thereof. Rather, we should probably just consider how successful VW is at what it does; which, in my opinion, is "somewhat."
in regards to this "African Beat" that it seems everyone is discussing these days... i dont get it? i agree with the person who made the bongo's comment. does using primitive droney beats make it "African"? i know that for years ive been sitting in my room making songs that use bongos and floor toms to drone out a ritualistic beat so I can play my songs along to them. does that make my music have an "African Beat"? Ive listened to as much African music as I have eaten feces. it seems like a natural step for one to pick up a drum and bang on it monotonously. I dont know what im getting at here... i guess I just hate how everything always needs to be put into a box, and because a few bands use bongos and droney beats they all get lumped into a new scene (animal collective, celebration, yeasayer, etc.).
anyways. sorry fr rambling about nothing.
also, vampire weekend.... booooooring.
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