Jake, as expected, has delivered yet another lengthy and worthwhile 
     set of points here. Especially useful was the reference to the 
     Althusser etc. idea about the different layers of 
     culture/socioeconomy/demographics responding at different rates to 
     different forces but coalescing (at least in retrospect) to form 
     particular cultural styles.
     
     Think of the map Jake was drawing as a seismographic (tectonic-plates) 
     survey and I think that makes sense of why Barry's issue about 
     individual boomer differences and the like doesn't obviate the point. 
     Generational bonds are one of the layers that scrape beneath our feet.
     
     (NB: I'd clarify that my question about the timing of the first 
     punk-style ironic covers wasn't meant to be a criticism of Jake's use 
     of the Mats, just a music-trivia sideline.)
     
     I also found the periodic questions about one-mass-culture vs. 
     splintered-niche culture interesting, esp. re: speed and pervasiveness 
     of media.
     
     My sense is that demographic pressure is helping push the parts of 
     mass culture closer together again (unity in diversity as rock & 
     hip-hop fanciers start to hop borders via hybrid New Top 40 pop hits a 
     la Puff Daddy). But each of the new mass phenomena is now famous for 
     much less than 15 minutes, helping reinforce a cultural amnesia-anomie 
     that's very far from the icon-saturation of the seventies. (And 
     nervous making, imho.)
     
     My sense of the post-ironic moment all this is helping create was 
     reinforced last night at an astoundingly packed and high-emotion 
     concert by Rufus Wainwright. His archly sentimental songs were being 
     treated as anthems by a crowd he suspected of being too young even to 
     know who River Phoenix (subject of his song "Death of the Matinee 
     Idol") was. Also significant, for instance, that this Gap-ad-doin', 
     slacker-fop incarnatin' singer closed with a cover of a little folk 
     song rather than of, say, a piano-retooled disco hit. Though of course 
     his own background informs such choices (having folk-makin' folks). 
     Watch those layers slide.
     
     Here's my review, appearing in tomorrow's Globe & Mail in Toronto. 
     (This is also part of my continuing consciousness-raising campaign on 
     behalf of Martha Wainwright's upcoming album...) --
     
     
     POP REVIEW
     Rufus Wainwright
     Trinity-St Paul's Centre, Toronto
     
     by Carl Wilson
     The Globe & Mail
     
     Diva this, diva that. While pop pundits _ who resist catchphrases less 
     hardily than medieval peasants did the bubonic plague _ affix the 
     label to every Celine, Alanis and Shania who comes along, the only 
     Canadian who earns it is a gay ex-Montrealer in his mid-20s.
        Rufus Wainwright, after all, croons about sex, death, Venetian 
     columns and the love rituals of arcane gods, in his unique 
     octave-skipping "popera" style. And if the fever of the 
     standing-room-only crowd at Trinity St. Paul's in Toronto Tuesday 
     night was any indication, he's tapping the latent romanticism of a 
     generation that would normally scoff at the whole idea of latent 
     romanticism.
        After a warmly received opening set by British singer Imogen Heap, 
     whose piano ballads aligned comfortably with the Rufus vibe, a female 
     chorus immediately began chanting "Roooofuss!" in an oh-so-20-year-old 
     singsong cadence. In fact, the starstruck Rufies (for want of a better 
     word) defined the evening _ even as brash a performer as Wainwright 
     seemed surprised to see how quickly a Gap-ad cameo, an 
     alternative-album Juno (last weekend for his eponymous Dreamworks 
     debut) and a year's worth of media fawning can make you a cult idol.
        The cheekbones and sideburns don't hurt either, of course. 
     Wainwright, in his flower-embroidered short black jacket and blue 
     crushed-velvet pants, embraced sex-symbol status with cheerful, if 
     self-conscious, arrogance. After full-band  treatments of bouncy album 
     numbers Danny Boy and Matinee Idol, he introduced the tougher Damned 
     Ladies from behind his piano: "This song is about opera and divas" _ 
     screams from the fans. Pause. "Some of you girls better grow up to be 
     opera singers, okay? ... For daddy?"
        The irony of being greeted as a sophisticated Backstreet Boys 
     didn't escape Wainwright, perhaps the most unabashed gay man ever to 
     grace a U.S. major label (and, with his blend of Sondheim, Schubert 
     and Harry Nilsson, a songwriter who takes camp seriously indeed). 
     Later, taking up his guitar, he coyly addressed the crowd: "Now, I'm 
     sure you little girls all brought your gay friends along _ are you 
     going to pimp them to me? Come on, line 'em up," he chuckled. "Oh, I 
     keep forgetting we're in a church ... and here I am giving a sermon."
        The tease continued into the encores, when Wainwright left aspiring 
     Lolitas crestfallen by ignoring their proffered roses and outstretched 
     arms. Still, no one was too disappointed. With Jack Petrizelli on 
     guitar, Jeff Hill on double-bass and Kevin Hobbes on drums, Wainwright 
     cranked out rousing versions of the single April Fools (with its 
     irresistable You will believe in love and all that it's meant to be 
     chorus), Foolish Love and the ragtimey Beauty Mark, a touching song 
     about not being "too manly" written for his mother, Kate McGarrigle of 
     Quebec folk-rock institution the McGarrigle Sisters.
        As expected in any Rufus show since he was playing cabarets in 
     Montreal five years ago, family references didn't stop there. 
     Wainwright is of course also the son of McGarrigle's ex-husband, U.S. 
     singer-songwriter Loudon Wainwright III, and the saga of the broken 
     musical home always provides something to ruminate on when (as in one 
     meandering mini-epic about Norse gods) the younger Wainwright loses 
     one's attention.
        One encore brought family friend Jordy on stage to duet on folk 
     song Do You Love an Apple? And audience members shouted questions 
     about sister Martha, who provided exquisite backup vocals on *Rufus 
     Wainwright* and is now in New York preparing her own debut recording. 
     "She's writing great songs, and I'm going to have her killed," 
     Wainwright half-joked. But he repented by playing a new song, Little 
     Sister, which portrays himself as the villain of the sibling rivalry.
        Martha's absence also allowed for the concert's highlight, a 
     revised version of the album's brother-sister duet In My Arms. 
     Wainwright compensated for the missing second voice by slowing the 
     song down to a sultry, steamy striptease grind, and a thick silence 
     descended on the room. It was as if the dreamy Rufies were suddenly 
     confronting more genuine sex than they'd bargained for _ their 
     starcrossed diva's sensuous way of saying, "You ain't heard nothin' 
     yet."

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