Re: Who is Robert Wilonsky?

1999-02-26 Thread Danlee2

  Does anybody know anything more about this
   obviously talented writer?
  
  Yeah, I know that someone posted a piece by him on LeAnn Rimes here a while
  ago that was so obnoxious and snide it made me wonder whether he'd
  propositioned her and been turned down.  He also wrote a piece about
Mermaid
  Avenue that provoked a fair amount of discussion because in it he alleged
  that Woody Guthrie was known, if at all, only as a "barren, soulless
legend"
  who needed Bragg  Wilco to be made human.

  Yeah, I gotta agree with Jon on this one.  Wilonsky's a pretty good
wordsmith, I'll grant you that, but he's written a number of things  that, for
various reasons, I and other P2ers have had a hard time with (none, of course
that are coming to mind right now other than Jon's examples).  I've read him
over a number of years, since about 1989 when I lived in Dallas and he write
for the Observer.   My problem with his writing has always been how
"subjective" his criticism is.  I know that looks like an oxymoron or
something, but what I mean is that he often strikes me as someone who has a
really hard time doing a well-balanced review of any artist that isn't a
personal favorite.  I've seen him just savage folks that are generally pretty
well thought-of musicians, and aren't considered  "either/or" artists (such as
Ani DiFranco, Tom Waits, Richard Buckner...).  In Dallas around '90 and '91 or
so, I often wondered about the guy's personal safety, his reviews were so
consistently extremely pro or con on generally well-liked artists around
town

  Anyway, we all grow up and hopefully get better at we do, if you think he's
turning out some good stuff send it to the list.  If nothing else his stuff
has started some pretty interesting threads here before...g

Dan  



Re: Who is Robert Wilonsky?

1999-02-26 Thread Chad Hamilton

He sucks.



Who is Robert Wilonsky?

1999-02-25 Thread Keith Meade

After reading his articles in the Dallas Observer on Wilco and Paul
Westerberg (thanks to fellow posters), I am amazed at the quality and the
depth of his writing. This guy writes very insightful and well researched
articles. He delves into subjects that are ignored by most reviewers but
are commonplace on this list.  Does anybody know anything more about this
obviously talented writer?

KM

np: Beth Orton "Central Reservation"



RE: Who is Robert Wilonsky?

1999-02-25 Thread Jon Weisberger

 Does anybody know anything more about this
 obviously talented writer?

Yeah, I know that someone posted a piece by him on LeAnn Rimes here a while
ago that was so obnoxious and snide it made me wonder whether he'd
propositioned her and been turned down.  He also wrote a piece about Mermaid
Avenue that provoked a fair amount of discussion because in it he alleged
that Woody Guthrie was known, if at all, only as a "barren, soulless legend"
who needed Bragg  Wilco to be made human.

Not a fan,

Jon Weisberger  Kenton County, KY [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://home.fuse.net/jonweisberger/



Re: Who is Robert Wilonsky?

1999-02-25 Thread Friskics

In a message dated 2/25/99 9:23:43 PM Central Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 Does anybody know anything more about this obviously talented writer? 

keith -- pasted below are the opening five paragraphs of a story i wrote a
year-and-a-half ago that leads with wilonsky's arrogant reduction of people to
ciphers and contrasts it with the empathetic humanity of brian henneman and
the bottle rockets. fwiw, bill f-w

Welfare Music

In a recent review for the Los Angeles newspaper *New Times*, Robert Wilonsky
dubbed the Bottle Rockets' new album *24 Hours A Day* "music for white
people--fat white people, drunk white people, unemployed white people, white
people who play air guitar with their eyes squeezed shut, white people who
hang kitty cat clocks on their walls, white people who go to Dolly Parton
concerts on the Fourth of July and get bummed out when they can't get close to
the stage, white people proud of their $1,000 cars and their speeding tickets,
white people who go to Skynyrd concerts and know their screams for 'Free Bird'
will be rewarded and then some." 

Wilonsky's disdainful tone, whether intended to be inflammatory or not,
betrays a cultural elitism not uncommon among critics on both coasts--a
dismissal of everything west of New York and east of Hollywood as a wasteland
of trailer parks, stock car racing, and rebel flags. The assumption is that
the inhabitants of this benighted realm aren't worth writing about (which in
turn makes dismissing anyone who *does* easier than spearing fish in a
barrel). But in some respects, Wilonsky's depiction of the Bottle Rockets'
social and moral universe is spot-on. He's wrong, however, to say that *24
Hours a Day* is music *for* white people; more correctly, it's music *about*
white people.

The group sets many of its songs in its uniquely rural and Southern hometown
of Festus, Mo. A predominantly white community of 15,000 located half-an-hour
outside St. Louis, Festus is culturally impoverished and economically
depressed--and not without its share of dysfunction. It's easy to imagine how
a sense of stagnation might pervade life there. And it's certainly easy to
understand why such mind-numbing pursuits as beer-guzzling, blaring the car
radio, and cruising the strip figure prominently in the Bottle Rockets'
lyrics. 

Empathy for how this stuckness plays itself out in people's lives has been
chief songwriter Brian Henneman's stock-in-trade from the beginning (no less,
in fact, than the band's meat-and-potatoes Southern rock). A good example is
"Wave That Flag," which takes an insider's look at the heritage-or-hate debate
over the confederate flag. "I'm a different kind but I'm a rebel too,"
Henneman sings. "Like to do my own thing, man, how 'bout you/You can whistle
'Dixie' all day long/If the tables turned wouldn't you hate that song?" 

As these lines suggest, the Bottle Rockets are unwilling to reduce anyone to
caricature--not the flag-wavers, nor the protesters. No matter how one-
dimensional couch potato in "Sunday Sports" may seem, he's still a human
being; in the Bottle Rockets' eyes, that alone makes his alienation worthy of
consideration, if not of compassion.