
2. The New Radicals “You Get What You Give”
(Gregg Alexander, Rick Nowels)
Maybe You’ve Been Brainwashed Too [MCA] • 1998
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It’s a little frightening looking back over the past dozen years of my life to realize how much of the time I’ve spent driving a car. And 98% of that time had some form of audio entertainment going, whether music (mostly), audiobooks (more rarely) or podcasts (sharp increase over the past couple years). Car-hours have been especially important when thinking about my exposure to mainstream pop music. Since graduating high school, I have almost never listened to the radio indoors. My education in Sixties pop, classic rock, the Eighties, and current chart music all took place behind the wheel of a car in the late 90s and early oughts. (As did my education in the exquisitely dull good taste of NPR and what might be called popular classical music, i.e., nothing after Brahms. But that’s a different, still incomplete self.)
Increasingly, those half-hour and forty-five-minute commutes (ah, blessed urban sprawl) became the only moments of unalloyed pleasure in a life that felt like it was closing in around me, choking, dry, and foreordained. If I had failed to create a satisfying life as an adult, living paycheck-to-paycheck at jobs I hated and snuffing out any chances at worthwhile relationships through lack of emotional oxygen, I was equally dissatisfied with the perpetual youth that avoiding responsibility was supposed to be the whole point of enabling. I was around actual young people — volunteering at church youth groups, watching my younger siblings grow up and lap me in terms of coherence, success, and stability — and was horrified by the idea that, in the tragic line from Dazed And Confused (I haven’t seen it, I just know the line), I would grow older while they stayed the same age.
Pop music became the only window in the prison of my mind. For three to four minutes at a time, for more years than I care to think about, songs about being young and cool and in love and feeling so much were my release into a larger world than the solipsism of self-pity, which a smartass depressive with a facile intellect can turn anything more ambitious into. High art, whether tragic or sublime, was too easy to incorporate into my self-obsessed narrative of doomed and thwarted ambition brought down by the tragic flaws of laziness and forgetfulness; the unpretentiously pleasure-inducing was all that could take me out of myself and into it, however briefly.
I must have heard “You Get What You Give” about a thousand times before it dawned on me what a great pop song it was. And I mean great pop song, like once-in-a-lifetime stuff, a “God Only Knows” or “Respect” or “I Feel Love” or “Anarchy In The UK” type of thing. It had simply short-circuited all my (still-nascent) critical faculties; I didn’t even know I loved it until I thought about it. I had simply lived with it, breathed it, pulsed with it. It’s only slightly hyperbolic to say that the New Radicals, along with P. G. Wodehouse and my discovery of a universe of healing, gently funny comics outside the suffocating soap-opera kabuki of superheroes (John Stanley, Lewis Trondheim, and Cliff Sterrett: good God, y’all), kept me alive ca. 1999.
Let me be clear. “Don’t give up, you’ve got a reason to live, can’t forget we only get what we give” strikes me now, as it did then, as tritely affirmative homiletics, sub-Oprah bullshit of the kind that slides off the meaning-seeking mind like warm butter. (Mini-epiphany of the last few months: reading David Foster Wallace’s “How Tracy Austin Broke My Heart” and realizing that some people can actually get something out of those contentless maxims, and being simultaneously happy and sorry that for whatever reason I simply can’t operate on that level.) It is not in the lyrics — or not in those lyrics — that the Great Escape lies. It is in the music; and again I want to be clear. I am as cynically unmoved as anyone by the great sweeping, stirring crescendos popularized by U2, Coldplay, the Arcade Fire, and so forth. There is nothing soaring about Gregg Alexander’s tightly-wound mechanical toy of a production: it may pound, but it never builds-and-releases (except perhaps on the line “we’ll kick your ass in,” which anyway works more like a punchline than what the ancients meant by catharsis), and when he goes into falsetto it’s less because the Big Important Melody needs to swoop into the stratosphere than because falsetto is simply another of the classic pop tools in his arsenal — cf. Roy Orbison, the Bee Gees, and Michael Jackson — and he’s showing off.
Showing off is an inherently childish thing, sure. Unsurprisingly, it’s something I’m pretty good at. (If you’ve been impressed by any particular verbal dexterity in any of the foregoing 97 theses, rest assured I meant to do that.) Shutting up and letting the fruits of my labor be their own reward, I’m not so hot at. I do, though, see it as goal, an ideal to aspire to, and perhaps another stick with which to beat myself. Which is why this song is at #2. But more about that next time.
“You Get What You Give” saved my life (metaphorically) in the sense that I found a channel (pop) into which I could divert the irresponsible, gleeful childishness that’s been struggling to sabotage my adulthood. Even Wodehouse comes to an end, and as Wimbledon Green knows to his sorrow, perfect comics are all too rare; but pop is a unquenchable Fountain of Youth, an Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (in the sense that Pope meant, not Gondry) which cannot be exhausted. There are always new frontiers: other countries, other decades, other genres. (I’ll get around to listening to post-1980 country someday, I swear.) So bracketed, I have become free to grow up, and in fact I’m busier than I’ve ever been in my life before, finally completing my degree while working two jobs (public sector and nonprofit), while bills get paid on time and I only contemplate suicide occasionally, as a bit of relaxation after a long day. (Yes, that’s meant as humor.)
An aside. There is, to my mind, nothing so irrepressibly pop as the one-hit wonder. Everything that pop could possibly be arrayed against militates against the entire concept: Serious Album Artists, Rock Provocateurs, those who aspire to make music in classical modes like jazz or composition, even Business, the true arch-enemy of pop (ooh, how thrilling! it’s always the ones you never suspect, the ones closest at hand). Because businessmen, of course, want a continuous return on initial investment, and one-hit wonders provide only that, a one-time spike and then flatline. One-hit wonders have gotten conspicuously more rare of late, a combination of industry pressure to perform and the increasing irrelevance of the charts; even when a band can be officially tallied as a one-hit wonder, they have a massive following elsewhere. The heady days when the New Radicals, Eiffel 65, or Len could appear and disappear without a trace are more or less gone. Sic transit gloria.
Finally, a reminder. All of the above, including the last two entries, is a narrative. There are others. This is the one I’m telling now. Life itself is not a narrative. It is life. Don’t mistake the two.