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    Money Changes EverythingTheodor Adorno on the Progressive Potential of Rock Music

    Disillusioned words like bullets bark

    As human gods aim for their mark

    Made everything from toy guns that spark

    To flesh-colored Christs that glow in the dark

    It's easy to see without looking too far

    That not much

    Is really sacred.

    -Bob Dylan,Its Alright, Ma

    (Im Only Bleeding), 1965

    Anthony Cushman b00412384

    Contemporary Studies Program - Honours Thesis

    Thesis Advisor Prof. Steven Boos

    March 2008

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    IntroductionThe reality is, to me, I dont really see it as a business. Im still one of those

    people that see music as art, and maybe its really nave, but maybe Im the

    future.

    -M.I.A., Singer-rapper

    Theodor Adornos skeptical conception of modern consumer society- dubbed

    The Culture Industry- is captured poetically in Bob DylansIts Alright, Ma (Im Only

    Bleeding). The epic tune has been referred to as the ultimate protest song because it

    expresses a general disapproval of the modern world. The lyrics are vigorously nihilistic,

    claiming that It's easy to see without looking too far/ That not much/ Is really sacred

    (Bob Dylan,Its Alright, Ma, 1965). The narrators prime target is capitalism, specifically

    the way in which the systems pragmatist ideology neutralizes all other values. Dylan

    suggests that instrumental reason subjects absolutes such as beauty to financial

    calculations, describing businessmen that cultivate their flowers to be nothing more than

    something they invest in (Ibid).The culture industrys amoral manufacturing has made

    everything from toy guns that spark/ To flesh-colored Christs that glow in the dark

    (Ibid). Dylan is disillusioned (Ibid) by the phony (Ibid) commodity form that

    traditional values are reduced to and Advertising signs that con you (Ibid) by diverting

    from this fact. Adorno argues that the whole of culture is consumed by administration in

    this way. Like Dylan, he suggests that the problematic inherent in the culture industry is

    so deeply rooted that there is no sense in trying (Ibid) to displace it.

    Adornos aesthetic theory is alternately hopeful and despondent: he is a strong

    believer in the social potential of art yet markedly pessimistic about its realization in

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    modern society.Its Alright, Ma is a testament to the progressive content that Adorno

    believes to be inherent in aesthetics: the song steps back from society and offers a holistic

    critique of it, offering possible solutions to suggested problems. By appearing to have a

    life of [its] own, [the work] of art [calls] into question a society where nothing is allowed

    to be itself and everything is subject to the principle of exchange (Cook, 114). Dylans

    song is consistent with Adornos aesthetics because it is autonomous, critical, and

    antithetical (Culture and Administration, 118).

    In so much asIts Alright, Ma is essentially artistic, it also represents that which is

    threatened by the culture industry. Adorno describes modern society as a victim of a

    vicious cycle of conservatism: the delimiting of art is both a cause and symptom of the

    culture industrys malady. Adornian theory dichotomizes society into two necessary

    elements- culture and administration. He suggests, however, that the latters inherent

    tendency towards expansion and domination renders the structure ultimately self-

    defeating. For Adorno, the absence of art in society is the emblem of the culture industry.

    Adorno has proven himself to be a prescient thinker: though his theory on mass-

    culture was composed early in the twentieth century, its contemporary relevance is

    becoming increasingly apparent. The intimate relationship between popular music and

    commerce is an ideal manifestation of Adornian theory. Though rock music was in its

    infancy at the time of the philosophers death, its growing connection to bureaucracy and

    simultaneous shift in content is consistent with the aesthetic lifecycle that the thinker

    illustrates.

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    DylansIts Alright, Ma is a quintessential example of the rebellious folk music

    that was being performed in a growing number of coffeehouses around Boston and New

    York in the early 1960s. By the 1970s, administrative interests transformed the art into a

    standardized collection of rock clichs. This thesis will argue that the history of rock

    music is a direct manifestation of Adornian aesthetic theory, providing examples of the

    way in which its aesthetics were radically compromised by industrial involvement. In

    doing so, the case study will suggest particular answers to Adornos questions concerning

    the potential for art within the culture industry.

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    Theoretical FrameworkTheodor Adornos Aesthetic Theory

    Decisions are made with the aim purely of serving a big companys financial

    interests It affects everything.

    -Chris Martin, Coldplay Frontman

    [Administration] is completely unrelated to the creative process, yet it imposes

    itself upon the artistic process.

    -Win Butler,Arcade Fire Frontman

    As a rule, critical theorists like Theodor Adorno do not make the most gracious of

    houseguests. Upon fleeing 1930s fascist Germany with a group of fellow Frankfurt

    School thinkers and arriving in the United States as an exile, the social philosopher

    immediately turned his shrewd eye on the consumerist culture of modern America.

    Adorno was greatly affected by the National Socialists systematic upheaval of Europe- a

    feeling evident in the strong sense of disillusionment and deep-rooted pessimism that

    pervades most of his philosophy. In his later work, Adorno stressed the lasting

    significance of the Holocaust, writing that extreme situations are in themselves

    inseparable from the substantiality of everything cultural down to the present day (CA,

    120). Adorno viewed the atrocities as a betrayal of the metaphysical traditions search for

    rational totality. Auschwitz, he wrote, confirmed the philosopheme of pure identity as

    death (Negative Dialectics, 362). It was with this disposition that Adorno encountered

    an entirely distinct form of oppression in his new home in what he famously deemed the

    culture industry. While Adorno nowhere identifies the culture industry with the

    political triumph of fascism, he does imply that [its] effective integration of society

    marks an equivalent triumph of repressive unification in liberal democratic states to that

    which was achieved under fascism (The Culture Industry, Introduction, 4). Though the

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    root and severity of oppression differed, America was akin to Nazi Germany in its

    subjugation of integral freedom.

    While Adornos critical theory is relatively holistic, he is most interested in

    aesthetics. Accordingly, many of his most involved works are concerned with defining

    the social role of art and assessing its potential to produce social change. The thinkers

    pessimism can be traced back to a central theory he developed- a problematic inherent in

    the capitalist system that threatens arts autonomy: by virtue of its extreme organizational

    power, the corporation threatens to subsume not only its competitors but also the

    aesthetic realm itself. The phenomenon is a double-edged sword: not only is the culture

    industry oppressive in its own right, but its structure also undermines attempts at

    progressive social change.

    To come to terms with Adornos case against capitalism, one must first examine

    the thinkers aesthetic sensibilities- particularly his definition of art. Adornos aesthetic

    investigations are primarily concerned with Modern Art. As such, his conceptualizations

    are rooted in socially-minded expressionism. The thinker adopts the Kantian notion of

    art, evaluating it in terms of its formal autonomy. In addition to being relatively

    independent of the market, a cultural good will also have to exhibit certain internal

    characteristics or features in order to be considered truly autonomous Products of the

    culture industry would themselves have to undermine reification from within (Cook,

    113). Adornos conception of aesthetic independence is clarified in Culture and

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    Administration. As the essays title suggest, the thinker constructs a dualistic model in

    which modern society is demarcated by two opposing ideologies.

    Administration- the first of the two elements- is essentially bureaucratic. As such,

    the realm is concerned with applying instrumental reason and intensive planning in order

    to produce what is most useful. In this sense, it relies on a means-based rationality.

    Culture, on the other hand, is the title of that which is often referred to in modern society

    as The Arts. In contrast to its opposite, the cultural realm can be defined as that which

    exists as an ends in itself. If administration aims at producing that which is useful,

    culture rejoices in its uselessness. By taking on this role, works of art recall the human

    purposes of production that instrumental rationality forgets (Cook, 114). Culture is

    viewed as the manifestation of pure humanity, Adorno writes, without regard for its

    functional relationship within society (CA, 108). The philosopher goes on to argue that

    [culture] stands in contrast to everything which serves the reproduction of material life,

    the literal self-preservation of the human being in general, and the needs of his mere

    existence (CA, 108). As such, it is related to spontaneous activity, inherent in the

    creative process. Culture, Adorno writes, would like to be higher and more pure,

    something untouchable which cannot be tailored according to any tactical or technical

    considerations (CA, 108). The thinker suggests that culture and administration are

    diametrically opposed and fundamentally incommensurable.

    Adorno argues the existence of a natural tension within society. Such a twisted

    feeling of irreconcilability (CA, 108) is a logical manifestation of the fundamental

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    difference between the two realms: culture is opposed to administration (CA, 108) and

    vice-versa. Ironically, this friction is a key indicator of social harmony.

    Ideally, administration and culture should exhibit a complementary, self-sufficient

    relationship. The former is the necessary basis for a sustainable society, providing an

    organized system in which the basic needs of the citizen are met. In this sense it is the

    basis of society. Culture, on the other hand, makes life meaningful. Administration gives

    society form and structure whereas culture creates and implements social values.

    Art takes on great significance in light of the above conception of culture. Adorno

    boldly casts art as that which is autonomous, critical, and antithetical (CA, 118).

    Aesthetic independence allows the artist to establish an objective critique of that which

    has been administered and the opportunity to challenge the status quo in his artwork.

    Arts revolutionary potential fosters Theodor Adornos dedication to aesthetic theory.

    That better things will make their way by virtue of their own power, he writes

    dismissively, is nothing but an edifying gingerbread slogan (CA, 119).

    While Adorno spends a great deal of time establishing arts revolutionary

    potential, he is markedly pessimistic about its realization in modern society. While

    culture and administration can theoretically support one another, the inherent tendency of

    the latter towards expansion suggests that such a structure of society may be ultimately

    self-defeating. In his The Theory of Social and Economic Organization, founding

    sociologist Max Weber argues that bureaucracies, following their own law, are destined

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    to expand (CA, 109). The dominance of administration is directly related to the highly

    advanced level of organization and purely technical superiority (Weber, CA, 109) that

    drives the business model. A fully-developed bureaucratic mechanism Weber argues,

    stands in the same relationship to other forms as does the machine to the non-

    mechanical production of goods (Weber, CA, 109). Adorno takes the sociologists

    theory to its radical extreme, arguing that the natural proliferation of administration

    threatens to make culture obsolete. The more firmly integrated [organizations] are, he

    writes, the greater is their prospect for asserting themselves in relation to others (CA,

    110). Adorno believes the culture industry to be an anomalous case of administrative

    domination.

    It is in Adornos belief in arts progressive potential that one can ascertain the real

    sense of tragedy inherent in its dissolution. In the idealized social structure offered by the

    philosopher, culture is the antithesis of administration. Among all of the opposing

    elements that exist between the two social spheres, the most pivotal exists in cultures

    ability to construct counter-culture. For Adorno, the truth content of a particular work

    of art exists in its relative ability to challenge unjust social norms and offer potential

    modes of change. [Art], he writes, involves an irrevocably critical impulse towards the

    status quo and all institutions thereof (CA, 116). In so much as art is a critic, it is also a

    renegade- a revolutionary force with the potential tobetray a given set of principles.

    Without culture, society lacks a meaningful sense of value and viable means for change.

    All that remains is a highly structured network of utilitarian calculations:

    The demand made by administration upon culture is essentiallyheteronomous: culture no matter what form it takes is to be measured

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    by norms not inherent to it and which have nothing to do with the qualityof the object, but rather with some type of abstract standards imposed

    from without, while at the same time the administrative instance according to its own prescriptions and nature must for the most part

    refuse to become involved in questions of immanent quality which regard

    the truth of the thing itself or its objective bases in general (CA, 113).

    Adorno argues that, on a basic level, the absence of culture amounts to a fundamentally

    shallow existence. An even greater danger, however, lies in ones subsequent inability to

    critically analyze and challenge potentially tyrannical forms of government.

    The expansion of Administration does not result in the liquidation of culture, but

    in a clearance sale. As Adorno is quick to point out, bureaucratic forces are eager to mold

    art into useful products: the culture industry systematically co-opts and commoditizes

    cultural artifacts, forcing them into the rigid framework of their opposite. They are

    granted the space in which to draw breath immediately by that power against which

    [they] rebel (CA, 118). Such devaluation preserves a hollow representation of art that is

    void of its defining characteristics: the products lack the autonomous, critical, and

    antithetical mark of aesthetics. What are emancipated from formal law are no longer the

    productive impulses which rebelled against conventions. Impulse, subjectivity and

    profanation, the old adversaries of materialistic alienation, now succumb to it

    (Regression, 32). Art is preserved by virtue of its exchange-value, namely its

    entertainment value. Adorno suggests that such devaluation is critical because it not only

    strips the work of its progressive potential, but also makes the consumer complacent by

    way of intoxication. Most strikingly of all, the customer is left with the illusion that

    artistic integrity is still intact. In an effort to preserve a feeling of contrast to

    contemporary streamlining, Adorno writes, culture is still permitted to drive about in a

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    type of gypsy wagon; the gypsy wagons, however, roll about secretly in a monstrous hall,

    a fact which they do not themselves notice (CA, 118).

    In many ways, Adornos account presents artwork as a microcosm of society as a

    whole: a work of art must internalize a holistic account of complex social structures if it

    is to do them justice in its critique. Accordingly, autonomous artwork will exhibit the

    same tension manifested in a dynamic social structure. While social friction is a

    reflection of the naturally opposing forces of culture and administration, the antagonistic

    core of Modern Art is reflective of its antithetical character: it bears witness to the

    continuing antagonistic character of a world which is growing ever more unified (CA,

    113). Adorno argues that such unification is a mark of the homogeneity and subsequent

    loss of identity that logically follow the rise of the culture industry. Just as autonomous

    art expresses social tension, when subsumed by bureaucracy, it produces the same hollow

    echo of standardization as that which resonates across the whole of society.

    The rise of the culture industry is a direct result of the neutralization of culture

    (CA, 117). Artwork is ruthlessly reified, stripped of any metaphysical significance, until

    all that remains is an aesthetic shell. That which is so provokingly useless in culture,

    Adorno explains, is transformed into tolerated negativity or even into something

    negatively useful into a lubricant for the system, into something that exists for

    something else, into untruth, or into goods of the culture industry calculated for the

    consumer (CA, 117). Adorno argues that most artwork consumed within modern

    society lacks aesthetic content. The thinker suggests that once a work of art is exposed to

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    the instrumental reasoning inherent in modern capitalism it surrenders its artistic

    integrity.

    Herein lies a paradox- one that Adorno is painfully aware of. He acknowledges

    the fact that the modern artist (and perhaps art in general) depends on various

    administrative institutions to convert his abstract creation into a work that may be

    accessed by a particular audience: Yet, at the same time, art denounces everything

    institutional and official (CA, 117). While Adorno does not wholly discount the potential

    for a society in which art is reified without sacrificing its autonomy, it is clear that

    modern America is by and large incapable of achieving such a feat. Instead, Adorno

    would argue that citizens of modern consumerist society are fed a continuous barrage of

    romantic comedies and celebrity gossip until they are too stuffed to fathom that anything

    is even missing.

    While Adornos critical theory is comprehensive enough to be applied to any

    number of media (and has been by his many followers), the German philosopher was

    known for his great passion for music and focused his aesthetic inquiry accordingly. The

    philosopher came from a wealthy German family that shared a common love for music.

    His mother and sister were both accomplished musicians and offered the young pianist

    encouragement and training. Though Adorno spent much of his adolescence focused on

    academics, his fascination with music grew as he continued to develop as an amateur

    musician. After completing his doctorate in Philosophy, he leapt at the chance to study

    under renowned composer Alban Berg. He later wrote that his teachers music is

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    have dramatically altered the particularity of compositions, the concerns of the listener

    (and society as a whole) remain relatively constant. Adorno opens the essay by remarking

    on the innate appeal of music in its variety of forms: Complaints about the decline of

    musical taste, he writes, begin [with] mankinds twofold discovery, on the threshold

    of historical time, that music represents at once the immediate manifestation of impulse

    and the locus of its taming (Regression, 29). This universal conception of music will be

    presumed in this paper when discussing its divergent forms.

    In the context of the rise of Rock and Roll- a musical movement that was

    blossoming at the time of the philosophers death- Adornos critique offers an

    astoundingly articulate manifesto for the musics infantile progressive aspirations.

    Furthermore, the awkward relationship between culture and administration that Adorno

    constructed is fully realized in the bureaucratic force that has threatened rock musics

    authenticity since its birth. This paper will use the collision of rock music and commerce

    as a case study to argue the profundity, modern significance, and far-reaching application

    potential of Theodor Adornos aesthetic theory. At the same time, Adornos prescient

    theory offers compelling insight into the modern musicians continuous struggle for

    authenticity in the culture industry.

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    Case StudyThe History of the Music Industry

    Theres something about music when its on the street level. Its the only way you

    can build up subcultures and have manifestos to believe in and lifestyles and

    ideologies Its going to make me sound old, but music had more in it back in theday, and it was more open and reflective and interesting. Now its one dimensional

    and market driven.

    -M.I.A., Rapper-singer

    Bob Dylans melodic proclamation that the times they are a changin became the

    manifesto of a cultural revolution. Echoing the political disillusionment shared by a

    growing number of young Americans, the enigmatic poet directed a barrage of rhetorical

    questions at his audience: How many years can a mountain exist/ Before it's washed to

    the sea?/ Yes, 'n' how many years can some people exist/ Before they're allowed to be

    free? (Bob Dylan,Blowin in the Wind, 1963). The concerns struck a chord with the

    bohemian crowd. They responded in an overwhelming wave of political activism that

    expressed their dissatisfaction with modern society and intent to provoke social change.

    But the burgeoning counter-culture of 1960s America was not only convinced

    that a change was gonna come, they shared the Adornian notion that the productive

    [impulse] that [rebels] against convention (Regression, 32) could manifest itself in their

    music. Deborah Cook writes that Adorno insisted very early in his work that the task of

    music as art was to express the exigency of the social situation and to call for change

    through the coded language of suffering (Cook, 109). The belief had been exemplified

    in the music of the previous decade: the birth of Rock and Roll had advanced the Civil

    Rights Movement, its Blues-based style provoking the integration of Black artists in

    popular music (and by extension, stimulating racial integration throughout society).

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    Inspired by the progression that had already been made through popular music, 60s

    youth were optimistic that their music could do the same. In the local coffeehouses of

    Boston and New York, college kids started a folk-revival that transposed its traditional

    aesthetic to reflect modern political concerns: For fifty cents you could buy a mug of

    coffee and hang out all night talking, reading, playing chess, or listening to the students

    who brought along their guitars and banjos (Mansion, 3). Their protest songs expressed

    liberal concerns like the war in Vietnam and the nihilistic elements of modern capitalist

    society. In accordance with Adornian theory, the movement was relatively detached from

    administration, giving it the independence necessary for rebellion: [The] approach and

    message held a growing appeal and veracity for many young intellectuals and middle-

    class college students who were increasingly uneasy with the countrys postwar

    consumer society (Mansion, 4). The movement was epitomized in 1969 at Woodstock-

    when half a million likeminded fans gathered at the festival to celebrate a shared belief in

    the revolutionary potential of their music.

    As the decade drew to a close, however, a cynicism began to overshadow the

    peace movement: while Hendrix was jamming at Woodstock, newly elected President

    Richard Nixon was expressing his lack of sympathy for the counter-cultures aspirations.

    Under the new leadership, police brutality at political protests escalated and an increase

    of troops were sent overseas to Vietnam. The developments made many hippies wonder

    whether their dream of peace had actually been a hallucination: while the 60s had seen

    an unprecedented outcry for social change, the counterculture seemed as though they

    were further than ever from achieving their goals. The changing mood was present in the

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    music, which no longer contained the same progressive messages: Nothing in the street

    looks any different to me (The Who, Wont Get Fooled Again, 1971) sang The Whos

    Pete Townshend, reflecting upon the naivet and sense of betrayal that overshadowed the

    flower power of the previous decade: Pick up my guitar and play/ Just like yesterday/

    Then Ill get on my knees and pray/ We dont get fooled again (Ibid).

    While a divergence in pop-musics content became blatantly obvious as the 70s

    progressed, one could argue that the change had less to do with the new political climate

    and more to do with the increased industrialization of the music itself. The notion is the

    central thesis of Fred Goodmans bookThe Mansion on the Hill, a historical account of

    the rise of the music industry. The power of the music and the broad, romantic appeal of

    the underground scene, Goodman writes, was transformed into a marketable

    commodity [that] had nothing to do with promoting counterculture (Mansion, 183).

    The author argues that by the 70s, Rock and Roll had been appropriated by industry and

    remodeled as a highly specialized mechanism designed to produce commercially

    successful music:

    Monetarily, the marriage of the music and the business was anextraordinary success. But artistically and socially, it was a complete

    reversal of the values that had spawned the music. The underground scenestarted in earnest when rock assumed the mantel of meaning and intent

    from folk music, and it was founded on a search for authenticity and anexplicit rejection of consumerism and mainstream values. But the

    resonance and appeal of that message had proven broad enough to supplythe impetus for a new business- and that business had taken on a life of its

    own (Mansion, 306).

    For Adorno, the expanse of administration that Goodman describes necessarily

    results in the impotence of music: culture is the essence of social reform. When its formal

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    autonomy is violated by administrative expansion, it is stripped of its progressive

    potential. Adornian theory thus suggests that pop-musics general disengagement from

    progressive ideals following the 1960s was nota response to an increasingly oppressive

    political climate. Instead, Adorno would argue, oppressive political conditions are

    indicative of a society in which art, and by extension culture as a whole, is obstructed by

    administration. For Adorno, a lack of progressive music suggests that no music is being

    created at all. He would argue that contrary interpretations are based on the misconceived

    notion that commoditized products contain the essential properties of the work of art.

    Goodmans account is consistent with this Adornian notion.

    The modern music industry serves as a strikingly faithful microcosm of Theodor

    Adornos culture industry- in fact, it was a manifestation he often referenced to exemplify

    his theory. The culture industry, Adorno suggests, has developed formulas [for]

    musical entertainment (Mansion, 105). Goodman spends much of his book expounding

    this theory, going into great detail about the high level of forethought and organization

    within the music business. In all [the culture industrys] branches, Adorno writes,

    products which are tailored for consumption by masses, and which to a great extent

    determine the nature of that consumption, are manufactured more or less according to a

    plan (Culture Industry Reconsidered, 98). In doing so, the system fixes its gaze on

    precisely that which is non-essential to the artwork: The entire practice transfers the

    profit motive naked onto cultural forms (CIR, 99). For Goodman, this is precisely what

    unfolded in the popular music of the 1960s, as musicians were hired by record labels that

    were admittedly concerned not just with the question of whether a recording [is] good,

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    but why it [succeeds] or [fails] with the public (Mansion, 275). The book chronicles the

    intensifying affinity of popular music and industry, the awkwardness and complexity of

    their relationship, and the effect it has on the music itself.

    Goodmans anecdotes about musicians struggling with their managers agendas

    substantiate the Adornian notion that the autonomy of works of art [are] tendentially

    eliminated by the culture industry (CIR, 99). While the form of the product tends to

    mimic its former self, its aesthetic content is dissolved: It does not strictly counterpose

    another principle to that aura, but rather it conserves that aura as a foggy mist (CIR,

    102). Goodman believes the same to be true of the modern music industry. He cites

    numerous examples of artists whose integrity was compromised by commercial interests,

    altering progressive content in accordance with the status quo. The author reduces this

    conformity to the listeners preference for that which is familiar, a symptom of Adornos

    regression of listening. The blending of aesthetics leads art not to its rightful

    position [of] opposition, Adorno writes, but rather in a variety of ways to the defense

    of its baneful social consequences (CIR, 102). He argues that a depreciation of artistic

    content is analogous to a standardization of its form. All things considered, Goodmans

    The Mansion on the Hillis a strong exemplification of Adornos theory, particularly its

    detailed account of the way in which the industrialization of music degrades its aesthetic

    content.

    Overtly commercial music is the object of ceaseless satirical pop-culture

    references: Jesus, man, could you change the channel? The Cohen Brothers The Dude

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    memorably pleads from the back seat of a cab before being forcefully ejected by its

    offended driver. I had a rough night and I hate the fuckin Eagles, man! (The Big

    Lebowski). The Eagles have become synonymous with the spiritually void Corporate

    Rock of the 1970s. The bands music was the product of meticulous standardization.

    Adorno would have found The Eagles commercial success to be symptomatic of a

    regression to a homogenous musical wasteland. Everything [in the music industry] is so

    completely identical, Adorno writes, that preference in fact depends merely on

    biographical details or on the situation in which things are heard (Regression, 30).

    Standardization is positively correlated with record sales because the familiarity of the

    piece is a surrogate for the quality ascribed to it (Ibid). Adorno argues that

    commoditized music is simplified in much the same way so that it makes for easily

    digestible consumption.

    Record executives of the 1970s based their business model on Adornos theory,

    gradually perfecting a formula for producing profitable acts that necessarily lacked

    progressive content. In the case of The Eagles, Atlantic Records carefully constructed a

    model for success, including a pre-planned image that adopted clich rock aesthetics:

    The songwriters honed a metaphor The Eagles would use to great advantage in their

    career: rock and roll as an outlaw lifestyle (Mansion, 238). The extensive role of

    administration in manufacturing Corporate Rock- relatively extreme in the case of The

    Eagles- is an explicit product of Adornos culture industry. For proof of the musics

    resulting banality: playDesperado.

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    The Eagles are just one of many bands that illustrate Adornos theory on the

    tendency of commoditized artwork to masquerade as its virtuous counterpart. By

    concealing or disguising their reification, some modern artwork also subverts it; they

    undermine the reifying effects of standardization, pseudo-individualism, stereotypes and

    schemata (Cook, 114). This administered deception further complicates matters, as it

    becomes quite difficult to identify prevailing authentic works among a wash of corporate

    imitations. The scope and reach of the business often make it impossible to tell what is

    done for art and what is done for commerce- which calls into question the musics current

    ability to convey the artistic intent that made it so appealing and different to begin with

    (Mansion, xii).

    Then again, some cases are more obvious than others. Adorno argues that typical

    commodities fail to disguise their entanglement with administration and do not pretend

    to have any value apart from that of exchange (Cook, 114). If the album [The Eagles

    Desperado] struck many critics as contrived, coming as it did from a group that was

    straightforward about its commercial aspirations, the view eventually found great

    resonance with fans (Mansion, 238). As Adorno writes, public reaction was split

    between the prescribed fun which is supplied to [fans] by the culture industry and a not

    particularly well-hidden doubt about its blessings (CIR, 103).

    By the 1980s, rock music had splintered into so many disparate yet uninspired

    subgenres that incessant journalistic claims regarding the essence of rock became

    increasingly obscure. These rapid stylistic changes reflect an essential feature of

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    modernity itself - all that is solid melts into air- and are reinforced by the vicissitudes of

    musical production in the capitalist marketplace (Cook, 43). That being said, growing

    administrative involvement within the music industry- a new colloquial term whose

    prevalent usage implied the two were now inseparable- had left a definite imprint on the

    content of music and the corresponding image of the musician. While Dylans manager

    Albert Grossman made a conscious decision to refer to his client as an artist, and with

    good reason, one could not apply the title to the bulk of modern pop-stars without

    evoking a sense of irony. While the folk singers of the 60s were epitomized by their

    poetic reserve, progressive aspirations, and disdain for mass-culture, the modern

    Rockstar is a caricature of greed, excessive consumption, reckless abandon, and

    ambivalent attitude towards social issues. By the late seventies the record companies

    had succeeded to such an extent that the modern rock scene became the antithesis of what

    it had originally aspired to be (Mansion, 306). The tendency of commoditized art to take

    on administrative qualities is a double-edged sword: not only is it stripped of its

    progressive potential, it now serves to reinforce the status-quo. Adorno argues this

    subversion of content to be symptomatic of the culture industry.

    As Goodman astutely deduces, the problem [is] that the music no longer [drives]

    the business, the business drives the music (Mansion, 306). The quote reads as an

    expression of the danger that Adorno described in Culture and Administration: while art

    requires the limited involvement of administration in order to be produced and

    distributed, there is an inherent threat that presents itself when culture and administration

    come in contact with one another. Adorno argues that the organizational model will

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    necessarily expand to the point at which it violates cultures aesthetic autonomy,

    eventually swallowing it up, and then spitting it out as commodity- a pitiful parody of its

    former self. Such is certainly the case for the music industry Goodman describes in The

    Mansion on the Hill: rock music was originally independent of commerce (in the 60s

    folk-revival) but was harnessed by entrepreneurs as soon as its mass appeal became

    evident. Popular music was then subjected to an increasing level of standardization and

    organization, until many artists became too overwhelmed by foreign commercial interests

    to retain their artistic aspirations.

    Its okay as long as it stays out of the way and it helps Bruce Springsteen once

    said reticently. Otherwise [its] got me freaked out I get upset sometimes, you know- I

    just dont wanna go and get lost in a bunch of stuff that dont mean nothing to me

    (Mansion, 302). A musician whose professed ambivalence to business led him to sign

    contracts without even reading them, Springsteen was acutely aware of the conflicting

    interests pervading the music industry. When he first started playing, his absolute refusal

    to compromise authenticity for commercial success frustrated pragmatic record execs to

    no end: when attempting to choose a final cut of his song The River, Columbia A&R man

    Peter Philbin explains, the rocker played him 17 different mixes of the song. And then

    Bruce goes, Now which one is better? Which one is better? Hey, flip a coin! (Mansion,

    333). The anecdote fits well into Adornos account of the awkward relationship between

    culture and administration. [Administration] lives parasitically, he writes, without

    regard for the obligation of the internal artistic whole implied by its functionality, but

    also without concern for the laws of form demanded by aesthetic autonomy (CIR, 101).

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    Springsteens delicate relationship with record executives is reflective of Adornos notion

    of the irreconcilability of art and business. The realms are based on two fundamentally

    distinct ideologies, incommensurable modes of thought, and opposing value systems.

    The foreign logic of administration persistently nags the artist to surrender

    himself: Weve got at least five big records here Springsteens manager Jon Landau

    insists. Now all we have to do is cleverly stage them, the sequence of them, the touring-

    and nobody tours better than [you] Bruce- and basically put together a two-year plan

    (Mansion, 342).Born in the U.S.A.s title track- profound disillusionment with the

    American dream, juxtaposed with a hauntingly patriotic refrain- expresses Springsteens

    ambiguous relationship to American consumer culture, its inherent tension, and the

    paradoxical pursuit of authenticity: You end up like a dog that's been beat too much/ Till

    you spend half your life just covering up (Bruce Springsteen, Born in the U.S.A.).

    Goodmans cynical portrayal of the modern music industry evokes Adornian

    critical theory. Using Springsteen as a prime example, the author argues that even the

    most grounded artists will eventually become worn-down by a barrage of bureaucratic

    demands. Goodman suggests that Springsteen eventually compromised his artistic

    autonomy.Born in the U.S.A. (1984) marked a departure from the rockstars earlier work:

    the tracks were shorter, less experimental, and dealt in rock clich rather than social

    critique. Born in the U.S.A. wasnt undertaken to question authority or the supremacy of

    commercialism but to achieve it. It now spoke for the aspirations of rock (Mansion,

    351).

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    While Springsteens capitulation could simply lead to his being discarded

    amongst fellow victims of the culture industry, his prodigious devotion to Adornian

    aesthetic ideals raises far greater questions: Can the artist survive in the culture industry?

    Is it still possible to create genuine art in modern society? While Adorno does not

    explicitly deny the potential for art within the culture industry, he is decidedly pessimistic

    about the prospect of creation within the given context. Goodman shares a similar belief:

    It is possible to both achieve commercial success and rise above it, he maintains,

    but it requires an absolute faith and focus in the intrinsic value of the work itself

    rather than smart career moves (Mansion, xiii).

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    ConclusionThe authenticity, originality and truthfulness of music is not like it was. The big

    corporations [arent] concerned with discovering the revolutionaries and poets

    that I [have] admired. In todays commercial radio and recordings, theres no risk,

    theres no sense of discovery, and people are trying as much as they can to soundalike.

    -Perry Ferrel,Janes Addiction andSatellite Party Frontman

    Songs can't save the world Bob Dylan once said. I've gone through all that.

    Popular music has gone through it as well. As Goodman argues in The Mansion on the

    Hill, the content of rock is drastically different than it was back in the 1960s. By

    presenting the history of the genre from the point of view of the industry- an angle fans

    hardly ever get a glimpse of- the extreme level of planning, organization, and

    administration that is involved in modern musical production is revealed. By contrasting

    the folk-revival with Corporate Rock, Goodman is able to persuasively argue that the

    tangible shift away from progressively-minded music that has occurred is directly related

    to its escalating integration with business. The authors case is reinforced by Adornian

    aesthetic theory. For Adorno, the rise of the music industry is synonymous with the

    dilution of the modern work of art.

    The question of whether Adornian art can exist within modern consumer society

    remains unanswered. Both Adorno and Goodman passionately believe in the

    revolutionary potential of music but are pessimistic about its ability to remain authentic

    in the culture industry. Goodman suggests that if anything, the problem is getting worse.

    Adorno, who argues that administration has a tendency to expand at an exponential rate,

    supports his position. Accordingly, music is now a billion-dollar industry churning out

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    popular music that exhibits a whole new level of standardization. I think its happened

    and nobody knows the difference (Mansion, 352), says Dylan. The great folk music

    and the great rock & roll, you might not hear it again. Like the horse and the buggy

    (Ibid).

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    EpilogueDigital Downloads and Industry Decline

    It seems like [the music industry is truly dying], and I dont find it particularly

    sad.

    -Jeff Tweedy, Wilco Frontman.

    I dont think the love of music is thanks to the record industry I guess what I

    mean is I dont think were going to lose music.

    -Dave Matthews,Dave Matthews BandFrontman

    Since Goodmans book was published in the late 90s, the music industry has

    undergone yet another dramatic transformation- a revolution that has the potential to

    authenticate art in the culture industry. For the first time since the emergence of Rock and

    Roll, the business has faced a significant decline, largely the result of technological

    advancement. While digital downloading has arisen as a popular medium for purchasing

    music, it fails to offset the loss inflicted by non-commercial file-sharing over the

    Internet. The contentious development offers an interesting scenario to examine in terms

    of Theodor Adornos critical theory.

    Whereas 60s youth rebelled against consumerism through the contentof their

    music, the present generation is taking a more direct approach. Studies estimate that over

    60 million people have downloaded songs illicitly, the major offenders being tech-savvy

    youth. Industry representatives have stated that rampant piracy is not an ideological

    protest against materialism but rather a case of individuals exploiting an opportunity to

    steal. While this may very well be the case, file-sharing has already proven itself to be an

    effective means of resisting the industrial production of music. Whereas political activism

    may have served this function in the past, downloading is a much more forceful course of

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    action. While the ethics of file-sharing may be debatable, the effect on the music industry

    is certain.

    Music downloading is reversing the expansion of administration that Adorno

    references in his theory: the commoditization of music relies on the presumption that

    music is a useful product that can be exchanged in the marketplace. Basic economic

    theory states that if there is no longer consumer demand for music it will cease to be

    produced commercially. The decline of the music industry would directly affect the form

    and content of popular music: while record executives caution that downloading could

    ultimately lead to the extinction of the musician, Adorno would make the opposite claim.

    He would argue that artists that continued to make music would necessarily be those

    genuinely concerned with the creation of art. The survival of modern poets and authors-

    starving artists that create as an end in itself- is living proof of Adornos claims.

    Furthermore, the decline of the music business would see that commercial interests are no

    longer challenging the musicians aesthetic values. Adorno would conclude that the death

    of the industry would greatly increase the potential for the creation of art within the

    culture industry.

    The decline of the industry of music, many conclude, is essentially based on a

    generations belief that music should be free. And while most teens downloading the

    new Kanye West album will certainly never have heard of the Frankfurt School, the

    credo seems to be consistent with Theodor Adornos critical theory.

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    References1. Dylan, Bob. "It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)."

    Bringing It All Back Home. Perf. Bob Dylan. Columbia Records, 1965.

    2. Cook, Deborah. The Culture Industry Revisited: Theodor W. Adorno on Mass

    Culture. Maryland, USA: Roman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.,1996.

    3. (CA) - Adorno, Theodor, "Culture and Administration."

    Bernstein, J. M., ed. The Culture Industry. New York, NY:Routledge, 2006.

    4. Adorno, Theodor. Negative Dialectics. USA: ContinuumInternational Publishing Group, 1983.

    5. Bernstein, J.M., "Introduction." Bernstein, J. M., ed.

    The Culture Industry. New York, NY: Routledge, 2006.

    6. (Regression) - Adorno, Theodor, "On the Fetish Character

    in Music and the Regression of Listening." Bernstein, J.

    M., ed. The Culture Industry. New York, NY: Routledge, 2006.

    7. Adorno, Theodor W., and Alban Berg, "Alban Berg."

    Lonitz, Henri, ed. Correspondence 1925-1935. USA: Polity, 2005.

    8. Dylan, Bob. "Blowin in the Wind." The Freewheelin Bob Dylan.Perf. Bob Dylan. Columbia Records, 1963.

    9. Goodman, Fred. The Mansion on the Hill. New York, NY: VintageBooks, 1998.

    10. Townshend, Pete. "Won't Get Fooled Again." Who's Next.Perf. The Who . MCA Records, 1971.

    11. (CIR)- Adorno, Theodor, "Culture Industry

    Reconsidered." Bernstein, J. M., ed. The Culture Industry. NewYork, NY: Routledge, 2006.

    12. Cohen, Ethan, and Joel Cohen. The Big Lebowski. Dir. JoelCohen. DVD. Polygram Filmed Entertainment, 1998.

    13. Springsteen, Bruce . "Born in the U.S.A." Born in the U.S.A.Perf. Bruce Springsteen. Columbia, 1984.

    14. Header Quotes: "The Future of Music." Rolling Stone, Issue 103910 Nov. 2007.

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