Utterly, hopelessly, biased analyses centred in, around, and beyond, the Loyalist settler enclave known as Kingston, Ontario.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Tragically Un-hip Alley

The City of Kingston is asking for input on how it can honour the Tragically Hip, who are a local band that made it big in the capitalist music industry for a while. Fine people, I'm sure - one of my kids used to hang out with one of the kids of the band's manager. That close to that close to fame!

It seems the leading idea is to name an alley after them. Even though the alley happens to be beside a hockey arena that is supposed to double as a music venue, I know I wouldn't feel too terrific about that.

Also, I wonder if this is where the city should be putting its resources which, we are constantly told, are extremely limited. Some better ideas might be :putting up some public housing, daycare spaces ... or if we want to stick to the theme, supporting emerging artists of various sorts in serious ways. Kingston could begin to play with the big kids by giving, say, 10% of what NYC or Berlin give, as a percentage of their budget. The city could allow the artists themselves to allocate the cash, keeping the White Men (and Women) in Suits out of it. (Yes, I know there will be nespotism and infighting, but it's not as though that doesn't exist when the Suit People are doing it. At least there'll be some amount of informed aesthetic judgement happening.)

But then again ... there's an interesting interview with John Lennon (I think), just after The Beatles became famous. He says 'We were just four guys, just a band'. The use of the past tense is revealing - he thinks they had become something other than a band when the masses latched on. But they hadn't. They were still just a bunch of guys. So Kingston could honour its local Beatles by not naming this increase in funding for autonomous creativity after them (though that might be better than a non-descript alleyway.) No committed artist needs that, it's embarrassing, it makes one feel like, say, a Springer (local capitalist developer who took over the town square).

I'd suggest: name the new arts program after one of the hundreds of poor and unheard-of artists in the city, drawn at random and with their permission. As a former friend of a friend of the band, I'm sure that would make them all very happy.

No comments: