What Alan Freed did for rock ân â roll in the â50s, DJ John Peel did for punk and new wave in the 70s and 80s, playing groundbreaking artists like Joy Division on his show and curating essential in-studio performances in his Peel Sessions. But long before he first played the Ramones on his BBC show in 1976, Peel played the 1969 debut album by the Stooges, the scrappy Detroit garage band whose frontman, Iggy Pop, would later be granted the title âgodfather of punk.” He’s certainly lived up to it, consistently, writes Kris Needs at Clash, âdumping on rock ânâ rollâs previously set-in stone inhibitions.â Each new generation has given Pop a new set of restrictions to dump on, but many of them could, perhaps, boil down to the same thing, the very condition Peel so often diagnosed in pop culture: the packaging and selling of rock ânâ roll that compromises its raw power and diminishes its artists.
Who better then to deliver the 2014 John Peel Lecture for the BBC at the UK Radio Festival, despite the fact that Iggy Popâwho Rolling Stone describes as âa visiting professor from the School of Punk Rock Hard Knocksââhas never delivered a lecture before? But he has always been witty and wise, on albums and interviews, and he is now—as was Peel for over three decades—a BBC DJ, a role that grants him a certain amount of critical authority. Itâs not his only side gig. During his lecture, Pop admits heâs had to begin âdiversifying my income,â appearing, for example, in insurance ads for UK insurance company Swiftcover (Englandâs been good to him). âIf I had to depend on what I actually get from sales,â says Pop, âIâd be tending bars between sets.â This is the situation he addressesâthe plight of the artists, the labels, and the fans in todayâs marketplace. The topic of his lecture: âfree music in a capitalist society.â
Iggy is critical of the U2/Apple alliance and their intrusive and unpopular recent mass album release, but he praises Thom Yorkeâs decision to release his latest solo album on peer-to-peer file sharing service BitTorrent for $ 6. Acknowledging that BitTorrent âis a pirateâs friend,â he claims nonetheless that âall pirates want to go legit, just like I wanted to be respectable.â This last remark may come as a surprise from the guy who wanted to be your dog, but although he defines capitalism as dominating and destructive, Pop isnât anti-entrepreneurialâheâs simply a champion of the little guy. He denounces digital theft, calling it âbad for everything,â but he doesnât want to see file-sharers jailed, which is âa lot like sending somebody to Australia a couple hundred years ago for poaching his lordshipâs rabbit.â
The larger problem is the media conglomerates, including not only major labels, but also, and maybe more so, Apple and Google subsidiary YouTube, who are âtrying to put the squeezeâ on the indies, âthe only place to go for new talent, outside of the Mickey Mouse Club.â Overall, the talk is a very sober and sobering look at the music industry from an old pro who has clearly paid careful attention to the trends. And although his glasses and stance behind a podium might make him look the part, Pop is a little less professorial than conversational, delivering some bad news with several doses of optimism and good humor, and exhibiting an unabashed willingness to mix tech, creativity, and commerce in a TED-like way.
The complete lecture was broadcast on BBC DJ Marc Rileyâs show, and you can stream it here for the next four weeks (the talk begins at 37:00, but listen to the first thirty minutes of the show for some excellent music and an introduction to John Peel). And if youâre in a hurry, catch the highlights of Iggyâs lecture in The Guardianâs âCliffsish Notes versionâ here.
Related Content:
From The Stooges to Iggy Pop: 1986 Documentary Charts the Rise of Punkâs Godfather
Iggy Pop Conducts a Tour of New Yorkâs Lower East Side, Circa 1993
The Distortion of Sound: A Short Film on How Weâve Created âa McDonaldâs Generation of Music Consumersâ
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Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness.
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Prof. Iggy Pop Delivers the BBCâs 2014 John Peel Lecture on âFree Music in a Capitalist Societyâ
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