A short list of caustic aphorisms inspired by Ambrose Bierce (pictured), who wrote the first Devil’s Dictionary (1911).
British Invasion: Sound bite, descriptive of a marketing phenomenon as much as an actual movement.
Acid Rock: Sound bite, once (mistakenly) used to refer to any song that referred to drugs; no longer an especially useful collocation, for which we can be thankful.
Bubblegum: Psychedelic rock with its objectionable (drug) elements removed; the contemporary equivalent of a fat-free product.
Groovy: Antiquated term for anything about which the speaker expressed approbation; now déclassé, for which we can be thankful.
Rock Festival: Once the name for the logistical nightmare of holding a sock hop outdoors. Legendary for the wasteful expenditure of non-renewable natural resources, now highly impractical.
Schlock Rock: Any rock music that is considered “trash,” as long as one understands there is worthwhile or valuable schlock, and actual schlock.
Jam Session: Another name for noodling, meaning to play without purpose or direction. Intoxicants are essential.
Space Rock: See Schlock Rock.
Country Rock: Dismissed by the late Gram Parsons as “plastic dry-fuck.” See also Schlock Rock.
45: Antiquated music storage technology in the form a vinyl record 7” in diameter, typically with a song on each side. Now repurposed as coasters.
Showing posts with label Ambrose Bierce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ambrose Bierce. Show all posts
Saturday, January 2, 2010
Devil’s Dictionary of Pop I
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