Wednesday, January 28, 2004

Mortality & The Mouse

Childhood in a Mennonite prairie-town circa 1972 was really quite dandy, but at the time anyone asking me where I'd move to if I could, got the same answer: Disneyland, California. The desire grew from a weekly hour of television, broadcast into our homes just before we buttoned up for Sunday night church service — "The Wonderful World Of Disney." Ah, Walt Disney — canny salesman incarnate! Along with a family movie that had just left theatre circulation, viewers were treated to coming attractions, and not infrequent "travelogues" giving a backstage peek at Disneyland, and the soon-to-be-open-to-the-public Disneyworld, Florida. The Florida park was supposed to be larger than the one in California, but Disneyland was complete, and located right where Walt got it all going, so it stood before me as a rather secular Mecca.

Religion complicated this relationship (as it does them all): my father was the pastor of the church, and our family was expected to be at the opening of church doors, just prior to the start of the service. This meant turning off the television 10 minutes before the conclusion of the hour. To this day, Old Yeller remains clutched in my memory as a rabid, angry dog who turns on his masters.

Nevertheless, Disneyland managed to serve not just the Magic Kingdom, but the Kingdom of God as well. After a particularly grueling Q&A I had with my father, hashing through the details of the Hereafter, and expressing my doubts about its appeal, he finally proclaimed, "Well, think of it like you do Disneyland — only 100 times better!" He seemed to slump a bit after saying this, as if such a base appeal to sensory pleasure might compromise my burgeoning piety, but his strategy was hardly unprecedented: it's a tack our Savior took many a time himself.

The Disneyland standard remained untarnished by reality, until puberty took over and ratcheted my base sensory expectations in an entirely different direction. Our family finally made the California trip when I was old enough to drive the car, and if seeing the park for the first time wasn't exactly a let-down, it was only because my expectations of it — and life — had become a bit more sophisticated.

Still, in 1982 Disneyland was not only underwhelming, but even a wee bit shabby. The most recent attraction in the park was the Haunted Mansion, and it was over a decade old. Everything showed signs of age, but the worst of the lot was Tomorrowland. The submarine ride was being dismantled, Mission To Mars was creaky with age, the highlight of Adventure Through Inner Space was a giant eyeball looking down at you, Autopia was a bunch of go-karts fouling up the air with their two-stroke engines. The only worthwhile ride was Space Mountain, and even it paled in contrast to a real roller coaster. Worst of all, my newly discovered sense of irony was worthless in this run-down corner. In the Reagan years, space was being flagged for militarization, not colonization, so even when I tried to enjoy the Kennedy-era kitsch factor, my efforts concluded with depression.

Flash forward 22 years to the present, and the future ain't what it used to be. My parents generously treated our family, taking the two grandchildren to the tea-cups, where they spent most of the day, while I took my wife by the hand and strolled through Tomorrowland — where I would have spent most of the day, had she indulged this dangerous impulse of mine. The Imagineers have cleaned it up, and tweaked the aesthetic in an interesting, if no less depressing, direction. Like so many other commercial commodities, the future can no longer be relied upon to supply an optimistic aesthetic, so the Imagineers have dipped even further into the past. Tomorrowland is now shaped as much by the aesthetic of Buck Rogers and Flash Gordon as it is the Kennedy era. Buck Rogers and Flash Gordon — movie serials that my grandparents recalled with some amusement, but never wistfullness.

As Walt Disney got older, he became more fanatical about his conception of the future. Committing his body to a cryogenic vault, hashing out detailed plans to make EPCOT an enclosed, GAIA-like community — these acts seem characteristic of a fundamentalist bent, indeed, on establishing a utopian kingdom. And yet the Disney enterprise begins with "Main Street, USA" — nostalgia in excelsius, constructed to receive a maximum cashflow from wistful tourists, desperate to grab hold of a pleasant past, even (especially) if the pleasant past is merely the last few hours in the park.

Main Street USA doesn't mean much to Gen X, but Tomorrowland sure does — it's the ultimate rec room, where we spent our childhood and held on to our adolescence. I loved it, but there is an irony here, when you consider the possibilities this realization generates. Who knows? Perhaps Frontierland, with its Davy Crockett trappings, is the next generation's Tomorrowland — an opportunity for the Prajer grandkiddies to mainline a nostalgia formed in utero by the cowboy shows their Gen X parents deemed too goofy to watch.

Oh, Blue Fairy: please bring back the Monsanto House Of The Future!

Thursday, January 15, 2004

Confession

Alright, it was a bit disingenuous of me to include the guitar work of Don Ross in a post regarding work-out music. You can't classify it among the sort of testosterone-fueled "three-chords-and-the-truth" stuff that drives a guy to attempt a 300 lb. bench-press. His music is energetic to be sure, but it's different - it's very positive (the CD insert commands us to, "File under: New Age," but that does it a bit of a disservice as well). Any further gabbing on my part is a distraction. Just buy Robot Monster - you'll be glad you did.

Back to the basement. When it comes to bench-press music, I must report in all earnestness that the devil still has all the good tunes - specifically, Daredevil. The soundtrack (or "album," if you prefer) is the only worthwhile by-product of the risible movie (I'd have included Jennifer Garner's shoulders, but you can usually get a good look at those in any given Alias episode). It's got plenty of hot, heart-pounding tracks, but the real cooker is The Man Without Fear, by Rob Zombie & The Drowning Pool. Oooh, baby!! Every aspect of this song, from its adrenaline-charged opening to its witlessly memorable lyrics make it a true charmer, fully worth adding to the ouevre of truly great superhero themesongs. If there were some way to expand it into 15-minute length, I've no doubt I'd be inspired to compress 30 minutes of bone-crushing labour into half the time (not usually recommended, for a man my age).

Wednesday, January 14, 2004

Music of the Spheres

Seems like it's been a dry year in the 'Inspirational Rock' category. Much depends upon where you need your inspiration, I suppose. I need it in the weight-room, and the current musical powers-that-be aren't providing a whole lot of drive. After wearing Satellite thin, I was expecting the next adrenaline surge from P.O.D.'s new effort. Payable On Death disappoints, alas. The crunchy guitar is definitely there, a relief for those of us who cringed while their guitarist Marcos Curiel left in an emotional blizzard of controversy. But the singing and harmonies are strangely relaxed, as if the band has been mining not just the Rastah sounds but the, ah, "lifestyle" as well. Hey, fine by me. It just doesn't up my reps, is all.

I'm happy to report I've had some help from JPUSA bluesman Glenn Kaiser and his band. Blacktop is straight-ahead blues, sung by a street-preacher who knows his medium. Kaiz might not yet evince the tallowy compassion of, say, Pop Staples, but he's in terrific form here, and like most bluesmen is steadily improving with age.

The other Divinity student who's got the groove is Don Ross. His live performances are incredible, but if you can't manage that, his Robot Monster does manage to pass along a good deal of his "in-person" energy. Not to be missed.

Confession

I am a pacifist by religion, so my thoughts on this most recent conflict are assuredly absurd. And yet I've been eating up the most recent Slate roundtable discussion, "Liberal Hawks Reconsider The Iraq War," and give it my highest recommendation. Even those of us wearied by Christopher Hitchens' strident hectoring should find something of value here.