frostingspoon Wrote:
Radcliffe Wrote:
Yeh, but at least Weller buffered that abomination with 20 years of crap-o-la. Now, if he'd gone straight from the Jam to "Close To You" I would've felt a stake through my heart.
Yeah, your stance on "once-great artists work past 1980" is pretty consistent. You hate all of it.

I see the winkie, but that statement just isn't true. There's a pile of artists whose work I've continued to admire through a couple of decades, but Weller isn't one of them. I realize my perspective ain't exactly unbiased, because those first handful of Jam albums I flat-out
loved and anything that came after would've seemed like a disappointment (hell, even
Start! sounded like a disappointment to me). I tried to like the Style Council - I grooved to "Long Hot Summer", "Walls Come Tumblin' Down", and "My Ever Changing Moods" - and tried to talk myself into believing Weller was simply digging into his soul roots, but, man, it just seemed like the creased slacks and penny loafers were as important as the music. And his solo work reminds me more of Traffic than the Jam, which means it's not embarassingly bad - just that it's the kind of whitewashed, sweatless jog that the breathless rush of punk was trying to obliterate.
Some examples of artists whose work continues to interest me (20 years later): Patti Smith, Robyn Hitchcock, David Byrne, Ian Hunter, Tom Waits, Paul Westerberg, Chuck Prophet, Nick Lowe, Hoodoo Gurus, Giant Sand, Jules Shear, Steve Earle, Alejandro Escovedo, The Church, John Lydon, Wire, and (now that there's a new album) Camper Van Beethoven.
And back on topic... examples of heroes that turned my stomach:
Alice Cooper (breaking up the band and then showing up on Hollywood Squares)
David Johansen (trashing his solo career for the cheap joke of Buster Poindexter)
Rod Stewart (from one o' the boys to flaming fuckwad in 14 seconds flat)