Robert Christgau (born April
18, 1942) is an American
essayist, music
journalist, and self-professed "Dean of American Rock
Critics". In print, he often abbreviates his name as
Xgau.
One of the earliest professional
rock
critics, Christgau is known for his terse capsule reviews,
published since 1969 in his
Consumer Guide columns. He
also spent 37 years as music editor for
The Village Voice, during which time
he created the annual
Pazz & Jop
poll.
Career summary
Christgau
grew up in New York
City
, where he says he became a rock and roll fan when disc jockey Alan Freed moved to the city in 1954.
He left
New York for four years to attend Dartmouth College
in New
Hampshire
, graduating
in 1962 with a B.A. in English. While at college,
Christgau's musical interests turned to
jazz,
but he quickly returned to rock and roll after moving back to New
York.
He initially wrote
short stories,
before giving up
fiction in 1964 to become a
sportswriter, and later, a police
reporter for the
Newark
Star-Ledger. Christgau became a
freelance writer after a story he wrote
about the death of a woman in New Jersey was published by
New York magazine. He
was asked to take over the dormant music column at
Esquire, which he began writing in
early 1967. After
Esquire discontinued the column,
Christgau moved to the
The Village
Voice in 1969, and he also worked as a college
professor.
In early 1972, he accepted a full-time job as music critic for
Newsday. Christgau returned to the
Village Voice in 1974 as music editor. He remained there
until August 2006, when he was fired "for taste" shortly after the
paper's acquisition by
New Times
Media. Two months later, Christgau became a contributing editor
at
Rolling Stone. Late in
2007, Christgau was fired by
Rolling Stone, although he
continued to work for the magazine for another three months.
Starting with the March 2008 issue, he joined
Blender, where he was listed as
"senior critic" for three issues and then "contributing editor."
Christgau had been a regular contributor to
Blender before
he joined
Rolling Stone. He continued to write for
Blender until the magazine ceased publication in March
2009.
Christgau has also written frequently for
Playboy,
Spin, and
Creem.
He
previously taught during the formative years of the California
Institute of the Arts
. As of 2005, he was also an adjunct professor
in the Clive Davis Department of
Recorded Music at New York University
.
Consumer Guide
Christgau is perhaps best known for his
Consumer Guide
columns, which have been published on a more-or-less monthly basis
since 1969, in the
Village Voice, as well as a brief
period at
Newsday. In December
2006, the column moved online to
MSN
Music, initially appearing every other month, before switching
to a monthly schedule in June 2007. In its original format, the
Consumer Guide consisted of 18 to 20 single-paragraph
album reviews, each of which was given a letter grade ranging from
A+ to E-. "Christgau's blurbs", writes
Jody
Rosen, "are like no one else's — dense with ideas and
allusions, first-person confessions and invective,
highbrow references and slang."
In 1990, Christgau changed the format of the
Consumer
Guide; it now contains six to eight reviews graded upper-B+ or
higher, one "Dud of the Month" review graded B or lower, and three
lists: Honorable Mention (B+ albums deemed not worthy of
full-paragraph reviews), Choice Cuts (excellent tracks on
un-recommended albums), and Duds. For several years, there were two
annual
Consumer Guide columns which strayed from this
format: The Turkey Shoot (typically published the week of
Thanksgiving), which consisted entirely of
reviews graded B- or lower, and a
Christmas-season roundup of compilations and
reissues, mostly graded A or A+. Both have been discontinued.
He also uses ratings such as "neither" (denoted by a frowny face),
which "may impress once or twice with consistent craft or an
arresting track or two. Then it won't" and a "choice cut" (denoted
by a pair of scissors), which, as noted above, "is a good song on
an album that isn't worth your time or money."
Lou Reed recorded a tirade against
Christgau in his 1978 live album,
Take No Prisoners:
"Critics…What does Robert Christgau do in bed? You know, is he a
toe fucker? Man, anal retentive,
A Consumer's Guide to
Rock?!? What a moron...A study by me by Robert
Christgau...Nice little box and a B+...Can you imagine working for
a fucking year, and you get a B+ from an asshole in
The Village
Voice?” Christgau rated the album C+ and wrote in his review,
“I thank Lou for pronouncing my name right.”
Pazz & Jop
In 1971, Christgau inaugurated the annual
Pazz & Jop music poll. The results are
published in the
Village Voice every February, and compile
"top ten" lists submitted by music critics across the nation.
Throughout Christgau's career at the
Voice, every poll was
accompanied by a lengthy Christgau essay analyzing the results, and
pondering the year's overall musical output. The
Voice has
continued the feature, despite Christgau's dismissal, and although
he no longer oversees the poll, Christgau continues to vote in
it.
Style and tastes
Christgau names
Louis Armstrong,
Thelonious Monk,
Chuck Berry,
The
Beatles, and the
New York Dolls
as his top five artists of all time. In music critic circles, he
was an early supporter of
hip hop and
the
riot grrrl movements, along with
other music styles. In the 1980s, Christgau was a fervent booster
of
Afro-pop, a stance that alienated him
from some in the critical community, as he seemed insufficiently
interested in American and British rock music. In the 1990s,
however, Christgau's interest in
indie
rock seemed to increase. He could be catty and wasn't above
using a derogatory term, as when he called
Willy DeVille "the songpoet of
greaser nostalgia".
Christgau readily admits to disliking (even "prejudice" against)
the musical genres
heavy metal,
art rock,
progressive rock,
bluegrass,
gospel,
Irish
folk, and
jazz fusion, but in rare
instances has recommended albums in most of these genres.
In December 1980, Christgau provoked angry responses from
Voice readers when his column approvingly quoted his wife
Carola Dibbell's reaction to the murder of
John Lennon: "Why is it always
Bobby Kennedy or John Lennon? Why isn't it
Richard Nixon or
Paul McCartney?"
Jody Rosen describes Christgau's writing as "often maddening,
always thought-provoking... With
Pauline
Kael, Christgau is arguably one of the two most important
American
mass-culture critics of the
second half of the 20th century. … All rock critics working today,
at least the ones who want to do more than rewrite PR copy, are in
some sense Christgauians."
References
- "A Counter in Search of a Culture," Robert Christgau, Any
Old Way You Choose It, Cooper Square Press, 2000, p.2.
- "A Counter in Search of a Culture," Robert Christgau, Any
Old Way You Choose It, Cooper Square Press, 2000, p.4.
- X-ed
Out-The Village Voice fires a famous music critic. slate.com
Sep. 5, 2006 Retrieved on Aug 15, 2009.
- "Poptastic bye-bye," Robert Christgau,
http://www.najp.org/articles/2009/03/under-the-axe.html
- Blender, June 2008, p. 16
- Jody Rosen, X-ed Out: The Village Voice fires a famous music
critic, Slate, September 5, 2006. Retrieved on October
15, 2006.
- [1]
- [2]
- Christgau, Robert (1978) Mink DeVille. Consumer Reviews. Accessed May
26, 2008.
External links