UnknownMy friends Karl and Paula, in addition to being fun long–distance chatters, also deeply appreciate prog rock—a rare quality. A recent remark by Karl about records by Gentle Giant and Van Der Graaaf Generator not holding up well for him, combined with Paula’s recommendation to me of Gentle Giant as a way to deepen my current prog rock obsession, prompted this entry.

The subject: Megalomaniacal weirdos and their relationship to rock music. Though I’ve only just begun to learn about Gentle Giant musically and historically (and though I know nothing at all about Van Der Graaf Generator), here’s a reflection Karl’s remark prompted for me: Gentle Giant is a band made up of middle–class white UK boys, three of them (initially) brothers, who have gone on over the past four decades post–GG–prime to make significant marks in the business and social worlds as label executives/label owners/farmers and dads. As far as I can tell, they’re all exceptionally unprepossessing, pleasant fellows who enjoy playing a bewildering variety of instruments and, while moderately progressive in the ways all hippies were, are not terribly interested in rocking the political boat in the UK, especially in ways that might impinge on their accumulation and preservation of wealth. And I suspect that makes for music that maybe, just maybe, is missing something vital: the megalomaniacal weirdo element that all great rock bands need, the one person (at least) in the band who engages life in wacky aesthetic ways by passionate disposition and who desperately craves attention and who has ideas about the world that just CANNOT be ignored and must, must, must be shared widely with the entire listening world through recordings and concerts or else tortured, angry bitterness will result.

It’s a risky argument to make, because one of the disheartening elements of rock history (and of popular arts generally) is the sense that only by being emotionally damaged can a person become a great artist. I don’t want to reinscribe that, but as I reflect on prog rock it’s one question I’m left with: How vital is the presence of a megalomaniacal weirdo (MW)? Prog rock is frequently painted with the punk–rock–swipe of bloated, precious art music crafted by white bread boys who come from privilege and who have nothing better to do than sit in a studio and twiddle. This description certainly fits the backgrounds of the founding members of Genesis—yet Peter Gabriel, who serves as a shining example of how the MW persona need not be a raging cretin (take note, Billy Corgan and Gordon Sumner!), assuredly fits the MW frame and thereby helps provide Genesis with an edge. As I learn more deeply about Yes, the principle transformation in my understanding has been my expanding appreciation for someone I used to hail simply as “that very annoying voice” but who turns out to be the band’s driving aesthetic visionary, Jon Anderson—a quintessential MW. Even ELP, which has been a trickier relational connection for me but which I continue to strive to appreciate, is nothing if not jammed with them: One typical MW, Greg Lake, combined with perhaps the weirdest person in the history of rock music (as high a bar as there is among all bars), Keith Emerson (Palmer seems calm). And a key piece to this puzzle for me is King Crimson, my newest great love yet a band that for many punk–swipers would stand as the most extreme example of what’s un–rockish about prog: Constantly shifting personnel, no clear front–person seeking out the spotlight on stage, the only consistent member a media–detesting nerd. However, the one and only thing Robert Fripp has in common with the pantheon of “me! me! me” rockstars from Elvis to Axl is that he’s an over–the–top MW—so King Crimson works. Even the genre most notorious for front–persons who are dismissive of the rockstar image features the MW linkage: If you put a gun in your mouth at 27, or you write “Alive,” or you live a life of artistic and economic and critical success and still cannot make it past 50 (rest in peace, Chris, no disrespect intended), you, too, just might be an MW.

Two immense caveats occur to me: First, Paula is (like her spouse Frank) a musician who seems to eschew talk ABOUT music in strong favor of actually MAKING music as a response, something she has in common with many musicians with whom I am close. Her recommendation of Gentle Giant did lead me to check out In a Glass House, which I find compelling if vocally and lyrically inscrutable, and The Power and the Glory, which I need to try once more after failing to bond with it initially. It’s possible that bands lacking an MW are easier to appreciate if listeners are also musicians. Second, Karl’s spouse Rosemary is one of many powerful women in my life who have taught me about other forms of art beyond Western popular music and film, two art forms historically dominated by white supremacist patriarchy. It’s possible that the need for a MW in order for a rock band to spark is an artifact of white supremacist patriarchy, and that if I knew more about, for instance, Japanese dance traditions, I might have a different sense of the MW in art.

But I am not yet a musician, I’m merely in the house of the critical writer and therefore focus on the art I already know. I’ll throw this stone.