I realized recently that so far my discussion of Kim Gordon and Sonic Youth here were mostly in the context of the Kim / Thurston split ("Diamond Sea", "Girl in a Band"). Women's History Month is a good excuse to fix that and to remind everyone why Kim is the Lemmy of alt/college rock.
I certainly knew about Sonic Youth prior to "Goo", their 1990 major label release, but just through coincidence of timing this was the first LP of theirs that I bought and really embraced. "Kool Thing" was the first single off the LP and is certainly more accessible than their previous work. At the time I enjoyed it as a great song, but it wasn't until much later that I learned the back story that it is about a 1989 article in Spin Magazine where Kim interviewed LL Cool J and the resulting cultural chasm between them, part of which is attributable to not finding space for feminism in the machismo of LL's style of hip-hop (e.g., "The guy has to have control over his woman").
Of course, the video and song are filled with many clever LL "Kool" J references (e.g., "walking like a panther", "I don't think so", "let me play with your radio"), and even briefly features Chuck D (I always felt he was significantly underutilized in this song, but to be fair the story goes theirs was an unplanned, serendipitous collaboration resulting from Public Enemy being in a nearby studio).
Enough about the back story -- there's a good "official" video and many live versions available, but this 1993 live version is a good reminder of when and why Kim (and Thurston) were the queen (and king) of the scene...
"Fear of a female planet"
Sonic Youth - "Kool Thing": live 1993, official video
LL Cool J - "Going Back to Cali" (from which the official "Kool Thing" video borrows)
Showing posts with label Kool Thing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kool Thing. Show all posts
Sunday, March 25, 2018
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