Music at Mars Hill is a weekly column by Luke Larsen that seeks to find God amidst the newest trends in both mainstream music and independent music.

Lana Del Rey, aka Lizzy Grant, may have been the most talked-about music story in 2011. That is, outside another infamous young singer who fired up debate over ethics and music earlier in the year. And yes, I’m talking about Rebecca Black.

The two don’t often get put in the same sentence, but in my mind there is a real and serious connection going on between the two. While Rebecca Black mostly just gave a lot of people a lot to laugh about, I took her role in our culture pretty seriously back in August when I wrote an article insisting that were we in some way partially responsible for her. After all, we are the ones who have the consumed cultural products that have somehow encouraged Rebecca Black, her parents, and the Ark Music Factory to believe she could succeed.

In some ways, I could understand the outcry over Black though. After all, “Friday” is absolutely hysterical. But Lana Del Rey? Did people have good reasons to be offended by the fact that Lana Del Rey wasn’t as “indie” as they had thought? If it wasn’t for Rebecca Black, would people have given any thought to the fact that Lana Del Rey wasn’t the singer’s real name and that she may or may not have gotten lip surgery and that she may or may not have been “engineered” by producers and agents to trick hipsters?

It’s as if, all of a sudden, we have become hyper-aware of how the music we listen to was made — as if we have become concerned that it had been made by underpaid workers in an assembly line in a Chinese factory. Don’t get me wrong: I think this new sense of awareness is something we should be thanking the “Friday” and Ark Music Factory incident for. But let’s not get ahead of ourselves either — it’s not like Lana Del Rey is any different than most other artists out there, whether they consider themselves “indie” or “mainstream.”

Marketing, branding, image, and production are not just afterthoughts in our musical culture — they are the bread and butter and they always have been. What would “Like a Rolling Stone” have been outside of the hippie movement? What would “Smells Like Teen Spirit” be without the 90s grunge movement it was part of? A band or artist doesn’t need to be signed to Interscope Records to care about stuff like what kind of clothes they wear, how long their beards are, and where their political/spiritual beliefs fall. That is why you won’t read many music reviews that talk a lot about music theory or technical performance skills.

The simple truth is that songs cannot simply be removed from their cultural context as if they are some kind of organism on a Petri dish in a science lab. Nor should we want them to be.


Christ and Pop Culture

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“When we demand that the enemy pays, where is the line between justice and vengeance?”


Christ and Pop Culture

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If only politics were more like business.  If only our elected officials were honest.  If only presidential history listed names like Iacocca, Welch, Buffet, or Mulally rather than Nixon, Carter, Clinton or Bush.  If only, if only, if only.

You and I listen to the tone of media more then we realize, and as a result we think of politics as dirty and unethical.  Okay, I’ll give you that.  I’m going to write about the recent debt ceiling issue soon and I imagine it won’t reveal an ethical Utopia.

But ethical issues are common to all mankind, and that certainly includes the business world.  I was reminded of this listening to an excellent podcast on misuse of patent law over at the NPR Planet Money blog.  The story is truly amazing… men who purport to crusade on behalf of lowly inventors are essentially buying inventor patents with shell companies (to help obscure their involvement), which they then sell to other companies (whose owner is unknown, but who don’t do any actual work), so that they can get kickbacks when those other companies sue everyone and their mother for accidental patent infringement.

If that sounds confusing, well, you’re right.  I recommend you listen to the podcast.  But what was most striking to me was how businessmen and lawyers and scientists alike can get so wrapped up in schemes and financial structures with no purpose other than attack, with no goal other than financial gain.  Every realm of our world is fraught with ethical opportunity and temptation, and in every sector people choose poorly.

Reminders like this should cause us to cry out to God for help in remaining steadfast, in exercising honesty about our lives and our careers, and in making wise decisions.  Politicians are in the limelight, but almost without exception each of us has opportunity to cause good or harm in the life spheres we occupy.  You may work in health insurance or patent law, media services or counseling, baking or financial auditing, and you will still face difficult ethical choices.

I love that media’s increasing interest in various niches allows us to feel less alone in our struggles.  But it also reminds us that the struggles we have are still real and need to be treated with ethical seriousness and careful prayer, whether they are discussed in newspaper headlines or not.

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Christ and Pop Culture

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