Flying Rabbit Wrote:
But then again, so is releasing records. He can pick and choose projects...why not "engineer" records only by independent artists? Like I said above, he's calling the kettle black. He has no problem working with label artists, and making money off the "system" but then he accuses SY of doing nefarious things. What if SY signed with Geffen because they thought it was a larf that a major label would sign them? That if they did, they could get the label to sign decent acts? I guess its all in perception, and like we've both maintained, his language is that of someone being intentionally vague.
He has been more specific in other interviews I've read, maybe not about what Sonic Youth did or were party to, but I think he's generally just alluding to this practice of luring bands out of the indie scene and into the world of the majors, sometimes with disastrous results for the bands. The history of bad recording contracts naturally goes back way before Sonic Youth, but I think what he's referring to here is how their decision helped burgeon that whole early '90s wave of indie bands that were signed to the majors in hopes of the majors finding their next Nirvana. Sonic Youth seemed to lend that whole movement some real credibility thereby helping to lure in more bands.
Now I'm not saying I agree with him or that I have any way of knowing if he's right or wrong about this (or if he even really does), but I feel like you're fundamentally misunderstanding him and maybe getting a little defensive on behalf of Sonic Youth. This is just Albini being Albini, as you know, and he's got pretty well-thought-out and practical reasons to feel the way he does about things, even though his stances can seem fairly extreme and curmudgeonly on the surface. Much like Ian MacKaye, he's been relatively successful doing things his own way, and he's had to work pretty hard - continues to work pretty damn hard - to do it. On the plus side, he's totally in favor of stuff like p2p filesharing and posting music on Youtube, etc. He likes things on his side of the fence, and I think his actions have been pretty consistent with his viewpoints. I suppose you could say, then, that he shouldn't even lend his name or sell his services to major label projects, but I don't think that doing so necessarily makes him a hypocrite. It's not like they're the mafia and their money is dirty.