Monday 06/24/2013 by bertoletdown

INTERVIEW: NATHAN RABIN ON THE JUGGALO-PHISHHEAD NEXUS

Diehard fans aren't made. They're called.

Ask a Bengals fan, or a Mets fan, or a Phish fan. Nobody gets into Phish music because Phish music is cool. We get into it and we bend our lives around it because we can't not do that.

Sometimes, nobody seems to understand. But any Juggalo would, and that's the axis of rotation for Nathan Rabin's new book You Don't Know Me But You Don't Like Me.

Rabin, who recently left his post as Head Writer at The A.V. Club, compares and contrasts the Phish and Insane Clown Posse communities through the lens of his own personal and professional turmoil. We caught up with Rabin as he finished a promotional stop in Madison, WI.

It seems like you enjoy re-examining easy targets that are scorned by pop culture critics – not just Phish and ICP, but also through your My Year of Flops and Ephemereview series.

Are you serving a larger personal thesis?

I definitely am serving a larger personal thesis. When I began writing My Year Of Flops in early 2007, I stumbled upon my purpose as an advocate for the underdog. My first idea for the series that became My World of Flops was to spend a year writing about either art house classics or Oscar winners. I'm glad both of those were nixed because my heart really wasn't in them: it was with the losers, the misunderstood, and the carnival freaks.

You Don't Know Me But You Don't Like Me is a continuation and ultimate manifestation of this instinct. It's appropriate that it takes its name from a Buck Owens song that he recorded with Dwight Yoakam, and has a title that could apply to many of the films I wrote about for My Year Of Flops.

Juggalos in particular have been treated as sub-human by people who've never taken the time to talk to them or imagine that there’s a nice young man behind the Hatchet Man neck tattoo. The same thing with Phish: I was among the people who sneered at them in my writing without really taking the time to listen to them or really understand what they're about. There's a big difference between hearing and listening, and it wasn't until I really started listening to ICP and Phish that this book came alive and began to feel genuine and not like some weird vanity project from someone who had lost the plot and gone upriver.

Trying to find the value in entertainment that's considered devoid of value has been an obsession for a very long time and will continue to be.

There was an easier way to go about writing this book, which is to say, “I’m a lab technician performing an experiment, and here’s my hypothesis and my data, but I’m not part of the experiment.” Can you describe the moment you knew you couldn’t do that book, but had to do something deeper?

It happened on 5/27/11 at Bethel Woods. I had been careening towards a breakdown for months, if not a year. Everything was spinning out of control and I had no idea how I would finish the book. Then I had this epiphany that in order to tell this story honestly it would have to be my story, and while that was self-indulgent, it was also necessary.

I remembered that Hunter Thompson failed to cover the Mint 400 race that Sports Illustrated was paying him to write about, but he got Fear and Loathing out of it. I just knew I couldn't write the anthropological survey of fan subcultures I had signed on to write, for a multitude of reasons: I didn't have the journalistic skills, I was too painfully self-conscious, and I ran out of money. I was setting myself up to fail on some level, but I was also setting myself up to writing something unique.

One of the vigorous defenses you present for ICP relates to the “Miracles” video – which is ironically the thing that first made you want to ridicule them. I think a lot of people who watched that came away thinking, “These guys aren’t quantum physicists but they’re talking about having wonder in your life. How can you hate them for that?”

That video introduced ICP to a whole new audience. Sure, people mocked them for it, but J is a savvy businessman and a whole lot of people watching your video over and over again is good business.

"Miracles" brought the group back in a major way. It's been performed at Gatherings I have attended so I don't think they're ashamed of it at all. I think the song provides an interesting look inside the other side of Insane Clown Posse: the ambitious, moralistic, world-building component of their music, business, lifestyle and subculture (and it really is all four things). Besides, they are literally clowns so I think they're pretty comfortable with being laughed at. It helps that ICP is pretty damn funny, and outside "Miracles," most of the abundant laughs to be found in their music is intentional.

ICP’s inner carny tells them that if people are laughing at you, then they're paying attention.

You describe in detail the time when you watched Juggalos attack and degrade Tela Tequila at the Gathering, and it is uncomfortable to read. At any point, were you close to turning around and going home?

No, because Cave-In-Rock is about seven hours from Chicago and many more hours from just about anything. So even if we had decided to turn around and go home, it would have taken us a very long time. Also, shit gets so weird so quickly at The Gathering that the Tequila thing almost seemed maybe abnormal, but also not that crazy in a relative way.

What was your peak moment at a Phish show?

Getting to watch backstage at Super Ball in 2011 was also almost overwhelmingly amazing. The Phish show in Chicago after I proposed to my wife is tough to beat from a nostalgia perspective.

ICP?

Their climactic performance at my second and third Gatherings were fucking amazing. They really are incredible entertainers and I liked that both performances climaxed with fireworks just like Super Ball back in 2011. I've also experienced some amazing stand-up comedy at The Gathering: Bobcat Goldthwait delivered a set for the ages.

Fans often use Phish music gateway to other music, like the artists they cover or collaborate with. Have you come to any new music by way of Phish since becoming a fan?

It works the opposite for me: I've come to see some of the music Phish covers as Phish songs. I recently borrowed a friend's hard drive and ripped a bunch of music and was delighted to see "Boogie On Reggae Woman", which I've seen Phish perform so often that I've come to think of it as a Phish song. When I saw it I thought, "Sweet! Stevie Wonder doing Phish!"

It's pretty backwards but I've come to associate every song and band they cover with Phish, particularly The Talking Heads and Rolling Stones.

See you on the road this summer?

God willing. If I had my druthers I would follow Phish extensively, but I have a new job I'm crazy about for a website that launches in about a month (it's called The Dissolve, and it's the new film site over at Pitchfork), so I have to be judicious in my Phish attendance.

You Don't Know Me But You Don't Like Me is available in e-book and paperback formats.

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Comments

, comment by ColForbin
ColForbin Nice interview Chris, I am looking forward to reading this book, just need to set aside some time.
, comment by bl002e
bl002e Thanks for the interview, Chris. Definitely intend to read the book.

@bertoletdown said:
Ask a Bengals fan, or a Mets fan
Hilarious -- I have a friend who falls under both categories, the poor bastard.
, comment by oohwilson
oohwilson I think that the egalitarian-like connection between Phish and ICP communities sounds legitimate. My knowledge of ICP, however, is pretty limited. I've never really communicated with a Juggalo before, and my knowledge is more or less confined to stereotypes, and footage from the documentary "American Juggalo" (a very interesting watch I might add). The thing that immediately raises a red flag for me when hearing about Mr. Rabin's book is the violence associated with ICP and their lyrics. Some of their songs are just incredibly violent and abhorrent. As a Phish fan, it's this association with extreme brutality that makes me feel very troubled about a Phish/ICP correlation. How exactly does this translate to the larger community? Is this rationalized by fans somehow, or secluded to small percentages of fans (maybe something similar to nitrous mafia presence at Phish lots?) If any .netters are more knowledgeable on the matter, I'd love to hear your thoughts. I suppose that there is a good chance of finding answers in the book, so I definitely plan on giving it a read.
, comment by bertoletdown
bertoletdown @oohwilson: The book doesn't seek to excuse anything so much as examine and understand it. I think it's safe to say that at one point or another every hardcore Phish fan has been on the receiving end of funny looks and probing questions from bosses, peers, in-laws, etc. that spring from prejudices and misunderstanding. Some of the reputation Phish fans have is deserved, but much of it is not. We share that with Juggalos without a doubt. The "living a double life" thing is real for a lot of people.
, comment by oohwilson
oohwilson @bertoletdown said:
= "living a double life" thing is real for a lot of people.
So true and often overlooked. It really is a fascinating phenomenon, and I sometimes feel similarly in ways. A multiple-night run will have that effect on me -- where once it's said and done, there is a sensation that you are leaving behind an alternate version of yourself when readjusting to the daily grind.

Regarding ICP, it is indeed important to recognize concerns like these for what they are -- misunderstandings or prejudices. When the assumption you're trying to interpret relates to violence, however, it's just a tougher pill to swallow (as opposed to, for example, drug use, personal beliefs, values etc.).

All the more reason to satisfy my curiosity by learning more about it. It looks like I'll have to swing by my bookstore this week and grab a copy of the book. Thanks for sharing the interview!
, comment by nichobert
nichobert "Some of their songs are just incredibly violent and abhorrent"

Some movies are incredibly violent and abhorrent too. We (hopefully) don't jump to the conclusion that the people making them are actually championing such ideas.

This is part of my more general idea about how strange it is that rappers aren't allowed to inhabit characters in their music... Being a popular rapper is almost like a twisted form of method acting. Most of the time you're maintaining the facade that you are the character you rap as..But surely the guard is let down at certain times.

It's what makes Rick Ross in particular such a fascinating figure. He was just a middling fat rapper with a good voice. Then people found out he had worked in the prison system, and it was like all his coke dealer bonafides went up in smoke. Everyone assumed that he'd just disappear after that. Instead it freed him to take his boasts to truly herculean levels. There wasn't any expectation of being anchored to reality anymore (Although he does give pinpoint details like very few other rappers).

If Ross had come out on his own and gone "Hey guys. As you can tell by the fact that I stole a drug dealer's name. I'm not a real drug dealer. But like Scorcese or De Palma I want to tell these kind of stories. Hopefully nobody minds the fact that they're fictional" people would have immediately given up on him. That suspension of disbelief is a huge part of what makes gangster rap feel so visceral.

But then he had that "Put molly in her drink, she ain't even know it, took her home and enjoyed that, she ain't even know it" - people lost. their. fucking. minds. Is it an abhorrent thought? Clearly. But is it SO far out of line with Ross's persona? A character that is tight with the Medellin cartel, who imports cocaine and murders people in the streets on a daily basis?
Here's where I'm bound to catch some shit.
I understand. Rape effects millions of people. Survivors and their family members. But so does drug abuse. So does drug war related shootouts in the streets. I'm not at all suggesting that people should be organizing to protest music.. but maybe the rape line got hammered down because they have such well organized advocacy groups?

It's hard to imagine being Len Bias' mother and seeing 'crack rap' become this huge thing. Or the mother of any of the countless people who have died in the many battles of the drug war. But it gets back to my point.. Rick Ross's character is an evil person. He might rape somebody. He might gut a baby to leave a message. So might Scarface. Or Benny Blanco or Frank White.

Some rappers have had insanely criminal pasts. But they aren't living up to their lyrics. Saying that they're all liars and actors isn't trying to diminish the wild shit they might have been through. But it's true.

With ICP, the face paint and the overarching world-building narrative throws the gauntlet down right away. Like Deltron 3030 or Dr. Octagon or the Leak Brothers, this is a fully admitted fictional pursuit. But since it's rap- where there's this weird idea of an authenticity contest meaning anything. People see these terrible lyrics and think that ICP must be promoting these activities.

Sorry this is so scatterbrained. I really want to sit down and arrange my thoughts on gangster rap. A music I love more than any other.
, comment by jackl
jackl @nichobert said:
"Some of their songs are just incredibly violent and abhorrent"

Some movies are incredibly violent and abhorrent too. We (hopefully) don't jump to the conclusion that the people making them are actually championing such ideas.
.

I've almost finished with "You Don't Know Me But You Don't Like Me" and find the author's descriptions of Phish and its community seeking ecstatic transcendance in the music -- coming from a former skeptic and critic who decided to immerse himself in the culture and actually listen to the music -- was dead on and that the author "gets it".

I knew very little about ICP and its music and community except for the stereotypic knee jerk derision they provide among many, but after reading Rabin's book came away with a much more sympathetic and positive take on the band. Their gatherings aren't so different than Phish festivals, where "outsiders" to white-bread culture find community among like-minded people.

As to violence in the lyrics, this passage from late in the book is instructive:

After Cube's performance, we headed into the wresting tent and talked to another man who defied stereotypes regarding Juggalos. He was a steelworker by day and a wrestler by night.

He seemed more interested in (Rabin's girlfriend) than in me, but when she went to the bathroom he offered a surprisingly sophisticated critique of the Juggalo's ethos. He began by saying ICP is a metaphysical anomaly within the music industry because unlike the Grateful Dead, its central ethos is not about worshipping the source of the music; it's bigger than that. It's not just a way of thinking, it's an ideology devoid of the specifics, that, in his mind at least, get in the way of of the purity of a simple idea like "Be good to others" and "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you."

"ICP is totally fake", he said, "And they're totally upfront with that. All those other rappers, they're pretending they're whatever their personas are supposed to be, but ICP, they come right out and tell you it's all an act."
.

I didn't learn much I didn't know about Phish fandom, but came away from Rabin's book with a much better understanding of where ICP and Juggalos are coming from and the similarities with our cultural fringe being greater than our differences. I highly recommend Rabin's book. A good, quick summer read.
, comment by goatsticks
goatsticks Finished the book last night, really enjoyed it.
, comment by yoyo742
yoyo742 ICP was voted #1 WORST band of all time, in which i completely agree.. They suck and cater to an audience of children that wouldn't know good music if it was spoon fed to them.. like attracts like and grown ass men that dress up like clowns, well you get what I'm saying.. Phish is one of the most innovative bands IN LIFE..!! I'm a Dead Head for life but phish damn sure can wail... see you there.
, comment by ColForbin
ColForbin I read the book, and I just love this quote, since it sums up my relationship to Phish perfectly:

“You find Phish. It changes your life and rewires your circuitry, you grow up and do the college, job, marriage thing but you still go to shows now and then because it’s part of your history, it’s part of your past, it’s part of who you are.”
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