Records: An Interview with Ian MacKaye
Brian
Price
Brian Price: In the history of art, so many
important artistic communities have been unable—despite their importance—to
sustain themselves, and for a number of reasons. I have in mind the Dadaists,
the Surrealists, and the Situationists—to name just a few. These communities
coalesced around forceful figures, and yet none of them remained in tact nearly
as long as Dischord has. Now that Dischord is 30 years in, I wonder to what you
attribute its sustainability.
Ian MacKaye: Probably, the idea that we weren’t
thinking about it, about why it’s working. I don’t know; I’m not an art
student. I haven’t studied the history of those scenes. I’m aware of them, but
I don’t know much about them. One of the things about our sustainability that
might be worth thinking about is that most people are thinking about ways to
make a living. Originally they group and come together and say: “Hey, we’re
going to make something. We’re a family. We’re a group.” They’re teenagers,
they’re in their early 20s, and they’re clustering because they’re looking for
a context to flourish, to have a pond to swim in, you know. And then with that
energy a conversation begins—whether it’s about music or about art or writing,
whatever—but there’s a conversation within that group, and that would be a
community, I reckon. And then people start to pay attention to it, and because
they’re interested, because they’re fans of the work, they become a part of the
community because they’re connected by their interests. And their interest
becomes a part of the conversation. Great. But at some point, people begin to
think: “Well, how can I make a living out of it?” But once you start thinking
about making a living out of it, a community becomes a competition, or a
community becomes a clientele. There’s a moment, I think, when people really
shift. I’m sorry, it’s actually not that clear of a moment. There’s a point in
time when people are like: “How do I make money with this?” And one person
starts to excel at it and other people don’t like that. In my experience, as
someone who got a lot of attention, there were some people who were not
particularly psyched about me getting attention, you know.
BP: I’m sure.
IM: It might be jealousy. Who knows? I don’t know. But this
kind of thing happens. But also the idea is—say, well—let’s imagine that me,
you, and five other people get together and we say: “Let’s make an incredible
feast” and we sit down and make the feast. And it could be glorious; it could
be unparalleled. But four days later, it’s gonna be rotten food. I think the
problem is that people get hung up on the feast instead of the idea of the
food. It’s like continuing to evolve with time: every day we have to get up and
make something again. And one of the other things—and I’m not an expert, I
don’t mean to say it—I think with a lot of the scenes is that people were
drunks, or junkies, or basically, they burned out. I don’t know this but it
seemed that with a lot of those people there was a pretty serious brain
demolition going on at all times, and I think that shortens the life-span of
the community, frankly. But there’s also what I call the schematic of fucking.
With a lot of these communities there are these underlying romantic
relationship structures and that plays a role in how these communities are
formed and how these communities come apart. I’ve thought a lot about this in
terms of history. Just from my experience, from my weird little sort of
relationship with history in terms of the D.C. punk scene. I haven't actually
read the books, like Mark Anderson’s Dance
of Days. I’ve kind of avoided reading books that deal directly with times
and situations that I was actually present for because it’s kind of depressing
to read that kind of summation of one’s life, or an aspect of one’s life. But
the little that I’m aware of it, the little that I hear people talking about
it, there’s a really missing component, which is all the relationships. This is
a theory on my part, but I think it holds water—that everything is affectation.
It’s all add on, every bit of this. I think of human beings as straight lines—singular,
equal, straight lines. Everything after that is just additive. The color of our
skin: that might not be something we chose, but we choose to give it
significance. The way we dress, where we live, some of this stuff is not our
choosing, but we do choose to stay. I think that really, when you boil it down
to the human organism it’s air, water, food, fucking. So it doesn’t surprise me
that really, in my mind, the central part of a lot of these things is that
people are trying to figure out how to be a part of something, and how to be a
part of something more; they’re instinctually trying to perpetuate the race;
the kind, the breed. But in terms of Dischord, what I can tell you is that
we’re a record label, which is essentially a music business in a town where
there is no such thing. We were actually punks in a town where it wasn’t even
recognized. We were basically told to go to New York—and by our peers—by punks,
even. “You can’t be a punk here. You gotta go to New York.” When we decided to
stay here, it was like a perfect isolation chamber. There was no business to
pervert us; there was no industry to say you’re doing it wrong. But what do
they know? Imagine if you had a really intense pottery movement in Franklin,
North Carolina, or something. Well, in Franklin North Carolina, that shit can
grow. But if they were all to pick up and move to New York—Brooklyn, for
instance—you know, that would probably disappear because the art world there
would assimilate them, because that’s a business up there. I think it’s the
fact that we stayed in Washington and that we’ve always focused on Washington.
On the one hand, people might say that it really limited you because there’s a
lot of records you could have put out. But in my mind it perpetuated us because
we didn’t have to contend with it all. Here’s an example. Because we didn't
work with bands outside of Washington, it ended up with us knowing all of the
people we worked with as friends, which meant that we didn’t have to deal with
contracts. We didn’t have that gulf, that expanse of geography to exacerbate the
paranoia. Our decision to work with only D.C. bands limited the situation and perpetuated
it. It also made it so that we never made that much money. If you want to blow
something up, make a lot of money on it, it’s sort of like the industry.
They’re like scavengers, you know. If there’s money to be made somewhere you
can bet they’re going to show up at people’s doorsteps. I can tell you for sure
that major labels did not start coming around punk rock until there was money
to be made. There were some little things here and there, but it wasn’t until
they were like: “Wait a minute, there’s money being made and we’re not getting
a part of it.” But because we kept our operation so small there was no money to
be made.
BP: What’s fascinating to me about your commitment to the
Dischord model, even when there were options for you to do otherwise, is that
the model and the commitment itself could be very useful to other communities
that want to sustain their own projects.
IM: For people that don’t want to be rich.
BP: That’s a beautiful alternative to lots of things, of
course, but also to not being completely poor and having to do lots of things
that you don’t want to do, which makes doing what you want to do even harder. But
that model is situated in a particular place with a particular economy, in
D.C., and I wonder if you also think of it as transferrable.
IM: Of course. Everything I’ve ever done, I’ve had people say:
“you can’t do this.” And I’m like, “Why not?” Usually the answer is: “Because
people have never done it.” It’s all relative. I’m not poor by any means. I own
a house. But I’m also almost fifty, and I’ve been working really hard for
thirty years. Compared to people I know who are in bands less well known than
mine, they’re far more wealthy than I am. When you called, I said that I have a
guy coming to work on the garage because we’re working on building a warehouse
in the garage now. And I’m doing it. It’s not like I have staff that I’ve hired
to come over and do it. I have to do it. And this is the thing about the D.I.Y.
thing that people can’t quite get their minds around: you actually do it
yourself. And people imagine—even friends of mine imagine “oh, you must have so
much money”—but not really. I’m not sweating it, but I didn’t sweat it to begin
with. I save. I’m frugal and I save money. I don’t live like most people
because I don’t find it interesting. The consumer aspect of life is not
interesting to me at all. I mean, with Dischord, most of the people in the
bands, they weren’t living off of the money they made on their record sales.
Some of them were doing ok, but they weren’t living off of it. Neither am I. I
live off of my work. My work is what I’m doing right this second. My work is
dealing with all the records. My work is booking shows for my bands, doing all
the things I do. I’m working all the time. But I do this work so that I’m free
to play music whenever, wherever, however.
BP: I wonder what you think, then, of the way in which the ethos
of D.I.Y has become appealing to corporations. For example, there’s a very
chilling scene in The Social Network,
in which you see Shawn Fanning of Napster talking with the soon to be
disenfranchised partner of Facebook, and he says to him something like: “The
point now is not to find a job, but to create your own job.” What he’s talking
about is structurally similar to what you’ve described and done with Dischord
and yet it exists for radically different reasons. I wonder what you think
about the way in which these two logics may have merged, or if they have; about how being poor is now
understood as a way of becoming even more rich. Is the underlying ethos of
D.I.Y today actually greed?
IM: I guess I feel like it’s nothing new. People are getting
rich off of love or peace, and that’s nothing new. You think that people are
driven by greed, but I don’t think that people even realize it. I don’t think
that it occurs to people that if there is a hundred of anything and they have
seventy-five of those things then that means everyone else has twenty-five of
those things. To me, it just seems obvious. But to them, it just seems that
you're supposed to get as many of those things as you can get. And weren’t
those guys Harvard people? Or M.I.T.?
BP: Harvard.
IM: Harvard, for being such a respected institution, it’s
like a den of sin. It’s like the most evil fucking place. I had a friend who
was in the business school up there and she told me about this class that she
was in, or at least a part of that class, and there was a discussion of whether
it was possible for corporations to be ethical, whether it was even a
consideration. Or, could a corporation be unethical? The argument was that
corporations are not people and I said, obviously, corporations are unethical
and another guy from there weighs in and says: “Well, give me an example.” So I
pulled out a stock one, the Nestlés formula, remember that one?
BP: I do.1
IM: Well, I started talking about putting profits over
people. But he said: “Well, yeah, but who’s to say that the formula that they
got in Africa wasn’t better than the mother’s milk?” Well, then I said: “What
about the Gerber’s thing?” You know, they had little baby food jars of
applesauce, those little Gerber jars. And there was just caramel colored water
with sugar in them. And he says: “Yeah, well apples have sugar in them.” And I
said: “You’re perfect for this.” To me, it’s obviously unethical to lie,
especially for profit’s sake. But that’s the thing, Harvard, and the people who
go there—not all of them, but many of them—the sense of entitlement is
incredible to me. I don’t know much about him, but I read an
article—Zuckerberg, is that his name? I don’t know anything about him. He’s
like The Wizard of Oz to me, and yet
he has twenty-six billion dollars? And I know people who are killing themselves
over a ten thousand dollar debt—people who have actually killed themselves over
that. Come on.
BP: Interestingly, what comes forward in The Social Network is that the most important thing in the
development of Facebook was actually the Harvard email address. Of course, one
of the things you notice in places like Harvard is that the students there are
already enfranchised, already well-connected. They will learn a lot of things, to
be sure, but above all else they’re there—whether they understand it or not—to
fortify and make use of a set of social relations that exist well in advance of
their arrival.
IM: Right. You’re given the illusion that universities are
like plateaus and that people matriculate up to various plateaus, and once they
reach those various plateaus they’re actually at the same level. But that’s
just not the case. I was actually at a salad bar yesterday and there was a
woman on her cell phone, and I always find it strange when people are serving
themselves with one hand, and talking on the phone with the other. She worked,
I think, for the government, at some government agency here and she says: “I
think that there might be a job opening here. But I can tell you right now, for
sure, that it’s going to be someone from Yale or Harvard. That’s just the way
it is now.” And I thought, wow, they’ve got it locked down. And in fact, the
idea that there’s so many things that you can’t do without a college degree. I
don’t think the idea of the college degree is that someone is smarter. The
people who lobby on behalf of the university system have really managed to firm
up their tollbooths. I think it’s crazy. I don’t know if you know, but I didn’t
go to college. I don't have a beef with college, with education and learning
and social interaction. I just think that college becomes a turnstile that one
must pass through. It becomes a perfunctory thing instead of a choice thing.
BP: That’s certainly true from within the university,
especially for those of us who teach in the humanities, which are generally
regarded—or better to say, disregarded—as having no use value. Increasingly,
universities are concerning themselves—and at the expense of people who teach
in the humanities—with what they think is practical. Enrollments are going down
in the humanities and we all know why. It’s the economy, or rather, how
students or the parents of students now see the university as a site of
vocational training because of the economy. And maybe that works, but what I
suspect to be more likely is that students are leaving the university with
degrees but not abilities of their own.
IM: It’s like the cogs have been more finely honed. The
machines that they’re going to work for are not interested in that kind of
thing. Their role is to fulfill very specific kinds of jobs. It’s tragic. I
don’t know what’s going to happen to college, to universities.
BP: Well, they’ll become increasingly privatized, for one,
and as things like the University of Phoenix become more and more legitimized
by various industries and employers, the harder it will be for those of us in
academia to have job security. Academics have had for a long time a system of
tenure that is traditionally meant to secure your job and provide you with the
space and protection to push your thinking in more creative, less foreseeable
ways, and so that you can say the kinds of things that students may not want to
hear, but need to hear, without fear of being fired. That’s one version of
things, anyway. But, now, university administrators seem increasingly open to
the more skeptical and conservative view that tenure actually prevents people
from working, since there are no incentives to remain productive. And so, many
universities are implementing post-tenure review practices and hiring more
adjunct labor—teachers who regularly get paid as little as two thousand dollars
per class. People regularly subsist on salaries that are less than $20,000 just
to be able to do this job.
IM: Right, but then you’re crafting pieces that are going to
make people billions of dollars. Part of my sustainability, in terms of
Dischord, is that I see…it’s like there’s an interstate and everyone is
building on that interstate and everyone is tooling their various affairs for
the interstate world, and I’m trying to cut a path, and that’s my world. I’m
not going to get to the rest stop, but that’s ok. In some ways, the presence of
the permanent, ever present business corporate structure in some ways makes it
that much easier for the underground to exist. What I used to think of as being
obvious, everyday thinking is kind of radical now. I have a neighbor, and I have
a kid, and my neighbor says: “Well, you better start saving for college.” And I
just made a joke: “Oh, you know, no son of mine will ever go to college.” And I
thought the guy was going to call child protection services on me. He was
really bugged out by the comment. I mean, I don’t care. I hope that there’s a
real college by the time my boy’s that age, but it doesn’t really make a
difference. If he wants to learn, he’ll learn. I think the other thing about
sustainability, I was going to say, is that you have to constantly be able to
redefine. Early on in my life I decided that I had inherited any manner of
things—some stuff, some ideas, some behaviors. But when one wakes up in life… I
woke up in Washington D.C., with my mom and dad and my older sisters, and by
that time, it was already on. I was eating certain foods, and all of these
things are inheritances. But just because someone gives you something, it
doesn’t mean that you have to keep it. I did inventory in my life about the
things that I got, the things that I thought were useful and good versus the
things that I thought: “Well, that doesn’t make any sense. I’m not going to do
that.” This could be my diet, this could be the things that I care about, that
I read about. These are my decisions. So, I think that a regular inventory is
somewhat necessary. You live and you start to accumulate, and it’s good to just
start to go through it and go: “Ok, where am I at with all of these things?” In
terms of Dischord, the original Dischord scene was very small, then there were more
people, there were younger brothers, so that was the community. Then there were
other people in the town and they got into it and so they were the community.
At some point, some people started to move into town because they liked the
bands and then they became a part of the community. Then there were other
factions that got connected and then they were the community. In other words,
it was an ever-changing set of circumstances. When the original crew left, I
had it in my mind that it would be like a tree with a hollow center and more
easy to fell. But I’m not sure if that really held up. There were aspects of it
that certainly did. There are definitely people now—people over the last ten or
twelve years—that come at it from a totally different point of view. You have
to remember that people from all of the original bands were all basically
natives. No one moved here to be in a band. We were here and we were just
documenting that. But at some point people started to move into town because
they liked the scene and they were in bands, and so obviously their motivations
are different. It’s not that their motivations were bad; they were just
different. And then there was a period of time when people moved in and even
more people moved in and a lot of people came to Washington who I never even
met. They just came and went. I thought I might recognize a person, but I
didn’t really know them. And then there were people in bands who basically grew
up listening to Dischord. That counts as community. That seems pretty obvious.
To a band like Black Eyes, or Q and Not U they’d been listening to Dischord
since they were like eight. That was pretty interesting for me, to hit that
point. So my point is to be sustainable you have to be able to redefine. I
think the other thing about sustainability, which is counter to the American
business model, is that I don’t believe that if you're not growing you're dying.
I don’t subscribe to that. I think that it’s tidal, that things go up and down.
I know that we started as nothing and that we will end as nothing. And that
will be fine with me. I think that if you are at peace with death then you will
live a lot longer. It’s not necessarily that you will live more years, but that
while you are here you will be more alive instead of spending your time
practicing dying. I apply the same thing to the record label. I never wanted to
have a record label, to be honest with you; I didn’t want to be in the music
business. I just wanted to play music. And this was the choice: make a label
and put the record out, or have no records. But having done it, and as we enter
into our 31st year, it occurred to me that a lot of people have been
trusted—us, me—with their music and we have responsibility to that music, to
making it available to anyone who wants to hear it. A couple of those bands—specifically
Minor Threat and Fugazi, and, yes, I’m in both of those bands—those two bands
have entered into a national, cultural discourse. And I think that those
records should be available on Dischord. Minor Threat broke up long before any
of us had any sense of how that record would enter into
that discourse. The biggest shows we every played were maybe a few hundred, a
thousand people. They were small bands, for the most part. The record sales
didn’t happen, for the most part, until after we broke up. Fugazi was a band,
as you mentioned earlier, who turned down—we turned down—vast sums of money to
stay with the label. So I think in many ways, the biggest responsibility that
we have is to look after the Fugazi catalogue, because Fugazi entrusted us with
that, and not only that, but turned down their monetary reward for that
purpose. And so I feel that as the label shrinks, and it is shrinking, who
knows, maybe the same thing will happen again; maybe not. But I do feel that
the last dollar that gets spent will be on a Fugazi record. We’ll see what happens.
I’m not morbid at all. Sustainability is just a matter of thinking about it.
Ian MacKaye is the co-founder of
Dischord Records and a member of some of the most legendary and influential
punk bands, Minor Threat, Fugazi, and now, The Evens.
Brian Price is a founding co-editor of
World Picture and Associate Professor in the Department of Visual Studies and
the Cinema Studies Institute at the University of Toronto.
1 In the late 1970s, there was a major boycott of Nestlé for promoting the use of breast milk substitutes, which were believed to be the cause of illness and malnutrition for babies in disadvantaged countries.