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The following is from 312 No. 3, March 2005 [Download Publication in .PDF format]:

still from Middleton & Taylor's 'Theme Song II'

Singing into the Mirror: Theme Song II

“People are strange… sure, look—look how alone I am, oh yeah, everybody looks ugly, I mean I’m all alone. Ah, you don’t want me to stay alone like this, do you?” He pleads in what seems a video personal from yesteryear. “Oh you can’t leave me alone… look how down I am, how depressed I am. I mean, I don’t have you yet, of course I’m depressed. Ah, you can’t leave me alone like this…” This would-be suitor splayed out on a living room floor so desperate for the viewer’s attention is Vito Acconci. In his 1973 video “Theme Song”, Acconci uses music by the Doors, Van Morrison, and others to make come-ons to his unknown audience for just over a half hour. While exploring the close-up intensity of video’s (and television’s) seductive relationship with the viewer, Acconci comes across as half-desperate/half-crazed, somewhere between Leisure Suit Larry and American Psycho.

Both born only the year before “Theme Song” was made, Tricia Middleton and Joel Taylor’s “Theme Song II” (2001) revisits Acconci’s original with altogether different intentions. Their version immediately declares in blue subtitles: “let’s face it honey / we all want to be rock stars at some point in our lives”. A woman reclines back into the frame. She sips some wine, then takes off her sunglasses to peer to her right, the self-conscious tic of someone checking the mirror (or a camera’s viewfinder). She exudes detached confidence with a cool demeanor. This is seduction of a different kind than Acconci’s—instead of (living room) sleazy, it’s (bedroom) relaxing. Suddenly, she begins to lip-sync along with Spiritualized’s “200 Bars”, a melancholy shoegazer epic made downright world-weary by a reduction in speed.

I’m reminded of all the childhood trips I took across the continent, staring at myself mouthing the lyrics to music issuing forth from my cassette walkman. Sure, I wanted to be a rock star, or a celebrity, or somebody famous. In my head, I wasn’t gazing into the passenger side mirror anymore—I was transported away from the car to the concert stage, singing these amazing songs, now my own songs, to millions of like-minded fans. With western culture focused on celebrity and image, I know I’m not the only one who entertained such fantasies. I know people who sang into pencils like they were microphones, and many more who attend karaoke bars on a regular basis. Maybe most of us don’t really believe we’ll become stars, but plenty do—Canadian Idol and the like are good enough witness to that.

The video reins me back into reality not long after it begins. The blue subtitles break it to me softly: “you’re just going to have to face the fact / that you will never be / what you dream of / sorry / oh honey / you’re just going to have to get over it”. Even Spiritualized gives up: “You know I tried, but now I’m tired…”. The woman seems to even ponder the subtitles, suddenly losing track of the soothing beat, staring offscreen as though disenchanted. She no longer lip-syncs and finally the image fades out. End of fantasy.
Mark Prier.

 

 

 
     

312 © Mark Prier. Design by Mark Prier. All images of artwork are © their creators.