Déjà vu Desperados: Embattled Survivor Imagery of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young in the Setting of Youth Rebellion America, c. 1967-1973

Abstract

The romanticised Wild West costumed motif of the folk-rock band Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young (CSN&Y) on the cover of their Déjà vu LP album from 1970 evokes the American Civil War rebel and Wild West outlaw, along with the rifle-toting heroic frontier scout, the Spanish/Mexican vaquero, and the Native American. Three photographs, taken during a single Déjà vu photo session by the photographer Tom Gundelfinger O'Neal, have been line-drawn for the present article by the design technologist and illustrator Marianne Bloch Hansen to enable a close analysis of details of dress, weapons, props, and the shifting positions of band members. The costumed images are considered as artefacts with a view to revealing the motivating circumstances behind that which is seen in the photos. This is accomplished by considering the cover costumes and staging on three distinct levels: as a genre item, a performance, and a product. The focus is on a specific political, social and cultural space, America of the late 1960s-early 1970s youth rebellion. Contemporary editorials, interviews, articles, and advertisements in the music and politics biweekly Rolling Stone magazine are utilized as sources. The imagery raises intriuguing questions about its underlying style prototypes and patterns of style influences, and whether the costuming of CSN&Y amounts to a pastiche of the sort originally suggested by Fredric Jameson in 'Postmodernism, or The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism' (1984). Whatever significance the Déjà vu album cover motif has as a source for fashion history depends on 'what,' 'how,' and 'why' questions asked by the historian. It is evident that the cover motif with its costumed and heavily armed 'outlaws' is a response to an America rent by social tensions contiguous with the Civil Rights Movement, the Vietnam War, fears of revolutionary violence and of notorious murders committed by the Charles Manson 'Family' for example, while also suggesting an ironic sense of failure of the youth counterculture.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftCatwalk: The Journal of Fashion, Beauty and Style
Vol/bind4
Udgave nummer2
Sider (fra-til)71-98
Antal sider28
ISSN2045-2349
StatusUdgivet - sep. 2015

Emneord

  • Det Humanistiske Fakultet
  • Fashion
  • Rock groups
  • Rock military style
  • Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young (CSN&Y)
  • Record album covers
  • photography
  • Pastiche
  • American Civil War
  • American Old West
  • cinema and society
  • Television
  • Westerns
  • western genren
  • memory and history
  • Civil Rights
  • Vietnam War
  • Rebellion
  • Native American textiles

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