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Bounding
behind "Goodbye Blue Sky" on the album and "What Shall We Do Now?" in the movie,
"Young Lust" bursts into life as "a pastiche of any young rock and roll band out
on the road" (Waters, 1979 interview). The music is so vibrantly cliché and the
vocals so infectious that the song, while lampooning the sexually driven, big-guitar-rock
songs and bands of the time, transcends its mold and becomes a lively entity unto
itself. Although Waters' original song recounted the singer's cautious sexual
exploits after school, "hanging around outside porno movies and dirty bookshops,"
the collaboration of Waters, Gilmour, and Ezrin quickly turned the song into a
rollicking melody recounting Pink's entrance into rock and roll super stardom.
And what better way to show celebrity excesses than through the eyes of yet another
sex-driven star. Yet there's little wonder as to why Pink explodes into his new
personage: in terms of album chronology, he has just left his overprotective mother,
his school, and the life he knew, all of which oppressed the development of Pink's
individuality. In the total absence of any boundaries whatsoever and with his
newfound power as a celebrity (we never really do find out HOW Pink became a star…but
that might be besides the point), Pink bursts through the rules placed on him
throughout his life and recklessly embraces all that he was never allowed to experience.
As the cliché says (which is appropriate for this purposefully stereotypical song),
he simply immerses himself with sex, drugs, and rock and roll.
Though
the song is relatively simple in terms of narrative (it's mainly used to detail
the sexual exploits of rock star Pink whose every sexual fantasy is explored in
every town that his tour stops in), the very style that Floyd uses to convey the
message contributes to the deeper undertones of the album. It's interesting that
Waters described the song as a pastiche, a literary imitation usually for the
sake of satire. In one way, the pastiche technique is used to criticize a certain
type of music or lifestyle without blatantly attacking it. To use a literary example,
many of the chapters of James Joyce's masterpiece Ulysses parody other writers,
books, and cultural trends of the time in an attack on what Joyce arguably saw
as the degeneration of intellectual thought and literature. Although Joyce never
mentions a specific writer or book in these parodic sections, his views are loudly
proclaimed and his aim is nearly unmistakable. So too is the aim of Pink Floyd's
"Young Lust," a parody of every rocker whose used his celebrity for sex and drugs,
whose ego is as large as his image, and whose only care is the pursuit of carnal
pleasure.
Going beyond sheer parody, Floyd interestingly uses this technique
to further define Pink's character. The very fact that the song is an imitation
of popular rock music of the 70's reinforces Pink's lack of individuality at this
time in his life. Up until now, he has been molded by his mother, his school,
and life itself into a model civilian void of nearly
all traces of distinctiveness. In the movie Pink is punished by his teacher for
writing poetry, restrained sexually by his ever-watchful mother, alienated from
much of society because he has no father; all of the above have only contributed
to the flimsy mask of personality, each incident painting a feature onto the mask
rather than adding depth to his character. Fittingly, the first song of his new
independence is one that is so full of rock clichés (the gruff, sexual voice;
the catchy, melodic hook; the polished guitar solo) that it's hard to grant just
one person credit for writing the song. It not only recalls popular musical trends
at the time but the vocals are also reminiscent of an earlier Floyd tune called
"the Nile Song", according to a Waters interview. Pink is not just a mere shadow
of 70's rock and roll but he's also a shadow of his creators' earlier music. But
it's only after he fully erupts that Pink finally comprehends the hollow shell
that he is and the void of individual nothingness underneath, a realization that
further contributes to the completion of the wall and the destruction of whatever
self there once was. While
the song's position on the album denotes a more natural sense of newfound sexual
freedom, one might argue that its position in the movie is much more dubious,
casting the song in a retaliatory light. By this argument, Pink turns to the sexually
willing groupies in order to get even with his unfaithful wife whose infidelity
he has just discovered in "What Shall We Do Now?" Pink stays in his trailer for
most of the song, only emerging momentarily when he sees a pretty female fan that
catches his eye. Although he is obviously annoyed with her when she tries to get
his autograph, he nevertheless takes her back to his hotel room, insinuating that
he originally intended to do something with her, that is until he has another
one of his "turns" in the next song.
One might also argue that the movie
sequence is little more than an extension of the album version, "serious[ly] romanticizing"
the life of a rock star (Waters, DVD). The majority of the song's scenes do little
to advance the plot, mostly showing the excesses of celebrity life in the numerous
women, abundant food, and flowing champagne
before concluding the song with the groupie following Pink back into his trailer.
Despite the scenes' apparent frivolity, there are a few subtleties that rescue
the video from being nothing more than justification for sex jokes and female
nudity. It's interesting to note that despite this being Pink's sexual anthem
(at least on the album), he is probably the character with the least amount of
screen time during the song. His absence from the majority of the footage creates
a physical separation between the viewer and the character, one that quite possibly
parallels Pink's feelings of abandonment and detachment after having discovered
his wife's unfaithfulness. This sense of disconnection is further emphasized by
the few times Pink is on screen. When the viewer is offered a glimpse of Pink,
it is usually through the window of Pink's trailer, producing yet another wall
of separation between the viewer and Pink as well as Pink and the rest of the
world. Rather than joining his own backstage party, he sits by the window and
indifferently watches the festivities outside of this trailer through a dark pair
of sunglasses, yet another wall of separation between the external world and himself.
Even when he does emerge from his trailer at the end of the song, he quickly retreats
back into it when he finds that the female groupie is just another faceless fan
in search of an autograph and a wild story. Interestingly, the fan is more persistent
than one might expect, trying to take off his glasses to "find out what's behind
[his] cold eyes" and following him into his trailer and eventually back to his
hotel room, even after Pink has blatantly expressed his exasperation with her.
Coupled with the
groupie's resemblance to his wife (at least in my opinion…which is perhaps why
Pink was drawn to her in the first place), the fan acts as yet another extension
of the wife's insistent attempts to try to break through Pink's wall and truly
connect with him. But just as Pink eventually drove his wife to having an affair,
he will also drive the female fan away from him before she even glimpses what's
behind his disguise in "One of My Turns." |