Re: Treme
Posted: Tue May 06, 2014 8:30 pm
I finished out this series and am sorry to see it done, but a lot of the short, meandering fourth season was a real step down from the previous three. I thought the characters of Davis McAlary and Janette Desautel were pretty compelling throughout the series, but they took up too much of the final five episodes, and the plot lines of Davis's midlife crisis and Janette's naming rights to her restaurant connected far less to the broader community of New Orleans and its challenges after Katrina than what most of the rest of the series showed us, and I would have rather seen more focus on corruption in the city, as well as its still crumbling social foundations such as the schools. What there was of that was excellent.
Davis in particular seemed to be used as a mouthpiece for the show to expound on the city's music, which is fine to an extent, but I was pretty galled by the hypocrisy of the way the show used his views against the planned national jazz center, and for the notion that local culture develops organically at the street level (which I'd largely agree with) while at the same time its scenes of live music are dominated by glorified scenes of the stage at the French Quarter House of Blues, a corporate national chain venue that lacks a vital connection to real blues or New Orleans music. (In one of his rants, George Carlin redubbed it the "House of Lame White Motherfuckers.") Looking at some of their upcoming shows I see a bunch of metal, indie rock, etc., and I'm not judging those genres but rather the show's purported focus on the local nature of the music and how much it's committed to its premise about people like Shorty who grew up in the second lines and streetcorners. Music was obviously one of the mainstays of the show, and for me part of the problem with these last five episodes was that I didn't enjoy most of the scenes of stage performances, and they didn't even tie at all into the resolution of most of the plots in the show's final episodes.
The many appearances of the House of Blues stage were not unlike the product placement—all the prominent views of bottles of Budweiser etc. (which is realistic the first couple of times, then just distracting) which was a poor substitute for something like the way the very first episode captured the post-Katrina situation by having Jeanette in the first episode run out of desserts except for an old Hubig's pie.
Again, all in all a great show.
Davis in particular seemed to be used as a mouthpiece for the show to expound on the city's music, which is fine to an extent, but I was pretty galled by the hypocrisy of the way the show used his views against the planned national jazz center, and for the notion that local culture develops organically at the street level (which I'd largely agree with) while at the same time its scenes of live music are dominated by glorified scenes of the stage at the French Quarter House of Blues, a corporate national chain venue that lacks a vital connection to real blues or New Orleans music. (In one of his rants, George Carlin redubbed it the "House of Lame White Motherfuckers.") Looking at some of their upcoming shows I see a bunch of metal, indie rock, etc., and I'm not judging those genres but rather the show's purported focus on the local nature of the music and how much it's committed to its premise about people like Shorty who grew up in the second lines and streetcorners. Music was obviously one of the mainstays of the show, and for me part of the problem with these last five episodes was that I didn't enjoy most of the scenes of stage performances, and they didn't even tie at all into the resolution of most of the plots in the show's final episodes.
The many appearances of the House of Blues stage were not unlike the product placement—all the prominent views of bottles of Budweiser etc. (which is realistic the first couple of times, then just distracting) which was a poor substitute for something like the way the very first episode captured the post-Katrina situation by having Jeanette in the first episode run out of desserts except for an old Hubig's pie.
Again, all in all a great show.