{"id":1413,"date":"2015-04-01T16:07:33","date_gmt":"2015-04-01T20:07:33","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/?p=1413"},"modified":"2015-04-01T16:07:33","modified_gmt":"2015-04-01T20:07:33","slug":"how-i-discovered-martha-and-the-muffins-metro-music","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/2015\/04\/01\/how-i-discovered-martha-and-the-muffins-metro-music\/","title":{"rendered":"how I discovered Martha and the Muffins&#8217; &#8220;Metro Music&#8221;"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"attachment_1419\" style=\"width: 611px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/shape.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-1419\" class=\"wp-image-1419 \" src=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/shape-300x209.jpg\" alt=\"SHAPE, Belgium\" width=\"601\" height=\"418\" srcset=\"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/shape-300x209.jpg 300w, https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/shape-1024x714.jpg 1024w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 601px) 100vw, 601px\" \/><\/a><p id=\"caption-attachment-1419\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">SHAPE, Belgium<\/p><\/div>\n<p>In ninth grade, my musical interests shifted from hard rock heard on the radio to the new wave and punk I discovered from tape mixes and recommendations passed on by the new kids I was hanging with. I chalk this shift in listening habits up in some part to the attraction that the city held for a suburban teenager like me. I lived in McLean, Virginia, a bedroom community for politicians, civil servants and others who commuted \u201cinside the Beltway\u201d to Washington, DC. My father worked at the Pentagon, and my mother stayed at home with on\/off spells of employment as a dental hygienist, leaving my older sister and me to preoccupy ourselves with the social life of McLean High School. While hers was quite active, mine that year was spent navigating the social tribes and discovering \u201cwho I was\u201d \u2014 a common experience for wimpy 14-year-old middle-class boys, I\u2019m sure.<\/p>\n<p>That quest became more exciting every time my parents took us to Georgetown, the hotspot of gentrification in a city still entangled in the postwar urban crisis. Georgetown was a big deal to suburban high schoolers, for reasons both obvious (DC\u2019s drinking age was still 18, and seniors and their friends with fake IDs could find relative anonymity in Georgetown\u2019s loud, expansive bars) and unspoken (its racial\/ethnic character was relatively white for the so-called Chocolate City). It had excellent destinations for teenage loitering like record stores and Commander Salamander, the new wave fashion and accessory store. When I could get my parents to leave me alone for a few hours, I would wander along the main roads, M Street and Wisconsin Avenue, soaking in the urban and commercial atmosphere. I wouldn\u2019t buy much but would return home with artifacts I collected, like a flyer I held on to for a long time advertising three shows at the 9:30 Club: New Order, the Slickee Boys, and Bow Wow.<\/p>\n<p>It was probably in a window of <a href=\"http:\/\/dcist.com\/2014\/01\/washington_ghosts_former_record_sto.php#photo-3\">Kemp Mill Records<\/a> in the spring or summer of 1983 that an oblique poster grabbed my attention. Blank white space framed a small square of what looked like an aerial image of green forest landscape. In a clinical, sans-serif font read the words MARTHA AND THE MUFFINS\/DANCEPARC, a band name and album title I\u2019d never heard of before; felt-tipped handwriting in the ample white space announced the band\u2019s local tour date. I didn\u2019t think anything more about the poster. I wasn\u2019t particularly curious about this concert; while I had never attended <i>any<\/i> nightclub shows at this age, even my fantasy concert wishlist had only limited room for groups l actually listened to, like Ultravox or Simple Minds. Oh well.<\/p>\n<p>That summer was an anxious one for me. My musical coming of age gained speed following my first concert, <a href=\"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/2013\/06\/04\/view-from-suburbia-dks\/\">a hardcore punk show headlined by the Dead Kennedys<\/a>. But my excitement about this music and the Washington, DC subculture that it came from was cut short by my father\u2019s announcement that the Army was transferring him to a base in Belgium, and that we\u2019d be moving overseas in July. \u00a0Nothing reveals the suburban insularity and national parochialism that white, middle-class American kids are socialized into better than the outbursts, tears, and panic that follows the news they\u2019re relocating to a small European country they\u2019ve dimly recall from a world history class. Will I have to speak a foreign language? (French? After three years of learning Spanish??) Will I have to eat weird food? What do those people even look like??<\/p>\n<p>At least I\u2019ll be able to get deeper into new wave, I decided with a sense of acceptance, having evidently reached the final K\u00fcbler-Ross stage of grief. Anyway, it was becoming harder to buy records while maintaining the steady consumption of comic books I\u2019d been reading since middle school. Imagining some kind of sartorial reinvention for myself along the lines of <a href=\"http:\/\/www.npg.org.uk\/collections\/search\/portraitLarge\/mw84537\/Duran-Duran-Andy-Taylor-Nick-Rhodes-Simon-Le-Bon-Roger-Taylor-Roger-Meddows-Taylor-John-Taylor\">Duran Duran\u2019s band photo on <i>Rio<\/i><\/a>, I made the mental transition: <i>I was going to be an American teenager living in Europe<\/i>. On the overnight flight into Brussels, I inaugurated my next phase as a \u201cnew European\u201d by playing Ultravox\u2019s <i>Vienna<\/i> on my Walkman as the plane entered over the continent.<\/p>\n<p>More than three decades later, I\u2019m still overwhelmed by the culture shock I experienced moving to Belgium at a highly impressionable age. The change in landscape immediately struck me. My father worked at <a href=\"http:\/\/www.usarmygermany.com\/Sont.htm?http&amp;&amp;&amp;www.usarmygermany.com\/units\/hqusareur\/usareur_shape.htm\">Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE)<\/a>, an international military base located just north of Mons, a French-speaking city with a history that predated U.S. history by the magnitude of a millenium. We lived not inside the base but \u201con the economy,\u201d in a town called Soignies separated from SHAPE by 10 minutes of tidy, compact parcels of farmland. My daily busride to school drove past scores of cows grazing in flat pastures, a damp, green pastoral landscape extending behind them.<\/p>\n<p>I attended SHAPE American High School, a small school (graduating class of about 60 students) that enrolled Americans alongside handfuls of Canadian students, a couple of British kids (military brats in Her Majesty\u2019s Armed Forces generally stayed back in English boarding schools, I learned), and the few Belgian, German, Italian and Dutch kids who were game for full American English-language immersion. There were also German, Italian and French-language schools where most of SHAPE\u2019s European military families enrolled their children. Those kids didn\u2019t appear to experience many difficulties transitioning linguistically and culturally to Belgium. By contrast, American kids from politically conservative military families clung tenaciously to American institutions like football, permed hair, and Def Leppard.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/Rock-Yearbook-1983.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright size-full wp-image-1417\" src=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/Rock-Yearbook-1983.jpg\" alt=\"Rock Yearbook 1983\" width=\"224\" height=\"288\" \/><\/a>I made some good friends with similarly adventurous musical tastes, but few could rival my diligent research into new music. This began with a foundation of British music media: the weekly New Musical Express, the bi-weekly Smash Hits, and the monthly Face. The NME especially influenced me\u2026 what am I saying? The NME <a href=\"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/2011\/02\/08\/uncovering-the-underground-ladbroke-grove\/\">fucked me up good<\/a>, and I began sneering at my classmates\u2019 U2 records (<i>War<\/i> was on my heavy rotation just the year before) and internalizing the \u201c1977: Year Zero\u201d paradigm of British punk and post-punk. Also important was a random purchase: the Rock Yearbook 1983, a glossy British publication that compiled pithy album reviews ranging from the mass-market (Status Quo, Dire Straits) to the obscure (Eyeless in Gaza, Mink DeVille, Funkapolitan), as well as sections like \u201cquotes of the year,\u201d \u201cbest and worst album covers\u201d and the like.<\/p>\n<p>Then there were the many trips to record stores. If only I had back then the resources and collector\u2019s attentiveness that I have now&#8230; Brussels had the best record-shopping destinations, my favorite being FNAC, a consumer\u2019s paradise of books, music, videos, graphic novels, and media technologies. Mons and Soignies had one or two music stores each; from the one in Soignies, I obtained my cherished Roxy Music <i>First Seven Albums<\/i> LP box set for the 1984 price of US $35, if memory serves me correctly. \u00a0On base, SHAPE\u2019s Bon March\u00e9 superstore had a decent selection, too, with the added bonus of being across the street from school; nearby American-only bases like the one in Chi\u00e8vres shipped in U.S. pressings to the PX at non-import prices. CDs were just being commercially introduced in those years and still rather pricey; thus, my collection was composed of vinyl, pre-recorded cassettes, and music I taped onto blank cassettes.<\/p>\n<p>It was in this last cost-conscious pursuit of new music that I made a life-changing discovery. Between the high school and the Bon March\u00e9 was a library that extended loan privileges to members and families of the international militaries represented at SHAPE. And as I learned one day, it had a shelf of vinyl records. A few weeks ago, reminiscing about the well-worn, crackling LPs that you could check out there, a friend recalled seeing albums by King Crimson, Thomas Dolby, and the Rolling Stones, as well as a deep backlist of Bryan Adams. (Remember, Canada was well-represented at SHAPE; you should have seen the Canadians <i>murder<\/i> on the ice hockey rink.) But even that doesn\u2019t do justice to the eclecticism of the SHAPE library vinyl collection.<\/p>\n<p>Here are three albums that I checked out some time in 1984, taped to cassette, and promptly took to heart:<\/p>\n<p><b> <a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/cramps.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft wp-image-1415 size-medium\" src=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/cramps-300x300.jpg\" alt=\"cramps\" width=\"300\" height=\"300\" srcset=\"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/cramps-300x300.jpg 300w, https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/cramps-290x290.jpg 290w, https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/cramps-50x50.jpg 50w, https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/cramps.jpg 500w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/a>1. The Cramps, <\/b><b><i>Songs the Lord Taught Us<\/i><\/b><b> (1980).<\/b> I can\u2019t overstate what a powerful effect the Cramps\u2019 debut album had on me. Seriously, I played that tape almost everyday for a whole year between 1984-85. Typically I fast forwarded past the third track \u201cGarbageman\u201d for some reason \u2014 maybe because it showed the calculations behind their B-movie horror schtick too clearly, more likely because I couldn\u2019t wait for the crazed trilogy that followed: \u201cI Was A Teenage Werewolf,\u201d \u201cSunglasses After Dark,\u201d \u201cMad Daddy.\u201d From this album I moved on to other Cramps albums (the <i>Off the Bone<\/i> compilation and the <i>Smell of Female<\/i> live album) and psychobilly compilations like <i>Blood on the Cats<\/i>, <i>Revenge of the Killer Pussies<\/i>, and <i>Rockabilly Psychosis and the Garage Disease<\/i>. The latter included a track by the Gun Club, whose discography became another obsession, one that long outlived my infatuation for the Cramps. (The beginning of the end came in the second half of the 80s, when the Cramps added a conventional bass guitar \u2014 <i>WHY?!<\/i>) Finally, from the Cramps and the Ramones, their brothers in the chord of E, I taught myself basic bar chords on guitar. This was enough for me to form my first band that year, <a href=\"http:\/\/faculty.vassar.edu\/lenevare\/Wankers\/\">the Wankers<\/a>, whose setlist included Cramps\u2019 covers like \u201cGoo Goo Muck\u201d and \u201cNew Kind of Kick.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>How many other public libraries have circulated this legendary album? There\u2019s a fascinating short story to be written about how this album was acquired. Was it a donation? Did a patron request it? Was a librarian an actual <i>fan<\/i> of the Cramps? Given the SHAPE library\u2019s mission of international representativeness, the larger question is which national constituency it was supposed to serve. The Cramps were icons of the downtown New York scene, but they were the inspiration for British psychobilly and patron saints of London\u2019s Batcave nightclub as well. Technically it could split the difference, but I suspect the library thought this a \u201cBritish\u201d acquisition.<\/p>\n<p><b> <a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/The-Teardrop-Explodes-Wilder-522890.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright wp-image-1414 size-medium\" src=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/The-Teardrop-Explodes-Wilder-522890-300x300.jpg\" alt=\"The-Teardrop-Explodes-Wilder-522890\" width=\"300\" height=\"300\" srcset=\"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/The-Teardrop-Explodes-Wilder-522890-300x300.jpg 300w, https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/The-Teardrop-Explodes-Wilder-522890-290x290.jpg 290w, https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/The-Teardrop-Explodes-Wilder-522890-50x50.jpg 50w, https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/The-Teardrop-Explodes-Wilder-522890.jpg 500w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/a>2. The Teardrop Explodes, <\/b><b><i>Wilder<\/i><\/b><b> (1981).<\/b> This was surely an album acquired for British patrons; in all my new wave exchanges back in the states, I never heard mention of the Teardrop Explodes. Their debut <i>Kilimanjaro<\/i> gets the critical acclaim because it showcased the Liverpool neo-psychedelia scene so well, but I loved the bright, glossy sounds of <i>Wilder<\/i> \u2014 chiming pianos, punchy horn sections, swelling synths. Almost certainly I was reading about Julian Cope in the British music press around this time (he penned an encylopedic tribute to 1960s \u201cflower punk\u201d in the NME), so I was curious to understand how his acid-gobbling reputation squared with this very accessible album. I guess that was the point: his particular psychedelic lineage drew upon the daffy pop bona fides of your Syd Barretts and Arthur Lees. The somber pair of recordings that close the album, \u201cAnd The Fighting Takes Over\u201d and \u201cThe Great Dominions,\u201d were songs to give a 14-year-old a sense of melancholy significance. Since then, I\u2019ve been listening to Julian Cope on and off <a href=\"http:\/\/sounditout.com\/2015\/02\/julian-cope-trip-advizer-best-julian-cope-1999-2014\/\">to the present<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p><b> <a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/Metro-Music.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft wp-image-1416 size-medium\" src=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/Metro-Music-300x300.jpg\" alt=\"Metro Music\" width=\"300\" height=\"300\" srcset=\"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/Metro-Music-300x300.jpg 300w, https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/Metro-Music-290x290.jpg 290w, https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/Metro-Music-50x50.jpg 50w, https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/files\/2015\/04\/Metro-Music.jpg 700w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/a>3. Martha and the Muffins, <\/b><b><i>Metro Music<\/i><\/b><b> (1980).<\/b> I pulled off the shelf an album with a serene blue and pink cartographic image on the cover. None of the British press mentioned Martha and the Muffins in anything I\u2019d read so far; only my memory of the poster in the Georgetown window provided a frame of reference. I took it home and was pulled in by the first seconds of lead track \u201cEcho Beach\u201d: an eerie strobing keyboard tone followed by a jangling guitar riff (similar to the style of R.E.M, a new band whose debut album I had recently discovered). The album came with no musician photos to look at, but I could place the band\u2019s sound within the classic new wave combo format (guitar, bass, drums, keyboards, optional sax) that I knew from the Attractions, Joe Jackson, B-52\u2019s, the Cars \u2014 a style already going out of fashion by 1984.<\/p>\n<p>Yet the band heard on the album had other features that kept me listening, starting Martha Johnson\u2019s deep, restrained vocals \u2014 a far cry from the bouncy style of the Go-Go\u2019s and Altered Images\u2019 Clare Grogan or the rock belting of Pat Benatar. She was doubled by a second vocalist, Martha Ladly (two Marthas!), who sang more urgently; together, their vocals and wordplay (\u201cSeparation\/Isolation\/No punctuation\/No fluctuation\u201d) gave the music a fluttering of engaging repartee. I also became attuned to the reedy, plangent keyboards (Johnson\u2019s Ace-Tone organ, I\u2019d learn later) that evoked a feeling of strange, melancholy place on tracks like \u201cSaigon\u201d and \u201cSinking Land.\u201d The album was energetic, even playful (on the closing \u201cCheesies and Gum\u201d) but hypnotic; the band sounded intent yet unpretentious, grounded but capable of moments of enchantment. For a kid whose head was filled with dreams of making music most of his friends couldn\u2019t bother with, this was a worthy mode of musical expression.<\/p>\n<p>I asked my American friends if they had heard of Martha and the Muffins: blank stares. I asked my Canadian friends if <i>they<\/i> had heard of Martha and the Muffins: \u201cOh yeah\u2026 Echo Beach!\u201d I had to find out more on my own, and, shortly after, a trip to FNAC yielded a cassette of <i>Danceparc<\/i>. With still no band photos or music reporting to consult, it took awhile for my untrained ears to figure out this was a new line-up working in a funkier, more sonically adventurous terrain. I only knew by this point that <i>I was all in<\/i> for Martha and the Muffins\u2026<\/p>\n<p>\u2026 And I still am, notwithstanding the blank stares I get when I tell my American friends and students that I\u2019m writing a book on the band. (Increasingly, they\u2019re joined by the blank stares of the handful of Canadian college students I\u2019ve taught when I ask if they\u2019ve heard Martha and the Muffins.) The routes that led me to this obscure group recapitulate theories of the urban: Washington, DC as the city of <a href=\"http:\/\/www.yorku.ca\/lfoster\/2006-07\/sosi3830\/lectures\/LouisWirth_Urbanismasawayoflife.htm\">critical mass<\/a>, specialized economies, and <a href=\"http:\/\/www.thepolisblog.org\/2011\/12\/claude-fischer-on-big-cities-and.html\">subcultural activities<\/a>; the SHAPE International Library evoking Lewis Mumford\u2019s city as the <a href=\"http:\/\/blog.dawngriffin.com\/2008\/04\/15\/lewis-mumford-the-culture-of-cities\/\">form and symbol of cosmopolitan culture<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><i>[These 2386 words represent my attempt to write the second <\/i><a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/2015\/01\/29\/syllabus-for-2015-musical-urbanism-seminar\/\"><i>Musical Urbanism<\/i><\/a><i> assignment, extended by a casual writing exercise for <\/i><a href=\"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/2014\/06\/18\/martha-and-the-muffins-a-book-project-in-musical-urbanism\/\"><i>my Martha and the Muffins project<\/i><\/a><i>. Here were the instructions Hua Hsu and I gave the students:<\/i><\/p>\n<p><b><i>Write 800-1000 words in response to the following prompt:<\/i><\/b><\/p>\n<p><b><i>For your second paper assignment, please write a brief \u201clistening biography\u201d detailing your relationship with a piece of music that possesses significant meaning for you. We&#8217;re interested in how this piece of music affected you at the level of imagination or self-identification. What ideas and fantasies of place or even &#8220;the urban&#8221; drew you to the work? Did it represent escape or quotidian realism? What conditions of taste or technology guided your listening habits? What role did the Internet, social circles and social networks or unlikely avenues for music discovery play? While this should be a creative, reflective endeavor, please approach this essay with some of our course discussions and themes in mind.<\/i><\/b><i>]<\/i><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>In ninth grade, my musical interests shifted from hard rock heard on the radio to the new wave and punk I discovered from tape mixes and recommendations passed on by the new kids I was hanging with. I chalk this shift in listening habits up in some part to the attraction that the city held for a suburban teenager like me. I lived in McLean, Virginia, a bedroom community for politicians, civil servants and others who commuted \u201cinside the Beltway\u201d to Washington, DC. My father worked at the Pentagon, and my mother stayed at home with on\/off spells of employment as a dental hygienist, leaving my older sister and me to preoccupy ourselves with the social life of McLean High School. While hers was quite active, mine that year was spent navigating the social tribes and discovering \u201cwho I was\u201d \u2014 a common experience for wimpy 14-year-old middle-class boys, I\u2019m sure. That quest became more exciting every time my parents took us to Georgetown, the hotspot of gentrification in a city still entangled in the postwar urban crisis. Georgetown was a big deal to suburban high schoolers, for reasons both obvious (DC\u2019s drinking age was still 18, and seniors and [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":308,"featured_media":1416,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[43805,43652,524,43795],"class_list":["post-1413","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-uncategorized","tag-belgium","tag-mobility","tag-toronto","tag-washington-dc"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1413","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/308"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1413"}],"version-history":[{"count":4,"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1413\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1422,"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1413\/revisions\/1422"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/1416"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1413"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1413"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/musicalurbanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1413"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}