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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 01 2010 at 03:21
I'd like to stop this polemic, as we are monopolizing the post and it may be interesting to see other's comments.
Of course long playing were available on 78RPM also in the 40s, but mono or stereo devices were expensive so most of the people in the 60s was allowed to radio or 45rpm only.

" there is some great intelligent dance music (IDM) - Autechre, for example, and not all music for dancing is just for dancing.  You are right, I'm not saying that this kind of music can't be good. This is my reaction to what the media have done of my music during the years. 

Stationary Traveller is a great album. It's one of the best albums of one of my favourite bands. The standardisation I'm speaking about is the one imposed by the media. I didn't go actually into Metallica or Cabaret Voltaire. You say that you are not currently looking for new music, I was in the same situation in the 80s. Pink Floyd, Camel, Yes and ELP were enough for me. 

Should you decide to check out Vangelis or Kitaro, Heaven and Hell of the first and Dream of the second are probably their best.

Script is just question of personal tastes so I don't want to criticize your opinions and I won't change mine, but I'm not saying that it's poor, only I don't see the masterpiece.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 01 2010 at 07:24
I don't buy this equation that says dance music = lack of intelligence. Skillful dancing requires intelligence.
Before you dismiss those who like to dance ask yourself how skilled are you at this art. I've never encountered anyone who would easily dismiss dancing who was any good at it.
As a musician who often works with dance bands, I think nothing elevates your music more than a room full of people moving to what you are playing. In a situation like this the room becomes charged with positive energy, its intelligence in a more abstract form.

By dancing I'm not referring to a couple of drunken lamoids stiffly shuffling their feet at a club trying to pick up somebody.

Edited by Easy Money - July 01 2010 at 07:28
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 01 2010 at 07:46
I hope this is not related to my replies. I never wrote an equation like that. I like reggae that's dancing music and I don't think it's stupid.

It's a specific kind of music I can't stand with and this is why I'm saying "yes, I am arrogant".

About dancing itself, it's an art like painting, sculpture and music. One can like it or not, but it's never stupid. I'm just saying that MTV stuff on which dance is more relevant than music is not my pot and from a musical point of view I think it's poorer than the worst progressive song.

This can be fine as well. Artists who give more importance to lyrics than to music (in this case we speak of poetry) can have great lyrics and poor music. In that case, I like poetry more than dance so I can buy them.

Michael Jackson, Madonna or also the set of video released by the Cars in the 80s with the direction of Andy Warhol are example of "multimedia" art. 

I don't buy Pink Floyd for the light shows. I buy their music. I want to "Let there be more light" in my mind, not necessarily in my eyes.

I'm absolutely not skilled in dancing and I have also wrote that I can't say if a dancer is good or not. I'm simply not interested at all in dance of any kind.

The last time I have danced was at a gig of Johnny Clegg. Of course I have no idea of which moves I have done. I simply moved because the music asked me to do it.  I don't think it can be called dance. Maybe yes, but I don't care. The room was charged with positive energy, the poetry was excellent but it was caused by his music, not by my dancing.

 



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 01 2010 at 11:51
But it is often just the marketing of such artists that attaches more importance to the dance videos than the music.  I repeat, Michael Jackson's albums upto Bad are more musically interesting than lots of boring, generic glam rock/metal stuff which in several cases was not accompanied by dance videos. Wink  It's upto the listener whether he's prepared to listen to the music itself or chooses to baulk at the package.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 01 2010 at 15:53
Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:

That would work if you are a robot. <font face="Courier New, Courier, mono" size="1">[while holding your nose] Beep! "This music is catchy, more popular and has a good beat "   

Surprisingly enough, if you'll unplug the robotic nose you'll find a normal person, describing why they like certain music, rather than just proclaiming it "good."
Popular art, including music, is effective in appealing to the public. That may or may not portend musical ability.
People like music because it appeals to their emotions, intellect, sense of fashion, sense of fellowship, memories....and so many other facets of a human.
No music is inherently "better," i.e. "more artistically valid" because there is no way at all to quantify such a distinction. What does "better" mean? Faster, slower, more aggressive, more intellectual, exceling withing
the confines of musical theory, soaring outside those boundaries, hobbling without them? Does "good" music facilitate laughing, dancing, cringing, rejoicing, lamenting, fuming, tripping, or escaping? Are there really any upper or lower limits on complexity, prerequisite to artistic validity?
People like different music because we're different than each other. No one can completely understand. It's subjective.
Don't make the close-minded mistake of proclaiming the music that appeals to your person "good music" and declare the rest "bad music." As long as it was created as art, I will accept it as art. That means that music designed purely for money is effective when it's popular, but not intended to be art.
Don't take me as a liberal hippie or something, some unfair stereotype entrenched in toleration and relativity.
Don't discount the message if there is no reason.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 01 2010 at 16:16
Of course, Europe were not better than MJ. Also Big Generator is probably not better than Thriller.  In my case I don't need the whole package. 
When I speak about 80s disco/pop I don't say "stupid" but I say "trivial".
Of course David Gilmour wasn't a great lyricist,(since High Hopes he is) but what about stuff like "get into the groove, boy you've got to prove your love to me, yeah" ?

Why a pop song can't have non-trivial lyrics? 

Not all the 80s are for the waste, of course as not all the 70s are good. Nick Kershaw was one of the most interesting mainstream artists, Joy Division were absolutely not bad. My criticism is mainly about the 80s. 

90s house music is something totally different from that stuff. It does its work and doesn't pretend to be an art.
I also think that Mike Oldfield's Amarok could be included in the genre in some way. 

There are also artists that I actually hated and I rediscovered later, but they are very few.

What I didn't like apart trivial lyrics?

1) Exagerated and standardised electronic drumming.
2) Keyboard sequences of max 10 notes, all made of Roland or Yamaha base sounds.
3) Fairlight for those rich enough to purchase one (Camel boorowed it from Kate Bush in Stationary Traveller. It's written in the sleeve notes).
4) David Bowie-like throat-singing. The Duke can do it, most of the others not.
5) Haircuts....well, seeing that look now is fantastic. They were really terrible. 

but more than everything else...

5) False singers able only to playback somebody else's singing (Milli Vanilli, Den Harrow)
6) Artists singing in playback during live performances (Spandau Ballet did it in Rome and had to suspend the gig)
7) The glam/rock metal stuff as previously mentioned. Do you remember the look of Motley Crue? Does anybody remember obne of their song?

Today I can't stand with:

8) Rappers who speak on progressive bases: I heard horrible things done to Comfortably Numb, and to Mother Russia. I'm angry when I think that those rappers probably haven't ever heard anything about Renaissance and don't know what's the music they are talking on.

Am I so wrong?

 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 01 2010 at 16:20
Originally posted by Astrapto Astrapto wrote:

Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:

That would work if you are a robot. <font face="Courier New, Courier, mono" size="1">[while holding your nose] Beep! "This music is catchy, more popular and has a good beat "   

Surprisingly enough, if you'll unplug the robotic nose you'll find a normal person, describing why they like certain music, rather than just proclaiming it "good."
Popular art, including music, is effective in appealing to the public. That may or may not portend musical ability.
People like music because it appeals to their emotions, intellect, sense of fashion, sense of fellowship, memories....and so many other facets of a human.
No music is inherently "better," i.e. "more artistically valid" because there is no way at all to quantify such a distinction. What does "better" mean? Faster, slower, more aggressive, more intellectual, exceling withing
the confines of musical theory, soaring outside those boundaries, hobbling without them? Does "good" music facilitate laughing, dancing, cringing, rejoicing, lamenting, fuming, tripping, or escaping? Are there really any upper or lower limits on complexity, prerequisite to artistic validity?
People like different music because we're different than each other. No one can completely understand. It's subjective.
Don't make the close-minded mistake of proclaiming the music that appeals to your person "good music" and declare the rest "bad music." As long as it was created as art, I will accept it as art. That means that music designed purely for money is effective when it's popular, but not intended to be art.
Don't take me as a liberal hippie or something, some unfair stereotype entrenched in toleration and relativity.
Don't discount the message if there is no reason.

Clap 


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 02 2010 at 00:57
thats the thing about prog its one of the only genres that you can be self inbulgent to make music and its acepted
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 02 2010 at 02:02
Originally posted by Astrapto Astrapto wrote:

That means that music designed purely for money is effective when it's popular, but not intended to be art.
So the Sistine Chapel isn't art? It was a commission, after all.
Originally posted by octopus-4 octopus-4 wrote:

8) Rappers who speak on progressive bases: I heard horrible things done to Comfortably Numb, and to Mother Russia. I'm angry when I think that those rappers probably haven't ever heard anything about Renaissance and don't know what's the music they are talking on.
If they don't know anything about music, how did they sample it in the first place?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 02 2010 at 02:06
Originally posted by Henry Plainview Henry Plainview wrote:

Originally posted by Astrapto Astrapto wrote:

That means that music designed purely for money is effective when it's popular, but not intended to be art.
So the Sistine Chapel isn't art? It was a commission, after all.
Originally posted by octopus-4 octopus-4 wrote:

8) Rappers who speak on progressive bases: I heard horrible things done to Comfortably Numb, and to Mother Russia. I'm angry when I think that those rappers probably haven't ever heard anything about Renaissance and don't know what's the music they are talking on.
If they don't know anything about music, how did they sample it in the first place?
Have you ever seen people digging into the storage bins of a major in search of ideas?
Did you hear about the lawsuit that Michael Jackson lost against an Italian pop singer because he found a tape and totally copied one of his songs?  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 02 2010 at 02:56
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 02 2010 at 03:02
So the Sistine Chapel isn't art? It was a commission, after all.

I didn't spot this sentence before...Every artist knows that he needs sponsors. Before the 20th century they were called "Mecenates": 


They were exchanging money for art, not vice-versa.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 12:28

Prog = Music + Innovation - Noise; As simple like this. Prog pop doesn't exist; high music is prog no matter the style. Smile

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 12:49
Originally posted by ferush ferush wrote:

Prog = Music + Innovation - Noise; As simple like this. Prog pop doesn't exist; high music is prog no matter the style. Smile

 
If the definition you are using suggests the non-existence of a sub-genre that other people have been discussing for quite some time and that has an archival history going back almost three decades, you might consider re-examiing your definition. It is probably missing something.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 13:29
Originally posted by octopus-4 octopus-4 wrote:

They were exchanging money for art, not vice-versa.
What's the difference? It's still art=money.
Originally posted by ferush ferush wrote:

Prog = Music + Innovation - Noise; As simple like this. Prog pop doesn't exist; high music is prog no matter the style. Smile

What's the difference between high and low music? Why is pop inherently low music? What's wrong with noise?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 10 2010 at 11:35
I like progressive rock, and Jazz-Rock/Fusion. That's why I listen to progressive rock and Jazz-Rock/Fusion, and am a member of the Progressive Archives site. I don't consider myself arrogant for stating my preference.
 
If my preference was for pop, I'd find a site dedicated to pop, and not bore the pants off of a site that was dedicated to progressive rock.
 
Smile
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 10 2010 at 12:52
Do you agree/disagree?  Any life stories about having rehabilitated from being a prog snob?  Any justifications for being more of a prog snob? 
 
I can justify being a music snob in general, meaning that I gravitate to complicated music, by pointing out that I can listen to 35 year-old songs by Genesis and others for the ten thousandth time, and still enjoy them, which often cannot be said of more 'simple' music. 
 
On the other hand, a wise girl pointed out to me that folks like Stevie Wonder and Carole King were able to put about as much feeling and complexity into their songs, while staying below the 3 minute mark, so perhaps there is a limit to the level of arrogance I should be allowed.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 10 2010 at 22:49
Originally posted by octopus-4 octopus-4 wrote:


Not all the 80s are for the waste, of course as not all the 70s are good. Nick Kershaw was one of the most interesting mainstream artists, Joy Division were absolutely not bad. My criticism is mainly about the 80s. 

 


Something of a unnerving precedent, Nick Kershaw and Joy Division in the one sentence. Shocked
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 10 2010 at 22:59
Nick Kershaw had style man, so much style you could land an aeroplane on his head.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2010 at 01:08
Originally posted by Foxtrot Foxtrot wrote:

Do you agree/disagree?  Any life stories about having rehabilitated from being a prog snob?  Any justifications for being more of a prog snob? 
 
I can justify being a music snob in general, meaning that I gravitate to complicated music, by pointing out that I can listen to 35 year-old songs by Genesis and others for the ten thousandth time, and still enjoy them, which often cannot be said of more 'simple' music. 
 
On the other hand, a wise girl pointed out to me that folks like Stevie Wonder and Carole King were able to put about as much feeling and complexity into their songs, while staying below the 3 minute mark, so perhaps there is a limit to the level of arrogance I should be allowed.


I don't remember hearing much 'complexity' in Carole King's Tapestry (can't comment on her other albums, I haven't heard), Stevie Wonder I certainly agree with, also, uh, the Beatles.  It's not so much about complexity though.  The thing is, it's just very hard to stand out from the crowd if you are working within the three minute pop format.  You must be some sort of genius to produce something fresh and interesting within the same length of time so many others are working with and still appeal to a large audience.   It is easier, however, to make your mark in an epic format because it affords the space to an artist to express his own individuality. 

I think the early prog rock bands understood this well and I highly doubt they would have been able to write pop songs like Stevie Wonder.  However, they could make more interesting music than so much other pop that's not so distinguished and that's really what makes at least me gravitate to prog...because I am very impatient with format-based cliched rock/pop music.   I don't think it has much to do with complexity though we tend to chalk it down to it (it's fair enough as a generalization though because Genesis's prog albums would be more complex than a lot of pop, we can discount the minority that manages to be complex within the pop format).   

A disclaimer though:  a)  You can find some prog rock bands that don't seem to have much understanding of form and thereby end up cobbling together unrelated parts of music which don't in totality amount to much.  It's harder for me to listen to a poorly put together prog epic than a generic pop song because the latter is over before you start getting irritated by it.

b)Not all pop that sells big is necessarily fresh and original because not everyone is very fussy about what music they listen to and don't mind if it is 'something nice'. 


Edited by rogerthat - September 12 2010 at 01:11
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