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rogerthat View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 09 2010 at 09:47
Originally posted by IGNEO1991 IGNEO1991 wrote:

 
The voclas in pop music may seem 'better' because 90% of the vocals in pop music are artificial. They use hard disk technology to correct the pitch of the vocal or make it sound a certain way.  So vocals in pop music are not necessarily naturally 'better'.


There is nothing to say that prog singers do not correct mistakes made in recording.  It is however not very unreasonable to say that many pop singers over the years have been technically very capable.  I promise you somebody like Christina Aguilera will riff Christina Booth out of the park and crush her with open high notes. Whether that is 'important' is beside the question for you are focusing here on the technical side of singing and technically, Aguilera absolutely is better than Booth and that would normally be the case in a pop-prog opposition.  George Michael for instance  is an excellent singer technically.  Michael Jackson was great too, it is certainly not easy to sound gritty at the top of your range ( refer the song Bad).    


Originally posted by IGNEO1991 IGNEO1991 wrote:

Even if this is not the case, where there is a sense of aptitude in pop music vocals, the vocals sound too generic, the same basically from so called 'artist' to 'artist'. People want to hear something familiar and generic. This is why pop music prevails and prog music remains, still, withtin a limited audience because prog music is deemed today in the mainstream as something a bit 'weird' and unfamiliar, despite prog's great aptitude for melody and composition. So pop music is more accessible, familiar, easily disgestible and catchier.
 

I may sound a bit of an 'Arrogant Proggie' in what i have just said, but i am being a realist. These are my opinions. I remain a bit of a prog snob, not because i am pretentious, but because pop music seems very much like a popular commodity, which is heavily manufactured, artificial and unnatural. If music is described as 'art', then pop music does not fit that mold, progressive music however does so and thus is more inspiring and attractive to me.

 



This is highly debatable and perhaps a case of focusing on some great/favourite artists at the convenient exclusion of the mediocre pile beneath.  I don't find above mentioned Christina Booth any more focused on song craft and individuality than a typical pop singer and I do find much of her stylistic licks to be derived from pop vocals, if anything.  Joanna Newsom has had more commercial success than Magenta (Booth's band), if I may hazard a guess, but she is loaded with way more quirk and adventure than Booth.  Tori Amos and Kate Bush may have been included in PA for their progressive approach to music, but they are better known to the world as pop/art rock artists and they certainly have a lot more individuality than many prog vocalists that did not make much of an impression on me.  A case could be made that in the present day, there is more scope for individuality for a musician making prog rather than pop (or commercial music in general), but that too depends entirely on the musician.  I find Shadow Gallery and Riverside's last albums generic and by the numbers and Everything Everything's debut fresh and invigorating. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 10 2010 at 10:00
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by ExittheLemming ExittheLemming wrote:


Disregarding what might be termed 'academic' instrumental music or what is described as 'absolute music' from the classical realm, where does something like Lou Reed or Bob Dylan fit into this scheme of things? Very simple non-challenging harmonic forms etc but texturally very complex and dare I hazard, from an intellectual starting point?


This is for him to clarify but possibly he meant 'intellectual' from a purely musical perspective, as in excluding the lyrics?  I cannot comment on Lou Reed as I am not familiar (and I am not familiar with a lot of Dylan's vast body of work either) but I don't remember Dylan being more texturally challenging than Pink Floyd? You have already mentioned that it is not harmonically very far out either.  The song structures tend to be simple too.  The intellect of the artist is revealed more in the lyrics.  I certainly understand 'cerebral' in the context of music to mean something challenging and thoughtful from a melodic/harmonic/rhythmic/form standpoint, preferably all. Tongue  This is not to say that there is no intellectualism involved in the songs crafted by Dylan but if they are more to do with the lyrical side of it, a listener would not require to learn much music to grasp the intellectually interesting side of it musically.   


Apologies Embarrassed I mean to type but textually very complex i.e the lyrics, but I think you got the gist.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 12 2010 at 20:29
Originally posted by sealchan sealchan wrote:

 
1.  Quality of vocals: better singers in pop



Ehh, it depends what you mean by better. I think that often the music is just better produced (good mics at best, autotune at worst) so the vocals sound better. But producers always sacrifice the organic rawness of a prog album in doing this.

Sure, Beyonce is a better singer than Peter Hammill, but Beyonce's singing doesn't capture the mad passion of Hammill. I think one of the technically worst singers in prog is Robert Wyatt-- he's got an awful tone to his voice and probably wouldn't make it past the first round of American Idol. But there's a sort of distinct whimsical Britishness to his singing that not only makes up for that lack of chops, but gives him a sort of indefinable quality that no pop singer that I no of can match.

And it is worth noting that the sort of pop music you are referring to is still the slim minority that honors musicianship on some level. Drake, Rihanna, Miley Cyrus, Kesha have nothing over prog as far as virtuosity goes, end of story.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 12 2010 at 20:33
It's all purely subjective, but IMO most pop singers don't even come close to the best prog singers. Peter Gabriel, Jon Anderson, Mikael Akerfeldt, Steven Wilson, etc can sing circles around the autotuned pop princesses. All IMO, of course.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 20 2010 at 17:58
Well, I think that prog rock music is more creative and the majorities of prog musicians are much better than the majority of all pop musicians. Nobody can deny this fact since it's true but people can love wathever music they want.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 20 2010 at 20:25
Originally posted by The_Jester The_Jester wrote:

Well, I think that prog rock music is more creative and the majorities of prog musicians are much better than the majority of all pop musicians. Nobody can deny this fact since it's true but people can love wathever music they want.

Pop MUSICIANS, especially those hired gun types, tend to be really good and in the current scene, certainly as good as prog musicians. It is the likes of Britney who convey the impression that pop is made by musicians who are not very talented. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 20 2010 at 21:24
There're arrogant rappers, rockers, metalheads,....humans :D
Never generalise
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 20 2010 at 23:16
I think every music fan is arrogant. it just happen to be that 85% of the proggies are in PA.

also, I hate you all my taste is supreme and superior!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 21 2010 at 08:57
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by The_Jester The_Jester wrote:

Well, I think that prog rock music is more creative and the majorities of prog musicians are much better than the majority of all pop musicians. Nobody can deny this fact since it's true but people can love wathever music they want.

Pop MUSICIANS, especially those hired gun types, tend to be really good and in the current scene, certainly as good as prog musicians.
 
Those hired gun types, i.e. studio musicians more than often surpass even some of the most respected musicians in terms of technical proficiency and diversity. Many of them can play just about anything. Problem being, that they usually aren't creating very much. Someone says "play this" or "play something like this" and they do it, usually extremely quickly and extremely well. There's just not much of a creative voice in their playing.
 
As far the arrogance thing, someone pointed out that there are arrogant musicians in all genres. Absolutely. Think Kanye West in rap or Yngwie Malmsteen in metal. Both extremely arrogant.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 21 2010 at 11:26
Originally posted by phrophus phrophus wrote:

[ Problem being, that they usually aren't creating very much. Someone says "play this" or "play something like this" and they do it, usually extremely quickly and extremely well. There's just not much of a creative voice in their playing.
 

I completely agree but the question addressed was about which musicians are better. Now, if the question pertained to compositional originality or distinct expression in the playing, my answer would be different (and even then there have been a handful of pop artists who were brilliant on these counts and more so than many prog artists).  Right now, unless I am missing someone very special, pop is pretty stale but then again, I would say compared to the 70s, prog is not that earth shattering right now either though there are many GOOD artists. Most of the exciting artists I have heard from the last 20 years were not purely in either basket. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 21 2010 at 12:42
It all depends on what style of music gets your rocks off the most, and how important it is for you to state your case to others. Arrogance rears it's ugly head in all steadfast opinions, but to me the "snobs" of prog find their opinion superior because the overall intelligence of prog is considered higher(ie more challenging) than your average top 40 hit. This, of course, doesn't make the music better, but enables those who "get it" to feel somewhat enlightened. Disliking something and looking down upon those like it are drastically different. Someone who loves King Crimson is more apt to loathe Nickelback than vice versa. Whereas a Nickelback fan probably couldn't care less about time changes and progression, and likely hasn't even heard of King Crimson. That being said, I'll take INXS over Marillion or Opeth any day. However, in my internet experience, PA is easily the least arrogant forum I frequent. Might be an age thing, or a broad spectrum thing, who knows. When it comes to art, an open mind is a rewarding tool, but not a necessity.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 31 2010 at 05:19
Horses for courses!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 02 2010 at 12:38
What is better than other things is completely perceptual. The reasoning behind your identification of what's "best" is also (hopefully) your opinion. There's not rhyme or reason to WHY we like things more than other things but we obviously do. Being rude towards someone else's tastes is wrong; however, being respectful and just saying "I don't care for that" is acceptable on most parts of the internet and in the real world.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 05 2011 at 13:27
Originally posted by Jörgemeister Jörgemeister wrote:

I think every music fan is arrogant. it just happen to be that 85% of the proggies are in PA.

also, I hate you all my taste is supreme and superior!
 Clap Tru
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 04 2011 at 07:55
Originally posted by progrules progrules wrote:

My experience is that prog spoils you. If I listen to pop music (just a few times last 20 years !) I get bored to death. And realize what pop music lovers are missing if they never heard of prog. So I only partly agree that it's subjective. Prog IS superior to (almost all) pop music. But I do agree with the singer aspect. Pop groups have usually far better vocalists than progbands. So be it.


That's because most prog vocalists are not professionally trained vocalists, but musicians or songwriters who just do vocals (because there nobody else around who can do it )

On the contrary, most pop music is a product created by producer, and he can hire the best vocalists for the particular song

For example: Massive Attack (pop group which I like) have no vocalist "in a band" at all - it's actually duo of producers/songwriters/arrangers who hire different vocalists for recording or live sessions



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 04 2011 at 08:27
Originally posted by progrules progrules wrote:

My experience is that prog spoils you. If I listen to pop music (just a few times last 20 years !) I get bored to death. And realize what pop music lovers are missing if they never heard of prog. So I only partly agree that it's subjective. Prog IS superior to (almost all) pop music. But I do agree with the singer aspect. Pop groups have usually far better vocalists than progbands. So be it.
 
 
You are an arrogant snob.
 
Close this thread.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 04 2011 at 09:09

As soon as anyone here says "prog IS objectively better than pop because...." I can no longer take them seriously.

I know some people are arrogant enough to believe that "it's all subjective" is some myth that the Jews keep propagating to keep all us mindless slaves under their control but yeah. You can't even prove that prog is better objectively in terms of skill.
 
Since pop does employ a lot of the best singers and session musicians in the world. You can argue over who is more creative with their skills but even that is subjective.
 
I enjoy a lot of pop music, I even consider Michael Jackson one of my favorite music artists, he was very creative as a singer and especially as a dancer and performer. He and the people who composed his songs may have had commercial success in mind, that doesn't mean they didn't have creative spirit. There's so much pop music now, and none of it can touch Billie Jean or Beat It.  Anybody can make pop music nowadays, but can just anybody make good pop music? Of course not.
 
The Beatles, The Beach Boys, David Bowie, Queen. Those are great examples of how creative and advenderous pop music can be.
 
Pop and prog are such different approaches to music, but one thing they tend to have in common is they tend to attract highly skilled musicians. Take Stevie Wonder for example, he's an incredibly gifted singer, keyboardist and multi instrumentalist. He shouldn't be compared to Rick Wakeman because what he does with the skills he has is very different.
 
Then you have Todd Rundgren, who made a double album of consistantly excellent pop music which he wrote, sang, produced and played nearly all the instruments for. Not all pop musicians are slaves to corporate executives, some have complete control over their work, Prince being one example. While the best pop artists still desire commercial success, there's still a drive to make high quality music that they themselves can appreciate.
 
So pop music can still be a very expressive form of music, just like any other genre of music.
 
I never understood how desire for profit somehow discredits an artist. Look at many of the Renaissance painters, they were basically contract workers, their work was often commissioned and paid for by private patrons, usually in the religious sector. They had a job to do, and yet their works are now called masterpieces. And why not? Everybody should admire the almost inhuman amount of detail and craftmanship that went into those paintings, even if they were doing a job, creating a product to sell and had limited creative control, they showed great dedication, knowledge of and respect for their subjects. That itself is a form of self expression. People too often forget that.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 04 2011 at 10:33
Originally posted by boo boo boo boo wrote:

As soon as anyone here says "prog IS objectively better than pop because...." I can no longer take them seriously.

I know some people are arrogant enough to believe that "it's all subjective" is some myth that the Jews keep propagating to keep all us mindless slaves under their control but yeah. You can't even prove that prog is better objectively in terms of skill.
 
Since pop does employ a lot of the best singers and session musicians in the world. You can argue over who is more creative with their skills but even that is subjective.
 
I enjoy a lot of pop music, I even consider Michael Jackson one of my favorite music artists, he was very creative as a singer and especially as a dancer and performer. He and the people who composed his songs may have had commercial success in mind, that doesn't mean they didn't have creative spirit. There's so much pop music now, and none of it can touch Billie Jean or Beat It.  Anybody can make pop music nowadays, but can just anybody make good pop music? Of course not.
 
The Beatles, The Beach Boys, David Bowie, Queen. Those are great examples of how creative and advenderous pop music can be.
 
Pop and prog are such different approaches to music, but one thing they tend to have in common is they tend to attract highly skilled musicians. Take Stevie Wonder for example, he's an incredibly gifted singer, keyboardist and multi instrumentalist. He shouldn't be compared to Rick Wakeman because what he does with the skills he has is very different.
 
Then you have Todd Rundgren, who made a double album of consistantly excellent pop music which he wrote, sang, produced and played nearly all the instruments for. Not all pop musicians are slaves to corporate executives, some have complete control over their work, Prince being one example. While the best pop artists still desire commercial success, there's still a drive to make high quality music that they themselves can appreciate.
 
So pop music can still be a very expressive form of music, just like any other genre of music.
 
I never understood how desire for profit somehow discredits an artist. Look at many of the Renaissance painters, they were basically contract workers, their work was often commissioned and paid for by private patrons, usually in the religious sector. They had a job to do, and yet their works are now called masterpieces. And why not? Everybody should admire the almost inhuman amount of detail and craftmanship that went into those paintings, even if they were doing a job, creating a product to sell and had limited creative control, they showed great dedication, knowledge of and respect for their subjects. That itself is a form of self expression. People too often forget that.
You are right for the pop band you just named. but those aren't what is pop right now. I love many pop artist from today and aknowledge the talent of their PRODUCER most of actual artist are more an image than an artist. the real genius in pop music is the producer not the half naked, botoxed and photoshoped person on the cover.
 
also, most of the time catchy riffs are and easy succession of chord nothing out of the ordinary.
 
if you want you can also look up the actual top chart artist live and you'll see that without autotune they have a hard time. And those artist are the one made out of an image
 
and, in the I have money and I'll make 2 or 3 protools burn because of to much editing you can look up Paris Hilton, Kim Kardeshian (i dont know if this is the right way to type it.)album.
 
THOUGHT, i cannot write or produce stuff like that they all are talented people. I just dont enjoy that kind of music.
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 04 2011 at 10:46
^ one thing to remember about those Renaissance painters - the work you see in the museums is not entirely by their own hand - they had teams of acolytes, apprentices and underlings working for them on each painting. They are in effect the producers of the work, but not the actual craftsmen that made them.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 04 2011 at 11:02
True, but they still had a clear vision and finding the right people to execute their every demand is easier said than done.
 
Should we discredit great architects because they didn't make the buildings personally? No, but neither should we discredit the people who actually worked to make them just because they're not the ones who designed them.


Edited by boo boo - March 04 2011 at 11:04
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