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Topic ClosedPinning down your personal taste!

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song_of_copper View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 17 2008 at 16:10
Originally posted by NaturalScience NaturalScience wrote:

Excellent post, very thought provoking.  I started to make an attempt to describe my personal tastes, then discovered I had a very hard time doing so.  Hate to do this, but I'll need to get back to you - which, again, means your thread is already a success.

Hehe, thanks! Smile  I've not put anything on the 'blog' section before, so even this much of a reply was nice to have!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 17 2008 at 16:00
1. spaciness, wide open space-evoking, warm, sometimes distant music (early Porcupine Tree)
2. strong chord progressions, synths maybe, emotional but interesting (Neo Prog)
3. electronic, spacey, futuristic, (electronic prog)
4. heavy, complex, perhaps somewhat medieval, very strong on catchiness (prog metal, power metal)
5. fun things! (Gong, Flaming Lips)

lots more, hard to pin down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 17 2008 at 15:48
I like quirky. I like "weird". I like experimentation. I like diversity within music (not just across genre lines but within the same song/album). I like the willing to do the unconventional. I like the unexpected. I like to be surprised...to an extent at least. I like smart. I like emotion...to an extent again. I like fun. I like energy.
 
Theres probably more...and I might augment this list later. But quirky, weird, energy, and diverse are big. Thats certainly something about a certain modern genre (no names here, don't want to corrupt a good thread...but its not metal!) that kinda puts me off. Everything is similar to a degree and its just not exciting after awhile. There are also small nuances to the above, such as bands don't need to radically change their style from album to album for me to keep enjoying them (but direct clones are obviously bad). Example to make it clearer: KC's first two. Very similar to me. Love both of them though, and still love KC. If a band has a winning formula theres no need to get crazy and rewrite the book so quickly.
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Warning: Listening to jazz excessively can cause a laxative effect.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 17 2008 at 15:35
 Hey man..I understand what you mean by not wanting to put money towards something that isn't really goin to "BLOW" you away. So here are a few different suggestions I have for you....

If you like Frank Zappa, but don't particularly find the extreme advant-garde of albums Like Trout Mask Replica by Captain Beefheart...I HIGHLY HIGHLY suggest you get "Shiny Beast" by Captain Beefheart. At times It reminds me so much of albums like Hot Rats...its highly melodic even for Beefheart, but the wierdness and fun is still there.

Since you claim to like music thats flamboyant and Diciplined, and also seem to enjoy the more Yang side of prog. (Magma) I suggest you try out some stuff by Van Der Graaf Generator. Godbluff is their best in my opinion, it may not hit you at first, but the band is really quite melodic, and very diciplined and structured. The phylosophic lyrics of Peter Hammil are extremely orgasmic, so yes you should try it out ;) afterwords, if you like that, you should try Still Life, or even go a step back, and pick up Pawn Hearts.

How could I have forgoten? Perhaps the most diciplined band of them all.. CAN! This krautrock band was seriously ahead of its time, with the dark atmospheres and the solid drum patterns, this band is top notch. I would HIGHLY recommend picking up TAGO MAGO. expectially if you like Magma...these bands share a certain dark approach..if thats even the appropriate turm for it.....

Well I hope these few things help you out...;)

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 17 2008 at 15:27
[QUOTE=BaldJean] for me I would say "weirdness with a magic". plain old weirdness is not enough. some examples:

for movies: "The Holy Mountain" by Alejandro Jodorowski, "Rashomon" by Akira Kurosawa, "Don't Look Now!" by Nicholas Roeg


Lol, yes The Holy Mountain was a rather interesting movie, not neccessarily wierd, nothing is really wierd for me, just funny, interesting, moving, whatever......I think the best example of what a advant-garde would look like if it was a movie, would have to be Eraserhead by David Lynch. Check it out! Wink

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 17 2008 at 13:24

Pinning down your personal taste?

I have no idea what so ever all i know is if i like what i hear i like it and then will more than  likely  buy it
that would explain that i am the opposite  to you  in that i have huge  collection of Music spanning  many different   genres  ,  though i would say most of it being Prog Rock(ha ha what ever that means ?) , Jazz and Folk Roots (English and Celtic)
So if my Ears Like it then thats good enough for me . 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 17 2008 at 12:50
I'm attracted to music I find playful and what I mean by zat is zat I enjoy it when an artist or group experiments in ways zey enjoy - think of The Residents (or Mr. Bungle's!) plundering, overt nonsensicality and grotesque interpretation of rock music, or else Gentle Giant's (or After Dinner's!) jaunt anachronism. Maybe that is enough to draw a circle around most of what I enjoy but it's not to say I don't like more serious bands - Magma, KC and Henry Cow are/were very purposeful groups (no matter what Belew thinks) but they all have an obvious whimsy of their own, whether it's histrionics and apparent profound belief in quite an absurd story, relentless self-referentialism or just sheer inaccessibility to the casual. Bands with quirks, shall we say? Outside of prog I like plenty of music, but I find the most remarkable singers most memorable too - Bjork, Gruff from the Super Furry Animals and so on. That scene is good pretention.

What I don't like (and what is abundant in the prog of 2008) is when a band is serious without really meriting it, IE, any band responsible for one of the ~30 albums I've heard which rip-off straight-faced the foundations of their genre, sprinkle on contrived lyrics and make no real attempt to advance the form. That scene is bad pretention.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 17 2008 at 12:32
Most music I enjoy because it spirals around in deeper cerebral levels that are difficult to access otherwise.  I can always tell how much I enjoy an album by how many layers I can jump between and still maintain a level of entranced mindf**k (no other word describes it quite like "mindf**k").  For example, last night before I went to bed I listened to Van der Graaf Generator's Still Life for the first time in a while and every song I could shift between focusing on a certain instrument or Peter's vocals while still paying attention to the others, just there is so much to uncover if you pay attention to different aspects.  I usually don't pay much attention to lyrics, but vocals are important, but if I'm in the right mood, following along to the music with the lyric sheet can add even more dimensions to already dense music (varies depending on the quality of the lyricist, of course).

Music is basically a drug to me, if I am in a certain mood and want to amplify that, I'll listen to a certain genre (heavy, relaxed, complex, minimalist, instrumental, etc.).  Experimenting while listening to certain music in certain moods sometimes produces strange, but almost always positive, feelings.  A recent example of this was listening to Cocteau Twins's Treasure late at night, being tired and ready to go to bed.  A few minutes after putting on the album, not sure what triggered this, but I ended up feeling very airy, or "high" if you want to call it that.  Of course the music is very airy and beautiful, but so far only that one time produced the floating feeling.  I've had several mystical experiences by listening to music completely sober chemically, but they usually seem to be random, or at least produced only at a certain unique mood that you cannot replicate simply by listening to the same music at a later time.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 17 2008 at 11:07
for me I would say "weirdness with a magic". plain old weirdness is not enough. some examples:

for movies: "The Holy Mountain" by Alejandro Jodorowski, "Rashomon" by Akira Kurosawa, "Don't Look Now!" by Nicholas Roeg
for paintings: Hieronymus Bosch, many surrealists
for music: Johann Sebastian Bach, Mahler, Stravinsky. you may ask what is so weird about Bach, but I find his high complexity extremely weird. and he was definitely weird for his time (which is why he had to be rediscovered in the 19th century)


Edited by BaldJean - June 17 2008 at 11:20


A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 17 2008 at 11:03
Excellent post, very thought provoking.  I started to make an attempt to describe my personal tastes, then discovered I had a very hard time doing so.  Hate to do this, but I'll need to get back to you - which, again, means your thread is already a success.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 17 2008 at 10:42
I’ve been thinking a lot about musical taste recently.  By which I don’t mean ‘discernment’ or ‘judgement’ or ‘liking the (so-called) right things’ or something like that…  But more like particular, specific, personal, individual preference.

I’m not talking about such broad matters as ‘pop v prog’ or ‘commercial v serious’.  I’m talking about the moment when you suddenly pin down what it is that links all the things you love together – the aspect that you have been instinctively seeking out, probably subconsciously, when going about your everyday listening/music acquiring activities.

For myself, it hit me only very recently: my key phrase would have to be ‘flamboyant and disciplined’.  My two musical favourites are Frank Zappa and – duh, no, really?! – Magma.  And who else does ‘flamboyant and disciplined’ like those two?  (If you can think of anything, please alert me, because I’m in wide-eyed music discovery mode at the moment, and I’m composing an epic shopping list that you are welcome to help me add to… Big%20smile)

It occurs to me also that I tend to like things that not everybody else in the universe likes or has even heard of.  I’m rather picky about music – not one of those people who can boast that they ‘like everything’!  For a while I was a bit worried that I was being unintentionally snobbish… but you know what, it’s not so much that I won’t listen to ‘normal popular music’, more that I won’t pay money for it.  I will happily pay money to be amazed, but it doesn’t seem worth it to feel – how can I put this? – pleasantly indifferent.  My music collection is, for that reason, small, but is pretty much ‘all killer, no filler’ (well, I think so... LOL).  I’m kind of an ‘all or nothing’ person with music, although not usually obsessive (I’ll make an exception for my untreatable Magma addiction!  HugHeart ).  I’ve got a reasonably high tolerance for weirdness, but I put that down to repeated exposure to ‘Trout Mask Replica’ during late adolescence. Confused LOL

My usual yardstick of quality: if ‘I could have done that’, it’s probably not worth paying money for…  If it makes me wish I could play [instrument name] just like [musical genius], or – even better – has me gibbering in soundbite-metaphors and turning into an amateur music journalist (of the most irritatingly verbose kind), then you can lead me by the ear to the nearest cash register.  (I’m opinionated, not to mention fond of writing, so anything that unleashes my ‘inner columnist’ will probably have me enthralled from the word go.)

The final thing that’s important to me is ‘mode of discovery’.  I’m always glad to get recommendations, at least in part because any excuse to talk to other people about a shared love for music – beyond-the-valley-of-the-top-40 music especially – is worth taking, in my book!  But most of the things that I love best sort of fell into my lap almost, rather than being introduced to me.  (Has anyone else had any of those spooky experiences where you can look back and trace your inexorable, unknowing progress towards something that you were made to love…?  I know, that sounds witlessly pretentious, but perhaps you know what I mean…)

So now I’m interested to find out what governs others’ musical habits.  Especially: have you got a neat phrase that sums up the essence of your favourite music, however diverse it might be?  I’m also quite fascinated by the range of musical attitudes out there.  Presumably music is a passion to you or you wouldn’t be looking at this site, but musical passions come in such a wide variety of flavours!  What are the facets that make up your particular appreciation for music?

Wow, hmm, I ask a lot of questions, don’t I! Tongue  Well, if any of this strikes a chord and you feel like writing a little bit about this stuff – I realise it’s rather a large subject, but don’t let that put you off! – I’d be genuinely interested to read your thoughts… Big%20smile
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