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mr.burns
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 30 2005
Location: Norway
Status: Offline
Points: 185
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 18:05 |
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Father Ted: Sheep like all wool-bearing animals, instinctively travel north. Where it's colder, and they won't be so stuffy.
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Ty1020
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 24 2005
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 721
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 18:06 |
mr.burns wrote:
^Word of the day^ |
I hope you realize you were pointing to my post, which explicitly disagreed with everything you've been saying .
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mr.burns
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 30 2005
Location: Norway
Status: Offline
Points: 185
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 18:09 |
f**k,there was one post between us
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Father Ted: Sheep like all wool-bearing animals, instinctively travel north. Where it's colder, and they won't be so stuffy.
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Ty1020
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 24 2005
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 721
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 18:18 |
mr.burns wrote:
f**k,there was one post between us |
And I'd very much appreciate it if you responded to that post, if you don't mind.
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mr.burns
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 30 2005
Location: Norway
Status: Offline
Points: 185
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 18:25 |
I really dont know what question youre talking about.But i say again,we dont need progressive rap!And i really meant,you came between the post i was refering to.I cant for my life see why this has turned into such a discussion,there is probably four people who thinks we need progressive rap.There cant be such a thing as progressive rap,end of topic.And i mean end of topic.
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Father Ted: Sheep like all wool-bearing animals, instinctively travel north. Where it's colder, and they won't be so stuffy.
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Ty1020
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 24 2005
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 721
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 18:28 |
mr.burns wrote:
I really dont know what question youre talking
about.But i say again,we dont need progressive rap!And i really
meant,you came between the post i was refering to.I cant for my life
see why this has turned into such a discussion,there is probably four
people who thinks we need progressive rap.There cant be such a thing as
progressive rap,end of topic.And i mean end of topic. |
Here, taken from an earlier post of mine:
Why wouldn't it be possible for rap to focus on the music,
too? Sure, current mainstream rap isn't musically interesting,
but that doesn't mean the genre is fundamentally rooted in that ideal.
I don't understand why everone here is trying to pidgeon-hole rap and
create artificial rules about what can and cannot be done within the
genre. Progressive music is all about not following such rules;
it's about thinking outside the box and trying new things. Why are so
many of you acting as if that's impossible in this case? It doesn't
make any sense to me.
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 19535
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 18:30 |
Ty 1020 wrote:
Like I said, I've never heard prog on the radio. Just because the radio played good music 30 years ago doesn't mean it still does; you have to realize that the mainstream media today is much different than it was in the 70's, and it's very rare to hear anything good or interesting on the radio |
I know that, but just in this moment I'm listening Birds of Fire by Mahavishnu Orchestra in Stereo Lima 100, and never heard in any radio good rap.
Ty1020 wrote:
This is even more true with rap, a genre in which virtually none of the mainstream artists have any redeeming qualities. The majority of the rap community hates those "artists |
Have you ever studied logics? Please read your arguments. Rap community is the biggest in the world right know, if not N° 1 at least N°2, that's a fact.
You say most Rap community hates mainstream artists.
Then using simple logic most people in the world hate mainstrean Rap artists:
- Why in hell does Music Industry still release music that most of the world hates?
- How in hell is mainstream Rap music so massively bought if most Rap community hates them?
- Doesn't music industry wants to gain money?
- If you said yes, why do they insist in musicians most of the rap community hates (but buys massively.
Your argument has no logic support, and you're talking as a fan more than as a person who wants to reach some degree of truth. I'm a Progressive fan fopr 28 years, and I must accept Prog is unpopular and underground, but not just good Prog', bad Prog is also unpopular, but Rap is popular, the Rap community is big and buys mainstream..........PLEASE
There are far more underground rap artists out there than there are mainstream ones |
Please again????????? Why in that case mainstream Rap sells milliopns of albums among a community that in it's mmajority hates it????????
Why are great Rap bands so underground that almost nobody has heard about them if they are so popular?
If good Rap band fans were more than mainstream Rap fans, Music Industry would inmediately stop wasting their money in crappy musicians, because they want to earn money and they automatically support what is more popular.
But they still support he career of crappy musicians and are more wealthy everyday.
Again, please think before you write.
I'm glad you're aware that good rap is out there |
Never said that either, I said I admit the posibility of good Rap as I admit the posibility of aliens living under the surface of Mars, professional wrestling is for real or that women burn in Salem were in fact witches
Finally, would you please explain why you stand by that point of view? |
In what I heard and in simple logic.
The most popular music is supported by music industry, if good rap was more popular (or even existed) we would never hear again about Eminem, MC Hammer or Queen Latifa.
Iván
Edited by ivan_2068
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mr.burns
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 30 2005
Location: Norway
Status: Offline
Points: 185
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 18:33 |
I guess i would say,rap is a sort of talking where prog music is seriously melodic.I really need melody in my music,and also i ned singing.That is why i think rap sucks,i think what we need is more good progressive rock with melody and strong songwriting.And ty,no hard feelings?
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Father Ted: Sheep like all wool-bearing animals, instinctively travel north. Where it's colder, and they won't be so stuffy.
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Ty1020
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 24 2005
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 721
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 18:40 |
Ivan: Again, there's been a miscommunication on my part. When I
referred to the "rap community," I meant people who actually listen to
rap as music and appreciate it, not the people who listen to radio rap
like 50 Cent just because it's popular. Those people aren't rap fans -
they're popular music fans. If rap wasn't popular, most of them
wouldn't listen to it, and therefore I do not include them as a part of
the rap community.
- Why in hell does Music Industry still release music that most of the world hates?
- How in hell is mainstream Rap music so massively bought if most Rap community hates them?
- Doesn't music industry wants to gain money?
- If you said yes, why do they insist in musicians most of the rap community hates (but buys massively.
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I didn't say most of the world hates rap; once again, you misunderstood
me. Just because mainstream rap is terrible doesn't mean there aren't a
lot of people who like it. Britney Spears sells millions of records
despite the fact that she is terrible, and the same goes for guys like
50 Cent and the like. However, it's clear that most serious music
listeners (rap fans and non-rap fans alike) can't stand them.
Mainstream rap music is massively bought by the pop community,
not the rap community, as I said before. People are sheep, they'll buy
what's marketed to them, and at the moment, that's what rap is.
However, there are many real fans of rap who listen to it because they
love it, and if you can find any of those true fans who like mainstream
rap, I'll be surprised.
Yes, the music industry wants to gain money.
I've already explained that mainstream rap isn't marketed to rap fans,
it's marketed to people who don't know any better, who would buy
anything that the music industry tried to sell them.
Now, I've posted this several times and nobody has responded to it yet,
which is probably because nobody can come up with a reasonable
response. Please, if you're going to respond to anything I've
written, respond to this:
I don't understand why everone here is trying to pidgeon-hole rap and
create artificial rules about what can and cannot be done within the
genre. Progressive music is all about not following such rules;
it's about thinking outside the box and trying new things. Why are so
many of you acting as if that's impossible in this case? It doesn't
make any sense to me.
Edited by Ty1020
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Ty1020
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 24 2005
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 721
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 18:42 |
mr.burns wrote:
I guess i would say,rap is a sort of talking where prog
music is seriously melodic.I really need melody in my music,and also i
ned singing.That is why i think rap sucks,i think what we need is more
good progressive rock with melody and strong songwriting.And ty,no hard
feelings? |
Definitely no hard feelings, I'm glad to hear from you .
Anyways, as you've said, it's all your personal opinion; there's
nothing fundamentally wrong with rap, you just don't personally like
it, which I respect. That doesn't mean it's impossible for it to be
fused with progressive music, though; who knows, maybe if it was, you'd
end up liking that a lot more.
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goose
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 20 2004
Location: United Kingdom
Status: Offline
Points: 4097
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 18:44 |
Man Overboard wrote:
I don't think it would be beyond feasibility to rap in odd time signatures...
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Steve Coleman, linked from Mike's blog (by me ). Mainly jazz, but also a fair bit of rap and in certainly 5/4, maybe more.
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Mercury
Forum Groupie
Joined: October 10 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 43
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 18:58 |
ARE YOU JOKING???
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 19535
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 19:03 |
Ivan: Again, there's been a miscommunication on my part. When I referred to the "rap community," I meant people who actually listen to rap as music and appreciate it, not the people who listen to radio rap like 50 Cent just because it's popular. Those people aren't rap fans - they're popular music fans. If rap wasn't popular, most of them wouldn't listen to it, and therefore I do not include them as a part of the rap community.
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I know what you're trying to say, but I was only trying to reach this point when you admit crappy Rap is more popular and for that reason is the vast majority of the genre.
The point is that you love to argue but you get trapped in your own web because you refuse to admit that the great majority of Rap is the one played in the radios and it's crap. Each day the music industry creates hundreed of 50 cent Rappers, terible hip hopper and disposable boys/girls bands, that's a fact, they have the money, they own the mind of most people so they are more, as simple as that.
IMO most of the music played in radios is crap, so I have to admit that most music is not remotely connected to Progressive Rock.
Yes it's possible there's some good Rap but as most good music is the great minority.
But still I don't see Progressive Rap as a posibility.
Iván
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mr.burns
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 30 2005
Location: Norway
Status: Offline
Points: 185
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 19:04 |
I couldnt agree more,no more of this rap talk.
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Father Ted: Sheep like all wool-bearing animals, instinctively travel north. Where it's colder, and they won't be so stuffy.
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Ty1020
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 24 2005
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 721
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 19:10 |
ivan_2068 wrote:
Ivan: Again, there's been a
miscommunication on my part. When I referred to the "rap community," I
meant people who actually listen to rap as music and appreciate it, not
the people who listen to radio rap like 50 Cent just because it's
popular. Those people aren't rap fans - they're popular music fans. If
rap wasn't popular, most of them wouldn't listen to it, and therefore I
do not include them as a part of the rap community.
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I know what you're trying to say, but I was only trying to reach
this point when you admit crappy Rap is more popular and for that
reason is the vast majority of the genre.
The point is that you love to argue but you get trapped in your
own web because you refuse to admit that the great majority of Rap
is the one played in the radios and it's crap. Each day the music
industry creates hundreed of 50 cent Rappers, terible hip hopper and
disposable boys/girls bands, that's a fact, they have the money, they
own the mind of most people so they are more, as simple as that.
IMO most of the music played in radios is crap, so I have to admit
that most music is not remotely connected to Progressive Rock.
Yes it's possible there's some good Rap but as most good music is the great minority.
But still I don't see Progressive Rap as a posibility.
Iván |
Maybe you have a different idea of what "majority" means than me...
obviously mainstream rap is the most popular, I never tried to say it
wasn't. That's what mainstream means. All I was saying was that there are more underground rap
artists than there are popular ones, and that's a fact.
Now, you still haven't replied to the bolded statement in my previous
post... it basically summarizes my entire argument and I'd really like
to see what you have to say about it .
Edited by Ty1020
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 19535
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 19:30 |
I don't understand why everone here is trying to pidgeon-hole rap and create artificial rules about what can and cannot be done within the genre. Progressive music is all about not following such rules; it's about thinking outside the box and trying new things. Why are so many of you acting as if that's impossible in this case? It doesn't make any sense to me.
Ok. I'lll answer this:
- Rules are not artificial, there's something called musical structure, Progressive ROCK bends this rules, makes them flexible, but we can't completely break the rules, Progressive Rock is mainly melody, influences, fusion of genres, rhythm, structure and sometimes lyrics.
- Progressive Rock is very flexible, but one of it's main characteristics is that it's a well structured genre, so the rules and musical canons are not artificial.
- Rap doesn't give importance to melody, it's mainly a rhythm and vocals genre, so IMO is outside of the reach of Progressive Rock.
And don't start again with your majority of great rap bands please, because any person knows that isn't true.
Iván
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GoldenSpiral
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: May 27 2005
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 3839
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 19:32 |
www.beaminfo.com
the band i was talking about before (page 1 i think...)
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Ty1020
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 24 2005
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 721
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 19:41 |
ivan_2068 wrote:
And don't start again with your majority of great rap bands please, because any person knows that isn't true. |
I don't understand what you mean by that - it's not some random fact
I'm trying to produce here, it's only natural that the majority of the
bands in any given genre won't be popular. I'm not sure why you're
arguing against that, nor do I understand why you've given such
importance to that statement over the course of this argument, because
there's no way you can possibly believe otherwise. The only thing I can
think of is that you still don't understand what I'm saying, so I'll
try to clarify myself further: do you actually think that most
rap is popular and gets radio play? If so, then how many rap artists do
you think are out there in total? I really don't understand what you're
trying to say here .
As for the rest of your post, I definitely see what you mean, and I
agree that a lot of rap in its current form can't be fused with prog
rock, but melodic rap does exist and I don't see why it's not possible
for more melody and instrumentation to be added in order to make
the genre more proggy. About the whole "rules" thing, I wasn't talking
about the rules of prog rock, I was talking about the rules of rap; you
seem to get the idea that melody has no place in the genre, which is
simply untrue. Just because most mainstream rap artists refuse to use
any melody in their music doesn't mean it can't be used in rap;
the focus doesn't have to be on rhythm and "beats" or whatever.
I believe that it would be entirely possible to have more
melody-focused rap with odd time signatures (which would fit the genre
perfectly) and more interesting instrumentation than is usually used in
the genre, would it not?
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con safo
Prog Reviewer
Joined: March 17 2005
Status: Offline
Points: 1230
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 19:53 |
Ty1020 wrote:
ivan_2068 wrote:
And don't start again with your majority of great rap bands please, because any person knows that isn't true. |
I don't understand what you mean by that - it's not some random fact
I'm trying to produce here, it's only natural that the majority of the
bands in any given genre won't be popular. I'm not sure why you're
arguing against that, nor do I understand why you've given such
importance to that statement over the course of this argument, because
there's no way you can possibly believe otherwise. The only thing I can
think of is that you still don't understand what I'm saying, so I'll
try to clarify myself further: do you actually think that most
rap is popular and gets radio play? If so, then how many rap artists do
you think are out there in total? I really don't understand what you're
trying to say here .
As for the rest of your post, I definitely see what you mean, and I
agree that a lot of rap in its current form can't be fused with prog
rock, but melodic rap does exist and I don't see why it's not possible
for more melody and instrumentation to be added in order to make
the genre more proggy. About the whole "rules" thing, I wasn't talking
about the rules of prog rock, I was talking about the rules of rap; you
seem to get the idea that melody has no place in the genre, which is
simply untrue. Just because most mainstream rap artists refuse to use
any melody in their music doesn't mean it can't be used in rap;
the focus doesn't have to be on rhythm and "beats" or whatever.
I believe that it would be entirely possible to have more
melody-focused rap with odd time signatures (which would fit the genre
perfectly) and more interesting instrumentation than is usually used in
the genre, would it not?
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I completely agree.
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: April 27 2004
Location: Peru
Status: Offline
Points: 19535
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Posted: November 12 2005 at 20:02 |
I don't understand what you mean by that - it's not some random fact I'm trying to produce here, it's only natural that the majority of the bands in any given genre won't be popular. |
Please don't come me with technicalities again, if we talk about any 4 kids wthat play on their garage, or wedding singers, of course there are more, but we are talking here about formal bands, don't try to escape to reality.
And for each good garage rapper you'll find 500 crappy ones trying to seek for the formula to make easy money.
Have you ever seen American Idol for God's sake, there are tousand of terrible amateurs singing crappy music, but they are so bad that seem like a joke.
I believe that it would be entirely possible to have more melody-focused rap with odd time signatures |
Yes, and probably in 5'000,000 years pigs will fly outside a Pink Floyd concert, but in this utopic scenario It would stop being rap, read history of rap, read how it began with Jamaican born DJ Kool Herc (with no formal musical training or knowledge of structures) and how scratching was accidentally created by Grand Wizard Theodore, and you'll find that the essense of Rap is improvising with no care for melody or structure, rap is an artificial form of Jamaican Toasting, nothing else.
But you can call me when such a wonder is created.
Iván
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