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Pnoom!
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Topic: derivative music? Posted: November 01 2006 at 17:28 |
What are your feelings on derivative music?
Please don't vote for bumper, that is just in case some other opinion is popular in the thread, in which case I can add it in in one of the "bumper" spots.
I think that it has it's moments, but that it's rarely as good as the original
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richardh
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Posted: November 01 2006 at 17:58 |
ermmm..give an example please of 'derivative music'.
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Posted: November 01 2006 at 18:48 |
Who cares? Either one enjoys it or one doesn't. The lineage does not matter to me - virtually all music has it's roots and influences elsewhere. It is virtually impossible to be totally original. Anyway, no two people hear the same thing when listening to music. Some hear influences, some imagine them and some just appreciate (or not) when listening anew. I never have any pre-conceived notions when setting out and along that journey I may hear things which I perceive to be overt influences from elsewhere but always look at the piece as new.
As with all music, I want to be moved in some way. Any music has the potential to do that - derivative or not.
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the icon of sin
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Posted: November 01 2006 at 19:17 |
Glueman wrote:
Who cares? Either one enjoys it or one doesn't. The lineage does not matter to me - virtually all music has it's roots and influences elsewhere. It is virtually impossible to be totally original. Anyway, no two people hear the same thing when listening to music. Some hear influences, some imagine them and some just appreciate (or not) when listening anew. I never have any pre-conceived notions when setting out and along that journey I may hear things which I perceive to be overt influences from elsewhere but always look at the piece as new.
As with all music, I want to be moved in some way. Any music has the potential to do that - derivative or not. |
I'm all for that. He must be refering to (whether consciously or not) bands like The Flower Kings, Porcupine Tree and Spock's Beard, who have been compared to Yes, Floyd and Genesis respectively. I don't in all honesty like any of the "new versions" as much as the originals, but this has little to nothing to do with their derivativeness. I'll focus on the musicianship and song structure over influence any day.
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peter_gabriel
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Posted: November 01 2006 at 19:22 |
Just shut up and listen to the music
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darkshade
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Posted: November 01 2006 at 20:13 |
shut up 'n play yer guitar
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Philéas
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Posted: November 02 2006 at 04:46 |
I voted "so long as it sounds good...". I generally don't have that
much of a problem with derivative music, especially not outside Prog
where it's more common. But there are, of course, exceptions.
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TheProgtologist
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Posted: November 02 2006 at 05:16 |
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Sean Trane
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Posted: November 02 2006 at 06:44 |
(almost) never as good as the original, but not bad automatically was my choice
but i hesitated with
shows a lack of originality (not systematically either)
and
tends (often but not always) to fall flat on its face, but does have it's moments
Glueman wrote:
Who cares? Either one enjoys it or one doesn't. The lineage does not matter to me - virtually all music has it's roots and influences elsewhere. It is virtually impossible to be totally original. Anyway, no two people hear the same thing when listening to music. Some hear influences, some imagine them and some just appreciate (or not) when listening anew. I never have any pre-conceived notions when setting out and along that journey I may hear things which I perceive to be overt influences from elsewhere but always look at the piece as new.
As with all music, I want to be moved in some way. Any music has the potential to do that - derivative or not. |
I don't agree at all. Sure you can be influenced and still produce great works, but derivative also means copying of plagiazing. Roots are important at least on the analysing process...
And your pleasure with highly derivative music either means:
1- you treat music like general entertainment (rather than art and culture), which means that if McDonalds is strongly inspired on Burger King (or Pepsi and Coke) >>>> who cares it's all the same
2- you are probably encourageing people to just be content on living out their fantasies as third rates Emerson (maybe not in terms of talents but certainly in terms of recognition/fame/notoriety) and giving derivative music the same value as original oeuvres. And this might lead to weakening the general arts in order to make it plain and accessible entertainment >>> like kids out on a Saturday at the movies, not being able to see their first choice of movie because sold-out so they go see just about anything else instead >> who cares right ??? It's all the same .... (crap)
Edited by Sean Trane - November 02 2006 at 06:55
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let's just stay above the moral melee prefer the sink to the gutter keep our sand-castle virtues content to be a doer as well as a thinker, prefer lifting our pen rather than un-sheath our sword
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Pnoom!
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Posted: November 02 2006 at 08:23 |
richardh wrote:
ermmm..give an example please of 'derivative music'. |
Well, a lot of people would say that IQ's Dark Matter is derivative of early Genesis and Pink Floyd.
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Pnoom!
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Posted: November 02 2006 at 08:25 |
Glueman wrote:
Some hear influences, some imagine them and some just appreciate (or not) when listening anew. |
I can agree with that. Like Shine On You Crazy Diamond and Echoes (Pink Floyd), a subject on which nobody agrees with me .
Sean Trane wrote:
(almost) never as good as the original, but not bad automatically was my choice
but i hesitated with
shows a lack of originality (not systematically either)
and
tends (often but not always) to fall flat on its face, but does have it's moments
Glueman wrote:
Who cares? Either one enjoys it or one doesn't. The lineage does not matter to me - virtually all music has it's roots and influences elsewhere. It is virtually impossible to be totally original. Anyway, no two people hear the same thing when listening to music. Some hear influences, some imagine them and some just appreciate (or not) when listening anew. I never have any pre-conceived notions when setting out and along that journey I may hear things which I perceive to be overt influences from elsewhere but always look at the piece as new.
As with all music, I want to be moved in some way. Any music has the potential to do that - derivative or not. |
I don't agree at all. Sure you can be influenced and still produce great works, but derivative also means copying of plagiazing. Roots are important at least on the analysing process...
And your pleasure with highly derivative music either means:
1- you treat music like general entertainment (rather than art and culture), which means that if McDonalds is strongly inspired on Burger King (or Pepsi and Coke) >>>> who cares it's all the same
2- you are probably encourageing people to just be content on living out their fantasies as third rates Emerson (maybe not in terms of talents but certainly in terms of recognition/fame/notoriety) and giving derivative music the same value as original oeuvres. And this might lead to weakening the general arts in order to make it plain and accessible entertainment >>> like kids out on a Saturday at the movies, not being able to see their first choice of movie because sold-out so they go see just about anything else instead >> who cares right ??? It's all the same .... (crap)
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Sean Trane has it right.
Edited by inpraiseoffolly - November 02 2006 at 08:26
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Trickster F.
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Posted: November 02 2006 at 09:16 |
I agree with Hughes myself, if you exclude originality from the list of things you seek for in music, you become ignorant and thus derogate it as Art.
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cmidkiff
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Posted: November 02 2006 at 10:14 |
All of it is derivative.
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cmidkiff
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chopper
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Posted: November 02 2006 at 10:46 |
inpraiseoffolly wrote:
richardh wrote:
ermmm..give an example please of 'derivative music'. |
Well, a lot of people would say that IQ's Dark Matter is derivative of early Genesis and Pink Floyd. |
I like to think of "Harvest of Souls" as an affectionate tribute to "Supper's Ready". Yes, it has the same structure (acoustic opening, iinstrumental section in non-standard time, big ending) but none of the melodies are directly derivative of any of the Supper's Ready melodies.
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cuncuna
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Posted: November 04 2006 at 10:32 |
¡Plop!
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¡Beware of the Bee!
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Visitor13
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Posted: November 04 2006 at 10:44 |
Mmm... you have to start somewhere, and more often than not that somewhere is, by and large, someone else's music, but you also have to move on eventually... so yeah, I'd rather listen to original stuff (but not forcefully original).
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Visitor13
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Posted: November 04 2006 at 11:19 |
Sean Trane wrote:
(almost) never as good as the original, but not bad automatically was my choice
but i hesitated with
shows a lack of originality (not systematically either)
and
tends (often but not always) to fall flat on its face, but does have it's moments
Glueman wrote:
Who cares? Either one enjoys it or one doesn't. The lineage does not matter to me - virtually all music has it's roots and influences elsewhere. It is virtually impossible to be totally original. Anyway, no two people hear the same thing when listening to music. Some hear influences, some imagine them and some just appreciate (or not) when listening anew. I never have any pre-conceived notions when setting out and along that journey I may hear things which I perceive to be overt influences from elsewhere but always look at the piece as new.
As with all music, I want to be moved in some way. Any music has the potential to do that - derivative or not. |
I don't agree at all. Sure you can be influenced and still produce great works, but derivative also means copying of plagiazing. Roots are important at least on the analysing process...
And your pleasure with highly derivative music either means:
1- you treat music like general entertainment (rather than art and culture), which means that if McDonalds is strongly inspired on Burger King (or Pepsi and Coke) >>>> who cares it's all the same
2- you are probably encourageing people to just be content on living out their fantasies as third rates Emerson (maybe not in terms of talents but certainly in terms of recognition/fame/notoriety) and giving derivative music the same value as original oeuvres. And this might lead to weakening the general arts in order to make it plain and accessible entertainment >>> like kids out on a Saturday at the movies, not being able to see their first choice of movie because sold-out so they go see just about anything else instead >> who cares right ??? It's all the same .... (crap)
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Hi Hugues, The problem with this 'art vs entertainment' dualism is that with time art becomes entertainment, so the lines between one and the other are blurred... the real issue here (and you seem to be addressing it, too) is, IMO, more about something I like to clumsily call 'aesthetic cowardice'; namely obsessively indulging in one's own little artistic world and being afraid to look outside it. But cowardice and courage can only be personal and subjective, so the way out of one's ivory tower can also only be personal and subjective. So a generally derivative piece of music doesn't have to be personally derivative to someone, it can be adventurous enough to lead one out of stale habits.
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Certif1ed
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Posted: November 05 2006 at 17:42 |
What is derivative?
If you write a piece that uses the pentatonic scale, is that derivative? Loads of people have done it before.
If you use a sample is that necessarily derivative, or just like using the pentatonic scale?
If you cover a piece in your own style, is that derivative, or just re-interpretation?
It's good enough for people who win prizes playing Beethoven!
Food for
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The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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cuncuna
Forum Senior Member
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Posted: November 16 2006 at 00:06 |
¿You end up listening to something else?
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¡Beware of the Bee!
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MikeEnRegalia
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Posted: November 16 2006 at 02:40 |
"derivative" ... that's too broad a term, it could mean anything.
IMO most prog fans (especcially the "hardcore" 70s purists) apply the word to any music that "sounds like" something that has been done before.
Are the Flower Kings derivative? I don't think so. Are parts of their songs derivative? Yes, I guess you could say that. But as a band or even on the album level they can hardly be confused with Genesis or Yes.
Without derivation there can be no progress ... evolution is not about always creating something completely different. In each iteration (generation) there are only very small changes - and rightly so, where's the point in throwing away concepts that have proven to be good?
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