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Poll Question: Should a rating without a review count in deriving the TOP 20?
Poll Choice Votes Poll Statistics
4 [19.05%]
17 [80.95%]
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richardh View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Collaborators’ TOP 20
    Posted: September 13 2004 at 03:08
ELP back in the top twenty thanks to Ivan's review
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2004 at 17:31

Originally posted by threefates threefates wrote:

No what?

No whatever you say

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2004 at 16:30
I haven't reviewed my ELP albums yet!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2004 at 16:17

Originally posted by richardh richardh wrote:

ELP have now dropped out of the top twenty.

Again Richard... its just me and you.  That is so disappointing... I'm really very disappointed with everyone here..

I think I'm gonna go play some Trilogy now to raise my spirits..

THIS IS ELP
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2004 at 16:14
Originally posted by JrKASperov JrKASperov wrote:

Originally posted by threefates threefates wrote:

I don't!!  ELP is way underrated, BSS should be in the top 10 and Trilogy is missing.  That in itself is a sin!!

No.

No what?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2004 at 16:12
ELP have now dropped out of the top twenty.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2004 at 16:05

Thanks, MAX@.

Well, regarding your second question, I think my opinion is known, but I also understand Easy Livin's concerns.

Is there some way we could protect against the spamming that Easy Livin thinks may be a possibility? For example, only include star-ratings from non-Collaborators if there is an associated review of at least a certain length? Only disclose the results to members of the forums?

Whatever is done, I think it would still be useful to have the Collaborators' TOP 20/50 as a separate list, if for no other reason than to give some recommendations to newcomers from the 'official' site reviewers. But as we've seen in this thread, the Collaborators tastes do not appear to be an indication of the tastes of the larger population.

When I get time I'm going to think about the algorithm. But I'm convinced that averaging is not the best way to do it: it does not make sense to me if an album has, say, ten 5-star ratings (average = 5 stars) and then someone adds a 4-star rating (average = 4.91) and the album drops in the ratings. Easy Livin might counter by saying that adding e.g. a 2-star review should not raise an album in the ratings, and he might also be right. But if Album1 has more 5-star and 4-star reviews than Album2 (as in the example I quoted in an earlier posting) then, to me, even if Album1 has more 2-star and below ratings, Album1 is the more popular. I say this because more people like Album1 than Album2, simple as that. But I'll give the algorithm some more thought.

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2004 at 15:50
I think we should only count ratings from andrea salvador.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2004 at 10:37
Originally posted by MAX@ MAX@ wrote:

"Should we count all ratings by collaborators and non-collaborators ?"


MAX@

I still say no to that one Max. I know at first it seems a bit elitist, but I retain my concerns about spamming when it becomes known that all votes count. (And rest assured it would, the bulletin boards on the various band sites would soon have notices on them saying "vote for our band"). Until we collecively come up with a reasonably foolproof way of doing it, I say stick with what we have.Thumbs Up

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2004 at 09:01

Prog Fans ,

This is cool to have great polls, manage and fill with bright POSTS like thoses in this forum. That is why the FORUM of PROG ARCHIVES is such important for us.

Continue your great work.

About the TOP 20 Collaborator's album on the HOME PAGE , as requested and debated in this THREAD, the algorithm now ( 09-12-2004 )  count only ratings of collaborators with review with 50 caracters and more.

I think it is better now, but not a lot of changes...

Next question :

"Should we count all ratings by collaborators and non-collaborators ?"


MAX@

 

 



Edited by MAX@
Prog On !
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 10 2004 at 18:04

Fun, it is!

But, as I think we both agree, the comparison of averages is problematic:

Album 1 has 20 5-star ratings => average = 5-stars

Album 2 has 60 4-star ratings => average = 4-stars

Which of the above two albums is more popular?

I think the number of reviews needs to be a factor. And I think that the more people/reviews are included, the better (i.e. the bigger the sample, the more interesting and representative the result).

I need to think some more about this (interesting) problem!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 10 2004 at 17:37

Fitzcarraldo,

It's fun isn't it!Big smile

I don't think any measure which uses the total number of "stars" as its main measure is particulary valid. In the example you quote, TOT is rated by over a third of the people as only "good"(3 stars) or worse, hardly an indication that it is universally liked. I would not like to think that if I then gave it two stars, I was making it appear more popular. (Hypothetical by the way, I have not yet heard TOT.) We will all have contributed reviews and ratings for albums we did not enjoy much. The fact that an album has a lot of ratings does not in itself make it "popular". There are quite a few albums with a lot of ratings, the majority of which are adverse. (Yes and Genesis have a few each).

I think averaging is the best solution, but with the safeguard that the album must have a minimum number of reviews (say 10) to qualify. I do acknowledge though that that too is flawed. Perhaps the star ratings is not the best way to identify the top albums. Maybe there could be a separate voting section for everyone's top 10. Registered voters (i.e. forum members) could change their top 10 at any time. That would immediately remove the adverse star ratings from the calculation, and thus focus on the positive. It would also mean that if I try to differentiate between two great albums by the same band by giving one 4 stars, and one 5 stars, I can still support both in my top 10 vote.

By he way, taking a straight averaging of the star ratings, DSOTM comes out far higher (4.67 vs 3.81)

TOT

Star rating

Number of votes

Total points

5

33

165

4

9

36

3

11

33

2

5

10

1

8

8

Totals

66

252

Average points

3.81

DSOTM

Star rating

Number of votes

Total points

5

28

140

4

2

8

3

3

9

2

1

2

1

0

0

Totals

34

159

Average points

4.67

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 10 2004 at 16:46

Easy Livin,

If you look at my original suggestion for the TOP 20 (see hyperlink below) you'll see that I discussed the algorithm and mentioned the problem of extreme cases.

http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=697

One of the reasons I ruled out just using averages was for the reason you point out. (Another reason is that it does not allow differentiation between the hundreds of albums that would have the same average rating.)

If you look at "Train Of Thought" you'll see that it *is* popular:

33 5-star ratings; 9 4-star ratings; 11 3-star ratings; 5 2-star ratings; 8 1-star ratings.

Compare that with "Dark Side Of The Moon":

28 5-star ratings; 2 4-star ratings; 3 3-star ratings; 1 2-star rating.

So, from the above, to me "Train Of Thought" *is* more popular than DSOTM whichever way you look at it. And addressing your comment about the number of people who have rated it, the fact that more people have rated it is, in itself, a possible indication of popularity.

When I checked the "real" TOP 50 list in June, it was a good reflection of popularity, i.e. the 'extreme case' scenario seems not to occur in practice.

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 10 2004 at 15:13

Maani,

As always, you make your points well and very persuasively. After considering further the comments made by yourself and others, I am agree that star ratings without reviews should not count towards the chart positions.

I disagree however with what you say about neo-prog bands (I acknowledge Ivan’s valid point here about the correct definition of neo-prog, but let’s assume we are referring to bands such as those you mention). The proposition that one star should be deducted from a rating because the band or album could not have existed without the prior works you mention, has to be flawed. Without exception, the "seminal" bands themselves also filtered many influences (be it classical music, blues, jazz, the Beatles, etc.) to create their masterpieces. I would suggest we have now become so familiar with those masterpieces, that we overlook the level of derivation and indeed plagiarism that exists in some of those masterpieces. I think for example I am right in saying that you have previously cited ELP as being guilty of plagiarism, or something close to it.

As an aside, the term "filtering" is interesting, as could imply "disguising". Is disguising more credible than being up front about ones influences, and "wearing them on your sleeve"? Roger Waters suggested that "A momentary lapse of reason" was a clever forgery. I believe what he was saying was that the band had filtered his influences well, but that the album was highly derivative of his work and ideas. Given that the album was made by "Pink Floyd" and sounded like "Pink Floyd", is this a fair accusation?

Suppose "A momentary lapse of reason" had been recorded by Pendragon, instead of Pink Floyd (with or without Waters), but sounded exactly as the same. Would it have been less worthy, i.e. should a three star rating become two?

I would say if an album is good enough for five stars, it should get five stars. It is too easy to get bogged down in identifying and assuming influences and derivations which may or may not be there. The music should be heard for what it is, and assessed on that basis. Many reviewers will say in the course of a review, that the band "can be compared to Pink Floyd", or a track sounded "similar to Porcupine Tree". These comments give useful references to those who have not heard the music, of the type of music they can expect to hear. It does not necessarily imply the band have derived their music from those sources.

Even if there has been some obvious derivation, that for me is not in itself a reason for criticism. If I enjoy the sound of Dave Gilmour’s guitar work, and find the guitar work on Mostly Autumn’s albums to be similar, I will enjoy it and rate it according to how much pleasure it gives me, regardless of how similar it sounds.

I guess you have raised an interesting point for debate. Should albums be rated purely on how much the reviewer enjoys them? If the reviewer detects (or thinks they detect) that the band have clearly been influenced by other bands or works, should they give a reduced rating to the album, even if they personally find it to be among most enjoyable albums they have heard? A practical example: I find that the early music of Porcupine Tree is very similar (derivative if you willWink) to the earlier works of Pink Floyd, but I enjoy the music of Porcupine Tree more. I will therefore give Porcupine Tree a higher rating than Pink Floyd. What would others do in such a situation?

Given that prog is a (fairly loosely) defined style of music, surely it is inevitable that the bands of today will appear to have been influenced by those of the 70's. Indeed, is that not what recommends them to us?

One final point, at the end of the day, a band can take all the influences it likes, and still make a bad album. The most obvious example for me is within the Jethro Tull catalogue. They made a sublime masterpiece in "Thick as a brick". They then took their own influences from that album, with little or no filtering, and managed to come up with "A passion play", probably the worst follow up album in history (with due apologies to those who like it!).

Fitzcarraldo,

 I agree that a chart which takes all reviews into account would be ideal, but still have concerns about hyping. The algorithm used to calculate the chart would need to be carefully considered. I think I’m right in saying "Train of thought" comes out top in the chart you posted because of the number of people who have rated it. The chart would need to be based on an average rating, but that in itself has flaws. An album with one five star review would come out above one with 500 five star reviews and one four star review. Overall, I would say leave things as they are, warts and all.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 10 2004 at 11:27

Originally posted by threefates threefates wrote:

I don't!!  ELP is way underrated, BSS should be in the top 10 and Trilogy is missing.  That in itself is a sin!!

No.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 10 2004 at 11:20

threefates,

I'm a fan of ELP and would have liked one or more the first four ELP albums to be in the "real" TOP 20, but what you and I think is popular is not necessarily what really *is* popular.

That's why I like the idea of a TOP 20 list based on thousands of different reviews and not a "select few", because it tells me what the majority of Prog fans are thinking.

If you're familiar with the science of statistics (Am I correct in thinking you mentioned you were in marketing?) then the bigger the sample size, the more representative it is of the statistical population, i.e. the more accurate it is.

I'm not a fan of Dream Theater, but it is high up in the "real" TOP 20, so the Collaborators do not appear to be representative of the majority of Prog fans. Similarly, ELP is not as popular amongst the majority. I'm 'sad' about it, but it appears to be the case. "Shoganai" as the Japanese say.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 10 2004 at 10:39
I don't!!  ELP is way underrated, BSS should be in the top 10 and Trilogy is missing.  That in itself is a sin!!
THIS IS ELP
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 10 2004 at 09:33
Indeed, this top 50 is a VERY much better representation! I actually like it
Epic.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 10 2004 at 07:21

James,

I think the TOP 20 (which can be expanded to a TOP 50 by clicking on a link at the botom of the list) *is* important. Not to you or me perhaps, but to new visitors to this site who are looking for information on the genre and would like to discover more about it. It is conceivable that someone visits ProgArchives who has little knowledge of the genre but wants recommendations on which albums he/she should buy to 'get into' the genre. The TOP 20 list is a good - and simple - place to start.

That's one of the reasons why I suggested a TOP 10 to MAX@ in the first place, although I wanted it to be based on *all* of the thousands of reviews posted in the ProgArchives, not just Collaborators' reviews, but was overruled on the basis that spammers might try to influence the rankings. I find the Collaborators' TOP 20 much less interesting than a TOP 20 derived from *all* reviews posted, because it's much less indicative of the true popularity of albums. Back in June this year the TOP 50 based on *all* reviews, not just Collaborators' reviews, looked like this:

Column 1 : RV
Column 2: Nb. of rates
Column 3: CD ID
Column 4: CD TITLE

477 159 3777 Train Of Thought
336 84 1827 Close to the Edge
288 72 1510 Selling England By The Pound
264 66 1829 Relayer
260 65 1672 Scenes From A Memory Metropolis Part II
244 61 1662 Images And Words
244 61 2 Foxtrot
224 56 1440 Dark Side of the Moon, The
224 56 1825 Fragile
212 53 1828 Tales From Topographic Oceans
204 51 1511 The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway
196 49 1443 The Wall
196 49 3 Nursery Cryme
192 48 1903 In the Court of the Crimson King
188 47 1911 Red
184 46 1826 The YES Album
184 46 328 Mirage
180 45 329 The Snow Goose
180 45 1441 Wish You Were Here
180 45 1442 Animals
168 42 1512 Wind And Wuthering
164 41 1433 Piper at the Gates of Dawn, The
164 41 2019 Thick As A Brick
160 40 2448 Trespass
160 40 3070 2112
160 40 330 Moonmadness
160 40 5 A Trick Of The Tail
156 39 1438 Meddle
156 39 3076 Moving Pictures
156 39 2177 The Power To Believe
156 39 2018 Aqualung
152 38 3073 Hemispheres
148 37 1513 Second Out
144 36 1437 Atom Heart Mother
144 36 1995 In Absentia
144 36 1909 Larks' Tongues in Aspic
140 35 1914 Discipline
140 35 2022 A Passion Play
140 35 1666 Awake
140 35 1623 Six Degrees of Inner Turbulence
140 35 327 Camel
136 34 1905 Lizard
136 34 1872 Brain Salad Surgery
132 33 1754 Script for a Jester's Tear
132 33 1831 Going for the One
132 33 3075 Permanent Waves
128 32 1833 Drama
128 32 1863 Tarkus
128 32 621 The Seventh House
128 32 890 Misplaced Childhood

It's much more interesting - and representative - than the Collaborators' TOP 50 in my opinion.

Anyway, back to my original question at the beginning of this thread, I'm glad to see that most of you agree that Collaborators ratings should not be counted in deriving the TOP 20 unless the rating is accompanied by a review.

And to diddy, who asks "...what should a 20 year old proghead tell THEM about Foxtrot just to name an example?" I would say: "Anything you want!" In my opinion reviews should focus on the music and how you feel about it, so that anyone who does not know the album (well, or at all) can decide whether or not it is worth getting. You don't need to be an expert in GENESIS or have been to GENESIS concerts to review "Foxtrot". So don't worry, diddy, write your review of Foxtrot and any other 'great' albums. Tell us how the music moves you, what it makes you think of, how it sounds to you, etc. Us old farts are also interested in the opinion of youngsters!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 10 2004 at 04:22

I have two small points, exposing my ignorance .

1. Is the "top 20" very important? I rarely do more than glance at it (I have been a little surprised to see Anglagard so frequently). To be fair, if I were just discovering prog, it would be a great 'must have' list- but even in that case, I've never seen a single album appear there that wouldn't be worth having.

2. I didn't even know it was possible to submit ratings without reviews; doing so never crossed my mind- even now that I do know, I won't be likely to do it. I think reviews without ratings would be a more mature approach, but I also comprehend the usefulness of a 'quick view' method.

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