Avantgardehead wrote:
khammer99 wrote:
Avantgardehead wrote:
Selling-out isn't just a style change. It's the watering down or otherwise drastic alteration of a band's music for the express purpose to increase popularity and/or sell more albums. Money money money!
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If a band doesn't sell enough albums, they go bankrupt, just like any other business. If enough bands don't sell enough albums, then record companies do not invest in "fringe" prog bands, that everybody seems to like around here. How much money is a band allowed to make? You need define what you mean by "sell out". I don't like popular music (Brittney Spears, Rap, Hip Hop, etc). But there are "popular" bands that I like (Led Zeppelin, BOC, etc). If a band sells there music to sell cars, soap, vacations, so what? Musicians don't get to eat?
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You completely missed my point. Making money is not the bad thing here, it's the compromise of musical and artistic integrity.
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No, I understand your point completely. At what point is someones musical or artistic integrity compromised? Whenever someone says a band has sold out, they always bring up the making money argument as justification. You have those words in your argument yourself; "
sell more albums" and "
Money money money", so making more money must
have some determining factor for you to label a band a sell out.
At what point does a band lose it's "musical and artistic integrity" And who decides that? It seems to be a very arbitrary point. So, if a band sells their song help sell fast food, is that a compromise? If it's used in a movie soundtrack, is that OK? What about those compilation CD's you see advertised on TV "The Greatest Hits of the 70's or 80's" or whatever. At what point is a band allowed to make money and keep their integrity?
Or if a metal band decides to put out a rap album, is that selling out? Listen to Led Zeppelin I and then II. Did they sell out on III because it was a different direction from their Blues/Rock fusion on I and II? Or listen to the entire catalog of Porcupine Tree, and the multitude of directions Steve Wilson has taken.
It seems whenever a band start selling a lot of albums, there by making a lot of money, or become more popular, then the "sell out" tag gets applied to them.
So, again, what determines a "sell out"?