Getting estranged from prog |
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Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: January 15 2009 at 01:46 | |
Of course there are things that I don't like ... I never said that I simply accept anything, I even directly objected to that post. Do you really have to resort to such means ... are you that desperate? I just said that I don't impose such broad and unusual limits as you do. You, as a drummer, reject a valid technique of drumming. I, as a guitarist, would never reject a valid technique of guitar playing. I might not like all techniques equally, but I wouldn't reject a song just because of a certain technique. I value music over technique. |
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BaldJean
Prog Reviewer Joined: May 28 2005 Location: Germany Status: Offline Points: 10387 |
Posted: January 15 2009 at 02:11 | |
neither did I generally reject double bass-drumming; I just do reject it in more cases than you. it is simply unnecessary in most cases from my musical point of view, that's all. and what "broad and unusual limits" do I impose? you sound as if I have dozens of liimts, which is plain nonsense. on the contrary, I welcome to overstep boundaries. by the way: I am a keyboarder; Friede is the drummer. she rejects double bass-drumming too (with exceptions also), but for slightly different reasons. and I am not desperate at all.; why should I? |
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A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta |
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BaldFriede
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 02 2005 Location: Germany Status: Offline Points: 10261 |
Posted: January 15 2009 at 02:38 | |
It is I who reject double bass-drumming on principle, simply because of the fact that anyone can sound good (at least in the ears of a non-drummer) when using two bass drums. Just create a bass-drum thunderstorm, and everyone will go "aw". That does not mean there are no excellent drummers who use double bass-drumming, but it is and remains nothing but a gimmick, and I will stick to that. Call it a quirk if you like, I don't mind.
Except for that "quirk", however, I am very open-minded. By the way: If a musical situation arises where the gimmick of double bass-drumming is adequate I am all for it;, that's what gimmicks are there for. So far I have only heard one example of that though (and sadly have forgotten who it was). You would be amazed what a good drummer can do with a single bass-drum. The need to use two has never arisen for me, and I think it is not likely that it will. And I will definitely not add another bass-drum to my kit just because I might use it some day. The hi-hat as counterpart to the bass-drum is much more expressive. |
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BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue. |
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Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: January 15 2009 at 03:29 | |
^ this is simply beyond ridiculous. I'll say only this: It's neither a gimmick nor a quirk. There are rhythmic patterns which you need two bass drums for (or at least two pedals) ... it's as simple as that. Such patterns occur most frequently in metal, but also in Jazz. Many months ago one of you two compared double bass to a "duck quack". IMO that's a very specious analogy ... conduct a poll if you want, but I'm very sure that while most people would agree that the duck quack is a gimmick/quirk, but not double bass drumming. And by "people" I mean musicians ... people who know what they're talking about.
BTW: Double bass drummers also use the hi-hat ... just FYI, in case you didn't know. |
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BaldFriede
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 02 2005 Location: Germany Status: Offline Points: 10261 |
Posted: January 15 2009 at 03:33 | |
Nonsense, you can play the same patterns using a hi-hat and a bass drum. You don't need two bass drums for that. They will sound completely different though, and much more interesting with the hi-hat being involved. Edited by BaldFriede - January 15 2009 at 03:36 |
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BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue. |
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Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: January 15 2009 at 03:54 | |
^ if they sound completely different, they're not really the same patterns ... rhythmically, yes, but not if you look at the complete picture. The whole point about double bass drumming is that it's the same drum (sound) playing those fast notes.
But I'm curious ... how would you change a typical double bass pattern so that it can be played with one bass drum and hi-hat? http://www.myspace.com/sonataarctica Maybe we could use "The Cage" as an example ... it's a textbook example of metal double bass drumming. |
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Petrovsk Mizinski
Prog Reviewer Joined: December 24 2007 Location: Ukraine Status: Offline Points: 25210 |
Posted: January 15 2009 at 04:03 | |
I'm a non drummer, but I still think many people can sound like absolute garbage by over doing the double bass thing. I've also heard a lot of people sound like garbage because they can't use the double bass drums in time. So no, not everyone sounds good when using double bass drums. I can tell the difference between when it is being over used and when it is being used in a more creative manner to add in intricate rhythms, so no, we aren't ALL instantly wowed by double bass drums. |
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Alberto Muñoz
Forum Senior Member Joined: July 26 2006 Location: Mexico Status: Offline Points: 3577 |
Posted: January 15 2009 at 10:38 | |
To use Double bass Drums you have to be an expert in rythym and percussion.
I agree that drummers than do not know how to use the double bass drum (DBD) have sound horrible and stupidy, but for those who actually knows how to use, this sound really great.
But in the topic i have to say that i love the DBD from the drummers who know how to use.
Here's and example of very good DBD: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gdz_G1VGJ4c&feature=related
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Nuke
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 25 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 271 |
Posted: January 15 2009 at 14:46 | |
Well,yes, I do not have predefined limits, but I also mean that I do not reject any form of technique or style. I don't care if it's chipmunk vocals over double-bass drumming produced half on protools and half on a dirty 8-track and artificially sped up, if it has merits I will respect it for it's merits. It's fine to say that you don't see the merits in something, but there is more to music that has double bass drumming than the double bass drumming, so it isn't fair to dislike music just because it has double-bass drumming if it has other merits. And on to the drumming, double-bass drumming is integral to lots of modern styles. It is nearly impossible to play modern metal without the double bass drum, so the double bass drum is not going away (to be fair, I've seen some single-bass metal drummers, so it is possible). I know that it is possible to drum amazingly with only one bass. I myself am an amateur drummer and I only have one bass pedal, and I'm not even close to having explored all the limits of my set with one bass pedal. We haven't explored all the limits of gregorian chant either, we really don't need harmony. |
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Nuke
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 25 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 271 |
Posted: January 15 2009 at 14:57 | |
Well, for that song you could maybe do really fast rhythm guitar and bass guitar to replace the double bass and then throw in some really cool hi-hat patterns. With a lot of compositional effort, I think you could actually make that one sound slightly better without the double bass. |
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Trademark
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 21 2006 Location: oHIo Status: Offline Points: 1009 |
Posted: January 15 2009 at 15:18 | |
There have been some interesting points raised here about what constitutes "open-mindedness"or being "limited" in our musical options, particularly where this DBD thing comes up. The consensus opinion seems to be "I like it and if you don't you're closed-minded about it", or "If you don't like it you just haven't heard enough of it or haven't heard so and so play" etc..
The offshoot of this opinion voiced in one way or another in many posts here is that is demonstrates the very closed-mindedness it criticizes by not allowing another point of view to be equally valid. Jean and Friede don't like DBD. This has been well established, they've given reasons for it and have, by all appearances, explored much music using that particular technique and found it not to their liking. Liking or disliking an artist or particular technique, which is what this is really about (well that and everyone being required to agree with Mike no matter what ), is a personal choice which cannot be "wrong" or "right" per se, only different. Disliking an artist, genre or technique does not make one closed-minded or limited in their appreciation for music. Jean's process in reaching her decision of personal taste about DBD seems to me to be the exact opposite of "limiting" or "closed-minded". She investigated, tried several different products using that method and didn't enjoy the results. I've done the same thing with several genres and, not to open an old wound, Prog Metal is one I've spent a lot of time and money on and at the end of about 4 years and more than 65 cd's purchased, found I simply don't care for. The reasons may or not be ones that others will see validity in, but they are my reasons and I simply don't see the point in waiting for that one magical experience in that genre any longer. I've done the same recently with RIO/ avant. I listened to 40- 50 different releases and found most of it not to my taste. With avant though, I have found 4 or 5 bands whose stuff I'll want to listen to more than once. That's about 10% compared to Prog metal's score of only one band (Fate's Warning) out of about 30 bands I have heard being even tolerable to my ears. So I see some purpose in carefully continuing to search for new music in RIO/avant when the mood strikes me (I'm in a decidedly non-prog frame of mind at the moment. Just got Ry Cooder's newest , "I-Flathead" and am really having a great time with it.) This process of investigation, (trial and error if you will) makes me the opposite of "limited" or closed-minded". But at the same time the purpose of investigation is to find what you like and since no one likes everything, some things must be rejected. If one can identify things that don't work for their taste, it makes the odds of successful investigation higher and that's not limiting, it's LIBERATING. Mike and Hughes and some others here are metal guys somehow by nature. I personally can't see how anyone over the age of 15 can listen to the stuff with a straight face, but that's just me. Every time LaBrie opens his mouth I just crack up laughing, but then my wife feels the same way about Fish and Tom Waits so.... If an artist or technique is rejected without investigation that could be viewed as "limiting" one's options, if it is investigated and only after careful consideration is rejected, it is the opposite and that's what I see Jean as having done. Saying "because I don't reject DBD I have broader taste than you" is really just childish. It has no possible basis in fact. I have a little over 4,500 CDs in my collection (42,000 songs if you go the itunes route; 220 GB of music encoded at 128kb so all I can say is, "Oh yeah?, well my dad can beat up your dad!" I'm not limited in my options because I have found out for sure that I don't like PM or because I think Mike "Pottymouth" Portnoy (Prog's own armpit farting 5th grader) is an idiot. I've simply opened up new avenues to explore and closed off the ones that don't lead me anywhere, thereby preventing a waste of resources (time and money) that can be put to better use. I mean, if every time you eat at McDonalds you throw up, sooner or later you'll decide not to eat there anymore. It doesn't make you close-minded about food or even a particiular method of preparing the food, it's just that McDonald's doesn't agree with you. I, myself, am lactose intolerant so that probably explains my aversion to PM, all that cheese just makes my stomach hurt.
Edited by Trademark - January 15 2009 at 15:24 |
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Trademark
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 21 2006 Location: oHIo Status: Offline Points: 1009 |
Posted: January 15 2009 at 15:28 | |
That particular tune would be a good deal better off if the whole band were sacked and it was done at a slower tempo with just an acoustic guitar and some hand percussion.
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Henry Plainview
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 26 2008 Location: Declined Status: Offline Points: 16715 |
Posted: January 15 2009 at 16:04 | |
Hahaha, I don't even like metal very much, but you're such a damn hippy. ;-)
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if you own a sodastream i hate you
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Nuke
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 25 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 271 |
Posted: January 15 2009 at 16:31 | |
Oh boy, this one is hard to bite off, but since I disagreed I had to reply . I think that disliking a specific thing does limit you. I think disliking anything limits you. I do not dislike music. I like some music less than other music, but I accept that everything has some amount of merit. When I listen to music, I don't get bent out of shape over what I think is bad, but rather I actively seek out what is good. I leave any biases at the door when I listen to a piece. That said, I definitely do have biases, certain things I like more than other things, and that comes into play when I select new music for sure, but even at that point, I often will turn on radio and listen to the random crap it spews out, even pop, country and rap, and I will enjoy it at least to some degree. I seriously like britney spears, think of me what you will . Unlike you, I am a connissuer of cheese, and I find La Brie to be delicious (in all seriousness though, prog metal a la dream theater is one of my less favorite types of metal or prog for that mater) |
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Trademark
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 21 2006 Location: oHIo Status: Offline Points: 1009 |
Posted: January 15 2009 at 16:37 | |
Thanks Henry. It's too true. But it's just such a nice little folk song at heart on top of which they piled every metal cliche known to man. Made me laugh. And Nuke, you basically said the same thing I said, just with fewer words. Listen to everything, focus on what you like, leave what you don't like alone. |
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Trademark
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 21 2006 Location: oHIo Status: Offline Points: 1009 |
Posted: January 15 2009 at 18:56 | |
Had to listen to the Sonata Arctica again just to be sure. Sounds like someone put John Sebastian's balls in a vise and squeezed them till he shrieked. Hilarious stuff, but there's a nice little tune hiding in there. Hand that one off to Richard Thompson or John Hiatt to see what it really is dying to be. Edited by Trademark - January 15 2009 at 19:12 |
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rogerthat
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 03 2006 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 9869 |
Posted: January 16 2009 at 01:21 | |
I agree with the gist of Trademark's long, well thought out post. There is nothing wrong in rejecting some genres or even techniques of performing instruments -even if they may be contemporarily in vogue and therefore shut you off from a lot of music that's at the point sought after. As I said with that example of deathgrowls, even the so-called open minded crowd have biases they can't and don't want to overcome. It's ok, it's human tendency. Besides, what broader tastes or limits are we speaking of here? It's all relative. Even after rejecting double bass drumming, BaldJean would have still listened to hell lot of music and would continue to do so. One lifetime is not enough to explore all the great music that's out there, so being blindsided to some parts of the musical ocean is par for the course.
Also, having a broader or narrower taste does not entail victory or defeat for anyone, there is no victory or defeat in music, you listen to random sounds and they make sense to you and maybe not to somebody else. As you get more experienced with appreciating music, you are able to rationalize to a large extent why you like some sounds and why not some others, but the point is, you still react to it, it arouses emotion within you and that's what it boils down to at the heart of it. I also don't see much point in attempting to negate this emotional reaction with the aim of seeing merit in music that you are wholly uncomfortable with, you could say that you are opening your mind to different approaches or that you are simply forcing yourself to like it. My family loves bitter groud preparations and I hate it but I would rather have rice with some vegetable curry than not. So I have learnt to gulp the poison pill just to humour my mother more than anything; I am clear that given a choice I would rather not have to eat it at all. My approach in music is pretty much the same; maybe I can live with some albums now that I simply did not like right from the word go but I would rather not listen to it anyway. |
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Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: January 16 2009 at 01:33 | |
I never said something like "I like it and if you don't you're closed-minded about it". Everybody's free to like or not like whatever they want. But there's a difference between not liking something and dismissing any possibility that it might be any good. BTW: It's not like I love double bass drumming "no matter what". Whether I like something *always* depends on the particular song. I think that's also the basic difference between me and BaldFriede: I place the song over the technique. |
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Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: January 16 2009 at 01:36 | |
Those are the times when I wish that I would have never begun posting here. Every once in a while, someone will come and twist and bend your words ... I wonder why people are doing this. Do you have nothing else to do than to bad mouth people? |
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Trademark
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 21 2006 Location: oHIo Status: Offline Points: 1009 |
Posted: January 16 2009 at 06:37 | |
Somebody call the Waaahhhmbulance. Really Mike, 3 years or so of having these little debates with you puts this one solidly in the truth column. Is it still "bad-mouthing" if its true? " I never said something like "I like it and if you don't you're closed-minded about it". I was referring to the general tone of a significant number of posts in the thread not to anything specific that you said, If I was unclear about that I'm sorry. But you did say "I just think that I'm broadening my horizon more than you do, because I impose fewer "hard" limits (like instruments/sounds or techniques) on what I'm listening to. You may be broadening your horizon, but within a (from my point of view) limited scope. " And this, while using different words has EXACTLY that same meaning as this: "I like it and if you don't you're closed-minded about it." It also implies YOUR own "correct" attitude is superior to anyone else's who does not share your point of view. The implication that if we don't see it your way, we're wrong is crystal clear. I'm perfecty happy to disagree with someone (ask Ivan ), but I won't stand for having my opinions invalidated in that way. |
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