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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 24 2009 at 03:02
I don't have problems with that either. I do love all sorts of music
in any genres as long as it's pleasing to hear and conveys a good
message and it's style is unique and general public have said that
it's a good one.That's what really matters to me..
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from dress up games and hair games community, Phil
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2009 at 16:56
I'm arrogant about it, but I keep it to myself. I studied music formally for a number of years- sax and guitar, and got fairly OK with the latter. But I understand music, and what interests me most is music I can't play. If I could sit down and learn a song in half an hour, I'm not really interested. I understand it, I've heard it, and I've played it all before. I want something that goes beyond what I can do, or at least what I couldn't compose. I could probably learn most Floyd tunes quickly, but I'd never come up with that stuff on my own. Older Sonic Youth falls into that category too.

But that's what grabbed me when I first heard KC 20 years ago- wow, how the hell did they think of doing that, and then PLAYING it, and it sounds great! I was hooked.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 25 2009 at 21:55
Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:

Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:

Originally posted by KingCrimson250 KingCrimson250 wrote:

Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:

one point - if anyone ever feels the need to proclaim , unprovoked, the superiority of any music over another ... there is only one way to do it - to clearly state that it is a personal opinion, a matter of one's taste in music.
To present as based on objective measures is to merit any & all abuse thrown at you.


Ah, but is that not a personal opinion as well? Can you objectively and conclusively prove that the superiority of some music over another cannot be objectively and conclusively proven?






Wink

actually , yes. (as quoted by a non-Britney Spears fan) - "if someone wants to argue what band or music is best, I throw sales info at them. After all, that is a concrete measure, right ?"

Then if they say that isn't a true measure, you ask them for the concrete (i.e. measurable) terms on which they base their "facts". Once they start blubbering and babbling, you ask them what music they LIKE best and why.
If you're lucky, you're with a music fan that understands the concept of personal taste.

P.S. I have actually used that approach with several "elitists" here. None, not even the most educated ( I would check their profile) ever came up with an objective way to determine superiority. They all lapsed into "I know what I like, and that's that". For which the only answer is - "that's what I've been saying all along" !Evil Smile


I believe that there are objective ways to measure superiority. (DB - please present the measurements and how they are measured)  I don't believe that all bands are created equal.  What's best for me may not be best for you is a given. (DB - so we agree that it is subjective opinion based on one's own tastes, and in now way objective)  I don't readily equate commercial success with artistic success (DB - neither do I. But it's a neat little way to take the stuffing out of people who can't see the sun, cause their nose is blocking the view)but people can use different criteria for determining the superiority of one bands, peice of music, or performance over another. ( DB - actually, no they can't  If they do, they are simply tryingt to rationalize their own likes & dislikes.) Commercial success is one way to measure superiority.(DB - no, it's just a way of measuring popularity that is to be taken with a grain of salt. Record industry insiders have this little joke -"It shipped Platinum, and sold Gold)  Band A had superior sales figures to band B.  Does it of itself make the music better.  No.  (DB - we agree) How about technical precision?  You've just been to a concert and boths bands were playing similarly difficult pieces,  Band A kept messing up and band B played immaculately.  Band B's was the superior performance.  (DB - you can't shine sh*te. content is important. form is too. but it is not a determining factor. Mimics and imitators are not held in higher regard than the original artist because they can play the songs more precisely. If that were the case, the Musical Box would ousell Genesis when it comes to concerts) Composition is another matter.  It seems obvious to me that certain composers and musicians are objectively more talented/ more professional than others (more genius). ( DB - for a few centuries, Bach was not held in high regard. Now he is, and has been for a century or two. What generation(s) got it right ? Again, you insinuate an objective way of  measuring superiority that doesn't exist. Beethoven , Mozart, Bach ... who's # 1 ? John or Paul ? Chuck Berry or Elvis ? Steve Howe, Steve hackett, Steve Gaines, or all of them vs Stevie Wonder, with one hand tied behind his back )It doesn't mean one will enjoy them more, though, nor that they will have more commercial success.(DB - again we agree. Genius can't even really be measured on an IQ test. Only the score on the test. If I'm in a foxhole in the middle of a war, I want someone who can figure out how to get me out alive, not somebody who can tell me which polygon is different from the others)

It can be problematic too when contrasting different styles.  Perhaps the music of Fred Durst and Beethoven are equally good in terms of what each does, which is different, but I don't believe that Fred Durst will ever be elevated to the musical stature of Beethoven.  Was Mozart's musical skill superior to Neal Morse's, or are they both musically equal -- each with his own strength and musical idiom?  Perhaps in another time and place, Neal Morse would have eclipsed Mozart making similar music.  Should William Hung get the same acclaim as Pavarotti? ( time will tell for all music. See Bach. also , with the gradual withdrawal of classical music from public & private broadcasters' playlists, we are already seeing the grand composers essentially becoming nothing more than academic history. Yes, their influence lives on. But less and less of them stay in the general public's mind. Just as jazz, blues, and even the most Popular of Pop musicians. Some endure. Some that even bewilder the bejesus out of their critics. And even some that surprise their fans. Again , see Bach. )


db - quote , unquote, there is no objective to measure a music's superiority over another. It is, was, and will always be subjective. A matter of taste, or if it's music the other person doesn't like - a lack of taste.
Which is why I listen to what I love, like, and what piques my curiosity. And surprise surprise, no objective means has been found to predict what I will like. Not even computer generated models like Pandora.
"Here I am talking to some of the smartest people in the world and I didn't even notice,” Lieutenant Columbo, episode The Bye-Bye Sky-High I.Q. Murder Case.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2009 at 02:25
This is a completely different topic, but of course there are ways to objectively measure one piece of music's superiority over another.

We'd have to go into music theory, and use examples, but it's not hard - and it's not subjective or simply a matter of taste - that is a gross over-simplification.

Taste enters into it, of course - but taste enters into everything in the sense of consensual agreement.

Don't confuse this with not being able to measure music's qualities objectively - you CAN. You need to separate this from simple taste, which is a DIFFERENT discussion.

For example, to me, a well-made cruet set is one that allows the condiments to flow freely through the holes.

But someone else might say "What sort of cruet set with no holes is that? All the condiments just fall out through the holes, therefore it's useless!"

Just so in music.

A piece of music that is a simple jam around two chords is, more often than not, next to useless as a piece of Progressive Rock, as such a jam is difficult to progress. A gifted band, such as Can, could work all kinds of magic around it and successfully spin it out to 20+ minutes and not lose interest.

...and this is where the discussion becomes more complex - all kinds of definitions are required.

In my first example, the cruet set is familiar to everyone and has a single function which may be desirable or undesirable.

In the second, I defined a rule and immediately pointed out the exception that proves the rule. 

In doing so, I used flowery, opinionated words like "difficult", "progress", "gifted", "magic", "successfully" and so on. These are words that could easily be pounced on by those who do not understand that music really does have measurable qualities, and I don't care. Pounce away and miss the point entirely!

What you need to do is define what the music is intending to achieve, and the yardsticks by which this can be measured.

ONE of those yardsticks is taste (ie, do I like it).

Another could be specific musical techniques used, which indicate the ability of the musician to learn and invent.

Another could be the precision of execution, which indicates the musician's ability to master the instrument.

Another could be the response of a captive audience, on a show such as X Factor.

These are all objective, measurable qualities that prove what they set out to prove - in the last case, the quality you are trying to prove is the scale and type of reaction of the audience as an indicator of general popularity. 

It will not tell you precisely, but then nothing in real life is precise - only in mathematical theory. Hence a computer cannot predict precisely what you will like - but it can probably make a reaonable guess.


History shows that J. S. Bach's music became unfashionable, and hence was not held in high regard. It does not show that EVERYONE had a low opinion of Bach, and I would suspect that it's only the general unwashed populace who would - not "proper" musicians. 

When people said "Bach", after JS's death, they usually meant one of his sons, who wrote in the more popular Italian style - which backs up my suspicions that it would have been the uneducated public, rather than educated musicians who would have dismissed the great man's music.

It was a composer (Mendelssohn) who "rediscovered" Bach and represented him to the astonished public, who wondered how they could have missed such a genius - which double underscores what I'm saying here.

If you're not a musician, you're not really ina position to evaluate music's qualities except in terms of taste, and certainly not in a position to evaluate whether musicians can objectively measure music's qualities or not.

If that sounds arrogant, then it's no more arrogant than a car mechanic telling you that he's in a better position to tell you what's wrong with your car than you, or a doctor is to tell you what is wrong with your health.

Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:

Yes, their influence lives on. But less and less of them stay in the general public's mind.

1. How do you know this about the general public?
2. It could be suggested that the "general public" have the attention span of a goldfish, and do not care for quality in music, just their own personal taste. Personally, if music I like is also of a good quality, then that is a bonus, and more often than not, is a reason for listening to it more than music of a lower quality. Hence I am rather keen on Prog Rock (neatly brings everything back on topic!) Wink


Edited by Certif1ed - June 26 2009 at 02:31
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2009 at 02:36
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

If that sounds arrogant, then it's no more arrogant than a car mechanic telling you that he's in a better position to tell you what's wrong with your car than you, or a doctor is to tell you what is wrong with your health.

That's the problem with analogies Mark - car mechanic's are renowned for driving some of the worse maintained cars on the road and my doctor isn't exactly the picture of health Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2009 at 02:59
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

This is a completely different topic, but of course there are ways to objectively measure one piece of music's superiority over another.

We'd have to go into music theory, and use examples, but it's not hard - and it's not subjective or simply a matter of taste - that is a gross over-simplification.

Taste enters into it, of course - but taste enters into everything in the sense of consensual agreement.


I agree to an extent, and pointed out that it's possible and/or preferable to think of ratings as more objective and write-ups as more subjective, but it also depends on what the musical context is, i.e.; a superior Pop song - as say a Beatles, Elton John or Michael Jackson cut - has different standards and emphases than jazz or Prog.  In 'Pop', simplicity, rhythm and melody are crucial and just as difficult to cultivate something superior as in other forms, and the discipline required to produce something really good just as challenging.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2009 at 06:53
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

If that sounds arrogant, then it's no more arrogant than a car mechanic telling you that he's in a better position to tell you what's wrong with your car than you, or a doctor is to tell you what is wrong with your health.

That's the problem with analogies Mark - car mechanic's are renowned for driving some of the worse maintained cars on the road and my doctor isn't exactly the picture of health Wink
 
Just because the mechanic drives a dodgy motor, it doesn't necessarily follow that he doesn't know how to maintain it - it might be more an indication that he can't be bothered, or doesn't have the spare time.
 
The analogy still holds water - there are "experts" at all levels: My 5-year old daughter has been learning French, and as I drove her home from school, she began to teach me Frere Jaques... LOL
 
BTW, my brother-in-law is a mechanic, and keeps his car in tip-top condition... thought you might like to see his car Cool


Edited by Certif1ed - June 26 2009 at 06:54
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2009 at 07:22
^ "Comp Altered" isn't exactly street-legal LOL (nice vid though).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2009 at 12:34
There's a difference between "descriptions" and measures.
You can measure distance in inches, feet, miles (or use the metric system). But what you or I consider far is a description not a measure.
Example - a 2 mile walk for Milk & bread might be fine by me, but far for you. The only measure we have is that the walk is 2 miles. The different subjective views are based on our opposing opinions.

And so you can measure( i.e. use very precise words or terms) tempo, time (4/4 , 11/ 5), chords progressions. But you can't describe what "good" or "bad" music is.
As a brilliant example of incongruousity (Tongue) , commercial success can be measured by units moved, i.e. albums or singles or even tickets sold. But you can't identify "commercial" music. How would you reconcile Bon Jovi's "Slippery When Wet" , and Pink Floyd' Wish You Were Here" ? Both were commercial successes.
But most (99.9 is a guess on my part) bands that tried to imitate these two groups failed to even attract enough attention to be known or remembered nowadays.
And yes, that applies to the Hair Metal scene that Bon Jovi was supposed to be part of. If you go through a few sites dedicated to that music, you'll find about a half dozen groups that hit platinum, mostly on the strength of a hit single, and then nothing. You'll then see a massive amount of nobodies that most Hair Metal fans never ever heard of.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2009 at 13:25
DB: I find it difficult to respond to your way of dissecting a post sentence by sentence -- since one loses context, and greater ideas that way.  I find it easier to focus on an idea.  I've tried to go into real depth in the past when you've brought the same stuff up.  As I've said, I studied film theory, not music theory, but I think that similar "measures" can be used for different arts.  I don't know how well versed in music theory you are.  What I've maintained is that popular success does not equal artistic success, and that when making a valid case for one thing being superior over another, one should have a logical framework of analysis (what one chooses as one's framework can show one's biases, of course).  Some measures could include: innovation, technicality, various compositional attributes and intent.  There needn't be one determining factor.  That was part of my point.  One could consider two bands trying their best to cover the same piece from sheet music note for note.  The first is sloppy, can't play it right, the second plays impeccably.  Therefore the first second is the superior performance.  That is objective.  Taste, as Certified said, is a different matter.  I'm not sure what your argument is against being able to assess superiority in an objective manner within set criteria/ conditions..

My five year old plays the piano reasonably well for her age and comes up with her own songs, but if I put her in a musical talent contest up against a child musical prodigy, she would not deserve to win.  And I say this as a proud, loving father.

EDITED primarily for a little mistake that I might have shrugged off as irony.


Edited by Logan - June 26 2009 at 13:57
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2009 at 13:34
Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:

DB: I find it difficult to respond to your way of dissecting a post sentence by sentence -- since one loses context, and greater ideas that way.  I find it easier to focus on an idea.  I've tried to go into real depth in the past when you've brought the same stuff up.  As I've said, I studied film theory, not music theory, but I think that similar "measures" can be used for different arts.  I don't know how well versed in music theory you are.  What I've maintained is that popular success does not equal artistic success, and that when making a valid case for one thing being superior over another, one should have a logical framework of analysis (what one chooses as one's framework can show one's biases, of course).  Some measures could include: innovation, technicality, various compositional attributes and intent.  There needn't be one determining factor.  That was part of my point.  One could consider two bands trying their best to cover the same piece from sheet music note for note.  The first is sloppy, can't play it right, the second plays impeccably.  Therefore the first is the superior performance.  That is objective.  Taste, as Certifies said, is a different matter.  I don't care much for The Music Box, but so what?  I'm not sure what your argument is against being able to assess superiority in an objective manner within set criteria/ conditions..

My five year old plays the piano reasonably well for her age and comes up with her own songs, but if I put her in a musical talent contest up against a child musical prodigy, she would not deserve to win.  And I say this as a proud, loving father.

You are doing a great disservice for our attempts to accomplish the extinction of the human species and should really cut it out.  Tongue


Edited by Slartibartfast - June 26 2009 at 14:25
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2009 at 13:54
Never fear: Having children, I feel that I'm contributing more to the destruction of the planet and the eventual extinction of the human race.  Not only are they helping to pollute the environment, but through procreation I'm polluting the gene pool.

Incidentally, on a related note, my daughter gets angry when I drive telling me that I'm hurting the polar bears.  School is such a bad influence these days. ;)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2009 at 14:06
Originally posted by sealchan sealchan wrote:

1.  Quality of vocals: better singers in pop

This is highly subjective. I like plenty of the singers in prog better than pop singers because the prog singers tend to have character in their voices. Of course this is pretty much irrelevant because I have yet to hear a technically good singer in anything other than choral/operatic music. No one ennunciates, no one uses round vowels and few pop singers will do anything else than belt out notes from their chest.


Originally posted by sealchan sealchan wrote:


2.  Catchier melodies in pop, especially if producers and other non-musical professionals get involved


There may be a higher quantity of catchy melodies in pop but some of the catchiest melodies I know are from prog.


As far as arrogance, I have the same smugness about my music as I do pretty much every other aspect of my life Tongue.


Edited by TheCaptain - June 26 2009 at 14:09
Curse your sudden but inevitable betrayal.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2009 at 14:10
[[/QUOTE]

There may be a higher quantity of catchy melodies in pop but some of the catchiest melodies I know are from prog.


As far as arrogance, I have the same smugness about my music as I do pretty much every other aspect of my life Tongue.
[/QUOTE]
 
You are so absolutly right
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2009 at 14:20
sealchan: are you familiar with Hoyry-Kone?  Topi Lehtipuu is a terrific vocalist, and verstile, who doesn't get a whole lot of acclaim here.




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2009 at 14:26
Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:

Never fear: Having children, I feel that I'm contributing more to the destruction of the planet and the eventual extinction of the human race.  Not only are they helping to pollute the environment, but through procreation I'm polluting the gene pool.

Incidentally, on a related note, my daughter gets angry when I drive telling me that I'm hurting the polar bears.  School is such a bad influence these days. ;)

OK, I take that back, maybe you are doing your part.  Are you doing enough to abuse your kids and turn them into psychopaths, rather than creative sensitive human beans? Tongue
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2009 at 20:15
Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:

DB: I find it difficult to respond to your way of dissecting a post sentence by sentence -- since one loses context, and greater ideas that way.  I find it easier to focus on an idea.  I've tried to go into real depth in the past when you've brought the same stuff up.  As I've said, I studied film theory, not music theory, but I think that similar "measures" can be used for different arts.  I don't know how well versed in music theory you are.  What I've maintained is that popular success does not equal artistic success, and that when making a valid case for one thing being superior over another, one should have a logical framework of analysis (what one chooses as one's framework can show one's biases, of course).  Some measures could include: innovation, technicality, various compositional attributes and intent.  There needn't be one determining factor.  That was part of my point.  One could consider two bands trying their best to cover the same piece from sheet music note for note.  The first is sloppy, can't play it right, the second plays impeccably.  Therefore the first second is the superior performance.  That is objective.  Taste, as Certified said, is a different matter.  I'm not sure what your argument is against being able to assess superiority in an objective manner within set criteria/ conditions..

My five year old plays the piano reasonably well for her age and comes up with her own songs, but if I put her in a musical talent contest up against a child musical prodigy, she would not deserve to win.  And I say this as a proud, loving father.

EDITED primarily for a little mistake that I might have shrugged off as irony.


O.K., here goes a (hopefully abbreviated version)
Measures are concrete. Descriptions are not. And personal tastes bear no relation to either, nor is one's preferring one music or genre over another. Find me someone who loves everything in any given genre .

  Sales numbers prove nothing but commercial success. And they are & always have been open to manipulation (shipped platinum, sold gold).

making a case for superiority on facts is impossible to do when the arguement is based on opinion ( I say this is why it is superior, and therefore it is). The "measures" you give do not equate to "good" or "bad" music. Do you prefer a tribute or cover act that plays , say, a King Crimson song more technically impeccable than King Crimson ? Or are you the type to keep "score" during the performance instead of listening ? I.E. , do you listen to music to analyze it or enjoy it ?

There is really no such thing as "superior" music to the listener. The music fan is looking for entertainment, for enjoyment. The listener is not going to determine whether they liked a song because the group used 11/8 and 32/7, or stuck to major chords, used 15 chords or 2 for the composition. And frankly, in the end, the intent of the artist matters little. The music is the only thing that counts. And the only "superiority" that anyone, even those with the most extensive knowledge of music theory, can claim is that they like Song A better than Song B. I.E. , song A is superior in pleasing this particular listener. Period.

Again, please read up on Bach. Then come back and tell me what generation or century was right about his music. Or better, put on an LP, CD, hell, a cassette 8 track of something you like and just enjoy it for what it is. Music to YOUR taste.

P.S. one cannot claim an arguement is to be won objectively on criteria one chooses subjectively. If so, then the only true, and reality based measure of superior music is that it is found in my music collection.  SO by the very fact that I have clearly established the determining factor as being whether I own it or not,  any music not found there is inferior.

So, if you wish, send me music that you like or that you are curious about, and I will tell you if it is superior or not.


Edited by debrewguy - June 26 2009 at 20:20
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 26 2009 at 21:10
The pantheons of perceived "greats" has often changed with times, and according to different fashions, within academic circles too, but I think we're talking at cross-purposes.  In film, auteur theory elevated certain Hollywood directors, but that's by-the-by.  I could send you some music, but to determine superiority in any given criterion, it would have to be compared to another piece of music -- preferably something of the same ilk (though it would not necessarily have to be, but it's easier to compare apples and apples).  It would help if you're already familiar with the style of music too and are reasonably familiar with music theory if you were to attempt any objective analysis.  Then I suggest reporting your results/ hypotheses to the nearest musical conservatory to get an academician's opinion.

Of course trying to make a valid case for objective superiority based on opinion is misguided, and many do seem to confuse personal taste/ subjective truth with objective truth.  I may find THIS superior according to my tastes to THIS, but that does not make the first objectively better.  I would argue that the first shows objectively greater skill, though. 


Edited by Logan - June 26 2009 at 21:50
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 27 2009 at 03:34
The problem here is with weasel words and assumptions;
 
"Better" and "Superior to" are weasel words unless qualified, just like "good" and "bad".
 
You cannot say that anything is better than anything else unless you have defined the measurements you're going to use - the framework that Logan mentioned in his earlier post.
 
The assumptions made in the arguments are around the word "objective", which is a little bit weaselly, as it can be a sliding scale - it does not have to be precise, just reasonable.
 
The measurements are factual, and the way the measurements are interpreted hold truth.
 
For example, a piece in standard song structure is more likely to be an inferior piece of Prog.
 
That statement is true, but littered with assumptions and missing definitions.
 
First we need agreement on what, exactly, Prog is - and here we're stuck, because "Prog" is different things to different people. Even if everybody in the world agreed that "The Musical Box" is a piece of Prog, it's just a piece of music that we've decided to call Prog (ie, it's our opinion that this is what it is).
 
Take this argument further, and you cannot objectively measure anything.
 
2 miles is NOT 2 miles.
 
It's 3.2 kilometers.
 
 
Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:

making a case for superiority on facts is impossible to do when the arguement is based on opinion ( I say this is why it is superior, and therefore it is).
 
This is true, but irrelevant - a precise performance is better than a sloppy performance.
 
Even science is not precise - it cannot tell us the nature of everything, and rules that have been absolutely proven on earth have been disproven elsewhere, and theories have had to be modified to cope with this - science explains, it does not prove. The nature of things proves - and so it is with music. Theory explains.
 
 
Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:

The "measures" you give do not equate to "good" or "bad" music.
 
"Good" music communicates well, "bad" music communicates badly.
 
Of course, good music played badly can also communicate badly - so even on a personal level, good music can be distingiushed from bad.
 
Music is complex. Interpreting it, like any language, requires intensive research and skill, but it can be done.
 
Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:

Do you prefer a tribute or cover act that plays , say, a King Crimson song more technically impeccable than King Crimson ? Or are you the type to keep "score" during the performance instead of listening ? I.E. , do you listen to music to analyze it or enjoy it ?
 
It's all part of the listening experience - if I choose to analyse, then I analyse and enjoy it. It is one of many ways in which music may be enjoyed.
 
If a piece of music does not divide up into "interesting" and quantifiable technical parts, then it is "bad" to analyse - it is less enjoyable from an analytical point of view - and you will see people referring to this phenomenon in reviews as "simple" vs "complex" music, where complex is "better".
 
It's interesting that you've acknowledged that a song can be more "technically impeccable" than another, without disclosing what those techniques are.
 
A technique is a technique - so use of it could be "good" or "bad".
 
If I said ksghiudhgliuhdslfhsgoiuysiurytishrltuhlkgshdkrjgdshlkhglkjdsv then you would not understand it - you would say that I have used something that is not a real word - an invention.
 
Why?
 
Because I am the only person who has decided what it means?
 
Consensus enters into it, and here we're back into taste territory - you cannot separate the two when you are a human being.
 
Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:



There is really no such thing as "superior" music to the listener. The music fan is looking for entertainment, for enjoyment. The listener is not going to determine whether they liked a song because the group used 11/8 and 32/7, or stuck to major chords, used 15 chords or 2 for the composition. And frankly, in the end, the intent of the artist matters little. The music is the only thing that counts. And the only "superiority" that anyone, even those with the most extensive knowledge of music theory, can claim is that they like Song A better than Song B. I.E. , song A is superior in pleasing this particular listener. Period
 
 
How long have you been a memberof Prog Archives?
 
I think it's obvious that all of the above generalisations are incorrect, especially when it comes to this site!
 
Frequently people here discuss the superiority of one piece or another, and state things along the lines that they cannot abide simple music - it has to be complex and challenging - and some people here really do like pieces because they're in an unusual time signature.
 
Here, there is a more general comparison than song A > song B.
 
There is the all-important qualifier.
 
Song A > Song B because.
 
Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:



Again, please read up on Bach. Then come back and tell me what generation or century was right about his music.
 
 
That's too general - what, exactly, were the "generation" or "century" in question claiming about Bach's music?
 
 
Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:



P.S. one cannot claim an arguement is to be won objectively on criteria one chooses subjectively.
 
You've now said this twice, and, while it may be true, it has nothing to do with an argument which uses objective criteria!
 
Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:

If so, then the only true, and reality based measure of superior music is that it is found in my music collection.  SO by the very fact that I have clearly established the determining factor as being whether I own it or not,  any music not found there is inferior.
 
That does not follow logically - your argument makes no sense.
 
To summarise, you said "An argument based on opinion is invalid, therefore any discussion of music is based on taste" - and, bewilderingly, have just stated that you call the shots, therefore you are right.
 
I can see the flaws in that argument straight away - can't you?
 
 

 


Edited by Certif1ed - June 27 2009 at 03:37
The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 27 2009 at 06:19
Originally posted by debrewguy debrewguy wrote:

[QUOTE=Logan]

There is really no such thing as "superior" music to the listener. The music fan is looking for entertainment, for enjoyment. The listener is not going to determine whether they liked a song because the group used 11/8 and 32/7, or stuck to major chords, used 15 chords or 2 for the composition. And frankly, in the end, the intent of the artist matters little. The music is the only thing that counts. And the only "superiority" that anyone, even those with the most extensive knowledge of music theory, can claim is that they like Song A better than Song B. I.E. , song A is superior in pleasing this particular listener. Period.


(How can you state something like this as facts? With all due respect, there's no way you can know what I'm looking for in music! In my case, for example, it's not entertainment I'm after but catharsis! You are blatantly wrong if you think one can't love a piece simply because of the musical elements, but if YOU can't love music because of the music itself... I really feel sorry for you. And how do you figure the music is what counts if the intent of the artist doesn't, when they are clearly the same thing?)




I must say I was stunned more then once reading your post.

What exactly do you mean with your comment about someone who loves everything in any genre? I simply don't understand your point. And I'm rather surprised you don't know the answer to your own question already: "Do you listen to music to analyze or enjoy it?" I ANALYZE TO ENJOY IT! You have to understand that the music some of us listen to is very complicated and layered, and it's impossible to notice all the beautiful elements without a proper analysis. I would like to know how can you respect something you don't understand???

PS: Logan and Certif1ed (the elders) are currently my favorite members!

"Music expresses that which cannot be put into words and cannot remain silent" - Victor Hugo
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