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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2010 at 02:38
Originally posted by Astrapto Astrapto wrote:

Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:

That would work if you are a robot. [while holding your nose] Beep! "This music is catchy, more popular and has a good beat "   

Surprisingly enough, if you'll unplug the robotic nose you'll find a normal person, describing why they like certain music, rather than just proclaiming it "good."


I know I would find a person I'd have no interest in discussing music with. Maybe not a robot, but a person with autism is a more presise description?

Originally posted by Astrapto Astrapto wrote:


Popular art, including music, is effective in appealing to the public. That may or may not portend musical ability.
People like music because it appeals to their emotions, intellect, sense of fashion, sense of fellowship, memories....and so many other facets of a human.
No music is inherently "better," i.e. "more artistically valid" because there is no way at all to quantify such a distinction. What does "better" mean? Faster, slower, more aggressive, more intellectual, exceling withing
the confines of musical theory, soaring outside those boundaries, hobbling without them? Does "good" music facilitate laughing, dancing, cringing, rejoicing, lamenting, fuming, tripping, or escaping? Are there really any upper or lower limits on complexity, prerequisite to artistic validity?
People like different music because we're different than each other. No one can completely understand. It's subjective.


I seem to be one of the few who gives credit to things such as knowledge and experience here. With lots of both, your opinion is more valid than someone who'd only listened to an adult contemporary formatted radio station all his or her life. Same if its literature, paintings, movies... whatever. Someone who's never read a book is less entitled to an opinion about what is the greatest novel ever written than someone's who read a lot. I don't believe everything is 100% subjective. A trained ear, eye or mind is discredited in this cultural relativist age. It unhealthy and makes our world stupider.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2010 at 02:41
Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:

  I don't believe everything is 100% subjective. A trained ear, eye or mind is discredited in this cultural relativist age. It unhealthy and makes our world stupider.



 Clap   I completely agree with this sentiment, even if it might get me - and perhaps you too - branded an elitist. I would only add a qualifier that whether the ear or mind is trained has not much to do with the age of the person but with the extent to which he understands the subject matter.  Not that you suggested otherwise anyway, just saying.   I think today's kids are too egoistic to want to learn from someone else and would like to pretend at all costs that they 'know'. Since they often don't and would get badly pwned, they resort to the subjectivity cop out.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2010 at 03:16
^Thanks. And yes, I agree.

I don't consider myself an elitist, but I couldn't care less if others thinks of me as one.   
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2010 at 12:41
""I can justify being a music snob in general, meaning that I gravitate to complicated music,""

I used to think like this. Then I started listening to other forms of complex music (certainly compared to Genesis) and discovered that I  didn't much like jazz fusion, some symphonic music, or some extreme metal bands, even though they were occasionally far more complex than what I listened to.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2010 at 16:49
I haven't read all the pages, but I just want to say a couple of things.

First off, I have to point out - the whole "prog is superior" thing isn't COMPLETELY unfounded. Prog is one of the gernerally more complex forms of music (along with a lot of Jazz).

Also, I don't particullarly thing pop singers are that great... but I've never been able to tell great singers apart from good singers.

Finally, I don't think pop is that hard to write... just get the good old chords out. If you have a keyboard in front of you, play the following power chords (meaning, leave out the third) - C, G, A, F. There's your chords. Perhaps in the chorus change it to C, G, F. Play 8th bass notes, just on the root of the chord. Make up some random melody, and play a simple rock beat on drums. You'll probablly end up somewhere in the charts.

Obviously, some pop music is more complex - then that's a bit better. Though the very definition of pop stops it getting too complex. I have heard some fairly complex "indie rock" as the kids call it (lol) - but that's a bit of a huge umbrella genre anyways.

Edit: Someone was saying you cannot quantify "artistic validity". I think you can to an extent. For example, when a Green Day song is literally just the same chord sequence, with the same bass, the same drums and the same/similar melody, you can say it isn't very artistically valid because it's unoriginal, pointless and uninteresting. But even then, I suppose you could say that taste comes into it...

I don't like to knock a band/genre before I've tried... but I have pretty much given up on hip-hop at the moment. And punk would need to do something great to win me over lol.


Edited by Nathaniel607 - September 12 2010 at 16:52
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2010 at 19:10
Originally posted by Nathaniel607 Nathaniel607 wrote:



Also, I don't particullarly thing pop singers are that great... but I've never been able to tell great singers apart from good singers.



Why, Stevie Wonder or Aretha Franklin would be better than a lot of prog singers.  And that's not just two names, in spite of examples like Britney, pop singers are generally trained and have a lot of range, which cannot be said of many prog singers.  Prog singers, honestly, are sometimes amongst the worst out there. 

Originally posted by Nathaniel607 Nathaniel607 wrote:

Finally, I don't think pop is that hard to write... just get the good old chords out. If you have a keyboard in front of you, play the following power chords (meaning, leave out the third) - C, G, A, F. There's your chords. Perhaps in the chorus change it to C, G, F. Play 8th bass notes, just on the root of the chord. Make up some random melody, and play a simple rock beat on drums. You'll probablly end up somewhere in the charts.

Obviously, some pop music is more complex - then that's a bit better. Though the very definition of pop stops it getting too complex. I have heard some fairly complex "indie rock" as the kids call it (lol) - but that's a bit of a huge umbrella genre anyways.


Just try singing along to Stevie Wonder songs like Too High or Summer Soft and then tell me the chords are absolutely simple.  Some ABBA songs are easily more complex than any Strawvbs I have heard.  No such thing as too complex for pop as long as it maintains a clear melodic direction and is catchy.  Gentle Giant tick all three boxes often, by the way.  Wink  Perhaps, rather than arrogant, progheads are ill informed then, if your post is any indication. 

Originally posted by Nathaniel607 Nathaniel607 wrote:


Edit: Someone was saying you cannot quantify "artistic validity". I think you can to an extent. For example, when a Green Day song is literally just the same chord sequence, with the same bass, the same drums and the same/similar melody, you can say it isn't very artistically valid because it's unoriginal, pointless and uninteresting. But even then, I suppose you could say that taste comes into it...



When a Focus 'composition' jams aimlessly for 20 minutes without achieving much development to speak of, you could say it's rambling, pointless and uninteresting.  If the composition in question is Eruption, then not too highly original either.   Wink 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2010 at 19:18
Originally posted by Nathaniel607 Nathaniel607 wrote:



First off, I have to point out - the whole "prog is superior" thing isn't COMPLETELY unfounded. Prog is one of the gernerally more complex forms of music (along with a lot of Jazz).




Oh, missed this!  As others have already asked, how exactly does complex make it superior?  I don't see the connection.   
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2010 at 19:48
I must say I disagree with your two points because progressive music is more a way of thinking and viewing the world, it is a whole ideology in itself and, according to that, cannot be compared to a totally made up pop star by a big music corporation and some auto tune who's goal is to sell albums, not trying to bring a message to society.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 12 2010 at 19:54
Originally posted by GY!BE GY!BE wrote:

cannot be compared to a totally made up pop star by a big music corporation and some auto tune who's goal is to sell albums, not trying to bring a message to society.


Stevie Wonder is not made up.  ABBA used to write their own music.  Tori Amos, as seems to have been acknowledged by this website, is proggier than a lot of stuff from the same decade that gets called prog.  Before generalizing (because I am not saying there are NO made up stars), please do recall how annoyed you probably get at people dismissing prog...so why would you do the same unto other genres of music? 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 13 2010 at 03:32
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:

  I don't believe everything is 100% subjective. A trained ear, eye or mind is discredited in this cultural relativist age. It unhealthy and makes our world stupider.



 Clap   I completely agree with this sentiment, even if it might get me - and perhaps you too - branded an elitist. I would only add a qualifier that whether the ear or mind is trained has not much to do with the age of the person but with the extent to which he understands the subject matter.  Not that you suggested otherwise anyway, just saying.   I think today's kids are too egoistic to want to learn from someone else and would like to pretend at all costs that they 'know'. Since they often don't and would get badly pwned, they resort to the subjectivity cop out.
 
I think that the thing which is most often overlooked is that music has both a subjective AND an objective nature.
 
Only the trained can understand the objective nature of music or any art - or, more accurately, explain the objective nature. The hard part about explaining it, is that a lot of the objective part is, or can be, subjective.
 
This is something which both camps, tutored and untutored) tend to overlook - there simply aren't two types of music (subjective and objective), rather it's all one.
 
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Nathaniel607 Nathaniel607 wrote:



First off, I have to point out - the whole "prog is superior" thing isn't COMPLETELY unfounded. Prog is one of the gernerally more complex forms of music (along with a lot of Jazz).




Oh, missed this!  As others have already asked, how exactly does complex make it superior?  I don't see the connection.   
 
I suppose that if you like your music to be complex, then to you, a complex piece is superior to a simple piece, QED.
 
Nevertheless, I'm still looking for a complex piece which is superior in terms of pure rock and roll "fire" to "Heard it on the X" by ZZ top, or a piece of prog which is hookier than A-Ha's "Take on Me".
 
"Superiority" lies where you find it - and anyone claiming it should be challenged on the terms by which the superiority is measured.
 
I would say that complexity is a very poor measure of superiority, as I've heard hideously complex pieces which in actuality, sound hideous. Maybe this was the composer's intention, but I prefer to enjoy the music I listen to... Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 13 2010 at 03:46
Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:

 
I seem to be one of the few who gives credit to things such as knowledge and experience here. With lots of both, your opinion is more valid than someone who'd only listened to an adult contemporary formatted radio station all his or her life. Same if its literature, paintings, movies... whatever. Someone who's never read a book is less entitled to an opinion about what is the greatest novel ever written than someone's who read a lot. I don't believe everything is 100% subjective. A trained ear, eye or mind is discredited in this cultural relativist age. It unhealthy and makes our world stupider.
It's funny, as the music I prefer to listen to become more and more what most people would call pretentious (or at least incredibly self-indulgent), the less convinced I am that there is any objective way to talk about music beyond stating the obvious. You would think it would be the other way around.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 13 2010 at 04:06
Originally posted by rogerthat rogerthat wrote:

Originally posted by Nathaniel607 Nathaniel607 wrote:



First off, I have to point out - the whole "prog is superior" thing isn't COMPLETELY unfounded. Prog is one of the gernerally more complex forms of music (along with a lot of Jazz).




Oh, missed this!  As others have already asked, how exactly does complex make it superior?  I don't see the connection.   


ĻI hoped no one was, but I certainly not writing about "prog being superiour because its more complex". I'm not writing about prog at all. Reading this and similar discussions, the consensus is that everything is down to personal taste and totally subjective. No one can tell you that Beethoven or Coltrane is superior to Black Eyed Peas or Justin Bieber (that 36 min. ambient remix was quite good, though). Its more accepted to shout: f**k Bach! he's boring!

There's this growing hatred towards intellectuals, academics and genuine knowledge (its always been there of course, but not as loud and proud). Ridicule and cripple the smartass as a way to justify filling your braincells and life in general with disposable crap. This "all in the eye of the beholder" nonsense is a scam you've all fallen for (you big twits!). You'll get booed off if you try  to address the escalating stupidity of popular music and culture. Who wants to be the snob spoiling the fun for everyone else?

Edited by Rocktopus - September 13 2010 at 05:25
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 13 2010 at 09:25
Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:

Reading this and similar discussions, the consensus is that everything is down to personal taste and totally subjective. 
  
 
That's not what I've got out of this discussion - and it's not what I said above, but I agree, a lot of people are under this misapprehension, and are missing out big time on some of the beauties that lie in the objective, technical side of music.
 
For example, Beethoven's Symphony #6 is a programme piece in 5 movements, each of which describes Pastoral scenes (hence it's name, the "Pastoral").
 
You would need to study it in depth with a well-versed tutor to get the maximum understanding of what Betthoven was trying to achieve (this much at least is objective), and the extent to which he achieved it - this much is both objective and subjective, because much of what he was trying to get across with the music is documented, and we can decipher the musical devices he used to do it.
 
But the layman can get a lot of subjective feeling from the music which would confirm the "Pastoral" feel of the music - it doesn't take any learning for that, especially the famous thunderstorm section.
 
In other words, while it is true that you do not need any musical education to enjoy music, you can get a whole load more out of music if you do, and music written from an intellectual starting point is more likely to provide intellectual stimulus in addition to emotional stimulus, while it's probably less likely true the other way around - even if you don't understand how it does it.
 
Conversely, having musical education and appreciating the finer technical points should not mean missing out on the best part of this amazing art - the soul of it.
 
Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:


Who wants to be the snob spoiling the fun for everyone else?
 
Me.
 
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Edited by Certif1ed - September 13 2010 at 09:32
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 15 2010 at 01:24
Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:



ĻI hoped no one was, but I certainly not writing about "prog being superiour because its more complex". I'm not writing about prog at all. Reading this and similar discussions, the consensus is that everything is down to personal taste and totally subjective. No one can tell you that Beethoven or Coltrane is superior to Black Eyed Peas or Justin Bieber (that 36 min. ambient remix was quite good, though). Its more accepted to shout: f**k Bach! he's boring!

There's this growing hatred towards intellectuals, academics and genuine knowledge (its always been there of course, but not as loud and proud). Ridicule and cripple the smartass as a way to justify filling your braincells and life in general with disposable crap. This "all in the eye of the beholder" nonsense is a scam you've all fallen for (you big twits!). You'll get booed off if you try  to address the escalating stupidity of popular music and culture. Who wants to be the snob spoiling the fun for everyone else?


I had responded to Nathaniel's post and I don't think he had directed his post to you.  Yes, I agree, it seems people have forgotten classical and jazz were supposed to be just music not so long ago.  Why exactly is it supposed to boring, elitist or pretentious to like either kind of music is beyond me (and I have honestly felt at times as if I was required to apologize for it) but it's become very fashionable to adopt that posture.  Behind the veil of subjectivity lies an insidious attempt to justify stupidity and force it down others' throats. 


Edited by rogerthat - September 15 2010 at 01:32
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 15 2010 at 01:29
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

 
"Superiority" lies where you find it - and anyone claiming it should be challenged on the terms by which the superiority is measured.
 



But even in that case, prog is not as a rule more complex than classical music.  It is more complex than stuff like basic rock and roll, that's about as far as I'd go to generalize. I don't even think, going with the kind of amorphous definitions of prog we have, we could generalize prog as a whole as complex music but it's fair to say that some of the great prog rock bands made complex music.   At the most, prog could be tenuously argued to be 'superior' to basic rock and roll (strictly on grounds of complexity and I agree with you that it is not a good yardstick) but not classical music, so any 'arrogance' based on prog being the most complex music is misplaced.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 15 2010 at 07:18

^Indeed - that's not at all at odds with what I was saying.

One could argue that "Classical" music is inferior to popular music on several grounds, the most obvious being its lack of popularity...
 
This way of thinking seems to cut mustard with a depressingly large number of music fans (including Prog fans) these days - the notion that if a straw poll indicates that a lot of people agree with a particular proposition, then it must be true.
 
Strange from a group of people set up to be essentially "anti-popular".
 
It's a reasonable observation that early prog, at least, is, as a rule, more complex than other forms of popular music - so in that respect, our proggers can enjoy a degree of arrogance, should they wish.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 15 2010 at 08:14
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

 
It's a reasonable observation that early prog, at least, is, as a rule, more complex than other forms of popular music - so in that respect, our proggers can enjoy a degree of arrogance, should they wish.


Qualified thus, I would agree with it. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 09 2010 at 07:45
Originally posted by sealchan sealchan wrote:

 
One thing I do have to concede to pop music is that pop music does often exceed prog in two categories (can you name others?):
 
1.  Quality of vocals: better singers in pop
2.  Catchier melodies in pop, especially if producers and other non-musical professionals get involved
 
 
 
 
 
 
The voclas in pop music may seem 'better' because 90% of the vocals in pop music are artificial. They use hard disk technology to correct the pitch of the vocal or make it sound a certain way.  So vocals in pop music are not necessarily naturally 'better'. Even if this is not the case, where there is a sense of aptitude in pop music vocals, the vocals sound too generic, the same basically from so called 'artist' to 'artist'. People want to hear something familiar and generic. This is why pop music prevails and prog music remains, still, withtin a limited audience because prog music is deemed today in the mainstream as something a bit 'weird' and unfamiliar, despite prog's great aptitude for melody and composition. So pop music is more accessible, familiar, easily disgestible and catchier.
 

I may sound a bit of an 'Arrogant Proggie' in what i have just said, but i am being a realist. These are my opinions. I remain a bit of a prog snob, not because i am pretentious, but because pop music seems very much like a popular commodity, which is heavily manufactured, artificial and unnatural. If music is described as 'art', then pop music does not fit that mold, progressive music however does so and thus is more inspiring and attractive to me.

 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 09 2010 at 07:55
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:

Reading this and similar discussions, the consensus is that everything is down to personal taste and totally subjective. 
  
 
That's not what I've got out of this discussion - and it's not what I said above, but I agree, a lot of people are under this misapprehension, and are missing out big time on some of the beauties that lie in the objective, technical side of music.
 
For example, Beethoven's Symphony #6 is a programme piece in 5 movements, each of which describes Pastoral scenes (hence it's name, the "Pastoral").
 
You would need to study it in depth with a well-versed tutor to get the maximum understanding of what Betthoven was trying to achieve (this much at least is objective), and the extent to which he achieved it - this much is both objective and subjective, because much of what he was trying to get across with the music is documented, and we can decipher the musical devices he used to do it.
 
But the layman can get a lot of subjective feeling from the music which would confirm the "Pastoral" feel of the music - it doesn't take any learning for that, especially the famous thunderstorm section.
 
In other words, while it is true that you do not need any musical education to enjoy music, you can get a whole load more out of music if you do, and music written from an intellectual starting point is more likely to provide intellectual stimulus in addition to emotional stimulus, while it's probably less likely true the other way around - even if you don't understand how it does it.
 
Conversely, having musical education and appreciating the finer technical points should not mean missing out on the best part of this amazing art - the soul of it.
 
Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:


Who wants to be the snob spoiling the fun for everyone else?
 
Me.
 
TongueLOL


As usual, I agree with most of your thoughts on such matters but have serious misgivings about this critter.
Disregarding what might be termed 'academic' instrumental music or what is described as 'absolute music' from the classical realm, where does something like Lou Reed or Bob Dylan fit into this scheme of things? Very simple non-challenging harmonic forms etc but texturally very complex and dare I hazard, from an intellectual starting point?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 09 2010 at 09:34
Originally posted by ExittheLemming ExittheLemming wrote:


Disregarding what might be termed 'academic' instrumental music or what is described as 'absolute music' from the classical realm, where does something like Lou Reed or Bob Dylan fit into this scheme of things? Very simple non-challenging harmonic forms etc but texturally very complex and dare I hazard, from an intellectual starting point?


This is for him to clarify but possibly he meant 'intellectual' from a purely musical perspective, as in excluding the lyrics?  I cannot comment on Lou Reed as I am not familiar (and I am not familiar with a lot of Dylan's vast body of work either) but I don't remember Dylan being more texturally challenging than Pink Floyd? You have already mentioned that it is not harmonically very far out either.  The song structures tend to be simple too.  The intellect of the artist is revealed more in the lyrics.  I certainly understand 'cerebral' in the context of music to mean something challenging and thoughtful from a melodic/harmonic/rhythmic/form standpoint, preferably all. Tongue  This is not to say that there is no intellectualism involved in the songs crafted by Dylan but if they are more to do with the lyrical side of it, a listener would not require to learn much music to grasp the intellectually interesting side of it musically.   
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