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Topic ClosedIs Pop Music Innovative Or Good Anymore?

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Slartibartfast View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Is Pop Music Innovative Or Good Anymore?
    Posted: January 17 2011 at 23:13
Frankly I don't pay attention to it.  But you dial it back a bit and there was a magical time when there was some pretty cool things going on.  It seems some stuff used to get commercial success because the music was genuinely good.  No point in a poll because I'm guessing the overwhelming answer would be no. But maybe there are some gems out there.


Edited by Slartibartfast - January 17 2011 at 23:15
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: January 18 2011 at 01:38
i like Cee Lo Green's - "F*ck You" . it's really catchy and of course the chorus. it's got a little 60's/70's soul feel too with a sweet little bass solo to it, but it's a cool popular song.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 18 2011 at 03:53
 
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:

It seems some stuff used to get commercial success because the music was genuinely good.

I disagree with this statement. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 18 2011 at 05:17
Originally posted by Henry Plainview Henry Plainview wrote:

 
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:

It seems some stuff used to get commercial success because the music was genuinely good.

I disagree with this statement. 
Big surprise there.
 
Anyhow, a couple of years back when Coldplay hit their pop heights the mainstream media continually describe them as innovative.  Lady GaGa is almost always described as innovative, as is Kanye West.  I suppose that whether any of these artists is good is a matter of personal taste, and whether they trully are innovative, or if they're just "different than the usual" I couldn't really say.  Fringe popular bands like Muse and Radiohead might fit the bill, but again, level of innovation and quality of goodness are up for debate.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 18 2011 at 05:41
The definition of pop has changed so much I don't think it means anything at this point, if not young and barely dressed "celebrities" disguised as musicians.

Not that "pop" has ever been a real genre, everything from Frank Sinatra to the Beach Boys and late Genesis have been called pop at some point, so I guess it's more of something that has to do with popularity.

And popular music is terrible, at the moment. The time of The Carpenters, Mamas and Papas and others topping all charts have passed, now thanks to the internet radio and TV play are unnecessary and the only popular acts are those worshipped by people in their young to mid teens. The songs you hear everywhere aren't necessarily the most popular, they're just the ones the labels are feeding to the masses. With the internet, everyone can listen to punk rock or noise or prog, it's not really a matter of being part of a subculture or going to obscure music shops anymore. So the only listeners labels can aspire to are those more susceptible to influence and brainwashing because they're usually left to rot their brains in front of TV and Facebook: teenagers. And people wonder why talentless Autotune users get popular? Because it's not difficult to influence someone who's maturing and doesn't know what to do with his or her hormones. And that's a messed up thing to do to because it gives them bad examples.

Let me make an example: there was this girl who did Hannah Montana or some show like that. Let's say two parents are too busy to look after their daughter and leave her in front of Disney Channel, and let her watch this Hannah Montana TV show. Let's see this girl is a 12 year old child and let's say three years have passed, now she's 15 and Hannah Montana is grinding her intimate parts against various males on MTV. What example do you think that would possibly give? Especially now that she's maturing physically and feels so confused inside. What has music to do with that?

Same thing with male teenagers seeing those pumped meat bags swearing around and dry humping "ghetto" girls.

Or that lady *a*a (I will not pronounce her name), you always hear about how much she cares about "different" people and how she teaches teenagers to be themselves. But she had tons of plastic surgery! That's hypocrisy at best.

I haven't watched TV in years and I'm aware of all those things. Why? I don't know, probably my experience on the internet and in real life. But I know for a fact that pop music is an absolute disgrace today.

Pop music is an absolute disaster because it's not about the music anymore, it's about the corporations pushing their creepy agendas. In the internet age, labels should become irrelevant. They know that and do these dirty tricks to stick around. I'm not saying you should be a hipster and listen to obscure music exclusively, just avoid packaged music.

It's obvious that teenagers need some kind of "rebel" to identify with, like Buddy Holly or James Dean or Dee Dee Ramone. But those working from the labels aren't rebels at all, they're just doing what the label tells them to do. A disgrace to humanity.

The same applies to the "indie" fad that many major labels are pushing. It works like this: they buy a small label (usually called "indie"), they promote its artists and then pretend said musicians are still working for a small label, while said artists are making six figures a year. An example? Crystal Castles is signed to Fiction Records, which is owned by Polydor which is a subsidiary of Universal. And Crystal Castles fans act like annoying "indie" hipsters all the time. That's another fad I hope will die.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 18 2011 at 07:23
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:

   It seems some stuff used to get commercial success because the music was genuinely good.  .
I'm not sure if I get it. Do you mean because bands like 10CC wrote some of the most interesting chord progressions in a Pop song, that it would get them 5 stars? In that particular aspect I do see a difference between the genius of Pop writing in the past and what I hear today which doesn't mean too much to me. It's a tough call to make personally because I don't pay attention. I do know that from what I HAVE observed in Pop music today, I hear chord progressions which derived from the 80's. Take a Pop band like Big Time Rush for example. The music is taylored for kids just as "The Monkees" were for kids my age. After hearing Big Time Rush, it is obvious to me that the chord structures and even some of the vocal harmonies derive from that 80's generation of George Michael, Boy George etc. Where "The Monkees" clearly had influence from the sign of the times which was "The Beatles".

So I think that the 80's style of Pop writing was present through the 90's and still lingers in today's music. I don't know what to say about the Pop music written today because I simply don't have an interest. I know that many Pop artists have done remakes of Beatle songs and many others and that gets up my nose a bit. I seem to observe a change of some kind in Pop writing over the last 2 decades but don't have the right to comment on all the details or the dislikes I have personally due to my lack of focus on the issue.  
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 18 2011 at 08:07
(Kind of relates to the post above) :

Most pop music these days hasn't managed to break free from the pop music of the 80's, that's what most of it is, it's just that the technology has expanded.   
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 18 2011 at 08:11

There are plenty of great pop songs now. "Crazy" by Gnarls Barkley is one that I actually play live.

Pop is about fun, energy, entertainment. Lady Gaga is definitely that. It's a whole package, a look, a sound, a presentation. The Beatles, Madonna, Prince, Backstreet Boys, Evanescence, it's all part of a package. Music is only a piece of it. The audience is not folks like us who have listened to tens of thousands of hours of music already and need something a bit off the beaten path to still feed us.
 
"Truly Innovative" is a tough one. Most of the artists even on PA aren't "truly innovative."
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 18 2011 at 09:06
When something as simple as "Pop" is divided into various sub-genres, it's hard to label it "Good". If I were to turn it on my local top 40 station (please don't make me), I would probably hear all of the following; hip hop, r&b, club beats, soft rock, mall-punk, and the occasional sh*t-rock (Nickelback, Kid Rock, etc.).

I love a catchy hook and my iTunes has everything from ABBA to Zappa, but I can't relate to 70% of my age group.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 18 2011 at 09:18
Currently I quite like the sound of Timbaland and his productions. I especially like the album "Loose" of Nelly Furtado which is primarily produced by Timbaland. I blame the specific synth drum beat sound on him. I think, this is quite a "new" and interesting sound.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 18 2011 at 09:25
Some pop music I like (Lady GaGa, at times), but most of the time it's a good vocal hook or a synth line...nothing really innovative there. There is this female empowerment thing going on now (slutwave, oh yes) but that's hardly innovative. Ani DiFranco's been writing about orgasms for two decades, with much more talent and class. Nothing's really innovative. Even everything lady GaGa's about can be traced back to Bjork, both in fashion and music. Plus the music was better.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 18 2011 at 09:39
It depends. If you're referring to the things that get massive airplay from the mainstream media channels, they're crap. But there's a lot of good "indie" stuff out there. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 18 2011 at 11:01
There's a lot of stuff that's not super duper popular but selling reasonably well and good to listen to. Fiona Apple's work is really good, for instance, a lot better than, imo, Carpenters or Michael Jackson.  What super duper popular stuff I have heard, i.e. the Shakiras and Beyonces is really boring Dead but that probably has a lot to do with the fragmentation of tastes so that it's no more possible to make an iconoclastic album and sell it to a big audience, much 'safer' for the big players to make assembly line identical units of pop and which usually gets lapped up too. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 18 2011 at 11:07
It's certainly good. I don't know about innovative.

I listen to much more Katy Perry and Lady GaGa than I do most things. I'll take them over Yes and ELP any day.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 18 2011 at 11:14
Originally posted by darkshade darkshade wrote:

i like Cee Lo Green's - "F*ck You" . it's really catchy and of course the chorus. it's got a little 60's/70's soul feel too with a sweet little bass solo to it, but it's a cool popular song.
I agree completely, but for the most part pop is just non talented people that try to say something to some computer generated beat and call it music.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 18 2011 at 11:33
Originally posted by Formentera Lady Formentera Lady wrote:

Currently I quite like the sound of Timbaland and his productions. I especially like the album "Loose" of Nelly Furtado which is primarily produced by Timbaland. I blame the specific synth drum beat sound on him. I think, this is quite a "new" and interesting sound.

Same here, although I have to admit that I haven't actually listened to a full pop album apart from Jacko's and some of the divas - i.e. Celine, Mariah etc (thanks mom!Tongue)
I don't know about the innovative side of pop, because there will always be a particular sound even in the case of 70s bands for example, that one hasn't heard before, but there still is some fairly good pop out there (Lady Gaga, even Katy Perry), not as much as in the pervious years though.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 18 2011 at 12:26
Innovative pop these days? I know Everything Everything (amazing band, their debut from last year kicked so much ass), Massive Attack and Coldplay, although only their first 2 albums are worth listening; the rest of their discography is just repetition of the formulas of Parachutes and A Rush of Blood to the Head.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 18 2011 at 12:59
I like pop music (THere, I said it) but I only like what I concider good pop music and not surprisingly, I don't look for the same things in my 'pop' as I do in my 'Prog'.  I don't take in much pop these days as I no longer listen to those radio stations and most of it is unlistenable.  However, every now and then someone makes something really good (Crazy, Hey Ya, Can't get you out of my Head (Or was that the video?),) Inovation is probably pretty difficult as for something to be pop it has to be catchy and short and conform.  It is possible and it happens. 
 
Don't know anything very current though ask someone young! LOL
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 18 2011 at 13:28
Pop music is at its best when it's being smart/clever/erudite/witty/provocative - anything that shows there is a brain and a personality (however prefabricated) at work behind the glitz and the gloss - of the modern era, artists like Tinie Tempah, Lily Allen, Biffy Clyro, Florence & the Machine, Kate Nash, Katy Perry, Gorillaz and (to some extent) Lady Gaga and Eminem, while not being stunningly profound or earth-shattering, are demonstrating that ti still takes talent and skill to produce Pop music as an art form rather than just a product.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 18 2011 at 13:37
Radio tends to overplay music that is popular. I liked pop music when it was underground.
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