Author |
Topic Search Topic Options
|
Kati
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 10 2010
Location: Earth
Status: Offline
Points: 6253
|
Topic: Reviewers should be judged too. Posted: January 23 2015 at 00:07 |
There seems
to be a very tight community among reviewers, this makes us forget about the
bigger picture which is the music. Just because a reviewer took part of their
precious time to review an album this by no means entitles them to overly bad negative criticism
in their review. Yes reviewers are not being paid by writing a review nor
should bands be grateful for a negative review either.
Honest and
unbiased opinions are important/crucial yes of course but nasty and unfounded
reviews to me do not contribute anything to our prog society, quite the
contrary, this does not benefit any of us (listener, prospect buyer or
follower) and I think this to be most inconsiderable and disrespectable to any
band. The effort, heart, time and soul bands take to produce an album plus
financing with their own personal savings/funds to release an album should not
be taken lithely. Most bands don’t even recover their initial costs inc. cd
production etc.
Thus for
every review out there, there’s a band who at least deserve an honest opinion
from a reviewer who took a considerable amount of time to listen to every track
on their album. Critique all
you want but if a reviewer, being a collab or not, they too should be allowed to
be judged by others and critiqued for their reviews good or bad and especially
if they made no effort to describe an album while posting a review. This is only
fair to me. hugs
Edited by Kati - January 30 2015 at 00:34
|
|
Aussie-Byrd-Brother
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: October 12 2011
Location: Melb, Australia
Status: Offline
Points: 7951
|
Posted: January 23 2015 at 01:02 |
Sonia, every reviewer has their own way of approaching what they want to praise or criticize about the music they listen to. I can only relate to you my own personal approach, so I won't be speaking for others. It's difficult for me to be overly critical and negative in much of what I write. I've given poorer reviews before, but there's only been rare examples, for a number of reasons: a) I am not a musician, so I hardly feel like I can complain about an artists work compared to the ZERO albums that I've recorded! b) Because the majority of my CD/LP collection is progressive related music, there's more than a good chance that there will be at least several elements - be it the instrumentation, the singing, the lyrics, etc - that will show intelligence, musical sophistication and/or inventive elements that are only worthy of praise, so those will be the things to focus on. and c) Life is too short to focus on negative, demeaning things, and even if there's some albums that don't mean too much to me (and I know my better friends on here will know plenty of albums/artists that I don't particularly enjoy! , I'd rather simply leave those alone, let others who find more to praise in them do the positive write-ups, than me personally launching into a negative attack. Also, there's plenty of negative things I have personally going on in my life, that I prefer to focus my attention and energy on positive, exciting directions, and I think my usually mostly positive reviews reflect that. Do I sometimes think `Man, I really should throw in a couple of negative reviews once in a while....'? Yes, absolutely! But I don't have the time, energy or mental space to take the time to be overly negative and put others efforts down, nor am I immature enough to want to ruffle people's feathers and get a reaction from them for the sake of sh*t-stirring. Anyway, I'm sure I had a point in there somewhere, but I'd like to hear other reviewers feelings on the matter!
|
|
Horizons
Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: January 20 2011
Location: Somewhere Else
Status: Offline
Points: 16952
|
Posted: January 23 2015 at 01:38 |
2/5 Review
Didn't say atmosphere enough
|
Crushed like a rose in the riverflow.
|
|
Aussie-Byrd-Brother
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: October 12 2011
Location: Melb, Australia
Status: Offline
Points: 7951
|
Posted: January 23 2015 at 02:51 |
Horizons wrote:
2/5 Review
Didn't say atmosphere enough
|
Bwahaha, well I'm glad at least one person takes notice of a lot of my stuff, makes it all worthwhile!
|
|
Argonaught
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 04 2012
Location: Virginia
Status: Offline
Points: 1413
|
Posted: January 23 2015 at 05:13 |
I can say I have read quite a few reviewers' reviews that felt distinctively malevolent, cockeyed and meaningless to boot. I stopped reading them altogether (almost). IMO, the reviewers' duty is to bring new music to the public's attention, not to tell you what you should think of it. And yes, improper reviews should be reported, just as improper ratings or other counter-productive behavior that doesn't make positive contribution to the community.
Edited by Argonaught - January 23 2015 at 05:14
|
|
Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
|
Posted: January 23 2015 at 07:07 |
Reviewers must be permitted to comment with impunity if they are to give their honest opinion of a piece of work, even if that is harsh or "unfair". Judging whether that harsh opinion is not an honest opinion is an "after-the-event" assessment that the reader is entitled to make, however, what we cannot do is presume that the reviewer is not being honest.
If we start imposing rules (above the normal standards of conduct implied by the Review Guidelines) then we are enforcing restrictions on reviewing practices that will also hamper fair and impartial reviews.
Not every album is solid gold and a review is of the music presented, not of the effort involved in making it.
Edited by Dean - January 23 2015 at 07:08
|
What?
|
|
Walton Street
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 24 2014
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 872
|
Posted: January 23 2015 at 07:15 |
I read movie reviews, and I've written a couple of concert reviews, but i'll never read a music review as long as I live. Someone else's critical opinion of an album means nothing to me. If I want to talk about the music I love i'll talk to someone else that loves it too. should they be held responsible? I guess so - sure. But it really doesn't matter much to me. When it comes to music - it's so damn personal that no one is wrong or right. Anything I want to know as far as information goes (producer, players, history) I'll look it up if i'm so inclined. I may have read a bit back in the day - I have Rolling Stone magazines going back to the 60's when they were on newsprint - but since the internet - I couldn't be bothered.
|
"I know one thing: that I know nothing"
- SpongeBob Socrates
|
|
earlyprog
Collaborator
Neo / PSIKE / Heavy Teams
Joined: March 05 2006
Location: .
Status: Offline
Points: 2133
|
Posted: January 23 2015 at 07:20 |
Argonaught wrote:
... improper reviews should be reported, just as improper ratings or other counter-productive behavior that doesn't make positive contribution to the community.
|
This is not the PA I want.
Should we put them up against the wall and then what?
The day that happens, call me Charlie
Edited by earlyprog - January 23 2015 at 07:41
|
|
Guldbamsen
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin
Joined: January 22 2009
Location: Magic Theatre
Status: Offline
Points: 23104
|
Posted: January 23 2015 at 07:22 |
Thanks Dean, I couldn't have said it better myself.
If you genuinely consider yourself a reviewer - or at the very least work as one, then you should also be able to voice your opinion when the album in question is poor. There are however many ways of doing so, and some people step over the line. That is why we have the report button (NOT because one's new fave album received a 1 star review ).
Some of my favourite reviews are 1 and 2 star write ups. Hell, I still go back and read Bob's (ClemofNazareth) old Triumph reviews
Edited by Guldbamsen - January 23 2015 at 07:23
|
“The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”
- Douglas Adams
|
|
Kati
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 10 2010
Location: Earth
Status: Offline
Points: 6253
|
Posted: January 23 2015 at 07:24 |
Dean wrote:
Reviewers must be permitted to comment with impunity if they are to give their honest opinion of a piece of work, even if that is harsh or "unfair". Judging whether that harsh opinion is not an honest opinion is an "after-the-event" assessment that the reader is entitled to make, however, what we cannot do is presume that the reviewer is not being honest.
If we start imposing rules (above the normal standards of conduct implied by the Review Guidelines) then we are enforcing restrictions on reviewing practices that will also hamper fair and impartial reviews.
Not every album is solid gold and a review is of the music presented, not of the effort involved in making it.
|
Yay Dean, my favorite grumpy hello! There's nothing wrong with critique and ones opinion regarding an album, this is not the point I making here. I do NOT think negative reviews without substance and actual description of the music/album content should be considered as a "review" because it clearly isn't. I could but won't actually show a review which the reviewer only named one single track on an album and even that name he wrote wrong. Another example would be a reviewer who said he doesn't like the singer while the album has 9 different singers Big hug to you,
|
|
Meltdowner
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: June 25 2013
Location: Portugal
Status: Online
Points: 10232
|
Posted: January 23 2015 at 07:30 |
Walton Street wrote:
I read movie reviews, and I've written a couple of concert reviews, but i'll never read a music review as long as I live.Someone else's critical opinion of an album means nothing to me. If I want to talk about the music I love i'll talk to someone else that loves it too. should they be held responsible? I guess so - sure. But it really doesn't matter much to me. When it comes to music - it's so damn personal that no one is wrong or right. Anything I want to know as far as information goes (producer, players, history) I'll look it up if i'm so inclined. I may have read a bit back in the day - I have Rolling Stone magazines going back to the 60's when they were on newsprint - but since the internet - I couldn't be bothered. | Aren't movie reviews "so damn personal" as well?
The reviewers share their opinion, but it's an opinion, nobody says if it's wrong or right. If everyone had the same one, the reviews wouldn't matter.
I like to read them to discover music I don't know but also to read how the music I already know touched others differently... like today's five star review of 'Time and a Word'
|
|
Walton Street
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 24 2014
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 872
|
Posted: January 23 2015 at 07:31 |
well the short answer is yes .. especially when it comes to factual errors. but aren't irresponsible reviews judged already - by the very virtue that people will publically disagree with them? are you talking about in general, or just on this site?
|
"I know one thing: that I know nothing"
- SpongeBob Socrates
|
|
Walton Street
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 24 2014
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 872
|
Posted: January 23 2015 at 07:33 |
Meltdowner wrote:
Walton Street wrote:
I read movie reviews, and I've written a couple of concert reviews, but i'll never read a music review as long as I live.Someone else's critical opinion of an album means nothing to me. If I want to talk about the music I love i'll talk to someone else that loves it too. should they be held responsible? I guess so - sure. But it really doesn't matter much to me. When it comes to music - it's so damn personal that no one is wrong or right. Anything I want to know as far as information goes (producer, players, history) I'll look it up if i'm so inclined. I may have read a bit back in the day - I have Rolling Stone magazines going back to the 60's when they were on newsprint - but since the internet - I couldn't be bothered. | Aren't movie reviews "so damn personal" as well?
The reviewers share their opinion, but it's an opinion, nobody says if it's wrong or right. If everyone had the same one, the reviews wouldn't matter.
I like to read them to discover music I don't know but also to read how the music I already know touched others differently... like today's five star review of 'Time and a Word' |
no I get it - that's how I feel about movie reviews .. and I wasn't saying people shouldn't review - I just occurred to me when reading the OP that I never read them or want to - not in years it was an odd discovery about me - not the process of reviewing. I used to write movie reviews for a print magazine - so I do get it :)
|
"I know one thing: that I know nothing"
- SpongeBob Socrates
|
|
Guldbamsen
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin
Joined: January 22 2009
Location: Magic Theatre
Status: Offline
Points: 23104
|
Posted: January 23 2015 at 07:40 |
I completely get what you're saying Sonia....but then again, these people are out in the open for all to see. Who in their right minds will trust a writer if the reviews are shallow, judgemental and poorly written? Trust me, they receive their end of the bad karma. Free speech* is a real bitch.
*......although we only allow free speech with a bit of common courtesy mixed in here on PA
Damn I got ninja'd by Walton there He even said the same thing - only much more comprehensible.
Edited by Guldbamsen - January 23 2015 at 07:42
|
“The Guide says there is an art to flying or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”
- Douglas Adams
|
|
ExittheLemming
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 19 2007
Location: Penal Colony
Status: Offline
Points: 11415
|
Posted: January 23 2015 at 07:41 |
Dean wrote:
Reviewers must be permitted to comment with impunity if they are to give their honest opinion of a piece of work, even if that is harsh or "unfair". Judging whether that harsh opinion is not an honest opinion is an "after-the-event" assessment that the reader is entitled to make, however, what we cannot do is presume that the reviewer is not being honest.
If we start imposing rules (above the normal standards of conduct implied by the Review Guidelines) then we are enforcing restrictions on reviewing practices that will also hamper fair and impartial reviews.
Not every album is solid gold and a review is of the music presented, not of the effort involved in making it.
|
Much as it pains me to agree with this unrepentant gothic hippy, this post cuts deep to the chase. You cannot 'cut and paste' sincerity (Better to live than to know etc) A similar deluded rationale exists where people opine that members who do not like certain genres should therefore not review albums that belong to those genres as if the potential deficit of positivity will somehow topple the edifice of informed choice. Since when did 'I've heard it, I don't like it and here's why' become 'close-minded?) There is no compulsory 'vegetarian choice' when it comes to the arts
Edited by ExittheLemming - January 23 2015 at 08:03
|
|
earlyprog
Collaborator
Neo / PSIKE / Heavy Teams
Joined: March 05 2006
Location: .
Status: Offline
Points: 2133
|
Posted: January 23 2015 at 07:48 |
Guldbamsen wrote:
I completely get what you're saying Sonia....but then again, these people are out in the open for all to see. Who in their right minds will trust a writer if the reviews are shallow, judgemental and poorly written? Trust me, they receive their end of the bad karma. Free speech* is a real bitch.
*......although we only allow free speech with a bit of common courtesy mixed in here on PA
Damn I got ninja'd by Walton there He even said the same thing - only much more comprehensible.
|
Gold-A-Bear, your avatar of Charlie's Aunt is very fitting
(The Danes would understand....) | |
|
|
Kati
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 10 2010
Location: Earth
Status: Offline
Points: 6253
|
Posted: January 23 2015 at 07:48 |
Walton Street wrote:
well the short answer is yes .. especially when it comes to factual errors. but aren't irresponsible reviews judged already - by the very virtue that people will publically disagree with them? are you talking about in general, or just on this site? |
Walton Street, I am talking in general, the two examples I gave above happened to be on here, however many prog sites deal with this SAME issue, not only P.A. Having bad written reviews with no content also is not fair to the reviewers who actual do care about what they write both positive and also negative views (both are necessary as it creates some kind of balance). Thus that one can write anything not related and call it a review with impunity is total B.S. another hug to you,
|
|
HolyMoly
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin
Joined: April 01 2009
Location: Atlanta
Status: Offline
Points: 26138
|
Posted: January 23 2015 at 07:54 |
Formalized "criticism" of artistic pursuits in general is an odd
pastime, when I think about it. Part of me knows that their purpose is
to inform the reader of the reviewers considered assessment of the
"value" of the work, in the hopes that the reader will have a similar
point of view (making it a persuasive piece of writing, in essence).
But
then another part of me also knows that art and music are really above
and beyond objective criticism (apart from a purely technical
description of the music), and that no two people can hear an album the
same way (kind of what Walton Street is saying above), so then the
purpose of the review is primarily to entertain rather than inform. And
if the purpose is to entertain, then there is some "value" in a piece
which harshly criticizes a piece of art - because for some people, that
kind of thing is fun to read. But in doing this, one must also be
sensitive to the parties involved. And in the case of a music review,
the artist who made the album is most definitely involved.
I
always tell myself that whatever I publish on the internet could very
well be read by the subjects of my review, and I will have to answer to
whatever I write. This doesn't mean sugar-coating everything, but it
does mean using tact - and if you make a bold claim, be sure you're
ready to back it up. We are all responsible for what we do and say. In
the internet world, it's easy to forget that, as we all hide behind
masks and sometimes think we can do or say anything without any
consequences. Those are the kind of environments I try to avoid on the
internet, because then it resembles actual human interaction less and
less, and I'm just not into that. Some are.
Conclusion - take
ownership of your reviews. Say good things, say bad things, but be
prepared to back it up, and use a level of tact befitting actual human
intercourse discourse.
|
My other avatar is a Porsche
It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle if it is lightly greased.
-Kehlog Albran
|
|
Walton Street
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 24 2014
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 872
|
Posted: January 23 2015 at 07:56 |
Kati wrote:
Walton Street wrote:
well the short answer is yes .. especially when it comes to factual errors. but aren't irresponsible reviews judged already - by the very virtue that people will publically disagree with them? are you talking about in general, or just on this site? |
Walton Street, I am talking in general, the two examples I gave above happened to be on here, however many prog sites deal with this SAME issue, not only P.A. Having bad written reviews with no content also is not fair to the reviewers who actual do care about what they write both positive and also negative views (both are necessary as it creates some kind of balance). Thus that one can write anything not related and call it a review with impunity is total B.S. another hug to you, |
I personally know someone that gave a hugely popular movie the worst review ever because he really wanted to see a different press screening so it put him in a bad mood. there in a nutshell is the difficulty with reviewing anything ... the human element. To get any pertinent information out of a review you have to understand and know the reviewer so that you can decipher their language. Reviewers are just as exposed as the art maker .. and subject to the same level of criticism. It just boils down to 'one person's opinion' Bad reviewers get sorted out soon enough and their opinions are discarded.
|
"I know one thing: that I know nothing"
- SpongeBob Socrates
|
|
Walton Street
Forum Senior Member
Joined: November 24 2014
Location: Canada
Status: Offline
Points: 872
|
Posted: January 23 2015 at 07:57 |
HolyMoly wrote:
Formalized "criticism" of artistic pursuits in general is an odd
pastime, when I think about it. Part of me knows that their purpose is
to inform the reader of the reviewers considered assessment of the
"value" of the work, in the hopes that the reader will have a similar
point of view (making it a persuasive piece of writing, in essence).
But
then another part of me also knows that art and music are really above
and beyond objective criticism (apart from a purely technical
description of the music), and that no two people can hear an album the
same way (kind of what Walton Street is saying above), so then the
purpose of the review is primarily to entertain rather than inform. And
if the purpose is to entertain, then there is some "value" in a piece
which harshly criticizes a piece of art - because for some people, that
kind of thing is fun to read. But in doing this, one must also be
sensitive to the parties involved. And in the case of a music review,
the artist who made the album is most definitely involved.
I
always tell myself that whatever I publish on the internet could very
well be read by the subjects of my review, and I will have to answer to
whatever I write. This doesn't mean sugar-coating everything, but it
does mean using tact - and if you make a bold claim, be sure you're
ready to back it up. We are all responsible for what we do and say. In
the internet world, it's easy to forget that, as we all hide behind
masks and sometimes think we can do or say anything without any
consequences. Those are the kind of environments I try to avoid on the
internet, because then it resembles actual human interaction less and
less, and I'm just not into that. Some are.
Conclusion - take
ownership of your reviews. Say good things, say bad things, but be
prepared to back it up, and use a level of tact befitting actual human
intercourse discourse.
|
that was exactly my approach .. couldn't put it better if I tried.
|
"I know one thing: that I know nothing"
- SpongeBob Socrates
|
|