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Dick Heath
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Jazz-Rock Specialist
Joined: April 19 2004
Location: England
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Points: 12812
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Topic: Reviews: I think we are doing well! Posted: April 30 2004 at 06:05 |
As a member of less than a few weeks, I would like to thank the organisers of this website, and especially its contributors for developing a great source of information on progressive music. In particular, the album reviews are shaping up fantastically.
Too often you can pick up a magazine, and read an negative rock review, which turns you off buying the album. If by accident you heard the album later, and you may discover that critic heard the record with his head half way up his fundament, so you will get angry for being mislead. Here on Progarchives, there is a developing cross-section of opinion provided in reviews - it is what the new listener with an enquiring mind needs if unaware of any band's music. A good recent example are the reviews generated for Spocks Beard's "Snow" - they range from (to paraphrase) 'the best thing since slice bread' to 'so what'. While I disagree with some opinions, I fully respect the liberty of ideas for those opinions to be expressed. It is up to the new boy or girl, to make his or her mind up, whether this an album for them - and the information to make a considered choice is slowly being provided. However, those reviews which are no more than 20 words long, saying little more than "Great" or "Bad", are not the greatest of help in such decision making. So a plea: a more information, for instance some cross references to other bands similar in style - of course if the band sounds unique, please let me know!
Finally, back to Spocks Beard "Snow". I'm curious to know why there is polarisation in the reviews (and obvious in other reviews too). Is this:
- an age thing, something to do with experience, i.e. been there, done this (yes, even got the teeshirt): so either more of the same (that's me on a rare occasion, as with Yes/Starcastle) or I would rather go to pastures new;
- a difference between those who like soft rock as opposed to hard rock or vice versa;
- something to do with those who prefer something vaguely familiar as opposed to those looking for something spanking new;
- or what ?
A plea. This question is about what different music fans are looking for in their music, so please leave the specific pro and cons of any one band's music out of this discussion (put it in a review).
Edited by Dick Heath
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Dan Bobrowski
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Posted: April 30 2004 at 11:23 |
With modern PROG, you have to put away the "sounds like......" comparisons, to a degree. To be considered "PROG" these bands have to reflect back to their sources of inspiration. Maybe you can reasons that the artist is merely piecing together bits of other bands and has zero creativity, much like RAP stealing samples of riffs to write bad poetry over. But maybe, maybe, an artist can take all he's learned from years of listening to Genesis, ELP, Yes, GG and whoever and be inspired by it.
Dick, you are a Holdsworth fan. Do you feel all these guitarist who sound like Holdsy are strictly derivitive or are they paying homage to the master and playing what they learned from him and injecting their own ideas?
I saw Snow as Neal Morse's attempt to compile all his influences and create an opus. Sure it's not an original idea, but what is? Give Snow it's do on it's own merit.
It is "nearly" impossible for any of todays musicians to NOT be derivitive of the forefathers. The 70's proggers took their instruments to the extreme, todays can only stretch the envelop. Can it be broken? Who knows.
As far as what the differences are between fans? There are so many variations. Musical tastes differ dramatically. Some people don't believe the 70's have ended and refuse to taste the fruit of latter generations. Some people think, if it doesn't rock out at 160 bpm it's "boring." I, for one, don't care for "hair metal" vocals. I think Dream Theater is made up of some great musicians, but their singer makes me cringe. Maybe it's my old ears.
But the search continues..... I'm always open to new sounds. That is why the MP3's here make this site the best. I've purchased numerous CD's because I liked what I heard.
The reviews? I read them when I research. The one liners I disregard. The are about 5 or 6 reviewers I trust. If they say it's good, it's good enough for me. I think the mainstream guy, like me, enjoys just having a place to "pretend" to know wat he's talking about. It's cool to see your words, with your name attached, posted at a web site. It makes your feel like your comments actually means something and someone may even read it and be influenced by it.
Thanks Max, Ian and all Prog Archives brass.
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Fitzcarraldo
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Posted: April 30 2004 at 11:26 |
Dick, I think you have raised a couple of interesting points.
I too would like reviewers to say more than just "great", "masterpiece", "mierda" (it's there!) or whatever. But I also would prefer not to read one huge paragraph, so would also suggest that reviewers keep their reviews to a reasonable length.
Regarding your point about the large difference of opinion of reviewers for some albums, I had also wondered about the reasons for the large discrepanicies. I guess the only real way of finding out would be for reviewers to fill in a Web form with all sorts of personal statistics and then for these to be analysed, which I can't see as being practical (or acceptable to many). I'm sure all of the reasons you list are factors for different people.
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Dick Heath
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Jazz-Rock Specialist
Joined: April 19 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 12812
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Posted: April 30 2004 at 15:12 |
Danbo and
Fitzcarraldo
Thanks for your
positive thoughts (and more questions).
With
modern PROG, you have to put away the "sounds like......"
comparisons, to a degree. To be considered "PROG" these bands have to
reflect back to their sources of inspiration. Maybe you can reasons that the
artist is merely piecing together bits of other bands and has zero creativity,
much like RAP stealing samples of riffs to write bad poetry over. But maybe,
maybe, an artist can take all he's learned from years of listening to Genesis,
ELP, Yes, GG and whoever and be inspired by it.
Pete Townshend
said in a documentary of British TV in the early 90's that rock had only so
many variations and in his opinion, musicians had done the lot there were no
more variations. Over time I've come to agree, although musical technology
(especially the PC) does give rise to the possibility of doing the old
materials with new effects - and if the musician is lucky it may sound new.
Personally I haven't been a fan of drum'n'bass or rap or house music, but
have a more relaxed view about it when melded with some rock or some jazz. In
particular, I'm really hooked by the nu.fusion or nu.jazz movement, without
leaving my loved jazz rock. But jazz rock , can sound very tired (especially
that aimed at the musak/smooth jazz marketplace and radio station). However,
there has been some revitalisation with the hybrid of metal
progressive with guitar jazz rock (see my recent post on Unicorn Records output
in the last few years). Have you also heard (former Megadeth guitarist) Chris
Poland's Ohm album released last year - jazz rhythm section (drum and bass)
pretty straight rock shredding on guitar - but it sounds good, fresh jazz
rock....?
Dick, you
are a Holdsworth fan. Do you feel all these guitarist who sound like Holdsy are
strictly derivitive or are they paying homage to the master and playing
what they learned from him and injecting their own ideas?
I believe
Holdsworth has developed a unique style, part of which (i.e. the legato) came
about because guitar technology/effects were introduced that permitted
that form of sustain, (I'm sure the only person to use electric guitar
legato before AH, was Harvey Mandel - listen to "Shengrenade"
- but it is very different playing style). I enjoy other Holdsworthian
guitarists, whether it is the multi-talented Francis Dunnery who can be found
throwing few bars a la Holdsworth into an It Bites solo (check out "Live
In Montreux") right through to the sophistication of Austrian Alex
Mahacek, who would give you the impression of being Holdsworth playing with the
Mothers Of Invention (i.e. on "Featuring Ourselves"). But
sometimes they fight back!!! Scott McGill's manager had a strop with me for
daring to write publically McGill was Holdsworthian - I didn't say I
disliked his music - I heard UK influences in Finneus Gauge. If
I think about it, I could put together a list of 12 or so guitarists clearly
influenced by Holdworth - but none of them sound exactly the same,
the majority are honest and say they are influence by AH. I find that
guitar sound exciting, (remember until recently Holdsworth has severely
rationed us), and I can't get enough of it. So influenced yes,
but doing their own thing in what I think is difficult music. Homage in their
ways. However, Holdsworth has said he gets peed by the imitators -
but isn't imitation the height of flattery?
I saw Snow
as Neal Morse's attempt to compile all his influences and create an opus. Sure
it's not an original idea, but what is? Give Snow it's do on it's own
merit.
I like chunks
of Spocks Beard (and the whole of "Kindness"), because they remind me
of Genesis, Yes, Gentle Giant to name but three. I do get on my high horse,
when fans seem not to be aware that some of this ground has been trod before.
It is like Darkness fans (18 to 21??) being unaware of how much of
Queen is in the is band. But perhaps I'm asking too much for music radio
to provide a better service by delving into their archives occasionally and
playing some of the originators of these sounds, to remind folks of a broad and
deep heritage? BTW didn't Spocks Beard in part ,come out of the West Coast
Genesis tribute band, Giraffe?
It is
"nearly" impossible for any of todays musicians to NOT be derivitive
of the forefathers. The 70's proggers took their instruments to the
extreme, todays can only stretch the envelop. Can it be broken? Who knows.
They have to
be something special, and/or spot an area of music, that was quickly passed
through by the origin prog band. (I think a number of early 70's jazz rock
groups did this; buzzing with great new ideas but only having time for one
album and one tour before radically shifting to something else).
But I
also would prefer not to read one huge paragraph, so would also
suggest that reviewers keep their reviews to a reasonable length.
I admit to
Danbo's point about the ego think and see things in prints, and perhaps you
might influence somebody else (but I'm a university teacher and would be called
a failure if I didn't in my day job). I know I'm guilty of producing one
huge paragraph - I can assure you my reviews leave here in a number of
small paragraphs but end up agglomerated. I've been a round a long time, (and
call it a combination of experience and arrogance), but there is some
self-compulsion to correct errors of fact I've seen in other reviews for
albums. I've read a lot on the subject. In some instances, I've be fortunate
and talked to the artists involved and know firsthand what they intended. For
instance, check out my review of Mastermind's "Excelsior!". I've
maintained some long correspondence with Bill Berends its leader and guitarist
- he also writes on the Fusenet website. He long ago confirmed this was
the band's Mahavishnu Orchestra album. I feel reviewers who bring in analogies
with ELP while missing those with MO, are missing the artist's
point. Therefore somebody checking out Mastermind for the first time,
ought have more of the truth. This website is intended to be an information
source, so it should be as accurate as possible.
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Certif1ed
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Joined: April 08 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
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Posted: April 30 2004 at 15:55 |
Pete Townshend said in a documentary of British TV in the early 90's that rock had only so many variations and in his opinion, musicians had done the lot there were no more variations. Over time I've come to agree, although musical technology (especially the PC) does give rise to the possibility of doing the old materials with new effects - and if the musician is lucky it may sound new.
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Sorry, but that statement makes my blood boil!!! I've heard it so many times - and before the 1990's - and it was rubbish then!!! You might as well argue that, since Bach wrote in every key available, Bach made composers run out of notes to use. However, Bach never went to India or China, TTBOMK.
Some drum 'n' bass is amazing - I'm particularly keen on LTJ Bukem, Aphrodite and Roni Size/Reprazent. And what about all that amazing dance music in the late 1990s - leading up to Trance. For me, that was the "Prog" of the late 1990s - OK, trance quickly got formulaic, but Chicane, Paul van Dyke and Delerium came up with some great compositions, and some of the mix compilations that were going around - particularly in 1997 - were amazing. And what about Radiohead and that AWESOME live set at Glastonbury the same year? Radiohead are anything but formulaic - it's quite hard to pin down all their influences.
Everyone is influenced by someone else, to some extent, and music develops over centuries, not weeks, months or even years.
/end blood boiling
I also disagree that there is a lot of Queen in The Darkness. I've seen those guys live, and they rock - but the similarities with Queen begin and end with the leotards, silly high voices and some of the guitar techniques. Mercury was a far more talented (trained) vocalist and pianist, May was an amazingly inventive guitarist, and the other two were OK... There's lots of 80's hair bands in the Darkness, the strongest influences being Def Leppard, Spinal Tap and the Cure.
I haven't been able to figure out how to stop the text from ending up as one big chunk on the reviews page - presumably there is a way, coz I agree on that point.
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Peter
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Posted: April 30 2004 at 16:49 |
^ Re paragraphing, I don't know if this works for non-Archive reviewers, but I put my stuff in paragraphs by hitting "enter" twice at the end of a paragraph. Official reviewers can log on and paragraph their existing reviews this way.
Re differences in taste, that is to be expected, but if you are reviewing a type of music you really don't care for, you should indicate this, or review something you can be more objective toward, IMO.
Re having "inside information" on an album, that is great when you possess it, but bear in mind that most of us are hobbyists, and not professional critics, and therefore have no access to the musicians. (Still, I believe that one should be able to express an opinion on an album without necessarily knowing how or why it was made.)
Re "sounds like" comparisions, I think that these can be valuable. If I tell you that a new band sounds (to me) a lot like classic Yes, you can then say either "Great! I like old Yes," or "Yuck, I hate that stuff!" In my biography (as well as in the biogs of many other Archives reviewers) I give my DOB, as well as a list of my favourite groups and albums. Anyone who reads my reviews can read this information, and decide if my taste in music is similar to theirs, or not. If they hate the stuff that I love, it stands to reason that they shouldn't buy albums based upon my recommendations!
Finally, there are many free MP3 song downloads here, which enable the potential buyer to check out some of the more popular acts before parting with any cash. If you hate an album that was well received here (as with a recent review of Porcupine Tree's "Lightbulb Sun," where the guy says he wanted to sell the disc, as he hated it) I have to ask: Did you listen to the download, Mr. Complainer? Did you read the reviewers' biogs and other reviews to see if their tastes were compatible with your own?
Reviews here are the opinions of unique and fallible humans, not the unerring "carved in stone" TRUTH delivered by some sort of all-knowing being that can read your mind!
Edited by Peter Rideout
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"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock? Come to my arms, my beamish boy! O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!' He chortled in his joy.
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Dan Bobrowski
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Points: 5243
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Posted: April 30 2004 at 17:41 |
Peter Rideout wrote:
Re "sounds like" comparisions, I think that these can be valuable. If I tell you that a new band sounds (to me) a lot like classic Yes, you can then say either "Great! I like old Yes," or "Yuck, I hate that stuff!" |
I agree with you when using the reasoning you point out, which is different than what I meant. Some reviewers trash a newer band BECAUSE they sound like..... It's pretty hard to not "sound like" someone. Don't dismiss a band simply because they play with their influences on their sleeve. That is what I meant.
Peace.
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Peter
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Posted: April 30 2004 at 18:32 |
danbo wrote:
Peter Rideout wrote:
Re "sounds like" comparisions, I think that these can be valuable. If I tell you that a new band sounds (to me) a lot like classic Yes, you can then say either "Great! I like old Yes," or "Yuck, I hate that stuff!" |
I agree with you when using the reasoning you point out, which is different than what I meant. Some reviewers trash a newer band BECAUSE they sound like..... It's pretty hard to not "sound like" someone. Don't dismiss a band simply because they play with their influences on their sleeve. That is what I meant.
Peace.
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Right on, Danbo!
I fully agree with that sentiment!
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"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock? Come to my arms, my beamish boy! O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!' He chortled in his joy.
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Dick Heath
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Jazz-Rock Specialist
Joined: April 19 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 12812
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Posted: April 30 2004 at 18:51 |
Re having "inside information" on an album, that is great when you possess it, but bear in mind that most of us are hobbyists, and not professional critics, and therefore have no access to the musicians.
I am an amateur, this is my hobby - partly because I love the
music and have since the mid 60's, and partly because this is
very different from my day job providing some sort of counter balance,
as a university lecturer teaching engineering (and I must thank my wife
for the support to do my hobby. What is common both to the hobby and
the day job, is providing understanding and accuracy. As Danbo
wrote there is an ego thing, but I want to communicate and tell folks
about some of the great music they might be missing. It is a
personal challenge to write an arts review when I'm more used to
writing scientific research papers - but I'm never satisfied with my
standards.
There are indeed musicians who are accessible and communicate with
their fans - one example: I went to see Larry Coryell's revamped 11th
House in London about 5 years ago and the band were in the bar talking
with their audience either side of the show - Jeff Berlin gave me 20
minutes of his time talking early Bruford - but now I won't
name drop anymore.
Originally, I'll admit I didn't expect one of my heroes to
respond or even make the first contact, until it happened. It happened
a couples time and then my confidence grew to approach others and they
talk or write - this has been true, in particular in the jazz rock
world. However, it has taken near 20 years for me to get to
this point - doing radio show once a week (amateur) during term
time, helping.
Sorry,
but that statement makes my blood boil!!! I've heard it so many times -
and before the 1990's - and it was rubbish then!!!
With some reflection, I'll draw back slightly from my statement
agreeing with Townshend. However, in certain parts of the music
industry, this does appears very true. In trying to pay for my reissued
Lifetime album or whatever in my local record shop, there are 30 others
clamouring to buy what they heard from the local radio music station's
play list - very safe formulaeic music, seemingly
unchanged since the early 80's (bar the better recording techniques) .
Didn't Coca Cola advertisers prove something of this 25 years
ago, by identifying a chord or particular groups of notes to base their
ad music to - and then sold in tens of millions of copies of the
single to the world (i.e. I Would Like To Teach The World To Sing). And
what are these manufactured boy or girl bands singing -- it seems to
me music we have heard before? But your example of
Radiohead, and relatively few other groups in the public eye, have
indeed provided changes - but is this less about chord changes rather
than song structures/ arrangements, lyrics for the modern
day? And then in Townshend himself you might wonder whether he
still held this idea; if you check out the 5 CD "Lifehouse Project",
there is a side of live recordings made at the end of the nineties -
"Who Are You" and "Baba O'Reilly" are deconstructed and rebuilt as 1999
models so the only real Who element left, is Townshend himself.
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Fitzcarraldo
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Posted: April 30 2004 at 19:26 |
"Now I've heard there was a secret chord That David played, and it pleased the Lord But you don't really care for music, do you? It goes like this The fourth, the fifth The minor fall, the major lift The baffled king composing Hallelujah"
Leonard Cohen
I remember listening some years back to a radio interview with Pete Waterman (Stock, Aitken and Waterman) about writing pop hits, when he said that there are safe note sequences to put in pop songs that the human brain is almost programmed to like. Apparently the song I'll Always Love You (Whitney Houston) had this 'magic sequence'. I think the interview was in a news report about a neighbour who had resorted to violence when someone next door played that song incessantly.
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Certif1ed
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Posted: May 01 2004 at 01:27 |
I'd never trust anything said by anyone who was a member of The Who - after all, one of them said, about Jimmy Page's project at the time, that the music would "go down like a lead baloon".
The basic chord sequence, I - IV - V - I has been in recorded use since Western music graduated out of the monastaries. Proabably it was the basis of folk music for centuries before.
We could argue that nothing's really changed since then - any attempts at being different have been short-lived or stuck around only in underground circles.
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Fitzcarraldo
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Posted: May 01 2004 at 04:16 |
Hang on, Certif1ied, back when your blood was boiling weren't you arguing the opposite?
There are certainly a lot of cover versions these days.
Mind you, in another thread I've raised the issue about prog bands ripping off the Classics, i.e. ...cover versions!
On a serious note, I am keenly looking around for top quality prog music from new bands (in fact, drop the "prog") and am struggling. I guess it must be me and/or age, but I very rarely hear a new band or singer these days that really makes me sit up. Funnily enough, often when I hear something I like which I have not heard before, it turns out to be from decades ago. Again, maybe it's an age-related thing but I have niggling doubts. Perhaps there's a little truth in Townsend's prognostication (pun intended).
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Dick Heath
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Joined: April 19 2004
Location: England
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Posted: May 01 2004 at 08:05 |
Quote: I'd never trust anything said by anyone who was a member of The Who -
after all, one of them said, about Jimmy Page's project at the time,
that the music would "go down like a lead balloon"
Keith Moon was involved in the early days of all that, playing on the
precursor to Led Zeppelin, Jeff Beck's "Truth" - read the liner
notes for the twoforone CD "Truth/Beckola". Beck was not best pleased
when Jim Page played some of the early LZ demos. When coherent (and he
is most of the time nowadays), Townshend makes quite a bit of
sense. Moon was high most of the time, and one of the reason's Robert
Wyatt doesn't drum as he did with Machine, but has done
some very original work since the mid 70's.
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Certif1ed
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Posted: May 01 2004 at 13:01 |
Fitzcarraldo wrote:
Hang on, Certif1ied, back when your blood was boiling weren't you arguing the opposite?
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Nope. Not at all.
In the first case I was saying that it is nonsense to say that rock only has so many variations. I present as exhibits A-H, A. Rock'n'Roll, B. FM Rock, C. Heavy Metal, D. Thrash Metal, E. The Beatles, F. The Stones, G. Radiohead and H. Prog.
C'mon and hit me that there are tons of variations in the loose groupings I've just made - you will help strengthen my case!
In the second, I intimated that one chord sequence in particular dominated Western music. This is merely a building block from which most writers of music start - very few jump straight in and write anything else.
In all the types of music listed above, only Rock'n'Roll is saturated with that progression. In all other types listed, artists push beyond the basics to produce something new and identifiable as a different style.
...and, of course, there are many, many more types of music, most of which use those building blocks.
Just 'coz Pete Townsend only ever used 3 chords doesn't mean everyone else does
You may as well argue that since most cars have 5 wheels and a door we can never progress beyond Henry Ford, or that since we make buildings out of bricks or stones that we can only design so many type of building.
Or that, since there are only so many words in the English language, Shakespeare has pretty much sewn the literature market up.
All Bocks
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