Ratings of Bruce Springsteen & Radiohead albums |
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jamesbaldwin
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 25 2015 Location: Milano Status: Offline Points: 5986 |
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@Stressed Cheese
Uh I can't agree with much of what you write, and that you consider as obvious things ("it is what it is"), from there comes the problem in answering you.
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Amos Goldberg (professor of Genocide Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem): Yes, it's genocide. It's so difficult and painful to admit it, but we can no longer avoid this conclusion.
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jamesbaldwin
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 25 2015 Location: Milano Status: Offline Points: 5986 |
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@Greg:
"229: Chico Buarque - Construção 4.03 / 6,634 ratings/ 76 reviews 230: Led Zeppelin - s/t: 3.92, 33,054 ratings, 603603 331: Neil Young - Harvest: 3.98 / 18,328 ratings / 603 reviews Led Zep IV is considerably higher rated, with 4.09 / 5.0 from 41,923 ratings and higher ranked at 64, but I am just using the first as an example when you see three in a row with such different numbers of ratings. That's a huge discrepancy in the numbers or ratings. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, the numbers are something else. Which of these three is actually the most appreciated? I would say Led Zeppelin because it has the most appreciators even if it has a .11 lower rating than Chico's album." Greg, I know very well Led Zeppelin, I never listened to Chico Buarque. Perhaps, if I listened carefully to it, I might like it better than Led Zeppelin. Or maybe less. Therefore, I would not really say that Led Zeppelin has more appreciators than Buarque, I would only say that he is better known in the north-western world, where most of RYM's users reside, and therefore, being more listened to, it has more ratings. The number of ratings, in other words, has very little to do with an album's score. The Quality Score can go up or down by making the number of listeners the same for each album. And this is the reason why, as I have already written, to obtain a coherent ranking of quality (beauty) of the music, it is necessary to make sure that all the voters have listened to all the nominated albums, as happens in film or song festivals. Edited by jamesbaldwin - June 05 2023 at 15:32 |
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Amos Goldberg (professor of Genocide Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem): Yes, it's genocide. It's so difficult and painful to admit it, but we can no longer avoid this conclusion.
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Stressed Cheese
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 16 2022 Location: The Netherlands Status: Offline Points: 540 |
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If you can't agree with what I write, I'd appreciate it if you'd point out which of the points I made are disagreeable to you, and I'd be interesting in hearing your perspective on them. I don't post here to just hear myself talk out of my ass for paragraphs, I'd be curious to see why you disagree. I've explained the difference between algorithms and rating systems, and tried to put into words why I think RYM is valuable. You surely can put into words what's wrong with my reasoning. You've basically posted that Ondarock chart with nothing more to comment on it than "it seems well done". Again, I'm not trying to argue against getting any value from lists like that. But they don't serve the same purpose.
Nobody is mandated to reply to my usually too-long posts if they don't feel like it, but I've responded to things you posted in here multiple times and every time your replies have basically come down to a simple "no". That makes me feel a little silly for typing so much, lol.
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Stressed Cheese
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 16 2022 Location: The Netherlands Status: Offline Points: 540 |
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That might work for very specific niches, but if you mix audiences too much, that won't result in a fair fight. Imagine if, in order for my Led Zep or King Crimson ratings to count for a chart like this, I'd also be forced to rate the album "Scaring the Hoes". I'd rate that low because it's not my kind of music. That means the less a genre is appreciated by people, the more people would give those albums low ratings. RYM ratings are based on how much people who fall into the audience of an album like them. Even for PA - why should someone who isn't into VdGG be discounted on their ratings for Yes?
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dr wu23
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 22 2010 Location: Indiana Status: Offline Points: 20623 |
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Well...based on my own opinions/taste....don't care what RYM thinks....and I assumed thats what the op was interested in; I like both about the same in that there are 2or 3 lps by both artists I like and the rest I can take or leave.
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One does nothing yet nothing is left undone.
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jamesbaldwin
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 25 2015 Location: Milano Status: Offline Points: 5986 |
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@Stressed Cheese
No problem with you. Having written a lot (me and you), and making various observations that start from opposing assumptions, I would like to answer you in an orderly way, and this takes time.
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Amos Goldberg (professor of Genocide Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem): Yes, it's genocide. It's so difficult and painful to admit it, but we can no longer avoid this conclusion.
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jamesbaldwin
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 25 2015 Location: Milano Status: Offline Points: 5986 |
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In fact I believe, as I have written many times, that rankings made by an editorial team of people are much more valid than those made by a community to established the value (the beauty) of the music albums. When I joined PA, for 2-3 years I just read the forum and listened to a lot of albums I didn't know about or that were in the Top 200. Then, I started posting when I felt I was sufficiently knowledgeable on the subject 'prog'. Now, as a reviewer, I am writing the Top 100 reviews. My goal is precisely to write reviews of the best albums in each genre. Obviously I will like some genres more than others, but I believe that an experienced music connoisseur (I think I am sufficiently knowledgeable about music up to the year 2000, but there are plenty of forum members here in PA who are much more knowledgeable than I am) is capable of making balanced judgments about albums in each genre. When you listen to a lot of music, you can no longer be a fan of a specific artist or genre. A fan listens to a few artists, always the same albums, always the same genre (or a few genres). If you aim to know the prog, you will also listen to the albums that inspire you the least, if you see that they are praised by many forum members you respect. For example, I have seen that there are three genres of heavy metal prog here in PA: I have made an effort to listen to most of the best rated albums, and to inform myself about that bands and genres. Now I believe I can make a considered judgement. So, just as I do reviews on Van der Graaf, whom I greatly respect as a band, I also do reviews on Yes and Dream Theater. I couldn't listen to Yes when I was 20 years old, because I was mainly a heartland rock fan, and I couldn't stand Anderson's voice, but with time, listening again to Yes in my 40s, I can say that I really appreciate them. I put 5 stars to Relayer. They are not in my Top 20 and maybe not even in my Top 50. But many other artists I couldn't stand at 20 are now in my Top 20. I have tried to have a musical education. I also believe, unlike you, that the best prog records are those appreciated by lovers of traditional rock music, or roots rock, or heartland rock, or jazz, in short, by lovers of non-prog music. Fans of prog which dont like easily other genres, they will tend to select as the best prog albums that have all the canons of prog, often in a pedantic way, whereas true art is to transcend a musical genre. Rock Bottom is appreciated by all the non-prog music connoisseurs I know. In fact, I consider it an absolute masterpiece of contemporary music, beyond any genre. Thick as a Brick hardly appeals to a non-prog listener. I, having joined RYM (I did so because I've heard a lot about it here on PA, otherwise I wouldn't have known of its existence), went to listen to that musical genius who occupies the number one position on the all-time chart, Kendrick Lamar (whose songs I had only heard distractedly). I did it carefully, read up on him, and finally gave my verdict (two stars). Disappointment, even though he has potential. Did I lower his rating? I'm glad: I think he is extremely overrated in RYM. We'll talk about him again in 20-30 years, we'll see what place he will have in the rankings. I don't spend a lot of time on RYM but if RYM can give me something, it's introducing me to unknown or almost unknown artists who occupy the top positions: if I have time, I will go and listen to them and rate them. Evaluating well Pink Floyd or Radiohead, which are already too highly represented in the charts in my opinion, is of little interest to me. If anything, I will go and give 5 stars to some U2 albums, poor guys. Edited by jamesbaldwin - June 05 2023 at 16:58 |
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Amos Goldberg (professor of Genocide Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem): Yes, it's genocide. It's so difficult and painful to admit it, but we can no longer avoid this conclusion.
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35878 |
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I just meant something that doesn't need saying, that Led Zep has more appreciators at RYM, not talking quality (that has not been my focus, my focus has been in trying to interpret the numbers and what one can infer from them). I just find it interesting that sequentially ranked albums have such variance in numbers of ratings while having similar average ratings, plus or minus .11, or .O6 out of 5. Okay, that can be considered a lot (liken it to the miniscule difference in time sometimes between three people in an race). We had been talking about appreciation, Led Zep has come into the conversation before, you felt a lack of appreciation or recongition as I recall for Neal Young (sorry if I now misinterpret you), but it is such a numbers game. The charts are really complex things, and when dealing with the kids of numbers they do, try to balance known-ness (number of ratings) and the perceived quality or appreciation of an album (average ratings). The numbers determine the ranking, but one can weight things differently to achieve at different rankings. M@x once changed the algorithm at PA and it resulted in very different rankings. There's more to the story when judging the cumulative appreciation index than just viewing the rankings.
And the number of ratings can have a huge affect on the ranking depending where. At PA, it makes a very big difference, and at a certain point having more ratings can hurt your ranking. It can be counterintuitive but mathematically sound.
Yeah, if you use some systems, but some systems don't work well for huge numbers of users raters. I'm not trying to make points about preference or what system is better, I'm submitting some of my observations of one specific system based on a very limited set. What is the better system depends on many factors, like obviously what you are trying to accomplish, what the data is meant to represent, how the data is taken etc.
Beauty is in the the beholder and therefore it depends on the individual is how I tend to think of beauty in art.. Some systems are better to find consensus. That can be a better approach when trying to come up with a best of list, and I shared my thoughts on that earlier in the thread. Now I still have major issues with groups who listened to shortlists based on larger list which is itself limited yearly list because then I would think everyone should have listened to all albums, otherwise it's just a best of whatever albums were considered and listened to. I'm not a great admirer of best lists period, especially when it to arts that is so subjective. I don't take best list or ranking that seriously even though they can be a useful too, for me discovering music if I narrow my parameters, and still I might have to check out many myself before I find one that resonates with me. What matters to me most is if I like it, but if many others like the same, then it does become easier to find usually. So if by coherent ranking you simply a consensus based on an agreement of the qualities of a set that all are familiar with, then okay. I don't treat RYM's list as a list of quality despite the fact that I find plenty of good qualities in the music. I don't claim, and I hope I don't act like. my tastes are better than others. With what you quoted maybe this better expresses my interest, and offers insight on what I was trying to bring up. It's about getting that balance where they want it. To sum all of this up, I would rather focus on a quantitative analysis of RYM's charts than a qualitative analysis. I think when talking about RM's chart specifically that makes more logical sense if one is interested in logic.
Edited by Logan - June 05 2023 at 19:21 |
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Stressed Cheese
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 16 2022 Location: The Netherlands Status: Offline Points: 540 |
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Thanks for coming up with a more concrete respond. I'll try to do the same.
Ok, but why? Why would a list made by a small team be more "valid" than the opinions of thousands of listeners? And what is your definition of valid in this context?
Enjoyment of music, and thus rating an album, is subjective. I absolutely cannot stand screaming death metal vocals or blast beats, so how would I be able to review a death metal album that features them? What would the value of me reviewing or even rating an album like that be? Most people will simply not like all genres, and I don't see the point in devaluing their opinions. That doesn't reflect the opinions of real listeners anymore, that just reflects how accessible something is.
Sure, I could give VdGG or Magma another chance. Maybe I'll like them this time around. But what if I don't? I'm not going to review them then. Because if I did, I'd give them a low rating, which is a result of my tastes, not the quality of the album. That's not fair towards them.
Ok, but what if someone were to do this with a genre they don't like?
That's good, and I wish more people would do this instead of sticking to what they know (obviously that's not really the case for most posters here), but when I branch out and educate myself musically, I still run into the limits of my tastes. Those don't go away simply because I try to force myself to listen to something.
Are you normally appreciative of the kind of genres he operates in? Because I'm not. Would you still like me to review him? If so, what would the value of that be?
Doesn't that kind of go against your whole point? If you want to be fair and review everything that's highly ranked, even those you think are up too high, but would get a high rating from you, should be reviewed, then.
Edited by Stressed Cheese - June 06 2023 at 04:04 |
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Saperlipopette!
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 20 2010 Location: Tomorrowland Status: Online Points: 11654 |
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One thing I do know about RYM's algorhythm, is that in addition to
the rating distribution and the sheer amount of ratings -an album's rating trend
will have some influence... beyond the obvious fact that the rating of
an album will be affected by it. A rising trend will be "awarded" and
vice versa. I don't know the details, and for all I know maybe those
Track rating sets are included in one way or another as well. As an example here's The Residents Eskimo: |
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Lewian
Prog Reviewer Joined: August 09 2015 Location: Italy Status: Online Points: 14733 |
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One possibility regarding the simple number of ratings in RYM is that generally more ratings translate into a higher score (I assume the will somehow compute a score for each album from which to determine the ranking, and obviously generally higher ratings will mean higher score), but in a very nonlinear way, meaning that a difference between 20 and 100 ratings makes a huge difference but a difference between 5,000 and 30,000 does very little. This would make some sense to me as it's saying that there needs to be a certain strong ratings basis to appear high in rankings, but if that is reached many further ratings don't say much about "high rankability" anymore. This will of course interact with any other information they use, obviously average rating or even the whole distribution, connection and maybe weighting of ratings for various reasons such as writing reviews or very prolific rating, trends over time in both number and value of ratings, discounting suspicious raters etc. By the way, to everybody who says "ranking X is more valid than ranking Y" - what is your definition of valid? I somehow suspect that there is some circularity in this, like "RYM has so many raters that it must be valid because it has so many raters" or "proper expert rankings are more valid because these are proper experts". But actually a more scientific use of "validity" should refer to an outside criterion. I don't think there is such a thing, so I don't think any validity statement here says much really, which from my point of view obviously applies to the pro as well as to the against RYM "fraction" (that latter may just be Lorenzo ).
Edited by Lewian - June 06 2023 at 05:55 |
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jamesbaldwin
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 25 2015 Location: Milano Status: Offline Points: 5986 |
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I agree with Lewian. RYM ratings only tell us what RYM users think, which is certainly different from the average western user. I believe that RYM attracts a precise group (or groups) of music listeners. Definitely westerners, definitely not of a high average age, definitely fans of certain genres of music more than others. I think traditional rock (heartland, roots post-punk rock etc.) tends to be devalued, and in fact The Rolling Stones, The Who, Creedence, Reed, Young, Sprinsteen, Van Morrison, Waits, Cave, U2, Rem are absent from the top 100 charts of all time. I think the audience is more related to more modern alternative rock and certain rather famous bands (Lamar, Radiohead, Pink Floyd, King Crimson, Bowie, Black Sabbath, Joy Division etc); then, unpredictably, certain cult bands (My Bloody Valentine) also appear in very high positions (but many other cult bands, that some music critics and other forums put in the top places together with My Bloody Valentine, are on the contrary quite neglected: Tortoise, Husker Du, Pere Ubu Suicide, Morphine, Jesus and Mary Chain, The Dream Syndicate etc). As Saperlipopette wrote, some bands are devalued (he mentioned U2 and Coldplay). You write: as long as prog fans will review prog, metal fans will review metal etc you don't see how things can be distorted. Well, that's the sentence I quoted in my previous post when I wrote that I, unlike you, believe that the best judgement of prog is made by non-prog fans. However, U2 and Pink Floyd, given their popularity, will not only get reviews from those who love them, but from many who grew up listening to that music for generational reasons, and so, given that U2 don't go beyond 2552 place, and Pink Floyd are in the Top 100 with several albums, we have to draw two possible conclusions: 1) Pink Floyd are much better than U2, who evidently got too much success compared to their merits 2) U2 were voted by many who are not their fans, just because they are very famous. That is to say: there are in RYM relatively few fans of the U2 music genre and relatively many fans of the FLOYD music genre. One of the two hypotheses must be right. Both can also be right. Personally, I believe that the quality of all U2's albums up to Achtung Baby is high (after that it plummeted), and that they have had great musical growth. The same can be said for Pink Floyd, particularly from 1967 to Wish You Were (then the quality dropped but remained good until The Final Cut). So I consider U2 very underrated, devalued in RYM, and not only for The Joshua Tree at 2552. In their genres, U2 and Pink Floyd were great artists. In my opinion, Pink Floyd with their early albums contributed more to the evolution of rock music than U2. But that would be another matter. The Who, with Tommy, made rock history. If a RYM reviewer is interested in his musical education, he should study the history of the sixties, listen to Tommy and evaluate it. Could the critics make lists that deviate so much from the average person's tastes? More than RYM does? Yes. But, are we trying to create a 'community' here to have a 'statistical sample' of the average listener? The larger and more homogeneous the community is in terms of geographical distribution and age and genres preferences, the more statistically significant a sample it will be, but is this an ideal to seek? I generally think that the average listener, as well as the average reader, as well as the average movie goer will have tastes that are NOT the best in music art, literary art, film art. When I think of my country, Italy, much of the cinema that sells the most, much of the music that sells the most is very poorly appreciated on an artistic level. So, I very much hope that a music critic will make a different list from the average listener: in Italy, especially in southern Italy, the average listener only listens to melodic music in the style of the Sanremo Festival!!! So, I criticize the RYM Chart of all time, but try to imagine: 1) Madonna - Loke a virgin 2) Oasis - Morning Glory 3) Rod Stewart 4) Bee Gees 5) Tiziano Ferro 6) Oasis - Stand 7) Oasis - Definitivle.... If the firsts 7 positions were these... Would you still got interest in RYM? I would regret the current RYM.
Edited by jamesbaldwin - June 06 2023 at 06:43 |
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Amos Goldberg (professor of Genocide Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem): Yes, it's genocide. It's so difficult and painful to admit it, but we can no longer avoid this conclusion.
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Saperlipopette!
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 20 2010 Location: Tomorrowland Status: Online Points: 11654 |
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Lewian
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^ That's all fair enough, but saying "It is what it is and I like it for that" is very different from making a supposedly (more) objective validity claim. By the way, regarding how "representative" RYM raters are for any bigger group than themselves, all we really can do is speculate. There are many which is fair enough, but that doesn't necessarily make them a valid (!) sample of any bigger group. In the last German elections, the SPD had 25.7%. Now if some subgroup of voters is selected by any means, there can be a very big group of people that all vote SPD! 25.7% of 50 million voters is still a lot. Polling companies who want to predict an election outcome will not just put up a website and whoever bothers to register can give their opinion. Self-recruitment of participants is known to often give very biased predictions. They will make an effort to reach people who are difficult to reach, and apply all kinds of correction techniques. Also they will start from a methodologically well defined stratified random sample, and correct if some people in the sample don't take part. There is much experience about how things go wrong if you don't do this. RYM does no such thing. Of course also the opposite claim, namely that RYM raters are specifically biased in certain directions is just speculation unless you actually have the data. In fact we don't really want RYM to be representative opinion research, as for our personal use some opinions are more valuable than others. On this basis we may well argue that RYM is pretty good (large number of people who really care with possibly certain biases that are somewhat well though not perfectly aligned to my personal tastes), or that it isn't, because many of the people there rate things too casually without paying enough attention, as Lorenzo seems to imply. Which is all well, but we're really only talking about personal tastes here (and be it personal taste regarding whose opinion we value, potentially beyond just our musical taste). Sorry, guys! Edited by Lewian - June 06 2023 at 07:19 |
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Stressed Cheese
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 16 2022 Location: The Netherlands Status: Offline Points: 540 |
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I really should be doing something more productive with my time instead of posting another chapter worth of ramblings...but I'm too invested now, lol
At the same time, I am also of the opinion that you'd need some kind of reasoning as to why a certain sample wouldn't be representative for the larger population. I did my BA thesis in psychology last year, and about 70% or so of participants were university students. But for our study, there wasn't any reason to assume that this would reflect poorly on the generalizability (within the western world, at least). RYM has a bit of a baked-in correction in that sense. Let's say that there aren't a lot of 60+ y/o people on the site. That means that the kind of music they tend to listen to might not get as many votes, but I don't see why it would necessarily lead to much lower ratings. Since it's more likely that music outside of RYM's userbase gets ignored (relatively) than panned. Because at the end of the day, most people will just rate stuff they already have an interest in, and won't go out of their way to rate stuff just because they hate it. But again I'll give you that validity isn't really a good term for this at all. I guess generalizability might be more accurate. Idk, but hopefully you get the point I'm trying to make and indulge me for a second. And again, RYM is what it is, in the sense that it's not perfect, and that it's trying to be a reflection of the here and now, of active listeners. And let me stress again that if people get something out of critic lists, that's fine with me. But I do strongly believe that RYM is the more accurate evalution of music, in the sense that it reflects the average person better than any curated list can.
First of all, I'm not really sure why you suddenly respond to this old post, when I took the effort to type up a resonse to a later post you made where I asked some very concrete questions. But ok.
I mean, I disagree with that. Again, it's not perfect, but it's as close to perfect as we can hope for, realistically. But if RYM tells us what (thousands of) RYM users think, surely a list made by a small group of critics will tell us something about an even smaller sample.
Top 100 of all time. That's 60+ years of music across all genres. To not fall into that extremely tiny fraction of all music made is NOT a sign of being devalued. A U2 album being in place 2552 or whatever it was still means it's in like the top 1% albums ever made. Is that supposed to be bad?
If they're into famous bands, then why do some famous bands score high (Floyd), and some low (U2). Also, you can go to any more obscure artist on RYM and see for yourself that they still recieve high rankings. Seriously, go on RYM for a bit and you'll see that fame doesn't correlate with higher ratings. Again, this has nothing to do with the supposed value or worth of RYM, this is just a misunderstanding of the website.
They're not devalued. They're just not seen to be as good as you think they are. U2 isn't as highly regarded as Pink Floyd, even outside RYM. Traditional rock isn't devalued at all, rock is by far the most common type of music in the top 10.000 (even if you go by just the higher ends of that), and a lot of that is rock from the 60's, 70's and 80's. Again, this is plain to see to anyone visiting the site.
Well, that makes ProgArchives one of the most worthless sites on the web. The fact of the matter is, most people listen to music that falls into their interests, and thus will review/rate music that falls into their interests. If you want people to review music outside of their interests, you'd have to create an all-new site for that I think (would honestly be interesting if such a site existed).
It's got more to do with the percentage of people who listen to X, who really like X. U2 concerts sold out like that, Pink Floyd concerts also sold out like that. But it's very possible there's just more people who like Floyd than U2, and thus their ratings are higher. That's not that hard to believe, in fact, it's kind of common sense to say that Pink Floyd is more highly regarded than U2.
That's fine, and then rate those albums highly. But that doesn't mean the average ratings aren't accurate.
It's a historically significant album, and I tend to make a point of listening to those, as long as they're in my areas of interest. But ultimately, people listen to music they want to listen to, it's something you do for fun. Not everybody is interested in educating themselves in music history. I'm still waiting for you to explain the value of someone evaluating an album they have absolutely no interesting it. Should I go around reviewing historically significant rap albums?
Why wouldn't that be ideal to ask? If you want a list that reflects the real world, why wouldn't you want that?
That's subjective. Best is subjective.
And that's exactly what RYM also does by having people literally rate things. It's not a popularity chart, it's a chart based on people's supposed quality of an album. Keep in mind that when something is very mainstream, more critical and "refined" people also get a taste of it, and will thus rate/review it. Hence why a lot of superhero movies, despite being box office successes, get low user ratings on Letterboxd or IMDB. if it was about mainstream tastes, wouldn't those mainstream tastes actually chart highly on RYM? They don't., so if anything, this should make you love RYM.
No, but this isn't what the top 7 is on RYM, so literally what's the point of this comparison? Again, you're arguing in favor of RYM now, so I'm getting a little confused here.
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Saperlipopette!
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 20 2010 Location: Tomorrowland Status: Online Points: 11654 |
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^^ (to Lewian) I just tried to explain my thoughs. "It is what it is and I like it for that" is
not how I would phraze it, because it's not what I believe to be true. I
don't think like you do. I don't doubt for a second that the collected
knowledge of a music community like RYM is of a greater value than 650
000 random people.
-To me it's a little like stating that
Bach is better than Limp Bizkit. Which I'll gladly do. Some may
disagree and guess I can't really prove that I am right and they
are wrong. But it won't stop me from believing it. Or knowing it,
really. So I'll continue thinking the way I do, without being able to
give you a fully satisfying explaination as to why. One can always be
met with a "yea but that's purely sujective". But it's not how I think.
Knowledge and experience is always a plus. I will give the opinions of a
knowledgable person greater weight than the inexperienced. Although
it's fully possible to agree with the latter and not the former. -I
can't really relate this to your German election comparizon. To be
honest I didn't really read it. It's too warm, and my head works kind of
slow.
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jamesbaldwin
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 25 2015 Location: Milano Status: Offline Points: 5986 |
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-----I have some doubts, if I think of the charts of all times. But overall, I think if we were to compare RYM's ranking to that of the "average citizen", RYM's (with all his defects) would probably be better.
I totally agree. And this is exactly why I believe that a serious and coherent ranking should be done with an editorial team that is committed to listening to a series of albums and evaluating them according to certain criteria, and not left to an algorithm of all the votes of people who perhaps they just vote for their favorites.
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Amos Goldberg (professor of Genocide Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem): Yes, it's genocide. It's so difficult and painful to admit it, but we can no longer avoid this conclusion.
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35878 |
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With all this talk, I registered at RYM again. I had an account years ago. My user name is LoganPA1 (same as I had for a youtube channel which I cannot access anymore). The Logan is for my PA username which is a reference to Logan's Run due to my propensity for run-on sentences. The PA is for Prog Archives, and the 1 is because I am number one (big The Prisoner fan).
I will start rating and reviewing some of my favourite things. I'm not interested in rating that which I don't like generally or from genres I don't appreciate. I don't think that rating albums from genres which I don't "get", am not that familiar with would be of value to myself or anyone. I value reviews and ratings more from people who can appreciate the idiom and are familiar with much related music. I do value the opinions on and the valuations of music, arts, sciences etc. from people who are well-versed in the subject matter/ genre/ field. I generally would rather a medical diagnosis from a medical doctor than an auto mechanic, and I generally would rather the opinion on the worth of, say, a hip-hop album coming from someone who appreciates and has explored plenty of hip-hop. And, not surprisingly, I value those who have similar tastes to mine. I don't care much about best lists unless they are best for me, and actually find ridiculous levels of focus on best lists, especially those that imply an unreasonable level of objectivity in the assessment. I have found it wonderful how well-rated so much music that I love is at RYM, and I have discovered so much great-for-me music through going through those charts (mostly custom fitted so maybe less surprising). It does attract many into quirky artsy music. I was listening to Kendrick Lamar's To Pimp a Butterfly earlier, which I do find to be a very interesting and eclectic album, and at times I found myself comparing it to black midi, which is popular at RYM. It took me a while to really appreciate black midi but I now love various albums -- Cavalcade is still my favourite. I could well see a big overlap in the audiences despite the differences. Like many, I prefer to rate that which I like, and it is Rate My Music, which implies to me rating the music from my collection and the music I like rather than evaluating the music others like. Rate Another's Music (RAM) would be cool. The Tagline could be RAM, for the music other's wish to RAM down your throat. I have tried to make topics like that at this forum, but they did not work as well as I hoped they would. A lot of PA users are a very tough crowd. ;) |
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Lewian
Prog Reviewer Joined: August 09 2015 Location: Italy Status: Online Points: 14733 |
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See, I'm fine with that, and I even agree. But I also have thought (and read and discussed and listened) too much about objectivity to think that it could apply to such stuff. Our points of view can still make sense and be attractive to others if we acknowledge that they're just our points of view. I mean, if your point of view is convincing enough as it is, you don't need to claim that it's more than just your point of view to give it more authority.
Edited by Lewian - June 06 2023 at 16:21 |
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Saperlipopette!
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 20 2010 Location: Tomorrowland Status: Online Points: 11654 |
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^ Well this isn't primarely about me but the biggest music community on internet. No other place elsewhere will you come closer to locating info and evaluations of all the music that has ever been released*. But personally, all my life has taught me that this relativist way of thinking that everything is subjective and it's all just a point of view - isn't fruitful. What can I say, I don't believe it. It's the ever useful/never useful, laziest non-argument ever. I see people losing their ability to state that a work of art that's obviously so bad it's an insult to one's intellect - isn't any good, as a result. Like "how can I tell if this bag of dogsh*t is great art or not? It's all in the eye of the beholder". I would a call a bag of dogsh*t on a pedestal bullsh*t - and objectively speaking a piece of crap. I believe some learned and experienced opinions are closer to objective truth than other opinions. And pretending that I don't, would be a lie. I do mesure the value of art to an extent. Sometimes it's a no-brainer: like Bach vs Limp Bizkit. Often two expressions are so different it feels both impossible and irrelevant to place one above the other, and most of the time comparing/choosing feels plain unessecary, but still I believe that it's true that Bach is objectively both better and greater art than Limp Bizkit. I measure the value of opinions as well. *by either a few, several, many, hundreds or thousands quite knowledgable people from all over the world in one place. The representation isn't perfect, there's still plenty of "lost" music out there, but it's the best we got. RYM's the closest I can get to something that's appears to be "fair" to all music. Music from all over the world has a better representation than everywhere else (that's not specialized and ignore "western mainstream music"). That, among other things makes it closer to something objectively true than something a group of rockers in an editorial office somewhere in the USA can come up with. This is relflected in the actual charts. And that's why it's so obviously more interesting, more eclectic and richer, and the perfect place for discovery etc... Btw: Both in this post and several others, I'm writing about two seperate, related things. Because we've ended up discussing both a community of knowledge like RYM and other, more "personal beliefs"
Edited by Saperlipopette! - June 07 2023 at 03:13 |
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