Ratings of Bruce Springsteen & Radiohead albums |
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Lewian
Prog Reviewer Joined: August 09 2015 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 14733 |
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Shouldn't we have done all this in a dedicated thread about ranking and measuring/scoring quality in music in general? This is a topic that interests me enough, apart from the RYM vs. curated expert ranking thing (let alone Springsteen vs. Radiohead, Radiohead now in the lead for quite some time btw). Of course I could do it, and I may, let's see. There are a few more things I may have to say but they really don't fit here (neither does 85% of what is already here actually). Or maybe for another time. Anyway, just to tease Lorenzo:
The thing about this statement is that it is very weak. I could sign up to it, but it doesn't say that much. I am very far away from the idea that there is some kind of most correct or best ranking we should strive for. There is very much space between "everything is subjective" and that idea. Music is not made for ranking in the first place. (In fact some music is, like for winning the Grand Prix Eurovision, but this music does not normally deserve to be ranked high compared to properly good music that isn't. )
I don't sign up to "valuable" without qualifications. "Valuable" will be relative to specific aims that would have to be specified. Also, universal music connoisseurs will be very hard to find, and even if you find some, they may not be the best when it comes to the kind of specialist knowledge that is needed to rank within certain specialist genres. In fact, in many places and for quite some time there was/is a culture of highly educated music connoisseurship that would pride itself for ignoring certain "lower" forms of music.
That, technically, is an algorithm. |
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Saperlipopette!
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 20 2010 Location: Tomorrowland Status: Online Points: 11649 |
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35871 |
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It's not like one plans all this out. Discussion, be it face-to-face or at the forum, takes twists and turns. Or hopefully does, really narrow topics tend not to be of much interest to me, and as you know, the polls in and of themselves often are not that important or interesting to me, and I treat them more as accessories to discussion. This poll directly grew out of my discussion with Lorenzo in Is Italian Prog epigonic? thread, but also from older topics where I have discussed charts with Lorenzo and others. Here is one where I got into this with Lorenzo a few years ago. 25 Unpopular Albums. I do rather wish all these issues could somehow be tied together into one place though. For instance, I know there was a much heavier discussion we had, but it would take me a while to search for it. It is interesting to see if one's opinions have shifted over the years.
By the way, I spoke of the validity of the results if they are an adequate translation and representation of the input, but I would think that there would be a very significant bandwagon effect. Not only does popularity breed popularity so as an album rises through the charts it gains steam with new people discovering it thanks to its position and so they also rank it highly, but this can and surely must to some extent lead to people rating those highlyu based on how others perceive those albums and how they think others will perceive them based on their ratings. It's all well and good provided that people are actually listening to those albums properly and rating them based on their honest appreciation rather than on how they think others perceive the album and how they think they will be perceived based on their ratings. This is always (never say always) a potential problem, with pro critics too who just regurgitate the expectations of canons of greats/ rate those very highly that they think should be rated highly based on how others rated them and how they will be perceived. |
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Lewian
Prog Reviewer Joined: August 09 2015 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 14733 |
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Of course what I wrote was not a complaint that nobody else has started a new thread for this. I could've done it myself of course. However I am active in a few other forums where even from moderator's side such discussion would be moved out, into a new (or existing fitting) thread. There are obvious advantages of this. Particularly it would inform people that this discussion exists who wouldn't look here as the title suggests something else. People who care about the original topic may be put off. Also later it would be much easier to find this, even by somebody interested in the "subtopic" who wasn't around at the time we did it. Of course nobody else may care anyway, but still... That said, the moderators are the heroes who do the work, and I don't, so absolutely I'm not complaining.
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jamesbaldwin
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 25 2015 Location: Milano Status: Offline Points: 5986 |
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1) I'll open a thread on the collaborators zone to explain my proposal of ranking. 2) It's not easy to explain. I dont think that there is some kind of most correct or best ranking we should strive for. I believe there can be well-made rankings that express different authors in the top positions. But I think that some thing shouldnt happen in a ranking. For example, a Top 10 of all time with 3 albums by the group A, two albums by the group B, and two albums by the group C is a bad ranking, it shows that that ranking isnt obtained by a balanced method (it's the case of RYM). I certainly have expectations about the quality of the music, but also about the representativeness of the music. I think a serious ranking will create a trend, i.e. it will tend to bring out some less famous groups than others. I have already given many example in this thread. I prefer the chart that consider like main criterion the beauty of the music (not the historical importance, the innovation or the richness of the arrangements and so on). Scaruffi made a chart in this way, and that chart helped me to discover a lot of less-known bands of great merits. I dont agree with Scaruffi for so many reasons, his judgements on the Beatles and Radiohead and Bowie, and U2 and other famous bands are too much severe, but I appreciate his complete freedom of judgement. And I appreciate even other rankings very different from that of Scaruffi. How can I say? A good ranking expresses a coherent vision on the beauty of the music. As I said, it's not easy to explain what I mean. But I have given many examples. 3) Rankings by genres are better than all-time rankings for all the genres. I would start with ranking by genre and by year. Then by decade. Only at the end we should reason about the best of all time. 4) Yes, etymologically it is an algorithm. But I think you understand what I mean. |
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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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Talking about the live performances by Springsteen:
This is Lost in the Flood, written in 1972, featured on his debut album, but here it's taken from Live in NY, year 2001. To be listened to with the reading of the visionary logorrhoid lyrics, written with street slang, between outlaw and Catholic reminiscences (at the time Bruce was presented as the new Dylan) |
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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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And this is Youngstown (from the Ghost of Tom Joad), live in NY again.
The lyrics of this protest song are among the most poignant and meaningful I have ever read. Here the story that is told in the song Here the lyrics: |
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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: 35871 |
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Thanks, Lorenzo. I particularly enjoyed that rendition of Lost in the Flood.
Here are a couple of Radiohead lives: "How to Disappear Completely" from 2001 Live at Canal Plus (I have loved various Canal Plus Concerts -- especially a Portishead one from 2008) And Exit Music (for a Film) from 2017 at Glastonbury (THE song that turned me onto Radiohead and I find this performance really electrifying). |
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