From this week's R&R (Reviewed & Rated) section of Exeter University Guild Of Students' magnificent student paper, Exeposé...
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v236/njsouthall/Screengrabs/onsellingoutexepose.jpg
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:17 (seventeen years ago) link
Argh, nu-ilx has shrunk it slightly past readable; here's a direct link - http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v236/njsouthall/Screengrabs/onsellingoutexepose.jpg
I just boggled at this over my lunch.
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:18 (seventeen years ago) link
"Jonny" is a name for gaywads
― Dom Passantino, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:20 (seventeen years ago) link
This only proves again that editors and writers are two different professions. Hence the two names.
― StanM, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:22 (seventeen years ago) link
You are actually posting a scan of an article from a student newspaper as the basis for a thread, aren't you? Good lord.
― Matt DC, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:25 (seventeen years ago) link
It's a screengrab from the pdf off the website! They didn't have a normal text version...
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:28 (seventeen years ago) link
can you link to the website? photobucket seems to be banned here.
― acrobat, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:29 (seventeen years ago) link
http://www.exepose.ex.ac.uk
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:30 (seventeen years ago) link
goes from strength to strength -- feeder mention is possibly the high point.
― That one guy that quit, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:31 (seventeen years ago) link
System of a Down's top 20 single was six and a half years ago, fact fans.
― Dom Passantino, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:32 (seventeen years ago) link
"Recent developments in music have given Architechs a top 5 single"
― Dom Passantino, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:33 (seventeen years ago) link
surely this can't be THE jonny garrett?
http://www.myspace.com/chasingfaces
― StanM, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:33 (seventeen years ago) link
(yeah, they have a myspace already, the sellouts)
― StanM, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:34 (seventeen years ago) link
I suspect it must be, StanM.
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:34 (seventeen years ago) link
I assume, from their name that they like Snow Patrol and The Small Faces.
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:35 (seventeen years ago) link
um, holding up articles by students as examples of 'bad music writing'? talk about shooting fish in a barrel. Matt DC OTM.
― blueski, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:35 (seventeen years ago) link
Following in the footsteps of West Country acts like Muse and Thirteen Senses by already winning over interest from various major and independent record labels, things are definitely looking good for the boys. Having recently been asked to support New Zealand favourites The Checks who have just finished touring with the likes of JET and Oasis.
"I know someone who knows someone who knows the guy from Young Heart Attack quite well"
― Dom Passantino, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:36 (seventeen years ago) link
blueski and Matt DC offtm, this is the new web2.0 media era, we're all critics now, user provided content is the new professionally written content.
Even in the realm of student media this is BAAAAAAAAD though, Steve - I flick through Exepose every week and this is BY FAR the worst thing I've ever seen in it; hence not starting a thread every week.
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:37 (seventeen years ago) link
Haha I used to write for that paper. I wonder how long before he Googles his own name and finds it.
― Matt DC, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:39 (seventeen years ago) link
It would be so wonderful if he googled this thread and responded. What an utterly thrilling discussion and exchange of views that could lead to.
― blueski, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:40 (seventeen years ago) link
Hey, with any luck he might hop over to ILE and start posting about his sex life or something.
― Dom Passantino, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:41 (seventeen years ago) link
(my question: is the article motivated by his own band possibly signing to a major soon?)
― StanM, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:42 (seventeen years ago) link
Maybe I should unleash the views of Chris Erasmus at you all?
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:42 (seventeen years ago) link
Haha, yeah, I'd imagine so, StanM.
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:43 (seventeen years ago) link
Hello Jonny's mom! No, he hasn't posted about his sex life yet. Try again later. Bye, ILX.
― StanM, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:43 (seventeen years ago) link
-- Dom Passantino, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:36 (11 minutes ago) Link
Dom is entirely correct here. I mean, the chuckle factor is diminished by him being a student, but the democratization of criticism basically leaves us with this sort of landscape (coughcoughP.E.W.cough).
― sanskrit, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:54 (seventeen years ago) link
also why do nearly all student newspaper writers write in what feels like the same voice? there's certain syntax and word choices that only student newspapers ever seem to have.
― acrobat, Monday, 18 June 2007 12:59 (seventeen years ago) link
Nobody knows how to sub-edit when they're 21, that's why.
― Dom Passantino, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:03 (seventeen years ago) link
^^not unrelated to why writers in the say, New York Times tend to sound the same. for that matter, ever read Blender? Despite the bylines it seems to be written by one many-armed poprockbot.
― m coleman, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:04 (seventeen years ago) link
that really is quite incredible.
― jed_, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:07 (seventeen years ago) link
New York Times doesn't have sub-editors? That's crazy!
― acrobat, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:08 (seventeen years ago) link
Hey Jonny, your band fucking suck.
― Noodle Vague, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:10 (seventeen years ago) link
Jonny Garrett of Exeter University, that is.
― Noodle Vague, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:11 (seventeen years ago) link
I think you mean <a href="OK, is this the worst piece of music writing ever?;>Jonny Garrett</a> of Exeter University.
― Dom Passantino, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:14 (seventeen years ago) link
BOO HTML
Kudos on sticking it to Westlife, tho, Jonny Garrett of Exeter University. Those bastards have had it their own way for too long.
― Noodle Vague, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:15 (seventeen years ago) link
Does Westlife even exist anymore?
― Tuomas, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:16 (seventeen years ago) link
highlights:
"...bands like westlife who can, quite frankly, go screw themselves with a rusty spoon and get tetanus"
"had nirvana not signed to sub pop... we would probably never have heard one of the most influential artists of our time and dave grohl may have never founded the foo fighters."
the pathos!
― jed_, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:17 (seventeen years ago) link
but the democratization of criticism basically leaves us with this sort of landscape (coughcoughP.E.W.cough).
democratization of criticism = people slagging this shit off just because they can rather than for any constructive cause. it's just easy target practice, who gives a shit? no-one/nothing is ever going to stop under-grads inheriting these absurd ideas about 'how things should be' in the music industry. surely we've all read this same article many times in the past.
i'm just more relieved than ever my music writing from college days was too soon for blog-era internet heh.
― blueski, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:19 (seventeen years ago) link
"had nirvana not signed to sub pop... we would probably never have heard of..." Sub Pop.
― NickB, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:21 (seventeen years ago) link
Was there ever a thread for people to post their own abysmal juvenile music writings from uni days?
― Michael Philip Philip Philip philip Annoyman, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:21 (seventeen years ago) link
Not that I'd post on it, my capsule reviews of Kinesis singles were all fuckin bang-on.
perhaps one day i will post my 8/10 track by track review of 'Be Here Now' from the time.
― blueski, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:24 (seventeen years ago) link
Yeah, you real writers are all jealous that you've lost the ability to write like that, aren't you?
― StanM, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:26 (seventeen years ago) link
I wrote a two-part article in my uni paper called "Rhythm & Sound", which basically stated that all rock music that's based on melody or lyrics is boring crap, and that beats and sound are the essential components of good music - hence electronic dance music (and fusion jazz) is the best music there is. I got some angry comments from the indie kids.
― Tuomas, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:27 (seventeen years ago) link
Kudos on sticking it to Westlife, tho, Jonny Garrett of Exeter University.
and kudos to you lot for bravely and relentlessly going after such a signifivcant target as jonny garrett. sure showed him!
ts being one of many thick students w/ bad music taste who can't write, vs being someone who actually gives a shit about what said student writes in some minor student rag
or, matt'n'steve otm, u r all losers
― lex pretend, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:27 (seventeen years ago) link
student newspapers have nothing to do with the "democratization of criticism"
― Curt1s Stephens, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:28 (seventeen years ago) link
I can't copy and paste from the Exeter Expose, but if you Google you can find a review where our Jonny talks about "Indy music".
― Dom Passantino, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:28 (seventeen years ago) link
paul please, please tell me you don't actually care about the answer to this
― lex pretend, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:29 (seventeen years ago) link
-- lex pretend, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:29 (58 seconds ago) Bookmark Link
http://downloadsimpsons.com/files/malibu_stacy.jpg
"Thinking too much gives you wrinkles"
― Dom Passantino, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:31 (seventeen years ago) link
haaaaaa
― Curt1s Stephens, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:33 (seventeen years ago) link
come on everyone, geir gives himself away in the final parentheses.
― Frogman Henry, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:34 (seventeen years ago) link
ha. not sure i care as such! a while back i had a job gathering information on universities, i found it kind of funny that you can go anywhere in the country and every student newspapers seems to be written by the same person. it sort of interests me to know who, if anyone, they are imitating. if my current job was more interesting this issue would, i think, seem rather less pressing.
xp
― acrobat, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:35 (seventeen years ago) link
i love the line about nirvana: nirvana's main block to future gold albums was kurt cobain's inability to accept the "popular culture lifestyle he was made to live", nothing about JUNKIE SUICIDE.
― Frogman Henry, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:37 (seventeen years ago) link
I think it's a lot more interesting to analyse and discuss the views of someone like Jonny Garrett than it is, I dunno, Petridish or Reynolds or Chuck Eddy or whoever. ILX falls into a trap of ivory towering itself, qf whoever it was on the purchase of music thread who was all "two and a half CDs a year? Everyone I know buys much more than that!". We gotta embrace the layman here guys.
― Dom Passantino, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:39 (seventeen years ago) link
keep in mind this kid was like 8 when Kurdt committed suicide and has probably been bombarded by Nirvana mythologies since he started showing an interest in altrock
― Curt1s Stephens, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:40 (seventeen years ago) link
Heh, this is a great idea. Yeah gotta say though, opinion pieces like this are ten a penny in this strange little further education world
― DJ Mencap, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:41 (seventeen years ago) link
there is thou a difference between "analyse and discuss" and "attack and dismiss"
― acrobat, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:42 (seventeen years ago) link
Maybe in the real world, but on ILM?
― Dom Passantino, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:43 (seventeen years ago) link
I'm still not sure when Cobain was adopted as an indie icon, tbh. When I was a teen, Melody Maker was still all "lol miserable junkie loved by them Kerrang oafs" about him.
― Dom Passantino, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:44 (seventeen years ago) link
I disagree that student writing is exempt from criticism. One's worldview may not be fully formed by the age of 20, but a journalistic voice should be.
Plus, this is just too awful to leave it alone. A phrase like "There has been a movement against corporate music, labels and magazines, which is thankfully disappearing, probably ever since Bob Dylan's move from acoustic to electric" is a jaw-dropper in any context.
― Erroneous Botch, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:46 (seventeen years ago) link
This, totally; what kind of culture are we propagating where these attitudes develop? Why does this guy think this? He's in a band, he's at university, he'd self-identify as 'loving music', he obviously has journalistic ambitions at the same time, and he writes this? Yes, he's young, but not all young people are writing stuff like this, are they?
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:46 (seventeen years ago) link
young aspiring music journalists should go to ILM training camp
― Curt1s Stephens, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:48 (seventeen years ago) link
http://duckdown.downloadcentric.com/content/Duck%20Down%20Records/Products/Audio%20Downloads/Boot%20Camp%20Clik/The%20Last%20Stand/DDM%20CD%202035%7B0%7D_large.jpg
― Dom Passantino, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:50 (seventeen years ago) link
more liek:
http://images-eu.amazon.com/images/P/B0001Y9YAW.02.LZZZZZZZ.jpg
― Frogman Henry, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:52 (seventeen years ago) link
Yes, he's young, but not all young people are writing stuff like this, are they?
most of them are, most of them always have, some of them get better as they, you know, grow up - i'm not denying that it's awful writing but i guess the question for me is, do you not feel your life ebbing away from you with every second you spend contemplating this rote and in no way unusual piece of student hackery? do you have this much spare time?? at this point i'mma take my own advice and exit thread stage left.
― lex pretend, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:53 (seventeen years ago) link
Our dominant myths about Art are still Romantic ones: the Artwork is a self-sufficient object, expressing universal truths and the personality of the artist, and has to be grounded in sincere, authentic feelings. Those ideas are still so fundamental (amongst people who think about aesthetics) that most critics have to unlearn them or react against them before they can think about other ways of apprehending music/literature/TV comedy. This isn't exactly a mystery, it's been going on for 200 years.
― Noodle Vague, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:54 (seventeen years ago) link
(b/c you know, if dude ever actually finds this thread, he's just gonna go HURRAH 100-POST THREAD TALKING ABOUT MEEEEE, I HAVE SUCCEEDED)
(ok that's it)
― lex pretend, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:54 (seventeen years ago) link
I don't know if the age of the writer is that important. There are plenty of people twice his age out there who would write/argue the same things so you might as well be arguing with them on the same basis. Expecting all young writers to reject rockism is too (p)optimistic.
― blueski, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:58 (seventeen years ago) link
<i>I'm still not sure when Cobain was adopted as an indie icon, tbh. When I was a teen, Melody Maker was still all "lol miserable junkie loved by them Kerrang oafs" about him.</i>
Dom, MM *was* pretty much behind early Sub Pop what with all Everett True's coverage and whatnot. I reckon Nirvana were an initially an indie kid thing here before the whole grunge pandemic hit (but I guess you're talking about the period after that).
― NickB, Monday, 18 June 2007 13:59 (seventeen years ago) link
Oh fuck<i>ng tags.
some of that piece is kind of chuck eddy like
― acrobat, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:02 (seventeen years ago) link
Garrett doesn't call Westlife a bhangra act though, so there are differences.
― Dom Passantino, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:06 (seventeen years ago) link
I'm talking about bands like Feeder, Coldplay and the Stereophonics who have (over time) offered more to music than many of the bands that the NME claim will change your life.
didn't the NME claim that Feeder/Coldplay/Stereophonics will change your life?
i'm drunk, but this guy should be sacked.
― Just got offed, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:09 (seventeen years ago) link
That's the kind of management technique that'll see you running in JP Morgan by the time your 31.
― acrobat, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:11 (seventeen years ago) link
Feeder/Coldplay/Stereophonics
I MEAN SRSLY THIS IS LIKE TEH AXIS OF EVIL
― Just got offed, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:12 (seventeen years ago) link
he's just gonna go HURRAH 100-POST THREAD TALKING ABOUT MEEEEE, I HAVE SUCCEEDED
I didn't know you went to Exeter.
(xpost oh J4gger's here ding ding ding)
― Matt DC, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:13 (seventeen years ago) link
RULE FOUR NOW APPLIES TO ALL BETS IN THREAD
(exp)
― Dom Passantino, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:15 (seventeen years ago) link
Drunk at 3pm = living the dream
― DJ Mencap, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:21 (seventeen years ago) link
Drinking cider from eleven?
― Matt DC, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:28 (seventeen years ago) link
Not only do I have plenty of articles google'able online that are humiliating - I still write articles on occasion that are poorly written. So, I sympathize for college-music-writer. Can't we at least go after people who get paid to write poorly?
― Mordechai Shinefield, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:36 (seventeen years ago) link
So we should be gentle because of: - age? ("but the Arctic Monkeys were only 19 when they..." "Oh, OK then, 10/10") - experience? ("but it's only their first album ever!" "Oh, OK then, 10/10")
?
― StanM, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:43 (seventeen years ago) link
There are dedicated threads for them (xpost).
― Marcello Carlin, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:43 (seventeen years ago) link
Mordechai OTM
No writing is exempt from criticism, but a college kid getting his footing should be exempt from a 100-post sonning by a bunch of adults.
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:44 (seventeen years ago) link
"adults"
― StanM, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:45 (seventeen years ago) link
If I was the writer in question I'd be more offended by the insinuation that I wasn't an adult myself.
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:45 (seventeen years ago) link
Burchill started on the NME when she was 17.
― Marcello Carlin, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:46 (seventeen years ago) link
Doogie Howser was performing surgery at 18, does this mean I should start a thread about how some high school kid dissected his worm wrong?
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:48 (seventeen years ago) link
Please accept my use fictional character as an appropriate metaphor for real life situations. Haha.
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:49 (seventeen years ago) link
Hang on a tick. This guy is the fucking Music Editor at his university. Not every student is this bloody clueless and illiterate and I'm sure there are gobloads of kids just wishing they could have a go at it (because they wanna write for the NME when they grow up).
There used to be an indie night at the uni I attended where each week they'd play no less than eight Limp Bizkit songs in an evening, and these guys ran the uni radio station. When I asked if I could play one night I got told my style wasn't right. Oh well.
― the next grozart, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:50 (seventeen years ago) link
^^^ poor grammar and typos admittedly non-deliberate.
― the next grozart, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:53 (seventeen years ago) link
He's not even a real music editor, he's not on the team!
http://www.exepose.ex.ac.uk/team.php
― StanM, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:55 (seventeen years ago) link
That's last year's team; they've obviously not changed that page yet.
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:57 (seventeen years ago) link
Ah, ok - sorry.
― StanM, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:58 (seventeen years ago) link
lol u r all intrenet crepes for talkin bout the guy. how long til Dom finds his facebook?
― blueski, Monday, 18 June 2007 14:59 (seventeen years ago) link
In the next issue: "Pol Pot - His Amazing Journey From Brutal Cambodian Tyrant To Winner Of Britain's Got Talent."
― Marcello Carlin, Monday, 18 June 2007 15:01 (seventeen years ago) link
1 person calls us crepes and that's the end of the thread?
This is exactly how nazi Germa... ok maybe it isn't.
― StanM, Monday, 18 June 2007 15:19 (seventeen years ago) link
that article reads like a GCSE project graded f with only q magazine used for research.
This current teenager yoof bebo generation is even more moronic than 1990s Shed 7 / OCS generation, that dizzy [probably NME reading] blonde on big brother from Bristol, that Exeter Uni Q reading chump, that yesterday's OMM teen issue, NME brit-indie-guitar-rubbish bands everyweek and teenager emo mall kids with fall out boy t-shirts etc etc. Is this the worst generation of kids ever?
Yours in despair, Viktor Martian
― djmartian, Monday, 18 June 2007 15:20 (seventeen years ago) link
I wrote a two-part article in my uni paper called "Rhythm & Sound", which basically stated that all rock music that's based on melody or lyrics is boring crap, and that beats and sound are the essential components of good music - hence electronic dance music (and fusion jazz) is the best music there is.
Tuomas, I'd like to think that, on the other side of Scandanavia, Gier Hongro was simultaneously writing exactly the opposite article.
― chap, Monday, 18 June 2007 15:26 (seventeen years ago) link
It's always the worst generation of kids ever when you're not part of it.
Ah yes, the OMM TEEN ISSUE...
― Marcello Carlin, Monday, 18 June 2007 15:26 (seventeen years ago) link
There's a picture of a new rave kid in that issue, and he is the twattiest person I have ever seen.
― chap, Monday, 18 June 2007 15:27 (seventeen years ago) link
I probably wrote something worse than this when I was in college.
― Jazzbo, Monday, 18 June 2007 15:34 (seventeen years ago) link
-- StanM, Monday, June 18, 2007 9:43 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Link
wow
Nothing wrong with a little constructive criticism obv. but this kid isn't the Arctic Fucking Monkeys. He's writing something for a university paper and he probably only expected it to be read by his fellow students anyway. It's like you guys are tearing apart some local kids' punk band for playing sub-"Greenday" music at their friends' party or something.
― Curt1s Stephens, Monday, 18 June 2007 15:55 (seventeen years ago) link
Martian you've been warned before about exaggerating the shitness of Shed Seven (at least 3 good songs!).
― blueski, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:02 (seventeen years ago) link
Just a bit of fun, it's not like we're seriously trying to get this guy to kill himself, you know. (I'm not, at least) (xpost)
― StanM, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:08 (seventeen years ago) link
i'm hoping to see this sort of thread on ILE
is this the worst fucking picture of a donkey or what? it's by my 5yr old nephew LOL look at the rubbish typography on this PIZZA FLYER!!!!!!11 rofllz babies - fucking idiots or what? they can hardly walk, look at their stupid faces!!!!!
plz
― Alan, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:10 (seventeen years ago) link
never mind the typography there is no excuse for the mind-boggling typos you get on pizza flyers where they have spelled the word correctly in the first two instances but then failed to do so the third time.
― blueski, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:13 (seventeen years ago) link
esp. when that word is CHEESE
― blueski, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:14 (seventeen years ago) link
The single most awesome post I ever came acorss on any internet board went like this: "Cows are such WANKERS they don't even RUN if you THROW STICKS at them."
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:14 (seventeen years ago) link
xxxxpost please!! please!!!
― the next grozart, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:15 (seventeen years ago) link
maybve one too many x's. that was a reply to alan, not stanm
OWLS ARE ASSHOLES
― Alan, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:17 (seventeen years ago) link
WITH THEIR BIG FUCKING EYES, WHY NOT HAVE SMALLER EYES? WANKERS.
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:18 (seventeen years ago) link
condemned to repeat myself
things you notice about owls
― Alan, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:19 (seventeen years ago) link
nick are you joining in the mockery of your own thread?
― lex pretend, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:19 (seventeen years ago) link
But anyway, this guy isn't some kind of remedial five-year-old; this isn't a GCSE-essay; he doesn't need enormous slack-cutting here. He is music editor at a student paper for one of the country's top 30 (possibly) universities, and as as such probably has three A Levels at grades AAB or very close to. He is a smart, educated, priviliged music fan who will possibly one day be a captain of industry, or Chris Martin, or something. He's not a cow or an owl.
x-post - Lex I am merely mocking owls and cows.
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:21 (seventeen years ago) link
FUCK BEES
― blueski, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:23 (seventeen years ago) link
Simon CowOwl more like
― blueski, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:24 (seventeen years ago) link
Why are you even reading a college paper in the hopes of finding good music writing?
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:24 (seventeen years ago) link
surely a lot of good writers come up thru student press
― blueski, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:25 (seventeen years ago) link
I'm not reading it in the hope of finding good music writing! I read it while I eat my sandwich, to see what's going on amongst the literate student body, and stumble upon the music pages by accident.
x-post - Hmmm. Well.
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:26 (seventeen years ago) link
Was it a good sandwich at least?
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:27 (seventeen years ago) link
OK, is this the worst piece of wafer thin ham ever?
― blueski, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:28 (seventeen years ago) link
Granted it came from one of the top 30 supermarkets in the country but it said 'quality' on the label.
You can use that rather reductive approach to stop anyone criticising anythign ever, SteveM.
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:30 (seventeen years ago) link
This might be more of a 'despite' than 'because of' situation in a lot of cases
― DJ Mencap, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:30 (seventeen years ago) link
(I speak as someone who put, really, a stupid amount of time into the student paper while I was there, and mainly enjoyed it and learned stuff, but I'd question how much it made me a better writer)
― DJ Mencap, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:31 (seventeen years ago) link
babies - fucking idiots or what? they can hardly walk, look at their stupid faces!!!!!
ha.
this guy, though - as nick said, he's 20-21, he's obviously got some semblance of a brain in his head if he's a. at exeter uni and b. music ed of the college paper (obvious snarks aside). more important, i suspect, is *why he thinks like this* not "why is his writing style a bit naff?", surely?
xpost i spent years at my college paper (inc a year as music editor) but i doubt it made me a better writer. a better editor, yes, and (in the long run) a better sub, but a better writer? doubtful.
― CharlieNo4, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:35 (seventeen years ago) link
Anyone want to make fun of bad high school writing?!?!?!? I have a number of shitty articles sitting in my car!
"H1nder lead vocalist Austin Winker's unique v0ice makes 'Lips of an Angel' completely captivating. The d3pth and emotion of the vocals dr4w you into the lyr1cs of the song. The lyrics and 1nstrumentation make this s0ng a great standout track."
HAHAHAHAAHA SHE CAN'T WRITE AND SHE HAS A BAD OPINION HAHAHAAHAHAHAHAHA AND SHE'S 17, FER CHRISTSAKES HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA SHOULDN'T SHE BE VERSED IN KRAUTROCK AND SHIT? HAHAHAHAHAA
― Tape Store, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:36 (seventeen years ago) link
i once made the mistake of reading my own (v poor) college dissertation. SO AWFUL. i wanted to punch the author so hard. i'm pretty sure there are no copies remaining outside of the one copy left with the faculty, who SHOULD have burned it just out of courtesy.
― Alan, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:37 (seventeen years ago) link
He's a decently smart kid with a passing interest in music who likes to write music articles for the school paper; it's not his career, it's not his thesis, it's just Something He Wrote.
― Curt1s Stephens, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:38 (seventeen years ago) link
like I said he's not looking to win awards with his writings, student music reviews are generally just sort of rambles anyway, even ones by Exeter students, as much as we at ILM want our Smart Kids to write Smart Music Reviews.
― Curt1s Stephens, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:41 (seventeen years ago) link
and you know, what the guy is saying is not all that objectionable. there's stuff in there if you pick it out of the noise. "the hardest music to write is commercial music".
― Alan, Monday, 18 June 2007 16:42 (seventeen years ago) link
is age really an excuse here? Have we all forgotten that university age isn't really especially young? I'm sure that most people here weren't a lot different then from how they are now, no? Is being just some random student really an excuse? Surely being music editor at a 15,000 student university should mean something more than being able to express opinions that the average 15-year-old who has MTV2 would be able to express. Although my wild optimism with regards to student publications is notorious. Poor Louis is presumably around the same age as this guy, yet he gets consistently lambasted for having much more sophisticated (if more uniquely nuts) opinions.
Kinda off-topic question, because I don't want to start picking at every questionable comment in the article: is Domino entirely independent?
― Merdeyeux, Monday, 18 June 2007 17:02 (seventeen years ago) link
the 'excuse' is that everyone here probably wrote stuff as bad as that at his age.
this guy wot wrote this rag rant retty much speaks for at least 2/3 of the record buying public in the UK right now (Rihanna at #1 not withstanding) so you can be aghast all you like but don't be surprised at all. it just seems ridiculous to single one person out in this way - if you are to do this pick a paid pro who has more cause to know better...perhaps in a situation where they can defend their position or learn from what you say (so not on ILM then i guess).
we could make a lot of the same points if the thread wasn't focussed on one person's deluded rant but the nature/future of student press generally and that might be better (but probably useless without actual input from student writers).
― blueski, Monday, 18 June 2007 17:04 (seventeen years ago) link
Have we all forgotten that university age isn't really especially young?
yes clearly I have forgotten this
but seriously his age isn't the point here.
― Curt1s Stephens, Monday, 18 June 2007 17:05 (seventeen years ago) link
stevem basically otm
― Curt1s Stephens, Monday, 18 June 2007 17:06 (seventeen years ago) link
re: Domino indie?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domino_Records
Pretty much, I guess. (Depends on what definition of independent you use. They might still have distribution deals with non-independent labels, for instance.)
― StanM, Monday, 18 June 2007 17:14 (seventeen years ago) link
Making fun of Westlife is more cliche than "sounds like (insert band name) on acid". If you're going to provide an example, at least have an ounce of originality and pick a band where a comparison to Green Day or Nirvana is in the general vicinity of apt.
― musically, Monday, 18 June 2007 17:15 (seventeen years ago) link
why even mention any of those 90S BANDS with so much other stuff going on?
― blueski, Monday, 18 June 2007 17:19 (seventeen years ago) link
"look at the rubbish typography on this PIZZA FLYER!!!!!!11 rofllz"
http://www.inkycircus.com/jargon/images/lightbulb.jpg
― Frogman Henry, Monday, 18 June 2007 17:35 (seventeen years ago) link
the 'excuse' is that everyone here probably wrote stuff as bad as that at his age
actually as bad? Besides, I'm much more interested in looking at student press in general than pillorying this one poor sap too; I would have no interest in picking apart the blog of a 20-year-old who wrote like a 15-year-old, but I'm just kinda bewildered that this kind of thing could under any circumstance be good enough to be from someone in the role of music editor.
― Merdeyeux, Monday, 18 June 2007 17:40 (seventeen years ago) link
although as PIZZA FLYER has reminded me, I recently saw a poster for a student newspaper which had about ten spelling mistakes on it, so yes, I should stop expecting any kind of standards from them.
― Merdeyeux, Monday, 18 June 2007 17:42 (seventeen years ago) link
Person who has role as student music editor = someone who wanted to write about music, who might not necessarily have tastes outside the mainstream, who might not even be that well-educated about music. Just someone who has a passion for the music they listen to. It would be one thing if music editor were a highly competitive position in the student paper but most likely the kids who are really "into" music are off doing other more specifically music-related things with their spare time.
― Curt1s Stephens, Monday, 18 June 2007 17:48 (seventeen years ago) link
like joining a radio station and doing actual, meaningful reviews for distribution companies :-D
― Just got offed, Monday, 18 June 2007 17:50 (seventeen years ago) link
curtis, stop calling him kid. if he was 8 when cobain offed himself, that means he's older than you.
― John Splith, Monday, 18 June 2007 17:54 (seventeen years ago) link
I know that John, I wasn't calling him "kid" as a term of derision, I call myself "kid" :/
― Curt1s Stephens, Monday, 18 June 2007 17:54 (seventeen years ago) link
maybe Britishers do things differently
― Curt1s Stephens, Monday, 18 June 2007 17:55 (seventeen years ago) link
I mean I'm not trying to patronize/insult the guy's intelligence here and say "oh he's just too young!" That's not the point. This thread is set up to pit his article against the broader tradition of "music writing" which I don't think is appropriate for an article someone wrote for a student paper. Though I may be biased in my perceptions because I go to an engineering school where the student paper isn't a reflection of the skills and career goals of the students.
― Curt1s Stephens, Monday, 18 June 2007 17:57 (seventeen years ago) link
yeah sorry curtis, i'm just seeing the usual uber-geek shit-slinging on display here and getting all defensive. it is an awful fucking article, though.
― John Splith, Monday, 18 June 2007 18:00 (seventeen years ago) link
xpost noodle, aren't you a swans fan?
― John Splith, Monday, 18 June 2007 18:01 (seventeen years ago) link
doing actual, meaningful reviews for distribution companies :-D
Congratulations! (NOW I understand why there's a "sounds like Mansun: 3.5/5" score next to every album)
― StanM, Monday, 18 June 2007 18:03 (seventeen years ago) link
I'm going to start scanning album spiels at our radio station for Jaggerisms
― Curt1s Stephens, Monday, 18 June 2007 18:05 (seventeen years ago) link
i don't think the point is how old the dude is - as a student, if i'd read something of that standard/expressing those opinions, i'd have gathered everyone i knew to point and laugh. i like to think i wouldn't have allowed it in the mag when i was editor, but i probably let worse through - so few good writers in uni also willing to hand copy in on time. at his age i was better than this, but not especially good.
the point is that it's really weird and mean-spirited and not a little pathetic for 20-something professionals southall/passantino/scott to spend their days ripping an article in a STUDENT RAG (and a REALLY MINOR ONE at that) to shreds - i mean, what will it be next, a-level essays? i'm especially disappointed in nick, who i'd thought was above this sort of pointlessness.
― lex pretend, Monday, 18 June 2007 18:13 (seventeen years ago) link
also, i think writing for the student paper DID actually make me a better writer.
i'm curious how seriously the students themselves take this sort of writing in these papers. surely it can't be seen as that representative, even if they are official papers.
― John Splith, Monday, 18 June 2007 18:16 (seventeen years ago) link
Lex, we must have a good point in ripping the article though, or else you wouldn't have made so many posts to this thread.
― Dom Passantino, Monday, 18 June 2007 18:29 (seventeen years ago) link
about 4? you don't have any point beyond LOL STUDENTZ, though.
― lex pretend, Monday, 18 June 2007 18:34 (seventeen years ago) link
Eight.
― Dom Passantino, Monday, 18 June 2007 18:35 (seventeen years ago) link
Wikipedia says...
― Tape Store, Monday, 18 June 2007 18:37 (seventeen years ago) link
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/d/d0/OpenDaySpecial.jpg
― Curt1s Stephens, Monday, 18 June 2007 18:39 (seventeen years ago) link
Another lovely looking campus (an especially nice line in daffodils in the spring), with the occasional dreadful looking building thrown in to stop you getting too cocky - one of them looks like it could be used to breed giraffes in.
― Curt1s Stephens, Monday, 18 June 2007 18:40 (seventeen years ago) link
In 1997, a new Exeposé logo was designed based on the Carlsberg logo (as shown in the gallery below) and from 1997-2000 the paper proclaimed itself to be 'Probably the Best Student Newspaper in the World'.
― Tape Store, Monday, 18 June 2007 18:46 (seventeen years ago) link
Quality of school in not equal to quality of individual shocker!
Most of the best music writers I know went to shitty state schools. Many of them didn't even go to college. When I was in college, I remember reading music articles on UWire that destroyed the community-college-level music writing that I saw coming out of the Ivy Leagues.
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 18 June 2007 18:51 (seventeen years ago) link
lex i have made like 5 posts on this thread and they were on the whole vaguely whimsical points about student papers in general and a couple of crap injokes. i agreed with you that the "attack and dismiss" approach is stupid. i'm not sure why you are attacking me.
― acrobat, Monday, 18 June 2007 18:53 (seventeen years ago) link
This is the BEST piece of music writing ever. Every word is sooooo correct and soooo spot-on.
― Geir Hongro, Monday, 18 June 2007 19:07 (seventeen years ago) link
fake geir
― Curt1s Stephens, Monday, 18 June 2007 19:09 (seventeen years ago) link
wait never mind I reread the article, possibly not fake geir
― Curt1s Stephens, Monday, 18 June 2007 19:11 (seventeen years ago) link
its not that his points are necessarily wrong, its just that everything he uses to "prove" his point is stupid
― Catsupppppppppppppp dude 茄蕃, Monday, 18 June 2007 19:20 (seventeen years ago) link
multixpost
Hi John yes I'm a Swans fan, why d'ya ask?
My student newspaper In Utero review and my interview with These Animal Men were way better than this article, oh yes, honest.
― Noodle Vague, Monday, 18 June 2007 19:25 (seventeen years ago) link
This is totally OTM. The guy might be putting a load of ideas forward that are completely ass-backwards but he obviously gives a shit about this stuff. I think you do have to sort of be wary of the ILM bubble where the idea of people being really passionate about Feeder or something is the height of absurdity, despite the fact that there are way way more of huge-scare-quotes "them" than of "us".
― DJ Mencap, Monday, 18 June 2007 19:59 (seventeen years ago) link
Hahaha I had totally forgotten about that! It was k-rub.
I'm pretty sure I read worse music writing by the then Music Editor when I was on Exepose ten years ago. And I'm fairly sure I let worse through when I was editing a different student mag, don't get me started on the Toploader interview I was forced to print.
― Matt DC, Monday, 18 June 2007 20:19 (seventeen years ago) link
"So, Toploader, why are you named after an outmoded, inefficient washing machine?" "We just make music for ourselves, and if anyone else likes it that's a bonus. WESTLIFE SUCK DUDE!"
― Noodle Vague, Monday, 18 June 2007 20:23 (seventeen years ago) link
what is difference between toploader and cornershop
― Just got offed, Monday, 18 June 2007 20:29 (seventeen years ago) link
Everything
― Noodle Vague, Monday, 18 June 2007 20:31 (seventeen years ago) link
before i jump in, how is this 175 posts? has the author showed up?
― That one guy that quit, Monday, 18 June 2007 20:32 (seventeen years ago) link
Nah, it just devolved into Sharks vs Jets and some kid got stabbed.
― Noodle Vague, Monday, 18 June 2007 20:34 (seventeen years ago) link
um NO
― That one guy that quit, Monday, 18 June 2007 20:39 (seventeen years ago) link
yeah, some of us would be pretty screwed if that were the case
(zingproofing: YEAH I KNOW i'm screwed anyway)
― Just got offed, Monday, 18 June 2007 20:41 (seventeen years ago) link
not just 'some of us' but pretty much all writers one could name. 20 is pretty young! i wrote shitloads when i was a student, some of it was almost as bad as this guy's. it's a shame they have to grow up in public (via the internet) in a way.
― That one guy that quit, Monday, 18 June 2007 20:46 (seventeen years ago) link
lol i was that "Person". the mainstream is an illusory category. if your audience is students the mainstream is different than what it is if you're writing for 12-year-olds, or for monied fuck-witted amoral east london twentysomethings.
looking back, ALL positions in the student press were competitive! and the music editor got free cds to hand out, got into gigs for free. i was briefly socially successful at that time. fyi writing about music qualifies as a "specifically music-related thing".
― That one guy that quit, Monday, 18 June 2007 21:15 (seventeen years ago) link
One of the previous music editors at Exepose also worked as a freelance music/gig photographer and promoter in the area; he ran club nights and had exhibitions of his pictures in a local venue, etcetera. My friend Steve (who was doing an MA at the time and writing for the paper - how I got to know the music editor) and I had to convince him that Prince was 'a respectable musician' once, but, you know, he wasn't ignorant, music wasn't a 'passing phase' or something. He was seriously into what he was doing. I'd imagine this guy is too.
Just look at the input on this thread, and ILM / music journalism in general - people who get involved with the music coverage at student papers often end up moving into it as a 'career' (haha @ Alex calling me a 'professional music journalist' - I've earnt a few hundred quid from it at most and never approached a publication with my writing in my life; it's really not my career and I'm not sure how it can be anybody's) in one way or another, whether that's writing or in PR or anything else - for all I know this guy could be doing a business or law degree and end up in the music business that way.
I never got involved in my own student paper music pages because I had an awful first term at university and lost a lot of confidence - I assumed that anybody involved in the paper in any way was going to be a MUCH better writer than I was and that I didn't stand a cat in hell's chance. A few years down the line and yeah, I realise that had I gone for it I'd have been as good as if not better than a lot of othr people, and maybe I'd have been a writer fulltime rather than a library dude with a hobby, but who knows.
I'm not really interested in this guy; I'm certainly not interested in slagging him off (although the idea that he's saying 'major labels are gr8!' and seemingly being courted by them via his band at the same time screams 'conflict of interest'); what I am interested in is the hows and whys of this article; not 'how was it published?' because we've pretty much established that student papers will publish anything (what was the thread a few weeks ago about the NYC student paper and the awful, offensive sexual helath feature), but 'how are these attitudes fostered, why are people thinking this, is this typical, if so, who is it typical of?'
I also think it's quite interesting re; the education system. University's basically a factory that teaches you to absorb and reinterpret data, to analyse and digest and critique and report and synthesise; this guy's a second-going-into-third-year at least, and probably given the average ages of Exeter students and numbers taking years out and so on, 21; why's he not got a more sophisticated approach than 'Westlife bad, Feeder good'? Granted there is an interesting thread in there re; the difficulty of 'writing popular music' and the whole marketing-of-music issue, but if he's doing either arts or business he ought to be more sophisticated in one or both directions.
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 21:57 (seventeen years ago) link
University's basically a factory that teaches you to absorb and reinterpret data, to analyse and digest and critique and report and synthesise
even if that were true (am unsure), people involved in student journalism are not exactly worker ants! student journalism is what people do instead of going to lectures.
― That one guy that quit, Monday, 18 June 2007 22:08 (seventeen years ago) link
True; given a conversation I had this evening with a mortgage advisor, I think my reasons for going to university were different to most of my contemporaries', and are even more different to people there today.
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 22:11 (seventeen years ago) link
enrique otm, although sleeping is what we do instead of going to lectures, student journalism happens when we ought to be consolidating our lecture notes later on in the day.
― Just got offed, Monday, 18 June 2007 22:12 (seventeen years ago) link
I'm just being idealistic, I guess; I'd like to think that everyone at university is there for the good of their intellect, and everyone writing about music for the student paper is there because they think music is the single most magical and important branch of art we have. Gilberto Gil and Caetano Veloso being arrested and ending up as (in Gil's case) culture minister thirty years later, rather than Johnny Rotten on Bill Grundy and then on Celebrity Jungle Island Brother Diet Got Talent.
― Scik Mouthy, Monday, 18 June 2007 22:24 (seventeen years ago) link
I'd wager they're more interested in getting their own column in The Sun.
Also some might argue that most students these days are trainee thrusting Thatcherkids who don't have time to know about Tropicalia or punk.
― Marcello Carlin, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 07:09 (seventeen years ago) link
You obviously think too highly of our ambitions, Marcello; most students these days are equally divided between getting a good degree and base social networking. There are about 15 Thatcherkids here in total that I've met.
A column in The Sun is definitely sought-after, though, you've nailed that one. Sadly.
― Just got offed, Tuesday, 19 June 2007 09:06 (seventeen years ago) link
a-HEM.
can't see what all the fuss is about here. i mean, yes, it's a shit article. but it's a shit article that matters not one iota of a fuck.
mind, i'm the daft bastard who's revived the thread after two days dormant, so on my head be it ...
― grimly fiendish, Thursday, 21 June 2007 00:45 (seventeen years ago) link
The first person I clap eyes on as I bound into The Paradise is the Radio 1 DJ Sara Cox, sporting a natty pair of green leggings and white hi-top trainers. “Ooooh, I'm so glad you're wearing a tracksuit too,” she foghorns at me, as though across a market stall in Bolton, not a fashionable pub/club in trendy west London. “Why are all these people here not wearing tracksuits? Can I dance near you all night?” she asks.
She needn't have worried — just a few minutes later the pub is teeming with party people clad in all manner of nylon and velour leisurewear, not all of them carrying it off quite as well as Cox.
We're here for Tayo's Tracksuit Party, a kitsch celebration of sports casual that has gone down a storm at Snowbombing and the Notting Hill Carnival over the past couple of years. Until now, it's been a very occasional moveable party.
DJ Tayo's idea for the night came out of his own impressive collection of 90 track-suit tops. He now plans to “do it all more properly”, with a party in east London in July, on carnival weekend in August at The Paradise (which will be the party's more regular home) and a further six parties this year.
Tonight's DJs include Felix B from Basement Jaxx and Frank “Dope” Tope, plus Tayo himself, presiding over the night in a dazzling white fleece tracksuit top and white shorts. In truth, I've been a bit anxious about these tracksuit shenanigans. I've heard the parties are brilliant fun but I wake up in a cold sweat having lurid, neon nightmares about my outfit options.
Stretchy sportswear does me no favours at all and I spend the morning trudging around a rainy Brixton, desperately searching for something that doesn't make my backside look the size of Hampshire. It's not to be.
I settle for some new retro adidas trackie bottoms in a forgiving dark colour and team them with my favourite, super-bouncy orange trainers. I dig out a sort of matching adidas zip-up top (bought during a short-lived period of regular gym attendance) and a red-and-white sports visor I found on a beach in Ibiza. I avoid all mirrors as I leave the house. On my Bakerloo line train the other passengers glare at me and check their wallets.
All five rooms of The Paradise are being taken over for tonight's party in polyester (£6 entry) and by 9pm the place is packed. I have a sudden vision of what Lakeside shopping centre must look like on a Saturday afternoon. Although, of course, most of the punters here are professionals in their late twenties and thirties — their trackies usually only get an outing for Pilates or Ashtanga yoga.
In the main room upstairs, the crowd is getting down to old school hip hop and drinking double vodka and tonics (£5.50). It's a sea of sports caps, hotpants, shell suits, fake bling, huge sunglasses and Vanilla Ice dance moves.
At 10.30, Beeny Royston and Jadell (“two blokes with a bit too much time on their hands,” according to Tayo) take to the stage in Hawaiian shirts and Flowerpot Men hats, to do their “Spinal Tap goes hip hop” thing.
The pair, who scored a YouTube hit with their first record, Straight To Video, are ironic rappers, a sort of London-centric Goldie Lookin Chain. They change into towels, shower caps and shaving foam for another song, then into baseball T-shirts and caps. The rest of the crowd and I love them, but my friend John is less than impressed. He loves hip hop and doesn't appreciate it being performed with irony. I, on the other hand, have never understood how it can be performed with a completely straight face.
After more dancing, we head downstairs to what is usually the restaurant, but tonight is the venue for Have A Go Hip Hop Karaoke. The room is heaving and Tayo bravely kicks things off himself, with a valiant performance of Ol' Dirty Bastard's Baby I Got Your Money.
The crowd is whooping, chanting and dancing on tables as the usually sedate restaurant transforms into a scene from Eminem's movie 8 Mile. Tayo introduces the next guy up — Doc Brown, who blows us all away with his Straight Outta Compton. I comment to the girl dancing next to me what a good impression he does of a rapper. It turns out that's because in fact he is a rapper and has been on tour with Mark Ronson recently.
This isn't karaoke. They've all got record deals! I'm a desperate show-off and totally fancy myself as a singer, but I quickly revise my earlier plan to perform Salt-n-Pepa's Push It — no way, José.
We dance on, flitting back and forth between the upstairs and downstairs rooms and bumping into friends as the party gets ever more wild and chaotic. As we slip away sometime around 2am, I realise I never did give my new friend Sara Cox that dance she was after. But last time I caught sight of her, bouncing around to Run DMC, she didn't look like she minded. Next time eh, Coxy?
― Dom Passantino, Thursday, 5 June 2008 10:51 (sixteen years ago) link
Who wrote this? Princess Beatrix?
― Tom D., Thursday, 5 June 2008 10:56 (sixteen years ago) link
By Jane Mulkerrins, London Lite 30.05.08
― Dom Passantino, Thursday, 5 June 2008 10:59 (sixteen years ago) link
She's a Cambridge graduate, which certainly shocked me, because dumb fucking "Hearts of Darkness" pieces about hip-hop clubs by safari-suited white broads are rarely written by Oxbridge types.
― Dom Passantino, Thursday, 5 June 2008 11:00 (sixteen years ago) link
oh, rarely?
― Mark G, Thursday, 5 June 2008 11:02 (sixteen years ago) link
It's all got a bit Dombot in here.
― Matt DC, Thursday, 5 June 2008 11:05 (sixteen years ago) link
i like how the first two-thirds of the article is exclusively about wearing tracksuits
― braveclub, Thursday, 5 June 2008 11:05 (sixteen years ago) link
What song did you do Dom?
― DJ Mencap, Thursday, 5 June 2008 11:28 (sixteen years ago) link
Chorus: White girls (Suzie, Janet Karen) Going through my mind (Sarah, Jess, and Judy too) White girls (Julie, Beth, and Sharon) Help me unwind (The more I see, the more I do) Don't Tell Minister Farrakhan (That's right) He don't want to know what's going on (Okay) 'Cause white girls won't go away
I've had a lot of education There's one thing I know about, and that's miscegenation
Ticket to ride, white girl highway Tell all the white girls, they could swing my way What up, baby girl?, How you doin, is you single? Have you ever messed, with a light-skinned Mandingo? And I could give a damn, what all my friends say to me You and me baby, could start making up for slavery Girl, I'm just playin', I got a white mom You got any Black in you?, (No) Would you like some? Oh word, you like my songs, that be playing on the radio? Well you know the sincerest, form of flattery's fellatio
I ain't a picky guy, so I really don't care If you a hippy white chick, who got underarm hair Or a ghetto white chick, who be trying to act Black With your name on a chain, and your hair slicked back
You could be from anywhere, Maine down to Malibu Cross a trailer park, on the way to Park Avenue See me with a Black girl, you got the wrong man Or might have just been, a white girl with a tan And sisters don't get mad, 'cause I'm out banging white chicks 'Cause we all look the same, when you turn off the light switch
See back in the day, I was getting no play Then I went the white girl way, like O. J. So you can call on Kato, but I'm sorry O'Shea 'Cause I got my white girl, and everything's okay
(Chorus)
I've, had Rich ones, poor ones, I even had some famous ones Like Traci Lords, Houstin, and Jenna Jameson Right about now, I'm on probation for three years 'Cause I caught a stat case, for having sex with Britney Spears Getting head in the dressing room, I bust on her chin Oops (pfff), I did it again
Gweneth Paltrow always said, I be making her laugh She gave me head 'cause if I hit it, I'd break her in half She ain't even the only, white actress on my matress I even had sex with that, fat chick from The Practice Bang Katie Holmes, who's always trying to take me home Call me on the phone saying, "Casey make me moan" Smoking weed in her dressing room, on a higher plane I hate country music, want to bang Shania Twain
Whether short or tall, whether blonde or brunette I ain't met a white girl, who I wouldn't do yet And I got Alyssa Milano, hitting high notes like soprano When we all up in my bedroom, making some mulattoes I really don't think, there's a girl that I missed I used to like Mariah, 'til I learned she was mixed
For those who's getting furious, please don't take me serious I'm just wil'in out, like Eddie Murphy in "Delirious" But if you took offense, and you're Black or you're white I'm glad you did sucker, 'cause you way too uptight
― Dom Passantino, Thursday, 5 June 2008 11:31 (sixteen years ago) link
It's a sea of sports caps, hotpants, shell suits, fake bling, huge sunglasses and Vanilla Ice dance moves.
Sounds great. Fake bling: lol black people!
― Neil S, Thursday, 5 June 2008 11:44 (sixteen years ago) link
Jane Mulkerrins was formerly drummer for the rock group Cocorosie
― Dom Passantino, Thursday, 5 June 2008 11:45 (sixteen years ago) link
That Nick Sylvester Pitchfork Weezer review/outburst/eruption from a few years ago remains one of the worst pieces of music writing I've ever read.
― Savannah Smiles, Thursday, 5 June 2008 12:58 (sixteen years ago) link
Coxy? What is this, Tarby's Golfy Diary?
― Dingbod Kesterson, Thursday, 5 June 2008 13:02 (sixteen years ago) link
(oho, on the green with Ademy, Drewy, Kieran Hebdeny and Tuungy etc.)
― Dingbod Kesterson, Thursday, 5 June 2008 13:04 (sixteen years ago) link
Along with the White Girls vid is another one by 'Black Jesus' called 'What it smell like'.
― VeronaInTheClub, Thursday, 5 June 2008 22:11 (sixteen years ago) link
Seems Tim Burgess of The Charlatans has got a gig as a columnist for the Independent's music section. And fuck me, this is *horrible*:
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/music-magazine/music-magazine-features/introducing-tim-burgess-840139.html
Their live set consist of songs containing lyrics such as, 'I can't hear what you're saying.' and I think the line 'I must kill you' sums up a lot, and the enthralling song 'We Don't Need Your Honesty' with the chorus shouting the word repetition over and over, then coupled with television.
They are fast learners, and even better leaders. They get it right. Guess Electricity In Our Homes truly are vintage classic in the finest sense. They are the new Post Punk renaissance
― Bill A, Monday, 9 June 2008 12:00 (sixteen years ago) link
That is puzzling in every way. Has it deliberately not been proofread?
― DJ Mencap, Monday, 9 June 2008 12:05 (sixteen years ago) link
I've never seen a published piece of writing with so many grammatical errors.
― chap, Monday, 9 June 2008 12:07 (sixteen years ago) link
Reads like a wind-up, to be honest.
― Dingbod Kesterson, Monday, 9 June 2008 12:32 (sixteen years ago) link
When I first read it I thought it must be some kind of piss-take, given the number of mistakes. I love the way that he drops in that Electricity In Our Homes will be supporting The Charlatans, and that their "Charlie Moderate" is also his "dj partner". No vested interest there, then.
― Bill A, Monday, 9 June 2008 12:34 (sixteen years ago) link
Technically, as in using languages, checking facts etc. it is useless.
The message is correct though. :)
― Geir Hongro, Monday, 9 June 2008 21:48 (sixteen years ago) link
hiring tim burgess is such an independent-y thing to do: a bit like having dom joly as columnist. there can't be many people out there who'll buy a paper because tim burgess has a slot.
― banriquit, Tuesday, 10 June 2008 09:49 (sixteen years ago) link
Haha OTM.
Tim Burgess writing in the manner of a 16 year old asked to write school report on pop music there.
― Matt DC, Tuesday, 10 June 2008 10:04 (sixteen years ago) link
I'm kind of assuming this is a wind-up, when the papers get David James or Rio Ferdinand to do a column they at least get a journalist in to actually write it. I know the Indy is on a tight budget but that would be ridiculous.
― Matt DC, Tuesday, 10 June 2008 10:07 (sixteen years ago) link
I can't imagine any 45-year-old Indy reader feeling remotely nostalgic, or feeling anything at all, about the Charlatans, Madchester's very own Swinging Blue Jeans, The.
― Dingbod Kesterson, Tuesday, 10 June 2008 10:32 (sixteen years ago) link
http://www.sfweekly.com/2009-05-06/music/kill-yourself-if-you-listen-to-classic-rock/
― High in Openness (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 8 May 2009 18:03 (fifteen years ago) link
^^^unbelievably terrible. let's challenge received wisdom with... a different kind of received wisdom! urgh fuck you
Surprised you read an article in the Weekly.
― Alex in SF, Friday, 8 May 2009 18:05 (fifteen years ago) link
I don't have anything to read at the moment (a rarity, but I am poor and haven't been to any bookstores lately)
― High in Openness (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 8 May 2009 18:07 (fifteen years ago) link
Libraries are friends to the poor!
― Alex in SF, Friday, 8 May 2009 18:07 (fifteen years ago) link
You know, the big problem with it is this:
probably every other person sharing your Wi-Fi connection at the coffeeshop right now knows the lyrics to "You Shook Me All Night Long," but how many can sing along with a single song by My Morning Jacket, TV on the Radio, Joanna Newsom, Of Montreal, or any of the other best rock artists of our era?
This is like being in the 60s and going "Yeah, the Rolling Stones are good, but why arent you listening to the Fugs and the Godz and Terry Riley?
Our shitty generation is doing JUST FINE adding to the shitty classic rock canon thanks to Foo Fighters, Bush, Stone Temple Toilets, Sublime, The Chili Peppers, Incubus and 1,000 other bands that OUR shitty kids are gonna know still all the words to 25 years from now.
― gui lovato (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 8 May 2009 18:27 (fifteen years ago) link
Dude is getting his strawmen mixed up. The same people that have
dinner parties where the hosts put Heart on the stereo
― gui lovato (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 8 May 2009 18:29 (fifteen years ago) link
Stone Temple Toilets
you did not
― triple-hater protection (J0rdan S.), Friday, 8 May 2009 18:30 (fifteen years ago) link
i can think of a few ilxors past and present who would agree with the notion of you should kill yourself if you listen to classic rock.
― pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Friday, 8 May 2009 18:32 (fifteen years ago) link
I don't listen to the radio at all (much less classic rock radio) so its not like I took this personally or anything but the piece is just such a mess of unfounded assumptions and misdirected anger the only person it made me want to kill was the writer. Like, does he really have that much of a problem with his parents and their record collections? grow the fuck up
― High in Openness (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 8 May 2009 18:35 (fifteen years ago) link
to take one minor example, the central problem with classic rock acts still filling arenas isn't that they're classic rock, its that arena shows BY THEIR VERY NATURE suck shit. Its not like I want to see any of my favorite bands in an arena...
― High in Openness (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 8 May 2009 18:36 (fifteen years ago) link
I know this guy has been ref'd on ilx before because I went to his blog and have seen his article on fruitcake before.
― kingkongvsgodzilla, Friday, 8 May 2009 18:39 (fifteen years ago) link
article blog post
― kingkongvsgodzilla, Friday, 8 May 2009 18:40 (fifteen years ago) link
My Morning Jacket, TV on the Radio, Joanna Newsom, Of Montreal are all classic rock
― tylerw, Friday, 8 May 2009 18:42 (fifteen years ago) link
probably every other person sharing your Wi-Fi connection at the coffeeshop right now knows the lyrics to "You Shook Me All Night Long," but how many can sing along with a single song by My Morning Jacket, TV on the Radio, Joanna Newsom, Of Montreal, or any of the other best rock artists of our era
― xhuxk, Friday, 8 May 2009 18:42 (fifteen years ago) link
Pretty sure there aren't four existing 'rock artists' he could have mentioned instead to prevent his article from being spectacularly retarded
― display mane (DJ Mencap), Friday, 8 May 2009 19:03 (fifteen years ago) link
Is the strawman here even prevalent enough to write an article about? The vast majority of people I speak to or hand with or whatever are in their 20s or 30s and I don't think any of them listen to classic rock exclusively
― display mane (DJ Mencap), Friday, 8 May 2009 19:09 (fifteen years ago) link
hand = hang
True enough, especially since he doesn't provide any sort of rationale as to why they are "the best" -- apart from "because I say so." And considering most of the article rests on the argument "because I say so," he comes off sounding like a petulant teenager.
― giving a shit when it isn't your turn to give a shit (sarahel), Friday, 8 May 2009 19:17 (fifteen years ago) link
this guy is a teenager, right?
― tylerw, Friday, 8 May 2009 19:19 (fifteen years ago) link
xp Shakey: Thanks for posting this ... I read the article yesterday and immediately felt that it deserved a place on this thread.
― giving a shit when it isn't your turn to give a shit (sarahel), Friday, 8 May 2009 19:21 (fifteen years ago) link
http://www.myspace.com/morbidund
right?
― once he puts that purple he will become an enemy (omar little), Friday, 8 May 2009 19:21 (fifteen years ago) link
Music: White Lion, Elzhi, Black Milk, RA The Rugged Man, White Rabbits, Bill Callahan, El-P, Avril, Replacements, DJ Khaled, MC 401(k), Brother Ali, Kanye West, 50 Cent, John Maxfield, The Long Winters, Band of Horses, The Streets, Ghostface, DJ Crucial, Serengeti, MC Paul Barman, The Frozen Food Section
xp omar: I think you found him. What I want to know, and one of the things that makes me dislike the SF Weekly, is why they are paying a bunch of non-local music writers, when the SF Bay Area has plenty of music writers? Is this a corporate thing? By that I mean, is this New Jersey dude and the other non-local music writers who write for the SF Weekly part of a New Times/Village Voice stable?
― giving a shit when it isn't your turn to give a shit (sarahel), Friday, 8 May 2009 19:27 (fifteen years ago) link
Each music editor in the VVM/NT chain is pretty much free to put together his/her own stable of music writers -- at least that was my experience.
― QuantumNoise, Friday, 8 May 2009 19:32 (fifteen years ago) link
"Is this a corporate thing?"
Yes.
― Alex in SF, Friday, 8 May 2009 19:41 (fifteen years ago) link
I mean in so far as I don't think that VVM/NT has a particularly loyalty to the idea of using local writers for media (or for that mannner anything else.)
― Alex in SF, Friday, 8 May 2009 19:44 (fifteen years ago) link
And in this case it looks like this dude writes for all the Weeklies. There are links to LA and OC Weekly articles on that Myspace page.
― Alex in SF, Friday, 8 May 2009 19:47 (fifteen years ago) link
xp Alex: That's what I've noticed ... he's not the only NJ/NY dude that writes for other chain papers that the Weekly has writing for them now.
― giving a shit when it isn't your turn to give a shit (sarahel), Friday, 8 May 2009 19:48 (fifteen years ago) link
yeah it's pretty horrific to think that not only have papers like the village voice, la weekly, and others in the vvm stable completely turned to shit, but they all employ the same bullshit writers.
― once he puts that purple he will become an enemy (omar little), Friday, 8 May 2009 19:48 (fifteen years ago) link
Yeah I'm not saying that they should be loyal to that idea. The problem here isn't that this guy lives in NJ. It's that the article(s) he wrote is crappy. I'm fine with getting the best writer who live wherever to write your music pieces.
― Alex in SF, Friday, 8 May 2009 19:51 (fifteen years ago) link
xp Alex: but that crappitude is stock in trade for the SF Weekly. A friend of mine used to write for them ... and he said that for articles there was a common format, as he explained it, one either writes about "This thing you thought was good? It's really bad." or "This thing you thought was evil? It actually is good."
― giving a shit when it isn't your turn to give a shit (sarahel), Friday, 8 May 2009 19:53 (fifteen years ago) link
Yeah I don't read the Weekly and basically I never have (I used to a little when Phil Sherburne used to write for them). I don't read the music section in the Guardian either though.
― Alex in SF, Friday, 8 May 2009 19:56 (fifteen years ago) link
they all employ the same bullshit writers
:-/
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 8 May 2009 19:57 (fifteen years ago) link
I give both at least cursory skims. I usually read at least one or two things in the Guardian, Kimberly Chun's column, and there's usually a show preview for someone interesting.
― giving a shit when it isn't your turn to give a shit (sarahel), Friday, 8 May 2009 19:59 (fifteen years ago) link
I think the answer to the thread's question is yes, this is the worst piece of music writing ever.
― Bill Magill, Friday, 8 May 2009 20:02 (fifteen years ago) link
well, there are diamonds in the rough, ned ; D
― once he puts that purple he will become an enemy (omar little), Friday, 8 May 2009 20:04 (fifteen years ago) link
oh come on now guys, it's bad but not that bad
― mark cl, Friday, 8 May 2009 20:06 (fifteen years ago) link
The Village Vanguard. New York City. 1961.
We was sittin’ there watchin’ the stage. Waitin’ for the man they called Coltrane to come out and do his thing. It was me and my four droogs. Them bein’ Peter, Georgio and Dim; Dim being really Dim.
‘Round an hour’d passed and the place was packed straight through to the back. I’d just dropped some dollars for ‘Trane’s Giant Steps six months back. Now was the time, this was the place. The Village Vanguard. New York City. 1961.
I was only there for the first night, see, but them cats at Impulse! just made my life complete. They put out four CDs of all that sound ‘Trane put out those nights. But you know my type, man. Can’t afford to eat, let alone spend some heavy cash on music. So I only got the essential. Live at the Village Vanguard: The Master Takes is one disc, makin’ it one-fourth the cost of the box set. And you only get the best stuff.
Man, the opening beauty of “Spiritual…” It’s like a dream I had: I floated on the River Nile, smokin’ some fresh weed, relaxin’. But I ain’t ever gonna see the Nile anyhow. This track’s as close as I come, and it’s close enough. Best of the best, though, has gotta be “India.” It’s only when you listen to a perfect old jazz tune like this that you realize how much drum-n-bass is derived from this music. ‘Trane takes it to heaven and back with some style, man. Some richness, daddy. It’s a sad thing his life was cut short by them jaws o’ death.
Shit, cat. It don’t make a difference. The man produced enough good music to last me a lifetime. This Village Vanguard thing’s just another example of the genius of Coltrane.
easy target i know
Guardian's definitely better, I like Chun a lot. (didn't she just get laid off tho?)
― High in Openness (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 8 May 2009 20:08 (fifteen years ago) link
xp Shakey: I saw her a couple nights ago and she was talking about an article she was working on ... but I heard that rumor somewhere, too.
― giving a shit when it isn't your turn to give a shit (sarahel), Friday, 8 May 2009 20:10 (fifteen years ago) link
This is actually an excellent article, making some very valuable and very correct points.
― Geir Hongro, Friday, 8 May 2009 22:01 (fifteen years ago) link
but Geir the Beatles are "classic rock"
― High in Openness (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 8 May 2009 22:06 (fifteen years ago) link
xp Oops I just accidently Permalinked you Geir. Sorry about that.
― Alex in SF, Friday, 8 May 2009 22:07 (fifteen years ago) link
LMFAO
― gui lovato (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 8 May 2009 22:08 (fifteen years ago) link
The same people that have dinner parties where the hosts put Heart on the stereo have 90 shitty contempory bands they like too. Who do you think is buying all the Coldplay records?
A few points: I assume there are several millions Coldplay fans who have never had any use for Heart at all; I don't know what Coldplay and Heart have in common in the first place (one was a great hard rock band, one wasn't); I've never been to a dinner party where Heart was played in my life; and though I never thought of it before, I think it might be kind of neat if somebody did play Heart at a one (especially if they put on Bebe Le Strange or Jupiters Darling, neither of which get played on classic rock radio much either, I don't think.)
Actually, if the food and company was good, they could even play Coldplay, for all I care. Hell, it's their party. They should play whatever they want.
― xhuxk, Friday, 8 May 2009 22:12 (fifteen years ago) link
Now I was speaking of the original article.
Classic rock is the canon is good. Of course.
― Geir Hongro, Friday, 8 May 2009 22:15 (fifteen years ago) link
(But nothing wrong about checking out new stuff - as long as it sounds like the old stuff)
― Geir Hongro, Friday, 8 May 2009 22:16 (fifteen years ago) link
Right, I've killed myself. Now what?
― Ismael Klata, Friday, 8 May 2009 22:16 (fifteen years ago) link
Now you get to listen to My Morning Jacket!
― Alex in SF, Friday, 8 May 2009 22:17 (fifteen years ago) link
http://www.reclaimingthemind.org/images/Parchment%20and%20Pen/Ruth%20Tucker/Hell.gif
― tylerw, Friday, 8 May 2009 22:21 (fifteen years ago) link
Nothing wrong about My Morning Jacket, although Flaming Lips do roughly the same thing better :)
― Geir Hongro, Friday, 8 May 2009 22:23 (fifteen years ago) link
you'll have to pry my jethro tull records from my cold, dead hands
― Domm P))) (M@tt He1ges0n), Friday, 8 May 2009 22:30 (fifteen years ago) link
Joanna Newsom is like Jethro Tull only NOW, man.
― Alex in SF, Friday, 8 May 2009 22:30 (fifteen years ago) link
Jethro Newsom - Aquaharp
― tylerw, Friday, 8 May 2009 22:31 (fifteen years ago) link
i really hope the author can explain how all those bomb throwing radical generation rock terrorists of the 60s spent most of their time obsessing over blues and folk records recorded in the 20s and 30s
― Domm P))) (M@tt He1ges0n), Friday, 8 May 2009 22:33 (fifteen years ago) link
^^
― mark cl, Friday, 8 May 2009 22:34 (fifteen years ago) link
See, the problem I have with the original article is that he makes some stupid mistakes in spelling, grammar, and music knowledge.
'...who can quite frankly can screw themselves..." <---- no Editor, even a Uni newpaper twerp, should make such a horrific mistake.
'Greenday' <-----you fucking kidding me?
In terms of music knowledge, the guy who wrote this is obviously retarded.
― the table is the table, Friday, 8 May 2009 22:35 (fifteen years ago) link
I really hope the author can make peace with his parents ... he seems to have issues.
― giving a shit when it isn't your turn to give a shit (sarahel), Friday, 8 May 2009 22:38 (fifteen years ago) link
^^^for realz. this is the first thing I thought of too. Like, does he not realize that the entire concept of generational-warfare-via-pop-culture was developed by, um, the baby boomers?
― High in Openness (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 8 May 2009 22:39 (fifteen years ago) link
I was just envisioning some chick he was interested in flirting with his dad instead.
― giving a shit when it isn't your turn to give a shit (sarahel), Friday, 8 May 2009 22:43 (fifteen years ago) link
a new challenger?
http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/story.asp?sectioncode=26&storycode=406425
― joe, Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:07 (fifteen years ago) link
was unable to read that.
― FREE DOM AND ETHAN (special guest stars mark bronson), Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:16 (fifteen years ago) link
shredded moose morelike
― sorry for british (country matters), Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:17 (fifteen years ago) link
At first, chords were enough: to simply hammer, as John Lennon did, a chord, a root, a seventh, a sixth - anything.
listen to some fucking charlie christian, arsehole.
― languid samuel l. jackson (jim), Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:19 (fifteen years ago) link
hendrix as phallic, clapton as anal
― call all destroyer, Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:20 (fifteen years ago) link
It might be noticed that I mention only English guitarists,
Ran. Screaming.
― kingkongvsgodzilla, Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:22 (fifteen years ago) link
was going to post that hendrix-clapton line but thought it would be unfair to inflict it on anyone who hadn't already read it. An image that will haunt the rest of my days.
― Stryder's on the Orme (j.o.n.a), Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:25 (fifteen years ago) link
"There is hardly one classic electric guitarist to have come from America. Blues, jazz, country, etc, indeed - and they have mastered the art of the Paganinistic solo in grand masters such as Steve Vai and Joe Satriani. But these are not guitarists with the right spirit, able to serve and transcend music at the same time."
No way, you did not just say that.
― Bill Magill, Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:26 (fifteen years ago) link
lol
― languid samuel l. jackson (jim), Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:27 (fifteen years ago) link
i like how he claims hendrix as an english guitarist just for the hell of it
― call all destroyer, Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:27 (fifteen years ago) link
surprised to find the guy is only 36, assumed he was some nostalgic baby-boomer.
― joe, Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:32 (fifteen years ago) link
Why is there so much music writing on the internet that's like 20 paragraph think pieces? Who is reading all of this?
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:32 (fifteen years ago) link
some people think the point of not having an editor is not editing themselves?
― Briney Deep Coralgarden (some dude), Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:34 (fifteen years ago) link
this piece was in the tls though rite? which is pretty respectable (or used to be).
― FREE DOM AND ETHAN (special guest stars mark bronson), Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:35 (fifteen years ago) link
was responding to Whiney's question about "writing on the internet," not talking about that piece
― Briney Deep Coralgarden (some dude), Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:36 (fifteen years ago) link
Off piste: A fortnightly series in which academics step outside their area of expertise
― just sayin, Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:36 (fifteen years ago) link
not the tls, the times higher - used to be part of the same stable but less culture and lit-crit, more news and features about university funding, admin, jobs etc. they run a weekly column where an academic writes about a subject outside his specialty.
xpost
― joe, Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:37 (fifteen years ago) link
It is in England that an odd mixture of pluck, determination and ignorance came to fruition between 1960 and 1970. There is no guitarist worth listening to who started playing after that time: the inauthenticity is too evident.
― display mane (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:38 (fifteen years ago) link
James Alexander teaches Hongroic theory at Bilkent University, Ankara, Turkey.
― display mane (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:39 (fifteen years ago) link
I vaguely recall posting something like this before but is this kind of application of confidence broadly thought of as a positive thing? Like the idea of writing the two sentences I quoted above when I couldn't possibly have the knowledge to back them up just seems, to me, like such a weird and alien thing to do
― display mane (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:43 (fifteen years ago) link
I vaguely recall posting something like this before but is this kind of application of confidence broadly thought of as a positive thing?
i think it is by editors. as i've gotten older and read more, i find myself reading papers/magazines and just knowing they're fronting half the time. but i think that appeals to editors and maybe readers. same way tanya gold gets published i guess.
― FREE DOM AND ETHAN (special guest stars mark bronson), Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:46 (fifteen years ago) link
This dude and the guy who wrote the anti-classic rock piece should have to live together. It could be one of those abject generational comedies.
― giving a shit when it isn't your turn to give a shit (sarahel), Tuesday, 12 May 2009 18:16 (fifteen years ago) link
But the tutored geniuses of later decades, who imitated these faster models, achieved the ultimate Aufhebung of the electric guitar, a sort of apotheosis by way of auto-da-fe whereby the blistering solo became so effortless that it was turned into a form of mechanical blandness, mere empty virtuosity.
this sentence is where i started to assume the whole thing was a prank.
― would you ask tom petty that? (tipsy mothra), Tuesday, 12 May 2009 18:21 (fifteen years ago) link
Because of the turn of phrase? What he's saying is... not something I'd get behind much but not all that insane or challopy either
― display mane (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 12 May 2009 18:37 (fifteen years ago) link
compared to almost every other paragraph he's written
not the sentiment, just because of "the ultimate Aufhebung of the electric guitar" etc.
― would you ask tom petty that? (tipsy mothra), Tuesday, 12 May 2009 19:26 (fifteen years ago) link
"Why is there so much music writing on the internet that's like 20 paragraph think pieces? Who is reading all of this?"
sorry, wait, what, where?
― thomp, Tuesday, 12 May 2009 20:41 (fifteen years ago) link
NME capsule review finds new depth to plummet to: http://www.nme.com/reviews/sam-isaac/10733
― Sickamous (Scik Mouthy), Monday, 10 August 2009 11:17 (fifteen years ago) link
I thought it was pretty lol
― Tim Krul ringmaster (DJ Mencap), Monday, 10 August 2009 11:35 (fifteen years ago) link
For anyone who is interested, Sam Isaac's album, 'Bears' is a refreshing, honest, album of melodic indie-pop, with songs written with conviction and passion
What a disaster for fans of refreshing, honest, melodic indie-pop, with songs written with conviction and passion
― Tim Krul ringmaster (DJ Mencap), Monday, 10 August 2009 11:36 (fifteen years ago) link
^^^LOL
"I had become Passantino"
― cockles (country matters), Monday, 10 August 2009 11:39 (fifteen years ago) link
that was fantastic.
― the shane bourne identity (haitch), Monday, 10 August 2009 11:58 (fifteen years ago) link
His line of “what you think I rap for/to push a fuckin’ Rav4” was both hilarious and truthful
lmao
http://www.popmatters.com/pm/review/111082-jay-z-the-blueprint-3/
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 8 September 2009 22:08 (fifteen years ago) link
wouldn't call this the worst ever but lots of unintentional lols
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 8 September 2009 22:09 (fifteen years ago) link
pedantic maybe, but:
"His debut, Reasonable Doubt, was easily one of the 1990s’ best albums, hip-hop or otherwise, and it featured some of the best producers and rappers of our time."
rappers plural, as in besides Biggie? either dude is being generous to Foxy or we've found the world's only Sauce Money stan.
― the delighted flute-clinking dinner party audience in soto's head (some dude), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 01:46 (fifteen years ago) link
hahaha
― call all destroyer, Wednesday, 9 September 2009 01:47 (fifteen years ago) link
dying
― k3vin k., Wednesday, 9 September 2009 03:33 (fifteen years ago) link
http://www.villagevoice.com/2002-08-06/music/lift-every-voice/
― Squash weather (Eazy), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 15:27 (fifteen years ago) link
http://thedailycrazy.files.wordpress.com/2009/02/orville1.jpg
― history mayne, Wednesday, 9 September 2009 15:28 (fifteen years ago) link
these people should be quarantined from society
― Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 9 September 2009 15:33 (fifteen years ago) link
In 1992, Springsteen seemed irrelevant because he was outflanked by both rhythm and noise, by PE on the left and Nirvana on the white.
― kingkongvsgodzilla, Wednesday, 9 September 2009 15:34 (fifteen years ago) link
taken as a whole that Bruce piece is over the top but there are a couple paragraph that on their own are pretty killer.
― some dude, Wednesday, 9 September 2009 15:41 (fifteen years ago) link
not Keith's best piece, but also FAR from the worst ever. (whatever happened to Keith anyhow?)
― all you need is love vs. money (that's what i want) (Ioannis), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 15:47 (fifteen years ago) link
OK, what the hell's wrong with this review? I agree with almost all of it.
― My life is butthurt so badly (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 15:51 (fifteen years ago) link
bit overcooked i guess, but i like it! the 'every sentence must have some pow pow pow trickery' style of writing has kind of waned hasn't it.
― goole, Wednesday, 9 September 2009 15:52 (fifteen years ago) link
I just thought it was petty and smug. Plus, sprinkling song titles and lyrics into a review is a pet peeve of mine. This review always comes to mind when I think of a particular kind of criticism that leaves me more annoyed than informed. Maybe this is personal and not Harris's fault, but it reminds me of the whole era of sarcasm and naivite that led folks to say that Bush and Gore were the same, and a Simpsons and Seinfeld world where if you're not making a joke you are a joke.
― Squash weather (Eazy), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:04 (fifteen years ago) link
And if gospel music and 9/11 and Springsteen aren't sacred cows, than I assume Keith Harris doesn't see himself as one either. I've liked other reviews of his, as well as his show recommendations in City PAges.
― Squash weather (Eazy), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:06 (fifteen years ago) link
The first graf is right-on and far from smug.
― My life is butthurt so badly (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:07 (fifteen years ago) link
September 11 affected us all in different ways, and the way it affected Bruce Springsteen was this—as the second tower toppled from the sky, he was plunged into a world of eternal vagueness.
That's not smug?
― Squash weather (Eazy), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:09 (fifteen years ago) link
no
― goole, Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:10 (fifteen years ago) link
No.
― My life is butthurt so badly (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:11 (fifteen years ago) link
it's funny! probably the funniest thing you could say about 9/11 and bruce springsteen
― goole, Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:11 (fifteen years ago) link
If anything, he implies that Springsteen's the smug one for responding to 9-11 with an album's worth of platitudes.
― My life is butthurt so badly (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:12 (fifteen years ago) link
i don't disagree w/ Eazy's general drift, but there are much much worse examples and practitioners of that style imo
― radio k3ller (some dude), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:13 (fifteen years ago) link
I mean, gospel music is almost always more symbolic and allegorical than concrete and specific. "We Shall Overcome" works on specific occasions, but it doesn't document the surface of those occasions.
Definitely there are worse examples out there. This one pissed me off more than any other, though no more than he seemed to feel about The Rising.
― Squash weather (Eazy), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:21 (fifteen years ago) link
And I'm no big fan of unmelodic Tom Joad and Rising Springsteen songs, though I think "The Rising" itself is about as good a Springsteen song as there is. Telling a song from the point of view from a fireman in the first tower, but telling it in a way that someone could sing it and make it their own, and telling it in a way that doesn't permanently ground it in 2002, is quite a fear.
― Squash weather (Eazy), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:24 (fifteen years ago) link
I'm afraid of it too.
― My life is butthurt so badly (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:24 (fifteen years ago) link
A feat, a feat!
― Squash weather (Eazy), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:25 (fifteen years ago) link
in that review keith seems to just KNOW things that he can't possibly know, i.e. the post-9/11 Springsteen is vague because, like the Democratic party, he doesn't want to alienate anyone. really?
The Rising argues, implicitly but unmistakably, that in a time of crisis we should shrug off our individual concerns in the interest of "healing." Sound familiar?That's not to equate the heartfelt pieties of one of rock's most decent millionaires with the demands for unanimity launched by those gutting the Fourth Amendment.
That's not to equate the heartfelt pieties of one of rock's most decent millionaires with the demands for unanimity launched by those gutting the Fourth Amendment.
except actually it is. cake = had and eaten! and nice job getting the "millionaire" reference in there dude
― Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:27 (fifteen years ago) link
FEAR THE BOSS! FEAR HIM, I SAY!
― all you need is love vs. money (that's what i want) (Ioannis), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:29 (fifteen years ago) link
also his first instinct that "if 9/11 hadn't existed bruce would have had to invent it" is a snide aphorism was the right one; it's a risible thing to say
― Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:29 (fifteen years ago) link
it's also funny as hell.
― all you need is love vs. money (that's what i want) (Ioannis), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:31 (fifteen years ago) link
Sometimes critics use albums as an excuse to write zingers – wow!
― My life is butthurt so badly (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:32 (fifteen years ago) link
And sometimes non-critics use critics to encapsulate the shortcoming of a particular era -- no harm done to anyone.
― Squash weather (Eazy), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:33 (fifteen years ago) link
(Not critics in general -- specific reviews.)
― Squash weather (Eazy), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:34 (fifteen years ago) link
suggesting that Bruce Springsteen actually welcomes national tragedy because it will boost his own "relevance" is funny as hell??
― Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:38 (fifteen years ago) link
http://culturekitchen.com/files/images/web_Lee_Greenwood.jpg
― goole, Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:39 (fifteen years ago) link
i just deleted like four bruce live albums off my ipod last night, i think i'm getting defensive because of my guilt - sorry bruce
― Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 9 September 2009 16:44 (fifteen years ago) link
no, it isn't. but suggesting that "If there hadn't been a September 11, Bruce Springsteen would have had to invent one." is, imho.
― all you need is love vs. money (that's what i want) (Ioannis), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 17:23 (fifteen years ago) link
c'mon RI-I-I-I-I-I-I-SE UP. RI-I-I-I-I-I-I-I-SE UP.
― vulva eyes (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 17:28 (fifteen years ago) link
just you wait til i fetch my Cain, you.
― all you need is love vs. money (that's what i want) (Ioannis), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 17:32 (fifteen years ago) link
what would we do without music critics--how would anyone ever understand music
― Monsieur Queueue (Mr. Que), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 17:35 (fifteen years ago) link
by abusing copious amounts of illegal substances, natch.
― all you need is love vs. money (that's what i want) (Ioannis), Wednesday, 9 September 2009 17:43 (fifteen years ago) link
haha @ the rapreviews.com writer eventually outing himself as an animal collective stan and comparing merriweather post pavilion to veckatimest
― k3vin k., Thursday, 10 September 2009 02:18 (fifteen years ago) link
uhhhh i first read that as "rape reviews" and then as "ra previews" pls let's pretend this says nothing about me except that i'm about four deep.
― call all destroyer, Thursday, 10 September 2009 02:24 (fifteen years ago) link
http://www.metro.co.uk/news/newsfocus/article.html?Straight_Edge_is_no_sex,_no_drugs,_just_rock_and_roll&in_article_id=741802&in_page_id=65
This is from today's Metro and actually worse than the URL would lead you to expect
― What are the benefits of Western democracy, better elections? (DJ Mencap), Wednesday, 23 September 2009 13:59 (fifteen years ago) link
I like that they transcribe the guy's t-shirt as "Party F******g Sober!" and then run a photo of the whole fucking thing right below that.
― pshrbrn, Wednesday, 23 September 2009 14:09 (fifteen years ago) link
SleeveNotes: Tim Jonze:It's not every day you get to compare Sugababes to the band who wrote Nazi Punks Fuck Off. But this week the pop trio followed in the footsteps of extreme metal terrorists Napalm Death by soldiering on, despite the fact that, since Keisha Buchanan's departure on Monday, their lineup now has zero original members.
It's not every day you get to compare Sugababes to the band who wrote Nazi Punks Fuck Off. But this week the pop trio followed in the footsteps of extreme metal terrorists Napalm Death by soldiering on, despite the fact that, since Keisha Buchanan's departure on Monday, their lineup now has zero original members.
OK, what's wrong with the above?
― Mark G, Wednesday, 23 September 2009 16:01 (fifteen years ago) link
Article on Creed in Slate today. Reads utterly incoherent to me and I'm not sure that it's not a joke, but it seems sincere enough I guess.
― wmlynch, Thursday, 22 October 2009 00:02 (fifteen years ago) link
I'd hardly say its incoherent save for
"Higher" might turn out to be the nu-grunge "Don't Stop Believing": dismissed by cognoscenti on arrival as bludgeoning and gauche but destined for rehabilitation down the road as a triumphant slab of ersatz inspirationalism.
ersatz?
inigo_montoya.jpg
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Thursday, 22 October 2009 00:14 (fifteen years ago) link
Oh just go for the clip:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2y8Sx4B2Sk
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 22 October 2009 00:15 (fifteen years ago) link
That article was fine. It was of a piece with Slate's baffling obsession with contrarianism and revisionism. It was a decent read.
― Bill Magill, Thursday, 22 October 2009 14:18 (fifteen years ago) link
It was a great read, except it would have read EXACTLY the same if it was on The Onion.
― & other try hard shitfests (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 22 October 2009 14:32 (fifteen years ago) link
derivative blowhards with a self-righteous Christian agenda
i like how he describes in 8 words why no one likes creed and then spends 5 paragraphs defending creed.
― call all destroyer, Thursday, 22 October 2009 14:35 (fifteen years ago) link
I'm a sucker for a thoughtfully contrarian essay, so this worked.
― lihaperäpukamat (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 22 October 2009 14:42 (fifteen years ago) link
Then you remembered the sex tape with Kid Rock and came to your senses.
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 22 October 2009 14:44 (fifteen years ago) link
I can share Brett Michaels' own tape with you.
― lihaperäpukamat (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 22 October 2009 14:50 (fifteen years ago) link
Why is Creed "good" and "underrated"?
1. They write "first-rate schlock-rock."2. "In his lyrics, Stapp is a well-meaning, Bible-fluent doofus, easy to chuckle at"3. Stapp's stage presence is "obnoxiously anachronistic"4. "Higher" is "a triumphant slab of ersatz inspirationalism"5. "Tremonti was a brutally effective guitarist"
It's like he couldn't even take his own argument seriously. His defense is pretty backhanded.
― wmlynch, Thursday, 22 October 2009 17:51 (fifteen years ago) link
the bar is pretty low for good music writing tbh
― access flap (omar little), Thursday, 22 October 2009 17:53 (fifteen years ago) link
Why is Creed good? Cuz they write shit songs with bad lyrics and their frontman is irritating. THAT'S WHY!
― wmlynch, Thursday, 22 October 2009 17:55 (fifteen years ago) link
Wait, it's that they're ersatz good.
the slate thing is just a space-filler, but its hardly terrible. or terribly written anyway. dunno if it was worth the effort...
― scott seward, Thursday, 22 October 2009 17:56 (fifteen years ago) link
what IS worth the effort these days? where's the good writing thread? i haven't read anything good in a dog's age. somebody must have written something good this year about music.
― scott seward, Thursday, 22 October 2009 17:57 (fifteen years ago) link
you don't need space-filler on the internet. it's not like a newspaper or magazine where you have to fill space; you choose how much of the theoretically infinite space of the internet you want to use.
― congratulations (n/a), Thursday, 22 October 2009 17:58 (fifteen years ago) link
but even internet newsmags have, um, theoretical space limits and such, no? they have sections. they need to fill a section. they need product, basically. same as a regular magazine.
― scott seward, Thursday, 22 October 2009 18:02 (fifteen years ago) link
that's probably because old people run it
― nice email (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Thursday, 22 October 2009 18:05 (fifteen years ago) link
it's the internet just throw up whatever
in case anyone was wondering why they ran that article, its because it gets forwarded around the internet and posted on message boards like this, and then people go to the site and some of them click on the ads, and then slate gets money, and pays its writers
― Bobby Wo (max), Thursday, 22 October 2009 18:07 (fifteen years ago) link
Thanks for explaining the internet Max, you are a hero.
― & other try hard shitfests (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 22 October 2009 18:08 (fifteen years ago) link
it's the internet just throw up, whatever (xxp)
― Fetchboy, Thursday, 22 October 2009 18:08 (fifteen years ago) link
np jon seemed like there was some confusion on this thread vis-a-vis the article, and why slate would publish something that wasnt particularly insightful but was contrarian enough that people seem to want to tell everyone about it
― Bobby Wo (max), Thursday, 22 October 2009 18:16 (fifteen years ago) link
it's about as contrarian as a cannned ham.
― scott seward, Thursday, 22 October 2009 18:17 (fifteen years ago) link
cannnnnned ham
"utterly incoherent to me and I'm not sure that it's not a joke, but it seems sincere enough I guess."
Ha! sums up my feelings re: Creed and maybe Rammstein and Rush. Maybe ICP and Burial, too.What groups are like that for you guys?
― Philip Nunez, Thursday, 22 October 2009 18:25 (fifteen years ago) link
To compare Creed and ICP to Rush is sacrilege.
― Bill Magill, Thursday, 22 October 2009 19:27 (fifteen years ago) link
Bill Magill OTM. Faygo & Seminars>>>>>>>>Ayn Rand.
― Fetchboy, Thursday, 22 October 2009 19:40 (fifteen years ago) link
which awful alt-weekly cover story essay on jay-z is worse??
http://www.citypaper.com/music/story.asp?id=19159http://www.thestranger.com/seattle/old-bull/Content?oid=2473786
― i got nothin (deej), Friday, 23 October 2009 03:23 (fifteen years ago) link
jk the stranger one is ugh but the cp one is http://www.soulstrut.com/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/lvl.gif
― i got nothin (deej), Friday, 23 October 2009 03:25 (fifteen years ago) link
He is Gen-Why's Crack Cobain, in their search for a new musical Nirvana.
man i fuckin hate wordplay
― call all destroyer, Friday, 23 October 2009 03:26 (fifteen years ago) link
What about scrapple?
― _Rudipherous_, Friday, 23 October 2009 03:27 (fifteen years ago) link
city paper joint is the worst piece of rap writing i've read this year
― everybody loves am0n (J0rdan S.), Friday, 23 October 2009 03:34 (fifteen years ago) link
RIP al shipley circa 2008 getting space to rightfully shit on 'american gangster'
― everybody loves am0n (J0rdan S.), Friday, 23 October 2009 03:35 (fifteen years ago) link
He may be getting old, but this album is a warning flare to the world that he could do this shit forever.
like, i don't even know where to start
― everybody loves am0n (J0rdan S.), Friday, 23 October 2009 03:40 (fifteen years ago) link
haha i still get space i just wouldn't use it to shit on nu-jay more than once
― some dude, Friday, 23 October 2009 03:47 (fifteen years ago) link
"Jay may be the Magna Carter (though they aren't related, both men share similar surnames) but Weezy smells succession"
similar?
― suggest friend (hmmmm), Friday, 23 October 2009 08:15 (fifteen years ago) link
He is "literally" carrying hip hop on his back.
― Dorian (Dorianlynskey), Friday, 23 October 2009 08:33 (fifteen years ago) link
"And we are in the age of Obamica now; if a black man can become president of the United States, then a wicked jump shot or slinging crack rocks—as the greatest rapper of all time, the late Christopher Wallace once suggested—is not the only way out of the hood. The looming shadow of the big baller/shot caller has not disappeared completely, but it's getting smaller."
This paragraph is literally burning my eyeballs. My head is literally going to explode. Figuratively speaking, this is a terribly written piece.
― dabug, Friday, 23 October 2009 16:56 (fifteen years ago) link
btw that goof jonah weiner who wrote that article on Creed has a 'conceptual' rap group:http://www.myspace.com/spiderfangz
― i got nothin (deej), Saturday, 24 October 2009 03:35 (fifteen years ago) link
haha the way nick sylvester constantly posted about 'spiderfang' on his blog i thought it was just some bullshit he made up himself
― wein blockas (some dude), Saturday, 24 October 2009 03:53 (fifteen years ago) link
Ghostface Killer (Tony Starks)
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Saturday, 24 October 2009 04:00 (fifteen years ago) link
ohhh, he means Tony Starks
― i got nothin (deej), Saturday, 24 October 2009 04:14 (fifteen years ago) link
honestly the predictable contrarianism of that creed article is so obnoxious to me for some reason ... like yes, we get it, all music isnt that bad when its not on the radio all the time
i just hate the idea that dude was like, "oooh creed catalogue torrent ... maybe ill make a hundred bucks in slate cash off a half assed review of this that SHOCKS MUSIC FAN SENSIBILITIES"
― i got nothin (deej), Saturday, 24 October 2009 04:21 (fifteen years ago) link
So hold on, is Weiner now Slate's official pop critic?
http://www.slate.com/?id=3944&qp=43219
Jeez, that's f'n depressing...
― uninspired girls rejoice!!! (Hoot Smalley), Thursday, 5 November 2009 19:20 (fifteen years ago) link
they were going to hire me and give me free reign to write about Wilco every week, but the deal fell through at the last minute.
― kshighway1, Thursday, 5 November 2009 19:26 (fifteen years ago) link
they went for second best.
― kshighway1, Thursday, 5 November 2009 19:27 (fifteen years ago) link
If I ever got a chance to interview Jay, I
so sad that this sentence occurs in a cover story on the guy
― banned, on the run (s1ocki), Thursday, 5 November 2009 20:22 (fifteen years ago) link
isn't a covery story
― the goondock saints (some dude), Thursday, 5 November 2009 20:27 (fifteen years ago) link
er cover story
no it's not very cover-y at all
haha xp
― banned, on the run (s1ocki), Thursday, 5 November 2009 20:27 (fifteen years ago) link
ya i assumed it was from deej's "which awful alt-weekly cover story essay on jay-z is worse??" but i guess you'd know better
― banned, on the run (s1ocki), Thursday, 5 November 2009 20:28 (fifteen years ago) link
Is It OK To Like Chris Brown's New Single?What to do when a bad person makes a good song.
Creed Is GoodScott Stapp's nu-grunge foursome was seriously underrated.
Can Miley Cyrus Save Health Care Reform?The pop starlet's new single is great, goofy—and bipartisan!—fun.
The Last SelloutsPearl Jam's brilliant new single, brought to you by Target.
Over the HumpThe Black Eyed Peas' inescapable, incoherent, irresistible new song.
Was Limp Bizkit Really That Bad?Why the most hated band ever deserves another listen.
Ladies! I Can't Hear You! No, Really, I Can't Hear You!Where did all the female rappers go?
Lil Wayne and the Afronaut InvasionWhy have so many black musicians been obsessed with outer space?
The Cure for the Common ColdplayThe band's surprising new album.
― jØrdån (omar little), Thursday, 5 November 2009 20:28 (fifteen years ago) link
Impressive corpus.
― kshighway1, Thursday, 5 November 2009 20:30 (fifteen years ago) link
You missed this one:
Unbearable WhitenessThat queasy feeling you get when watching a Wes Anderson movie.
― o. nate, Thursday, 5 November 2009 20:30 (fifteen years ago) link
Slate's new challops column.
: /
― jØrdån (omar little), Thursday, 5 November 2009 20:31 (fifteen years ago) link
My new Slate column: "Received Contrarianism"
― uninspired girls rejoice!!! (Hoot Smalley), Thursday, 5 November 2009 20:34 (fifteen years ago) link
Is the rest of Slate any good? I rarely read it.
― kshighway1, Thursday, 5 November 2009 20:38 (fifteen years ago) link
Varies wildly from writer to writer, but I'd say overall it's gotten worse over the years.
― uninspired girls rejoice!!! (Hoot Smalley), Thursday, 5 November 2009 20:41 (fifteen years ago) link
holy shit, that city paper story takes the fucking cake - easily the worst thing I've read this year
― Brio, Thursday, 5 November 2009 20:58 (fifteen years ago) link
Craziest thing about the CP story is that it's not by some dumb young kid:
http://www.nathanielturner.com/baltimoreoratorbarrymichaelcooper.htm
― uninspired girls rejoice!!! (Hoot Smalley), Thursday, 5 November 2009 21:04 (fifteen years ago) link
:O
― banned, on the run (s1ocki), Thursday, 5 November 2009 21:22 (fifteen years ago) link
Totally thought that was written by a college kid.
― Brio, Thursday, 5 November 2009 21:32 (fifteen years ago) link
Every single one of this guy's article titles outdoes most of the #slatepitches responses.
http://twitter.com/#search?q=%23slatepitches
― dabug, Friday, 6 November 2009 00:02 (fifteen years ago) link
Yeah, you can't out-Slate Slate...
― uninspired girls rejoice!!! (Hoot Smalley), Friday, 6 November 2009 00:11 (fifteen years ago) link
from city pages in mpls, steely dan concert review:
http://blogs.citypages.com/gimmenoise/2009/11/steely_dan_at_t.php
― The looming shadow of the big baller/shot caller (M@tt He1ges0n), Monday, 9 November 2009 20:30 (fifteen years ago) link
I imagined myself in a wood-paneled basement rec room party with Chicago and the Pat Metheny Group.would go to that party.
― tylerw, Monday, 9 November 2009 20:33 (fifteen years ago) link
City Pages, RIP.
― uninspired girls rejoice!!! (Hoot Smalley), Monday, 9 November 2009 20:35 (fifteen years ago) link
I don't think that's a badly written piece at all
― I forgot my mantra (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 9 November 2009 20:47 (fifteen years ago) link
lol i thought of a slatepitch this morning... what was it
― banned, on the run (s1ocki), Monday, 9 November 2009 20:51 (fifteen years ago) link
ugh, that Dan piece. being a middle aged loner with no taste and a clear disdain for people more successful than you is NAGL. it would help if she at least learned to write a serviceable punchline
― k3vin k., Monday, 9 November 2009 21:08 (fifteen years ago) link
i just hate that smug failure to try to even engage with something, just recycling lazy "zings" about something you clearly don't even really understand
― The looming shadow of the big baller/shot caller (M@tt He1ges0n), Monday, 9 November 2009 21:11 (fifteen years ago) link
yup
― k3vin k., Monday, 9 November 2009 21:12 (fifteen years ago) link
oh I don't agree with her at all and think her succession of lazy zings are very revealing about her own very funny and fairly arbitrary insecurities but I don't think its badly written per se. its kinda funny.
― I forgot my mantra (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 9 November 2009 21:13 (fifteen years ago) link
she would make a perfect subject for a Becker/Fagan song lolz
not really--how fucking old are these jokes at this point? cocaine! wine coolers! parents are old! lol!
― call all destroyer, Monday, 9 November 2009 21:16 (fifteen years ago) link
there are (perhaps unintentional?) lolz at the fact that she stresses how HER parents wouldn't be here, just YOUR parents. whoah, judgmental much...
― I forgot my mantra (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 9 November 2009 21:18 (fifteen years ago) link
also hey who has issues about being 30yo and unmarried and clinging to juvenile aesthetic positions derived from received wisdom
― I forgot my mantra (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 9 November 2009 21:19 (fifteen years ago) link
but mostly she just hates nerds!
― Brio, Monday, 9 November 2009 21:24 (fifteen years ago) link
http://www.city-data.com/forum/members/bs13690-83559-albums-random-pics-pic43266-nerds-ogre.jpg
― Brio, Monday, 9 November 2009 21:26 (fifteen years ago) link
having a downtown condo and drinking chardonnay sounds tite imo
― call all destroyer, Monday, 9 November 2009 21:27 (fifteen years ago) link
Starbucks wasn't hiring, huh?
― if I don't see more dissent, I'm going to have to check myself in (Matos W.K.), Monday, 9 November 2009 21:29 (fifteen years ago) link
the best thing about the steely dan thing was when i clicked to the second page and there were pictures of john d. and donald fagen both singing with their heads held high. wanna hear that duet!
― scott seward, Monday, 9 November 2009 21:29 (fifteen years ago) link
oh wait its on the first page too.
― scott seward, Monday, 9 November 2009 21:30 (fifteen years ago) link
pwned
― a Barbie-like nub where he provates should be (HI DERE), Monday, 9 November 2009 21:35 (fifteen years ago) link
matos, come home.
― The looming shadow of the big baller/shot caller (M@tt He1ges0n), Monday, 9 November 2009 21:53 (fifteen years ago) link
― I forgot my mantra (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, November 9, 2009 4:13 PM (50 minutes ago)
ok but the entire glue of her piece is supposed to be this wit she brings - if we agree she can't write a punchline and goes for only the laziest of zings, what's of value? was there any insight you gained?
― k3vin k., Monday, 9 November 2009 22:06 (fifteen years ago) link
so tempted to RAMPAGE THOSE COMMENTS, but, why
― goole, Monday, 9 November 2009 22:10 (fifteen years ago) link
― uninspired girls rejoice!!! (Hoot Smalley), Monday, November 9, 2009 2:35 PM (1 hour ago) Bookmark
^^ this ain't no shit btw
goole do you even do stuff for them anymore?
― The looming shadow of the big baller/shot caller (M@tt He1ges0n), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:12 (fifteen years ago) link
the insight i gained is she needs an editor: "I have to say it's a pretty brilliant concept to feature entire album on tour." if you're gonna do a disreview your writing should at least be clean, especially at your zing-a-sentence ending there
― kamerad, Monday, 9 November 2009 22:12 (fifteen years ago) link
Sorry, but my mom tells better jokes and has more insight than this critic.
― I yanked that sucker hard, and work it did. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:13 (fifteen years ago) link
was there any insight you gained?
main insight is that the writer is neurotic. I def. didn't learn anything about the music haha
― I forgot my mantra (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:15 (fifteen years ago) link
What is the ridiculous strawman that Steely Dan fans think that Dan music is somehow the apotheosis of jazz fused with rock?
I will say that while I thought her writing was horrible, the gig she described sounded great!
― a Barbie-like nub where he provates should be (HI DERE), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:15 (fifteen years ago) link
I see wine coolers at the Publix every visit and always wonder who the hell buys them in 2009.
― I yanked that sucker hard, and work it did. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:17 (fifteen years ago) link
lol @ shakey's halfhearted backhanded defense of this awful piece
― heart goin ham (deej), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:17 (fifteen years ago) link
jk i havent even read the piece
oh, right: Becker-Fagen groupies buy wine coolers.
is this piece online only? i know the alt weekly in my city is under huge pressure to just churn out content constantly for the web these days, so "editing" is kinda a thing of the past. Gotta get those click throughs y'all!also, i don't think I've ever had a wine cooler. are they tasty? are they like the steely dan of beverages?
― tylerw, Monday, 9 November 2009 22:18 (fifteen years ago) link
It's not that the piece is really AWFUL as much as it's just really, really stupid; you get a sense that the author is WAY more of a douchebag poser twit than the people she's criticizing for SHOCK HORROR having fun at a Steely Dan concert
Wine coolers are awesome until you turn 19
― a Barbie-like nub where he provates should be (HI DERE), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:19 (fifteen years ago) link
Like life.
― I yanked that sucker hard, and work it did. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:19 (fifteen years ago) link
:'(
― tylerw, Monday, 9 November 2009 22:20 (fifteen years ago) link
― The looming shadow of the big baller/shot caller (M@tt He1ges0n), Monday, November 9, 2009 4:12 PM (5 minutes ago) Bookmark
naw my relationship was entirely w/ s4r4h 4sk4ri. they canned her for reasons that are probably unrelated to running the kind of shit i wrote, heh. the new crowd there is, from what i know, wholly imported from reveille, but i don't really pay any attention anymore.
― goole, Monday, 9 November 2009 22:20 (fifteen years ago) link
y'all are sadly OTM re wine coolers and life
― TGAAPQ (Mr. Que), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:21 (fifteen years ago) link
so tempted to drop the "john d. hearts the dan" bomb in comments there...
― goole, Monday, 9 November 2009 22:21 (fifteen years ago) link
this pretty much says it all. I don't really think its poorly written - not as poorly written as, say, that Nick Sylvester hipster runoff piece . There's stuff published that is borderline incomprehensible AND offensive from start to finish, but this piece is not like that.
― I forgot my mantra (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:25 (fifteen years ago) link
other things I learned about the writer from this article - she approves of weed smoking and enjoys it, but feels guilty and self-conscious about it
― I forgot my mantra (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:26 (fifteen years ago) link
That's how she feels about her parents.
― I yanked that sucker hard, and work it did. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:28 (fifteen years ago) link
hey dan i don't think the [ital] tags work the same way over there ;)
― goole, Monday, 9 November 2009 22:28 (fifteen years ago) link
oh dammit, this website has ruined me
― a Barbie-like nub where he provates should be (HI DERE), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:28 (fifteen years ago) link
Are you drinking wine coolers?
― I yanked that sucker hard, and work it did. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:29 (fifteen years ago) link
Do I look 19?????? (plz say yes)
― a Barbie-like nub where he provates should be (HI DERE), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:30 (fifteen years ago) link
― I forgot my mantra (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, November 9, 2009 5:26 PM (23 seconds ago)
probably because she's seventeen and her mom might be reading
― k3vin k., Monday, 9 November 2009 22:32 (fifteen years ago) link
ok fuck it I'm going in
― goole, Monday, 9 November 2009 22:33 (fifteen years ago) link
i think i wrote a review or maybe two for that paper once? but i can't remember who asked me to. it wasn't matos.
― scott seward, Monday, 9 November 2009 22:33 (fifteen years ago) link
melissa maerz?
― goole, Monday, 9 November 2009 22:36 (fifteen years ago) link
dylan hicks? i think that's who it was.
i wrote something for someone named melissa in seattle once.
― scott seward, Monday, 9 November 2009 22:39 (fifteen years ago) link
lol who is 'tasty lixx'
― heart goin ham (deej), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:41 (fifteen years ago) link
:D
― goole, Monday, 9 November 2009 22:42 (fifteen years ago) link
i think i got the purdie shuffle detail wrong but w/e
dasty hixx
― I yanked that sucker hard, and work it did. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:46 (fifteen years ago) link
Donald Fagen says:
As a founding member of The Dan, I say though square we may be, squared is what we are. Our brand of jazz-rock-fusion-core is crucial to the 31-59 age demographic. Every year thousands of new danfans give in to the jazzgasms we provide. If you dont like jazzgasms then we dont want you at our squarefair. Simple as that.
!
― jØrdån (omar little), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:55 (fifteen years ago) link
i'm just now entertaining the possibility that that is the ACTUAL donald fagen
― goole, Monday, 9 November 2009 22:56 (fifteen years ago) link
― a Barbie-like nub where he provates should be (HI DERE), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:56 (fifteen years ago) link
<3
― jazzgasms (Mr. Que), Monday, 9 November 2009 22:57 (fifteen years ago) link
hope so
― heart goin ham (deej), Monday, 9 November 2009 23:03 (fifteen years ago) link
haha i'm 90 percent sure i know who "donald fagan" is
― The looming shadow of the big baller/shot caller (M@tt He1ges0n), Monday, 9 November 2009 23:30 (fifteen years ago) link
lololol
― squarefair (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 9 November 2009 23:33 (fifteen years ago) link
This is the kind of internet posturing that we, Steely Dan, appreciate the most of our fans. This dedicated sense of giving a shit proves that we, Steely Dan, matter in this come and go world we call Earth. In 1972 Walter Becker and I wrote a song called Do It Again and let me tell you Steely Dan is indeed Doing It Again.
Donald FagenSteely DanPosted On: Monday, Nov. 9 2009 @ 10:59PM
― like moses, the townfolk like the red sea (stevie), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 09:32 (fifteen years ago) link
Damn, the comments on that Dan review are merciless and well-deserved.
― Brio, Tuesday, 10 November 2009 18:18 (fifteen years ago) link
http://www.chartrigger.blogspot.com/
This whole site.
― ô_o (Nicole), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 18:20 (fifteen years ago) link
Was waiting for that to appear.
― Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 10 November 2009 18:22 (fifteen years ago) link
"Meanwhile, Taylor Swift has set a Billboard Hot 100 record by debuting five songs from her Platinum Edition re-release of Fearless in the Top 30, led by "Jump Then Fall" at #10. Interrupt that, Kanye West."
― uninspired girls rejoice!!! (Hoot Smalley), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 18:23 (fifteen years ago) link
Wow, Kanye got told.
― ô_o (Nicole), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 18:25 (fifteen years ago) link
That reads like copy from "The 10" on E!
― a Barbie-like nub where he provates should be (HI DERE), Tuesday, 10 November 2009 18:29 (fifteen years ago) link
that deserves to be called "writing" as much as the words on the back of a packet of toilet cleaner
― lex pretend, Tuesday, 10 November 2009 18:31 (fifteen years ago) link
Little can top Duff McKagan at the Seattle Weekly.
http://www.dickdestiny.com/blog/2009/09/real-jim-anchower-to-understand-this.html
Now before one sez consider the source, think about mental gymnastic practiced every week by editors and copy editors allowing him into print. That's actually worse than the finished product.
― Gorge, Tuesday, 10 November 2009 20:15 (fifteen years ago) link
in the grand scheme of things, this is not the worst article ever. sportswriters writing about music is almost always gold though
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/296438-top-4-thanksgiving-halftime-shows-that-made-the-gravy-go-bad/page/2
― we be emi robin' (k3vin k.), Thursday, 26 November 2009 22:24 (fifteen years ago) link
paul shirley on espn.com is great for this too
― we be emi robin' (k3vin k.), Thursday, 26 November 2009 22:29 (fifteen years ago) link
Wow.
http://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/2009-12-03/music/why-do-hot-chicks-always-play-bass-and-why-do-i-love-them-so
― unclelukethic (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 3 December 2009 02:39 (fifteen years ago) link
Come back, Masonic Boom, all is forgiven
― unclelukethic (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 3 December 2009 02:41 (fifteen years ago) link
I'm gonna go donate $250 to the Willie Mae Rock Camp for Girls just for accidentally giving that article traffic.
― unclelukethic (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 3 December 2009 02:43 (fifteen years ago) link
was hoping the byline on that would be Ted Mosby
― the 6 SBillion dollar man (some dude), Thursday, 3 December 2009 02:43 (fifteen years ago) link
http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/columnists/2009/12/10/not-frightfully-a-muse-d-after-being-caught-out-by-s-club-7-91466-25358932/
“This is it!” I thought. “Music that roars with ancient beauty in the electricity age!” Was this a new work by a Montreal band with a knack for avant garde orchestral exploration?
― imo better blues (DJ Mencap), Saturday, 12 December 2009 16:56 (fifteen years ago) link
http://www.thelefthandpath.com/lefthandpath/index.cfm/event/read/entry/High_on_Fire_Snakes_for_the_Divine
― Pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 12:48 (fourteen years ago) link
― we be emi robin' (k3vin k.), Thursday, November 26, 2009 5:24 PM Bookmark
Sportswriting about music is like ice dancing about architecture?
― pithfork (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 12:55 (fourteen years ago) link
Pfunkboy I think that article's pretty great!
― Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:07 (fourteen years ago) link
I would have nixed the "Ain't it?" but possibly not much more
He is the worst writer in the world today. He's routinely mocked on the rolling metal threads (and most other metal boards)
― Pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:10 (fourteen years ago) link
i dont know shit about metal but the guy seems like a p good writer
― max, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:12 (fourteen years ago) link
He's used to write for Stylus: http://thestylusdecade.com/apocalypsesky.html
― ksh, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:15 (fourteen years ago) link
*He
Oh, the guy who has that belief that all Mastodon fans are like, secret Widespread Panic fans or something.
― kingkongvsgodzilla, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:20 (fourteen years ago) link
He also used to write for Dusted.
― PANZER DIVISION DEVO (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:21 (fourteen years ago) link
I love Stew's style (he reminds me of dave q), I just don't know wtf he's writing about 75% of the time. It's probably better that way.
― No, YOU'RE a disgusting savage (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:22 (fourteen years ago) link
I read something by him occasionally and it just reminds me why I try not to read music criticism at all.
― PANZER DIVISION DEVO (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:23 (fourteen years ago) link
I dont think he knows what he's on about eitherxp
― Pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:25 (fourteen years ago) link
Could never work out how to pronounce this guy's surname
― MPx4A, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:26 (fourteen years ago) link
I say it as vote-lin in my head.
― No, YOU'RE a disgusting savage (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:28 (fourteen years ago) link
It's pronounced as asshole.
― Pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:28 (fourteen years ago) link
Yeah Bertie Vogts the football manager is pronounced Bertie Votes so I go from there
― Originoo Golf Clappaz (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:29 (fourteen years ago) link
pfunk: is your primary problem with him that he's a bad writer, or just that he slags off things you like?
― m the g, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:30 (fourteen years ago) link
I assumed there was more of a "vert" thing because of the oe
― MPx4A, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:31 (fourteen years ago) link
I liked his Stylus Decade thing and dude is evidently a very adept writer but his would-be challoping is really tiresome to read
― Originoo Golf Clappaz (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:32 (fourteen years ago) link
Yeah I'm gonna say it Vertlin
― MPx4A, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:32 (fourteen years ago) link
If I ever have cause to say it out loud for the first time
― max, Tuesday, February 23, 2010 1:12 PM (18 minutes ago) Bookmark
― sharter the unstoppable ilx machine (history mayne), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:33 (fourteen years ago) link
idk if he's challoping coz he's talking about metal
― sharter the unstoppable ilx machine (history mayne), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:34 (fourteen years ago) link
He's good for the hit counts I daresay
― Originoo Golf Clappaz (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:35 (fourteen years ago) link
"I read something by him occasionally and it just reminds me why I try not to read music criticism at all."
you are better off, overall. you should still read my column in decibel every month though. it's short. won't take you long.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:36 (fourteen years ago) link
m the g i dislike his writing even when he writes about stuff i don't know.
― Pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:38 (fourteen years ago) link
http://www.stylusmagazine.com/articles/pop_playground/disconnecting-the-dots-getting-critical-with-music-critics-and-their-readers.htm
think I remember people getting really fucking angry about this but the comments don't load any more
― MPx4A, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:39 (fourteen years ago) link
I can't help but picture this guy typing the last word of the review, then sitting back in his chair, crossing his arms, and letting a little that'll-show-'em smirk creep across his face.
This kind of writing is so transparent and depressing to me.
― Shannon Whirry and the Bad Brains, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:50 (fourteen years ago) link
what's brent d. up to these days? i liked that guy.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:56 (fourteen years ago) link
Name looks Dutch to me, which would make the "oe" like an English "oo" sound (I think?) and the "g" an unpleasant throaty hairball noise, but assuming the guy is American and not Dutch all bets are probably off
(I quite liked that review but didn't enjoy his Stylus thing at all thanks to his tic of accusing some new swathe of music listeners of clearly being Republicans every other paragraph; never read anything else by the guy, but I find Mark Prindle funny so y'know I have some time for splenetic self-amused challop-bursts in music criticism)
― falling while carrying an owl (a passing spacecadet), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:56 (fourteen years ago) link
the guy has got a 'character' and i can see disliking/disagreeing with the 'character' but he writes the 'character' p effectively
― max, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 13:58 (fourteen years ago) link
To summarise, then, this is probably not the worst piece of music writing ever
― MPx4A, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:00 (fourteen years ago) link
yeah guys it's not that he's a bad writer (so no this should not be here) but for those that know nothing about metal his critical acumen is p. much straight bullshit.
― call all destroyer, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:08 (fourteen years ago) link
Herman are you sure your beef with this guy isn't that you disagree with his opinion, not that his writing is bad?
― Lee Dorrian Gray (J0hn D.), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:11 (fourteen years ago) link
i'll be honest, high on fire kinda bore me too. but i haven't heard the new one. not really going out of my way to hear the new one though. they are way up there on my list of bands that - on paper - i should love but don't.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:14 (fourteen years ago) link
would-be challoping
how does this work? even in the absence of biters, a challop is a challop right?
― nakhchivan, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:15 (fourteen years ago) link
i'll be honest, high on fire kinda bore me too.
I haven't heard Snakes for the Divine but you just took yrself off my xmas list buddy
― Lee Dorrian Gray (J0hn D.), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:17 (fourteen years ago) link
just being honest. wasn't a big sleep fan either except for dopesmoker/jerusalem. i like OM okay though.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:20 (fourteen years ago) link
I think Songs take far too long to get their bearing and then flail about listlessly, content with grand declarations of emotional quagmire received in wholly disconnected and unfounded ways – sorta like a dog flipping through a Time magazine photo special on the Haiti earthquake devastation. is bad writing.
― Shannon Whirry and the Bad Brains, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:21 (fourteen years ago) link
really digging this right now though:
http://shop.no-colours-records.de/cover/10566bazookatoxicwarriorscd1320091028.jpg
― scott seward, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:23 (fourteen years ago) link
looks like neo-thrash
I am completely over neo-thrash
― Lee Dorrian Gray (J0hn D.), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:24 (fourteen years ago) link
it's 9:23 a.m. and i'm listening to bazooka. how about you?
recorded at ASSLOVER studio in Taiwan. everyone should record there. i think its actually just a big hole in the ground wired for sound.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:25 (fourteen years ago) link
Bad writing how? That is very evocative of flailing listlessly to make an emotional impact but being too disconnected from the source material to be effective; it's likely that the anger generated by reading that glib comment is akin to the frustration this dude feels when he listens to this music.
― Jack the Dude-Kicker (HI DERE), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:25 (fourteen years ago) link
it is nu-thrash but it is really good taiwanese ASSLOVING nu-thrash. the riffs are great.
recorded at ASSLOVER studio in Taiwan. everyone should record there.
omg brb, goin 2 Taiwan
― Lee Dorrian Gray (J0hn D.), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:27 (fourteen years ago) link
i know, right?
― scott seward, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:30 (fourteen years ago) link
still think this line from the dude's other review posted on the metal thread would make a great ilx username for someone:
"a pulsing vibe on the clit of aesthetic eureka"
― scott seward, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:31 (fourteen years ago) link
Q: You really went for a new sound on this record - what do you attribute that to?A: I have to say, it's Asslover. Asslover really left its mark on this record, no doubt about it.
― Lee Dorrian Gray (J0hn D.), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:33 (fourteen years ago) link
words of wisdom on the back of the bazooka album:
fuck to: posers
― scott seward, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:33 (fourteen years ago) link
well one way in which it's bad writing is that a dog flipping through a magazine is a wholly incongruous image
― call all destroyer, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:33 (fourteen years ago) link
this thread took a bizarre turn
― Pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:34 (fourteen years ago) link
seriously though, i've had it up to here with the nu-thrash revolution as much as anyone, but this album rocks hard. very satisfying.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:35 (fourteen years ago) link
http://blog.lib.umn.edu/bgleason/pt/dogs-playing-poker.jpg
― Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒ (dyao), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:36 (fourteen years ago) link
xps yeah I am trying hard here to parse the dog simile and it's just not happening
― Originoo Golf Clappaz (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:37 (fourteen years ago) link
but that incongruity plays right back to the disconnect he's talking about
― Jack the Dude-Kicker (HI DERE), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:37 (fourteen years ago) link
http://c2.ac-images.myspacecdn.com/images02/140/l_3154ef78d3d64e149fa6ff5068f34789.jpg
― scott seward, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:38 (fourteen years ago) link
I spent like two hours the other day looking for somewhere that sold dogs playing poker on a button-up shirt in a size below XL - it's as if they only expect fatteys to wear them
― Originoo Golf Clappaz (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:38 (fourteen years ago) link
i dunno abt that; a dog watching images of earthquake devastation on tv at least makes some kind of sense--with his construction i get pretty stuck on how the dog is flipping through the magazine without thumbs.
― call all destroyer, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:39 (fourteen years ago) link
otoh if he meant the dogs that also play poker all is forgiven; i understand completely
The idea that the reader needs a backup example of 'disconnect' is also slightly off, to my mind
― Originoo Golf Clappaz (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:41 (fourteen years ago) link
― call all destroyer, Tuesday, February 23, 2010 2:33 PM (6 minutes ago) Bookmark
god forbid, an incongruous image
― sharter the unstoppable ilx machine (history mayne), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:41 (fourteen years ago) link
sorry incongruous might not be the right word--i mean it doesn't make any goddamn sense
― call all destroyer, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:42 (fourteen years ago) link
isn't that construction like the commonest of common writing tropes (ie, allegory)?
― Jack the Dude-Kicker (HI DERE), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:43 (fourteen years ago) link
i like the dog line! wish i had thought of it.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:45 (fourteen years ago) link
can dogs flip pages with paw-static?
― nakhchivan, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:45 (fourteen years ago) link
dog was using a kindle, obviously. paw pad.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:48 (fourteen years ago) link
http://ihasahotdog.wordpress.com/files/2008/08/funny-dog-pictures-dog-wants-to-finish-reading-a-chapter.jpg
― scott seward, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:49 (fourteen years ago) link
dogs actually do have opposable thumbs fyi; they just don't want to tip their hands to their human masters
― Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒ (dyao), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:56 (fourteen years ago) link
or should I say, tip their PAWS???
― Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒ (dyao), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:57 (fourteen years ago) link
see if dogs were just holding out on us w/r/t the fact that their paws work really well for grasping, i'd expect them to also be affected by images of earthquake devastation
― call all destroyer, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:58 (fourteen years ago) link
So the question is whether dogs love Chinese neo-thrash. As we already know they are asslovers.
― Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 14:58 (fourteen years ago) link
*reads last post**decides not to investigate thread further*
― _Rudipherous_, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 15:01 (fourteen years ago) link
it's time for the nard-dog to take mags into his own paws
― you live in a space battle homo cave (sic), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 15:09 (fourteen years ago) link
"Why oh why didn't I warn them like the dog in that one movie I saw"
― Originoo Golf Clappaz (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 15:15 (fourteen years ago) link
fuck to:posers
ladies and gentlemen, my newest tattoo
― Lee Dorrian Gray (J0hn D.), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 15:20 (fourteen years ago) link
they do great work in taiwan:
http://theartoftattoo.files.wordpress.com/2009/02/taiwan-tattoo.jpg
― scott seward, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 15:25 (fourteen years ago) link
hey J0hn, what other tattoos do you have?
― ha! (Drugs A. Money), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 18:25 (fourteen years ago) link
Pretty sure this is one of them:http://s1.hubimg.com/u/1434032_f260.jpg
― Sean Carruthers, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 18:36 (fourteen years ago) link
he's got lady gaga making out with admiral akbar on his lower back.
known fact.
― strongohulkingtonsghost, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 19:24 (fourteen years ago) link
http://i15.photobucket.com/albums/a373/Ami4203/randyrhodesspelledwrongtattoo.jpg
― Brio, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 19:27 (fourteen years ago) link
we're talking about tattoos, though
― Jack the Dude-Kicker (HI DERE), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 19:27 (fourteen years ago) link
Hey, how come only Courtney is special enough to get a portrait
― Originoo Golf Clappaz (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 19:45 (fourteen years ago) link
dude, that's madonna.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 20:06 (fourteen years ago) link
my face is actually a tattoo, my actual face is a smooth reflective surface
― Lee Dorrian Gray (J0hn D.), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 20:32 (fourteen years ago) link
I like how if he's got his shirt on all you can see is a big shitty metallic 'the' on the back of his neck
― Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 23:24 (fourteen years ago) link
someone turn that pic into THE HOUSE OF PAIN POLL
― !aNiMeGaLaXy (Future_Perfect), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 23:31 (fourteen years ago) link
does that say Randy Boads?
― Pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Tuesday, 23 February 2010 23:56 (fourteen years ago) link
lol i think it's randy roads which is still so so wrong but i like randy boads better
― call all destroyer, Tuesday, 23 February 2010 23:57 (fourteen years ago) link
It's definitely not one big R to cover both names because noway is that an 'h'
― Pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 00:37 (fourteen years ago) link
no i think it's another R but the tail hooks in so it looks like a B from that angle
― call all destroyer, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 00:40 (fourteen years ago) link
I think he took the door from a stall my junior school boy's bathroom into the tattoo parlour and just said, "Gimme all of it, except put Randy Boads where that cock and balls drawing is."
― Brio, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 00:55 (fourteen years ago) link
Also, can anyone make out the 3 band names under TESLA and above IRON MAIDEN?
― Brio, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 00:59 (fourteen years ago) link
Savatage, TUFF and not sure of the other
― Pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 01:01 (fourteen years ago) link
Heavens Rage maybe?
― Pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 01:02 (fourteen years ago) link
looks like HEAVES KIDS
― Brio, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 01:02 (fourteen years ago) link
Heaven's Rage
― freebird manjunya (zvookster), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 01:03 (fourteen years ago) link
GiS Tuff btw. Had lots of fun laughing at them in kerrang 20 years ago
― Pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 01:05 (fourteen years ago) link
Really tough looking hardmen
― Pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 01:06 (fourteen years ago) link
http://www.sleazeroxx.com/bands/tuff/tuff1.jpg
http://www.dsk.zaq.ne.jp/glamglam/COVERL/TUFF01.jpg
Tuft
― freebird manjunya (zvookster), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 01:07 (fourteen years ago) link
The album title referred to the clap, I assume.
― Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 01:09 (fourteen years ago) link
Not that whoever did those tattoos had the steadiest hand, from the looks of it, but I could swear that says "The House of Hair", which is almost hilarious.
― Sean Carruthers, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 01:12 (fourteen years ago) link
The House Of Hair Metal.
― Pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 01:13 (fourteen years ago) link
Also, I like dude's foresight to put Guns 'n' Roses right near his asscrack.
― Sean Carruthers, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 01:16 (fourteen years ago) link
Is The House of Pain his name for his back? He's pointing out how awesomely tuff he was to have endured all the PAIN of tattooing to become a human jean jacket, right? Or did he really get into Jump Around after his hair metal days?
― Brio, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 01:18 (fourteen years ago) link
Or was their a metal The House of Pain before the hip hop House Of Pain?
― Brio, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 01:19 (fourteen years ago) link
it's house of hair, ffs
― HIDEREggerian Philosophy (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 01:27 (fourteen years ago) link
we need a poll to decide if its pain or hair
― Pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 01:28 (fourteen years ago) link
http://houseofhaironline.com/
― Pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 01:32 (fourteen years ago) link
if it's House of Hair, he's 23 and lives in Williamsburg and interns at Vice
― Brio, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 01:37 (fourteen years ago) link
was their a metal The House of Pain before the hip hop House Of Pain?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v1ntsBXdK88
― xhuxk, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 01:44 (fourteen years ago) link
It is HOUSE OF HAIR i think!
― Brio, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 02:48 (fourteen years ago) link
Definitely says hairhttp://i15.photobucket.com/albums/a373/Ami4203/randyrhodesspelledwrongtattoo.jpg
― Pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 02:54 (fourteen years ago) link
So here's what I could make out:
The House Of Hair
LEFT SIDEJudas PriestWarrantAcceptRatt(logo unclear)AC/DCSkid RowDokkenWhite LionTora ToraPoisonJackylTwisted SisterKissW.A.S.P.Dangerous ToysDef LeppardDioScorpionsBritney Fox
RIGHT SIDEWhitesnakeMotley CrüeFirehouseTeslaHeaven's RageTuffSavatageIron Maiden(logo unclear)Black SabbathThe CultRandy Roads (sic)MegadethL.A. GunsTestamentQuiet RiotOzzy OsbourneBullet BoysMetallicaGreat WhiteGuns 'N' Roses(logo unclear)
I can't tell the two nearest his pits, not the one on the bottom right that appears to start "co". Sadly, I think I've heard at least one album by each of these bands.
― EZ Snappin, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 03:06 (fourteen years ago) link
I think the last one is Cinderella.
― PANZER DIVISION DEVO (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 03:12 (fourteen years ago) link
if House of Hair ever runs into Eddie Van Halen at the beach, he's gonna have some explaining to do
― Brio, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 03:20 (fourteen years ago) link
the bulletboys were the biggest doughnut pumpers on the planet...
― Ballistic, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 03:23 (fourteen years ago) link
xp I was assuming 'house of pain' was referring to the song of the same name by van halen, who are seriously conspicuous by their absence.
maybe his whole chest is covered in a ham-fisted facsimile of the 'fair warning' cover.
― m the g, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 09:24 (fourteen years ago) link
christ almighty I thought you guys would know your Ozzy Tribute album cover better:
http://www.classicrockmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/randy-rhoads-tribute.jpg
― Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 09:57 (fourteen years ago) link
the one on his back does not look like an 'H'
― Pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Wednesday, 24 February 2010 22:39 (fourteen years ago) link
xpost from other thread, not really so much bad writing but uninformed:
LOL-review of Immolation's Unholy Cult from the normally reliable AllMusic:
Immolation sounds like an opening band.
Had no idea "opening band" was a sound. Are there "openingbandcore" bands too?
If you go to a death metal show and endure three to five bands, Immolation might be the second or third band on the bill.
Wtf. This is ridic. The band had been around 20 years, and headlined several tours, both European and USA when this album came out -- in 1999, they headlined a show I attended. They're HEADLINING DEATHFEST 2010 NOW! The writer makes them sound like some mediocre struggling up and coming act that are lucky to have a record deal, rather than someone who has been on Roadrunner and Metal Blade! Not to mention what obscene amounts of money people were paying for "Dawn of Posession" on ebay after it went OOP.
Also, note the word sardonic use of the word "endure" as if watching death metal is a chore - furthering my belief that he isn't even a fan of the genre.
They've toured with some heavy hitters like Cannibal Corpse and Six Feet Under, but on their fifth album, Unholy Cult, they do nothing to raise themselves higher on the death metal totem pole.
This is a matter of opinion, but this is one of Immolation's more solid efforts, and it is not 'generic' by any means as the writer implies. Other than a few nods to Incantation (mostly the 'squeals'), Immolation have their own exotic sound that can easily be placed, and this album definitely 'differentiated' themselves from the pack, which is why it wound up on so many people's best of lists that year.
Ross Dolan's vocals are fine, but are not any more monstrous than your average death metal growler.
Lol. Whatever.
Musically, Immolation's songs have a sort of flat, relentless feel to them
Isn't being 'relentless' the point of a genre called "death metal"?
and, like Slayer, the leads seem tacked on in the middle of a song for no particular reason.
This is a far reaching comparison, not to mention that it isn't true. And if you were going to make that comparison, why focus on solely Slayer, since 'needless solos" are a staple of the genre.
The cover art for Unholy Cult is scary, but the music inside could be a little more evil.
Lol did an 11 year old write that last sentence for a book report?
― Ballistic, Wednesday, 24 February 2010 23:34 (fourteen years ago) link
Bill Chenevert of Philadelphia Weekly, you are fucking awful. Reproduced below is his capsule review for Mike Patton's Mondo Cane:
Sounds Like: The Faith No More alum sure can use his voice box. Here he sings mostly in Spanish and with a touch of kitsch, but totally authentic.
Free Association: His Eureka, Calif. roots really show here, rocking a chulo vibe.
For Fans Of: Mexico, camp, horns, Zappa, Mr. Bungle.
Not bothering to listen to the album is one thing- you have constraints on your time, I understand- but for fuck's sake, if you're going to fake it at least read a goddamn press release first or something.
― a black white asian pine ghost who is fake (Telephone thing), Monday, 10 May 2010 01:30 (fourteen years ago) link
Thanks for the new screen name!
― Mexico, camp, horns, Zappa, Mr. Bungle (Matos W.K.), Monday, 10 May 2010 01:58 (fourteen years ago) link
I haven't heard the album yet, so I'm not sure what is inaccurate about that. Does he not actually sing in Spanish? No horns?
― he's always been a bit of an anti-climb Max (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Monday, 10 May 2010 02:08 (fourteen years ago) link
The Faith No More alum sure can use his voice box.
^ great point
― ksh, Monday, 10 May 2010 02:09 (fourteen years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6GOnu_mU1wU
― ksh, Monday, 10 May 2010 02:10 (fourteen years ago) link
Pretty sure it's all Italian pop songs
― congratulations (n/a), Monday, 10 May 2010 02:19 (fourteen years ago) link
no wai
― hills like white people (Hurting 2), Monday, 10 May 2010 03:03 (fourteen years ago) link
xpost to Matos- you have no idea how tempted I was to change mine to "rocking a chulo vibe." Thankfully, cooler heads prevailed
― a black white asian pine ghost who is fake (Telephone thing), Monday, 10 May 2010 03:16 (fourteen years ago) link
So it is, and, yeah, then this is incredibly lazy journalism.
― he's always been a bit of an anti-climb Max (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Monday, 10 May 2010 03:20 (fourteen years ago) link
lol, it's called fucking MONDO CANE, and here is the cover:
http://www.culturebully.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/mike-patton-mondo-cane-cd-cover.jpg
― hills like white people (Hurting 2), Monday, 10 May 2010 03:48 (fourteen years ago) link
that's a dope cover
― J0rdan S., Monday, 10 May 2010 03:50 (fourteen years ago) link
agreed
― hills like white people (Hurting 2), Monday, 10 May 2010 03:54 (fourteen years ago) link
I had only heard the name of the album before now! Knew nothing about it, other than it was coming out.
― he's always been a bit of an anti-climb Max (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Monday, 10 May 2010 03:55 (fourteen years ago) link
I mean forgetting about whether the guy read a press release, what kind of cretin lives in a major east coast city, thinks "Il Cielo In Una Stanza" and "L'Uomo Che Non Sapeva Amare" are Spanish, and fancies himself a writer of any kind?
― hills like white people (Hurting 2), Monday, 10 May 2010 04:00 (fourteen years ago) link
to be fair, the cover pointing directly at italy and highlighting the country in all white could be confusing if you thought italy was spain.
― women are a bunch of dudes (tipsy mothra), Monday, 10 May 2010 04:01 (fourteen years ago) link
Or baja california.
― hills like white people (Hurting 2), Monday, 10 May 2010 04:02 (fourteen years ago) link
dude was clearly referencing this imo http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_the_Two_Sicilies
― is it really that hard to spot all these fake british dudes? (velko), Monday, 10 May 2010 04:04 (fourteen years ago) link
http://turntabling.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/mondo-cane-sountrack-vinyl-lp.jpg
― Ward Fowler, Monday, 10 May 2010 08:11 (fourteen years ago) link
that mondo cane soundtrack album has a spectacular cover.
― by another name (amateurist), Monday, 10 May 2010 10:19 (fourteen years ago) link
Yes. Yes it is. Capt. Obvious graces with a stunning revelation.
― ImprovSpirit, Monday, 10 May 2010 12:50 (fourteen years ago) link
hahahah that review is hilarious, someone should write in about that
― sir gaga (s1ocki), Monday, 10 May 2010 12:53 (fourteen years ago) link
this 9-year-old essay (by pioneering internet poet/narcissist/literary critic Dan Schneider) about how Jewel and Alanis Morrissette are better lyricists than Joni Mitchell and Patti Smith has long held a special place in my heart as one of the most irritating pieces of writing I've ever read:
OK- pop quiz: you are reading this essay in 2027. What do these names mean to you? Brandy, Pink, Shakira, Blu Cantrell, Nelly Furtado, Faith Evans, Aaliyah. If you guessed millennial names of types of liquor- WRONG! These are names of some of the hottest soul/black music pop babes of 2002. All of them are sexy & severe lookers, although little talent could be ascribed to them. Most are critically panned. Round 2: How about these names? Christina Aguilera, Mandy Moore, Britney Spears, Willa Ford, Jessica Simpson. If your 1st thought was ‘porno stars’ you are not that far off. These are the cute white versions of the aforementioned- all blond, all as talentless (or more so than their dusky counterparts), & all under 21 at the start of their careers. In order this is what they are noted for: CA’s the most talented but anorexic; MM’s cute & sweet; BS’s the biggest star & a virgin (chuckle); WF’s a dumb slut, & (for emphasis) a slut; & JS’s also a virgin who wishes she were BS. To be fair, JS is actually a very good- & healthy-looking babe & the only one who projects a non-binge & purge appearance- whether she or the others have talent- well…. In truth neither group is likely to be recalled in a quarter century. Already, some of the hottest female stars from the 1990s have sunk slowly out of sight. Where have Sheryl Crow, Jennifer Trynin, Natalie Merchant, Tracy Bonham, Joan Osbourne, Lisa Loeb, Gwen Stefani, Chantal Kreviazuk, Courtney Love, Sinéad O’Connor, Fiona Apple, Jennifer Paige, Björk, Tori Amos, Ani DiFranco, Michelle Branch, Natalie Imbruglia, Shawn Colvin, or that Lilith Queen Sarah McLachlan been lately? (Not to mention crossover country/pop divas Shania Twain & Faith Hill?) Chances are none of these names will mean much to you either- in 2027, especially. Only FA might survive- but as a jazz singer. But there are 2 oddly named female pop stars from the 1990s that are my bet to last- artistically & namewise- to 2027 & beyond. They are the Canadian brunet bombshell Alanis Morissette & the Alaskan blond burbler Jewel Kilcher.
Already, some of the hottest female stars from the 1990s have sunk slowly out of sight. Where have Sheryl Crow, Jennifer Trynin, Natalie Merchant, Tracy Bonham, Joan Osbourne, Lisa Loeb, Gwen Stefani, Chantal Kreviazuk, Courtney Love, Sinéad O’Connor, Fiona Apple, Jennifer Paige, Björk, Tori Amos, Ani DiFranco, Michelle Branch, Natalie Imbruglia, Shawn Colvin, or that Lilith Queen Sarah McLachlan been lately? (Not to mention crossover country/pop divas Shania Twain & Faith Hill?) Chances are none of these names will mean much to you either- in 2027, especially. Only FA might survive- but as a jazz singer. But there are 2 oddly named female pop stars from the 1990s that are my bet to last- artistically & namewise- to 2027 & beyond. They are the Canadian brunet bombshell Alanis Morissette & the Alaskan blond burbler Jewel Kilcher.
Before I get to demolishing the myth of the superior & ‘more relevant’ lyrics of the older duo, let me state- there are things I like about PS & JM- & their music. It simply is not superior (to a discerning ear) to anything AM or JK have achieved at this stage in their careers- not to mention the music of a # of the other 90s pop babes mentioned earlier. In fact, the younger duo’s songs are the equal or superior to the older duo’s- both at similar stages of their careers & overall. Another caveat- I will analyze just the song lyrics (I am an expert with words)- I’ve not the desire nor will too argue the more nebulous & almost totally subjective debate over excellence of the music- or not.
Music critics are notoriously bad- rivaling even poetry critics in their uselessness- although, music- really- could do without critics far more than poetry. Poetry’s critics suck ass to an Academic & Outsider elite who represent a very marginalized core. Music critics have almost ZERO effect on honorifics, & even less on sales. Perhaps the only arts where criticism has a relevance is the visual arts- both painting, & especially film- which (surprise, surprise) is the easiest (for its accessibility) of the arts to criticize. But music- people like what they like & don’t give a damn that the critics stroke themselves over the awful alternadronings of an Ani DiFranco or Björk. Even the lay ear knows bad when it hears it- in fact, most music critics are so out of touch with the masses that they cannot face the fact that the reason most ‘alternative’ music acts do not get airplay (even admitting that various forms of payola still exist) nor become million-sellers, is that their music plain old sucks! Despite how the critics rave about it!
. Over & again, I maintain that all of the so-called excellence & ‘Golden Age’ of female musicianship of the 60s is merely the predictable product of a generational need to justify its place in history. Just as Tom Brokaw’s Greatest Generation of WW2 MUST BE greater than the slaggards from the 60s Free Love Generation, so does that generation stake its claim by overinflating its (especially female) musicians’ relevance & excellence vis-à-vis the 90s-00s generation of songstresses. This is due to the relative paucity of feminine influence on rock-n-roll (& pop) music in general, no doubt.
there are so many things to hate about this guy's writing, from his seedy objectification of popstars ("Jessica Simpson is actually a very good- & healthy-looking babe & the only one who projects a non-binge & purge appearance"...blech) in a work that purports to be scholarly and objective, to the hypocrisy of railing against the worship of baby boomers while failing to take new artists seriously if they don't pander to baby boomer tastes or pass an imaginary test of time (Fiona Apple as a jazz singer in 2027? prescient!), to his beef with strawman "PC elitists", to his treatment of "female musicians" as a separate breed fit only to be compared to other female musicians, to his snide blanket statements about other music critics, to his use of initials in place of the musicians' actual names, to his insistence on the primacy of lyrical analysis over musical analysis and his failure to realize that as a poetry critic he isn't likely to be an expert at either. even when he says something level-headed (he has a point — though it's hardly an original one — about the pervasiveness of elder worship) he generally crawls up his own ass within a few sentences. but really, the whole thing just has to be read in its 8,700-word, initial-packed glory to be appreciated for the classic badness that it is.
― gtforia estfufan (unregistered), Tuesday, 7 June 2011 21:46 (thirteen years ago) link
oops, link here:
http://www.cosmoetica.com/B41-DES20.htm
"their dusky counterparts"
― goole, Tuesday, 7 June 2011 21:49 (thirteen years ago) link
Regardless of quality AM, doubtless, has the most powerful voice in the quartet. So much so that it may be worth comparing her to black pop divas/screechers Whitney Houston & Mariah Carey, rather than the 3 others.
"black pop diva/screecher Mariah Carey"
― gtforia estfufan (unregistered), Tuesday, 7 June 2011 21:51 (thirteen years ago) link
lolling that the current household names out of that list are Pink, Xtina, Britney and Shakira
ppl still know Jewel and Alanis but they are not really musical vanguards anymore
JSimp still being around but not as a musician is also lol
had Jewel released "Fat Boy" by the time he wrote this?
― low-rent black gangster nicknamed Bootsy (DJP), Tuesday, 7 June 2011 21:53 (thirteen years ago) link
also did he not know Pink was white?
― low-rent black gangster nicknamed Bootsy (DJP), Tuesday, 7 June 2011 21:54 (thirteen years ago) link
Unless I missed a huge part of Willa Ford's marketing, this guy is a huge douchebag and doesn't deserve one iota of attention. I mean, jesus christ, coming straight out and calling a female singer a "dumb slut"?
― the fey bloggers are onto the zagat tweets (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Tuesday, 7 June 2011 21:58 (thirteen years ago) link
yup. but this guy must've had a small stroke when she released "Intuition" about a year after he wrote that essay.
one of his favorite hobbies (besides clunky music criticism) is 'improving' critically acclaimed poems by rewriting chunks of them in his far more tasteful, far superior writing style. I don't have a problem with questioning the received wisdom w/r/t canonical texts, but this dude truly has an ego that won't quit.
I haven't paid much attention to him since I was like 16, but he's still good for the occasional lol nowadays.
― gtforia estfufan (unregistered), Tuesday, 7 June 2011 22:04 (thirteen years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LyC59VuGbMs
this should be linked everywhere so that people stop thinking Jewel can write songs
― low-rent black gangster nicknamed Bootsy (DJP), Tuesday, 7 June 2011 22:09 (thirteen years ago) link
DJP it's 2011 and I'm pretty sure even Jewel no longer thinks she can write good songs.
― gtforia estfufan (unregistered), Tuesday, 7 June 2011 22:16 (thirteen years ago) link
"Fat Boy" sounds like a Belly song from a fantasy universe (circa 1992) in which Tanya Donnelly is an absolute fucking moron.
― gtforia estfufan (unregistered), Tuesday, 7 June 2011 22:19 (thirteen years ago) link
wow, "fat boy" is pretty hilarious.
Hush, sleepDon't think, just eat
― original bgm, Tuesday, 7 June 2011 22:29 (thirteen years ago) link
Top Comments
I'm Fat.Gorthakk 2 years ago
lol @ that jewel song, its basically a in irl version of this
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jv6mEv_rDdE
― puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Tuesday, 7 June 2011 22:43 (thirteen years ago) link
She is the host and judge of a competitive songwriting show!
http://www.nbcumv.com/mediavillage/networks/bravo/platinumhit
― low-rent black gangster nicknamed Bootsy (DJP), Tuesday, 7 June 2011 23:14 (thirteen years ago) link
Not gonna add this to one of the zillion Loutallica threads because it really belongs in a thread about bad music writing. This review of Lulu really irritates me:
http://www.volcanictongue.com/columns/show/17
And this is what Lou Reed and Metallica are becoming: Rock'n'roll animals in the perverted zoo of the internet. Yes, Lulu is about sex. It is a 69 between Lou Reed and Metallica. Lou's tongue is a chainsaw with rusted links (for infection and maximum durability). Metallica gets cut in two and will never recover.
― ban this sick stunt (anagram), Friday, 4 November 2011 20:22 (thirteen years ago) link
Yes, Lulu is about sex. It is a 69 between Lou Reed and Metallica. Lou's tongue is a chainsaw with rusted links (for infection and maximum durability)
This is like conservatives with totalitarian envy.
― lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 4 November 2011 20:26 (thirteen years ago) link
idk I kinda liked that, it prolly helps if you have a working idea of Mattin's sense of humour
― We All Had Guess Papers (DJ Mencap), Friday, 4 November 2011 21:07 (thirteen years ago) link
stand back, gary giddins...
http://blogs.villagevoice.com/music/2012/11/ten_jazz_albums_to_hear_before_you_die.php
― scott seward, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 19:45 (twelve years ago) link
cool i'll add those to my bucket list thx village voice
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 19:55 (twelve years ago) link
they paved pazz & jop and put in about.com
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 19:57 (twelve years ago) link
hard to even pick an excerpt, but man
Probably one of the hippest figures in jazz, Thelonious Monk was a genius who was able to see notes on the piano that didn't even exist in Western music. When he would sit down on the piano, he would strike two half notes (notes next to each other that sound awful when played together) to simulate the imaginary notes between the two piano keys.
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:03 (twelve years ago) link
okay, so that piece isn't great. but it's not exactly terrible either.
― Chuck_Norris_on_the_topic_of_obesity (stevie), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:07 (twelve years ago) link
Oh, dude, it is so terrible.
In fact, I knew this thread revival was going to be about this list.
― If Assholes Could Fly This Place Would Be An Airport, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:09 (twelve years ago) link
― Chuck_Norris_on_the_topic_of_obesity (stevie), Tuesday, November 13, 2012 3:07 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
how is it not exactly terrible? It is exactly terrible.
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:12 (twelve years ago) link
If you think about the course of hip-hop, then can you really imagine groups like Tribe Called Quest or even someone like Tupac without a cultural and musical prophet like Coltrane?
― Brad C., Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:13 (twelve years ago) link
6. Miles DavisBitches Brew I'm not saying that you have to like this album. But it's one you just have to listen to before you die; it's kind of like looking at Abstract Expressionism or listening to Morton Feldman -- it just might not jive with you. Bitches Brew was released in 1970. The first time I heard this album, I thought it was a joke. In fact, I was kind of pissed. Where was the melody? Where was the catchy rhythm? Well, it's so shocking the first time you hear it that it forces you to question what jazz and music can be. It makes you think about structure and limitations of our current music. The prison of the human ear. Ah, enough of that. Just listen to the album. Chaos and cacophony defined.
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:13 (twelve years ago) link
Charles Mingus is the godfather of the upright bass
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:15 (twelve years ago) link
This is a hilarious article. Serious laughs.
― Evan, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:16 (twelve years ago) link
"it just might not jive with you" <-- wtf
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:18 (twelve years ago) link
that's not even getting to the fact that he's making Bitches Brew sound like a Naked City release
The first time I heard this album, I thought it was a joke. In fact, I was kind of pissed. Where was the melody? Where was the catchy rhythm?
― sug ones (omar little), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:21 (twelve years ago) link
thanks, i cdn't think of a suitable vehicle for laughing at that BB piece
― only Brod can judge me (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:21 (twelve years ago) link
for some reason my favourite detail is his assertion that there are multiple decades of jazz.
― Yorkshire lass born and bred, that's me, said Katriona's hologram. (thomp), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:21 (twelve years ago) link
brb gonna go play some half notes on my piano -- they're not even known to western music and basically imaginary
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:21 (twelve years ago) link
village voice sneaking geir hongro into its freelance rolodex under another name
― sug ones (omar little), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:22 (twelve years ago) link
the vicious atonal skronk of Bitches Brew was so mind-blowing in its redefinition of what music cd be that only 10 years earlier were dudes like Coleman and Ayler able to catch up
― only Brod can judge me (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:22 (twelve years ago) link
― Yorkshire lass born and bred, that's me, said Katriona's hologram. (thomp), Tuesday, November 13, 2012 3:21 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
I loved this too
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:22 (twelve years ago) link
it's kind of like looking at Abstract Expressionism or listening to Morton Feldman -- it just might not jive with you.
yes of course what idiot would do these things for pleasure
― C:\GAMES\KEEN\KEEN4E.EXE (clouds), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:23 (twelve years ago) link
http://blogs.ocweekly.com/heardmentality/2012/11/10_albums_while_studying.php?page=4
3. Simon Trpceski -- Debussy: Images
Claude Debussy is one of the best French composers and probably artists, and that says a hell of lot. His compositions were analogous to the paintings of the impressionists, and he hoped when you listened to his music, you saw, literally, similar visualizations of Monet. That's why he called his work Images. You can find an album by Simon Trpceski on Spotify. Take for instance Debussy's, "Clair De Lune." It's probably one of the most famous works in music -- played in everything from lullabies to film scores. And really, it's not just a song. It's a painting that will set all 100,000,000,000 neurons in the average human brain on fire.
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:23 (twelve years ago) link
Geir would NEVER have made that half note gaffe
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:24 (twelve years ago) link
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, November 13, 2012 3:21 PM (4 minutes ago)
Can't you read they're in between those
― Evan, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:27 (twelve years ago) link
In a way, studying or being creative is kind of like sex. Yes, you can probably have it any time you want (some of us, anyway), but sometimes, it's really about being in the right mood.
Joseph Lapin, ladies and gentlemen.
― only Brod can judge me (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:28 (twelve years ago) link
i like the idea that this guy was pissed at miles davis for the way a 43 yr old undisputed masterpiece sounded.
― sug ones (omar little), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:28 (twelve years ago) link
named after the Williamsburg Bridge, which connects Manhattan to Brooklyn.
lmao @ this bit of trivia being in the village voice
― sug ones (omar little), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:29 (twelve years ago) link
At one point, Head Hunters was the best selling jazz album of all time. Be warned though, there is experimentation happening here.
― super perv powder (Phil D.), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:30 (twelve years ago) link
If you're about to go sky diving, and you're not sure if you're going to survive, play this album on the car ride over.
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:31 (twelve years ago) link
Why is it so great? Let's not try to put it into words. It might be something unsayable.
Kind of Blue is about abortion?
If you're about to go sky diving, and you're not sure if you're going to survive, play this album on the car ride over. turn the car around imo
― sug ones (omar little), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:32 (twelve years ago) link
Herbie Hancock helped bring the synthesizer and the Fender Rhodes Electric Piano to mass appeal.
once the domain only of enthusiasts like The Beatles and The Doors
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:34 (twelve years ago) link
In a way, studying or being creative is kind of like sex. Yes, you can probably have it any time you want (some of us, anyway)
I can study and sex all day whenever wherever
― Evan, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:36 (twelve years ago) link
also (kind of exhausting this piece, I know, but)
Ornette Coleman went from playing the sax to the trumpet
um, not on Shape of Jazz to Come, and not really that often in general.
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:40 (twelve years ago) link
I don't want to give this terrible thing clickthroughs but I kind of want to see if it's being savaged in the comments
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:42 (twelve years ago) link
"I can still remember the first time I heard this album. I was 17, and I was driving my Subaru Legacy Wagon in the rain."
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:46 (twelve years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WxQYgH5WF_g
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:47 (twelve years ago) link
i think the five minute drive to his grandparent's house in the subaru might be my favorite part. belongs on the *worst anecdote ever* thread.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:48 (twelve years ago) link
i once wept like a schoolgirl driving home from work the day my grandmother died and "hollywood swinging" came on the radio but you don't see me trying to work it into any listicles.
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:49 (twelve years ago) link
And really, it's not just a song.
...it's not a fucking song!
― C:\GAMES\KEEN\KEEN4E.EXE (clouds), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:50 (twelve years ago) link
Misspelt Mingus song title. Axe this fucker to death.
― comedy is unnatural and abhorrent (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:51 (twelve years ago) link
I really liked the image of him already at his grandparents house with So What less than half over, sitting in their driveway "blaring" the record while his grandparents are staring out the window like "what the hell is Joseph doing out there?"
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:52 (twelve years ago) link
honestly would prefer maudlin personal anecdotes to eight-hand regurgitation of Intro To Jazz class material
― da croupier, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:52 (twelve years ago) link
i mean it's POSSIBLE for a random twentysomething to have a touching anecdote involving a mingus album, far less likely they have any information/insight wikipedia doesn't
― da croupier, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:53 (twelve years ago) link
you know he was sitting in his car in the driveway in the rain because he was dreading the fact that he actually had to hang out with his grandparents and help them, like, change lightbulbs or something. not because his life was being changed by a jazz record.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:54 (twelve years ago) link
once I was pulling into a grocery store parking lot and "It's Still Rock and Roll To Me" came on the radio and I was too lazy to change the station so I kept listening to it until I parked
― paula boradwell (crüt), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:54 (twelve years ago) link
this dude probably passive-aggressively sits in driveways for thirty-five minutes because he "has to hear the rest of this record" all the time
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:55 (twelve years ago) link
maybe if he'd actually talked to his grandparents he might have found they had first-hand stories to share about the genius of dave brubeck.
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:55 (twelve years ago) link
alas, now they are worm food.
this morning as i parked the car in the garage at my office building, i heard the first few notes of surrender by cheap trick. slight disappointment arose within me when i realized it was not the version from budokan. yet i still listened because it's a good song. cried a bit or something, memories.
― sug ones (omar little), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:56 (twelve years ago) link
I've performed with Dave Brubeck twice btw, I just wanted to throw that out there </insufferable>
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:57 (twelve years ago) link
last week i was smoking a cigarette in the parking lot outside of where I was working that day and the prodigy's breathe came on right when I was done with the cigarette so I turned the radio off and walked towards the gate I had to go through but some public works guys had parked their car near the gate and they were blasting the rest of breathe by the prodigy and when one of them asked me for a cigarette I said I was out
― puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:57 (twelve years ago) link
there was a Police song playing in my car earlier today, I forget which one
― paula boradwell (crüt), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:58 (twelve years ago) link
one of his "classical" reviews (of an ennio morricone album) features the phrase "Yo-Yo Ma and his aching cello"
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:58 (twelve years ago) link
godfather of the upright cello
― puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:59 (twelve years ago) link
i don't have a car or else i'd go out and sit in it and listen to a whole album right now. maybe the well-tuned piano.
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:59 (twelve years ago) link
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/cc/Yo-Yo_Ma_-_World_Economic_Forum_Annual_Meeting_Davos_2008.jpg/220px-Yo-Yo_Ma_-_World_Economic_Forum_Annual_Meeting_Davos_2008.jpg
my cello, oh how she aches
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:59 (twelve years ago) link
xp or maybe it an AC/DC song playing in the police car that took me away from the house whose driveway I sat in for 30 minutes blaring music -- lol, my grandparents are dead, totally forgot
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:59 (twelve years ago) link
hurtingchiefWow, thank you for the great introduction to this music called "Jazz." Miles Davis, huh, I will have to check that guy out. Glad the Voice is still around to shine a light on the hidden corners of the music world.
― super perv powder (Phil D.), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:59 (twelve years ago) link
one time after i hooked up with a girl, i was driving in my car and 'you got lucky' by tom petty came on the radio. funny, that.
― sug ones (omar little), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:00 (twelve years ago) link
my dad used to sit in the car with the radio on after pulling into the driveway, but he was an alcoholic
― C:\GAMES\KEEN\KEEN4E.EXE (clouds), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:00 (twelve years ago) link
i was going to turn this whole thread
whitesnake - "here i go again"
into a voice pitch. maybe i can now.
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:00 (twelve years ago) link
I heard a Yo-Yo Ma cello performance that was so aching I accidentally drove off the road and crashed into my grandparents' house
― paula boradwell (crüt), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:00 (twelve years ago) link
i killed my grandfather while listening to albert ayler.
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:02 (twelve years ago) link
now that's journalism.
― paula boradwell (crüt), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:02 (twelve years ago) link
you weren't sure he was going to survive, so you put on Spiritual Unity
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:02 (twelve years ago) link
gave in and went to the first page, went "oh fuck no" and backed away
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:02 (twelve years ago) link
sorry guys i'm writing this from jail i meant to tell you.
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:03 (twelve years ago) link
twist ending
― sug ones (omar little), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:03 (twelve years ago) link
When I first put on Herbie Mann - Memphis Underground, I was PISSED. What is that shrill, experimental sound?
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:03 (twelve years ago) link
did people really fuck to take five
― puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:05 (twelve years ago) link
When I first put on Stravinsky's "Le Sacre du Printemps," I was pissed. Where was the melody? Then I threw a chair and booed.
― super perv powder (Phil D.), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:06 (twelve years ago) link
So the Village Voice is paying their writers in Skittles now? Because that seems to be how they attracted the talents of this fine scribe.
― 5-Hour Enmity (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:06 (twelve years ago) link
i'm pretty sure i was conceived to chuck mangione's "feels so good"
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:06 (twelve years ago) link
― paula boradwell (crüt), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:06 (twelve years ago) link
Skittles beat what some place pay.
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:07 (twelve years ago) link
https://encrypted-tbn1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQxpK5tTW7Df0OVNt_Gj6O5g6YDn5CW3mOO0vnm4vSfioh8rRpJPA
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:08 (twelve years ago) link
most of us are actually paid in marshmallow "circus peanuts" these days
haha omg
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:09 (twelve years ago) link
josh that is fucking creepy
this bottomlessly horrid listicle is producing psychic mind-melds between ilxors now
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:10 (twelve years ago) link
"Be warned though, there is experimentation happening here."
I think I saw this written on one of those doorknob things at a hotel.
― Evan, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:16 (twelve years ago) link
There's something happening but you don't know what it is, do you, Mr. Lapin
― EZ Snappin, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:18 (twelve years ago) link
i heard amy goodman rambling on and on about bbc sex scandal in the car this morning and then i heard katy perry and then i yelled at my kids. it was raining.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:18 (twelve years ago) link
I like how he confuses "raucous" with "ruckus" in the Mingus bit. Well done.
― 5-Hour Enmity (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:19 (twelve years ago) link
it's still not as bad/horrifying as "jive"/"jibe"
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:20 (twelve years ago) link
where be thy jives now?
― C:\GAMES\KEEN\KEEN4E.EXE (clouds), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:21 (twelve years ago) link
Oh man, I fucking hate when people do that. But it's so common that "jive" is about to overtake "jibe."
― 5-Hour Enmity (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:21 (twelve years ago) link
he is apparently old enough to drive a car so i guess its safe to assume he isn't 12. which would be the only excuse for this thing i can come up with. though that might actually be offensive to actual 12 year old kids.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:21 (twelve years ago) link
honestly I did not know it was "jibe" till just now.
― paula boradwell (crüt), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:22 (twelve years ago) link
I definitely did not know about any of these albums when I was 12.
my whole life has been cloaked in ignorance
The jibe/jive & raucous/rawkus posts make it sound like you're arguing about Cherry Poppin' Daddies lyrics.
― EZ Snappin, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:23 (twelve years ago) link
xp: at least you did not say your life was clucked in ignorance
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:23 (twelve years ago) link
i think my dad might have owned "headhunters" but it also might have been too funky for him
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:23 (twelve years ago) link
and there was experimentation going on in there
― only Brod can judge me (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:24 (twelve years ago) link
to be fair discharge would have been too funky for my dad
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:25 (twelve years ago) link
funky discharge is unfair to everybody.
― EZ Snappin, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:25 (twelve years ago) link
my parents didn't do enough experimentation to listen to funky jazz
― paula boradwell (crüt), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:26 (twelve years ago) link
when i first started listening to jazz my mom just called me maynard g. krebs a lot
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:28 (twelve years ago) link
when i was little, my dad sung me a blood, sweat & tears song every night before i went to sleep.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:29 (twelve years ago) link
my dad played a lot of Miles Davis, Dave Brubeck, James Brown, Steely Dan, The Beatles, Average White Band, Stevie Wonder and Vanilla Fudge
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:31 (twelve years ago) link
claire de lune is used in lullabies
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:31 (twelve years ago) link
my dad's favorite band was yes :'-(
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:31 (twelve years ago) link
I have a friend who teaches a class in criticism and music writing, a post-grad class, and she says the quality of student and in particular their writing is overwhelmingly abysmal. I have a feeling their idea of funk - or jazz, for that matter - may be the Red Hot Chili Peppers.
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:32 (twelve years ago) link
Before the first time I saw Charles Mingus, I thought bass could only be played flat on the ground. But then one day I drove my Hyundai Elantra over to my grandparents house. It was only a three minute ride, but when i pulled into the driveway, there was Charles Mingus, playing the bass upright. Some say he is the godfather of the upright bass. Including me!
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:33 (twelve years ago) link
taste in music and quality of writing don't necessarily correlate; my dad could write amazingly and convincingly about Vanilla Fudge and it would not change the fact that he was lionizing Vanilla Fudge
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:34 (twelve years ago) link
I dunno, the ability to lionize Vanilla Fudge is an achievement unto itself!
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:35 (twelve years ago) link
That would be my assignment if I were teaching music writing: in 800 words or less, convincingly praise Vanilla Fudge.
(although I'm listening to a remastered version of "You Keep Me Hanging On" on Spotify right now and I'm starting to get it)
also Hurting, you know that "upright bass" is actual terminology, right
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:36 (twelve years ago) link
dan i think i have a project your dad might be interested in
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1828132368/uncool
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:36 (twelve years ago) link
I don't think I've ever heard Vanilla Fudge. They fell through the same crack that caught Uriah Heap.
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:36 (twelve years ago) link
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Tuesday, November 13, 2012 4:36 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
lol of course
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:37 (twelve years ago) link
http://open.spotify.com/track/4R2Zih6jIGEpANAYdFCRaf
the Vanilla Fudge version of "You Keep Me Hanging On", which my dad played to death
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:37 (twelve years ago) link
There should be something called downright bass.
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:38 (twelve years ago) link
i'm gonna see my dad in a week or two cuz he's coming down from upstate new york to see the louis hayes trio in brattleboro. he bought tickets online. 2+ hour drive does not keep his 75 year old self from the jazz.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:38 (twelve years ago) link
imo vanilla fudge should not just be heard but seen
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YFabNBveHOk
― da croupier, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:40 (twelve years ago) link
i can't load all, can anyone relink to the post that set off this conversation?
― Everybody did shit, art happened! (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:40 (twelve years ago) link
some douchebag twentysomething wrote a jazz listicle for a once venerable publication
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:41 (twelve years ago) link
you ain't missin much
so I click on this thread and you guys are discussing Vanilla Fudge
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:41 (twelve years ago) link
you know it kinda freaks me out that djp's dad and my dad would have a common point of connection at all and that it would be vanilla fudge
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:43 (twelve years ago) link
yeah that Vanilla Fudge video is like a master class in psychedellic stage hamming
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:43 (twelve years ago) link
you know, after watching that video I kind of have to say I'm regressing back to childhood and deciding that Vanilla Fudge pwns
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:44 (twelve years ago) link
wait holy shit @ that video
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:45 (twelve years ago) link
more classic tim bogert o face for u
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Yl8u2vGuwc
― da croupier, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:46 (twelve years ago) link
^ junior wells' "shotgun"
lol junior walker's i mean
― da croupier, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:47 (twelve years ago) link
this article doesn't really chive with me
― flopson, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:47 (twelve years ago) link
There's a hilarious line in Townshend's autobio about Vanilla Fudge: "Yes, they were louder than us. But they were still Vanilla Fudge."
― 5-Hour Enmity (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:48 (twelve years ago) link
I'm going to replace the "laser on" sign that lights up outside of our lab with "At one point, Head Hunters was the best selling jazz album of all time. Be warned though, there is experimentation happening here."
― Eccsame the Photon Guys (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:49 (twelve years ago) link
i once delegated the task of buying dave brubeck a six pack of heineken
― mookieproof, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:49 (twelve years ago) link
drumstick twirls are A+
― Force Boxman (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:49 (twelve years ago) link
reading vv now is kinda lol but mostly sad
― flopson, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:50 (twelve years ago) link
getting phil freeman vibes from this guy tbh
Rock & Roll is probably my fave Fudge album. great title too.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:51 (twelve years ago) link
from the Rock & Roll era. just mayhem.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jXvIOKBp1vQ
― scott seward, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:54 (twelve years ago) link
more keyboardists need to flail their left hand when they're not using it
― da croupier, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 21:58 (twelve years ago) link
at first I thought he was directing the band, and then I realized he was communing with the infinite wonder of an ever-expanding, unknowable universe
also I'm super-impressed that he can flail like that and still support his breath
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:00 (twelve years ago) link
When he would sit down on the piano, he would strike two half notes (notes next to each other that sound awful when played together) to simulate the imaginary notes between the two piano keys.
It's like a game of telephone that started with Hermann von Helmholtz in 1880 just finally made its way to Joseph Lapin, and he wrote down the message.
― Eccsame the Photon Guys (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:00 (twelve years ago) link
i really hope that nothing i write ever ends up in this thread.
― borntohula, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:02 (twelve years ago) link
write exclusively about vanilla fudge and you will be ok
― ums (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:05 (twelve years ago) link
write about vanilla fudge with your right hand while flailing the left
― da croupier, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:06 (twelve years ago) link
huge fan of the low-budget tv in-out mindzoom
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:09 (twelve years ago) link
Wait does this fuck also review classical music for VV or are those (astonishing) bits pulled from elsewhere?
― Antonin Scylla (Jon Lewis), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:11 (twelve years ago) link
the dude that wrote the "ten jazz albums to hear before you die" piece also got a "top 5 multiplayer nintendo games" post up today at the oc weekly so i'm not surprised if he's covering classical too
― da croupier, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:12 (twelve years ago) link
top 10 tyrannical dictators
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:13 (twelve years ago) link
DJP tell your pop to stay tuned for my Vanilla Fudge thinkpiece
― borntohula, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:13 (twelve years ago) link
done and done
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:14 (twelve years ago) link
the classical bit was pulled from elsewhere and is Joseph Lapin, i didn't think the Jazz article was the same dude?
― only Brod can judge me (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:14 (twelve years ago) link
jazz article is also lapin
― da croupier, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:17 (twelve years ago) link
same dude
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:17 (twelve years ago) link
There should be something called downright bass.― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, November 13, 2012 4:38 PM (37 minutes ago)
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, November 13, 2012 4:38 PM (37 minutes ago)
― What Kind Of EOY POLL Do You Look Like Now? (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:18 (twelve years ago) link
Vanilla Fudge, rocking the ascot!
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:19 (twelve years ago) link
Downton Abbey Bass.
Downward Facing Bass
― Moodles, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:23 (twelve years ago) link
Downtrodden Bass.
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:24 (twelve years ago) link
yeah so i read that piece and strongo was right except that I now have the phrase "a jazz bucket, filled with masterpieces" stuck in my head
― Everybody did shit, art happened! (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:25 (twelve years ago) link
KFC currently offering an awesome jazz bucket special.
I once saw Eleventh Dream Day, and I was trying to figure out the type of fish on the back of Doug McCombs's bass. "Trout?" I asked my friend out loud. "No, idiot," said some other guy. "It's a bass.
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:26 (twelve years ago) link
one of my college friends wrote the following poem while in high school:
I like to sing bassBecause it rhymes with 'ass'
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:31 (twelve years ago) link
trouthow low can you go
― multiple decades of jazz (Jon Lewis), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:32 (twelve years ago) link
catfish, surely.
― Everybody did shit, art happened! (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:33 (twelve years ago) link
an imprint of strange and beautiful blaps
― Albert Crampus (NickB), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:49 (twelve years ago) link
i bought a packet of circus peanuts today b/c of this thread.
― mod is my co-pilot (Pillbox), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:53 (twelve years ago) link
ew
― multiple decades of jazz (Jon Lewis), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:56 (twelve years ago) link
How many people buy circus peanuts a year, or were they just made all and once years ago and have been sitting on shelves ever since?
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 22:58 (twelve years ago) link
Just before birth, the fates allot each man a certain number of circus peanuts; when the last is eaten he is visited by death.
― multiple decades of jazz (Jon Lewis), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 23:00 (twelve years ago) link
the first one was OK, but I tired of them midway through the second & threw the rest away. I was just kind of curious about them b/c I haven't eaten them since I was prob age 5 or so. Impressively, the texture & taste is even more artificial-seeming than you'd think, given their appearance.
― mod is my co-pilot (Pillbox), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 23:01 (twelve years ago) link
I'd rather eat packaging peanuts.
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 13 November 2012 23:02 (twelve years ago) link
This is like from a high school newspaper!
http://blogs.ocweekly.com/heardmentality/2012/09/john_coltrane_a_love_supreme.php
― ya bish called wanda (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 06:18 (twelve years ago) link
http://josephalapin.com
― mookieproof, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 06:22 (twelve years ago) link
Yeesh.
Funny how the "high school newspaper" genre now includes random facts from Wikipedia.
― Sandy Denny Real Estate (jaymc), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 06:22 (twelve years ago) link
It doesn't take a genius to figure out that Flying Lotus, born Steven Ellison, is a special artists, guiding our ear palettes and rhythmic intuitions into complex and undiscovered territory.
― lil dirk (J0rdan S.), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 06:29 (twelve years ago) link
i kind of like this guy for saying things like "And of course, Coltrane was just straight-up killing the sax."
― flopson, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 06:38 (twelve years ago) link
flopson stop being okay w/ everything
― C:\GAMES\KEEN\KEEN4E.EXE (clouds), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 06:47 (twelve years ago) link
Happy belated birthday, Trane!
― how's life, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 10:39 (twelve years ago) link
Could have just got him a card, Joe.
― how's life, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 10:40 (twelve years ago) link
And then there's Trane's A Love Supreme which all the lovers of the NOW SOUND swear by and all it is is the precursor of the Vanilla Fudge, Coltrane's worst and its good that he's dead I would say it worse than that
-- Not a bad excerpt from not a bad piece of writing by R. Meltzer to be found in Gulcher (and perhaps originally in the Voice)
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 11:08 (twelve years ago) link
not bad piece of writing, just so there is no confusion..
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 11:09 (twelve years ago) link
but quote inaccurately, blame the lack of coffee.
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 11:10 (twelve years ago) link
It turned out that John Coltrane, like many of the great beboppers (Miles Davis, Thelonious Monk, Charlie "Bird" Parker), would fall victim to the black-tar bug -- in other words, heroin.
All this needs is for "beboppers" to be in quotes and it'll be perfect.
― super perv powder (Phil D.), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 11:21 (twelve years ago) link
texas t
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 11:25 (twelve years ago) link
crude
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 11:26 (twelve years ago) link
can i just say i love you all
I haven't really read this thread properly yet, but I'm going to drop what I'm doing and check it out NOW.
― What Kind Of EOY POLL Do You Look Like Now? (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 13:14 (twelve years ago) link
As a jazz fan you might find it helpful. Sure made an impression on me.
― Albert Crampus (NickB), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 13:19 (twelve years ago) link
Well when I say impression, I mean more sort of like an imprint of strange and beautiful blaps
― Albert Crampus (NickB), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 13:20 (twelve years ago) link
I always thought this "jazz" stuff was pretty scary but now I'm going to give it a try.
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 13:21 (twelve years ago) link
reading this article in the voice is like the end of flowers for algernon.
― s.clover, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 13:44 (twelve years ago) link
― flopson, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 13:50 (twelve years ago) link
Funny how the "high school newspaper" genre now includes random facts from Wikipedia.It's almost like the educational text on a kid's restaurant placemat. The only thing missing is the Word Scramble- SILEM VASID- and the Jazz Maze.
lol at algernon
― What Kind Of EOY POLL Do You Look Like Now? (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 14:14 (twelve years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dsx2vdn7gpY
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 14:27 (twelve years ago) link
http://images.nitrosell.com/product_images/7/1683/THANKS%20FOR%20A%20JOB%20WELL%20DONE.jpg
― scott seward, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 14:31 (twelve years ago) link
I accidentally listened to Head Hunters and think I might have heard some experimentation, is there someone I can call? ;_;
― super perv powder (Phil D.), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 14:38 (twelve years ago) link
some sort of funky doctor i guess
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 14:39 (twelve years ago) link
You were warned.
― 5-Hour Enmity (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 14:39 (twelve years ago) link
http://images4.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20060312024346/muppet/images/2/29/Drteeth2.jpg
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 14:40 (twelve years ago) link
http://images2.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20120309030013/muppet/images/c/c3/Kids_menu_-_Mama_Melrose%27s_Ristorante_Italiano.jpg
― scott seward, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 14:52 (twelve years ago) link
lol all that clicking inspired a sequel. i hate the internet.
― maura, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 15:07 (twelve years ago) link
haha! sorry. its kinda funny though. they sent in the big guns! love this:
Yesterday's much celebrated "Ten Jazz Albums to Hear Before You Die" post was a starter course, an easily digestible, rudimentary entry into the storied genre that not one person on the planet disagreed with. But today, we go further. Because for every Blue Train or Kind of Blue there's a jazz album that's as good, or better, but infinitely more obscure. Here are 10 of them, culled from about 100 years.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 15:22 (twelve years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VhDJe8IP8A0
― What Kind Of EOY POLL Do You Look Like Now? (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 15:27 (twelve years ago) link
At least they got decent writers the second time around. I was on an EMP panel with Rodriguez, and I've employed Kassel as a freelancer myself. And the ten discs they chose are an interesting mix. But none of that washes away the stain of the first piece.
― 誤訳侮辱, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 15:35 (twelve years ago) link
Don't worry, I'm not going to get too music geek on you right now
thanks for going easy on me, half note
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 15:38 (twelve years ago) link
http://www.au-lapin-agile.com/img/cabaret.jpg
― multiple decades of jazz (Jon Lewis), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 15:41 (twelve years ago) link
so we don't all have to clickthrough that:
Ten (More) Jazz Albums to Hear Before You DieBy Sound of the City Wed., Nov. 14 2012 at 7:20 AMCategories: JazzBy Matthew Kassel and Alex W. RodriguezYesterday's much celebrated "Ten Jazz Albums to Hear Before You Die" post was a starter course, an easily digestible, rudimentary entry into the storied genre that not one person on the planet disagreed with. But today, we go further. Because for every Blue Train or Kind of Blue there's a jazz album that's as good, or better, but infinitely more obscure. Here are 10 of them, culled from about 100 years.See Also:- Ten Jazz Albums to Hear Before You Die- Top Ten Jazz Shows in NYC This Month10. Louis ArmstrongSatchmo at Symphony HallLouis Armstrong's triumphant return to the small-ensemble format came with the trumpeter at the peak of his powers, and surrounded by virtuoso sidemen. In addition to Armstrong's updated renditions of his classic repertoire, clarinetist Barney Bigard and trombonist Jack Teagarden give inspired performances during their respective features, making this a singular document of these original jazz giants at their absolute best.9. Sidney BechetMoasic Select: Sidney BechetSidney Bechet's completely inimitable style is in full force on these remastered takes of his work with Columbia from the 1920s to the 1940s. Really, any record that features Bechet's wild virtuosity and shuddering vibrato is worth a listen; this boxed set just happens to feature some of the most carefully-restored examples of it, which can be difficult to find. Or, you can hear his "Si Tu Vois Ma Mere" as the opening cut on the Midnight in Paris soundtrack -- we can always leave it to Woody Allen to give the early jazz greats their due.8. The QuintetJazz at Massey HallOn May 15, 1953, the world heavy weight champion Rocky Marciano knocked out Jersey Joe Walcott to defend his title in a boxing match in Chicago. That same night Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Bud Powell, Charles Mingus and Max Roach got on a stage in Toronto and played bebop standards with the same vigor with which a pugilist might throw his prize-winning punch. More people watched the boxing match 50 years ago, but you'd do well to check out this album now. Listen to Gillespie impetuously shrieking "salt PEE-nuts!" as Parker enters his solo.7. Nancy Wilson with the Cannonball Adderley QuintetNancy Wilson/Cannonball AdderleyNancy Wilson was only 24 years old when she joined Cannonball Adderley and his quintet to make this beautiful record. She sounds in complete command. Four of the tracks on this CD are instrumental, and they're good post-bop numbers -- featuring Louis Hayes on drums, Sam Jones on bass, Joe Zawinul on piano and Cannonball's brother, Nat, on trumpet. But the group is at its best working behind Wilson, accentuating her impeccable voice.6. Duke Ellington, Max Roach and Charles MingusMoney JungleIf you think of Duke Ellington as an even-tempered artist, then listen to Money Jungle, which he recorded in 1962 with Max Roach and Charles Mingus, and reconsider. This is an odd record, but its no exaggeration to say that it is one of the greatest piano trio recordings ever made. And if you're looking for an album which showcases Ellington's abilities as a pianist, this is the one to check out.5. John Coltrane QuartetCrescentIn 1964, John Coltrane recorded A Love Supreme -- his most exalted album -- to express his admiration for God. It deserves every bit of the attention it gets. But Crescent, made earlier that very year, with the same unflappable quartet of McCoy Tyner on piano, Elvin Jones on drums and Jimmy Garrison on bass, may be the saxophonist's deepest and most affecting CD.4. Count BasieCount Basie Live at the SandsNo jazz list is complete without a big band, and Count Basie's New Testament band of the 1950s and '60s is one of the form's most dynamic and hard-swinging exponents. This album, a live take of one of Basie's popular Las Vegas shows, opening for Frank Sinatra, serves up a satisfying blend of classic Frank Foster charts, clever re-workings of pop tunes like Ray Charles's "I Can't Stop Loving You" and in-the-pocket solos from star sidemen such as trombonist Al Grey and trumpeter Harry "Sweets" Edison.3. Julius HemphillDogon A.D.On Dogon A.D. -- one of the finest examples of loft jazz out there, from 1972 -- you'll hear complex funk, repeated melodic patterns and spare instrumentation. Like Ornette Coleman, Julius Hemphill, who founded the World Saxophone Quartet, was born in Fort Worth, Texas, in the 1930s, and he never abandoned his attachment to the blues, even at his most experimental. In 2011 this record was reissued in limited supply by the International Phonograph Inc. label after years of being out of print.2. Maceo ParkerLife on Planet GrooveThis unfathomably funky set of music comes from the horn section that helped make James Brown famous: Maceo Parker, Pee Wee Ellis, and Fred Wesley. This live recording captures a brilliant highlight of their post-Brown careers, featuring adventurous improvisation alongside passionate showmanship. Parker described the music as "two percent jazz, 98 percent funky stuff," and he and his bandmates cooked up a potent mix of creative blowing and unstoppable groove.1. Claudia QuintetRoyal ToastThere have been dozens of great jazz releases cut during the past few years that could make up a worthy list of must-hear musical titles, but this one from The Claudia Quintet stands out in particular. Drummer and composer John Hollenbeck's mesmerizing loops and the group's constant polyrhythmic interplay offer a compelling example of what 21st century jazz can sound like: both maddeningly complex and irresistibly hard-grooving, performed by dexterous improvisers who inject something new into every take.
By Matthew Kassel and Alex W. Rodriguez
See Also:- Ten Jazz Albums to Hear Before You Die- Top Ten Jazz Shows in NYC This Month
10. Louis ArmstrongSatchmo at Symphony HallLouis Armstrong's triumphant return to the small-ensemble format came with the trumpeter at the peak of his powers, and surrounded by virtuoso sidemen. In addition to Armstrong's updated renditions of his classic repertoire, clarinetist Barney Bigard and trombonist Jack Teagarden give inspired performances during their respective features, making this a singular document of these original jazz giants at their absolute best.
9. Sidney BechetMoasic Select: Sidney BechetSidney Bechet's completely inimitable style is in full force on these remastered takes of his work with Columbia from the 1920s to the 1940s. Really, any record that features Bechet's wild virtuosity and shuddering vibrato is worth a listen; this boxed set just happens to feature some of the most carefully-restored examples of it, which can be difficult to find. Or, you can hear his "Si Tu Vois Ma Mere" as the opening cut on the Midnight in Paris soundtrack -- we can always leave it to Woody Allen to give the early jazz greats their due.
8. The QuintetJazz at Massey HallOn May 15, 1953, the world heavy weight champion Rocky Marciano knocked out Jersey Joe Walcott to defend his title in a boxing match in Chicago. That same night Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Bud Powell, Charles Mingus and Max Roach got on a stage in Toronto and played bebop standards with the same vigor with which a pugilist might throw his prize-winning punch. More people watched the boxing match 50 years ago, but you'd do well to check out this album now. Listen to Gillespie impetuously shrieking "salt PEE-nuts!" as Parker enters his solo.
7. Nancy Wilson with the Cannonball Adderley QuintetNancy Wilson/Cannonball AdderleyNancy Wilson was only 24 years old when she joined Cannonball Adderley and his quintet to make this beautiful record. She sounds in complete command. Four of the tracks on this CD are instrumental, and they're good post-bop numbers -- featuring Louis Hayes on drums, Sam Jones on bass, Joe Zawinul on piano and Cannonball's brother, Nat, on trumpet. But the group is at its best working behind Wilson, accentuating her impeccable voice.
6. Duke Ellington, Max Roach and Charles MingusMoney JungleIf you think of Duke Ellington as an even-tempered artist, then listen to Money Jungle, which he recorded in 1962 with Max Roach and Charles Mingus, and reconsider. This is an odd record, but its no exaggeration to say that it is one of the greatest piano trio recordings ever made. And if you're looking for an album which showcases Ellington's abilities as a pianist, this is the one to check out.
5. John Coltrane QuartetCrescentIn 1964, John Coltrane recorded A Love Supreme -- his most exalted album -- to express his admiration for God. It deserves every bit of the attention it gets. But Crescent, made earlier that very year, with the same unflappable quartet of McCoy Tyner on piano, Elvin Jones on drums and Jimmy Garrison on bass, may be the saxophonist's deepest and most affecting CD.
4. Count BasieCount Basie Live at the SandsNo jazz list is complete without a big band, and Count Basie's New Testament band of the 1950s and '60s is one of the form's most dynamic and hard-swinging exponents. This album, a live take of one of Basie's popular Las Vegas shows, opening for Frank Sinatra, serves up a satisfying blend of classic Frank Foster charts, clever re-workings of pop tunes like Ray Charles's "I Can't Stop Loving You" and in-the-pocket solos from star sidemen such as trombonist Al Grey and trumpeter Harry "Sweets" Edison.
3. Julius HemphillDogon A.D.On Dogon A.D. -- one of the finest examples of loft jazz out there, from 1972 -- you'll hear complex funk, repeated melodic patterns and spare instrumentation. Like Ornette Coleman, Julius Hemphill, who founded the World Saxophone Quartet, was born in Fort Worth, Texas, in the 1930s, and he never abandoned his attachment to the blues, even at his most experimental. In 2011 this record was reissued in limited supply by the International Phonograph Inc. label after years of being out of print.
2. Maceo ParkerLife on Planet GrooveThis unfathomably funky set of music comes from the horn section that helped make James Brown famous: Maceo Parker, Pee Wee Ellis, and Fred Wesley. This live recording captures a brilliant highlight of their post-Brown careers, featuring adventurous improvisation alongside passionate showmanship. Parker described the music as "two percent jazz, 98 percent funky stuff," and he and his bandmates cooked up a potent mix of creative blowing and unstoppable groove.
1. Claudia QuintetRoyal ToastThere have been dozens of great jazz releases cut during the past few years that could make up a worthy list of must-hear musical titles, but this one from The Claudia Quintet stands out in particular. Drummer and composer John Hollenbeck's mesmerizing loops and the group's constant polyrhythmic interplay offer a compelling example of what 21st century jazz can sound like: both maddeningly complex and irresistibly hard-grooving, performed by dexterous improvisers who inject something new into every take.
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 15:41 (twelve years ago) link
zzzzzzzzz
― multiple decades of jazz (Jon Lewis), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 15:43 (twelve years ago) link
regret selling my original copy of dogon a.d. that's all i have to add.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 15:45 (twelve years ago) link
the ppl voted for another Lapin listicle and they give us this mere competence?
― multiple decades of jazz (Jon Lewis), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 15:47 (twelve years ago) link
― What Kind Of EOY POLL Do You Look Like Now? (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 15:48 (twelve years ago) link
Is the 'Jazz at Massey Hall' rec "infinitely more obscure"? there's a whole book abt it!
― Ward Fowler, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 15:59 (twelve years ago) link
Only one copy was ever pressed, and it lies at the bottom of the ocean. Only plankton have heard it.
― 5-Hour Enmity (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 16:00 (twelve years ago) link
Live At R'lyeh Town Hall
― multiple decades of jazz (Jon Lewis), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 16:00 (twelve years ago) link
But every one of those plankton formed a band.
― What Kind Of EOY POLL Do You Look Like Now? (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 16:02 (twelve years ago) link
irl lol
― 5-Hour Enmity (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 16:04 (twelve years ago) link
did the public actually shame a newspaper into competence? sorry about the high school kid, here's something that is almost worth reading!
― scott seward, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 16:29 (twelve years ago) link
I know. I would now like to take back my Sesame Street counting to twenty post.
― What Kind Of EOY POLL Do You Look Like Now? (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 16:43 (twelve years ago) link
That list is slightly, slightly more interesting and the writing isn't as headsmackingly awful, but why does the Voice need to do this at all? Why does the Voice have to be shitty Time Out? This isn't some new Ugandan underground dance genre, it's fucking Jazz. How about "Ten NYC landmarks you need to see before you die: 10. Central Park; 9. Empire State Building..."
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 16:54 (twelve years ago) link
Top 10 hot dog vendors you may have missed...
― scott seward, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 16:56 (twelve years ago) link
You know what I fucking miss? The awesome taco truck that used to be around the corner from my office. I ate at fucking Chipotle yesterday and I think they poisoned me...I had the chills and the sweats all night. Oh, well.
― 誤訳侮辱, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 17:07 (twelve years ago) link
I'll never forget the first time I had Chipotle. I was on my way to my grandparents for dinner. It was only a five minute ride, but I stayed in the driveway for twenty minutes to finish the entire burrito.
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 17:12 (twelve years ago) link
They say Thelonious would put the medium and hot salsas together on one Chipotle to simulate the imaginary medium-hot salsa between these two salsas that exist in western cuisine
― Eccsame the Photon Guys (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 17:23 (twelve years ago) link
He sat down on the Chipotle.
― how's life, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 17:29 (twelve years ago) link
monk was the godfather of sriracha.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 17:46 (twelve years ago) link
The first time I ate Korean Tacos, I thought it was a joke. In fact, I was kind of pissed. Where was the cheddar cheese? Where was the pico de gallo? Well, it's so shocking the first time you eat it that it forces you to question what food can be.
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 17:48 (twelve years ago) link
they say the spice intervals at Guy Fieri's Paris restaurant, The Rite of Spring Rolls, caused the first patrons to riot
― Eccsame the Photon Guys (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 18:02 (twelve years ago) link
THIS is my kinda listicle. even though i have to click through 14 friggin' pages. i only really read musicians talking about music these days.
http://thequietus.com/articles/10654-michael-gira-swans-bakers-dozen-favourite-albums?page=1
― scott seward, Wednesday, 14 November 2012 18:11 (twelve years ago) link
*diet
― Joanna Motorhead (DJ Mencap), Wednesday, 14 November 2012 18:51 (twelve years ago) link
Missing u, thread on top five jazz topic of last week.
― Listicle Vogue (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 18 November 2012 17:51 (twelve years ago) link
I've been reading about Korean tacos. Joke or not, Hurting has convinced me that these will change my life.
― Mozzarella i Fieri (Sufjan Grafton), Sunday, 18 November 2012 18:09 (twelve years ago) link
oh man bulkogi tacos are an amazing thing
― thraeds of life (The Reverend), Sunday, 18 November 2012 22:57 (twelve years ago) link
Laura Barton in fine form at the Guardian http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/musicblog/2012/nov/15/power-of-love-magical-hit
"It was, Lewis explained, "a curious thing" capable of making "one man weep" and "another man sing"."
― bham, Monday, 19 November 2012 11:29 (twelve years ago) link
― super perv powder (Phil D.), Tuesday, November 13, 2012 3:59 PM (6 days ago) Bookmark
― turds (Hungry4Ass), Monday, 19 November 2012 12:13 (twelve years ago) link
i clicked that vanilla fudge video up there and one of the side links is a 9 minute version of season of the witch
― turds (Hungry4Ass), Monday, 19 November 2012 12:14 (twelve years ago) link
Lewis, Rush and Frankie Goes to Hollywood are not the only artists to have attempted to distill the power of love in song
― j., Monday, 19 November 2012 12:17 (twelve years ago) link
Laura Barton really is the worst. I want to smash something whenever I read her. She has that prissy smugness you get in a lot of student journalism. A nitwit naively laying out one cliche after another.
And then sentences like this: "It's pretty enough, of course, but there is something a little bleached, a little bloodless about Alpin's version".
What function does "of course" have? "There is something"? "A little"? Why bother saying it's both "bleached" AND "bloodless", mixing up the metaphors? The words are so vague here as to be synonymous.
"It's pretty but bloodless." There, that's better.
― Eyeball Kicks, Monday, 19 November 2012 12:25 (twelve years ago) link
It's pretty but bloodless, almost as though she had reneged on her promise to keep the vampires from the door
― Albert Crampus (NickB), Monday, 19 November 2012 12:39 (twelve years ago) link
so many commas
― resplendent quetzal spokil (clouds), Monday, 19 November 2012 14:19 (twelve years ago) link
I'll fuckin throw your listicle up on the dresser, just ya listicle, and bang that shit with a spiked bat. BLAOW!
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Monday, 19 November 2012 15:20 (twelve years ago) link
I'd sew that sentence up with a period, and just keep feeding it, clause after clause, comma after comma.
― Mozzarella i Fieri (Sufjan Grafton), Monday, 19 November 2012 15:24 (twelve years ago) link
http://noisey.vice.com/blog/rip-dave-brubeck
As our music media continues to focus on Taylor Swift's hotel room sleepovers and Shakira's $100 million dollar lawsuit, a major, mind-numbingly influential figure has passed in our midst.
Dave Brubeck, one America's greatest cultural treasures—the man who got late-50s America dancing in 5/4 time with Paul Desmond's seminal track "Take Five"—died today of heart failure, a single day ahead of his 92nd birthday.
Maybe you haven't heard of Dave Brubeck, and unless you sat through hours of jazz appreciation class in high school, we can't really blame you. Pop music fans have a nasty habit of writing jazz off completely, mostly because it's such a dauntingly rich and nuanced genre. But until you've sunk your teeth into the untouchable discography of the Dave Brubeck Quartet, you probably should take a pass on illegally downloading the next Purity Ring single--no offense Corin and Megan!
More than almost anyone else, Brubeck redefined the role of the jazz musician, and walked through the walls hemming in standard conceptions of genre as if they weren't even there. He was a classically trained pianist who brought his talent to jazz, and almost single handedly proved that jazz was an idiom that deserves a place among the highest forms of art.
What blows my mind about Brubeck has always been "Take Five." It's a melody that's existed in my brain since before I can remember, like the Mario theme or the Crossfire commercial. What's so spectacular about the piece is that it's in 5/4, a time signature which almost no pop music even begins to touch (besides Sunny Day Real Estate). The reason no one touches it is because it's just not catchy. With "Take Five," Brubeck and Desmond managed to create a melody everyone knows, in a time signature no one understands. It's more than just an achievement, it's a challenge to take your audience more seriously. Even if Brubeck's catalog had begun and ended with "Take Five," his impact on the music world would still resonate well beyond that of many of his contemporaries (and successors) combined. Magic.
RIP, Dave.
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 5 December 2012 22:50 (twelve years ago) link
almost single handedly proved that jazz was an idiom that deserves a place among the highest forms of art
oof
― Force Boxman (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 5 December 2012 22:54 (twelve years ago) link
Irrelevant and stupid comparison to *today's vapid pop music* -- checkAssumption that your audience has never heard of one of the top-selling jazz artists of all time -- checkRepetition of the canard that Brubeck is a genius because he wrote a song in 5/4, which is like the quantum physics of music or something -- checkMisplaced credit to white guy for elevating jazz to "place among highest forms of art" after it had already been there for decades -- check"Classically Trained" -- check (seriously do people really think that black jazz pianists are all self-taught blues savants and never went through the Hanon book and Well Tempered Klavier and Chopin etudes like everyone else?
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 5 December 2012 22:54 (twelve years ago) link
eesh that is stupid. the 5/4 thing is such a weird thing. it's a catchy song, no one cares about the time signature. also, i mean, it was his signature song, but he didn't even write it!
― tylerw, Wednesday, 5 December 2012 23:07 (twelve years ago) link
but it's a time signature no one understands!
― Force Boxman (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 5 December 2012 23:08 (twelve years ago) link
understanding 5/4 is definitely a mission impossible
― crüt, Wednesday, 5 December 2012 23:10 (twelve years ago) link
uh people totally care about the time signature in "Take Five." it's called "TAKE FIVE," THAT'S WHAT IT'S FAMOUS FOR
― RIP Gramp C (some dude), Wednesday, 5 December 2012 23:11 (twelve years ago) link
I mean who can count to five
― Force Boxman (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 5 December 2012 23:11 (twelve years ago) link
NOBODY
Hurting 2 OTMFM.
― and I scream Fieri Eiffel Tower High (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Wednesday, 5 December 2012 23:12 (twelve years ago) link
not that i'm defending this terrible article xp
― RIP Gramp C (some dude), Wednesday, 5 December 2012 23:13 (twelve years ago) link
maybe if he'd actually talked to his grandparents he might have found they had first-hand stories to share about the genius of dave brubeck.― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:55 (3 weeks ago) Permalinkalas, now they are worm food.― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:55 (3 weeks ago) Permalink
― idiot man-child (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Tuesday, 13 November 2012 20:55 (3 weeks ago) Permalink
― wk, Wednesday, 5 December 2012 23:24 (twelve years ago) link
sorry i killed dave brubeck everybody u_u
― bob chipeska (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Wednesday, 5 December 2012 23:26 (twelve years ago) link
living in the world of contemporary choral music really makes articles like this a special level of stupid
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Wednesday, 5 December 2012 23:50 (twelve years ago) link
walked through the walls hemming in standard conceptions of genre
IS HE IN A BUILDING OR ON A PIECE OF CLOTH? DECIDE!!!
― my other pug is a stillsuit (Jon Lewis), Wednesday, 5 December 2012 23:56 (twelve years ago) link
maybe he is drapery
― Dave Whobeck? (jjjusten), Thursday, 6 December 2012 00:00 (twelve years ago) link
But wait, there's more! http://noisey.vice.com/reviews
― dow, Thursday, 6 December 2012 01:25 (twelve years ago) link
http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Admin/BkFill/Default_image_group/2012/9/4/1346756780619/Statue-of-Marcel-Aym--008.jpg
― Roadside Prisunic (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 6 December 2012 01:26 (twelve years ago) link
no offense Corrin and Megan!
― (alternatively, “Respec’”) (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 6 December 2012 01:41 (twelve years ago) link
sweet jesushttp://noisey.vice.com/blog/the-dixie-chicks-greatest-hits-reminds-me-that-banjos-are-always-racist
it's like vice ate its own shit until it became fecal vice essence
― (alternatively, “Respec’”) (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 6 December 2012 01:42 (twelve years ago) link
(for men)
― (alternatively, “Respec’”) (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 6 December 2012 01:43 (twelve years ago) link
actually it's more of a bite of the old Buddyhead.com reviews section but with more n-word and not punk
― the purpose driven trife (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 6 December 2012 01:49 (twelve years ago) link
"apart from Sunny Day Real Estate"
― make like a steak and beef (dog latin), Thursday, 6 December 2012 12:28 (twelve years ago) link
Ed. Note: The Kid Mero is a Bronx-based writer and comedian specializing in #KNOWLEDGEDARTS and #COKEDREAMS.
― some dude, Thursday, 6 December 2012 12:31 (twelve years ago) link
Those Kid Mero reviews... are they supposed to be - funny?
― make like a steak and beef (dog latin), Thursday, 6 December 2012 12:44 (twelve years ago) link
What's so spectacular about the piece is that it's in 5/4, a time signature which almost no pop music even begins to touch (besides Sunny Day Real Estate).What's so spectacular about the piece is that it's in 5/4, a time signature which almost no pop music even begins to touch (besides Sunny Day Real Estate).What's so spectacular about the piece is that it's in 5/4, a time signature which almost no pop music even begins to touch (besides Sunny Day Real Estate).What's so spectacular about the piece is that it's in 5/4, a time signature which almost no pop music even begins to touch (besides Sunny Day Real Estate).What's so spectacular about the piece is that it's in 5/4, a time signature which almost no pop music even begins to touch (besides Sunny Day Real Estate).What's so spectacular about the piece is that it's in 5/4, a time signature which almost no pop music even begins to touch (besides Sunny Day Real Estate).What's so spectacular about the piece is that it's in 5/4, a time signature which almost no pop music even begins to touch (besides Sunny Day Real Estate).
― Tim F, Thursday, 6 December 2012 13:26 (twelve years ago) link
Tell Your Favourite Jokes Here!
― Roadside Prisunic (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 6 December 2012 13:52 (twelve years ago) link
dave brubeck the magic man. spreading magic in incomprehensible musical language. that nobody will ever understand. not even aliens!
― scott seward, Thursday, 6 December 2012 13:52 (twelve years ago) link
Dave Brubeck, vanguard ringmaster of total serialism
― my other pug is a stillsuit (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 6 December 2012 16:00 (twelve years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_C672_Fkzms&feature=youtube_gdata_player
― Roadside Prisunic (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 6 December 2012 16:24 (twelve years ago) link
this isn't about the camille paglia piece specifically but about this amazingly stupid junior high school paper-level response to it in LAist:
http://laist.com/2012/12/06/camille_paglia_rips_hollywood_a_new.php
Camille Paglia isn't known for being polite or couching her feminist arguments in niceties. In an opinion piece for The Hollywood Reporter, she keenly rips Taylor Swift and Katy Perry brand spanking new assholes, calling the singers "insipid" and "bleached-out" and saying that they and their ilk are ruining things for young women.
The piece itself is a little scattered, beginning by talking about how Perry and Swift are so bland as to vault feminism back about 60 years, then moving on to talk about how young middle-class white girls have sex these days without being considered rebellious, and wrapping up by saying that there aren't enough roles in Hollywood for older women in their 40s and 50s.
But in between all that, Paglia makes the correct point that watered down performers like Swift and Perry don't provide particularly interesting role models for girls, insofar as they seem to be more reflections of what society wants them to be than expressions of their own true selves.
The only catch? There are always artists like Perry and Swift out there, and they will probably never go away.
See, not everyone is a Camille Paglia. Some people take their music cookie-cutter because they are cookie-cutter themselves. And here's the thing -- that's OK. Just like not everyone will grow up to be a lawyer or a doctor, not everyone has the eclectic taste of a punk rocker, or a hip-hop head, or a connoisseur of electronic music.
In other words, some people like bland because they are bland. Writing a takedown piece of stars like Perry and Swift, who are harmless for all intents and purposes, just seems kind of unnecessary.
― LIKE If you are against racism (omar little), Friday, 7 December 2012 21:47 (twelve years ago) link
original CP piece here:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/taylor-swift-katy-perry-hollywood-398095
the kid mero is a top 5 twitter follow
― J0rdan S., Friday, 7 December 2012 21:48 (twelve years ago) link
Oof, that "The only catch?" followed hard by an "And here's the thing" in the unnecessary takedown of the unnecessary Camilia Paglia takedown. I hate that "it's just us talking over coffee" type writing.
― brio, Friday, 7 December 2012 22:30 (twelve years ago) link
that's just one of the most incredibly stupid and condescending bullshit pieces i've seen, shouldn't be surprised she writes for VVM too.
― LIKE If you are against racism (omar little), Friday, 7 December 2012 22:34 (twelve years ago) link
Chris Redfield 1 day ago in reply to Drrickey Idiot. At 25 years of age, it is ENTIRELY LOGICAL to reason that our society is MORE DEGENERATE THAN EVER! I see it every day, ant its PAINFUL to witness other idiots like you insist "Wrong"When I was young THE NATIONS YOUTH DANCED TO THE MACARANA (innocent), Today children know the lyrics, the dance/song to GANGSTER RAP (soldier boy, little wayne)- If you think this is an exaggeration, if you think this has no affect on our society- YOU NEED TO OPEN YOUR DAMN EYES.
Idiot. At 25 years of age, it is ENTIRELY LOGICAL to reason that our society is MORE DEGENERATE THAN EVER! I see it every day, ant its PAINFUL to witness other idiots like you insist "Wrong"
When I was young THE NATIONS YOUTH DANCED TO THE MACARANA (innocent), Today children know the lyrics, the dance/song to GANGSTER RAP (soldier boy, little wayne)- If you think this is an exaggeration, if you think this has no affect on our society- YOU NEED TO OPEN YOUR DAMN EYES.
― Snoop Lion (crüt), Friday, 7 December 2012 22:36 (twelve years ago) link
When I was young THE NATIONS YOUTH DANCED TO THE MACARANA (innocent)
this is the most amazing comment ever
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Friday, 7 December 2012 22:39 (twelve years ago) link
also I had never looked up a translation to The Macarena's lyrics before:
[Chorus:]Give happiness to your body Macarena'cause your body is for giving happiness and nice things toGive happiness to your body MacarenaHeeey,... Macarena! Aaay!(repeat once)Macarena has a boyfriened who's calledwho's called the last name Vitorino,and while he was taking his oath as a conscriptshe was giving it to two friends ...Aaay!(repeat once)(Chorus)Macarena , Macarena , Macarenayou're popular the summers in MarbellaMacarena , Macarena , Macarenayou like the guerilla excesses ...Aaay!(repeat once)(Chorus)Macarena dreams of the English Tailor*and buys the latest modelsShe would like living in New Yorkand seduce a new boyfriend... Aaay!(repeat once)(Chorus)http://lyricstranslate.comhttp://lyricstranslate.com
Macarena has a boyfriened who's calledwho's called the last name Vitorino,and while he was taking his oath as a conscriptshe was giving it to two friends ...Aaay!(repeat once)
Macarena , Macarena , Macarenayou're popular the summers in MarbellaMacarena , Macarena , Macarenayou like the guerilla excesses ...Aaay!(repeat once)
Macarena dreams of the English Tailor*and buys the latest modelsShe would like living in New Yorkand seduce a new boyfriend... Aaay!(repeat once)
(Chorus)http://lyricstranslate.comhttp://lyricstranslate.com
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Friday, 7 December 2012 22:41 (twelve years ago) link
xpost Seconding that, holy jeez.
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 7 December 2012 22:42 (twelve years ago) link
YOU NEED TO ROLL YOUR DAMN EYES
― Chewshabadoo, Friday, 7 December 2012 22:44 (twelve years ago) link
everyone should end everything with YOU NEED TO OPEN YOUR DAMN EYES.
― brio, Friday, 7 December 2012 22:46 (twelve years ago) link
Macarena has a boyfriened who's calledwho's called the last name Vitorino,and while he was taking his oath as a conscriptshe was giving it to two friends ...Aaay!
this does not sound innocent at all!!!
― Snoop Lion (crüt), Friday, 7 December 2012 22:47 (twelve years ago) link
*blanches, fans self desperately*
― Tomb Of Spatula (Jon Lewis), Friday, 7 December 2012 22:49 (twelve years ago) link
You're an idiot. Any intelligent, college-educated woman knows Camille Paglia or should. Oh, I guess you are vapid too because someone told you to jsut stand there and be a girl. Wouldn't want you to create any controversy, let women have jobs, etc. Those two singing twits wouldn't be on stages now if not for strong women and feminists paving the way and instead they give away all their power as corporate shills. Women like YOU don't even know the difference, you foolish, TV babies! By the way, Katy Perry and Taylor Swift do not make MUSIC. They are performers and controlled dolls. End of story.
― LIKE If you are against racism (omar little), Friday, 7 December 2012 22:50 (twelve years ago) link
mixed signals there
― LIKE If you are against racism (omar little), Friday, 7 December 2012 22:51 (twelve years ago) link
haha that is terrible in exactly the opposite direction
― I loves you, PORGI (DJP), Friday, 7 December 2012 22:51 (twelve years ago) link
that one is totes snl drunk girl at a party
― We Got Hasheem (Sufjan Grafton), Friday, 7 December 2012 23:30 (twelve years ago) link
Seems like Swift's ever-massing target audience identify with Swift as somebody bursting out of the cocoon, fighting the good and necessary fight as each and every girl-to-woman does, regardless of Feminism-per-se's landmark victories. Paglia and her critic should see this as the obvious pitch, whether they like the songs or not. Dunno wtf deal is w Perry.
― dow, Friday, 7 December 2012 23:46 (twelve years ago) link
she has a dazzling smile
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 7 December 2012 23:50 (twelve years ago) link
Oof, that "The only catch?" followed hard by an "And here's the thing" in the unnecessary takedown of the unnecessary Camilia Paglia takedown. I hate that "it's just us talking over coffee" type writing.― brio, Friday, December 7, 2012 2:30 PM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― brio, Friday, December 7, 2012 2:30 PM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
otm otm otm otmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
― difficult listening hour, Saturday, 8 December 2012 00:28 (twelve years ago) link
stealing this dn before anyone else i hope
― THE NATIONS YOUTH DANCED TO THE MACARANA (innocent) (zachlyon), Saturday, 8 December 2012 01:10 (twelve years ago) link
the kid mero hate in here is totally rong
― it just might not jive with you (fadanuf4erybody), Saturday, 8 December 2012 01:24 (twelve years ago) link
^^^^
― J0rdan S., Saturday, 8 December 2012 01:25 (twelve years ago) link
you know what, i'm gonna do that one two, we all shouldin protest of the way people used to be
― THE NATIONS YOUTH DANCED TO THE MACARANA (innocent) (forksclovetofu), Saturday, 8 December 2012 18:06 (twelve years ago) link
also, show me a piece by mero that has some merit?
― THE NATIONS YOUTH DANCED TO THE MACARANA (innocent) (forksclovetofu), Saturday, 8 December 2012 18:07 (twelve years ago) link
Was Mero behind the fake Ghostface blog from a few years ago?
― My Heart, My soul, My World, Mahbod, My everything (lpz), Monday, 10 December 2012 00:52 (twelve years ago) link
no, Big Ghostfase ripped off Mero's schtick
― rap乒 4-tay (The Reverend), Monday, 10 December 2012 01:31 (twelve years ago) link
― THE NATIONS YOUTH DANCED TO THE MACARANA (innocent) (forksclovetofu), Saturday, December 8, 2012 1:07 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark
@THEKIDMERO
― J0rdan S., Monday, 10 December 2012 01:38 (twelve years ago) link
i don't remember saying that
― THE NATIONS YOUTH DANCED TO THE MACARANA (innocent) (zachlyon), Monday, 10 December 2012 01:52 (twelve years ago) link
tbh im p tired of his schtick too. i did like his response to this tho
http://victory-light.blogspot.com/2012/07/top-ten-reasons-this-guy-needs-to-gtfoh.html
― D-40, Monday, 10 December 2012 01:52 (twelve years ago) link
the internet is so fucking full of so many of these identical contrived UNFILTERED ALL CAPS WILD MAN "personalities" and he's not even one of the more redeemable ones. even old school ilx troll Elli$ was funnier.
― some dude, Monday, 10 December 2012 02:06 (twelve years ago) link
none of you guys like sports, which is another hurdle before you can love the kid mero
― J0rdan S., Monday, 10 December 2012 02:09 (twelve years ago) link
i dunno something like chris ryan's old "chauncey billups" blog could be wildly entertaining to me even when i had to google a lot of the sports stuff to understand it
― some dude, Monday, 10 December 2012 02:13 (twelve years ago) link
oh i just mean his twitter account is the best when he's tweeting about sports
― J0rdan S., Monday, 10 December 2012 02:13 (twelve years ago) link
billups blog was kinda the OG tho, that shit was great
― J0rdan S., Monday, 10 December 2012 02:14 (twelve years ago) link
the all caps shit is dead, imo
― D-40, Monday, 10 December 2012 02:54 (twelve years ago) link
basically never funny
― D-40, Monday, 10 December 2012 02:55 (twelve years ago) link
seriously
― some dude, Monday, 10 December 2012 03:05 (twelve years ago) link
uh i like sports
― THE NATIONS YOUTH DANCED TO THE MACARANA (innocent) (forksclovetofu), Monday, 10 December 2012 05:34 (twelve years ago) link
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/criq.12001/full
I die each time I hear this sound: Getting dumped and the pop song
I don't know whether to copy-paste this whole thing or just highlights but fyi it starts with Nick Hornby
-
Other songs are angrier, raging against the dumper, but still indicative of a dumpee with a profoundly unhealed heart. ‘Damn your love, damn your lies’, sings Stevie Nicks on Fleetwood Mac's ‘The Chain’ (1977). ‘Song for the Dumped’ (1997) by Ben Folds Five, similarly bitter, is dominated by its chorus:
Well fuck you tooGive me my money backGive me my money backYou bitchI want my money back(And don't forget to give me back my black T-shirt)Wrathful, obsessing over infuriating details, the song is directed at the dumper but dedicated (it's ‘Song for the Dumped’, after all) to the mass of the similarly dumped. I understand, the dumped call back; what a bitch! Other angry songs rail against the ex's new lover. ‘There are two people here’, Todd Trainer of post-hardcore band Shellac screams in their 2000 song ‘Prayer to God’, ‘and I want you to kill them’. The song aims its rage mostly at the new guy: ‘Fucking kill him, fucking kill him/ Kill him already, kill him’ is the refrain, cathartic and angry and totally heartbroken. These are songs for wallowing in and for shouting along to.
The angry song turned inside out becomes the I'm moving on song: singing as hopeful self-help. These songs often accompany a montage of post-dumping recuperation in a certain kind of rom-com. After being dumped yet again, Bridget Jones, for example, declares that ‘This time […] I choose vodka, and Chaka Khan’.[41] These are songs to rally to, summon your friends to, to help you forget you were ever in love in the first place. The apotheosis of the I'm moving on song is, of course, Gloria Gaynor's ‘I Will Survive’ (1978). Gaynor's lover ‘tried to hurt me with goodbye’. ‘It took all the strength I had not to fall apart’, she sings. ‘Kept tryin’ hard to mend the pieces of my broken heart’. But after ‘oh so many nights just feeling sorry for myself’ she started to think about ‘how you did me wrong’: she ‘grew strong’, and blossomed into the heroine of a disco classic.
― attempt to look intentionally nerdy, awkward or (thomp), Thursday, 20 December 2012 15:40 (twelve years ago) link
Our appetite for these songs shows no signs of waning; in fact, we seem to need these songs more and more. A recent study analysing trends in pop music over the last fifty years has concluded that songs are getting sadder: slower, longer, more often in a minor key.[49] The lyrics have become ‘more self-focused and negative’, and the music ‘sadder-sounding and more emotionally ambiguous’, wrote the article's authors, a psychologist and a sociologist.[50] We have more misery in music than ever before. The sad song, the ‘dump’ that Nicholas Udall used in the sixteenth century to describe a heavy heart, has come back to life in the brokenhearted pop song.
It was pop music that both reflected and created the experience of the 1950s adolescent, and continues to score our romantic lives. The teenager arrived at the same time as the idea of being dumped, and the adolescent dating practices of the mid century have endured: the term ‘going steady’ may not be used these days but the model of having more than one serious relationship is the Western norm. We assume the experience, the relationship, will be repeated: and if there are to be multiple such relationships they necessarily have to end, perhaps in graceless break-up by dumping.
In its intensity, but also its disposability, the pop song reflects this string of heartbreaks that we all expect to have. And yet, for all its swooning brokenheartedness, pop retains the ideal of the one true love. In its happier moments pop music promises that the cycle of falling in love and falling out of it again will eventually end, that there'll be a happy ever after. At the end of High Fidelity, Rob is back with his girlfriend Laura. He's decided to commit to the woman he loves, and it seems as though his days of being dumped are over. He begins to compile a mixtape for her: a profoundly adolescent gesture, but at least the tape is ‘full of stuff she's heard of, and full of stuff she'd play’.[51] In the film version, we get to listen in to one of the tracks on the tape: Stevie Wonder's ‘I Believe’ (1972), a song that bemoans lost love (‘Life began, then was done’) at the same time as it hopes that this new relationship will be one to last. ‘I believe’, sings Stevie, ‘when I fall in love this time it will be for ever.’ That ‘this time’ may contain within it the hint of a ‘next time’, but pop music remains endlessly, repetitively hopeful that ‘this time’ it's going to work out. If not, though, we'll press play once more and do it, all of it, all over again.
xpost i couldn't even read the annotated version.
― besides Sunny Real Estate (dog latin), Thursday, 20 December 2012 15:43 (twelve years ago) link
I keep on meaning to start a blog for the free mag 'Brighton Unsigned'. If you think you've seen bad writing, I'm afraid you ain't seen nothin' yet.
― emil.y, Thursday, 20 December 2012 15:44 (twelve years ago) link
Do provide a sample.
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 20 December 2012 15:45 (twelve years ago) link
Seriously, it is amazing.
Hope Rudd was up next to play another solo artist to carry on the chilled theme from Newsham but she wasn't something that was quite expected. With the help of new fangled equipment at her feet, all of a sudden, what she was playing on the guitar was still playing and she was playing a different riff. With the sound of more than one person playing and the sight of one person is something that took a bit of getting used to. However, it was done brilliantly. It turns out that when a riff was played, it was temporarily recorded to harmonize with what was being played currently. Hope wasn't short of confidence either: coming across as a happy soul, she shares a few jokes and stories behind some of her songs, showing her willingness to involve the audience to be with her.
― emil.y, Thursday, 20 December 2012 15:53 (twelve years ago) link
I transcribed that myself but it is entirely as printed. Sic sic sic.
― emil.y, Thursday, 20 December 2012 15:54 (twelve years ago) link
Is that a google translation?
― pandemic, Thursday, 20 December 2012 15:55 (twelve years ago) link
The bassist from Attack Attack! used a loop pedal, huh?
― besides Sunny Real Estate (dog latin), Thursday, 20 December 2012 15:55 (twelve years ago) link
Thomp, where did you come across that article? Is that what a typical critical studies grad student (surely not a professor) is like?
― grandavis, Thursday, 20 December 2012 16:01 (twelve years ago) link
I honestly get so much joy out of that review - she has a magic box! Oh my god!
― emil.y, Thursday, 20 December 2012 16:02 (twelve years ago) link
That review is amazing. I am glad the reviewer got over her shock in time to "be with" the artist.
― grandavis, Thursday, 20 December 2012 16:04 (twelve years ago) link
Or his shock
Our local paper would often cover my club/gig nights in their listings but always always ALWAYS wrote the name of the night as "Rouge" instead of "Rogue", even when they were quoting an email that I'd sent them. Bloody journalists.
― besides Sunny Real Estate (dog latin), Thursday, 20 December 2012 16:06 (twelve years ago) link
Mooge Rouge
― emil.y, Thursday, 20 December 2012 16:10 (twelve years ago) link
"I distinctly heard the sound of strings and yet no string players were on stage, merely a man pressing the keys on his new fangled magic piano. Naturally I fainted with shock but, upon being revived by smelling salts, I was able to appreciate his cunning application of electrickery."
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 20 December 2012 16:10 (twelve years ago) link
emil.y I am still back on that first sentence of the excerpt you transcribed and will probably be staying there until after Christmas
― GIMME SOME REGGAE (DJP), Thursday, 20 December 2012 16:11 (twelve years ago) link
thanking u emil.y that is just some mind-expanding stuff. The palpable struggle!
― the clown's reflection is incorrect (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 20 December 2012 16:21 (twelve years ago) link
I came across it because I just turned down my Ph.D. place and now I am temping for the publisher /:
Katherine Hunt is completing her PhD at the London Consortium on the invention and reception of change-ringing in seventeenth-century England. She is a reviews editor for Critical Quarterly and a founding editor of Teller, a magazine of stories.
― attempt to look intentionally nerdy, awkward or (thomp), Thursday, 20 December 2012 16:26 (twelve years ago) link
Sorry about the Ph.D. (though maybe for the best?). I guess if you are a reviews editor your payment is getting an article published?
― grandavis, Thursday, 20 December 2012 16:34 (twelve years ago) link
More excerpts from Brighton Unsigned please! Please please please
― it's all fuck what sit says, we'll do our own thing (Matt #2), Thursday, 20 December 2012 16:39 (twelve years ago) link
the invention and reception of change-ringing in seventeenth-century England.
Interested
― woof, Thursday, 20 December 2012 16:45 (twelve years ago) link
posts v much in etc
― attempt to look intentionally nerdy, awkward or (thomp), Friday, 21 December 2012 10:15 (twelve years ago) link
From that ancient Limp Bizkit site: http://niggab.tripod.com/review.html
― besides Sunny Real Estate (dog latin), Friday, 21 December 2012 12:21 (twelve years ago) link
so then towards the end of the set, fred goes, "i gotta take a shit right now," and he gets up on the toilet and lethal makes this fart noise and a cardboard cut out of posh spice pops up out of the toilet. fred goes "how many of you like the spice girls?" and like everyone boos. then he goes "how many of you girls would like to beat the fuck out of the spice girls?" and you hear like this huge feminine roar. then he says "how many of you fellas would like a blowjob from the spice girls?" ive never heard so many men cry out in my life. except for that one time in al's mom's bedroom. but anyway, then he goes, "well i just want to flush this bitch cos the spice girls suck!" and there is this huge roar of approval.
Oh the nostalgia.
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 21 December 2012 13:35 (twelve years ago) link
feel like its been a loooooong time since someone posted something on the good music writing thread. or was that thread locked and buried. r.i.p.
― scott seward, Friday, 21 December 2012 13:40 (twelve years ago) link
further proof that the late 90s had the highest shit to good music ratio. FUIUD.
― besides Sunny Real Estate (dog latin), Friday, 21 December 2012 14:18 (twelve years ago) link
imo that ratio just rises every year, as more and more music is made all the time
― nobody's bitch speaks again (some dude), Friday, 21 December 2012 14:44 (twelve years ago) link
it's all about shit listening vs good listening imo
― Captain Humberbantz (Noodle Vague), Friday, 21 December 2012 14:47 (twelve years ago) link
ive never heard so many men cry out in my life. except for that one time in al's mom's bedroom.
― THE NATIONS YOUTH DANCED TO THE MACARANA (innocent) (forksclovetofu), Friday, 21 December 2012 22:34 (twelve years ago) link
lol @ zadie smith
I am addressing this to my fellow Britons in particular. Fellow Britons! Those of you, that is, who were fortunate enough to take the first generation of the amphetamine ecstasy and yet experience none of the adverse, occasionally lethal reactions we now know others suffered—yes, for you people I have a question. Was that joy?
I am especially interested to hear from anyone who happened to be in the Fabric club, near the old Smithfield meat market, on a night sometime in the year 1999 (I’m sorry I can’t be more specific) when the DJ mixed “Can I Kick It?” and then “Smells Like Teen Spirit” into the deep house track he had been seeming to play exclusively for the previous four hours. I myself was wandering out of the cavernous unisex (!) toilets wishing I could find my friend Sarah, or if not her, my friend Warren, or if not him, anyone who would take pity on a girl who had taken and was about to come up on ecstasy who had lost everyone and everything, including her handbag. I stumbled back into the fray.
Most of the men were topless, and most of the women, like me, wore strange aprons, fashionable at the time, that covered just the front of one’s torso, and only remained decent by means of a few weak-looking strings tied in dainty bows behind. I pushed through this crowd of sweaty bare backs, despairing, wondering where in a super club one might bed down for the night (the stairs? the fire exit?). But everything I tried to look at quickly shattered and arranged itself in a series of patterned fragments, as if I were living in a kaleidoscope. Where was I trying to get to anyway? There was no longer any “bar” or “chill-out zone”—there was only dance floor. All was dance floor. Everybody danced. I stood still, oppressed on all sides by dancing, quite sure I was about to go out of my mind.
Then suddenly I could hear Q-Tip—blessed Q-Tip!—not a synthesizer, not a vocoder, but Q-Tip, with his human voice, rapping over a human beat. And the top of my skull opened to let human Q-Tip in, and a rail-thin man with enormous eyes reached across a sea of bodies for my hand. He kept asking me the same thing over and over: You feeling it? I was. My ridiculous heels were killing me, I was terrified I might die, yet I felt simultaneously overwhelmed with delight that “Can I Kick It?” should happen to be playing at this precise moment in the history of the world, and was now morphing into “Smells Like Teen Spirit.” I took the man’s hand. The top of my head flew away. We danced and danced. We gave ourselves up to joy.
― puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Wednesday, 26 December 2012 19:42 (twelve years ago) link
idk much about her but everything of hers that I have read is completely embarrassing
― puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Wednesday, 26 December 2012 19:46 (twelve years ago) link
LOL where did that piece run?
― Q-Tip—blessed Q-Tip! (Jon Lewis), Wednesday, 26 December 2012 19:53 (twelve years ago) link
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2013/jan/10/joy/
― puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Wednesday, 26 December 2012 19:54 (twelve years ago) link
― Matt Armstrong, Wednesday, 26 December 2012 19:56 (twelve years ago) link
longest "Missed Connections" ad ever
― Captain Humberbantz (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 26 December 2012 19:59 (twelve years ago) link
i like that bellows portrait at least
― ILX is not a non-profit — we are just not profitable (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 26 December 2012 20:03 (twelve years ago) link
The New Yorker piece she wrote about Joni Mitchell was even worse.
― 誤訳侮辱, Wednesday, 26 December 2012 21:17 (twelve years ago) link
blessed Q-Tip!
― J0rdan S., Wednesday, 26 December 2012 22:28 (twelve years ago) link
And the top of my skull opened to let human Q-Tip in, and a rail-thin man with enormous eyes reached across a sea of bodies for my hand. He kept asking me the same thing over and over: You feeling it? I was.
http://images.huffingtonpost.com/gen/28505/thumbs/s-HITCHENS-WATERBOARDED-large.jpg
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 December 2012 22:32 (twelve years ago) link
lool
― mookieproof, Wednesday, 26 December 2012 22:33 (twelve years ago) link
Glad we mentioned her incomprehensible Joni article. I held it in front of a mirror and it still made no sense.
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 December 2012 22:36 (twelve years ago) link
I want her to explain Dave Brubeck's use of meter to me
― Q-Tip—blessed Q-Tip! (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 27 December 2012 00:25 (twelve years ago) link
Ah yes, Q-Tip--blessed Q-tip! And his dog, who plays upon the fife! And Ali, the mussulman!
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Thursday, 27 December 2012 04:19 (twelve years ago) link
human Q-Tip
― puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Thursday, 27 December 2012 06:06 (twelve years ago) link
Or a heavyset grown man, smoking a cigarette in the rain, with a soggy mustache, above which, a surprise—the keen eyes, snub nose, and cherub mouth of his own eight-year-old self.
Surprise! His mouth is above his mustache!
― Mordy, Thursday, 27 December 2012 06:09 (twelve years ago) link
...and a round little belly that shook when he laughed like a bowl full of jelly...
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 27 December 2012 07:02 (twelve years ago) link
yeah that sentence, wtf. is this guy meant to be some elaborate mr. potato head? xpost
― charlie h, Thursday, 27 December 2012 08:55 (twelve years ago) link
i like those aprons.
― t_s (how's life), Thursday, 27 December 2012 11:16 (twelve years ago) link
that zadie smith article is just beyond words. the most guardian paragraph i've ever read.
― Heterocyclic ring ring (LocalGarda), Thursday, 27 December 2012 11:47 (twelve years ago) link
I have to say I can’t remember these aprons.
― Chewshabadoo, Thursday, 27 December 2012 11:55 (twelve years ago) link
i find it hard to believe the records before nirvana/q-tip were "deep house"
― Heterocyclic ring ring (LocalGarda), Thursday, 27 December 2012 12:22 (twelve years ago) link
unless it was laurent garnier.
but it was probably fatboy slim, right?
She was almost certainly at the so-called 'Muscle Mary' gay night (going on her description) whose music policy bore little resemblance to Fabric's usual Friday and Saturday night fare. I never saw any evidence of it whatsoever but the club certainly had the reputation of being a bit grope-y at the weekend. The Muscle Mary night was OK but my gay friends saw it as being a bit body fascistic - which it probably was given how prevalent this was in London gay clubbing pre-Pop Starz etc, especially for them to single it out. I think I had strangers referring to me as a fucking mess at this night, which was cool, as it's only what I'd get in straight clubs in the same area.
Anyone with any sense went out clubbing in Brixton.
<old man talk/>
― Doran, Thursday, 27 December 2012 12:30 (twelve years ago) link
what she's describing is a backless top with a string tie, they were very popular going-out-clothes in the late 90s, the 'classic' one would be made of shiny gold-coloured material.
― c sharp major, Thursday, 27 December 2012 12:39 (twelve years ago) link
If that's the case, it would have been DTPM in its final re-incarnation, which IMO wasn't a patch on its stint at The End - it felt snootier, more limiting. (It wasn't pre-Popstarz, though; that's been around since 1995.) I have a vivid memory of gurning to Deep Dish, and a stranger asking if I was having a nasty turn, ahem.
Anyhow, I quite like the Zadie Smith piece! I had a similar moment at Pacha in 1995: lost, alienated and fucked up, not feeling the music, then being rescued by the unexpected entry of a recognisably human element. (In my case: four hours of Jon Pleased Wimmin followed by, of all things, "Live Forever".)
― mike t-diva, Thursday, 27 December 2012 13:04 (twelve years ago) link
Yeah, I thought that as soon as I wrote it, I meant more the effect that Pop Starz had on gay clubbing in London, which I'm sure you remember was a predictably cliched experience for the most part until the turn of the century. Pop Starz was such a big deal that it had almost as much of an influence on straight, student-y clubs as it did on gay clubs imho.
― Doran, Thursday, 27 December 2012 13:09 (twelve years ago) link
I don't mind Zadie Smith too much either. A lot of shit vented at her seems to be based on her age, gender and race, and in turn what this says about the social class of her readers, rather than her ability to write. (She's a fantastic prose stylist if not too hot on plot but she's clearly leagues ahead of most of her contemporaries.)
I'm sure she'd be the first to admit that she doesn't really give a fuck if she's mistaken hi-energy for deep house.
I was watching 'Stigma' - a short made for TV, ghost story originally aired by the BBC in 1975, released as part of the amazing BFI Ghost Stories For Christmas box set recently - and only just managed to internalise my rage that the 12-year-old female character was sitting in her room listening to Their Satanic Majesties' Request by the Stones. "But it's just so unbelievable that she would be doing this!" I fumed to myself, oblivious that it was simply a plot device and no one - who isn't mad - gives a shit about this stuff.
I wouldn't be so forgiving about the Joni Mitchell piece however.
― Doran, Thursday, 27 December 2012 13:41 (twelve years ago) link
it's all just music in the end really.
― Heterocyclic ring ring (LocalGarda), Thursday, 27 December 2012 13:49 (twelve years ago) link
Her first two novels and her first essay collection have moments (I liked the essay about Obama and the English language), which made the Mitchell one all the more cloddish.
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 27 December 2012 13:51 (twelve years ago) link
XP: Ha ha ha!
― Doran, Thursday, 27 December 2012 13:54 (twelve years ago) link
to be fair, a LOT of novelists can make you cringe when they write about music. even when characters in a novel talk about music it can make me cringe. music is funny like that. what makes me cringe in novels is when the music talk is obviously in the writer's voice and not the character's voice. sometimes its REALLY obviously just a way to talk about stuff they like.
― scott seward, Thursday, 27 December 2012 14:50 (twelve years ago) link
totally otm
― Albee Thousand (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 27 December 2012 14:51 (twelve years ago) link
Yep. All the music talk in George Pelecanos books is like that. Totally intrusive and artificial.
― 誤訳侮辱, Thursday, 27 December 2012 14:52 (twelve years ago) link
What are the best chapters on music from novels? The stuff from American Psycho springs to mind.
― Frederik B, Thursday, 27 December 2012 14:55 (twelve years ago) link
But that works because it's played as absurd. There's quite a bit of straight writing about music in fiction that reads very similar.
― maura, Thursday, 27 December 2012 14:57 (twelve years ago) link
Anyway I think all us music writers should start petitioning fiction editors to let us have a crack at short story writing. Tit for tat, right?
― maura, Thursday, 27 December 2012 14:58 (twelve years ago) link
my dad reads this mystery guy john sandford and he was telling me about one of his books where the hero spends the entire novel thinking of the best 100 songs to put on an ipod. they don't make mysteries like they used to...(my dad thought it wss cool though.) (mystery/suspense guys are always throwing in the names of blues/jazz people they like. especially newer singers who they feel should get more recognition or something.)
http://richardlaymonkills88710.yuku.com/topic/1561/t/List-of-top-100-songs-from-John-Sanford-s-quot-Broken-Prey.html
― scott seward, Thursday, 27 December 2012 14:58 (twelve years ago) link
OTM: Douglas Adams' effusive love for Dire Straits annoyed me even when I was a child.
― Ima Pay Close Attention To Your Post (Doran), Thursday, 27 December 2012 14:59 (twelve years ago) link
This is a thing in fiction full stop though right? I'm not a fan of Iain Banks per se but his novel about a retired rock star Espedaire Street is particularly bad iirc.
― Ima Pay Close Attention To Your Post (Doran), Thursday, 27 December 2012 15:03 (twelve years ago) link
Several xps.
― Ima Pay Close Attention To Your Post (Doran), Thursday, 27 December 2012 15:04 (twelve years ago) link
In its review of Ian Rankin's latest novel Private Eye said Rankin always seemed to be applying to be editor of Mojo between the lines. Novelists who love music, especially male ones, have a hard job disguising their fandom so they try to proselytise for their cult heroes, which is kind of sweet but mostly jarring and distracting. Zadie S doesn't do that in her novels - until recently I assumed she wasn't very interested in music - so I don't know what explains this recent burst of gushy non-fiction.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 27 December 2012 15:14 (twelve years ago) link
― scott seward, Thursday, December 27, 2012 9:58 AM (29 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
I dig Sandford cuz his stuff takes place in the twin cities where I grew up and is full of local detail. He didn't belabor music in the even or eight books I read. Ian Rankin, though, he namechecks way too much music.
― Q-Tip—blessed Q-Tip! (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 27 December 2012 15:33 (twelve years ago) link
i still have a long-brewing tumblr post about how some of the the music writing in 'visit from the good squad' is bullshit
― finally rich, fun-packed, fulfilling (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 27 December 2012 15:35 (twelve years ago) link
and never forget the watchmen
https://si0.twimg.com/profile_images/530435136/250px-Ozymandias.PNG
"Oh, and I've heard some interesting new music from Jamaica ... a sort of hybrid between electronic music and reggae. It's a fascinating study in the new musical forms generated when a largely pre-technological culture is given access to modern recording techniques about the technological preconceptions that we've allowed to accumulate, limiting out vision. It's called dub music. You'd like it, I'm sure."
― finally rich, fun-packed, fulfilling (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 27 December 2012 15:38 (twelve years ago) link
― Q-Tip—blessed Q-Tip! (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 27 December 2012 15:41 (twelve years ago) link
I really, really enjoy Zadie Smith's books column in Harpers. I think she's just kind of out of her element writing about music. In any case, "I didn't get X thing that most people think is great, but then one day I did" is such an uninteresting and self-involved narrative.
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Thursday, 27 December 2012 15:41 (twelve years ago) link
Really? I don't mind that narrative too much. For instance I enjoyed the. part in the Will Friedwald book on (mostly pre-rock style) American popular singers where he talks about dismissing Bob Dylan for years and gradually turning around so that he now owns and apparently listens to every album
― Albee Thousand (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 27 December 2012 16:23 (twelve years ago) link
stephen king and his springsteen/bob dylan worship to thread
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 27 December 2012 16:23 (twelve years ago) link
On the other hand King weaving Angel of Morning into Langoliers still creeps me out. Oh and he used Eli's Coming in...the Stand maybe? I can't remember. That was pretty cool too.
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 27 December 2012 16:25 (twelve years ago) link
Feel like I missed my chance to discuss the otherwise perfectly good Charles Willeford novel that was almost ruined when the narrator picked up a guitar and live-blogged his emotional state whilst playing. Cockfighter maybe.
― Albee Thousand (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 27 December 2012 16:28 (twelve years ago) link
Also, Hurting, isn't that the way the mind works: some stuff you like right away and some stuff requires some time and effort? Me, I'm still waiting for my Grateful Dead moment
― Albee Thousand (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 27 December 2012 16:30 (twelve years ago) link
The problem is that the J Mitchell piece is so washy it's not really about that experience, or about Mitchell, or about ANYTHING.
― Q-Tip—blessed Q-Tip! (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 27 December 2012 17:15 (twelve years ago) link
ysi
― puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Thursday, 27 December 2012 17:19 (twelve years ago) link
OK, still can't read that article but the description and the word "epiphany" in the title are worrisome.
― Albee Thousand (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 27 December 2012 17:34 (twelve years ago) link
yesssss
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Thursday, 27 December 2012 17:58 (twelve years ago) link
absolutely.
― s.clover, Thursday, 27 December 2012 18:25 (twelve years ago) link
and then on the "novelists doing it right" side, there's of course this:
“So?” is Säure’s customary answer to that one. “Which would you rather do? The point is,” cutting off Gustav’s usually indignant scream, “a person feels good listening to Rossini. All you feel like listening to Beethoven is going out and invading Poland. Ode to Joy indeed. The man didn’t even have a sense of humor. I tell you,” shaking his skinny old fist, “there is more of the Sublime in the snare-drum part to La Gazza Ladra than in the whole Ninth Symphony. With Rossini, the whole point is that lovers always get together, isolation is overcome, and like it or not that is the one great centripetal movement of the World. Through the machineries of greed, pettiness, and the abuse of power, love occurs. All the shit is transmuted to gold. The walls are breached, the balconies are scaled—listen!” It was a night in early May, and the final bombardment of Berlin was in progress. Säure had to shout his head off. “The Italian girl is in Algiers, the Barber’s in the crockery, the magpie’s stealing everything in sight! The World is rushing together. …”
― s.clover, Thursday, 27 December 2012 18:30 (twelve years ago) link
I think the thing that bugged me most about Zadie Smith's Joni Mitchell piece was all of her anxiety and insecurity about not being able to understand and appreciate music in the same way she does literature. That idea might've made for a worthwhile article on its own, but since the article was basically billed as "Zadie on Joni," I was disappointed that Smith seemed too afraid to capture anything interesting about her ostensible subject.
― Sax Blatterday (jaymc), Thursday, 27 December 2012 18:42 (twelve years ago) link
^Yeah, basically.
― Sax Blatterday (jaymc), Thursday, 27 December 2012 18:43 (twelve years ago) link
I think the depiction of the punk band and its surrounding scene in Goon Squad's early chapters is unusually believable but the later stuff about the outcast singer-songwriter redeeming a plasticised world through the magic of authenticity kind of undoes that good work. Novelists have a bad epiphany addiction when it comes to describing the music itself rather than the characters involved in making it.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 27 December 2012 18:47 (twelve years ago) link
Bad epiphany addiction good way to put it.
Where were you Whiney when the pinefox did his slow liveblog reading of that book? Looking forward to tumblr post
― Albee Thousand (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 27 December 2012 19:00 (twelve years ago) link
feel like all my examples of "novelists doing it right" = "novelists on classical"
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Thursday, 27 December 2012 20:28 (twelve years ago) link
Zadie, you listen to Joni, but you can't HEAR Joni
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Thursday, 27 December 2012 20:38 (twelve years ago) link
The Music Man?
― Albee Thousand (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 27 December 2012 20:41 (twelve years ago) link
is this the thread where they talk about the vice on pitchfork piece? which thread is that?
― Dominique, Thursday, 27 December 2012 20:41 (twelve years ago) link
― drunk 'n' white's elements of style (Hurting 2), Wednesday, December 26, 2012 10:19 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
ahaha
― have a sandwich or ice cream sandwich (Jordan), Thursday, 27 December 2012 20:47 (twelve years ago) link
someone brought a rock 'n' roll mystery novel into the store today! weird. it originally even came with a cd of original songs to go along with the book! its looks horrible.
― scott seward, Thursday, 27 December 2012 21:50 (twelve years ago) link
burn it
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 27 December 2012 21:51 (twelve years ago) link
le guin novel that originally came with a tape of original new age folk in a made-up language is really good though if you ever see it.
― scott seward, Thursday, 27 December 2012 21:51 (twelve years ago) link
it even says A ROCK & ROLL MYSTERY on the cover. worst genre ever.
― scott seward, Thursday, 27 December 2012 21:52 (twelve years ago) link
for people who hate music and reading
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 27 December 2012 21:52 (twelve years ago) link
anywayyyyyyy......
http://www.npr.org/blogs/bestmusic2012/2012/12/26/168097407/what-happened-to-music-writing-this-year
― scott seward, Thursday, 27 December 2012 21:53 (twelve years ago) link
I always wanted to read one of those lord iffy boatrace books by bruce dickenson of iron maiden
― Andrew WKRP (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 27 December 2012 21:57 (twelve years ago) link
and my immediate response to maura's thing is: what happened this year? what about all those other years?
― scott seward, Thursday, 27 December 2012 21:57 (twelve years ago) link
i'd gladly write an overview of "all those other years" if asked
― maura, Thursday, 27 December 2012 21:58 (twelve years ago) link
see, i was gonna point that out in the spirit of equal time: musicians often write horrible novels.
x-post
― scott seward, Thursday, 27 December 2012 21:58 (twelve years ago) link
Can that genre be worse than sudoku/crossword mysteries? Probably.
― Albee Thousand (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 27 December 2012 21:59 (twelve years ago) link
rock 'n' roll mystery = Inherent Vice, more or less
― Brad C., Thursday, 27 December 2012 21:59 (twelve years ago) link
i'm just cranky when it comes to music writing. and it makes me sad that this thread and threads like them are bumped waaaaaaaay more than any good music writing threads on here.
― scott seward, Thursday, 27 December 2012 21:59 (twelve years ago) link
wait, cat mysteries might be the worst.
― scott seward, Thursday, 27 December 2012 22:00 (twelve years ago) link
Do you have a lord iffy boatrace book skot? If so I would buy it
― Andrew WKRP (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 27 December 2012 22:00 (twelve years ago) link
i bumped the thread for great music writing just a few hours ago and yet everyone INCLUDING YOU, SCOTT!, prefers to be in here
― lex pretend, Thursday, 27 December 2012 22:01 (twelve years ago) link
but i blame myself too cuz when i read a horrible rockcrit thing what do i do first? link to it here, probably. which is fun for a minute and might have been instructive at some point but you could kinda do it every day of the week if you wanted to.
― scott seward, Thursday, 27 December 2012 22:02 (twelve years ago) link
(i really liked that article maura)
― lex pretend, Thursday, 27 December 2012 22:02 (twelve years ago) link
sorry lex! i'll check it out. just got home from work. been shoveling snow.
(thank you)
― maura, Thursday, 27 December 2012 22:02 (twelve years ago) link
has anyone read any mick farren books? sci-fi stuff, right? maybe those are good. kinky friedman, i read one of his once. not bad.
― scott seward, Thursday, 27 December 2012 22:03 (twelve years ago) link
I just read the beginning of that piece because I was surprised it wasn't Maura's NPR piece and I really, really hated it
Maura's NPR piece is super rad
― GIMME SOME REGGAE (DJP), Thursday, 27 December 2012 22:15 (twelve years ago) link
I read one of Mick Farren's vampire books, it was okay
the only good music writing is on ilm
― Mordy, Thursday, 27 December 2012 22:16 (twelve years ago) link
god help us all
― crüt, Thursday, 27 December 2012 22:20 (twelve years ago) link
Really excellent piece by Maura.
The only thing i wished for was a mention of the rise of the kind of outrageously inept listicle we keep coming back to on this thread. EG the Village Voice jazz thing with Brubeck his insane rhythms fly at u face. It functions the same way as the contrarian/provocative listicle (ppl will click to get pissed off cuz ppl sorta like getting pissed off) except the provocation here is the abysmal quality of the writing itself. There's no way the VV didn't know what was gonna happen with that jazz thing and they sure got their clicks out of it.
― Q-Tip—blessed Q-Tip! (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 27 December 2012 22:25 (twelve years ago) link
it seemed like a signal moment to me
― Q-Tip—blessed Q-Tip! (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 27 December 2012 22:26 (twelve years ago) link
there were a whole bunch of things in this month's wire that were pretty awful
― attempt to look intentionally nerdy, awkward or (thomp), Thursday, 27 December 2012 22:26 (twelve years ago) link
visit from the goon squad, though, enh
Moorcock was great at putting pop music in his sci-fi
― If I was a carpenter, and you were a douchebag (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 27 December 2012 22:34 (twelve years ago) link
http://perpetua.tumblr.com/post/38971850406/critical-discoursin-in-the-social-media-era
Don't know if this is too short to be considered, but it is pretty laughable and lacking self-awareness.
― this will surprise many (Nicole), Thursday, 27 December 2012 22:37 (twelve years ago) link
well consider the source
― lex pretend, Thursday, 27 December 2012 22:45 (twelve years ago) link
I always wanted to read a moorcock book because of his blue oyster cult association
Inherent Vice rules so hard
― Andrew WKRP (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 27 December 2012 23:01 (twelve years ago) link
his book starring Hawkwind is better in theory than in practice, unfortunately (I blame his cowriter tbh)
― If I was a carpenter, and you were a douchebag (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 27 December 2012 23:04 (twelve years ago) link
http://www.book-owski.com/wp-content/uploads/wpsc/product_images/1287417239-thetimeofthehawklords.jpg
― If I was a carpenter, and you were a douchebag (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 27 December 2012 23:05 (twelve years ago) link
nice
― mookieproof, Thursday, 27 December 2012 23:08 (twelve years ago) link
the bits where Hawkwind is rockin-to-save-the-universe are pretty entertaining tbh, it's the rest of the book (plot, characterization, prose, etc.) that fails miserably
― If I was a carpenter, and you were a douchebag (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 27 December 2012 23:13 (twelve years ago) link
Rankin always seemed to be applying to be editor of Mojo between the lines.
Peter Robinson had one mystery where the victim was a writer for Mojo.
― tokyo rosemary, Thursday, 27 December 2012 23:35 (twelve years ago) link
I guess there are also The CosbyCosloy Mysteries.
― Albee Thousand (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 27 December 2012 23:37 (twelve years ago) link
Maura that was a great and depressing article
― Andrew WKRP (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 27 December 2012 23:59 (twelve years ago) link
clumsy Tom Sharpe pastiche with extra scatology iirc
I can get behind Christopher Brookmyre having a 40-something Glaswegian grandmother accidentally wandering into a Twilight Singers gig at King Tut's Wah Wah Hut and through the power of Dulli realising her domestic life is terrible and she should become a two-fisted international merc
― ( ͡° ͜ʖ͡°) (sic), Friday, 28 December 2012 01:16 (twelve years ago) link
lol dulli is powerful, but i'm not sure it's in quite that way
― mookieproof, Friday, 28 December 2012 01:27 (twelve years ago) link
so recommended?
― Andrew WKRP (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 28 December 2012 01:34 (twelve years ago) link
I didn't read A Visit From The Goon Squad as a "rock novel", certainly not in the usual (horrible) sense. The outsider guy tips into a moment of mass acclaim, oneness for the goodness' sake, but once in, it will all gradually be different, he will be digested in history and memories like everything else, whether or not he actually cares to try to cultivate his peak-niche as a bum Dylan or super-Jandek or whatever. He and his audience shall be released for a New York minute and some afterglow, but other characters' manipulations are crucial. It's hardly a purist thing, from the view we're offered.
― dow, Friday, 28 December 2012 01:54 (twelve years ago) link
time for maura to write a novel imo
― mookieproof, Friday, 28 December 2012 01:59 (twelve years ago) link
I agree!
― this will surprise many (Nicole), Friday, 28 December 2012 02:03 (twelve years ago) link
Mick Farren's The Texts of Festival was a satire: like when the Shogun banished Westerners, and then centuries later, they came back and discovered the crypto-Christians, who had secretly practiced the rituals of their converted ancestors, but no longer knew what the words meant. In Farren's novel, the ancient Rock Gods are worshiped, especially via the legacy of the Woodstock Album (memorized, handed down): the Fish Cheer is a sacred mystery, etc. Seemed good at the time, but overall he was better as a musician.
― dow, Friday, 28 December 2012 02:06 (twelve years ago) link
Maybe the reason people spend more time on the bad music writing thread than the good one is that it is easier to agree on what is bad, kind of an "I against my brother, my brothers and I against my cousins, then my cousins and I against strangers" kind of thing.
― Albee Thousand (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 28 December 2012 05:17 (twelve years ago) link
also thought the article maura linked to about gawker and linkbait was good.
― Tome Cruise (Matt P), Friday, 28 December 2012 05:24 (twelve years ago) link
OK, just clicked through to the observer article she linked, thanks.
― Albee Thousand (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 28 December 2012 05:42 (twelve years ago) link
i would buy a maura novel
― ILX is not a non-profit — we are just not profitable (forksclovetofu), Friday, 28 December 2012 05:57 (twelve years ago) link
I am no longer writing about music. I am sure that has a lot to do with things changing.
Maura, let me know when you want to interview me for the profound impact my absence has caused.
― Loud guitars shit all over "Bette Davis Eyes" (NYCNative), Friday, 28 December 2012 16:18 (twelve years ago) link
too soon. We will all need the perspective that only comes with time.
― Q-Tip—blessed Q-Tip! (Jon Lewis), Friday, 28 December 2012 16:29 (twelve years ago) link
I do wonder if music criticism matters anymore though, and no, I am not trolling.
Technology has kept making it easier for music consumers to check out things before then purchase them without the filter of an expert endorsement. Radio meant you could hear the single though a lot of fringe music and even album cuts from mainstream fare would escape those not fortunate enough to be in close proximity to a college station.
The advance of cable television and the music video still pretty much limited things to the single and with a few exceptions, it was even more difficult for listeners to get a feel for the non-mainstream material and/or genres.
Record labels tried everything they could to get consumers to hear shit - flexidiscs are a perfect example of this mentality. It was easy to get free cassettes at record stores, free CD samplers, and many music publications would make money not by writing about music, but offering free actual music that their readers could listen to.
But now, a listener can stream an entire album - often legally, though it's not difficult to do so illegally - sometimes right after it comes out, sometimes even before. Entire genres of music and subgenres that would never get radio or video play are at the fingertips of anyone who wants to check it out.
In 1971, I would not be able to find out about Sir Lord Baltimore unless the band happened to open up for someone bigger whom I knew (say, Black Sabbath) or I read what Lester Bangs had to say. People read bylines because once you found a writer who you trusted, you would be more likely to use that writer to help you make your purchases.
In modern times, I don't need to look for Phil Freeman's byline. I just need to find the album myself and listen to it. A "responsible" music buyer would purchase things that they liked; someone else might keep the MP3s on their computer or maybe burn a CD.
When it comes to criticism, people still do rely on it when it comes to things that they cannot experience themselves. It's why people still flock to see reviews of a new iPhone if they are not an early adopter who will have it already. Even movie reviews are still relevant since it's a lot more difficult to check out, say, The Hobbit (and you certainly won't in real IMAX quality) then it is the new Witchcraft CD.
Now, I am a Luddite. I still buy CDs and even though I can check things out for free online to decide what I want to buy, I prefer to read the opinions of people in magazines and on this message board - but also in my Facebook feed - and will make purchases based on that even without hearing the music, or very much of it. But I don't count. I'm an old guy who is stuck in his ways. Hell, when a publicist sends me an album download, I will listen to it but either delete it or buy a physical CD (or in rare cases, an LP) because that's what makes sense to me. I have an iPod (that I inherited when my wife upgraded hers) but when I take a road trip, I am more likely to grab some CDs for the car than load up my iPod, even though the sound quality is identical and it's a lot more convenient.
But I am a dinosaur. My way is silly (by my own logic!) and few people even my own age still act like I do, let alone younger people who might have thousands of songs at their on-demand disposal but who don't own a single piece of plastic or winyl or magnetic take with even a second of it imprinted upon it.
It's a sobering thought, but I felt this way towards the end of my writing "career" - why does anyone need to trust me when they can trust their own ears? Why does anyone need to trust any of you?
― Loud guitars shit all over "Bette Davis Eyes" (NYCNative), Friday, 28 December 2012 16:43 (twelve years ago) link
i started writing something LONG. who knows when i'll finish. probably just throw it on the blog eventually. i have no desire to write for music mags or wherever. i really do have a pretty bad attitude about most music writing right now. and music magazines. and websites. and blogs. and everything. it'll pass.
― scott seward, Friday, 28 December 2012 16:44 (twelve years ago) link
"I do wonder if music criticism matters anymore though, and no, I am not trolling."
i don't think it does. good writing matters. good writers. i just don't think the majority of people writing about music online or in mags have a great burning desire to write about music! and it shows. its something to do until they can do something else. and that was kinda the case forever, but it just seems increasingly space-filling stuff. could be anything. pictures of kitties. whatever.
― scott seward, Friday, 28 December 2012 16:46 (twelve years ago) link
but see it's not like ppl really ARE foraging around and listening to everything and letting their ears decide. They're still relying on filters and convenient shorthand approaches and traveling memes.
― Q-Tip—blessed Q-Tip! (Jon Lewis), Friday, 28 December 2012 16:48 (twelve years ago) link
Also, when I find some quality television program, I like reading reviews online even though I had already consumed the show myself. I equate this to how I will read the recaps of sporting events that I attended or watched. And now that I think about it, I will sometimes listen to some music and then go about looking for reviews.
I do this because I want to see if I missed anything, or to see a new perspective on the art that maybe I missed because of my own biases or vantage point.
Still, I wonder how many people are like me. And this doesn't involve buying something to read the criticism, like a magazine or whatever. If I had to directly pay for it, I probably don't do this. And the indirect ways I pay for it, with advertising I see or click or that pops up or makes me watch before I can get to the content I want to see or through page views that might make someone a tenth of a cent, aren't a huge concern to me.
― Loud guitars shit all over "Bette Davis Eyes" (NYCNative), Friday, 28 December 2012 16:49 (twelve years ago) link
xpost true that, scott, much more of what's out there is blatantly just filling up space. It makes sense. No one in spending money to print it on paper, and barely spending any money on the writers, so why get uptight and editorial about the pieces you run? I miss editors. Mean, uptight editors.
― Q-Tip—blessed Q-Tip! (Jon Lewis), Friday, 28 December 2012 16:51 (twelve years ago) link
NYCN, this is true of lots and lots of us. Our synapses were molded by the way information flowed in print. We'll always digest the net this way.
― Q-Tip—blessed Q-Tip! (Jon Lewis), Friday, 28 December 2012 16:52 (twelve years ago) link
tbh I think the biggest "development" in "music writing" this year, if we are restricting it to this year as in 2012 (and maybe parts of 2011), is the rise of these text articles with a youtube embed or full-size photo or gif or whatever between every paragraph. I mean I don't even dislike these on principle! they can actually work, maybe if there's some sort of wry humor being pulled off, caption writers with pulses, you know. or it wouldn't be the BIGGEST objection if the piece is supposed to be a listicle in the first place, but more often you tend to see articles that would be ~*longform*~ but whose 15 embedded speed bumps don't lend themselves well to close reading, or to bothering to sustain an argument. (if the writer originally wrote it text-only and then had a bunch of stuff embedded, most freelance commissions etc, it's not to bad, but people are starting to write for this format.)
like, in print design you sometimes hear about the dollar-bill rule, or that if you can put a dollar bill down on the page and hit only text, you need more art. (obviously this is more toward the USA Today end of the spectrum.) this is like that jim cramer.
(plus these things always crash my browser. and it is 2012!)
― katherine, Friday, 28 December 2012 17:51 (twelve years ago) link
(and I should clarify this is not a shot at any outlet in particular, nor is it about embeds in general but then I feel like everyone pretty much knows what I'm talking about.)
― katherine, Friday, 28 December 2012 17:54 (twelve years ago) link
can I go back to Perpetua's tumblr post for a second and ask if he is honestly arguing that the job of a music critic is to curate other people's opinions?
― GIMME SOME REGGAE (DJP), Friday, 28 December 2012 18:09 (twelve years ago) link
curated, small batch
― Q-Tip—blessed Q-Tip! (Jon Lewis), Friday, 28 December 2012 18:16 (twelve years ago) link
katherine otm, the tendency toward constant visuals/streaming media in the middle of articles instead of just at the top or even every few articles is i guess inevitable but unfortunate
― fanute me or shoot me (some dude), Friday, 28 December 2012 18:20 (twelve years ago) link
dan, the argument seems to be that being a music writer is doing whatever someone will pay you do to -- regardless of how little it has to do with anything 99 percent of humanity would define as "writing," "effort," "insight," "journalism," "originality," or "criticism" -- before that publication either goes under or decides to change its approach based on whatever new plan is apparently going to squeeze a few more advertising bucks out of whatever suckers are left advertising in music publications.
― packt like phoebe cates's dad in a chimney (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Friday, 28 December 2012 18:22 (twelve years ago) link
and then ideally you roll with that. and the next one. and the next one.
― packt like phoebe cates's dad in a chimney (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Friday, 28 December 2012 18:23 (twelve years ago) link
― scott seward, Thursday, December 27, 2012 3:51 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
whoa what
― it burns when 1p3 (goole), Friday, 28 December 2012 18:32 (twelve years ago) link
i love how so many musicians on my facebook preface a link with: I USUALLY HATE ALL MUSIC REVIEWS BUT...
and then they link to something where they, themselves, are mentioned.
and then the first comment will be: THAT WAS SURPRISINGLY NOT HORRIBLE.
granted this is just a small sampling but it seems like there is a lot of animosity out there. and maybe my facebook is skewed toward old cranks and noise musicians but there is little love for the online rockcrit standard - sooooo much pitchfork hate - and even lots of hate for stuff like the wire. maybe people always hated the wire, i have no idea. and most of the links - like i mentioned earlier - are of the GET A LOAD OF THIS MORON - variety. not a lot of love in the room. so maybe perpetua does find insightful tumblr stuff every day, but the average person doesn't seem filled with wonder at the state of discourse. (again, my small crowd and the people they know, etc, not a proper cross-section. maybe its different elsewhere.)
― scott seward, Friday, 28 December 2012 18:36 (twelve years ago) link
there is a lot of nerd rage out there against critics in general, across all forms of media. Genre movie nerds DESPISE film critics with a knee-jerk venom that gets really depressing to me.
― Q-Tip—blessed Q-Tip! (Jon Lewis), Friday, 28 December 2012 18:39 (twelve years ago) link
i do get some of that too, scott. and yeah, mostly from folks who own shops or are in bands or etc. otherwise my feed seems evenly split between people who couldn't care less about any of this shit, and rock critics discussing some twitter feud or dumb article or some other thing where they might as well be speaking esperanto.
― packt like phoebe cates's dad in a chimney (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Friday, 28 December 2012 18:41 (twelve years ago) link
http://dangerousminds.net/comments/pop_singer_samantha_fox_reviews_the_fall_1986
― ILX is not a non-profit — we are just not profitable (forksclovetofu), Friday, 28 December 2012 18:45 (twelve years ago) link
"whoa what"
original edition of Always Coming Home came with a tape of folk music and poetry. (sadly, though i love le guin, that book a little too new age-y earth mother-y for me. i don't think i ever even read the whole thing. cool concept though. lots of illustrations too of tribal stuff/customs/etc.)
― scott seward, Friday, 28 December 2012 18:46 (twelve years ago) link
see, i love sam fox reviews! would read all day. and she's right too.
― scott seward, Friday, 28 December 2012 18:48 (twelve years ago) link
i'll be honest, i much prefer to read musicians talking about music than any rockcrit these days. i always kinda want to subscribe to the wire JUST for their jukebox feature. its my favorite part of decibel too when they get a band to listen to songs blind. i love mojo's stuff like that. i love Q&A's with musicians. long interviews about music. that is the stuff for me. i almost always learn more. they're more illuminating even when filled with the usual prejudices and blindspots. there will always be music writers i like, but watching artists interact with art (same goes with filmmakers on film, writers on writing) is my preferred brand of criticism.
― scott seward, Friday, 28 December 2012 18:52 (twelve years ago) link
totally agree. Quietus should do an antho of their pick 13 pieces, love that shit so much.
Artists on other artists are totally untrustworthy in a certain sense but that's part of why it's so rewarding to read.
― Q-Tip—blessed Q-Tip! (Jon Lewis), Friday, 28 December 2012 18:53 (twelve years ago) link
I mean it's not true of all artists, for instance Brahms was able to look at just about all music around and preceding him with great insight, but Debussy, if you read all his writings on music you'd think no one worthwhile had ever composed except for a scant few oddball choices.
― Q-Tip—blessed Q-Tip! (Jon Lewis), Friday, 28 December 2012 18:55 (twelve years ago) link
and i love that.
― Q-Tip—blessed Q-Tip! (Jon Lewis), Friday, 28 December 2012 18:56 (twelve years ago) link
dusted site does that listed thing. those are really good. haven't looked at that site in forever. should check out new ones.
― scott seward, Friday, 28 December 2012 18:58 (twelve years ago) link
for some reason i ended up with all these back issues of Performing Songwriter magazine and i was just gonna throw them into the store but i ended up keeping them in the back to read. they're great! long q&a's with people you never see interviewed. i mean, a lot of them are people i don't even listen to, but i love reading them anyway. even their record reviews are pretty good. i mean they'll interview j.d. souther and mavis staples and darryl hall and chrissie hynde and tony visconti in the same issue. love it.
― scott seward, Friday, 28 December 2012 19:02 (twelve years ago) link
The "MUSIC WRITING SUX FUK PITCHFORK" etc. attitude seems to come mostly from non-pro musicians. It's a perennial complaint, the people who're most excited about a blerb are the squeakiest wheels about how this or that Institution is ruining everything.
BUT this isn't meant to be a dis toward so-called "amateurs"-- I have the opposite opinion and think amateur musicians have made good decisions in life--
If you are to consider that maybe this animosity toward Music Writing is coming from people who just aren't covered by anybody (or covered very effectively), might it not suggest a paucity in local coverage?
― capital in ruins, thousands dead (flamboyant goon tie included), Friday, 28 December 2012 19:13 (twelve years ago) link
I mean it makes me sad whenever WGW is like "you don't know how many fucking promo copies are on my desk right now" bc my favourite columns this year were those "Yes in my backyard" things
― capital in ruins, thousands dead (flamboyant goon tie included), Friday, 28 December 2012 19:15 (twelve years ago) link
scott, think I agree w/you regarding most music writers doing that until something better comes along. I think even *I* did this, but the better thing to come along was me growing up and realizing I just wanted to make music and not write.
However, imo that's not the main reason why music criticism might not "matter". To me, it's because people who read about music aren't looking for a discourse on anything, they're either using reviews as filters to find new music, or they just want to know what's cool in general, to fill some inner quota of current events (ha, in much the same way I read CNN). Also, I notice a lot of writers who seem to write because they want *their* voice out there as a content generator, rather than because they feel any great desire to service a community w/info or analysis. And really, that's not news. People are people, they do things out of self-interest.
Music criticism (or any criticism of the arts) is by my guess pretty low on the totem poll of journalistic career ambition, lower still for literary career ambition. It's often a gateway for writers, much as their reviews are gateways for readers. I don't mean to suggest that all the writing is bad or unimportant, but sheesh, it seems a lot of it is unnecessary beyond the "here is an item you should be interested in" way, even to the people writing/reading it.
― Dominique, Friday, 28 December 2012 19:20 (twelve years ago) link
i feel like the best mindset for musicians is "do what you're passionate about, try to find and audience but don't get angry or lose motivation when the one you find isn't especially large or lucrative" and critics could probably do well with that as a motto too
― fanute me or shoot me (some dude), Friday, 28 December 2012 19:24 (twelve years ago) link
Pipe dreams imo
― capital in ruins, thousands dead (flamboyant goon tie included), Friday, 28 December 2012 20:23 (twelve years ago) link
some dude OTM here I think. The problem isn's that criticism doesn't matter, it's its that a larger and larger group of people don't find it matters to them. Meh. If writing about music is something you want to do, is the art you want to make, then make it, let it matter to those it matters to (even if that might be a small group of fellow music writers.)
― Regional Tug (irrational), Friday, 28 December 2012 21:47 (twelve years ago) link
editors, plz give Samantha Fox a regular column.
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 28 December 2012 21:54 (twelve years ago) link
she used to have a whole page
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Friday, 28 December 2012 21:55 (twelve years ago) link
give her a magazine then
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 28 December 2012 21:58 (twelve years ago) link
maybe i'm just getting further inside the bubble but it kinda feels to me like there's a lot of good energy in the music writing world at the moment? obviously as a profession and as a medium there are some unfortunate economic and cultural trends afoot, but in terms of people getting riled up about what they're listening to and what other people are writing, and the amount of interaction on twitter/tumblr/etc. that is actually substantial conversation or argument and not just shallow networking.
― fanute me or shoot me (some dude), Friday, 28 December 2012 21:59 (twelve years ago) link
Yeah, obviously The Collapse of the Monoculture as well as the entities that used to allow writers to eke a decent living has had consequences, but the climate feels simultaneously more AND less insular. Thanks to the interwebs, we can comment on each other's FB, Twitter, Tumblr; conversations take place which couldn't fifteen years ago. On the other hand I'm more aware than ever at how small the rockcrit/music writing community is. It was small in 1995 and 1983 too but now that we're forced to engage in what is essentially niche marketing the chances of any supra-cultural impact are slim.
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 28 December 2012 22:03 (twelve years ago) link
A Day Without Rain [Reprise, 2001]Pondering the fate of post-September 11 pop, everyone predicted what they already wished for--Slipknot undone, Britney in hiding. What happened instead was the unthinkable--sales of Enya's first album since 1995 spiked 10 months after release. (And she thought that movie where Charlize Theron fucked Keanu Reeves and died of cancer was a promotional coup!) Two years in the making with the artiste playing every synthesizer, the 11 songs here last a resounding 34 minutes and represent a significant downsizing of her New Age exoticism since 1988's breakthrough, Watermark--it's goopier, more simplistic. Yanni is Tchaikovsky by comparison, Sarah McLachlan Ella Fitzgerald, treacle Smithfield ham. Right, whatever gets folks through the night. But Enya's the kind of artist who makes you think, if this piffle got them through it, how dark could their night have been? Like Master P or Michael Bolton only worse, she tests one's faith in democracy itself. D-
― Mr. Snrub, Saturday, 29 December 2012 20:23 (twelve years ago) link
Assholy in the last two sentences, but no, it's not the worst music writing ever, esp. compared to many other specimens submitted.
― dow, Saturday, 29 December 2012 21:12 (twelve years ago) link
Assholy vs her fans, that is
― dow, Saturday, 29 December 2012 21:14 (twelve years ago) link
oh, c'mon, that's funny!
― s.clover, Saturday, 29 December 2012 23:27 (twelve years ago) link
Zingers on target up the last couple couple sentences (a little too much stage blood there), and "treacle Smithfield ham" is a great punchline for the comparisons, maybe he shoulda quit there? Brevity is the soul of wit, but I guess he wanted to emphasize the fact that he was really really upset!!
― dow, Sunday, 30 December 2012 01:28 (twelve years ago) link
So pretty funny after all--tell us how you really feel, 'gau.
― dow, Sunday, 30 December 2012 01:29 (twelve years ago) link
how terrible that he wrote a bad review of an Enya record.
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 30 December 2012 01:37 (twelve years ago) link
writers should justify easy target hatchet jobs by bringing their A game, not by sneering bravely at a fanbase that is almost definitely not reading it
― some dude, Sunday, 30 December 2012 01:45 (twelve years ago) link
A- game in this case.
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 30 December 2012 01:55 (twelve years ago) link
christgau doesn't even seem to like records he says are A- so that's appropriate
― PliesStripAThon5Jan20th@gmail.com (some dude), Sunday, 30 December 2012 01:55 (twelve years ago) link
i mean it really is perhaps the most useless rating system in all of music writing
― PliesStripAThon5Jan20th@gmail.com (some dude), Sunday, 30 December 2012 01:57 (twelve years ago) link
It's more accurate to say he doesn't much like his B+'s and especially his B's. Getting awarded the latter means you should crawl back into your mother's womb.
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 30 December 2012 02:04 (twelve years ago) link
like i said, most useless rating system in all of music writing
― PliesStripAThon5Jan20th@gmail.com (some dude), Sunday, 30 December 2012 02:05 (twelve years ago) link
Better just to ignore the grades and read the comments---but the later thing, when he awards icons of bombs etc, with no comments--now *that* is the most useless rating system, far as I'm concerned.
― dow, Sunday, 30 December 2012 02:54 (twelve years ago) link
i thought he was dropping bombs in the style of Funkmaster Flex
― PliesStripAThon5Jan20th@gmail.com (some dude), Sunday, 30 December 2012 02:57 (twelve years ago) link
it's da bomb
― Rolling "2 chainz" draadje (The Reverend), Sunday, 30 December 2012 02:59 (twelve years ago) link
I'd like to think so! Like it even better if he just spewed keyboard graffiti all over his hated ones; (!#)))>\d1-->fuk I know some of yall are more creative w it
― dow, Sunday, 30 December 2012 03:04 (twelve years ago) link
In my line of work only deans get to decree whether anything is neither here nor there
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 30 December 2012 04:00 (twelve years ago) link
(thanks guys. a novel! by me! you are all so nice <3)
wouldn't a single bomb imply it being THE bomb, though
― maura, Sunday, 30 December 2012 15:20 (twelve years ago) link
"productionally"? ...yes, terrible piece of writing.
― Doctor Flange, Sunday, 30 December 2012 16:04 (twelve years ago) link
Samantha Fox reviews The Fall, 1986.
http://dangerousminds.net/content/uploads/images/37735076264sam1.jpg
― Stop Gerrying Me! (onimo), Thursday, 3 January 2013 12:36 (twelve years ago) link
what's wrong with that?
― besides Sunny Real Estate (dog latin), Thursday, 3 January 2013 12:42 (twelve years ago) link
Mark Smith doesn't yodel on that songIt doesn't rip off a Peter Gunn guitar bitShe listens to half a song then moans about a different bandThe Smiths are not this "sort of group" when this sort is The FallThe Smiths lyric is wrong"I heard one the other while"
― Stop Gerrying Me! (onimo), Thursday, 3 January 2013 12:51 (twelve years ago) link
The Smiths lyric is wrong
― attempt to look intentionally nerdy, awkward or (thomp), Thursday, 3 January 2013 12:56 (twelve years ago) link
I am just going to type all of the Wire's '2012 Rewind' issue in here. Particularly though Tony Herrington's bit about the diaspora of African-American archetype invoked in DJ Spinn's 'Teklife 2'.
― attempt to look intentionally nerdy, awkward or (thomp), Thursday, 3 January 2013 12:58 (twelve years ago) link
Sam Foxes are the art of pretend forgetfulness
― Sounds like something Maria Carey would of rejected (DJ Mencap), Thursday, 3 January 2013 13:05 (twelve years ago) link
There is totally a yodelly bit in "Living Too Late". Two, I think.It does sound a bit "Peter Gunn"-y too, I can see what she means, though I agree rip-off would be a bit strong. From Sam's POV, The Smiths and The Fall are probably the same sort of group, I might have said the same thing in 1986 (1986 would probably have been the year when I got close enough to indie to start thinking about the subgenres as not the same sort of music). This isn't music writing, it's music chat. "I heard one the other while" is very likely mis-transcription for "I heard one the other day, while..."
I'm on Sam's side in this one.
― Tim, Thursday, 3 January 2013 13:25 (twelve years ago) link
It's a basically accurate piece, and I like the style too.
― s.clover, Thursday, 3 January 2013 14:22 (twelve years ago) link
He fails badly at a couple of high notes, I don't think that counts at trying to yodel. Peter Gunn is very distinctive, the Fall track is distinctively not like it, though I too can see what she means - it's a perfect example of a lazy reference from a bad reviewer."From x's POV" is every review ever - people shouldn't get a free pass for being wrong
I know it isn't supposed to be proper music writing - I saw it on Dangerous Minds and it amused me and it reminded me of this thread.
I do get (slightly) annoyed when people who can't write and have no interest in a genre are asked to write reviews just because they have huge tits are famous.
― Stop Gerrying Me! (onimo), Thursday, 3 January 2013 14:26 (twelve years ago) link
naughty girls review records, too
― GIMME SOME REGGAE (DJP), Thursday, 3 January 2013 14:36 (twelve years ago) link
xp So that's what Stylus's letter-graded system referred to...
― besides Sunny Real Estate (dog latin), Thursday, 3 January 2013 14:38 (twelve years ago) link
I think "he sounds like he's been having yodelling lessons" is a pleasingly accurate reflection of what happens at 1:13 and 2:26 in "Living Too Late".
"Peter Gunn" is a perfectly sensible reference, too - the two twangy lines are not identical but clearly similar enough to merit a comparison.
Sam's not wrong in saying that the Smiths and The Fall are different sorts of music, she's right - they are both alternative rock. Now you (and I) may be close enough to see the many subdivisions in alternative rock, and with that perspective (and the benefit of a quarter of a century of hindsight) they may sound like different sorts of music. You (or I) don't need to be a specialist or an expert to have a valid opinion. I think Sam's opinions here are valid, although not particularly interesting.
The worst thing to have come out of this exchange is my having listened to "Living Too Late". I remember liking it, this morning I'd have told you I liked it, and I now think it is really, really terrible.
― Tim, Thursday, 3 January 2013 14:45 (twelve years ago) link
Sam did herself a favour by taking the damnable thing off at half time, and it's not like anything happens in the second half of the record to change a person's mind about it, is it?
― Tim, Thursday, 3 January 2013 14:47 (twelve years ago) link
I am sorry for spoiling Duane Eddy's yodelling Smithsesque classic for you.
― Stop Gerrying Me! (onimo), Thursday, 3 January 2013 14:48 (twelve years ago) link
So you should be, what with you being placed here to rep for that sort of music.
― Tim, Thursday, 3 January 2013 14:49 (twelve years ago) link
Wish I stopped @ Luigi Nono's music was never going to change the world. A travesty.
Some of the other entries are terrible too.
― xyzzzz__, Thursday, 3 January 2013 15:17 (twelve years ago) link
I'm scared to read that
― ~farben~ (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 3 January 2013 16:30 (twelve years ago) link
the thing I like about the smiths comparison is the fall sometimes sounds nothing like the smiths, but that track does sound something like the smiths. and the lyrics are more smithslike than other fall tracks too. and i love the smiths lyrics in that review!
― s.clover, Thursday, 3 January 2013 19:00 (twelve years ago) link
mark e was always my favourite one of the smiths
― Albert Crampus (NickB), Thursday, 3 January 2013 19:10 (twelve years ago) link
Imagine a duet of mark e and Morrisey---a mash-up maybe---?
― dow, Thursday, 3 January 2013 19:12 (twelve years ago) link
M-o-r-r-i-s-s-ey, that is (what, ah, you. ah, mmmeaan-ah----to me.)(that's my mark e imitation)
― dow, Thursday, 3 January 2013 19:14 (twelve years ago) link
we did the sam fox thing up thread already?
― jazbay crostata (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 3 January 2013 19:15 (twelve years ago) link
I read somewhere that Morrissey couldn't stand being in the same room as MES bcz the latter always insisted in calling the former by his birth name Stephen (MES-is-a-prick-shockah)
― x-gau, uncut gau, The Bomb! (Drugs A. Money), Thursday, 3 January 2013 19:22 (twelve years ago) link
Samantha Fox is such a wild dame.
― this will surprise many (Nicole), Thursday, 3 January 2013 20:35 (twelve years ago) link
I think of Shiftwork as the Fall's 'Smiths' record
― ~farben~ (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 3 January 2013 20:38 (twelve years ago) link
maybe he was mad they named their band after him.
― s.clover, Thursday, 3 January 2013 21:04 (twelve years ago) link
This is written in defense of Holopaw. The band has simply put too much time, love and care into their new record for this type of thing to occur.In disheartening form, Paste Magazine published a snarky review of Holopaw's new Misra release, however, they clearly listened to the concept album in the wrong order. It's fair enough if the widely read publication doesn't take to the "unevenly epic Academy Songs, Volume I," however, it's not fair to criticize an album as "uneven" when you haven't even bothered to listen to it in the correct order. In reading the Holopaw review, it seems Paste writer Beca Grimm spent little time with Academy, downloaded it incorrectly, and clearly didn't care to read the track order that accompanied the promo. Grimm writes: "Academy" sparks with John Orth's cherub vocals as flint. Tiny embers glow quietly, transitioning into the demure, hotly narrative "Bedfellows Farewell."But then a hiccup. Surely the band included "Chapperelles Interlude" in an effort to set the very deliberate, scholastic stage. Following hot on the heels, "Diamonds" comes off almost like a parody of the nostalgia Academy tries so hard to maintain. It doesn't work. This review doesn't work. The song "Academy" does not transition into "Bedfellows Farewell," "Bedfellows Farewell" does not transition into "Chapperelles Interlude," and "Diamonds" does not "follow hot on the heels" of the latter. From there, Grimm goes on to further illustrate that she listened to the new concept album incorrectly and, in turn, issued an inaccurate, unfair assessment. Perhaps Grimm wouldn't find Academy Songs, Volume I lacks in "the final burst of tenacity needed to alleviate the audio blue balls it conjures" if it was listened to correctly? Then again, perhaps not, but Paste and Grimm don't even bother to give Holopaw a fighting chance here. When you pour your heart into a new record and spend months and months preparing for its release, it's obviously disheartening to read a snarky review. Nonetheless, in requesting criticism, this misfortune is expected from time-to-time. What's not expected is that a widely read and highly influential publication will avoid taking proper time and care with your release. When painstaking hours of hard work are tossed to the wayside in such a lackluster manner it's enough to put you on the defense. Really, what does this say about the trusted voices of music criticism?
But then a hiccup. Surely the band included "Chapperelles Interlude" in an effort to set the very deliberate, scholastic stage. Following hot on the heels, "Diamonds" comes off almost like a parody of the nostalgia Academy tries so hard to maintain. It doesn't work. This review doesn't work. The song "Academy" does not transition into "Bedfellows Farewell," "Bedfellows Farewell" does not transition into "Chapperelles Interlude," and "Diamonds" does not "follow hot on the heels" of the latter. From there, Grimm goes on to further illustrate that she listened to the new concept album incorrectly and, in turn, issued an inaccurate, unfair assessment. Perhaps Grimm wouldn't find Academy Songs, Volume I lacks in "the final burst of tenacity needed to alleviate the audio blue balls it conjures" if it was listened to correctly? Then again, perhaps not, but Paste and Grimm don't even bother to give Holopaw a fighting chance here. When you pour your heart into a new record and spend months and months preparing for its release, it's obviously disheartening to read a snarky review. Nonetheless, in requesting criticism, this misfortune is expected from time-to-time. What's not expected is that a widely read and highly influential publication will avoid taking proper time and care with your release. When painstaking hours of hard work are tossed to the wayside in such a lackluster manner it's enough to put you on the defense. Really, what does this say about the trusted voices of music criticism?
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 16 January 2013 13:48 (twelve years ago) link
layers within layers of steaming gibberish
― Eyeball Kicks, Wednesday, 16 January 2013 13:50 (twelve years ago) link
"Academy" "Bedfellows Farewell" "Chapperelles Interlude" "Diamonds"
Looks like the reviewer listened to the tracks in alphabetical order - the download prob didn't have tracks numbers and played in file-name order.
― Stop Gerrying Me! (onimo), Wednesday, 16 January 2013 13:53 (twelve years ago) link
"trusted voices of music criticism"
― s.clover, Wednesday, 16 January 2013 14:01 (twelve years ago) link
it's never nice to hear you conjured audio blue balls
― da croupier, Wednesday, 16 January 2013 14:05 (twelve years ago) link
ok this whole review would be a wow even if the author had listened to the tracks in order
http://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2013/01/holopaw-academy-songs-volume-1.html
can remember twice when I experienced snow in Florida. The first time feels hazy—I recall stuffing my sparkly bangled arms into thick, magenta coat sleeves for the occasion but not much else. The second remains crystal: I stood outside a Tallahassee liquor store the day after Christmas two years ago. A Miami native and FLA-all-day gal, my mom looked around puzzled, a bottle of Bombay Sapphire fisted. “Ash?” she asked me. “Weird to be doing a controlled burn in the winter.”
― da croupier, Wednesday, 16 January 2013 14:09 (twelve years ago) link
poor holopaw
― Mordy, Wednesday, 16 January 2013 14:12 (twelve years ago) link
it's nice to know that the brent d-era pitchfork style lives on after deletion
― da croupier, Wednesday, 16 January 2013 14:13 (twelve years ago) link
i can confirm that this holopaw album is less than impressive
― Mordy, Wednesday, 16 January 2013 14:52 (twelve years ago) link
d'uh THAT was the concept.
― pandemic, Wednesday, 16 January 2013 14:55 (twelve years ago) link
oooweeeAcademy" sparks with John Orth's cherub vocals as flint. Tiny embers glow quietly, transitioning into the demure, hotly narrative "Bedfellows Farewell."
― dow, Wednesday, 16 January 2013 15:04 (twelve years ago) link
I'm sure this guy has his fans and making an effort is better in principle than hacky boilerplate but sweet Jesus no.
http://thequietus.com/articles/11264-my-bloody-valentine-live-review
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 31 January 2013 10:38 (twelve years ago) link
haha he is overreaching somewhat
― Eyeball Kicks, Thursday, 31 January 2013 10:42 (twelve years ago) link
"jungle love"
― Just noise and screaming and no musical value at all. (Colonel Poo), Thursday, 31 January 2013 10:44 (twelve years ago) link
holy shit. i obviously fast-forwarded to the end, which was even worse than i had imagined.
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 31 January 2013 10:45 (twelve years ago) link
I mean he can obviously write and there are some good sentences but that ending is unforgivable. Also, the meaningful epigraph thing has been done to death.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 31 January 2013 10:47 (twelve years ago) link
"teenhood"
― Ballboy to Afghanistan (LocalGarda), Thursday, 31 January 2013 10:50 (twelve years ago) link
His style's given to hyperbole and flights of fancy, but JC's a good sort in my book.
― dog latin, Thursday, 31 January 2013 11:17 (twelve years ago) link
The sort of writing that helped hasten the end of Melody Maker in the nineties.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Thursday, 31 January 2013 12:24 (twelve years ago) link
made it to "de-materialised"
― Hermann Hesher (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 31 January 2013 12:28 (twelve years ago) link
"Maybe God"
― Neil S, Thursday, 31 January 2013 12:28 (twelve years ago) link
perhaps he was thinking of Tricky's short-lived 90s project Nearly God.
― Neil S, Thursday, 31 January 2013 12:29 (twelve years ago) link
To be fair, I remember finding this kind of overwriting very exciting as an MM-reading teenager circa 1989, so I'm sure that some Quietus readers think of Calvert the same way I used to think of Chris Roberts at his purplest, which I now find unreadable. I blame shoegazing. Sonic cathedrals redux.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 31 January 2013 13:14 (twelve years ago) link
nah, i love florid prose and this isn't a case of "too much" this is just v. bad florid prose
― Hermann Hesher (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 31 January 2013 13:18 (twelve years ago) link
Naw the music they covered did that perfectly well.
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 31 January 2013 13:19 (twelve years ago) link
Well, yes.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Thursday, 31 January 2013 13:59 (twelve years ago) link
I suspect here that MC is referring to the last year or two of the tabloid-sized Maker, and AG to the magazine-sized one that hatched as, presumably, a misguided attempt to bump up its sales
― why they let the bodies hit the floor? (DJ Mencap), Thursday, 31 January 2013 14:18 (twelve years ago) link
well, the writing on the wall was when they gave Catatonia album of the year and that was old style broadsheet MM
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 31 January 2013 14:19 (twelve years ago) link
By the time MM reached its terminal phase nobody was writing like this. This has much more of a late 80s/early 90s pre-Britpop-triumphalism vibe. I don't remember when the relaunch happened.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 31 January 2013 14:20 (twelve years ago) link
And I was just about to say Catatonia never got AOTY but I googled it and holy shit you're right. Catatonia > Beastie Boys > Mercury Rev > Pulp > Air.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 31 January 2013 14:22 (twelve years ago) link
I never forgave them for it
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 31 January 2013 14:23 (twelve years ago) link
http://www.rocklistmusic.co.uk/mmlists_p2.htm#1998
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 31 January 2013 14:24 (twelve years ago) link
Head Music getting AOTY in 99 was just as bad (and I loved the 1st 3 Suede albums)
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 31 January 2013 14:25 (twelve years ago) link
If you're going to be purple, you have to communicate accurately and choose the right words. Calvert doesn't. So it reads like undergraduate wanking, interspersed with odd sports commentator asides.
Easy sample: "MBV are, in a very real way, able to summon divinity. That, or the secular equivalent." Well, no, because the very nature of divinity is that it has no secular equivalent.
― Manfred Mann meets Man Parrish (ithappens), Thursday, 31 January 2013 14:35 (twelve years ago) link
"MBV are, in a very real way, able to summon divinity. That, or the secular equivalent."
LOLz
― Designated Striver (Tom D.), Thursday, 31 January 2013 14:37 (twelve years ago) link
xp Head Music?! Christ.
I know 1998 was a weak year but it can't have been as bad as that MM list makes out. There are maybe 10-12 albums on there that I would bother with now.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 31 January 2013 14:37 (twelve years ago) link
Here's the NME list for 98: http://www.rocklistmusic.co.uk/1998.html
― Manfred Mann meets Man Parrish (ithappens), Thursday, 31 January 2013 14:41 (twelve years ago) link
MM had obviously "invested" in Catatonia that year. Or Allan Jones loved it above all else.
― Manfred Mann meets Man Parrish (ithappens), Thursday, 31 January 2013 14:42 (twelve years ago) link
MM just sunk so low in its final years.
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 31 January 2013 14:47 (twelve years ago) link
That Born To Do It "send-up" was maybe the final straw.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Thursday, 31 January 2013 14:52 (twelve years ago) link
I'm pretty sure I did the worst piece of music writing at some point in my life.
I'm sorry about that.
― Loud guitars shit all over "Bette Davis Eyes" (NYCNative), Thursday, 31 January 2013 15:28 (twelve years ago) link
When he finally gets to describing the actual performance, it's a lot better: his imagery is tied to some sense of impressions of particular sounds and how they were generated. If he'd concentrated on the sense of his KV quote, rather than just slapping it up there, could've been really powerful: here is this outer awkardness, this crap sound system, ths bit with changing guitars, maybe stage fright of people who in any case are no longer used to the vagaries of live performance if they ever were--but here comes this MBV reach for transcendence, this stubborn audacity. Anyway, some of that did come across. I'd say start with some backstory, telling the noobs why and how the band mattered in the first place, without boring or pandering to the old fans, the kind of balancing act you gotta/should do do with this stuff. (Some of this may also be the anxiety of writing long by today's usual standards.) And yeah lose that ending.
― dow, Thursday, 31 January 2013 15:37 (twelve years ago) link
I just went and downloaded the Holopaw promo and discovered, yes, the ID3 tages were correct, so this writer probably sorted them fucked up in their own iTunes
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Thursday, 31 January 2013 15:37 (twelve years ago) link
A friend who works on an online title said she was horrified that one of her fellow editors thought that writers filing long (because no word count) were going the extra mile and giving them value for money, when in fact it can take longer to edit a piece than it can to write the first draft - cutting extraneous words is how you go the extra mile. The freedom of online may be better than stubby little 80-word magazine reviews but it needs to be tempered by some kind of awareness of the appropriate length. Pitchfork, for example, is much better now at not letting writers ramble on ad nauseam. Even the tiniest limit on this review's word count would have meant removing the worst bits and tightening the best sections and if editors won't impose those limits it falls to the writer to exercise a bit of self-censorship, otherwise a potentially excellent review can become a florid mess.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 31 January 2013 15:47 (twelve years ago) link
The Quietus - which is generally a useful site - does seem to be a little light in its editing. Even the good pieces feel like drafts.
― Eyeball Kicks, Thursday, 31 January 2013 15:58 (twelve years ago) link
I enjoy reading The Quietus a lot
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 31 January 2013 15:59 (twelve years ago) link
me too, but it does have the occasional wtf piece on there, and is no worse for that.
― Neil S, Thursday, 31 January 2013 16:00 (twelve years ago) link
cutting extraneous words is how you go the extra mile Exactly. A lot of the overdone opening, in my experience, is revving up the engines, and sometimes the self-confidence/motivation/will to write. Once I get the whole thing "done", can see it, often happily, as a first draft (not that I always cut enough, or well enough).
― dow, Thursday, 31 January 2013 16:06 (twelve years ago) link
The thing that causes me most shame - and that is the correct word I'm using - about the Quietus is the standard of editing. There is no subbing because there are no subs or production people because we don't charge a cover fee like, for example, the old Melody Maker or the Guardian. I work 6am to 1 or 2am at the moment to do the second job that allows me to do the Quietus. World's smallest violin right?
We'd need to be twice the size we are to afford a production editor and even then I wouldn't hire one, the money would go on making sure all the writers got paid, rather than just some. This is simply what it's like now and will remain like for the foreseeable future. We'd need an audience of tens of millions per month to be able to afford one sub editor part time. And this is not going to happen given the lack of click throughs, listicles, lowest common denominator features, features on MUSE and Mumfords etc.
So if anyone wants to lend their skills to a "useful" site and do us a few hours of subbing gratis we'd love to hear from you. It's a problem that I'd really like to get on top of. John at the quietus dot com.
I'm not going to say anything about Calvert other than I love his writing. For all it's madness and gauche purpleness etc. he nails MBV for me. I first went to see them when I was 16 when Isn't Anything were out. This is exactly how I felt about them.
I totally get why people hate him though... it's not like there aren't plenty of other dry pieces to read on the site.
― Doran, Thursday, 31 January 2013 16:34 (twelve years ago) link
thanks for the thoughtful response D. As I said, I never mind the occasional o_0 post on The Quietus, it's part of the fun, and you have so many great writers there's always something worth checking out IMO. Keep on keepin' on!
― Neil S, Thursday, 31 January 2013 16:37 (twelve years ago) link
To be fair to Calvert, he's got a regular slot reviewing live shows for tQ. I wouldn't like to imagine trying to write an original, interesting medium/long-form live review once every couple of weeks - think I'd go a bit mad.
― dog latin, Thursday, 31 January 2013 16:42 (twelve years ago) link
XP: We want him to write shorter pieces on the whole. And this is my favourite one of his. If we saw it as a "failure" we'd discontinue the series. And a lot of people read him.
Seriously, we totally expect to get the grief over Calvert! We'd be idiots if we didn't! I'm not bothered about it but the editing thing ruins the little sleep I have. Also, the way I see it is everything is pretty much in balance. So at the other end of the scale from Calvert we've got Matthew Lindsay who is such a forensically brilliant journalist.
I don't know if you saw his pieces on Nico: The Marble Index Trilogy Kate Bush: The Dreaming and David Bowie: Ziggy Stardust. I'd stand these pieces against anything published in MOJO, UNCUT etc. In fact I'd say they're a lot better.
― Doran, Thursday, 31 January 2013 16:47 (twelve years ago) link
Secular Divinity would be a great name for a terrible band/album.
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 31 January 2013 17:02 (twelve years ago) link
(re reviewing live gigs so often)True, and it would be hard to deal w finding yourself finding patterns, however useful to yourself and readers; plua a lot of live bands present songs in very predictable arcs. Good to see that the New Yorker's Anthony Lane has found fresh ways to entertain/console himself and his audience, even/especially while slogging through blockbuster movies.
― dow, Thursday, 31 January 2013 17:10 (twelve years ago) link
And, before heading out the door, I meant to just glance over Linday's Marble Index Trilogy piece, but got hooked. Wow! Would like him to indicate sources for some biographical stuff (the Nico Icon documentary, perhaps?); also, the pre-VU Jimmy Page-produced single, "I'm Not Saying/The Last Mile" and Chelsea Girls are already Nico as hell--she always needed a producer, but even pre-"trilogy", she came across pretty strongly (would also have liked to see him talk about her performances on VU albums, since it's long anyway). But she really, really comes across vividly in this, and he's got details that even old Nico junkie me never saw before. Thanks!
― dow, Thursday, 31 January 2013 17:20 (twelve years ago) link
Thanks Dow. I'll ask Matt about his sources. He's working on a Kraftwerk related piece for us at the moment.
― Ima Pay Close Attention To Your Post (Doran), Thursday, 31 January 2013 17:54 (twelve years ago) link
No prob; I guess some of his references might be from Cale's What's Weish For Zen, which I'm finally about to read, rather than skim; also of course he mentions Young's memoir. Looking fwd to the Kraftwerk-related!
― dow, Thursday, 31 January 2013 18:26 (twelve years ago) link
I'm late to this but Zadie Smith's Joni piece is one of the most incoherent pieces I've ever read in the New Yorker and it tells you nothing at all about why she came around to Joni's music (or specifically Blue - she seems to have written the whole piece without venturing any further). When she began a long aside about Kierkegaard that took up most of the penultimate page I gave up on expecting anything useful from this piece. Is it about Joni Mitchell? Or her childhood? Or race? Or how to deal with overwhelming cultural choice? Or insecurity about artforms you don't fully grasp? Or why you change your mind about certain art? It's all of these things and yet none of them. I can't imagine a less famous writer getting something so garbled past an editor.
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 14:07 (eleven years ago) link
haven't read it but i'm pretty sure the piece is about Zadie Smith.
― wmlynch, Wednesday, 13 March 2013 18:13 (eleven years ago) link
Yeah I think we talked about it extensively in either a Joni thread or the NYer thread or a Zadie thread, don't remember. It was very childishly narcissistc, like "I used to not like pizza, but then, one time, I went to my friend's birthday party, and there were like 8 different kinds of pizza..."
― space phwoar (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 18:33 (eleven years ago) link
or like "it bums me out that my friends know more about pizza than i do. I guess it's because I spend all my time knowing everything about french cuisine"
― gentle german fatherly voice (President Keyes), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 19:54 (eleven years ago) link
So why do you think you like pizza so much now? Is it the cheese? The crust? The toppings. "Uh… oh… I… Kierkegaard?"
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 19:57 (eleven years ago) link
BAN NOVELISTS FROM MUSIC WRITING
― maura, Wednesday, 13 March 2013 20:41 (eleven years ago) link
I've been so bitter about this lately I think there's maybe only about ten people who shouldn't be banned from music writing.
― rallying against young people who wear hats (Nicole), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 20:42 (eleven years ago) link
I think a great side-effect of the internet is that it has devalued merely having an opinion about an artist or piece of music as being worthy of extended writing.
― space phwoar (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 20:45 (eleven years ago) link
Like it already used to be boring enough when the NYTimes or NPR would ask a bunch of random people of note what their ten dessert island discs were and why, and they'd fumble through their thin musical vocabularies for an explanation, as though just being who they were and liking something mattered. That might have been tolerable when I didn't have a million better pieces of music writing at my fingertips, not to mention spotify.
― space phwoar (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 20:47 (eleven years ago) link
*desert island
― space phwoar (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 22:37 (eleven years ago) link
JUST TELL ME WHERE TO FIND THIS DESSERT ISLAND DAMMIT
― poking pocong (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 22:44 (eleven years ago) link
easier ways to get music recommendations
― the craziest half-court shots and wildest WAGs (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 23:06 (eleven years ago) link
i know right if I were on dessert island I wouldn't need music cuz I'd be too busy eating DESSERTS
― space phwoar (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 23:08 (eleven years ago) link
"#10: Chocolate Lava Cake. This just has this really great, like, chocolatey flowy-ness."
― space phwoar (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 23:09 (eleven years ago) link
whipped cream and other delights mirit
― the craziest half-court shots and wildest WAGs (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 13 March 2013 23:23 (eleven years ago) link
I like how Zadie keeps saying "open tuning" because she heard that's what Joni did and it sounds technical.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 14 March 2013 10:47 (eleven years ago) link
Piece doesn't know whether it wants to be Hornby or Morley. Doesn't tell me anything about the music because there's obviously no technical knowhow.
I can't imagine a less famous writer getting a better piece past the editor of the New Yorker, unfortunately. I wonder whether I should tell them about Then Play Long, or whether they'd just go ho-ho-ho like Santa on the cover if I bothered.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Thursday, 14 March 2013 11:38 (eleven years ago) link
Well it's bloody hard for anyone to get anything into the New Yorker, but they do publish good music articles by people less famous than Zadie Smith. James Wood's Keith Moon piece was fantastic - knowledgable, passionate, funny and illuminating.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 14 March 2013 12:51 (eleven years ago) link
Harder now that Anna Wintour's going to be running the New Yorker, as I understand it.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Thursday, 14 March 2013 13:33 (eleven years ago) link
started reading the zadie smith piece and ended up bailing after this line:
In the passenger seat of a car, on the way to a wedding, I no longer had the excuse of youth: I was now the same age as Christ when he died.
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Thursday, 14 March 2013 23:31 (eleven years ago) link
pretty sure she's confused as to what a bat mitzvah is there
― the craziest half-court shots and wildest WAGs (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 14 March 2013 23:33 (eleven years ago) link
A good unit of time. "It's been two christlives since they've won the Super Bowl"
― that Django got me Nuages (Sufjan Grafton), Friday, 15 March 2013 04:02 (eleven years ago) link
for years (and still kinda) i would measure long events in "Seven Samurais". As in, "that line was half a seven samurai wait".
― the craziest half-court shots and wildest WAGs (forksclovetofu), Friday, 15 March 2013 04:16 (eleven years ago) link
I am one and quarter Jesuses old :(
(Jesii?)
― Habemus mundissimo ostentus nomen (onimo), Friday, 15 March 2013 12:40 (eleven years ago) link
NounJesuses plPlural form of Jesus. Usage notesCare should be taken to establish context when using this term as some Christians find the notion of more than one Jesus to be blasphemous.
Jesuses just alright with me
― Another turning point, a stork fuck in the road (ledge), Friday, 15 March 2013 13:00 (eleven years ago) link
Plus, if you go to only Catholic Christian Churches then they believe in the doctrine of Transubstantiation, whereby the bread and wine literally become the body and blood of Jesus. So far, taking Jesus to be the size of an average Nazarene man, I have eaten nine whole Jesuses plus one of Jesus legs. This is more whole Jesuses than anyone has ever eaten. Neil Petark says he has eaten 12 Jesuses, but he includes bread and wine consumed at Protestant Churches, and Protestants do not believe in Transubstantiation so he is wrong and I am still the Jesus eating King. Neil Petark has really only eaten 4 Jesuses which is rubbish.
― an average girl realizing that leggings aren't helping the cause (DJ Mencap), Friday, 15 March 2013 13:04 (eleven years ago) link
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Thursday, March 14, 2013 7:31 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Christ was already "done with early Joni" by the time he was 25 and would only listen to Hejira and maybe Hissing of Summer Lawns if he "was in a poppy mood"
― space phwoar (Hurting 2), Friday, 15 March 2013 14:20 (eleven years ago) link
lol i have that book
― poking pocong (Noodle Vague), Friday, 15 March 2013 14:22 (eleven years ago) link
what book is that?
― s.clover, Friday, 15 March 2013 15:28 (eleven years ago) link
Fist of fun I'd guess
― dat neggy nilmar (wins), Friday, 15 March 2013 15:30 (eleven years ago) link
just googled it up and the whole pdf is online! great stuff. the section on challops seems particularly prescient.
― s.clover, Saturday, 16 March 2013 05:09 (eleven years ago) link
link?
― m0stlyClean, Sunday, 17 March 2013 06:23 (eleven years ago) link
http://www.fistoffun.net/book.htm
this is the challops page: http://www.fistoffun.net/book/16.jpg
― s.clover, Sunday, 17 March 2013 18:43 (eleven years ago) link
<3 interesting music column
― Deafening silence (DL), Monday, 18 March 2013 10:04 (eleven years ago) link
wd be less challopy if he wasn't championing Blur
― poking pocong (Noodle Vague), Monday, 18 March 2013 10:06 (eleven years ago) link
it was the done thing in 1995 tbf
― an average girl realizing that leggings aren't helping the cause (DJ Mencap), Monday, 18 March 2013 10:16 (eleven years ago) link
yeah i don't hate Blur but the real challopry in that bit is Stewart Lee - cos it's obviously Lee - doing his "everybody knows that objectively shitty indie bands are the best and anyone who says otherwise is fronting"
― poking pocong (Noodle Vague), Monday, 18 March 2013 10:31 (eleven years ago) link
Interesting music column = exactly my impression of ILM when I first got here.
― space phwoar (Hurting 2), Monday, 18 March 2013 13:44 (eleven years ago) link
I love St3wart lee but he has the worst taste in music
Well he likes some cool improv & jazz stuff but probably for dumb rockist reasons
― dat neggy nilmar (wins), Monday, 18 March 2013 14:12 (eleven years ago) link
Hands up if you have mostly given up music writing but you still check this thread to make sure you're not busted on something stupid you wrote recently or long ago
O/
― @GracieLoPan #fyi (Display Name (this cannot be changed):), Monday, 18 March 2013 14:17 (eleven years ago) link
hehe, this thread is the music writers' equivalent of Posts Very Much In Character.
― pssstttt, Hey you (dog latin), Monday, 18 March 2013 14:20 (eleven years ago) link
Hands up if you have mostly given up music writing but you still check this thread to make sure you're not busted on something stupid you wrote recently or long ag
Real talk.
― Badmotorfinger Debate Club (MFB), Monday, 18 March 2013 15:23 (eleven years ago) link
Context for that "interesting music column" is early 90s writers making a big deal about liking pop, which was both a necessary counterbalance to rockism and, in many cases, an annoyingly self-aggrandising posture. It all seems a long, long time ago.
― Deafening silence (DL), Monday, 18 March 2013 15:45 (eleven years ago) link
Hand up
― Raymond Cummings, Monday, 18 March 2013 15:50 (eleven years ago) link
the whole Ironic Review bit is a skit on the Modern Review which obviously employed some of the annoyingest writers of all time, but that doesn't mean it's not also carping at the mere idea of treating popular culture as a serious object of enquiry
― poking pocong (Noodle Vague), Monday, 18 March 2013 16:01 (eleven years ago) link
I don't think Stewart Lee has a problem with treating popular culture as a serious object of inquiry tbh.
― Deafening silence (DL), Monday, 18 March 2013 16:02 (eleven years ago) link
he likes some cool improv & jazz stuff but probably for dumb rockist reasons
― dat neggy nilmar (wins), Monday, 18 March 2013 14:12 (3 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
is he still doing that thing of posting all the negative comments abt himself he finds on his website, because I think this would be an excellent addition
― an average girl realizing that leggings aren't helping the cause (DJ Mencap), Monday, 18 March 2013 17:23 (eleven years ago) link
oh is that why someone g00gl3pr00f3d him?
― s.clover, Monday, 18 March 2013 17:33 (eleven years ago) link
yeah it was a half-joking allusion to that.
― dat neggy nilmar (wins), Monday, 18 March 2013 18:02 (eleven years ago) link
Hand up. I imagine that when I hit the jackpot I'll print it off and blu tak it on the wall next to my Pseud's Corner appearance.
― Doran, Monday, 18 March 2013 19:11 (eleven years ago) link
British Rock - Forgotten Heroes & Where We Went Wrong (Palma Violets, The Strokes, Muse Feature)
― congratulations on yet another award and i loved your baseball cap (DJ Mencap), Friday, 22 March 2013 19:07 (eleven years ago) link
https://fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash3/45186_10151370213003526_643562198_n.jpg
― congratulations on yet another award and i loved your baseball cap (DJ Mencap), Friday, 22 March 2013 19:10 (eleven years ago) link
Hands up if you have mostly given up music writing but you still check this thread to make sure you're not busted on something stupid you wrote recently or long agoO/― @GracieLoPan #fyi (Display Name (this cannot be changed):), Monday, March 18, 2013 7:17 AM (4 days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― @GracieLoPan #fyi (Display Name (this cannot be changed):), Monday, March 18, 2013 7:17 AM (4 days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
My music writings are probably the worst I've ever read, but I still write them, for myself. I do share them online, but obviously they're so bad no one comments on them.
What I find funny is the surprising amount of music writing that people consider to be 'good', yet when compared to those they find 'bad', they offer very little difference in their approach or concept. It usually sounds more like, "I like this dude's writing better and think this other piece is utter shite" (hyperbole included), but they display this preference simply because they don't like the other 'shit piece' because they just don't agree with it--with very ambiguous justifications.
For me, the only music writing I enjoy reading these days is writing that tries to put music in historical context or within a certain movement or artistic group. More of a study of, rather than an opinion on the value of art/music as a representation of a given society/time/movement/expression, because this last bit seems to be so arbitrary. The worst (read, cheesiest) things in art/music have been influential in pop/mainstream culture, yet some were or have been discarded by 'critics' because of a so-called 'inherently' poor artistic/musical expression; that is, they made a value judgement or imposed a truth value on statements which do not have truth values (in terms of logic).
Sorry to go on a tangent. I might just be really disconnected with contemporary musical thought/criticism.
― kafkaesque (c21m50nh3x460n), Friday, 22 March 2013 19:27 (eleven years ago) link
Hooray, Elizabeth Wurtzel's back!
I wonder if there will ever be another rock star. Probably not. Axl Rose was the last one in the sense of having a drug problem, dating a centerfold, showing up onstage at Madison Square Garden two hours and 15 minutes late to an audience that continued to sit and wait. No one would sit and wait anymore. Too exhausted. And the whole point is to post that it happened on Facebook, not to have the experience. Kurt Cobain was an anti-rock star. That was good too. Eminem: maybe. Jay-Z is a businessman—it’s not that he isn’t talented, but he is a professional, the kingpin of an entertainment conglomerate. The opposite of a rock star is a professional. He is the platform and the content. And really, ideally you are the platform, even if that makes you inanimate: People now form lines around the corner not to buy a new album but because a new iPhone is out. Then they use it to send text messages mostly, or to do something they could have done two devices ago, but in any case the wait begins at 4:45 a.m. Which is to say that the party is over. Or maybe standing there as the dark of night becomes the light of day and the Apple Store opens for business is the fun part. Steve Jobs was weirdly both a rock star and a professional, so it figures he would check out before this got any worse.
There is nothing like lying in bed listening to music. Sometimes it’s better on a sun-drenched happy day; sometimes I prefer the cool gray winter sky. There is nothing better still than a Sunday morning in Greenwich Village under the covers with Blonde on Blonde playing. You could fake the experience in another city or even in another part of this city, and maybe it would even be the same—but when it comes to sensual matters, the details count. And it really works. I have been spending Sundays with Dylan for a long time now. I have done it in cassette and vinyl and CD and mp3, because it doesn’t matter. (This point is so obvious that it is necessarily parenthetical: Nothing sounds better than an LP, but nothing feels better than not having to flip it over three times.) What matters is that there are people who may get their clients a consistent 12 percent return on investment and there are others who run corporate empires, but I am sure their lives are not anywhere near as rich as mine is, because they don’t know what I know. Just being a great listener to music has made my life impossibly sweet. And all the while, it has kept me clear of any of the many industries that are really just hastening civilization’s decline. Or maybe it has kept me in my nightgown. I have many lovely lacy nightgowns.
― 誤訳侮辱, Sunday, 7 April 2013 22:49 (eleven years ago) link
ew, thank you
― I have many lovely lacy nightgowns (contenderizer), Monday, 8 April 2013 00:02 (eleven years ago) link
Yeah, but you mustums read the whole thing.
― dow, Monday, 8 April 2013 00:11 (eleven years ago) link
From the comments:
I really love this article. It makes me want to go home and lay in bed and listen to coldplay.
― Badmotorfinger Debate Club (MFB), Monday, 8 April 2013 05:56 (eleven years ago) link
People now form lines around the corner not to buy a new album
― kinder, Monday, 8 April 2013 07:53 (eleven years ago) link
1,974-word article about doing nothing. Proust this is not. Not even in the suburbs of Simon Barnes.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Monday, 8 April 2013 08:37 (eleven years ago) link
Whatever you think of the album in question, this is such a horribly witless, inept hatchet job. The byline photo really caps it off.
http://www.offthetracks.co.nz/willy-moon-heres-willy-moon/
― Deafening silence (DL), Tuesday, 9 April 2013 14:01 (eleven years ago) link
That's so hacky and awful I'm surprised it wasn't published on Collapse Board.
― 誤訳侮辱, Tuesday, 9 April 2013 14:13 (eleven years ago) link
I really liked that single...
― they all are afflicted with a sickness of existence (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 9 April 2013 14:27 (eleven years ago) link
I like Willy Moon but I didn't want to get into the pros and cons of the record. Even if it was indeed the worst album of 2013 it would be better than that review. Nothing sadder than seeing someone huffing and puffing to deliver a killer hatchet job only to drop the axe on his foot.
― Deafening silence (DL), Tuesday, 9 April 2013 14:55 (eleven years ago) link
I don't hate Elizabeth Wurtzel's recent blogging. It's not especially good, but it feels honest.
― --808 542137 (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 9 April 2013 15:14 (eleven years ago) link
Faint praise to warm any writer's heart.
― Deafening silence (DL), Tuesday, 9 April 2013 15:18 (eleven years ago) link
:)
― --808 542137 (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 9 April 2013 15:48 (eleven years ago) link
I mean, people have feelings about music, and there's this tendency on ILM to reflexively dismiss most such feelings (other than exaggerated poptimist enthusiasm) because they're not adequately problematized, or something. I don't really like her writing, but I like the sentiment well enough.
― --808 542137 (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 9 April 2013 15:50 (eleven years ago) link
I agree. I can't get angry about her.
― Deafening silence (DL), Tuesday, 9 April 2013 16:26 (eleven years ago) link
she kind of reminds me of my sad aunt who lived a pretty amazing life but is now alone and depressed and says wistful things all the time about having "the memories to comfort her" -- full of pathos, not really objectionable
― --808 542137 (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 9 April 2013 16:37 (eleven years ago) link
Just filing the Tiny Mix Tapes Knife review here for posterity
http://www.tinymixtapes.com/music-review/the-knife-shaking-the-habitual
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 10 April 2013 12:25 (eleven years ago) link
That writer's whole catalogue appears to be Worst Music Writing gold.
― Trans-Europe Stopping Train (ithappens), Wednesday, 10 April 2013 12:58 (eleven years ago) link
they are responsible for a heterogeneous garland um
― gr8 tr∞lls i have known (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 10 April 2013 13:58 (eleven years ago) link
I salute anyone who can write a line like this without thinking oh, wait, hang on a minute…
"Absorbing the girth of this behemoth in one fell swoop is rigorous and harrowing"
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 10 April 2013 14:10 (eleven years ago) link
unless you're a power bottom
― pea hen (clouds), Wednesday, 10 April 2013 14:12 (eleven years ago) link
Holy shit, that whole article is http://tinyurl.com/bovb886
― bizarro gazzara, Thursday, 11 April 2013 14:21 (eleven years ago) link
^ I'll have what he's having
― Devendra Bumhat (sic), Thursday, 11 April 2013 14:23 (eleven years ago) link
That Willy Moon review... jesus.
This album dresses up vacuous in its mother’s clothes then takes it out on a date.This album masturbates on to its own cover then rubs in whatever lands because it might help to maintain the sheen.This album is certainly unique. (That’s not a compliment).
This album masturbates on to its own cover then rubs in whatever lands because it might help to maintain the sheen.
This album is certainly unique. (That’s not a compliment).
Like the random, half-formed scribblings I type into my iphone notes between snoozes on the train.
― pssstttt, Hey you (dog latin), Thursday, 11 April 2013 14:47 (eleven years ago) link
Killer parenthesis. "Unique? That sounds like a compliment! Oh wait, ya got me."
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 11 April 2013 14:49 (eleven years ago) link
The main problem is approaching via wads of press material, which is painfully presented by this reviewer, and can make it seem like you've got to refer to this stuff while listening, to justify the musicians' presentation. Better to start with Clocking in at 97 minutes, this 3xLP has not been recorded with the ease of amiable track-hopping in mind, its purpose built for a single sitting., which makes the initial presentation's main point much more succinctly--but the rest of the graf argues that listeners being "obliged" to listen a certain way is a good thing----which will soon run into the beginning of the next graf The songs come in a variety of forms, destined to instigate cherry picking the “best bits” for the next subway trek Press tidbits-wise,I do like the mention of The Knife recording sounds so you can't tell the source, then telling exactly what the source is--but, still playing editor, I'd ask the writer if this kind of humor comes across in any of the music, as one way of getting past press sheet-directed conceptualism and sweeping swooping overviews, though "girth of the behemoth" is kinda fun.
― dow, Thursday, 11 April 2013 15:11 (eleven years ago) link
I think this should be included on this list:
"Bauer remains focused on developing Q's editorial proposition to increase the brand's relevancy for mainstream music fans with a view to building exciting new properties out of a strong magazine product."
― maura, Thursday, 11 April 2013 15:27 (eleven years ago) link
"relevancy for"
― pssstttt, Hey you (dog latin), Thursday, 11 April 2013 15:36 (eleven years ago) link
"magazine product" -- this is the worst kind of business-speak -- redundantly adding a word like "product" to try to elevate something beyond what it is.
― --808 542137 (Hurting 2), Thursday, 11 April 2013 15:37 (eleven years ago) link
took me a while to realize we weren't talking about the harlem shake guy.
― Chuck E was a hero to most (s.clover), Thursday, 11 April 2013 16:09 (eleven years ago) link
if we were, it would be a great sentence!
i feel like the majority of tiny mix tapes reviews i have read are mind-bogglingly terrible (check out their farrah abraham one sometime)
― teddy dominatrix (dyl), Thursday, 11 April 2013 16:29 (eleven years ago) link
"elevate"
― the white queen and her caustic judgments (difficult listening hour), Thursday, 11 April 2013 16:58 (eleven years ago) link
http://woundedbyechords.tumblr.com/post/48147751615/paramore-selt-titled-an-album-review
― the Shearer of simulated snowsex etc. (Dwight Yorke), Sunday, 21 April 2013 22:20 (eleven years ago) link
For some reason I was interested in what Matthew Friedberger might have to say about Vampire Weekend but this is unreadable. Surely nobody will ever get to the end of it.
http://thetalkhouse.com/reviews/view/matthew-friedberger-vampire-weekend
― Eyeball Kicks, Wednesday, 15 May 2013 12:20 (eleven years ago) link
I won't mention the American Express UNSTAGED: Vampire Weekend with Steve Buscemi video comedy show. I typed "video comedy show" because it was meant to be funny… yes?But since I've mentioned it already: when "Director Steve Buscemi meets Vampire Weekend for the first time, and offers some interesting advice on how to raise their profile," as American Express UNSTAGED told us on April 16, 2013.............................................
― Public Brooding Closet (cryptosicko), Wednesday, 15 May 2013 12:34 (eleven years ago) link
shocker, he writes prose the same way he writes songs
― society is a lol, it makes me j/k to my friends (some dude), Wednesday, 15 May 2013 12:36 (eleven years ago) link
God, that is appalling.
― emil.y, Wednesday, 15 May 2013 12:46 (eleven years ago) link
I don't know if this is 'about vampire weekend' in any conventional sense.
― stefon taylor swiftboat (s.clover), Wednesday, 15 May 2013 13:10 (eleven years ago) link
This opening paragraph (from Pitchfork's review of Venetian Snares - Huge Chrome Cylinder Box Unfolding) is unbeatable for its unbridled pomposity and ludicrous false dichotomy:
"A great schism has gradually formed in the orthodox church of the glitch and IDM scene. Of one doctrine is the Matmos/Oval/Mouse on Mars school, based around clicks, squelches and skips, in which musicians struggle to merge our fleshy, imperfect world with that of bent circuitry and drum machines. On the other side are those such as Autechre and Richard Devine, who program crystal-clear computer assaults directly into the listener's brain, with no patience for human warmth or error. While the first are an elusive breed of rarefied souls with mild artistic aspirations, the second are the kids who once survived on Mortal Kombat, Jolt Cola, and Dune, all grown up and ready to overload your conscious mind. And if, at the moment, electro-acoustician Fennesz and musique-concrete practitioners The Books are at one end of the scale, Canada's Aaron Funk (aka Venetian Snares) is providing the counterbalance."
Barf.
― aonghus, Wednesday, 15 May 2013 13:29 (eleven years ago) link
"Matthew Friedberger, a Chicagoan born in 1972, is unemployed. He has no degrees or credentials of any kind."
Surely he isn't sustaining himself via checks from solo work and Fiery Furnaces? Is that possible?
― Evan, Wednesday, 15 May 2013 13:32 (eleven years ago) link
"You simply must come over to dinner. Yes? No? My wife is making the most delightful...well, some will say that, I won't go into it here suffice it to say that we have not yet been disappointed by them...burgers. Would you care, oh that's such a terrible way to put it, but surely you know what I mean, to come over?"
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 15 May 2013 15:24 (eleven years ago) link
He writes like David Mamet after a stroke.
― Huston we got chicken lol (Phil D.), Wednesday, 15 May 2013 15:28 (eleven years ago) link
lol that's perfect
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 15 May 2013 15:29 (eleven years ago) link
I'm impressed that he's into Shake It Up.
― wk, Wednesday, 15 May 2013 15:31 (eleven years ago) link
http://www.vulture.com/m/2013/05/why-pop-stars-rule-the-world.html
― maura, Saturday, 25 May 2013 14:10 (eleven years ago) link
That was a whole lotta hot air.
― Ned Raggett, Saturday, 25 May 2013 14:24 (eleven years ago) link
and factual errors!
― maura, Saturday, 25 May 2013 14:35 (eleven years ago) link
but I guess once you reach tv-exec status the "small things" are mere piffle
JONES BEACH IS NOT A STADIUM GAHHH
― maura, Saturday, 25 May 2013 14:40 (eleven years ago) link
I'm not sure if this from Salon is exactly music writing or not -- is there a "tragically misconceived generational thinkpiece" thread? -- but I challenge any human here to read the whole thing
http://www.salon.com/2013/05/25/i_dont_hate_millennials_anymore/
Perhaps unfairly, I want my students to define themselves personally by defining themselves musically. I want them to care deeply for one band or musical genre over another. A lot of my cultural bonding with friends occurred because of music. One always knew who had been at the big rock show the night or weekend before, because everyone wore concert shirts to school the next day. The coolest kids at my school were the skate punks who listened to the Dead Milkmen and Anthrax and 7 Seconds. In high school, I found it difficult to be good friends with people who couldn’t appreciate the Cure. At my high school proms, it was my friends and me who took over the dance floor at the opening riff of the B-52s’ “Rock Lobster”—after sitting down through all of the Taylor Dayne, Bob Seger, Miami Sound Machine, and Tiffany preceding it. Underground music in the 1980s truly was an alternative to the likes of Lionel Richie, Michael Jackson, Debbie Gibson, and the proliferation of syrupy romantic duets (like “(I’ve Had) the Time of My Life” from “Dirty Dancing”). Marked by “deep,” literary, or socially conscious lyrics, melodic buildups that defied the three-minute pop format, innovative vocals, and like as not a British pedigree, alternative music was a revelation to me and my left-of-center peers. Millennials, on the other hand, “do not have a generational music.”
Given this anecdotal evidence, it is tempting to believe that the sum of the generation gap between us can be encapsulated by a “content item” like “The Breakfast Club”—a sacred text for Generation X (and for a long time my half-serious litmus test for friendship), the alienation of which does not generally reflect Millennial experience. In reality, however, the difference is one of method and mode; not only have the “experience boxes” of Millennials been filled with different content, the manufacture of the boxes themselves has followed a process as deliberate and structured as the formation of Generation X was laissez-faire, relativistic, and nonintentional.
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Saturday, 25 May 2013 18:35 (eleven years ago) link
i could barely finish that excerpt.....
― m0stlyClean, Saturday, 25 May 2013 18:40 (eleven years ago) link
On the first day of class each semester, I ask my students to list on a three-by-five card their contact information, major, hometown, clubs/activities/athletic teams, favorite book, film, and music. Despite being an English professor, I am most interested in the third of that triad. I hope against hope each semester to see listed the Decemberists or Nick Drake or Sigur Rós or even U2. What I get instead is a lot of second-rate hip-hop, former American Idol contestants who’ve landed recording contracts, or—worst of all—“I listen to anything.” One semester a young woman who indicated English as a potential major also listed Britney Spears as one of her favorite musicians. I said to her, “Is that ironic?”
“What do you mean?” she replied.
Oh, that’s right, I thought. Millennials don’t do irony.
Tenure-track professor, ladies and gentlemen.
― cr4bdbgs, Saturday, 25 May 2013 19:34 (eleven years ago) link
wow what a dumbass
― ḉrut (crüt), Saturday, 25 May 2013 19:36 (eleven years ago) link
I hope against hope each semester to see listed the Decemberists I hope against hope each semester to see listed the Decemberists I hope against hope each semester to see listed the Decemberists I hope against hope each semester to see listed the Decemberists I hope against hope each semester to see listed the Decemberists I hope against hope each semester to see listed the Decemberists I hope against hope each semester to see listed the Decemberists I hope against hope each semester to see listed the Decemberists I hope against hope each semester to see listed the Decemberists
why??????????
From RateMyProfessor: "If you want to learn, study with this woman. You will be challenged to think and grow beyond adolescent self-centeredness into reflective creativity."
Now there's some irony!
― cr4bdbgs, Saturday, 25 May 2013 19:39 (eleven years ago) link
what the fuck is a beloit college
― THIS IS NOT A BENGHAZI T-SHIRT (Hurting 2), Saturday, 25 May 2013 20:13 (eleven years ago) link
lol "even u2"
― the white queen and her caustic judgments (difficult listening hour), Saturday, 25 May 2013 20:15 (eleven years ago) link
For six seasons, I obsessed over “Lost” and wept prolifically through the last episode.
― puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Saturday, 25 May 2013 20:19 (eleven years ago) link
in the years since I "got my paper and I was free" I've come to realize that there are a lot of middling minds in academia
― THIS IS NOT A BENGHAZI T-SHIRT (Hurting 2), Saturday, 25 May 2013 20:23 (eleven years ago) link
I knew I was a decent writer, and so I relied on that ability to cover a multitude of sins (such as thin content or a missing thesis).
part of this sentence rings true
― Pasty, British & Shit (wins), Saturday, 25 May 2013 20:44 (eleven years ago) link
feel like as media/teaching changes hands to x, "you have no self, nobody was ever mean to you because you liked the cure" will become the new "you have no social conscience, you never had to decide whether or not to go to vietnam", and i for one have some apologies to make
― the white queen and her caustic judgments (difficult listening hour), Sunday, 26 May 2013 12:58 (eleven years ago) link
Also apparently missing from the Millennial generation are an appreciation for irony, an individualistic self-concept, and the kind of originality born of feeling alienated and out of place. Where is the Sylvia Plath-obsessed would-be writer who shopped quite happily at the Salvation Army? Or the rabid Monkees fan who idolized the 1960s and lit her basement dorm room with a lava lamp? Or the poet/actor/playwright/jack of all literary trades who could mimic anyone and came back to teach at his alma mater? My initial reaction to teaching the students at my first institution was to think, “I don’t look out there and see myself—or for that matter, anyone I went to college with.”
Millennials: no irony, never shop at thrift stores, hate the Monkees
― mimicking regular benevloent (sic) users' names (President Keyes), Sunday, 26 May 2013 13:19 (eleven years ago) link
i like to think of the millenials as a work in progress, a tale not yet fully told, a subject we should shut the fuck up about until we have some hindsight.
― da croupier, Sunday, 26 May 2013 14:26 (eleven years ago) link
I think of us as a generation that isn't reducible to quirky, superficial, context blind categorisations, that you can make valid observations about so long as you're willing to make a modicum of sense.
― Studied keyboard mash (tsrobodo), Sunday, 26 May 2013 16:10 (eleven years ago) link
millennials are too ironic
― Mordy , Sunday, 26 May 2013 16:14 (eleven years ago) link
TNT Fall 2013 The Millennialist solves crimes by pointing out other generation's affinity for irony in Internet fluff pieces
― a very generous Cordoban (Sufjan Grafton), Sunday, 26 May 2013 16:30 (eleven years ago) link
the salon piece is soooo fucking long!!
― the display names will fall like rain (Matt P), Sunday, 26 May 2013 17:05 (eleven years ago) link
it's like seeing ten shits in one bowl.
― the display names will fall like rain (Matt P), Sunday, 26 May 2013 17:06 (eleven years ago) link
http://img2.imagesbn.com/p/9780810890701_p0_v1_s260x420.JPG
― the display names will fall like rain (Matt P), Sunday, 26 May 2013 17:08 (eleven years ago) link
List Price: $80.00Price: $71.60 & FREE Shipping. Details
― the display names will fall like rain (Matt P), Sunday, 26 May 2013 17:09 (eleven years ago) link
*DIES DYINGLY*
― the display names will fall like rain (Matt P), Sunday, 26 May 2013 17:10 (eleven years ago) link
Everything about this is one big earnest fucking fail. It's like this professor caught the same virus that turned the Flaming Lips and Dave Eggers into the walking dead circa 1999.
― Ned Raggett, Sunday, 26 May 2013 17:59 (eleven years ago) link
I have taken to creating my own set of benchmarks to note the important-to-me facts and experiences that will never be true for my students. For instance:• On “Sesame Street,” Elmo has always been a major presence; Roosevelt Franklin, never.• Millennials never held a tape recorder next to an LP player to record a song.• AIDS has always been a global, predominantly third-world epidemic, rather than a mysterious disease decimating the gay community and cutting a deadly swath through America’s fashion, art, and creative worlds.• During the Millennials’ college years, a large percentage of their communication will occur via text messaging, e-mail, Facebook, and cell phones. As an undergraduate, I had access to none of those technologies.• They have no idea who the Solid Gold Dancers were.• They never had to await their once-yearly chance to watch “The Wizard of Oz” or “The Sound of Music” on network television, preceded by the familiar, spinning “Special Presentation” logo.
• On “Sesame Street,” Elmo has always been a major presence; Roosevelt Franklin, never.• Millennials never held a tape recorder next to an LP player to record a song.• AIDS has always been a global, predominantly third-world epidemic, rather than a mysterious disease decimating the gay community and cutting a deadly swath through America’s fashion, art, and creative worlds.• During the Millennials’ college years, a large percentage of their communication will occur via text messaging, e-mail, Facebook, and cell phones. As an undergraduate, I had access to none of those technologies.• They have no idea who the Solid Gold Dancers were.• They never had to await their once-yearly chance to watch “The Wizard of Oz” or “The Sound of Music” on network television, preceded by the familiar, spinning “Special Presentation” logo.
"they don't worship the same consumerist idols as I do, oh and also AIDS"
― don't doomie like that (crüt), Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:01 (eleven years ago) link
or—worst of all—“I listen to anything.” or—worst of all—“I listen to anything.” or—worst of all—“I listen to anything.” or—worst of all—“I listen to anything.” or—worst of all—“I listen to anything.”
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:02 (eleven years ago) link
I Like All Types Of MusicCOMMENTARY • Entertainment • Opinion • ISSUE 33•05 • Feb 11, 1998By Michelle Carney, Music LoverMichelle CarneyMusic LoverWhen I go to the mall for music, you won't catch me stuck in just one section of Record Town. That's because I like all kinds of music!Just yesterday, I was in the car with a girlfriend, and she asked me what kind of music she should play, so I told her that anything at all was just fine with me. After all, I like everything from Billy Joel to Elton John to Jewel.But that's not all by a long shot: One day I'll be in the mood for rock and roll, so I'll put on the new Fleetwood Mac album, and the next I'll feel like classical, so I'll reach for the Titanic soundtrack. I even listen to jazz, like that hunk Kenny G.I've also really been getting into that new "alternative" music after hearing it on Melrose Place and in that Volkswagen commercial. There's this one alternative song I heard last time I was eating at Denny's, and I just fell in love with it. I don't know who it's by, but it goes, "What if God was one of us?" It was so deep.On a typical day at home, I might listen to a Celine Dion CD, then watch a few videos on VH1, and then turn the channel to line-dancing on the Nashville Network while I do the dishes. You see, I have what is called an eclectic personality.My husband isn't half the music lover I am, so when I bought a new oak cabinet for our stereo last year, he complained that I was throwing our money away. It was kind of expensive, but I just had to have a cabinet that matched the furniture in our day room. One of my matching oak CD towers is almost half full, and I'll be getting six more CDs in the mail because I just joined the BMG Music Club.When I was filling out the enrollment form, I had a pretty hard time deciding which box to check to indicate my favorite type of music. I went ahead and checked the section that had Sheryl Crow in it, because I really like that one song she does.I like music so much that when I'm at work at the insurance agency, I keep the radio on all day. Unfortunately, last week, my love of music resulted in a very unpleasant run-in with a typist from the temp agency. Personally, I can't imagine how my music could have possibly bothered her, as we have an office rule that the volume dial goes no higher than three.It was Thursday afternoon, and I was listening to the Christian Contemporary station when the temp started making wisecracks about the music. I changed the station to Lite 107-FM, but then she began to groan loudly at the start of every song.The last straw came when she shouted "Oh, God!" when The Carpenters' "Close To You" came on. I finally just turned the darn radio off altogether. One thing I can't understand is someone who hates music.
Michelle CarneyMusic Lover
When I go to the mall for music, you won't catch me stuck in just one section of Record Town. That's because I like all kinds of music!
Just yesterday, I was in the car with a girlfriend, and she asked me what kind of music she should play, so I told her that anything at all was just fine with me. After all, I like everything from Billy Joel to Elton John to Jewel.
But that's not all by a long shot: One day I'll be in the mood for rock and roll, so I'll put on the new Fleetwood Mac album, and the next I'll feel like classical, so I'll reach for the Titanic soundtrack. I even listen to jazz, like that hunk Kenny G.
I've also really been getting into that new "alternative" music after hearing it on Melrose Place and in that Volkswagen commercial. There's this one alternative song I heard last time I was eating at Denny's, and I just fell in love with it. I don't know who it's by, but it goes, "What if God was one of us?" It was so deep.
On a typical day at home, I might listen to a Celine Dion CD, then watch a few videos on VH1, and then turn the channel to line-dancing on the Nashville Network while I do the dishes. You see, I have what is called an eclectic personality.
My husband isn't half the music lover I am, so when I bought a new oak cabinet for our stereo last year, he complained that I was throwing our money away. It was kind of expensive, but I just had to have a cabinet that matched the furniture in our day room. One of my matching oak CD towers is almost half full, and I'll be getting six more CDs in the mail because I just joined the BMG Music Club.
When I was filling out the enrollment form, I had a pretty hard time deciding which box to check to indicate my favorite type of music. I went ahead and checked the section that had Sheryl Crow in it, because I really like that one song she does.
I like music so much that when I'm at work at the insurance agency, I keep the radio on all day. Unfortunately, last week, my love of music resulted in a very unpleasant run-in with a typist from the temp agency. Personally, I can't imagine how my music could have possibly bothered her, as we have an office rule that the volume dial goes no higher than three.
It was Thursday afternoon, and I was listening to the Christian Contemporary station when the temp started making wisecracks about the music. I changed the station to Lite 107-FM, but then she began to groan loudly at the start of every song.
The last straw came when she shouted "Oh, God!" when The Carpenters' "Close To You" came on. I finally just turned the darn radio off altogether. One thing I can't understand is someone who hates music.
― Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:20 (eleven years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MzIFA1f-LZk
― Oulipo Traces (on a Cigarette) (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:20 (eleven years ago) link
They neither seek nor anticipate the version of higher learning depicted in the Indigo Girls’ “Closer to Fine,” a song often heard drifting across the quad during my college years
― A deeper shade of lol (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:21 (eleven years ago) link
Finally gave in and clicked on the link, just to verify that those were real quotes
― Oulipo Traces (on a Cigarette) (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:28 (eleven years ago) link
this is so good
― flopson, Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:31 (eleven years ago) link
what the fuck is wrong with this person
― ty based gay dead computer god (zachlyon), Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:31 (eleven years ago) link
everyone goes through this challops phase in college, but some of them become professors and never leave campus
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:33 (eleven years ago) link
seems like run of the mill shut-in academic to me, rly only extreme ito shamelessness/lack of self-awareness
― flopson, Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:34 (eleven years ago) link
i had a pretty awful gen x prof who would play, like, pop punk circa 2003 on his laptop before class... everyone thought he was cool tho, p horrifying
― flopson, Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:37 (eleven years ago) link
that piece is pretty much irredeemable.
― klaus dingeldore's rhinelander monkey keeper father (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:38 (eleven years ago) link
also
― klaus dingeldore's rhinelander monkey keeper father (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:39 (eleven years ago) link
btw ugh @ onion just the headline + photo punchline? i mean not that u usually read more than the headline & lede but still depressing?
― flopson, Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:41 (eleven years ago) link
eh, cut out the middleman imo
― klaus dingeldore's rhinelander monkey keeper father (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:43 (eleven years ago) link
middleman = your profession??!
― flopson, Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:51 (eleven years ago) link
writers?
― klaus dingeldore's rhinelander monkey keeper father (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:52 (eleven years ago) link
oh ya sry forgot u are a promoter
― flopson, Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:53 (eleven years ago) link
AIDS has always been a global, predominantly third-world epidemic, rather than a mysterious disease decimating the gay community and cutting a deadly swath through America’s fashion, art, and creative worlds.
I don't remember most of my Gen X classmates really giving a damn about the toll AIDS was taking on the gay community or the creative world. Maybe they were being ironic about it though.
― mimicking regular benevloent (sic) users' names (President Keyes), Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:56 (eleven years ago) link
remember Steve Zahn in Reality Bites?
― A deeper shade of lol (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 26 May 2013 18:57 (eleven years ago) link
i'm a pr nerd dude
― klaus dingeldore's rhinelander monkey keeper father (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 26 May 2013 19:00 (eleven years ago) link
1991 stand up!
― Studied keyboard mash (tsrobodo), Sunday, 26 May 2013 23:46 (eleven years ago) link
seems like run of the mill shut-in academic to me
au contraire, i'm a shut-in academic and i posted this precisely because it so dramatically exceeds the standards of self-absorption I've set for myself
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Monday, 27 May 2013 01:10 (eleven years ago) link
painful article
― dyl, Monday, 27 May 2013 01:19 (eleven years ago) link
Where is the Sylvia Plath-obsessed would-be writer who shopped quite happily at the Salvation Army?
By the way, it can't really be true, can it, that there no longer exist people in college who aspire to write poetry and read Plath?
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Monday, 27 May 2013 01:21 (eleven years ago) link
Which Gen-X actor will be cast in the remake of this?
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/c/c6/Gran_Torino_poster.jpg
Probably should be a poll
― Elvis Telecom, Monday, 27 May 2013 01:29 (eleven years ago) link
Edward Norton
― mimicking regular benevloent (sic) users' names (President Keyes), Monday, 27 May 2013 11:13 (eleven years ago) link
What is coke snortin
― klaus dingeldore's rhinelander monkey keeper father (forksclovetofu), Monday, 27 May 2013 11:54 (eleven years ago) link
Gen x's clint eastwood is 100% Ben affleck
― da croupier, Monday, 27 May 2013 13:25 (eleven years ago) link
barf
― mimicking regular benevloent (sic) users' names (President Keyes), Monday, 27 May 2013 13:34 (eleven years ago) link
yeah, is it possible that all the interesting students (you can tell they're interesting if they shop quite happily at the salvation army) are off learning english from a more interesting teacher?
― m0stlyClean, Monday, 27 May 2013 16:14 (eleven years ago) link
the "i like all types of music lady" seems lame, yes, but her coworker who actively dislikes the carpenters is basically a monster.
― Treeship, Monday, 27 May 2013 16:19 (eleven years ago) link
at least she doesnt like all types of music except country
― flopson, Monday, 27 May 2013 19:33 (eleven years ago) link
how are you all ignoring the steaming hot panglossian pile of "thinkpiece" garbage from this week's nymag
― maura, Tuesday, 28 May 2013 14:41 (eleven years ago) link
http://images.nymag.com/images/2/home/13/05/27-lede-umami.jpg
― the white queen and her caustic judgments (difficult listening hour), Tuesday, 28 May 2013 15:11 (eleven years ago) link
i'm always about two issues back on ny mag, which puts me at nj levels of cognition i suppose
― i didn't even give much of a fuck that you were mod (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 28 May 2013 15:13 (eleven years ago) link
I think she meant this one, right???
http://nymag.com/news/features/punk-movement-2013-4/
― waterface, Tuesday, 28 May 2013 15:14 (eleven years ago) link
i've been to umami burger in l.a.. the burger cost $12 and while i ate it beggars put their hands through the holes in the wrought-iron fence installed to screen them from my view.
― the white queen and her caustic judgments (difficult listening hour), Tuesday, 28 May 2013 15:15 (eleven years ago) link
why poppage stars rule the world
― crüt, Tuesday, 28 May 2013 15:16 (eleven years ago) link
There was an on-campus coffee shop at my school that seemed to play nothing but a loop of Closer to Fine and River.
― THIS IS NOT A BENGHAZI T-SHIRT (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 28 May 2013 15:20 (eleven years ago) link
Is someone suggesting that that Nabisco was not otm
― curmudgeon, Tuesday, 28 May 2013 15:27 (eleven years ago) link
gasp
― Evan, Tuesday, 28 May 2013 15:34 (eleven years ago) link
no the pop star onecmon guys it is low hanging fruit all over the place
― maura, Tuesday, 28 May 2013 19:55 (eleven years ago) link
B-b-but did it mention the Solid Gold Dancers?
― Oulipo Traces (on a Cigarette) (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 28 May 2013 20:00 (eleven years ago) link
http://www.vulture.com/2013/05/why-pop-stars-rule-the-world.html
Oh
― curmudgeon, Tuesday, 28 May 2013 20:02 (eleven years ago) link
feel like that was covered in another thread?
― i didn't even give much of a fuck that you were mod (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 28 May 2013 20:39 (eleven years ago) link
The answer may be that the relentless and unforgiving feedback loop of social media has made being unfeasible anything other than consistently awesome, like (and forgive one last culinary metaphor) opening a bad restaurant in New York
First of all, this sentence is garbled -- maybe "has made unfeasible anything other than being completely awesome" is meant? And what is going on with the metaphor? Surely New York is a notably EASY place to get by running a bad restaurant.
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Tuesday, 28 May 2013 20:47 (eleven years ago) link
I don't know, before social media it was consistently awesome to be unfeasible; I miss those days tbh
― they are either militarists (ugh) or kangaroos (?) (DJP), Tuesday, 28 May 2013 20:52 (eleven years ago) link
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/c/c0/Zaireeka_cover.png
― the white queen and her caustic judgments (difficult listening hour), Tuesday, 28 May 2013 21:42 (eleven years ago) link
Surely New York is a notably EASY place to get by running a bad restaurant.
nah not really. the usual quoted figure is that 80% of NYC restaurants close in their first five years.
still a terrible sentence.
― dmr, Tuesday, 28 May 2013 22:02 (eleven years ago) link
And that sentence goes out of its way to be terrible! It like goes all the way across town to be terrible and gnarled and wrong!
― 2 huxtables and a sousaphone (Jon Lewis), Tuesday, 28 May 2013 23:12 (eleven years ago) link
the usual quoted figure is that 80% of NYC restaurants close in their first five years.
Sure, but the question is whether this is different from other cities! That sounds like a long median lifespan to me.
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Wednesday, 29 May 2013 03:43 (eleven years ago) link
Me too. Like WAAAAHHHH!!! WHAT THE FUCK IS THIS SHIT? WHAT HAVE I DONE WITH MY LIFE? WAAAHHHH!!!
― no man is an islam (onimo), Thursday, 30 May 2013 13:48 (eleven years ago) link
I've still only seen the last 5 minutes of the last Lost episode
― they are either militarists (ugh) or kangaroos (?) (DJP), Thursday, 30 May 2013 13:53 (eleven years ago) link
That's the worst part!
― Huston we got chicken lol (Phil D.), Thursday, 30 May 2013 13:59 (eleven years ago) link
...in today's lack of surprise, that's all I've seen too. Plus that little epilogue thing. Series should have been about the two drones at the warehouse wondering what the hell they were doing.
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 30 May 2013 14:27 (eleven years ago) link
tbf, the last ep of lost is really funny
― i didn't even give much of a fuck that you were mod (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 30 May 2013 17:05 (eleven years ago) link
*************SPOILERS**************
Is it that the island is Hell's butt plug?
― Doran, Thursday, 30 May 2013 18:24 (eleven years ago) link
The first few sentences of this article actually made me angry. Fine, try to have a "unique" writing style, but when you devolve into fucking gibberish you've gone too far and need to dial it back a little. And that's without even bringing up the sections that are just bad English, with misplaced or missing articles, etc. Gurgh.
― 誤訳侮辱, Saturday, 1 June 2013 02:33 (eleven years ago) link
I present no loose little mistress-list that rattles itself off in splendid flesh-bone-suck order.
― i didn't even give much of a fuck that you were mod (forksclovetofu), Saturday, 1 June 2013 16:34 (eleven years ago) link
^ haha
"a dark and crispy nimbus"
― Benny B, Saturday, 1 June 2013 23:11 (eleven years ago) link
Fuck Rob Sheffield.
― 誤訳侮辱, Sunday, 2 June 2013 02:38 (eleven years ago) link
It is, after all, the genre that gave the phrase “comfortably numb” to the language.
you know, that phrase people use all the time
― ttyih boi (crüt), Sunday, 2 June 2013 02:47 (eleven years ago) link
More thoughts on the Sheffield piece.
― 誤訳侮辱, Sunday, 2 June 2013 14:04 (eleven years ago) link
Yeah, Sheffield really should stop being close-minded and taking about things he knows nothing abo—
Hip-hop critics are some of the most myopic, Year Zero-minded writers in all of music criticism, with virtually no interest in anything predating the summer's hot single or mixtape
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Sunday, 2 June 2013 14:17 (eleven years ago) link
Sheffield's also written at length about Dylan, Roxy Music, Neil Young, Pavement. Shiny perhaps, not ephemeral.
― A deeper shade of lol (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 2 June 2013 14:27 (eleven years ago) link
Sheffield's great and that piece is hilarious
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Sunday, 2 June 2013 14:28 (eleven years ago) link
"At one point, Peter Gabriel is praised as the bluesiest of prog singers, which is like calling Betty White the fiercest arm-wrestler on 'The Golden Girls.'"
Great! (And my guess is that Rob likes Peter Gabriel fine.)
― clemenza, Sunday, 2 June 2013 14:29 (eleven years ago) link
Gabriel made his list of worst singers ever.
― A deeper shade of lol (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 2 June 2013 14:31 (eleven years ago) link
Surprises me. He also picked "In Your Eyes" as his second (?) greatest movie-music moment ever.
― clemenza, Sunday, 2 June 2013 14:33 (eleven years ago) link
A more polished version of an older article.
― A deeper shade of lol (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 2 June 2013 14:44 (eleven years ago) link
I remember that piece. I checked his "In Your Eyes" blurb from a couple of months ago, and while he does have it #3 on his list, it's not exactly a ringing endorsement of the song. So I guess he doesn't like Gabriel.
My point is, though, that there's hardly anybody or any genre I can think of where Rob doesn't eventually like something--he just doesn't hate stuff unreservedly, not that I remember. He'd give somebody a low rating four singles in a row in Radio On, then turn around and enthuse about the fifth one. So I bet there's prog-rock he likes. He just might not like it or express it in the same way that a devotee of the genre might.
― clemenza, Sunday, 2 June 2013 14:54 (eleven years ago) link
(I'm doing something that drives me up the wall--being an apologist for someone, and for someone who doesn't need it.)
― clemenza, Sunday, 2 June 2013 14:56 (eleven years ago) link
anybody still churning out the same not-particularly-true cliched jokes about Prog Rock that were being made in 1976 shd probably write about something else
― floored character (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 2 June 2013 14:59 (eleven years ago) link
Oh yeah. It wouldn't surprise that Passion is his favorite Gabriel album.
― A deeper shade of lol (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 2 June 2013 15:00 (eleven years ago) link
noodle vague otm
― reggie (qualmsley), Sunday, 2 June 2013 15:07 (eleven years ago) link
lol @ ppl getting mad over that sheffield review
probably anyone would have a low opinion of prog after reading rick moody's raves about it
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Sunday, 2 June 2013 15:22 (eleven years ago) link
prog bashing is the most tired bullshit imho
― reggie (qualmsley), Sunday, 2 June 2013 15:29 (eleven years ago) link
that piece gives me nostalgic memories of the 1992 rolling stone album guide.
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Sunday, 2 June 2013 15:35 (eleven years ago) link
KRISTEN STEWART HAS A NEW BLACK FLAG TATTOO AND IT DEPRESSES THE HELL OUT OF ME
by "The Jaded Punk"
― going to grind shows so they can quasi-ironically EDM (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 23 July 2013 09:05 (eleven years ago) link
want to believe that's a joke
― IIIrd Datekeeper (contenderizer), Tuesday, 23 July 2013 13:07 (eleven years ago) link
http://www.theonion.com/articles/90s-punk-decries-punks-of-today,1486/
― what makes a man start polls? (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 23 July 2013 13:13 (eleven years ago) link
Sebadoh kicked off their first tour after a 14 year hiatus at Bootleg Tuesday night. Bassist Dave Barlow and Jay Mascis wrote songs as little known, late '80s band, called Dinosaur Jr. Barlow started a side project, Sebadoh, which then became a underdog indie group that gained serious street cred throughout the years. Their soon to be released LP, "Defend Yourself" comes out in stores Sept 17th. Opening the night was a heavy guitar trio called the Dumb Numbers. Indie Alt-Rock royalty reigned supreme and reclaimed their throne at this eastside establishment.
http://www.laweekly.com/slideshow/sebadoh-reunites-at-bootleg-40097933/#1
― Position Position, Sunday, 4 August 2013 02:48 (eleven years ago) link
LOL
― wk, Sunday, 4 August 2013 03:56 (eleven years ago) link
Dave Barlow is indeed little known.
― The Butthurt Locker (cryptosicko), Sunday, 4 August 2013 04:13 (eleven years ago) link
LOU
― glumdalclitch, Sunday, 4 August 2013 04:32 (eleven years ago) link
Haha holy shit that's amazing
― O_o-O_O-o_O (jjjusten), Sunday, 4 August 2013 05:11 (eleven years ago) link
There are also unknown little known bands. These are bands we don't know we don't know.
― President Keyes, Sunday, 4 August 2013 20:44 (eleven years ago) link
Maybe confused with http://images.artistdirect.com/Images/Sources/AMGCOVERS/music/cover200/drc300/c394/c39462u6g1w.jpg
― The O RLY of Everything (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 4 August 2013 21:13 (eleven years ago) link
http://www.collapseboard.com/blogs/scott-creney/an-immodest-proposal/
― ..it would have sounded about as heavy as Talulah Gosh. (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 13 August 2013 14:22 (eleven years ago) link
That dude's pretty far up his own asshole
― touch. zing touch. you've almost convinced me I'm real (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 13 August 2013 14:39 (eleven years ago) link
The Jaded Punk piece is hilarious. Change the names and dates and it could be from any year between now and 1977.
― Deafening silence (DL), Tuesday, 13 August 2013 14:43 (eleven years ago) link
http://www.theguardian.com/music/musicblog/2013/aug/13/hashtag-pilgrimage-abbey-road-beatles
― ..it would have sounded about as heavy as Talulah Gosh. (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 13 August 2013 14:47 (eleven years ago) link
^ yeah that's p disgraceful
― my father will guide me up the stairs to bed (anagram), Tuesday, 13 August 2013 14:49 (eleven years ago) link
Scott Creney might be the worst music writer in the entire world circa 2013
― congo nattefrost (DJ Mencap), Wednesday, May 8, 2013 9:10 AM (3 months ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― the secret life of bantz (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 13 August 2013 15:25 (eleven years ago) link
I've never heard of him before but he comes across as a total dick in that piece. I like the idea that Savages were poised for massive success until Scott Creney bravely spoke the truth on Collapseboard and it all came crashing down.
― Deafening silence (DL), Tuesday, 13 August 2013 15:29 (eleven years ago) link
― touch. zing touch. you've almost convinced me I'm real (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, August 13, 2013 10:39 AM (57 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
You can just call it "spelunking".
― Evan, Tuesday, 13 August 2013 15:39 (eleven years ago) link
i looked at a few other reviews from him. they mostly read like he's writing as he's hearing the music for the first time and kept that draft.
― blinded by aggro (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 13 August 2013 15:54 (eleven years ago) link
lol, LA Weekly updated that Sebadoh blurb
Thank you to award-winning East Coast journalist Daniel Ralston for bringing the problems with this blurb to my attention. It was not, in fact, satire, but had a number of mistakes. Dinosaur Jr., as we all knew, were huge in the late '80s, and "Dave Barlow" is the name Lou uses on sabermetrics baseball sites and not in an official bassist capacity. L.A. Weekly regrets the errors.
― wk, Tuesday, 13 August 2013 15:57 (eleven years ago) link
"Dave Barlow" is the name Lou uses on sabermetrics baseball sites and not in an official bassist capacity
Wait did I miss something.
― Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 13 August 2013 15:57 (eleven years ago) link
"And contending in the World Series of Poker, Fred Albini."
― Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 13 August 2013 15:58 (eleven years ago) link
see the original blurb above
― wk, Tuesday, 13 August 2013 16:05 (eleven years ago) link
new display name
― "Dave Barlow" is the name Lou uses on sabermetrics baseball sites (s.clover), Tuesday, 13 August 2013 16:35 (eleven years ago) link
I've never heard of him before but he comes across as a total dick in that piece. I like the idea that Savages were poised for massive success until Scott Creney bravely spoke the truth on Collapseboard and it all came crashing down.― Deafening silence (DL), Tuesday, August 13, 2013 4:29 PM (3 hours ago)
― Deafening silence (DL), Tuesday, August 13, 2013 4:29 PM (3 hours ago)
I don't read the point of that piece as being that. Seems to me to be more a satirisation of the lack of importance of the individual music writer, and a frustrated yelp at the power and money thrown behind the chosen bands to make sure they break.
Generally I don't dig most of the negative Collapseboard stuff but I kinda enjoyed this one.
― ineloquentwow (Craigo Boingo), Tuesday, 13 August 2013 18:51 (eleven years ago) link
oh its irony i see
― "Dave Barlow" is the name Lou uses on sabermetrics baseball sites (s.clover), Tuesday, 13 August 2013 19:02 (eleven years ago) link
Satirony
― ineloquentwow (Craigo Boingo), Tuesday, 13 August 2013 19:10 (eleven years ago) link
I don't think you can namecheck "A Modest Proposal" with anything meant to be taken at face-value and still claim to understand English but that doesn't really make this piece well-constructed or particularly clear about the point it's trying to make.
― OH MY GOD HE'S OOGLY (DJP), Tuesday, 13 August 2013 19:13 (eleven years ago) link
xp yeah I mean I get that he wasn't being entirely serious this time out but the level of narcissism in basically everything he writes is off the scale
― the secret life of bantz (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 13 August 2013 19:20 (eleven years ago) link
its a waste of time and kinda dumb but that's what this thread is for! so, appropriate. nice of him to give a shout-out to my pals in blanche blanche blanche though. they are funny.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 13 August 2013 19:34 (eleven years ago) link
Pretty much every piece I've ever read on Collapse Board has been suffused with a massively overblown belief in their own importance. And if anything they've ever done has been intended to be funny, it's blown right past me.
― 誤訳侮辱, Tuesday, 13 August 2013 19:46 (eleven years ago) link
Couldn't we just post this link here and close this thread?
http://www.buzzfeed.com/music
― Position Position, Tuesday, 13 August 2013 23:47 (eleven years ago) link
I don't really understand that Collapse Board post. It can't be sincere right? It has to be some deadpan big indie rock business parody or something, right? RIGHT?
― Badmotorfinger Debate Club (MFB), Wednesday, 14 August 2013 01:06 (eleven years ago) link
like the nirvana press release one last week?
― ..it would have sounded about as heavy as Talulah Gosh. (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 14 August 2013 02:15 (eleven years ago) link
loool matthew perpetua is a buzzfeed editor??
― dyl, Wednesday, 14 August 2013 03:44 (eleven years ago) link
xp OK, busted. Skimread it, knowing nothing about the writer, missed the irony. Now don't see the point the irony is trying to make.
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 14 August 2013 07:26 (eleven years ago) link
So it fails as a serious piece, and as an ironic / satirical piece. So it's doubleshit.
― they all are afflicted with a sickness of existence (Scik Mouthy), Wednesday, 14 August 2013 08:13 (eleven years ago) link
Not writing, but music journalism of a sort. I went looking for podcasts of Duff McKagan interviews and found a recent one by a guy named Jay Mohr. I'd never heard of him, but about 10 minutes into the podcast I did a search on him and I guess his name has a little bit of currency around here. Anyway, the interview was like the sound of a bird flying into a window and then getting back up and doing it again and again and again for about an hour and a half. McKagan handled the situation really well, but it was super-awkward. One of the worst interviewers I've ever heard.
― how's life, Wednesday, 14 August 2013 12:27 (eleven years ago) link
Pretty much every piece I've ever read on Collapse Board has been suffused with a massively overblown belief in their own importance. And if anything they've ever done has been intended to be funny, it's blown right past me. --誤訳侮辱
This is all p funny considering 2004 ILX's inflated sense of self worth
― brian uoeno (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 14 August 2013 12:52 (eleven years ago) link
well let me fire up my time machine and send that zing back to 2004 ilx where i'm sure it will elicit a sharp response
― "Dave Barlow" is the name Lou uses on sabermetrics baseball sites (s.clover), Wednesday, 14 August 2013 13:17 (eleven years ago) link
wait, what happened in 2004?
― scott seward, Wednesday, 14 August 2013 13:48 (eleven years ago) link
when whiney showed up here in mid-2005, he was so disgusted by the old posts he saw in the archives that he decided to stay for EIGHT YEARS and do something to make this a better place
― some dude, Wednesday, 14 August 2013 13:48 (eleven years ago) link
is that the year that ilm singlehandedly made Xiu Xiu a household name?
― scott seward, Wednesday, 14 August 2013 13:50 (eleven years ago) link
it was the year that Annie came from Norway with a suitcase in her hand
― some dude, Wednesday, 14 August 2013 13:54 (eleven years ago) link
CREEM magazine circa fall 1973 and summer 1974 but not winter '73 and maybe a bit of spring '74 (but definitely winter '75), I'M CALLING YOU OUT
― "Dave Barlow" is the name Lou uses on sabermetrics baseball sites (s.clover), Wednesday, 14 August 2013 13:55 (eleven years ago) link
odd numbered pages only tho
found a recent one by a guy named Jay Mohr. I'd never heard of him, but about 10 minutes into the podcast I did a search on him and I guess his name has a little bit of currency around here.
a very little currensy:
gear (gear) wrote this on thread NOT FUNNY. on board I Love Everything on Sep 27, 2006
JAY MOHR
gabbneb (gabbneb) wrote this on thread if _______ stars in your movie, i will probably hate it on board I Love Everything on Dec 6, 2005
Jay Mohr
Picard Maneuver (Leee) wrote this on thread Last Comic Standing 2 on board I Love Everything on Jul 1, 2004
Is Jay Mohr a comedian?
Lolpez wrote this on thread If you had to kill one comedian, who would it be? on board I Love Everything on Jan 9, 2008
city of gyros (chaki) wrote this on thread "Hey, you guys like comedy?" on board All Noise Dude Summertime Fun Board and Pickle Bar on May 12, 2006
JAY mohr is a huge asshole
☂ (max) wrote this on thread tracy morgan - classic or dud? on board I Love Everything on Jun 10, 2011
i saw him and jay mohr together, and jay mohr was funnier than him. JAY MOHR
gabbneb (gabbneb) wrote this on thread Andrew McCarthy S & D on board I Love Everything on Apr 26, 2004search: Matthew Perrydestroy: Jay Mohr
― President Keyes, Wednesday, 14 August 2013 14:16 (eleven years ago) link
Yeah, I meant that he was familiar to ilxors, but not to me (although I guess I saw a couple of Last Comic Standings and Go, which I don't remember him from).
― how's life, Wednesday, 14 August 2013 14:21 (eleven years ago) link
He was on SNL and played an asshole in a bunch of stuffOther comics seem to hate him
― President Keyes, Wednesday, 14 August 2013 14:23 (eleven years ago) link
― scott seward, Wednesday, August 14, 2013 9:48 AM (40 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
It's ILM: The Book!
― brian uoeno (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 14 August 2013 14:31 (eleven years ago) link
clicked on link, looked at date, lolled heartily
― OH MY GOD HE'S OOGLY (DJP), Wednesday, 14 August 2013 14:32 (eleven years ago) link
great book
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Wednesday, 14 August 2013 14:33 (eleven years ago) link
its ilm: the magazine http://www.spin.com/about/
― "Dave Barlow" is the name Lou uses on sabermetrics baseball sites (s.clover), Wednesday, 14 August 2013 15:12 (eleven years ago) link
two whole people, great post
― brian uoeno (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 14 August 2013 15:18 (eleven years ago) link
― markers, Wednesday, 14 August 2013 15:21 (eleven years ago) link
doubleshit
― MAVEN! (Matt P), Wednesday, 14 August 2013 15:23 (eleven years ago) link
that book is awesome. i'm in it. oh wait, conflated sense of self worth...eh, i'll take it. i kinda rule.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 14 August 2013 15:59 (eleven years ago) link
it's ilm: the galactic supercluster http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virgo_Supercluster
― "Dave Barlow" is the name Lou uses on sabermetrics baseball sites (s.clover), Wednesday, 14 August 2013 16:12 (eleven years ago) link
http://www.culturecritic.co.uk/blog/33-five-careers-that-were-shaped-by-liz-phairs-exile-in-guyville/
uh
― maura, Thursday, 15 August 2013 04:43 (eleven years ago) link
comedic
― blinded by aggro (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 15 August 2013 04:49 (eleven years ago) link
that article has to be trollgaze, right?
― "Dave Barlow" is the name Lou uses on sabermetrics baseball sites (s.clover), Thursday, 15 August 2013 05:29 (eleven years ago) link
Thicke's blasé, same as it ever was assertion that "I know you want it" and "we're gonna get nasty" is a reminder that the same words are a hell of a lot more compelling when they're coming from a girl's mouth.
Wait I thought this was about Liz Phair, not Britney
― da croupier, Thursday, 15 August 2013 05:33 (eleven years ago) link
6. Daft Punk7. Barack Obama8. North West
we are all liz phair now
― "Dave Barlow" is the name Lou uses on sabermetrics baseball sites (s.clover), Thursday, 15 August 2013 13:27 (eleven years ago) link
Released in 1993, Exile in Guyville is one of the best alt-rock records of the nineties (in our opinion), with a musical and, maybe more importantly, attitudinal influence apparent across lots of contemporary artists who’ve arguably eclipsed Phair in terms of popularity (Best Coast’s Bethany Cosentino, for example).
waht
― OH MY GOD HE'S OOGLY (DJP), Thursday, 15 August 2013 14:06 (eleven years ago) link
i can't turn on my t.v. without seeing friggin' best coast's bethany cosentino.
― scott seward, Thursday, 15 August 2013 14:08 (eleven years ago) link
you can tell this article is a troll because it doesn't mention avril
― "Dave Barlow" is the name Lou uses on sabermetrics baseball sites (s.clover), Thursday, 15 August 2013 14:08 (eleven years ago) link
"attitudinal influence apparent across lots of contemporary artists"
r.i.p. riting...
― scott seward, Thursday, 15 August 2013 14:09 (eleven years ago) link
she spends time in the Amanda Palmer blurb talking about how Steve Albini attacked Liz Phair for being a chore to listen to, using it as an example of the male hegemony closing its borders to a female voice, then turns around in the M.I.A. blurb and says that Liz Phair's music career was an afterthought, much like that of the one person of color on her list
also let's talk about Lana Del Rey's smash hit "Summertime Sadness" that I've never heard once in my life
the "why this album is better than Exile On Main St." would have been so much better
― OH MY GOD HE'S OOGLY (DJP), Thursday, 15 August 2013 14:16 (eleven years ago) link
The word "attitudinal" always makes me think of Patrick Swayze's pedophile self help guru in Donnie Darko.
― the vineyards where the grapes of corporate rock are stored (cryptosicko), Thursday, 15 August 2013 14:58 (eleven years ago) link
This being the 21st century, Dunham takes Phair's shock tactics one step further by not just talking about sex, but by doing it on camera.
loool
― #fomo that's the motto (Hurting 2), Thursday, 15 August 2013 15:01 (eleven years ago) link
Forgot lil kim
― President Keyes, Thursday, 15 August 2013 15:06 (eleven years ago) link
Effugere 48 minutes agoLOL maybe you can't read. But he was praising her original work and calling the changed version gardbage. Lana's music should not be altered because her original works are the efforts of her talent. So, before you start calling people hypocrites, learn to read. The remix is garbage because the original is Lana. Got it?
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 15 August 2013 16:11 (eleven years ago) link
ok ok i got it, now put the knife down
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 15 August 2013 16:14 (eleven years ago) link
http://sabotagetimes.com/music/v-festival-a-chav-paradise/
― cardamon, Monday, 19 August 2013 21:48 (eleven years ago) link
riff-raff!
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Monday, 19 August 2013 21:59 (eleven years ago) link
There are some choice sentences in there
Imagine if there was a Channel Four juxtaposition of My Big Fat Gypsy Wedding and The Only Way Is Essex, only instead of being a TV show it was a music festival. Well, V Festival would basically be the Channel Five version of that.
― cardamon, Monday, 19 August 2013 22:03 (eleven years ago) link
Personally I blame the highstreet for making rock ‘n’ roll imagery so readily available that anyone with pocket money can wear the right threads with a faux swagger and pretend to like music. Encouraged by the over televised nature of the modern festival to then top off their look with a fashionable visit to a music festival. Because that’s basically what V festival is, a confused fashion parade for pricks. A music festival for people that don’t actually like music but still want to say that they’ve been to a music festival.
― cardamon, Monday, 19 August 2013 22:05 (eleven years ago) link
didn't twig until I skimmed the comments that that was a two-year-old article, even when he mentioned the set by king of hip-hop Eminem
― transmisogyny express (DJ Mencap), Monday, 19 August 2013 22:06 (eleven years ago) link
choice britisher etc
― YOU FOOLS PAY OVER $2.50 for a comic book (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 20 August 2013 01:38 (eleven years ago) link
tbh i like exile in guyville more than i like exile on main st.
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, 20 August 2013 01:42 (eleven years ago) link
http://valawyersweekly.com/files/2012/07/Impops-art.jpg
― beans on toast and ghosts (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 20 August 2013 01:51 (eleven years ago) link
that is a v big stamp, NV
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 20 August 2013 02:35 (eleven years ago) link
^ I think that's an interesting article in a way because, like, guy seems angry that people are getting drunk, rowdy and expressive, making sexual displays (this is what 'they're too fashionable' means?). He thinks they ought to be well-mannered and behave according to some standard of decorum. That for him is the essence of the authentic (non-'high street') music festival.
I think he's probably more invested than he thinks in a reified, tasteful festival culture
― cardamon, Tuesday, 20 August 2013 16:34 (eleven years ago) link
http://blink.htcsense.com/Web/ArticleWeb.aspx?regionid=45&articleid=12583156
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 02:09 (eleven years ago) link
So nice of that AP reporter to let his 10 yer old review the festival for them.
― the vineyards where the grapes of corporate rock are stored (cryptosicko), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 04:38 (eleven years ago) link
Lol, I thought that was actually serious until I got to this: NIN closed the night with a slow and smoky cover of Johnny Cash's "Hurt," which earned nonstop cheers from the crowd.
― emil.y, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 04:41 (eleven years ago) link
I just came here to post that, lol.
― Geoffrey Schweppes (jaymc), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 04:42 (eleven years ago) link
Just as I thought the paragraph couldnt get any worse they dropped that bomb
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 04:44 (eleven years ago) link
That reads like the reporting I give my parents when asked if I made it to mass on Easter Sunday
― touch. zing touch. you've almost convinced me I'm real (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 04:45 (eleven years ago) link
that particular part was even worse though
The band's 90-minute set featured hard rock anthems, songs with techno influences as well as groovy and eerie jams. NIN closed the night with a slow and smoky cover of Johnny Cash's "Hurt," which earned nonstop cheers from the crowd. Reznor was soft as he sang the song's verses — making it the set's highlight. "Yeah, Trent!" one burly voice screamed, and that was one of many.
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 04:47 (eleven years ago) link
Burly man so disappointed when Trent's hard during 'Hurt'
― touch. zing touch. you've almost convinced me I'm real (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 04:49 (eleven years ago) link
I love that detail.
― One burly voice screamed and that was one of many. (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 05:07 (eleven years ago) link
It's like a robert frost poem gone awry
they still havent fixed the band name they got wrong
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 05:11 (eleven years ago) link
are y'all sure that wasn't written by some kind of not very advanced computer program?
― imagine Brigadoons (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 10:13 (eleven years ago) link
Can a voice really be 'burly'?
― bizarro gazzara, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 10:47 (eleven years ago) link
If it's burly audible (need a Lancashire accent for this)
― Tommy McTommy (Tom D.), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 11:05 (eleven years ago) link
can i just
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDKb4O-l02U
(interesting side note, this record pisses on Trent Gothface's entire shitty career)
― imagine Brigadoons (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 11:09 (eleven years ago) link
Found the author, btw: http://bigstory.ap.org/content/mesfin-fekadu
― Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 13:53 (eleven years ago) link
Oh lord.
http://bigstory.ap.org/article/girl-girl-groups-are-making-comeback
I'll tell want you want, what you really, really want: Girl groups.
A new batch of pop tarts are ready to dominate the charts and fill a void since best-selling groups like Destiny's Child, TLC and the Spice Girls aren't dropping songs as fast as music fans want them.
This person is actually a music journalist?
― emil.y, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 14:48 (eleven years ago) link
haahahah. the inclusion of TLC there takes this from absurd to sort of sad and morbid but still absurd.
― "Dave Barlow" is the name Lou uses on sabermetrics baseball sites (s.clover), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 15:00 (eleven years ago) link
yes, TLC's output has definitely slowed of late
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 15:01 (eleven years ago) link
unfrozen caveman music critic
― "Dave Barlow" is the name Lou uses on sabermetrics baseball sites (s.clover), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 15:07 (eleven years ago) link
https://twitter.com/MusicMesfin
― emil.y, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 15:09 (eleven years ago) link
"The Saturdays is one of a new crop of girl groups currently on the music scene."
― Mark G, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 15:11 (eleven years ago) link
there shd probably be a dedicated thread for the unsung heroes feeding the world's relentless demand for content day in day out
― imagine Brigadoons (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 15:13 (eleven years ago) link
a new crop of whores are ready to dominate charts and fill a void left by the decreasing output of the dead
― #fomo that's the motto (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 15:19 (eleven years ago) link
if this dude has been paid a cent ever for writing im literally going to cry
― the Shearer of simulated snowsex etc. (Dwight Yorke), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 15:23 (eleven years ago) link
Damn, too long for a display name. xp
― emil.y, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 15:23 (eleven years ago) link
im no jordan sargent but i'd like to think im slightly better than MusicMesfin and i've never been paid for any writing
― the Shearer of simulated snowsex etc. (Dwight Yorke), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 15:24 (eleven years ago) link
"The lead single from Ciara's self-titled fifth album, "Body Party," is an oozing, seductive R&B track that deserves rousing applause — especially when the 27-year-old matches the song with daring and sensual dance moves that scream Janet Jackson, Aaliyah and others that have come before her, as she did at the recent BET Awards."
― One burly voice screamed and that was one of many. (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 15:29 (eleven years ago) link
"an oozing R&B track"dat sentence structure
title of that piece is REVIEW: CIARA STILL SEARCHING FOR CIARA ON 'CIARA'i think there's a lot to be mined with this guy
― One burly voice screamed and that was one of many. (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 15:30 (eleven years ago) link
I guess if a music writer's twitter is 80% RTs of articles from his place of work and 20% NormalTweetGuy inanity, at least that cuts down on the public circlejerking
― many a slip 'twixt Yow and Yip (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 15:32 (eleven years ago) link
Lol hurting
― rooibos in disguise (wins), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 15:40 (eleven years ago) link
and you will know us by the decreasing output of the dead...
― "Dave Barlow" is the name Lou uses on sabermetrics baseball sites (s.clover), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 16:50 (eleven years ago) link
Rumors of TLC's fall from the pop charts have been greatly exaggerated
― #fomo that's the motto (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 16:52 (eleven years ago) link
This guy. The more I read, the more I fear my eyes will roll so far back into my head that I may not be able to get them back out.
― Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 17:05 (eleven years ago) link
"Mumford & Sons and the crowd were loud, but not unruly during the two-hour show. The band played their folk-rock tunes with ease, and at times slowed things down as red-orange lights shined and small light bulbs hung in the air. They boys were like mad scientists during "Dustbowl Dance" — singer Marcus Mumford was now on the drums and he kicked it out of his way as he headed to the front of the stage to finish singing the song."
First half of first sentence is almost seussian.
― sktsh, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 19:13 (eleven years ago) link
Professional rock band plays songs professionally, at times slowly, with lighting
― #fomo that's the motto (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 19:19 (eleven years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZnIF72mW1vs
― scott seward, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 19:30 (eleven years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z3EizbF-38I
― scott seward, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 19:32 (eleven years ago) link
― #fomo that's the motto (Hurting 2), Tuesday, September 3, 2013 3:19 PM (19 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
The Associated Press isn't exactly looking for Richard Meltzer tho
― Vinetalic - "My Friend Terio" (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 19:39 (eleven years ago) link
i basically get the sense that maybe this person didn't want to be a music journo at all, and sort of doesn't care? or cares about one sort of music but really doesn't care about NIN or british pop girlgroups and is just sort of phoning it in until they can cover whatever they feel their 'calling' is? like more than anything else, it just drips with boredom and indifference.
― "Dave Barlow" is the name Lou uses on sabermetrics baseball sites (s.clover), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 20:29 (eleven years ago) link
"One member of the band picked up his guitar and began playing it. Then, while the singer vocalized into his microphone, the drummer crashed his sticks wildly into his drums and cymbals, creating a stir in the crowd, which seemed close to filling the 430-person capacity venue."
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 20:39 (eleven years ago) link
It's the Associated Press, it's not supposed to be fucking Joan Didion, guys
― Vinetalic - "My Friend Terio" (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 20:41 (eleven years ago) link
"The lead single from Ciara's self-titled fifth album, "Body Party," is an oozing, seductive R&B track
http://pzrservices.typepad.com/vintageadvertising/images/2008/03/15/vintage_ad_1975_copy.jpg
― first I think it's time I kick a little verse! (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 20:42 (eleven years ago) link
cap'n save-a-hack
― "Dave Barlow" is the name Lou uses on sabermetrics baseball sites (s.clover), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 20:48 (eleven years ago) link
i'm kind of relieved when i run across phoned-in robot articles written by people who have not spent any time analyzing pop culture, one less human being subjecting themselves to the grotesquery of caring in a sinking ship industry.
― forevermore (a maven) (Matt P), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 21:02 (eleven years ago) link
*puts cigarette out on palm, gazes balefully into the smoggy distance*
― One burly voice screamed and that was one of many. (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 21:02 (eleven years ago) link
in any case, this guy answers the thread question pretty definitively; i can't imagine anyone else who gets this level of distribution and exposure who writes this poorly
― One burly voice screamed and that was one of many. (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 21:03 (eleven years ago) link
it's a relief! phew, this person can care more about things that matter. good for them.
xp i beg to differ. i enjoyed the 'burly voice' line more than anything you've ever posted.
― forevermore (a maven) (Matt P), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 21:10 (eleven years ago) link
no offense. i mean it's a great line, not everyone can be a genius.
― forevermore (a maven) (Matt P), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 21:11 (eleven years ago) link
no offense taken. there are certainly plenty of would-be "genius" hacks who devote themselves to flexing atrophied muscles on the internet in misguided attempts to look clever. why one of them could be in the room right... now.http://www.sherv.net/cm/emoticons/hand-gestures/crossed-arms-smiley-emoticon.gif
― One burly voice screamed and that was one of many. (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 21:17 (eleven years ago) link
joan didion?
― Cannae Just (Lamp), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 21:18 (eleven years ago) link
holy shit, joan didion is in the room?
― One burly voice screamed and that was one of many. (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 21:19 (eleven years ago) link
she posts as "The Other J.D."
― da croupier, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 21:21 (eleven years ago) link
AP (New York) -- Wire service writes like wire service
― katherine, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 21:33 (eleven years ago) link
katherine gets me as of late tho
― Vinetalic - "My Friend Terio" (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 22:21 (eleven years ago) link
Yeah, criticising someone who's probably a news reporter for not writing a great review is insufferably smug. Unless everyone here could write a perfect court report …
― Wantaway Striker (ithappens), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 22:39 (eleven years ago) link
his work is factually incorrect, grammatically suspect and betrays little creativity or knowledge of the work he's writing about!
― One burly voice screamed and that was one of many. (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 22:45 (eleven years ago) link
what standards would you LIKE me to judge that work on?
Everything in his AP repertoire so far is music/pop culture oriented, so I dunno where the idea that he's a news reporter comes from.
― Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 22:46 (eleven years ago) link
he says he's a music writer in his twitter bio
― many a slip 'twixt Yow and Yip (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 22:49 (eleven years ago) link
what's his twitter name again?
― i'll be your mraz (NickB), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 22:57 (eleven years ago) link
Leave him alone!
― first I think it's time I kick a little verse! (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:03 (eleven years ago) link
I imagine Britney saying that.
― Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:04 (eleven years ago) link
but shouldn't someone tell him that a bunch of people he's never heard of think he's not good at something?
― j., Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:05 (eleven years ago) link
so are we gonna be hand-wringing about poor music journalism in in-flight magazines next?
― not some dude poking a Line 6 pedal with his dick (sarahell), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:05 (eleven years ago) link
I wouldn't want his job. I imagine none of us would. But the idea that he's got it instead of someone who can write and actually knows things about music is irritating.
I know! Welcome to the world.
― Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:08 (eleven years ago) link
god get over yourself
― forevermore (a maven) (Matt P), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:12 (eleven years ago) link
rme at everyone in this thread stanning for this clown. If he worked at Wendy's, he'd be fired by now.
― Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:15 (eleven years ago) link
Wendy's publishes music writing?
― not some dude poking a Line 6 pedal with his dick (sarahell), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:16 (eleven years ago) link
― flamboyant goon tie included, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:18 (eleven years ago) link
WHAT THE HELL
Bad writer writes badly. When has this ever been a taking sides issue on ilm before?
― Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:19 (eleven years ago) link
sorry that was flip - i think it's more an issue of should we be spending our precious outrage resources on this issue rather than something else
― not some dude poking a Line 6 pedal with his dick (sarahell), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:21 (eleven years ago) link
if you'd changed Wendy's to Subway otoh
― not some dude poking a Line 6 pedal with his dick (sarahell), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:22 (eleven years ago) link
seriously if this rote and harmless writing irritates you, i would suggest some self-exploration, it can only get better.
― forevermore (a maven) (Matt P), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:25 (eleven years ago) link
The customer ate his Foot-long Cold Cut Trio with ease, and at times slowed things down as florescent tubes hummed and adjacent heat lamps warmed the Provolone
― flamboyant goon tie included, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:25 (eleven years ago) link
Jesus fuck, this is the fucking AP, not some backwater daily. Forget about musical knowledge, this writer can barely put a sentence together.
"Mumford & Sons and the crowd were loud, but not unruly during the two-hour show. The band played their folk-rock tunes with ease, and at times slowed things down as red-orange lights shined and small light bulbs hung in the air. They (typo in original) boys were like mad scientists during "Dustbowl Dance" (they were? how so?) — singer Marcus Mumford was now on the drums and he kicked it (kicked what???) out of his way as he headed to the front of the stage to finish singing the song."
― #fomo that's the motto (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:25 (eleven years ago) link
I'm not even heavily invested in this whole thing, other than figuring out the author's name. I was just amazed to come back to the thread hours later and see people arguing over whether or not his work should be taken in context and whatever other excuses are upthread. Dude has written one ill-informed piece, some other really o_O things, and all of the sudden he's a frustrated news reporter who's been forced to write about music (which doesn't appear to be the case whatsoever...he chose music, and he's bad at it!).
And then I was told to get over myself, to which I say get the fuck out of my face.
― Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:27 (eleven years ago) link
Seriously, Matt P. That shit was uncalled for and I hope you get a summer cold and don't sleep for three nights.
― Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:29 (eleven years ago) link
I'm not really particularly mad at the writer or that I'm not that writer, in fact I'm not especially mad at all -- what it boils down to is that this is just another thing to mock on the internet and kill a little more time before I die. But it's still a bit sad to see how grimey the bottom of the barrel is that is now being scraped by journalistic outlets unwilling or unable to pay living wages.
― #fomo that's the motto (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:30 (eleven years ago) link
are we sure the AP this guy with is the Associated Press? if he was with Alternative Press he'd be one of their best writers.
― 2 Steenz (some dude), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:34 (eleven years ago) link
Newspaper writing is an entirely discipline than "music writing."
Meanwhile I HAVE BLOG gang of twentysomethings are turning the regular music writing game into an outlet for shameless self-aggrandizing with no idea about "ethics" or "how to write a lede" and that shit runs rampant all day long and you guys aren't crying.
― Vinetalic - "My Friend Terio" (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:36 (eleven years ago) link
i have blog gang kill them all
― 2 Steenz (some dude), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:38 (eleven years ago) link
That's because I don't read any of it. Ever. Unless something particularly good or particularly bad gets linked in my general vicinity, it might as well all take place in a parallel universe.
― Ⓓⓡ. (Johnny Fever), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:39 (eleven years ago) link
xxp - newspaper editing too!
― not some dude poking a Line 6 pedal with his dick (sarahell), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:40 (eleven years ago) link
"The two boxers went at it like mad scientists, hitting each other with gloves and sometimes putting up their own gloves to block the other guys"
I'm a news writer, not a sports writer.
― #fomo that's the motto (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:48 (eleven years ago) link
Newspaper writing has a non-zero overlap with music writing in that you shouldn't accidentally write about Trent Reznor's weenis in either
― touch. zing touch. you've almost convinced me I'm real (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:51 (eleven years ago) link
what it boils down to is that this is just another thing to...kill a little more time before I die.
My guiding philosophy for at least the last 6-7 years.
― clemenza, Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:52 (eleven years ago) link
Can we please go back over every piece of writing linked in this thread over the years and assess whether it is appropriate to compare it to didion (if not, y'all have wasted a LOT of time)
― I Accidentally Dommed Your Sub (wins), Tuesday, 3 September 2013 23:58 (eleven years ago) link
it's funny, because in trying to pull the "You guys are taking mediocre news writing a little too seriously" move, they actually set themselves up for the "you guys are taking INTERNET too seriously" move. Played yaselves.
― #fomo that's the motto (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 4 September 2013 00:16 (eleven years ago) link
it would be one thing if the AP were still just a wire service delivering raw data but they churn out so much crap now to fill sites with it ain't even funny. all kinds of non-news crap.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 4 September 2013 00:34 (eleven years ago) link
The problem with this guy's writing is not that it's hacky or that it isn't Joan didion, it's that it's barely even language. Hacks are baseline competent. Hacks can remember the clause before the one they're currently writing.
― i believe we can c.h.u.d. all night (Jon Lewis), Wednesday, 4 September 2013 00:44 (eleven years ago) link
to be fair, most writers don't really know how to write anymore.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 4 September 2013 00:49 (eleven years ago) link
that's why the good ones stick out so much.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 4 September 2013 00:50 (eleven years ago) link
It's true. I remember going to some historic house in New Brunswick, NJ, and they had some copies of a local paper from the turn of the century in a glass case, and I thought the prose in it was as good as or better than most of today's newspaper writing. Granted a lot of newspaper writing from that era has a certain florid hackiness of its own.
― #fomo that's the motto (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 4 September 2013 00:58 (eleven years ago) link
"this is just another thing to mock on the internet and kill a little more time before I die."
^ solitary posts that effortlessly summarize etc
― "Dave Barlow" is the name Lou uses on sabermetrics baseball sites (s.clover), Wednesday, 4 September 2013 01:14 (eleven years ago) link
shd be criticizing dude's nonexistent copyeditor
― fuck your movie theater yacht (zachlyon), Wednesday, 4 September 2013 03:19 (eleven years ago) link
http://www.avclub.com/articles/neko-case-the-worse-things-get-the-harder-i-fight,102717/
The a cappella tune “Nearly Midnight, Honolulu” tells the sad tale of a verbally abusive mother, but Case’s sweetly echoing “I’m sorry” only apologizes to the child for it happening. Maybe she should apologize for not intervening.
― Mordy , Saturday, 21 September 2013 22:55 (eleven years ago) link
Yikes. Certainly sounds like an AV Club review, though.
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Sunday, 22 September 2013 00:48 (eleven years ago) link
Is it necessary to have heard the album in order to have any idea wft is going on in this review? Or was this originally a longer piece edited down into incomprehensibility?
2 Chainz is all hype. Me Time chronicles a rags-to-riches story, with touches of paranoia characteristic of marijuana users. It's slicker than its predecessor, in terms of production and enunciation of lyrics. "I Do It," a potential single, featuring interwoven verses from Ca$h Money family members Lil Wayne and Drake, ends with a gospel section calling for a little bit of "me time" for the song's helmer — a nice touch. Also, Mike WiLL Made It (the producer of the hour) delights, surprising listeners with a faintly recognizable diversion from his traditional trap sound; in fact, he goes backwards in time, borrowing Southside's wobbling hi-hats from Watch the Throne's bonus track, "Illest Motherfucker Alive." Even amongst all the talk of coitus and throwing it up on YouTube ("Used 2"), "first name, 2, last name, Chainz" takes the time on wax to give an official shout-out to his favourite household appliance: the stove ("Fork"). However, as charming as these progressions may sound, the heart of the project lies beneath the glitz and glamour of 2 Chainz's traveling circus act, which for the benefit of capitalist America, has made quite the stink in the papers recently. Whether it's the weight of Chrisette Michele's spoken word ode to imagination ("Black Unicorn") or the ATL wordsmith's confession ("Outroduction") that he gets profiled more now than when he was hustling, one thing's for certain: by the end of Me Time, the down-to-Earth, around-the-block-and-back 2 Chainz bores.(Def Jam)
― the vineyards where the grapes of corporate rock are stored (cryptosicko), Friday, 27 September 2013 23:59 (eleven years ago) link
not heard it and that mostly reads OK to me apart from there's no explanation whatsoever why the reviewer finds it boring?
― Lee Ranaldo's Putting Challenge (DJ Mencap), Saturday, 28 September 2013 08:22 (eleven years ago) link
my god, the discussion before the jump. rmde
― C/3 Jenks kakling Neu! military£ absinthe snkkt! pckls Özil JTCF njhtdgs (imago), Saturday, 28 September 2013 08:40 (eleven years ago) link
this thread has got a lot of nerve when some of the worst music posters in the world frequent this board
― how do i shot cwmbran? (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 28 September 2013 08:48 (eleven years ago) link
name naaaames
― C/3 Jenks kakling Neu! military£ absinthe snkkt! pckls Özil JTCF njhtdgs (imago), Saturday, 28 September 2013 08:59 (eleven years ago) link
saving that poll for when i need some time away
― how do i shot cwmbran? (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 28 September 2013 09:32 (eleven years ago) link
What about the world's best music poster
― abcfsk, Saturday, 28 September 2013 10:05 (eleven years ago) link
pretty sure it's this one:
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-hIzag7ptdSg/Tzgt2JOlVhI/AAAAAAAAEeU/Q7bg0vXgMOk/s1600/DSC00014.JPG
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Saturday, 28 September 2013 11:10 (eleven years ago) link
I that John Paul ii above Whitney Houston?
― that is how ghosts laugh (bends), Saturday, 28 September 2013 11:16 (eleven years ago) link
yeah, he put a couple of solo records out on Metal Blade in the 80s iirc
― how do i shot cwmbran? (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 28 September 2013 11:24 (eleven years ago) link
outrageous nipple hat
― swmp thing (wins), Saturday, 28 September 2013 11:27 (eleven years ago) link
The problem with being a pop star is that in order to continue to score hits — and hence, to stay relevant — it is imperative to adopt and incorporate current trends into one’s work. When the flavor of the day is something pure — as it was when Carole King was writing songs alongside Gerry Goffin in the ’60s or when she unleashed her masterpiece Tapestry in the early ’70s — the results can be magical and timeless. On the other hand, when the market favors style over substance — as it has, almost without fail, since the disco era — the outcome can range from being diminished to being lifeless.
http://www.musicbox-online.com/reviews-2007/caroleking-lovemakestheworld-09042007.html#axzz2gKHWUNv0
― Neanderthal, Sunday, 29 September 2013 23:11 (eleven years ago) link
musicbox-online you've disappointed us this time
― Luigi Nono, le petit robot (seandalai), Monday, 30 September 2013 12:39 (eleven years ago) link
haha, that's what i thought when i saw that. they really lowered their standards over there at musicbox-online in 2007.
― scott seward, Monday, 30 September 2013 13:22 (eleven years ago) link
From the Haim thread: Rockist Agonistes.
http://www.collapseboard.com/reviews/albums-reviews/haim-days-are-gone-columbia/
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 11:04 (eleven years ago) link
Like Bryan Adams, Haim have mastered the art of writing a song composed entirely of lyrics from other songs.
T.S. Eliot did this too, you think you're better than T.S. Eliot do you mister crappy pop music critic?
― how do i shot cwmbran? (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 11:06 (eleven years ago) link
When I posted it on the haim thread I hadn't realised it was by the same guy who did http://www.collapseboard.com/blogs/scott-creney/an-immodest-proposal
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 11:08 (eleven years ago) link
Overcoming the Haim vs Savages critical divide by shitting on both and congratulating himself for it.
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 11:09 (eleven years ago) link
And it’s not like I have a vendetta against any of your labels. I wrote very nice things about the recent Cat Power album. Same with Yo La Tengo and Fucked Up. Yeah, I made fun of Fleet Foxes and Stephen Malkmus, but not enough to ruin their careers or hurt your labels. And let’s just talk about the fucking emotional memoir I wrote for last year’s Interpol reissue. There was so much soul in that review that Collapse Board’s Mike Turner, a lifelong Interpol hater, was forced to reassess the band after reading my review, arriving at the conclusion that the record “actually isn’t that bad”.
As a writer, I am nothing if not persuasive.
― the objections to Drake from non-REAL HIPHOP people (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 11:12 (eleven years ago) link
Willing to bet that a disproportionate amount of the worst music writing ever is first person.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 2 October 2013 11:59 (eleven years ago) link
It seems I have angered the Collapseboard massive on Twitter.
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 12:18 (eleven years ago) link
No, the lines above are a sample of random lines from a book that came out earlier in 2013. Bough Down by Karen Green is one of the most devastating, beautifully created works of art ever created. I literally get butterflies when I read it — tiny little flutterings of a panic attack welling up in my belly. Because of the art, the exquisite design, it costs a little bit more than your average book. I had to wait all summer to buy it, until I was sure I had the money. Having it now, I realize it would have been worth twice as much.
I can't believe he got that far into that paragraph without writing, "You probably haven't heard about it."
― My question is primarily riparian (Phil D.), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 12:27 (eleven years ago) link
Couldn't read that shit at all but I am glad I scrolled down to read Doran's comment at the end.
― i'll be your mraz (NickB), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 12:42 (eleven years ago) link
I literally get butterflies when I read it
Presumably involves a trip to the butterfly shop?
― Neil S, Wednesday, 2 October 2013 12:50 (eleven years ago) link
DL im sure being called a "dick" by everett true is a badge of honour
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 13:03 (eleven years ago) link
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/1/19/Wendy_Craig_in_Butterflies.jpg
― Addison Doug (Matt #2), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 13:08 (eleven years ago) link
He stopped Savages dead in their tracks? Someone all to tell the people who keep buying tickets to see them.
― Unsettled defender (ithappens), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 15:13 (eleven years ago) link
He's a one-man truth machine.
― Pingu Unchained (dog latin), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 15:14 (eleven years ago) link
lol at "(if this review introduces just one person to this book etc…)" because that review just made me want to check out Haim who I haven't heard before but I now like.
― wk, Wednesday, 2 October 2013 16:31 (eleven years ago) link
Look, I don’t deny the pleasure you get from this music, but your ability to be moved by it says more about the depth/breadth of your emotions, the thrill of being alive, than it does about Haim.
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 16:40 (eleven years ago) link
AKA: If you are shallow/young it doesn't take much (intellectually) for you to be moved.
― Evan, Wednesday, 2 October 2013 16:59 (eleven years ago) link
unsurprisingly for a guy who appears to love the sound of his own typing, he seems unable to process any aspect of the music apart from the lyrics.
― wk, Wednesday, 2 October 2013 17:27 (eleven years ago) link
I haven't read the piece, but if it said "Haim suck and everyone who likes them is a fucking idiot who should be murdered", it's spot on.
― emil.y, Wednesday, 2 October 2013 17:28 (eleven years ago) link
>:|
― Johnny Fever, Wednesday, 2 October 2013 17:31 (eleven years ago) link
haha
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 17:34 (eleven years ago) link
Heh. wk, as someone who adores the fuck out of this album, I'd be the first to tell you the lyrics are merely serviceable, but fine as such.
― The Reverend, Wednesday, 2 October 2013 17:48 (eleven years ago) link
I always suspected emil.y was mr agreeabl.e
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 18:19 (eleven years ago) link
skimming the article I missed the part where Bough Down was a book so I threw it into youtube and the first hit was one of those pronunciation guide videos. clearly the real explanation is that this guy is horse_ebooks
― katherine, Wednesday, 2 October 2013 20:44 (eleven years ago) link
He is in a band called Tunabunny.
― how's life, Wednesday, 2 October 2013 21:10 (eleven years ago) link
He is in a fucking excellent band called Tunabunny, yes.
― emil.y, Wednesday, 2 October 2013 21:17 (eleven years ago) link
god I just wrote a post and then deleted it
― THE SONIC UNREGULATED ELECTRIC CATFISH (imago), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 21:29 (eleven years ago) link
I just listened to a couple of HAIM songs. I'll hold my tongue and just quietly OTM emil.y.
I like Tunabunny and Haim. :(
― polyphonic, Wednesday, 2 October 2013 21:31 (eleven years ago) link
rapture about the memoir of DFW's ex seems exactly right for the middlebrow vibes going on in that prose, frankly
― the tune was space, Wednesday, 2 October 2013 21:35 (eleven years ago) link
wait, this guy who doesn't hear anything good in Haim makes tuneless, rhythmically challenged music? that's a shock.
― wk, Wednesday, 2 October 2013 21:52 (eleven years ago) link
haw haw haw!
― THE SONIC UNREGULATED ELECTRIC CATFISH (imago), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 21:54 (eleven years ago) link
*smarmy chuckle, places hands on gut*
― THE SONIC UNREGULATED ELECTRIC CATFISH (imago), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 21:55 (eleven years ago) link
Bloke who plays in lumpen indie band tries to add to his own infamy/success by saying pop music is shite shocker.
― Damo Suzuki's Parrot, Wednesday, 2 October 2013 22:40 (eleven years ago) link
lj is in a band called Tunabunny?
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 22:42 (eleven years ago) link
know some ppl that really rep for Tunabunny. not expecting them to care about the world's worst music writer being in the band tbf
― Dance kings intent on making us laugh and groove at the same time (DJ Mencap), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 22:42 (eleven years ago) link
i just looked at the comments on collapseboard and DL isnt too popular!
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 22:43 (eleven years ago) link
― polyphonic, Wednesday, October 2, 2013 10:31 PM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― the cat equivalent of love handles (bends), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 22:44 (eleven years ago) link
I've only listened to Tunabunny for the first time tonight, and it's 100% due to the Haim review being linked to in this thread, so if DS's P is correct this strategy is working
― the cat equivalent of love handles (bends), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 22:47 (eleven years ago) link
Heavy Metal is the genre Dorian Lynskey , from that twitter exchange, espouses in the guardian and the quietus I think?
Why does Dorien not have a go at the misogyny in heavy metal or the fact that 99% of fans of black metal (who are ALL white) are racists?
http://www.soulstrut.com/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/know.gif
― Dance kings intent on making us laugh and groove at the same time (DJ Mencap), Wednesday, 2 October 2013 23:22 (eleven years ago) link
Pretty terrible writer & it's embarrassing to witness the gap between what he is aiming for and what he achieves BUT I think DL's sexism accusation ("I find all kneejerk loathing of pop inherently sexist and reactionary") partly rests on a misreading of
So if I seem a little annoyed at their empty-headedness, the way people who should know better see their lack of anything beyond pure pop emptiness (the word ‘pop’ used in a backhanded way — as if Beyonce, or Taylor Swift, or Lady Gaga, or even Katy fucking Perry didn’t have at least something in their songs) as some kind of asset, well like, why should I have to read inanities like, See, they’re great BECAUSE they’re empty
which is a terrible sentence but does seem to be in favour of pop - at least some "non-empty" kind of pop - and against people who celebrate pop as "emptiness" i.e. he is offended by "the word ‘pop’... used in a backhanded way" rather than using it in a backhanded way himself.
I get the patronising of youth and the Rick Astley stuff - though of all briefly successful pop fellas Astley surely had the fewest young female fans. If anything, he just signifies pop as punishment i.e. rickrolling.
― Eyeball Kicks, Wednesday, 2 October 2013 23:23 (eleven years ago) link
26 Responses to “Haim – Days Are Gone (Columbia)” moOkie says: October 2, 2013 at 7:09 pm Slap my knee bones to the ground! Ben Green says: October 2, 2013 at 8:56 pm GROSS VOCALS Sarah says: October 2, 2013 at 9:28 pm This is less of a review more of a mental breakdown. You sound like a ranting baffoon Scott. If you have friends I suggest you get them to read this review, then look you in the eye and tell you what they think of it. woot says: October 2, 2013 at 9:33 pm geez is there anything you like that isn’t predictable “smart guy” garbage? might as well call you tj for fuck’s sake. read Gass or Mossman not the pale imitations you dumb motherfucker, maybe you’ll learn something. YOU, to say nothing of Haim, desperately need to. andy says: October 2, 2013 at 10:09 pm SO IF I CRY TO RICK ASSTLEY THEN THAT’S REALLY ME CRYING NOT RICK ASSTELY BUT IF RICK ASSTLEY HAD EMOTIONS THEN I WOULDN’T NEED TO HAVE ANY EMOTIONS BECAUSE RICK ASSTLEY COULD DO ALL THAT STUFF FOR ME. OR SOMETHING. RJC says: October 2, 2013 at 10:34 pm But if Rick Astley moves someone to tears then surely that is Pete Waterman’s doing, not Rick Astley’s?! ITS ALL SO CONFUSING!!! Steph says: October 2, 2013 at 10:36 pm Is Haim the marmite of the pop world. They just mildly bore me. Not enough to stir up hatred. Their winning quality is the bassist’s bass face. Best I’ve seen but not into 80s classic rock music. RJC says: October 2, 2013 at 11:25 pm This isn’t about Haim though is it? Tenbenson says: October 2, 2013 at 11:53 pm It’s always the fans of the shittest music that spit the most feathers when someone dares to criticise it. Caroline says: October 3, 2013 at 1:38 am You’re right, RJC. It’s about the slow, depressing creep of society and popular music towards vapid, substanceless mediocrity. Will says: October 3, 2013 at 2:19 am I don’t get the fuss over this review. The opening gambit is a bit…much imo, but there’s nothing sexist or out of order about this. Haim’s record was made with the endless budget of Columbia/Sony, they were put into the studio with high profile co writers and producers and they came out with something that sounds like a Shania Twain b-side or some 80s one hit wonder. No spark, nothing interesting…just cookie cutter nonsense with an incredibly high marketing budget. Cynical in that it is all geared up to satisfy people who are scared of the new. I don’t even hear ANY production flourishes in this which could mark it out. Manufactured pop doesn’t HAVE to be shit. All my beloved sixties girl groups, Spector stuff etc were manufactured, but by people who gave a shit, and had the talent to write and produce good music. This is not that. RJC says: October 3, 2013 at 2:33 am I found this to be an interesting exchange https://twitter.com/AndrewMaleMojo/status/385432851346255872 What is it about this piece (and the others) that so riles the Great British music journalist? It might be helpful if some of the er, haterz came on here and joined the conversation as I don’t think Twitter is particularly suited to long form debate. Hmmm… Lee says: October 3, 2013 at 3:34 am Sarah – will do. I’ll tell him it’s an excellent review. Dunno about you guys, but I certainly believe I deserve better than Haim. Way to go, girls, for perpetuating the airhead, glamor-girl stereotype (that, secretly, I’m sure my mum wished I could have been) and exploiting an old pop formula that’s already been played to death. If I had to listen to a whole album of this, I might sound like a “ranting buffoon”, too (and a less articulate one, at that). Erika Meyer says: October 3, 2013 at 4:20 am Dorian Lynskey (in the twitter debate referenced above) referred to this review as “sexist” (also I think “stupid” and “reactionary”). When Wallace asked him to make an evidence-based defense of his accusation of sexism, he refused. I’m not saying I agree with Scott that being childlike is a bad thing… even if too much pop music is too childlike too often… But I’ve never noticed Scott being in the slightest bit sexist in any of his reviews. AFA their music… it seems like a “thing” now… new music that sounds like old music. In particular, the music we hated in the 1980s. THIS is how our children annoy us now. My favorite thing about the review is of course the part of the review that was not about Haim, but about writer Karen Green. So I think the pertinent question here is: how does Karen Green look in hot pants? RJC says: October 3, 2013 at 5:58 am Caroline – this is indeed about the slow, depressing creep of society and popular music towards vapid, substanceless mediocrity, but it is also about pointing the finger at those complicit in this creep. Wayne Walls says: October 3, 2013 at 7:10 am I would rather cut my ears off than listen to Haim Stevie M says: October 3, 2013 at 8:26 am This is an excellent review and see nothing sexist about it at all. Uptight pc Brits don’t like pop music or anything with “girls with guitars” getting dissed no matter how bland they are and cry SEXISM if you dare to go against their expert opinions. Check the xx or coldplay for an example of bland UK bands of recent years all hyped initially by the NME and middlebrow media outlets like The Guardian. Rather than get behind creative bands like The New Puritans they have to go for safe and bland music. What worries me with the state of critically adored rock and indie is that its so dull and watered down and SAFE which mean young rock fans might end up drifting to the awful actual misogynist sub-genre of rock -Heavy Metal than the once proud , intelligent bands in the rock genre. We need to save the kids from sweaty, spotty, sexless youths watching men in loincloths. Heavy Metal is the genre Dorian Lynskey , from that twitter exchange, espouses in the guardian and the quietus I think? Why does Dorien not have a go at the misogyny in heavy metal or the fact that 99% of fans of black metal (who are ALL white) are racists? Tamsin Chapman says: October 3, 2013 at 8:43 am I don’t understand why a gang of established Smug 4 Life journalists are so up in arms about a review by an unpaid critic who writes purely because he cares about music. *Everybody* knows Haim are terrible. And they’re Tories to boot. They sound like Wilson Phillips except without their one good song & interesting back story. I actually disagree that Haim make music aimed at young people – it’s patently aimed at middle-aged men.I also even disagree it’s pop music at all. It’s MOR. The only young people I can imagine liking them are members of the Young Conservatives who find the charts “a bit urban”. Pop music is about the now and the future. Beyonce makes great pop music. Kanye makes great pop music. Haim are retrograde, reactionary piffle. Music for people who are *satisfied* with themselves and their lives. Music for people who don’t like music. No wonder Tracey Thorn likes them – I love the Marine Girls but let’s face it, Everything But The Girl were MOR too. I also think Courtney Love is partly to blame for all this. She started the critical rehabilitation of Fleetwood Mac. Fleetwood Mac (who apparently Haim are supposed to sound like) are also tedious MOR bollocks. I’m sorry but they are. Music journalism used to be rockist (and that was shit), in theory it’s now supposed to be poptimist. It would be great if that were so – I live for pop music. But it bloody isn’t, it’s dominated by the middle-aged and the middle-of-the-road. Today, the Tories announced that if they win the next election they’ll strip all welfare benefits from the under 25s, leaving those young people abandoned or abused by their families to die on the streets. And a music review that you disagree with is what you choose to get angry about is it Dorian Lynskey? Fuck the gerontocracy Daz says: October 3, 2013 at 9:04 am I fail to see how people have interpreted this review as sexist. Haim sound like Hanson for a new generation. What actually makes me curious is why one of the band members stands up behind a couch for an interview while David Cameron and another guest sit on a couch. WHY? RJC says: October 3, 2013 at 9:32 am Tasmin Chapman is correct – Haim do not make music aimed at young people. I don’t know who they make their music for. Perhaps, in time-honoured tradition Haim ‘just make music for themselves and if anyone else likes it that’s a bonus’. This is less about who Haim make their music for, but rather who their music is marketed at. Their music is marketed at middle aged men. Arguably middle aged white men. “And I know I’m not the target audience for Haim, but if that’s the case, how come I have to see/hear them all over the place? I haven’t gone looking for Haim. They’re everywhere this week. And this review is my response…” This is the straw man. If Creney weren’t the target audience for Haim then how is it he sees them everywhere he looks? He is the target audience. Marketing has just attempted to become more sophisticated. Before I logged on here, I checked my emails. Oh look, there’s one from Amazon telling me that I might be interested in the new Haim album. I am a middle aged white male. Jodi says: October 3, 2013 at 9:37 am Even as a frothing, rabid feminist, I can’t see anything sexist about this review. I can’t even really spot any direct references to gender at all (apart from in the purely descriptive pronoun sense). That being said, I don’t think this is up to your usual standards, Scott. It makes you sound like a bitter old man. If you’re going to hate the music, at least spend more time talking about the music. This review reads like you listened to three songs one time and decided that they’re everything that’s wrong with The Youth Today. Also fuck you right in the ass Stevie M, when you make statements like “…the fact that 99% of fans of black metal (who are ALL white) are racists…” you are actively damaging our side of the argument with your fucking rampant stupidity. Suzie2999 says: October 3, 2013 at 9:38 am A heated debate about Haim? Really? RJC says: October 3, 2013 at 9:53 am Argh. This isn’t about Haim. Lucy Cage says: October 3, 2013 at 10:04 am I’ve been puzzling over the extraordinarily rabid response to this review all day; it seems so uncontroversial, dissing Haim for being bland, for not being good enough… why is that so hard to swallow? Most odd. As far as I can tell though, the sexism critique made on Twitter was a poor reading of the review through the eyes of a smarting Haim fan who assumed that because Scott was suggesting that their pop is not good enough (and also that much mass-appeal pop is reflective more of the listener’s subjective experience rather than innate genius) he was: a. a Hater of Pop in general b. making the fairly standard gendered critique wherein pop & its fandom is seen as female (and therefore lesser, dismissable, manufactured) and is set against high culture (worthy, complex, auteured). To this crude view (even when made by white, middle-class, middle-aged, male writers with media-establishment platforms) pretty much any critique of female-produced pop = misogyny. The fact that Scott’s review is not making that argument in the slightest doesn’t seem to have discouraged them in banging it out over and over. If there is any more substance to the sexism accusation than this, I would like to hear it. RJC says: October 3, 2013 at 10:21 am Something is happening here, But you don’t know what it is Do you, Mr Lynskey? UnContainuhDrivuh says: October 3, 2013 at 10:53 am the old serious journos who are defending haim are probably just dudes who want to sleep with the band. i know that’s being a bit direct, but really that’s probably the case.
moOkie says: October 2, 2013 at 7:09 pm
Slap my knee bones to the ground!
Ben Green says: October 2, 2013 at 8:56 pm
GROSS VOCALS Sarah says: October 2, 2013 at 9:28 pm
This is less of a review more of a mental breakdown. You sound like a ranting baffoon Scott. If you have friends I suggest you get them to read this review, then look you in the eye and tell you what they think of it.
woot says: October 2, 2013 at 9:33 pm
geez is there anything you like that isn’t predictable “smart guy” garbage? might as well call you tj for fuck’s sake. read Gass or Mossman not the pale imitations you dumb motherfucker, maybe you’ll learn something. YOU, to say nothing of Haim, desperately need to. andy says: October 2, 2013 at 10:09 pm
SO IF I CRY TO RICK ASSTLEY THEN THAT’S REALLY ME CRYING NOT RICK ASSTELY BUT IF RICK ASSTLEY HAD EMOTIONS THEN I WOULDN’T NEED TO HAVE ANY EMOTIONS BECAUSE RICK ASSTLEY COULD DO ALL THAT STUFF FOR ME. OR SOMETHING. RJC says: October 2, 2013 at 10:34 pm
But if Rick Astley moves someone to tears then surely that is Pete Waterman’s doing, not Rick Astley’s?! ITS ALL SO CONFUSING!!! Steph says: October 2, 2013 at 10:36 pm
Is Haim the marmite of the pop world. They just mildly bore me. Not enough to stir up hatred. Their winning quality is the bassist’s bass face. Best I’ve seen but not into 80s classic rock music. RJC says: October 2, 2013 at 11:25 pm
This isn’t about Haim though is it? Tenbenson says: October 2, 2013 at 11:53 pm
It’s always the fans of the shittest music that spit the most feathers when someone dares to criticise it. Caroline says: October 3, 2013 at 1:38 am
You’re right, RJC. It’s about the slow, depressing creep of society and popular music towards vapid, substanceless mediocrity. Will says: October 3, 2013 at 2:19 am
I don’t get the fuss over this review. The opening gambit is a bit…much imo, but there’s nothing sexist or out of order about this.
Haim’s record was made with the endless budget of Columbia/Sony, they were put into the studio with high profile co writers and producers and they came out with something that sounds like a Shania Twain b-side or some 80s one hit wonder. No spark, nothing interesting…just cookie cutter nonsense with an incredibly high marketing budget. Cynical in that it is all geared up to satisfy people who are scared of the new. I don’t even hear ANY production flourishes in this which could mark it out.
Manufactured pop doesn’t HAVE to be shit. All my beloved sixties girl groups, Spector stuff etc were manufactured, but by people who gave a shit, and had the talent to write and produce good music. This is not that. RJC says: October 3, 2013 at 2:33 am
I found this to be an interesting exchange
https://twitter.com/AndrewMaleMojo/status/385432851346255872
What is it about this piece (and the others) that so riles the Great British music journalist?
It might be helpful if some of the er, haterz came on here and joined the conversation as I don’t think Twitter is particularly suited to long form debate.
Hmmm… Lee says: October 3, 2013 at 3:34 am
Sarah – will do. I’ll tell him it’s an excellent review.
Dunno about you guys, but I certainly believe I deserve better than Haim. Way to go, girls, for perpetuating the airhead, glamor-girl stereotype (that, secretly, I’m sure my mum wished I could have been) and exploiting an old pop formula that’s already been played to death. If I had to listen to a whole album of this, I might sound like a “ranting buffoon”, too (and a less articulate one, at that). Erika Meyer says: October 3, 2013 at 4:20 am
Dorian Lynskey (in the twitter debate referenced above) referred to this review as “sexist” (also I think “stupid” and “reactionary”). When Wallace asked him to make an evidence-based defense of his accusation of sexism, he refused.
I’m not saying I agree with Scott that being childlike is a bad thing… even if too much pop music is too childlike too often… But I’ve never noticed Scott being in the slightest bit sexist in any of his reviews.
AFA their music… it seems like a “thing” now… new music that sounds like old music. In particular, the music we hated in the 1980s. THIS is how our children annoy us now.
My favorite thing about the review is of course the part of the review that was not about Haim, but about writer Karen Green.
So I think the pertinent question here is: how does Karen Green look in hot pants? RJC says: October 3, 2013 at 5:58 am
Caroline – this is indeed about the slow, depressing creep of society and popular music towards vapid, substanceless mediocrity, but it is also about pointing the finger at those complicit in this creep. Wayne Walls says: October 3, 2013 at 7:10 am
I would rather cut my ears off than listen to Haim Stevie M says: October 3, 2013 at 8:26 am
This is an excellent review and see nothing sexist about it at all. Uptight pc Brits don’t like pop music or anything with “girls with guitars” getting dissed no matter how bland they are and cry SEXISM if you dare to go against their expert opinions. Check the xx or coldplay for an example of bland UK bands of recent years all hyped initially by the NME and middlebrow media outlets like The Guardian. Rather than get behind creative bands like The New Puritans they have to go for safe and bland music.
What worries me with the state of critically adored rock and indie is that its so dull and watered down and SAFE which mean young rock fans might end up drifting to the awful actual misogynist sub-genre of rock -Heavy Metal than the once proud , intelligent bands in the rock genre. We need to save the kids from sweaty, spotty, sexless youths watching men in loincloths. Heavy Metal is the genre Dorian Lynskey , from that twitter exchange, espouses in the guardian and the quietus I think?
Why does Dorien not have a go at the misogyny in heavy metal or the fact that 99% of fans of black metal (who are ALL white) are racists? Tamsin Chapman says: October 3, 2013 at 8:43 am
I don’t understand why a gang of established Smug 4 Life journalists are so up in arms about a review by an unpaid critic who writes purely because he cares about music. *Everybody* knows Haim are terrible. And they’re Tories to boot. They sound like Wilson Phillips except without their one good song & interesting back story.
I actually disagree that Haim make music aimed at young people – it’s patently aimed at middle-aged men.I also even disagree it’s pop music at all. It’s MOR. The only young people I can imagine liking them are members of the Young Conservatives who find the charts “a bit urban”.
Pop music is about the now and the future. Beyonce makes great pop music. Kanye makes great pop music. Haim are retrograde, reactionary piffle. Music for people who are *satisfied* with themselves and their lives. Music for people who don’t like music.
No wonder Tracey Thorn likes them – I love the Marine Girls but let’s face it, Everything But The Girl were MOR too. I also think Courtney Love is partly to blame for all this. She started the critical rehabilitation of Fleetwood Mac. Fleetwood Mac (who apparently Haim are supposed to sound like) are also tedious MOR bollocks. I’m sorry but they are.
Music journalism used to be rockist (and that was shit), in theory it’s now supposed to be poptimist. It would be great if that were so – I live for pop music. But it bloody isn’t, it’s dominated by the middle-aged and the middle-of-the-road. Today, the Tories announced that if they win the next election they’ll strip all welfare benefits from the under 25s, leaving those young people abandoned or abused by their families to die on the streets. And a music review that you disagree with is what you choose to get angry about is it Dorian Lynskey? Fuck the gerontocracy Daz says: October 3, 2013 at 9:04 am
I fail to see how people have interpreted this review as sexist.
Haim sound like Hanson for a new generation.
What actually makes me curious is why one of the band members stands up behind a couch for an interview while David Cameron and another guest sit on a couch. WHY? RJC says: October 3, 2013 at 9:32 am
Tasmin Chapman is correct – Haim do not make music aimed at young people. I don’t know who they make their music for. Perhaps, in time-honoured tradition Haim ‘just make music for themselves and if anyone else likes it that’s a bonus’.
This is less about who Haim make their music for, but rather who their music is marketed at. Their music is marketed at middle aged men. Arguably middle aged white men.
“And I know I’m not the target audience for Haim, but if that’s the case, how come I have to see/hear them all over the place? I haven’t gone looking for Haim. They’re everywhere this week. And this review is my response…”
This is the straw man. If Creney weren’t the target audience for Haim then how is it he sees them everywhere he looks? He is the target audience. Marketing has just attempted to become more sophisticated.
Before I logged on here, I checked my emails. Oh look, there’s one from Amazon telling me that I might be interested in the new Haim album. I am a middle aged white male. Jodi says: October 3, 2013 at 9:37 am
Even as a frothing, rabid feminist, I can’t see anything sexist about this review. I can’t even really spot any direct references to gender at all (apart from in the purely descriptive pronoun sense).
That being said, I don’t think this is up to your usual standards, Scott. It makes you sound like a bitter old man. If you’re going to hate the music, at least spend more time talking about the music. This review reads like you listened to three songs one time and decided that they’re everything that’s wrong with The Youth Today.
Also fuck you right in the ass Stevie M, when you make statements like “…the fact that 99% of fans of black metal (who are ALL white) are racists…” you are actively damaging our side of the argument with your fucking rampant stupidity. Suzie2999 says: October 3, 2013 at 9:38 am
A heated debate about Haim? Really? RJC says: October 3, 2013 at 9:53 am
Argh. This isn’t about Haim. Lucy Cage says: October 3, 2013 at 10:04 am
I’ve been puzzling over the extraordinarily rabid response to this review all day; it seems so uncontroversial, dissing Haim for being bland, for not being good enough… why is that so hard to swallow? Most odd.
As far as I can tell though, the sexism critique made on Twitter was a poor reading of the review through the eyes of a smarting Haim fan who assumed that because Scott was suggesting that their pop is not good enough (and also that much mass-appeal pop is reflective more of the listener’s subjective experience rather than innate genius) he was:
a. a Hater of Pop in general b. making the fairly standard gendered critique wherein pop & its fandom is seen as female (and therefore lesser, dismissable, manufactured) and is set against high culture (worthy, complex, auteured).
To this crude view (even when made by white, middle-class, middle-aged, male writers with media-establishment platforms) pretty much any critique of female-produced pop = misogyny. The fact that Scott’s review is not making that argument in the slightest doesn’t seem to have discouraged them in banging it out over and over.
If there is any more substance to the sexism accusation than this, I would like to hear it. RJC says: October 3, 2013 at 10:21 am
Something is happening here, But you don’t know what it is Do you, Mr Lynskey? UnContainuhDrivuh says: October 3, 2013 at 10:53 am
the old serious journos who are defending haim are probably just dudes who want to sleep with the band. i know that’s being a bit direct, but really that’s probably the case.
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 3 October 2013 01:06 (eleven years ago) link
middlebrow media outlets like The Guardian
― the cat equivalent of love handles (bends), Thursday, 3 October 2013 01:14 (eleven years ago) link
which one of you lot is stevie m? Im not rising to the bait!
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 3 October 2013 01:19 (eleven years ago) link
― the objections to Drake from non-REAL HIPHOP people (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 3 October 2013 01:24 (eleven years ago) link
The two non-musicinternetppl friends I have who share my Haim obsession are both early-20s black lesbians, or, apparently, middle aged white men.
― The Reverend, Thursday, 3 October 2013 01:40 (eleven years ago) link
I’m sorry but they are.
Lol at poster Tamsin Chapman's unearned smugness. "I'm sorry to have to tell you the truth, but here you go, free of charge".
― Neanderthal, Thursday, 3 October 2013 01:44 (eleven years ago) link
No winners on that thread
― smangerz (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 3 October 2013 02:01 (eleven years ago) link
xp Heavy metal is pretty much the only genre I can't get into and I don't write for the Quietus but otherwise that comment is otm.
Impressed such a shitty review has so many fans though. He must be touching a chord with somebody.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 3 October 2013 08:58 (eleven years ago) link
I suspect Scott Creney himself is smart enough to know that if you write a provocative review and you provoke strong reactions then it's job done and not something to wail about.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 3 October 2013 09:02 (eleven years ago) link
It just makes me wonder why I bother spending months researching and writing well thought out pieces for my blog to minimal response, since I should obviously stamp my feet, stick my tongue out and sod facts and feelings to get attention because that's what people on the internet seem to want.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Thursday, 3 October 2013 09:10 (eleven years ago) link
The only thing people want is soundbites and controversy. See also: politics, news, etc.
― StanM, Thursday, 3 October 2013 09:24 (eleven years ago) link
Yes I know (sighs) - all people want is A Good Story.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Thursday, 3 October 2013 09:29 (eleven years ago) link
Yes it's depressing. Nice to see Bob Stanley mention TPL on the Guardian site today though.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 3 October 2013 09:38 (eleven years ago) link
And indeed he also mentions me (and Lena) in his Yeah Yeah Yeah book. Gladdens the heart, I must say.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Thursday, 3 October 2013 09:44 (eleven years ago) link
Someone's confusing DL with Doran.
My problem with the review is that half of it is a book review and the other half is just 'LOL Haim suck and you suck and PS I am great' with no actual proof to back any of these three points up.
― Pingu Unchained (dog latin), Thursday, 3 October 2013 09:58 (eleven years ago) link
I have no hair. Doran has all the hair.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 3 October 2013 10:08 (eleven years ago) link
is this the thread where we all agree that the horrible creney piece is horrible? i'm sorry but it is.
did make me want to listen to haim though.
― pervilege as a meme (contenderizer), Thursday, 3 October 2013 14:29 (eleven years ago) link
hmmm wait a min DL
Stevie M says:October 3, 2013 at 8:26 amThis is an excellent review and see nothing sexist about it at all. Uptight pc Brits don’t like pop music or anything with “girls with guitars” getting dissed no matter how bland they are and cry SEXISM if you dare to go against their expert opinions. Check the xx or coldplay for an example of bland UK bands of recent years all hyped initially by the NME and middlebrow media outlets like The Guardian. Rather than get behind creative bands like The New Puritans they have to go for safe and bland music.What worries me with the state of critically adored rock and indie is that its so dull and watered down and SAFE which mean young rock fans might end up drifting to the awful actual misogynist sub-genre of rock -Heavy Metal than the once proud , intelligent bands in the rock genre. We need to save the kids from sweaty, spotty, sexless youths watching men in loincloths.Heavy Metal is the genre Dorian Lynskey , from that twitter exchange, espouses in the guardian and the quietus I think?Why does Dorien not have a go at the misogyny in heavy metal or the fact that 99% of fans of black metal (who are ALL white) are racists?
What worries me with the state of critically adored rock and indie is that its so dull and watered down and SAFE which mean young rock fans might end up drifting to the awful actual misogynist sub-genre of rock -Heavy Metal than the once proud , intelligent bands in the rock genre. We need to save the kids from sweaty, spotty, sexless youths watching men in loincloths.Heavy Metal is the genre Dorian Lynskey , from that twitter exchange, espouses in the guardian and the quietus I think?
You think he's otm about metal being misogynistic and 99% of black metal fans are racist?
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 3 October 2013 15:25 (eleven years ago) link
I think Dorian is sarcastically saying the comment is so wrong in its facts that it can't possibly be anywhere near OTM in its assumptions.
― Unsettled defender (ithappens), Thursday, 3 October 2013 15:40 (eleven years ago) link
not all fans of black metal are white (at least judging by attendance at Immortal, Watain and Mayhem shows in Baltimore over the past year or so, where there were some black fans, and plenty of Latino fans in the mix)
and not all fans of black metal are racist either- you could go further and say that not even all fans of explicitly racist/Nazi black metal are racists, for that matter- listening isn't voting and it isn't necessarily a passive acceptance of the messages in the music (and I would also question whether the message within unintelligible distorted screeching/shrieking in a foreign language even constitutes a "message" at all for many listeners)
it would be dumb to deny that there are ideological and committed racists in black metal fandom. there are. but it's wrong to assume that the figure is anywhere close to 99%. that's just ignorant trolling disguised as ethical concern (and sadly typical of the way in which people instrumentalize politics on behalf of an ethical beauty contest that's mostly about feeling superior to someone else)
― the tune was space, Thursday, 3 October 2013 15:42 (eleven years ago) link
you could go further and say that not even all fans of explicitly racist/Nazi black metal are racists, for that matter- listening isn't voting and it isn't necessarily a passive acceptance of the messages in the music
I cannot accept this argument.
― smang culture (DJP), Thursday, 3 October 2013 15:44 (eleven years ago) link
xp Yeah, it was sarcasm. I don't think we need to waste time explaining why a confused Collapseboard commenter is wrong about metal.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 3 October 2013 15:46 (eleven years ago) link
I spend hours of my time reading sixteenth and seventeenth century religious propaganda which demonizes Catholics on behalf of radical Protestantism. I do that because it's also astonishingly beautiful poetry. But at no point do I side with, agree with, or endorse the hateful views which drive, say, Edmund Spenser's "Faerie Queene". The same dynamic- of seeing politically dangerous ideas for what they are, but not allowing that to totalize an artwork which operates on lots of levels in addition to its politically repellent ones- can obtain when listening to music, looking at paintings, or watching films. Politics and aesthetics can't be separated, ever. But they're not the same thing, ever. You can take both seriously, and in fact you have to if you're going to responsibly engage with art.
― the tune was space, Thursday, 3 October 2013 15:48 (eleven years ago) link
ok DL,just wanted to check!
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 3 October 2013 15:49 (eleven years ago) link
I get where DJP is coming from but also where dr3w is too esp re this (and I would also question whether the message within unintelligible distorted screeching/shrieking in a foreign language even constitutes a "message" at all for many listeners)
Extreme Metal seems to be a genre where lyrics do not matter so some can listen to say Burzum (who are not NSBM but the artist himself is a racist murdering fuckwit) as well as um ... Graveland whose lyrics are neo nazi. (not me, i refuse to listen to nsbm) Many can listen to it and not agree with the lyrics they cant make out and just go for the music. Doesnt make it right, but there's NO WAY 99% of Black Metal fans are racist. I doubt very much 99% of those misguided people who listen to NSBM are nazis either.
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 3 October 2013 15:55 (eleven years ago) link
Do you listen to Burzum AG? Just out of interest.
― Pingu Unchained (dog latin), Thursday, 3 October 2013 15:56 (eleven years ago) link
I don't feel it is the responsibility of people who are targets of oppression to work out which bits of the art created for purposes of helping continue their oppression are worth salvaging. I do take very personally art that explicitly rejects me or wishes ill on me and I feel no guilt about rejecting it right back, nor do I feel any guilt about wondering why others would expend energy looking for a reason to embrace it rather than reject it for its message.
― smang culture (DJP), Thursday, 3 October 2013 16:00 (eleven years ago) link
I get that. Life's too short to waste one's time bending over backwards to "understand" hateful creeps and jerks, and the project of "seeing the good" in X or Y when there are lots of non-toxic artworks to enjoy without such handicaps / drawbacks makes total sense to me. Nor should you feel any guilt at all about such rejection.
― the tune was space, Thursday, 3 October 2013 16:14 (eleven years ago) link
dog latin i listen sometimes to mp3s as id never ever buy his stuff and support him financially. Also remember that the great majority of his (good) material came out before he became known as a nazi (which started when he was in prison iirc) and his music has no nazi signifiers at all.
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 3 October 2013 16:17 (eleven years ago) link
I listen to anti-semitic music sometimes. I used to write about it in grad school and while I'd never 'enjoy' listening to it, I do find it compelling on some level. I'll listen to Burzum and other explicitly anti-Jewish artists occasionally - Absurd, is another one. I haven't really done it in a year or so, so I'm not ideologically opposed to the idea. Hate is a really interested affect. I'm not trying to find the good in evil, I'm explicitly trying to find the evil in evil.
― Mordy , Thursday, 3 October 2013 16:20 (eleven years ago) link
Posting that, though, it occurs to me that not only have I written similar posts on ILX before, but I think I've had exchanges about this very topic with DJP on ilx before. I guess I'm a broken record.
next time I'm in the same city with any of y'all, I'm buying a round
― smang culture (DJP), Thursday, 3 October 2013 16:59 (eleven years ago) link
philly yo i think we're already fb friends. i'll take u to my favorite bar.
― Mordy , Thursday, 3 October 2013 17:04 (eleven years ago) link
nsbm tbf is pretty easy to ignore. You dont really come across it as its a very tiny scene who acts dont sell much but It is a bugger however when you hear a track you like thats been posted on ILM aka Nokturnal Mortum and it turns out its nsbm.
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 3 October 2013 17:28 (eleven years ago) link
Oh cool this again
― smangerz (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 3 October 2013 18:04 (eleven years ago) link
Oh cool you saying 'Oh cool this again' again
― Pingu Unchained (dog latin), Thursday, 3 October 2013 19:26 (eleven years ago) link
Sorry he mistook you for me DL. And there'll always be room for you on the Quietus if you ever get the time or the inclination to write for us.
― Doran, Thursday, 3 October 2013 19:30 (eleven years ago) link
Thanks Doran. I wasn't saying I don't write for Quietus as a big "fuck no", just a statement of fact at the moment. I didn't twig that he'd confused Dorian with Doran so I was just baffled.
Anyway, what do you have to say about misogyny in heavy metal you big hypocrite? j/k
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 3 October 2013 19:47 (eleven years ago) link
What's wrong with being sexy? is my initial response.
I had a piece on dubstep submitted to me once by a very well respected scribe who claimed that any misogyny in dubstep and grime was caused solely by the influence of one scene DJ who used to be a metalhead and that it had to be "that whole Beavis and Butthead thing" that he'd brought over with him, like the shipbound rat who brought the black plague to Norway in 1349. So there you have it 'Bell Dem Slags' by The Newham Generals - obviously the fault of Manowar and/or Tankard.
― Doran, Thursday, 3 October 2013 21:16 (eleven years ago) link
"the black plague" being the "black death"... my true white supremacist black metal nature shining through unfortunately for a second there.
― Doran, Thursday, 3 October 2013 21:18 (eleven years ago) link
wait, Manowar are gay shurely?
― lusty thoughts of big, strong, powerful hipsters (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 3 October 2013 21:25 (eleven years ago) link
I believe they're very happy at what they do, yes.
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 3 October 2013 21:39 (eleven years ago) link
All rock and roll is homosexual. Apart from Cold Chisel.
― Doran, Thursday, 3 October 2013 21:40 (eleven years ago) link
I had a piece on dubstep submitted to me once by a very well respected scribe who claimed that any misogyny in dubstep and grime was caused solely by the influence of one scene DJ who used to be a metalhead and that it had to be "that whole Beavis and Butthead thing"
Kevin Martin getting the blame?
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 3 October 2013 21:40 (eleven years ago) link
*Everybody* knows Haim are terrible. And they’re Tories to boot.
What
― polyphonic, Thursday, 3 October 2013 21:45 (eleven years ago) link
Scuba? (xpost)
― My god. Pure ideology. (ey), Thursday, 3 October 2013 21:49 (eleven years ago) link
Apparently people are taking the fact that they posed with Cameron because they were booked on a show together after dedicating a fairly meanspirited song to him as deeply indicative of their politics.
― The Reverend, Thursday, 3 October 2013 21:57 (eleven years ago) link
XP: It wasn't Scuba but you're along the right kind of lines. I can't even remember the guy's name but he used to be in some Kerrang! style band for five minutes "back in the day".
― Doran, Thursday, 3 October 2013 22:08 (eleven years ago) link
for those not reading the Haim threadhttp://www.collapseboard.com/everett-true/haim-an-open-letter-to-christopher-r-weingarten/
whiney has now replied
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Friday, 4 October 2013 23:42 (eleven years ago) link
And you're the kind of girl I like / Because you're empty and I'm empty / And you can never quarantine the past..And if I go there, I won't stay there / Because I'm sitting here too long
^^ the haim debate imho
― Saul Goodberg (by Musket and Pup Tent) (s.clover), Sunday, 6 October 2013 06:38 (eleven years ago) link
m8, "when the war is over" is a bit of a poofta song
― hipster racist (King Boy Pato), Monday, 7 October 2013 12:37 (eleven years ago) link
also, while I'm here, just gonna point out that Everett True *chose* to live in Brisbane
this means he *chose* to live in an almost culture-less city because anything more would distract from furiously typing out pissweak troll blogs
― hipster racist (King Boy Pato), Monday, 7 October 2013 12:44 (eleven years ago) link
@jordansarge 8hif you're a white hipster who denies miley cyrus it is because you have a superiority complex about your own appropriation@jordansarge 8hif you go to cool brooklyn dance parties you will see much sloppier racial appropriation than what miley cyrus has done@jordansarge 8hthere is institutionalized racism in miley cyrus' visuals but at least as a pop star she is forced to reconcile with her decisions
@jordansarge 8hif you go to cool brooklyn dance parties you will see much sloppier racial appropriation than what miley cyrus has done
@jordansarge 8hthere is institutionalized racism in miley cyrus' visuals but at least as a pop star she is forced to reconcile with her decisions
― Bitch Fantastic (DJP), Monday, 7 October 2013 12:50 (eleven years ago) link
twitter was the worst thing to happen to music journalism since the internet
― Defund Phil Collins (stevie), Monday, 7 October 2013 12:52 (eleven years ago) link
"cool brooklyn dance parties"
― Saul Goodberg (by Musket and Pup Tent) (s.clover), Monday, 7 October 2013 12:58 (eleven years ago) link
but what if you're a white non hipster who doesnt like it?
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Monday, 7 October 2013 13:36 (eleven years ago) link
i had an answer to that in the other thread
― Bap & Ounge (Noodle Vague), Monday, 7 October 2013 13:37 (eleven years ago) link
white tweeter
― velko, Monday, 7 October 2013 15:21 (eleven years ago) link
when did you stop tweeting you're white
― Saul Goodberg (by Musket and Pup Tent) (s.clover), Monday, 7 October 2013 15:28 (eleven years ago) link
― Defund Phil Collins (stevie), Monday, October 7, 2013 7:52 AM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
yes
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Monday, 7 October 2013 15:37 (eleven years ago) link
that was not music writing (or else i would have wrote something!)
― J0rdan S., Monday, 7 October 2013 15:42 (eleven years ago) link
Using "cool Brooklyn dance parties" as a counter-weight to your argument is gonna allow you to reach all kinds of places
― REDACTED got your back (flamboyant goon tie included), Monday, 7 October 2013 16:51 (eleven years ago) link
Cool Brooklyn Georgetown cocktail dance parties
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 7 October 2013 16:54 (eleven years ago) link
having lived in brooklyn for 8 months i can confirm that nothing here is cool
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Monday, 7 October 2013 18:37 (eleven years ago) link
literally nothing
your Mexican food is cool
― the objections to Drake from non-REAL HIPHOP people (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 7 October 2013 18:52 (eleven years ago) link
the weird old stationery and technical office supply store down by the fulton st. mall is pretty cool
― pervilege as a meme (contenderizer), Monday, 7 October 2013 19:49 (eleven years ago) link
white hipsters move to brooklyn, complain about white hipsters in brooklyn
― The Reverend, Monday, 7 October 2013 20:15 (eleven years ago) link
― J0rdan S., Monday, 7 October 2013 20:16 (eleven years ago) link
the first of those tweets is maybe a bit sloppy but the last two seem otm to me?
― flopson, Monday, 7 October 2013 20:19 (eleven years ago) link
where brookyln at?
(a cool dance party)
― lorde willin' (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 7 October 2013 20:23 (eleven years ago) link
This sounds like the worst thing
― maura, Monday, 7 October 2013 20:30 (eleven years ago) link
i swear to god all this shit about riff raff and miley cyrus is just like going through that entire cycle of history all over again
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Monday, 7 October 2013 21:41 (eleven years ago) link
the script is already written, but everyone under the age of 27 has cultural amnesia
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Monday, 7 October 2013 21:42 (eleven years ago) link
besides the fact that jordan's argument paradoxically sets him falling exactly into the trap he decries (and honestly I thought he was smarter than that -- white people decrying white people doesn't become any better when you add a layer to it, no it gets even worse), I'm not sure how it's helpful to a) bring up an extreme example from almost ten years ago as if that's any sort of norm or excuses anything else (I mean, come on, you can't take issue with miley because tha pumpsta?) and more importantly, b) ignore people of color in those scenes?
― The Reverend, Monday, 7 October 2013 21:51 (eleven years ago) link
I mean, I'm sure if there are black people in Brooklyn, and that's a big if, none of them ever go to cool dance parties.
― The Reverend, Monday, 7 October 2013 21:52 (eleven years ago) link
I just posted a link! I didn't editorialize! It was more a "circle of life" type comment than anything else.
― maura, Monday, 7 October 2013 22:08 (eleven years ago) link
yeah jordan's argument is funny as an observation of the narc of sd required to be a hipster who loves rap / wears vaguely hip hop clothing & who really really hates miley cyrus
but as a defense of miley cyrus it doesnt work b/c godwin's law
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Monday, 7 October 2013 22:16 (eleven years ago) link
jordan's argument works bc it's obv satirizing how identity issues in pop culture are always subordinate to taste + preference. appropriation is only a problem when it's aesthetically unappealing.
― Mordy , Monday, 7 October 2013 22:19 (eleven years ago) link
you cant separate aesthetics/taste from identity issues tho (although white ppl are more likely to pretend you can ime)
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Monday, 7 October 2013 22:22 (eleven years ago) link
or, i should say, u can't always, although there are plenty of hypocrisies that crop up when ppl try to act as if they're always completely overlapping
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Monday, 7 October 2013 22:39 (eleven years ago) link
mexican food in new york is warm bullshit
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Monday, 7 October 2013 22:55 (eleven years ago) link
but Brooklyn isn't New York is it
― the objections to Drake from non-REAL HIPHOP people (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 7 October 2013 22:56 (eleven years ago) link
look I was in a heavily Mexican part of Bushwick last month and after an afternoon of scotch a buddy's girlfriend disappeared and returned with $5 worth of mole and chicharrones and I proposed to her.
― the objections to Drake from non-REAL HIPHOP people (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 7 October 2013 22:58 (eleven years ago) link
lol haven't gone so far as bushwick but i took a trip back to san francisco last year and confirmed the difference in burrito quality is genuinely profound
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Monday, 7 October 2013 23:01 (eleven years ago) link
a profound burrito
― lorde willin' (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 7 October 2013 23:06 (eleven years ago) link
of all the things to brag about in new york mexican food is at the bottom of the list
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 00:09 (eleven years ago) link
http://images.fineartamerica.com/images-medium-large/dog-with-glasses-retales-botijero.jpg
look I was in a heavily Mexican part of Bushwick last month
― smangerz (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 00:55 (eleven years ago) link
Who are the self-clowning ovens of ILX?
― excited about the intentional phallus-y (sarahell), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 01:02 (eleven years ago) link
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Monday, October 7, 2013 8:09 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
^^ truth bomb.
― Saul Goodberg (by Musket and Pup Tent) (s.clover), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 01:27 (eleven years ago) link
All The Tacos Love You in New York
― Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 8 October 2013 02:37 (eleven years ago) link
differences aren't that small here.
― excited about the intentional phallus-y (sarahell), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 04:25 (eleven years ago) link
default burrito experience imo
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 04:34 (eleven years ago) link
i used to work at 16th and Capp in SF -- got tired of burritos tbrr
― excited about the intentional phallus-y (sarahell), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 04:36 (eleven years ago) link
burritos w/e, its about tacos
― Saul Goodberg (by Musket and Pup Tent) (s.clover), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 04:39 (eleven years ago) link
italian food >>>>>> mexican food
― excited about the intentional phallus-y (sarahell), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 04:43 (eleven years ago) link
― excited about the intentional phallus-y (sarahell), Monday, October 7, 2013 11:25 PM (22 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
i think we disagree
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 04:49 (eleven years ago) link
how does loving rap and hating miley cyrus equal a small difference?
― excited about the intentional phallus-y (sarahell), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 04:51 (eleven years ago) link
is OK, is this the worst piece of music writing ever? about to become the worst music writing ever? find out after a message from our sponsors
― ^^ post obviously honoring and supporting Qualcomm (zachlyon), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 04:53 (eleven years ago) link
Zach, I love you with a love usually reserved for friends and pop stars.
― Murgatroid, Tuesday, 8 October 2013 05:00 (eleven years ago) link
heavens to you!
― ^^ post obviously honoring and supporting Qualcomm (zachlyon), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 05:01 (eleven years ago) link
Murgatroid, do you like Miss Murgatroid?
― excited about the intentional phallus-y (sarahell), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 05:02 (eleven years ago) link
I'm not here for no Q&As. Back to awful music writing please.
― Murgatroid, Tuesday, 8 October 2013 05:05 (eleven years ago) link
― excited about the intentional phallus-y (sarahell), Monday, October 7, 2013 11:51 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
im talking about instagram selfies of folks in beanies who love rap music talking all down on miley for basically appreciating rap on the same level they do
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 05:08 (eleven years ago) link
i thought it was because they hated her music?
― excited about the intentional phallus-y (sarahell), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 05:09 (eleven years ago) link
the two go hand in hand, we're plowing our way into strawman territory here and for the record i realize i'm about to argue with sarahell about hipsters so i'm gonna close the computer and go to sleep buuuuut ime there are people in brooklyn and elsewhere that would like miley's music if it was in a context that wasn't "a person that looks like me but who i perceive to be worse at interacting with the culture of rap music than me"
― J0rdan S., Tuesday, 8 October 2013 05:16 (eleven years ago) link
there is a broad range of aesthetics in rap music -- you'd need to be more specific to be convincing -- are you talking about stuff that sounds like Miley but the singer happens to be black? Otherwise, you're saying the equivalent of "ppl who like darkthrone and gorguts are fronting if they say that guns n roses suck balls"
― excited about the intentional phallus-y (sarahell), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 05:23 (eleven years ago) link
http://media-social.s-msn.com/images/blogs/002a0065-0000-0000-0000-000000000000_00000065-06d4-0000-0000-000000000000_20130424224142_marky%20mark.jpg
― scott seward, Tuesday, 8 October 2013 05:23 (eleven years ago) link
or let's put it this way: I know more than one person making fun of miley for appropriation who makes awful jokes about twerking where the punchline is "look, I said 'twerking,' what a wacky and ironic man am I"
― katherine, Tuesday, 8 October 2013 06:19 (eleven years ago) link
let's just agree that people are awful
― Bap & Ounge (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 06:23 (eleven years ago) link
ok katherine, you know more than one person, you win the argument!
― excited about the intentional phallus-y (sarahell), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 06:28 (eleven years ago) link
fyi the raison d'être for music critics is shades of whiteness
― hipster racist (King Boy Pato), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 08:38 (eleven years ago) link
at least their etre has a raison
― Defund Phil Collins (stevie), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 09:14 (eleven years ago) link
it's almost funny but needs twerk.
― Mark G, Tuesday, 8 October 2013 09:17 (eleven years ago) link
put a twerk on it
― Moodles, Tuesday, 8 October 2013 13:23 (eleven years ago) link
did somebody do a twerking for the weeknd joke yet?
― Saul Goodberg (by Musket and Pup Tent) (s.clover), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 21:41 (eleven years ago) link
here's another
http://24.media.tumblr.com/23aa8a2a566f38f9982f282b217852dc/tumblr_mfixhfcMOX1r0yh5io1_500.gif
― the objections to Drake from non-REAL HIPHOP people (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 8 October 2013 21:46 (eleven years ago) link
Interesting piece in last night's Evening Standard: http://www.standard.co.uk/comment/amol-rajan-its-high-time-london-got-its-reggae-mojo-back-8866456.html
― mahb, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 12:09 (eleven years ago) link
lol that's amazing
― I like to tackle hard and am crazy (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 12:11 (eleven years ago) link
Wow
Long experience has taught me that you have to be fabulously stoned to enjoy dub step in its purest form, it being a genre of music designed to void reggae of its main virtues: beat, lyrics, soul.
First, what a shame reggae has been near hijacked by the cult of Rastafarianism.
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 12:14 (eleven years ago) link
so bitter that Gospel has been hijacked by the cult of Christianity
― I like to tackle hard and am crazy (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 12:15 (eleven years ago) link
Going through my reggae collection, removing anything tainted by Rastafarianism. Left with Uptown Top Ranking.
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 12:21 (eleven years ago) link
"Dreadlock Holiday" probly doesn't count
― I like to tackle hard and am crazy (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 12:24 (eleven years ago) link
You need some Yabby You
― gotta lol geir (NickB), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 12:25 (eleven years ago) link
Amol Rajan is editor of The Independent.
So wait, was this the guy that cut Simon Price loose??
― gotta lol geir (NickB), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 12:29 (eleven years ago) link
No, SP worked for the Indy on Sunday - different editors.
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 12:31 (eleven years ago) link
Is he not 28 or something?
― Inte Regina Lund eller nån, mitt namn är (ShariVari), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 12:32 (eleven years ago) link
oh okay, thanks DL xp
― gotta lol geir (NickB), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 12:35 (eleven years ago) link
He's very young. Just realised what his column reminds me of.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXRuWshJH0c
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 12:37 (eleven years ago) link
dude i love those Paul Nicholas records
― I like to tackle hard and am crazy (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 12:38 (eleven years ago) link
I think it might be possible for a 70s reggae fan to argue the case, in a manner that doesn't make you want to slap them, that the commercial split in the genre between dancehall and 'conscious' reggae has led to the increasing domination of Rastafarian themes - but he's falling quite a long way short here.
― Inte Regina Lund eller nån, mitt namn är (ShariVari), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 12:49 (eleven years ago) link
so in summary this dude loves Congo Natty's back catalogue but doesn't know what kind of music it is and is completely unfamiliar with its lyrical content. righto
― when I was Ted Croker man I couldn't picture this (DJ Mencap), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 12:54 (eleven years ago) link
i don't really get any sense of whether he's bemoaning the changes in Reggae's musical form or the absence of club nights playing classics or segregation in the audience or not being able to smoke weed any more tbh
not sure whether "dub step" is meant to be "dubstep" or "dub" either
― I like to tackle hard and am crazy (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 12:58 (eleven years ago) link
In the meantime, Jah bless.
― Neil S, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 13:18 (eleven years ago) link
I'm sure it said "dub" in the print ed., but I might have misread
― mahb, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 15:12 (eleven years ago) link
i cd've sworn the online verzh said just "dub" the first time i read it but maybe my brain elided the step
― I like to tackle hard and am crazy (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 15:15 (eleven years ago) link
No, it was "dub step" in the paper last night (xpost)
― Just noise and screaming and no musical value at all. (Colonel Poo), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 15:18 (eleven years ago) link
This guy edits the Independent? Wtf?
― Pingu Unchained (dog latin), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 19:25 (eleven years ago) link
Standard editor clearly thinking "give him enough rope" by running this imo
― sktsh, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 20:36 (eleven years ago) link
A previous article by the editor of the independenthttp://www.independent.co.uk/voices/commentators/amol-rajan-how-about-a-reggae-anthem-to-inspire-the-nation-8030765.html
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 21:35 (eleven years ago) link
what a weirdo
― lorde willin' (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 22:02 (eleven years ago) link
that this guy is all jah bless, while simon price is all jobless is a national scandal
― gotta lol geir (NickB), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 22:04 (eleven years ago) link
New winner here. Holy fuck.
Near the end of the slow burning “Key/Hole”, for instance, he kicks in a raw cacophony and lets the guitar screech. He may not be playing with a screwdriver or attempting to make Michael Gira’s ears bleed, but throughout Night on Earth, Ranaldo takes a step back and realizes that—oh, that’s right—he was in Sonic Youth. And he thrashed.
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Thursday, 10 October 2013 07:50 (eleven years ago) link
Oh, Ranaldo's lyrics don't have the 'storytelling deftness' (actual quote, no shit) of Robert Hunter's? Ignoring for a moment the fact that Robert Hunter rarely wrote 'story' songs, it seems to me this reviewer read Lee's recent piece on the Dead and structured his entire review around the specious idea of Ranaldo and the Dust as a 'jam band,' pesky facts be damned. I get the feeling that if Lee had instead written a billet-doux to, oh, I don't know, Kriss Kross, St John might be complaining that the cadences heard on Last Night on Earth aren't as 'poignantly riveting' as Daddy Mack's.
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Thursday, 10 October 2013 07:52 (eleven years ago) link
you tell 'em, son
― I like to tackle hard and am crazy (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 10 October 2013 07:53 (eleven years ago) link
has this been linked yet?
http://www.theguardian.com/music/2013/oct/08/school-of-pop
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 10 October 2013 07:55 (eleven years ago) link
from the comments: I kind of rely on well informed Guardian commenters to expand upon my limited range of references, as you have done.
― Defund Phil Collins (stevie), Thursday, 10 October 2013 09:16 (eleven years ago) link
Almost the only aspect of being paid to write columns that is not highly pleasurable is being scooped.
― Pingu Unchained (dog latin), Thursday, 10 October 2013 09:22 (eleven years ago) link
old dude be old
― Neil S, Thursday, 10 October 2013 09:27 (eleven years ago) link
Amol Rajan should write a book on reggae. What would it be called I wonder?
― Pingu Unchained (dog latin), Thursday, 10 October 2013 09:30 (eleven years ago) link
I'd imagine rereading such dogshit columns before submitting them must be quite painful too, though its clear that the reggae guy doesn't actually reread his stuff before sending it.
― Defund Phil Collins (stevie), Thursday, 10 October 2013 09:30 (eleven years ago) link
He's the editor of the fucking Independent. wtf.
― they all are afflicted with a sickness of existence (Scik Mouthy), Thursday, 10 October 2013 09:42 (eleven years ago) link
The weird thing is that he actually seems to know quite a lot about reggae - he must have actively worked to come across as so clueless and objectionable.
― Inte Regina Lund eller nån, mitt namn är (ShariVari), Thursday, 10 October 2013 09:46 (eleven years ago) link
http://www.independent.co.uk/incoming/article8514227.ece/ALTERNATES/w460/Amol_Rajan_crisps.jpg
― gotta lol geir (NickB), Thursday, 10 October 2013 09:48 (eleven years ago) link
needs some Reggae Reggae Sauce on those crisps
― Neil S, Thursday, 10 October 2013 09:52 (eleven years ago) link
andrew collins' blog is the smuggest piece of shit in the world
― the Shearer of simulated snowsex etc. (Dwight Yorke), Thursday, 10 October 2013 09:53 (eleven years ago) link
do i have to cross out the "s' blog" there?
― I like to tackle hard and am crazy (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 10 October 2013 10:38 (eleven years ago) link
modern chart pop – industrially produced by a risk-averse industry for distracted tweens who generally get to vote for the artists they'd like to perform it – is no longer required to induce academic curiosity
Apples and oranges, this. All of his old examples are art-rock or post-punk, apart from the mighty Boney M.
Likewise this: The National Literary Trust study found that 21.5% of young people agreed with the statement: "I would be embarrassed if my friends saw me read." This jars with my fond teenage memory of poring over lyrics with friends in the gatefold-sleeve era. I'm sure some of the other 78.5% do the equivalent now.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 10 October 2013 10:44 (eleven years ago) link
That piece is maddening and lazy and loads of people argued with it beneath the fold and so therefore it generated lots of clicks and so therefore it justified itself as "paid journalism" but really this isn't why I "got into" writing about music, and certainly not what I read it for. Also his books are wincingly poor "Do u remember spangles and white dog poo?" dogshit.
― Defund Phil Collins (stevie), Thursday, 10 October 2013 10:47 (eleven years ago) link
modern clickbait "journalism" – industrially produced by a risk-averse industry for distracted twenty-somethings who generally get to vote for the writers they'd like to perform it – is no longer required to induce academic curiosity
― I like to tackle hard and am crazy (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 10 October 2013 10:49 (eleven years ago) link
he literally writes impassioned 4000 word posts where he cries about people not putting their british library carrier bags back in the box properly
― the Shearer of simulated snowsex etc. (Dwight Yorke), Thursday, 10 October 2013 10:54 (eleven years ago) link
I'm wary of the phrase "clickbait" tbh. There's always been a need for eyeballs and a disappointing willingness to run sloppily argued "provocative" columns, long before the internet. AC isn't a product of the SEO era - he was writing like this in the NME 20 years ago.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 10 October 2013 10:57 (eleven years ago) link
30 years ago.
― they all are afflicted with a sickness of existence (Scik Mouthy), Thursday, 10 October 2013 11:04 (eleven years ago) link
I'm wary of the phrase "clickbait" tbh.
Just makes me think of the song(?) "Slug Bait" by Throbbing Gristle
― Tommy McTommy (Tom D.), Thursday, 10 October 2013 11:09 (eleven years ago) link
https://fbcdn-sphotos-c-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash3/1391487_10151956929613834_974845207_n.jpg
― Defund Phil Collins (stevie), Thursday, 10 October 2013 22:34 (eleven years ago) link
Tory reggae could totally be a thing.
― In times of osterity, these Eton-educated poshboys (Bananaman Begins), Friday, 11 October 2013 09:23 (eleven years ago) link
Jah Trustafar-i
― Defund Phil Collins (stevie), Friday, 11 October 2013 09:33 (eleven years ago) link
How long shall they kill our profits/ while we stand aside and look
― In times of osterity, these Eton-educated poshboys (Bananaman Begins), Friday, 11 October 2013 10:43 (eleven years ago) link
New winner
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/men/thinking-man/10358000/Dave-Berry-the-10-albums-every-man-should-own.html
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:13 (eleven years ago) link
Fuck me.
― they all are afflicted with a sickness of existence (Scik Mouthy), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:16 (eleven years ago) link
nggghhh
― Evil Juice Box Man (LocalGarda), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:16 (eleven years ago) link
I like "Survivor's legendary basslines" but, "quite simply", it's all Partridge gold.
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:18 (eleven years ago) link
During some of the naughtiest times in my life this has been the soundtrack that has turned me into "the special cuddle king".
I can't even begin to get my head around this.
― Many guys will try to get your attention by giving a manly stare (bends), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:22 (eleven years ago) link
The first line is a quote just to be clear, I forgot the italics.
― Many guys will try to get your attention by giving a manly stare (bends), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:23 (eleven years ago) link
i'm reading this as excellent satire on a certain vision of masculinity, surely?
― footballer of the future (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:42 (eleven years ago) link
This guy should be chained to a lambretta and thrown in a slurry pit.
― gotta lol geir (NickB), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:46 (eleven years ago) link
"I didn't want to include "best ofs" in this list it's cheating. But if I'm honest I don't know enough about the great John to recommend a specific album."
I ...
― Mark G, Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:49 (eleven years ago) link
Actually, I'd have more respect for him if he said "These are the only albums I own"
― Mark G, Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:50 (eleven years ago) link
Anyway, truth time:
How Many Of These Do You Own?
(you can only answer if you're a MAN mind)
― Mark G, Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:51 (eleven years ago) link
(five)
― Mark G, Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:52 (eleven years ago) link
hmmm, allow me to qualify what i was about to post "only owning 10 obvious churl-rock records is exactly part of that vision of masculinity i was thinking about."
― footballer of the future (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:53 (eleven years ago) link
Our Amber owns the Ed Sheeran one, but she's not a MAN so it did not count. (oh, and she's not me obv)
― Mark G, Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:53 (eleven years ago) link
I don't actually think it's wrong to pick a JLH compilation and if I was trying to introduce him to someone, that would be the way I'd go too. This guy is still a bellend though.
― gotta lol geir (NickB), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:54 (eleven years ago) link
Dave Berry needs to know it's okay to not really be into music much. also didn't he put out some records in the 60s?
― footballer of the future (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:55 (eleven years ago) link
I am 10% man ("Dummy").
― Michael Jones, Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:55 (eleven years ago) link
there's some kind of aporia happening around the whole "i need to think in terms of the album so i am ashamed to acknowledge the compilation album as an album even tho i like these songs" waltz that idiots do
― footballer of the future (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:57 (eleven years ago) link
Trying to think who this other Dave Berry was but can only remember this guy instead:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OL2t2Pu2Z44
― gotta lol geir (NickB), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:57 (eleven years ago) link
http://www.cryinggame.co.uk/
― footballer of the future (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:59 (eleven years ago) link
I don't actually think it's wrong to pick a JLH compilation and if I was trying to introduce him to someone, that would be the way I'd go too.
Nor do I, it was more the "I don't know anything about his albums" bit.
― Mark G, Wednesday, 16 October 2013 10:59 (eleven years ago) link
ILM needs a Mike Berry thread stat, wash away the taste of laughing at the unfortunates
Had not heard The Crying Game before, so thanks thread & NV for introducing me to it. Actually I lie cos apparently the Boy George version was used in Ace Ventura: Pet Detective, but that somehow didn't make much of an impression on me.
― gotta lol geir (NickB), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:07 (eleven years ago) link
"The Crying Game" is a fantastic record which is why they made a film about it.
― footballer of the future (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:10 (eleven years ago) link
Hmm yes, I admit I have not seen that film. Only Ace Ventura: Pet Detective.
Maybe a big Mike Berry vs Paul Nicholas vs Dennis Waterman vs ??? poll would be the way to go, it's the ILM way
― gotta lol geir (NickB), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:11 (eleven years ago) link
who is the ??? though
― gotta lol geir (NickB), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:12 (eleven years ago) link
said this earlier on top, top social networking website Facebook but I doubt most people who think of themselves as 'serious music fans' could name a John Lee Hooker studio album. most canon blues artists are best served by compilations right?
― when I was Ted Croker man I couldn't picture this (DJ Mencap), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:13 (eleven years ago) link
Paul Nicholas in a heartbeat unless we can find a serious challenger
― footballer of the future (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:14 (eleven years ago) link
most canon blues artists released all their best records as singles so it has to be compilations really
― footballer of the future (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:15 (eleven years ago) link
David Essex too heavyweight for the 70s Britpop throwdown?
Yeah he would walk it. Was he an actor turned singer though? Thought he was the other way round.
― gotta lol geir (NickB), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:17 (eleven years ago) link
Oh wait, Paul Nicholas was a singer first too, so that doesn't work.
― gotta lol geir (NickB), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:18 (eleven years ago) link
Paul Shane? If we're going down the sing-your-own-show's-theme route.
― Michael Jones, Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:18 (eleven years ago) link
True but you would miss out on glorious stuff like Muddy Waters' Electric Mud
― gotta lol geir (NickB), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:19 (eleven years ago) link
Paul Shane is a good call, but then I feel you'd have to add Don Estelle and Windsor Davies and that wouldn't be a fair fight.
― gotta lol geir (NickB), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:22 (eleven years ago) link
mirror straining for the zing:http://www.mirror.co.uk/lifestyle/going-out/music/move-over-dave-berry-tell-2458656
― as a chocolate salesperson (ledge), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:24 (eleven years ago) link
was just pondering Don Estelle.
as i often do.
― footballer of the future (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:25 (eleven years ago) link
On the plus side, new display names ahoy!
― I like to think I have learnt a thing or two about music (Neil S), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:25 (eleven years ago) link
i think of Paul Nicholas and David Essex as proper pop artists, whilst accepting they might be perceived as being a shade kitsch
― footballer of the future (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:27 (eleven years ago) link
From the Mirror: Weirdly, there’s never been an album called The Very Best Of The Beatles. Probably something to do with Yoko.
No, but there's an album compiling all their No.1 singles, you complete and utter dipshit.
― Defund Phil Collins (stevie), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:47 (eleven years ago) link
his byline pic is...unfortunate
― Number None, Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:50 (eleven years ago) link
Pulp Fiction - The Motion Picture SoundtrackAn education. As a 15-year-old boy living in south east London I never expected I'd be blasting Al Green, Kool & The Gang and Neil Diamond out of my stereo.
An education: Neil Diamond is not on that album.
― Are you a horse? (onimo), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:56 (eleven years ago) link
Curious about the timeline for that statement, like when did he never expect this, before he'd heard them? How could this be the case?
― Evil Juice Box Man (LocalGarda), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:58 (eleven years ago) link
Was down to Elton John before I realised for sure that the second article was a piss-take.
― Many guys will try to get your attention by giving a manly stare (bends), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 11:59 (eleven years ago) link
well for the first two i think he just meant black people generally xpost
― Number None, Wednesday, 16 October 2013 12:00 (eleven years ago) link
Couple of awesome lines in the Mirror riposte.
― I can still taste the Taboo in my mouth when I hear those songs (Scik Mouthy), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 12:16 (eleven years ago) link
http://img2.imagesbn.com/p/9781449437589_p0_v1_s260x420.JPG
― wooden shjipley (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 12:20 (eleven years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AbMSUQE36us
― Tommy McTommy (Tom D.), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 12:41 (eleven years ago) link
Over my 10-year career I've worked on MTV, 4Music, and hosted the V, Homelands, iTunes and Isle of Wight music festivals. I've hosted radio shows on XFM and Capital FM, and like to think I have learnt a thing or two about music.
http://www.smh.com.au/ffximage/2006/10/12/paulrobinson_wideweb__470x348,0.jpg
― My question is primarily riparian (Phil D.), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 12:41 (eleven years ago) link
The original Dave Berry has a pretty good reputation, Ray Davies wrote some songs for him in the 60s, I don't think I've ever heard him though
― Tommy McTommy (Tom D.), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 12:43 (eleven years ago) link
― Number None, Wednesday, October 16, 2013 12:00 PM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
this kind of thing makes me want to side with Dave Berry tbph
― when I was Ted Croker man I couldn't picture this (DJ Mencap), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 13:58 (eleven years ago) link
A response to the responsehttp://www.telegraph.co.uk/men/thinking-man/10383450/Dave-Berrys-10-best-albums-a-further-thought.html
― ۩, Wednesday, 16 October 2013 15:30 (eleven years ago) link
Being the owner of a powerboat and speaking a little conversational French, I think it's safe to say that I understand a LITTLE BIT about the MUSIC INDUSTRYhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UXCwgHyAgAw
― Has talent, needs to figure out how to improve (staggerlee), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 18:46 (eleven years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KiLw45oAuD0
― Luigi Nono, le petit robot, actually (seandalai), Wednesday, 16 October 2013 20:49 (eleven years ago) link
When Telegraph Men (the men's section of the Telegraph)
― ^^ post obviously honoring and supporting Qualcomm (zachlyon), Thursday, 17 October 2013 00:03 (eleven years ago) link
pretty sure most of the Telegraph's the men's section of the Telegraph tbh.
― Defund Phil Collins (stevie), Thursday, 17 October 2013 09:16 (eleven years ago) link
Oof, this is awful.
― JACK SQUAT about these Charlie Nobodies (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Monday, 4 November 2013 16:29 (eleven years ago) link
BURN IT WITH FIRE. I wish I could un-read that.
― Has talent, needs to figure out how to improve (staggerlee), Monday, 4 November 2013 16:34 (eleven years ago) link
Hey, this is catchy, Lester says as he lights up, but how come there’s no clicks or hiss? Explaining how a download works to the ghost of Lester Bangs turns out to be quite difficult.
― how's life, Monday, 4 November 2013 16:39 (eleven years ago) link
stfu "Lester"
― I like to think I have learnt a thing or two about music (Neil S), Monday, 4 November 2013 16:39 (eleven years ago) link
Charles Shitter more like.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Monday, 4 November 2013 16:45 (eleven years ago) link
I hope Lester's ghost haunts this guy for eternity.
― JACK SQUAT about these Charlie Nobodies (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Monday, 4 November 2013 16:46 (eleven years ago) link
Fuck me. At first I thought it was some kind of meta point, but it's just not, is it? It's just thick.
― I can still taste the Taboo in my mouth when I hear those songs (Scik Mouthy), Monday, 4 November 2013 16:47 (eleven years ago) link
all this stupid political correctness that everyone forces on everyone else
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Monday, 4 November 2013 16:58 (eleven years ago) link
CAN I GET A WITNESS PEOPLE
that was how far i got, btw
can anyone beat me?
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Monday, 4 November 2013 17:01 (eleven years ago) link
This guy clearly hasn't been at this long. This just feels like the kind of trick that newbies try. Be kind, is what I'm saying; this guy could get better, or he could soon realize he has no talent for this.
― a fifth of misty beethoven (cryptosicko), Monday, 4 November 2013 17:06 (eleven years ago) link
That kind of eminently reasonable attitude isn't going to bring lols when I'm bored at work, so everyone shd clown this douche imo
― In times of osterity, these Eton-educated poshboys (Bananaman Begins), Monday, 4 November 2013 17:11 (eleven years ago) link
^^^
― the doleful cant of a bigot blinded by fear and hate (DJP), Monday, 4 November 2013 17:14 (eleven years ago) link
I didn't make it past the first sentence
I didn't get through the whole thing either, but I kind of like using this thread to point out writing that is offensive, obnoxious, wrongheaded or journalistically incompetent. This is more just eye-roll worthy. Laughing at this kinda feels like laughing at a child's horrible painting or something. Still, carry on.
― a fifth of misty beethoven (cryptosicko), Monday, 4 November 2013 17:20 (eleven years ago) link
(also, having written for PopMatters, I know for a fact that this guy didn't get paid for this, so...)
― a fifth of misty beethoven (cryptosicko), Monday, 4 November 2013 17:22 (eleven years ago) link
I was enjoying that cos I thought Charles and the ghost were going to fuck at the end. then the review finished and I was like, hey come back
― too much Michu, not enough meta (DJ Mencap), Monday, 4 November 2013 17:22 (eleven years ago) link
as long as there’s still someone putting out some gritty rock and roll music as a soundtrack to the times
this was my bail point btw
― when did you stop caring about (Noodle Vague), Monday, 4 November 2013 17:23 (eleven years ago) link
http://images.moviepostershop.com/ghosts-cant-do-it-movie-poster-1990-1020232413.jpg
― a fifth of misty beethoven (cryptosicko), Monday, 4 November 2013 17:24 (eleven years ago) link
the Strokes are his kind of band, with the black leather jackets, the guitars, the cigarettes, the girls,
there are no girls in the strokes?
― Defund Phil Collins (stevie), Monday, 4 November 2013 17:32 (eleven years ago) link
also i think this dude knows lester bangs only from the speech in almost famous and has never read anything he wrote
― Defund Phil Collins (stevie), Monday, 4 November 2013 17:33 (eleven years ago) link
also this
Yeah, Lester says, I get that, the past is a dead country, but man the world these days has become so boringly safe and emotionally neutral through all this stupid political correctness that everyone forces on everyone else whether you like it or not.
is some really bizarre puppetry in that the writer is forcing into Lester's mouth garbage that even dennis o'leary or dennis miller would blanche at
― Defund Phil Collins (stevie), Monday, 4 November 2013 17:34 (eleven years ago) link
I would venture into guessing what type of music Lester would like in 2013 had he lived, but that's like a pube away from writing fanfic where Gene Shalit fucks a cartoon pony.
― obie stompin' moby (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 4 November 2013 17:38 (eleven years ago) link
My heads says "be kind", my heart says lol.
OTM. The line about political correctness in particular suggests that he doesn't really understand a thing about Bangs' POV.
― Deafening silence (DL), Monday, 4 November 2013 17:53 (eleven years ago) link
agreed. but it wouldn't be albert hammond jr.
― Defund Phil Collins (stevie), Monday, 4 November 2013 18:26 (eleven years ago) link
man I get enough incompetent necrophilia fanfic from Shakespeare criticism, surely no need to make those moves in rock criticism too? oy gevalt
― the tune was space, Monday, 4 November 2013 18:30 (eleven years ago) link
I can't believe I read that thing, but I am really unhappy that I watched the video for Albert's song attached to it. Gotta go cleanse now.
― grandavis, Monday, 4 November 2013 18:37 (eleven years ago) link
I'm guessing he at least read LB's Jimi Hendrix 'interview', and had a great idea.
― jmm, Monday, 4 November 2013 18:42 (eleven years ago) link
― J0rdan S., Monday, 4 November 2013 18:45 (eleven years ago) link
it's sort of nice that in 2013 there is still someone naive enough to write an album review with the ghost of lester bangs as the main character
― J0rdan S., Monday, 4 November 2013 18:46 (eleven years ago) link
about a Strokes solo project, too!
― some dude, Monday, 4 November 2013 19:53 (eleven years ago) link
http://img1.etsystatic.com/012/1/6396521/il_340x270.437584919_g6v8.jpg
― Evan, Tuesday, 5 November 2013 04:49 (eleven years ago) link
http://www.regimebooks.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/Charles-Pitter.jpg
haha wow
― 1staethyr, Tuesday, 5 November 2013 05:17 (eleven years ago) link
― In times of osterity, these Eton-educated poshboys (Bananaman Begins), Tuesday, 5 November 2013 10:39 (eleven years ago) link
"Gaga is an artist that creates for the sake of creation, and this is her manifesto"
http://www.billboard.com/articles/review/5778227/lady-gaga-artpop-track-by-track-review
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 6 November 2013 13:40 (eleven years ago) link
I found the original long-lost All Music Guide one-and-a-half-star review of Coldplay's Parachutes! And I thought it was Stephen Thomas Whatsisname all these years.
It is rarely a good sign when you can't tell if an album is on or not. From British indie-guitar mumbling to completely innocuous songwriting, Coldplay's Parachutes is an unhealthy sign of a musical subculture that is mired far too deep into its own anonymity. Yes, this is an album that -- aside everything else -- refuses to acknowledge it is even alive. The problem might be in the marketing aspect of the band. If Embrace was a competing label's answer to Oasis, Coldplay seems to be another label's answer to Travis. This time the response is to try and manufacture an album that is so riddled with even more indie-by-number blandness that it will be nearly impossible for any potential record buyer to be offended, because Parachutes is an album in love with the ordinary. The closest the album ever comes to anything interesting is on "Shiver" -- a wafer-thin mimicry of Ned's Atomic Dustbin that at least implies that the band can do well when they play around with usual verse-chorus-verse structures. Still, other than that, the album is bare of anything else very noteworthy. The core single "Yellow" sets up an interesting premise with rolling guitar riffs and vocal cracks, yet goes absolutely nowhere with any of it. Also, closer "Everything's Not Lost" (despite at times sounding like a Randy Newman throwaway) has a wistful atmosphere about it that feels like an epilogue to an event that never happened. Even the better songs prove that there is a large failure to peak on this album. This is a traditional case of wasted opportunity. Everything is just so determinedly middle-of-the-road, one can only picture a dotted yellow line while listening to it. -- Dean Carlson
― Mr. Snrub, Thursday, 7 November 2013 01:56 (eleven years ago) link
why is it in this thread?
― my whole family is catholic so look at the pickle i'm in (zachlyon), Thursday, 7 November 2013 02:47 (eleven years ago) link
Because it sucks.
― Mr. Snrub, Thursday, 7 November 2013 03:21 (eleven years ago) link
coldplay's parachutes? yes it does
― lollercoaster of rove (s.clover), Thursday, 7 November 2013 03:38 (eleven years ago) link
not averse to colplay reevaluation or w/e but there's nothing objectionable about that at all, it's sort of a standard AMG pan
― my whole family is catholic so look at the pickle i'm in (zachlyon), Thursday, 7 November 2013 03:44 (eleven years ago) link
You guys know you're arguing with Mr. Snrub, right
― smoking, drinking, cracking and showing the MIDDLE FINGER (DJP), Thursday, 7 November 2013 03:47 (eleven years ago) link
i have a few mrsnrub.txt files but none of them are about this particular mr. snrub i'm afraid
― my whole family is catholic so look at the pickle i'm in (zachlyon), Thursday, 7 November 2013 03:55 (eleven years ago) link
you need mrsnrub.xls
― mookieproof, Thursday, 7 November 2013 03:58 (eleven years ago) link
remember that guy that wrote that really bad review of robin thicke? now he's done some really bad reviews for lady gaga and katy perry!
http://i41.tinypic.com/21bk2t.jpg
i don't like artpop or prism that much but the fact that somewhere someone is being paid to put music journalism this pathetic and lazy in print makes me irrationally infuriated
― monotony, Thursday, 7 November 2013 19:10 (eleven years ago) link
Literally the first thing I saw was "vaginal awakening"...
― Evan, Thursday, 7 November 2013 19:15 (eleven years ago) link
Duncan Sheik was never very good with sequels
― smoking, drinking, cracking and showing the MIDDLE FINGER (DJP), Thursday, 7 November 2013 19:19 (eleven years ago) link
"Perry almost pushes me out of the realms of heterosexuality"
i don't like her music but dude, GIS
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Thursday, 7 November 2013 19:20 (eleven years ago) link
This guy's a prize specimen. So much fear, ignorance and contempt masquerading as "yeah I went there" truthbombs.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 7 November 2013 19:37 (eleven years ago) link
that god-awful Crazy Frog
― too much Michu, not enough meta (DJ Mencap), Thursday, 7 November 2013 20:09 (eleven years ago) link
Finally someone's had the balls to call out Crazy Frog.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 7 November 2013 20:29 (eleven years ago) link
This guy is terrible as a music reviewer, but as a writer he expresses what he has to say - maniacal misogyny - with admirable vim and vigour.
― Eyeball Kicks, Thursday, 7 November 2013 21:42 (eleven years ago) link
"he's so good at misogyny"
― Murgatroid, Thursday, 7 November 2013 21:44 (eleven years ago) link
WHY DOES HE KEEP ITALICIZING SONG TITLES
― my whole family is catholic so look at the pickle i'm in (zachlyon), Friday, 8 November 2013 02:15 (eleven years ago) link
"If you see someone on a train wearing a Lady Gaga shirt you should probably give up your seat to them because they are clearly musically challenged."
http://gifrific.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/Tina-Fey-giving-herself-high-five.gif
― some dude, Friday, 8 November 2013 02:23 (eleven years ago) link
the crazy frog album is really funny and "axel f" is a classic
― dyl, Friday, 8 November 2013 02:44 (eleven years ago) link
― my whole family is catholic so look at the pickle i'm in (zachlyon), Friday, November 8, 2013 2:15 AM (6 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
think it would be the person who sets the house style of the paper that did that
― too much Michu, not enough meta (DJ Mencap), Friday, 8 November 2013 08:25 (eleven years ago) link
This may say more about my UK suburban lifestyle but I don't think I've ever encountered a Lady Gaga fan irl.
― Pingu Unchained (dog latin), Friday, 8 November 2013 08:39 (eleven years ago) link
otm:
This guy's a prize specimen. So much fear, ignorance and contempt masquerading as "yeah I went there" truthbombs.― Deafening silence (DL)
― Deafening silence (DL)
we have a guy at my local alt-weekly who kinda writes like this. it's maddening.
― alpine static, Friday, 8 November 2013 08:47 (eleven years ago) link
like, what publication allows a Gaga review to go near the "is she a man" thing, much less quip "I've got $50 on yes." ugh, fuck this dude and whoever publishes him.
― alpine static, Friday, 8 November 2013 08:49 (eleven years ago) link
more:
http://i.imgur.com/70v73Dq.png
― Eyeball Kicks, Friday, 8 November 2013 09:51 (eleven years ago) link
love this guy
― I like to think I have learnt a thing or two about music (Neil S), Friday, 8 November 2013 09:55 (eleven years ago) link
TS: Thicke's "unambiguous misogyny" vs Tyson Wray's unambiguous misogyny
― Deafening silence (DL), Friday, 8 November 2013 10:00 (eleven years ago) link
"their" right to choose.
― Legitimate space tale (LocalGarda), Friday, 8 November 2013 10:17 (eleven years ago) link
like he's only talking to men
― Legitimate space tale (LocalGarda), Friday, 8 November 2013 10:18 (eleven years ago) link
what % of people who have enjoyed the music of Robin Thicke in 2013 know or care who his dad is?
― too much Michu, not enough meta (DJ Mencap), Friday, 8 November 2013 10:18 (eleven years ago) link
Tyson Wray doesn't seem to have much interest in how music sounds
― . (Noodle Vague), Friday, 8 November 2013 10:19 (eleven years ago) link
Captain Save-a-Thicke
― In times of osterity, these Eton-educated poshboys (Bananaman Begins), Friday, 8 November 2013 10:57 (eleven years ago) link
His songs amalgamate WHAT to the artistic creativity of a singing fish, Tyson?
― Unsettled defender (ithappens), Friday, 8 November 2013 15:14 (eleven years ago) link
Ugh. (Universal)
― there's no camera to capture that yelping moment! (forksclovetofu), Friday, 8 November 2013 15:22 (eleven years ago) link
I'd love to see the research paper which proposes that rubber fish can sing.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Friday, 8 November 2013 15:27 (eleven years ago) link
you've obviously never met billy.
http://diztopia.typepad.com/photos/uncategorized/11152004.jpg
― scott seward, Friday, 8 November 2013 15:35 (eleven years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dHchmWsrfUo
― Ian from Etobicoke (Phil D.), Friday, 8 November 2013 15:44 (eleven years ago) link
In Tyson Wray's world, every musician would be called Big Mouth Billy Bass.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Friday, 8 November 2013 15:53 (eleven years ago) link
now i have Robin Thicke singing "Tight Lines" in my head
― . (Noodle Vague), Friday, 8 November 2013 15:58 (eleven years ago) link
re: Gaga / Perry, I wonder which is the higher rating: 1 star flush left or 1 star flush right
― alpine static, Friday, 8 November 2013 16:12 (eleven years ago) link
Want to read more tyson wray
― you can get fuckstab anywhere in london (wins), Friday, 8 November 2013 16:18 (eleven years ago) link
http://thegrillandbarrel.wordpress.com/2013/10/20/what-the-music-industry-can-learn-from-the-ale-industry/
only 200 words but packs an impressive amount of chuckleheadedness into that small space
― too much Michu, not enough meta (DJ Mencap), Friday, 8 November 2013 16:20 (eleven years ago) link
http://tysondwray.tumblr.com/
― I like to think I have learnt a thing or two about music (Neil S), Friday, 8 November 2013 16:20 (eleven years ago) link
The title track is a vociferous number characterized by curling breakbeats, frantic snares and Taylor’s signature penchant for meticulously clipped R&B samples. “Werk” follows the lead with a breakbeat formation, but employs a bulbous bass line to lead the assertive vocals through a sea of skittering hi-hats layered over pulsing cowbells. The third original, “Give In To You,” is held together by a relentless drum roll powering through melancholic chords and inconceivable vocal cuts. French Fries’ rework of “Bash” is rendered with a big-room aesthetic, its marinated grooves edging delicately through more spacious territory. Rounding off the release is Isotonik’s take on “Give In To You,” which rings reminiscent of a 90s warehouse rave with frenzied synths and heavy bass lines; however the culmination wanes in authenticity and results in a maladroit number that falls misplaced amongst it’s more restrained counterparts. There’s arguably little innovation within Bash as Taylor simply weaves his regular aural artillery, but it’s his scrupulous composition and predilection for subtle progression that keeps his work emotive, novel, and authoritative over any dance floor — a formula that’s showing no signs of going stale.
the boy likes adjectives
― . (Noodle Vague), Friday, 8 November 2013 16:21 (eleven years ago) link
Everything is just so determinedly middle-of-the-road, one can only picture a dotted yellow line while listening to it.
^ this is great
― Tip from Tae Kwon Do: (crüt), Friday, 8 November 2013 16:22 (eleven years ago) link
inconceivable vocal cuts
― I like to think I have learnt a thing or two about music (Neil S), Friday, 8 November 2013 16:23 (eleven years ago) link
a formula that’s showing no signs of going stale
It's easy to misjudge Rob Schneider.
― . (Noodle Vague), Friday, 8 November 2013 16:26 (eleven years ago) link
Classic tyson wray
― you can get fuckstab anywhere in london (wins), Friday, 8 November 2013 16:34 (eleven years ago) link
― Tip from Tae Kwon Do: (crüt), Friday, November 8, 2013 10:22 AM (15 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
lol this is actually good
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Friday, 8 November 2013 16:40 (eleven years ago) link
god, i read my own reviews and cringe (horribly) at my use of adjectives and adverbs.
― Pingu Unchained (dog latin), Friday, 8 November 2013 16:46 (eleven years ago) link
Lol really? The review isn't awful but "i'm gonna call something mor and then get this compare it to the literal middle of a road oh the wit" is some weak obvious zinging imo xp
― you can get fuckstab anywhere in london (wins), Friday, 8 November 2013 16:48 (eleven years ago) link
I mean its not tyson wray public transport zing level
― you can get fuckstab anywhere in london (wins), Friday, 8 November 2013 16:49 (eleven years ago) link
At least he is trying to describe what the music sounds like though, if ineptly. I'm more sympathetic to that passage than the ones in this thread that involve grand pronouncements about how the music fits into some meta-cultural narrative the writer has just invented, involving tropes about hipsters or the prog/punk divide or whatever.
― Treeship, Friday, 8 November 2013 16:52 (eleven years ago) link
It's not terrible, not brilliant. I was just taken aback that that line was being singled out when "clever" riffs on "middle of the road" are almost as cliched as the phrase itself
― you can get fuckstab anywhere in london (wins), Friday, 8 November 2013 17:01 (eleven years ago) link
middle of the road is cliche but the imagery after is funny/clever
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Friday, 8 November 2013 17:30 (eleven years ago) link
http://blogs.laweekly.com/westcoastsound/2013/11/giorgio_moroder_dj_daft_punk.php
"Hailing from northern Italy, Moroder is basically a G."
― the portentous pepper (govern yourself accordingly), Friday, 8 November 2013 19:08 (eleven years ago) link
http://flavorwire.com/424281/camp-is-for-everyone-r-kelly-and-the-evolution-of-trash/
― some dude, Saturday, 9 November 2013 01:07 (eleven years ago) link
can i just http://observer.com/2011/03/tyler-coates-man-who-tweeted-about-being-trapped-in-an-elevator-speaks/
― . (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 9 November 2013 01:16 (eleven years ago) link
tbh im worried i just wrote the worst review of 2013...can some objectively tell me if the review of 'it hurts' by creeper_ on here is awful:http://www.thisisfakediy.co.uk/articles/features/tracks-broken-bells-bombay-bicycle-club-more/
― the Shearer of simulated snowsex etc. (Dwight Yorke), Saturday, 9 November 2013 11:27 (eleven years ago) link
in my defence, very difficult to write about music made by friends of yours.
― the Shearer of simulated snowsex etc. (Dwight Yorke), Saturday, 9 November 2013 11:35 (eleven years ago) link
Camp, however, has found a much warmer home in pop music, a genre that seemingly appeals to women and homosexuals.
^^^amazing sentence
― my UK suburban lifestyle (soref), Saturday, 9 November 2013 11:36 (eleven years ago) link
It's from the Tyler Coates article some dude linked to to be clear, not Dwight Yorke's review.
― my UK suburban lifestyle (soref), Saturday, 9 November 2013 11:37 (eleven years ago) link
'pop music, a genre that seemingly appeals to women and homosexuals' could be a good ilm board description.
― my UK suburban lifestyle (soref), Saturday, 9 November 2013 11:42 (eleven years ago) link
well, y'know, not really.
― my UK suburban lifestyle (soref), Saturday, 9 November 2013 11:46 (eleven years ago) link
it's good that women and homosexuals can put aside their differences to stand as one under the umbrella of pop music
― too much Michu, not enough meta (DJ Mencap), Saturday, 9 November 2013 12:41 (eleven years ago) link
Dwight, I don't get the first sentence - "contemporary lovelorn bedroom pop game Todd Rundgren." Is there a word missing there? Other than that it was ace.
― grease grease (stevie), Saturday, 9 November 2013 12:44 (eleven years ago) link
http://img2-2.timeinc.net/ew/dynamic/imgs/031224/91435__liza_l.jpg
― the objections to Drake from non-REAL HIPHOP people (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 9 November 2013 12:48 (eleven years ago) link
Cheers Stevie! Was riffing on the 'rap game + [something usually not related to rap]' construction which tends to drop the 'the' so I fully admit that it looks a little awkward on the page.
― the Shearer of simulated snowsex etc. (Dwight Yorke), Saturday, 9 November 2013 13:00 (eleven years ago) link
my posts
― color definition point of "beyond "color, eg a transient that, Saturday, 9 November 2013 13:03 (eleven years ago) link
Idiots, that song is about meth and the overman.
― Sheik Yitzhak Patrin (usic), Wednesday, 31 December 2008 23:24 (4 years ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
overruled
― durianlychee (imago), Saturday, 9 November 2013 13:23 (eleven years ago) link
http://blogs.laweekly.com/westcoastsound/2013/01/sonic_youth_are_boring.php
― i wish i had a skateboard i could skate away on (Hurting 2), Monday, 18 November 2013 16:31 (eleven years ago) link
cant be as bad as the one johnny cigarettes did for the nme years ago. That really was the worst ever.
― ۩, Monday, 18 November 2013 16:51 (eleven years ago) link
such opinions
copy of the tape on SST that runs backward on one side and forward on another <<<what is this?
― too much Michu, not enough meta (DJ Mencap), Monday, 18 November 2013 16:52 (eleven years ago) link
The next album, Experimental Jet Set, Trash and No Star is mostly noteworthy for igniting puberty in teenage alt rockers via a video featuring Bikini Kill's Kathleen Hanna bouncing around in an approximation of irreverence.
Ugh x 100
― Deafening silence (DL), Monday, 18 November 2013 16:54 (eleven years ago) link
Some articles make me think the writer's a decent person with no skill. This one just seems like the work of an appalling human being.
― Deafening silence (DL), Monday, 18 November 2013 16:55 (eleven years ago) link
I was about 13 and somehow acquired a copy of the tape on SST that runs backward on one side and forward on another. I know, right? How creative.
There's a Mudhoney album that does this IIRC.
― Pingu Unchained (dog latin), Monday, 18 November 2013 17:00 (eleven years ago) link
don't fall into their trap
― maura, Monday, 18 November 2013 17:02 (eleven years ago) link
Voice Media Group is just the WORST
― i wish i had a skateboard i could skate away on (Hurting 2), Monday, 18 November 2013 17:04 (eleven years ago) link
i doubt they believe half the challops they put out in WCS, it's just for angry clickthroughs.
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Monday, 18 November 2013 17:05 (eleven years ago) link
I was about 13 and somehow acquired a copy of the tape on SST that runs backward on one side and forward on another. I know, right? How creative.There's a Mudhoney album that does this IIRC.
Sonic Youth's first s/t EP did this. I liked it equally well both directions.
― A sort of "Sister Ray" for the mentally handicapped (staggerlee), Tuesday, 19 November 2013 02:58 (eleven years ago) link
― Pingu Unchained (dog latin), Friday, November 8, 2013 11:46 AM (1 week ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Me too. Sometimes I think that the phrase "good music writing" is a bit of an oxymoron tbh. I mean, you can't avoid adjectives and adverbs. Recently I read a little Flaubert before bed--a translation, mind you--and it paralyzed me for weeks.
Who am I kidding--Pauline Kael paralyzes me, too.
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Tuesday, 19 November 2013 06:16 (eleven years ago) link
I was asked to post this here
http://www.ritaora.com/uk/biography
― ۩, Tuesday, 19 November 2013 17:34 (eleven years ago) link
awesome"If there is a sense when Rita Ora walks into a room that a star has already been ordained from above then nobody appears to have told the young Londoner and future pop princess herself."
― Strangers look on with a discernible, barely contained ‘wow’. (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 19 November 2013 17:52 (eleven years ago) link
OMFG
My favourite bit so far:
She managed to keep one step ahead of the stop-starts and false alarms of anyone treading tentatively into the shark pond of the London creative elite
― Deafening silence (DL), Tuesday, 19 November 2013 17:53 (eleven years ago) link
Yeah that really is amazing.
― Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 19 November 2013 17:54 (eleven years ago) link
it's like a single page choose your own adventure; in lieu of commas you have to bookmark what you hope are phrase breaks and keep going on
― Strangers look on with a discernible, barely contained ‘wow’. (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 19 November 2013 17:55 (eleven years ago) link
It's got the lot: mixed metaphors, endless sentences, gruesome sycophancy, ludicrous hyperbole. Bio gold.
I'm genuinely fascinated by the mind of a person who thinks this is an acceptable sentence.
The result is a monopoly stronghold on future pop supremacy.
― Deafening silence (DL), Tuesday, 19 November 2013 17:59 (eleven years ago) link
that is a proper 'ora indeed
― but my heart is full of woah (NickB), Tuesday, 19 November 2013 18:00 (eleven years ago) link
The bio seems to have been taken down now!
― Unsettled defender (ithappens), Wednesday, 20 November 2013 11:11 (eleven years ago) link
Hope you downloaded it!
― ۩, Wednesday, 20 November 2013 11:12 (eleven years ago) link
Sadly no. Lost to me forever.
― Unsettled defender (ithappens), Wednesday, 20 November 2013 11:14 (eleven years ago) link
a scandal as big as the Tories removing past speeches
― I like to think I have learnt a thing or two about music (Neil S), Wednesday, 20 November 2013 11:20 (eleven years ago) link
Google cache does the business:
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:th8IvcTdaIoJ:www.ritaora.com/uk/biography+&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=uk
― my father will guide me up the stairs to bed (anagram), Wednesday, 20 November 2013 11:43 (eleven years ago) link
"She might not have been born this way, but she was recognizably named it."
Some mortified teenage intern that lurks ilm has probably just gone out to B&Q to buy a length of rope.
― tsrobodo, Wednesday, 20 November 2013 11:48 (eleven years ago) link
haha you can still download the pdf from the site via that googlecache link
― ۩, Wednesday, 20 November 2013 11:52 (eleven years ago) link
Her music is the contents of her young brain spilling out into song.
― In times of osterity, these Eton-educated poshboys (Bananaman Begins), Wednesday, 20 November 2013 12:07 (eleven years ago) link
Downloaded 4 eva
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 20 November 2013 12:23 (eleven years ago) link
the elegant noise of gentrification
― veneer timber (imago), Wednesday, 20 November 2013 12:41 (eleven years ago) link
that bio is a perfect summation of rita ora's music tho, almost too perfect
― my whole family is catholic so look at the pickle i'm in (zachlyon), Wednesday, 20 November 2013 14:11 (eleven years ago) link
have to say i am pretty unbothered that there is bad writing in an artist bio, those things are written on autopilot in 10 minutes and never designed to be read by anyone let alone claimed as good writing
― lex pretend, Wednesday, 20 November 2013 14:15 (eleven years ago) link
there's a difference between professional fuckupery and just straight up looking on with a a discernible, barely contained 'wow'.
wanna save this here for posterity:
If there is a sense when Rita Ora walks into a room that a star has already been ordained from above then nobody appears to have told the young Londoner and future pop princess herself. She has not an air or a grace about her. She greets the bar staff dotted in the hostelries of her neighborhood like old friends, mostly because they are. She bumps knuckles with the coat check chicks and management with the same egalitarian smile. Friends stop by for a brief ‘Hi’. Strangers look on with a discernible, barely contained ‘wow’. There is no mistaking the fact that Saturday night in Notting Hill is brightened by a touch of Rita’s special aura. She might not have been born this way, but she was recognizably named it.Buzz acts come and go, but the pertinent feeling amongst those that have heard the results of her knockout first round in the recording studio as a bona fide solo star, accompanied by a blue chip roster of production hands, is that the effect Rita Ora has locally is about to translate to the upper terrains of the global pop market. A composite of street-smarts of the metropolitan life she was schooled in and pure, urgent, otherworldly star quality, she makes for a brilliantly contradictory mix.Rita is one of the few British female singers that has emerged singing the opening bars of her career ready for world star status. So why is she so palpably shy of celebrating herself? "Because, you know what? I might seem confident about all this. It might be all I’ve ever wanted. It might even be all I’m ever any good at. But I am still really, really nervous about it all."The fact that she has already made British chart history as the vocalist on one of the first ever drum and bass number one singles here, DJ Fresh’s "Hot Right Now", is almost brushed aside. "That was Fresh’s triumph," she gifts the producer, though it's clear her soaring vocals lend the propulsive tune a hefty portion of its personality. "He started a tiny drum and bass record label back in the day, now here he is with its first number one? That’s incredible for him. He owns that."Regardless, the breakout smash success of her first number one looks very much like the dress rehearsal, the overture or prelude to the main act: Rita Ora solo. If "Hot Right Now" has temporarily rocked the British pop chart, her solo material is about to blow its mind.Rita Ora began singing as at age six. This is where the magic started: "What drew me most to singing was the fact that I could make a noise that made me feel good about myself. I used to sing poems. It was just about doing something that inspired a reaction. It was about self-esteem, even back then, at a young age. I made a noise, the reaction was positive. Simple as that. I could sing my feelings. It was a new, exciting way of expressing myself. This brand new communication device. I understood the power of it straight away."Rita was born the second of two girls in war-torn Kosovo at the start of the 90s. Her mother, father and elder sister decamped to London before her first birthday. "I wasn’t made to feel aware of what we had come from," she says, "but obviously when you grow up you get to learn something of what your parents went through to get you where you are today. I owe them everything."Guided by her innate performance instinct, as well as her developing and hugely impressive powerhouse vocal range, she began dipping her toes into the local music industry in West London as an early teen. She managed to keep one step ahead of the stop-starts and false alarms of anyone treading tentatively into the shark pond of the London creative elite, enjoying notable highs.Rita has a natural propensity toward mixing street-beats with pop. Her music is the contents of her young brain spilling out into song. The sounds she heard on the streets of Notting Hill, the brassy calypso and raga of Carnival mingling with the ringtone pop emanating from fast food joints; the splash and funk of the locale’s black music history engaging with the elegant noise of gentrification. If she sounds black and white, hard and soft, rich and poor, it is because her world is full of those competing factions too. She just learned to set it all to song. "My first record," she says, "had to sound exactly like my life."Equally, her brilliantly developing sense of style is a dynamic and deliberate mismatch of high and low fashion. A ball-gown, Louis Vuitton shoes and a biker jacket make perfect sense to Rita’s unique fashion instinct. Costume jewelry is interchangeable with opulent bling. She says working with a stylist "is just like playing dressing up with your friends before you go for a night out, with a few more contacts." Rita loves to rock platinum blonde hair. At the prospect of going brunette, she recalls: "I tried a wig on in Top Shop recently and just thought, never again." She also loves her signature red lipstick, and was delighted to see young fans at her recent London showcase who had already caught on to her signature red smackers. "They were all rocking red lipstick on the front row! Yes. Fierce."Though Rita is signed to a modeling agency, it is clearly in music where she is about to shine. Her debut UK single "R.I.P." is a thrusting, compelling ode to lost love. Sitting around the peripheral borders of pop, R&B, rock, rave and dusted off with a sugar-coating of immaculate heartbreak, "R.I.P." thunders upon the very first listen. It was written by the current master-craftsman of relationship drama, hip hop connoisseur, Drake: "I had the hugest crush on Drake," she gushes. "Then I met him, sweetest guy ever and it evolved into a great friendship. I can’t believe he gave me such a great song!" The song was produced by the titans of underground/overground crossover British dance, Chase and Status and also features a guest rap from that pocket dynamo, Tinie Tempah. "I wanted to keep it British," Rita explains. "I need to rep for the UK!" Yet for all its invincible, diamond-plated credentials, this is very much Rita Ora’s opening shot, and she really does own it.Rita’s debut U.S. single, “How We Do (Party),” is an infectious pop-rock party anthem paired with her stunning vocals. The single first premiered on New York’s Z100 on March 23rd and quickly became Just Jared & KIIS FM’s Pick of the Week. Lyrically, “How We Do (Party)” celebrates being young and having fun, as Rita sings, “We're tearing up the town, 'cause that's just how we do" over production duo The Runners' irresistible guitar and drum driven beats. Rita and The Runners have created one of the most addictive tunes of 2012, and "How We Do (Party)" is sure to be an essential on every playlist this summer. "I had to learn my pop instinct," she says. "The lyrics had to be tough because the song is so immediate. I wanted that twist. This is about the feeling of waking up in the morning and wanting to take another whiskey shot," she says, looking embarrassed for all of five seconds, "We’ve all been there. Haven’t we?"There’s plenty more where that came from. Rita Ora has fashioned a debut album that is ready to stake its claim on the world stage. She has become a huge priority for JAY Z’s Roc Nation. The music icon introduced her personally to the American public with a surprise visit to one of the US’s premier radio stations Z100 earlier this year. "I was so nervous!’ she enthuses "but so excited too!".The superstar cast of artists that have lined up to work with her reads like an award ceremony of modern urban musical excellence, from the left-field margins right to the heart of mainstream, including Diplo, Switch, Stargate, and The-Dream, in addition to Chase & Status and Drake. The result is a monopoly stronghold on future pop supremacy. "I can’t believe how lucky I’ve been," she says, "that these people have even given me the time of day, let alone clicked with me in making my album." She name drops "Rock The Life" – a ridiculously catchy, mid-tempo R&B growler – and the beautifully delivered ballad, "Love and War" as her other album favorites, before the world picks its own.It’s time for Rita Ora to dive in headfirst and see how her unique talent plays out. With support slots on the DJ Fresh and Coldplay tours this year she’s ready. ‘I am so nervous,’ she repeats. ‘Now is when I’m put to the test. I don’t even know what to expect. I have to dive in. I’ve just got to do it.'
Buzz acts come and go, but the pertinent feeling amongst those that have heard the results of her knockout first round in the recording studio as a bona fide solo star, accompanied by a blue chip roster of production hands, is that the effect Rita Ora has locally is about to translate to the upper terrains of the global pop market. A composite of street-smarts of the metropolitan life she was schooled in and pure, urgent, otherworldly star quality, she makes for a brilliantly contradictory mix.
Rita is one of the few British female singers that has emerged singing the opening bars of her career ready for world star status. So why is she so palpably shy of celebrating herself? "Because, you know what? I might seem confident about all this. It might be all I’ve ever wanted. It might even be all I’m ever any good at. But I am still really, really nervous about it all."
The fact that she has already made British chart history as the vocalist on one of the first ever drum and bass number one singles here, DJ Fresh’s "Hot Right Now", is almost brushed aside. "That was Fresh’s triumph," she gifts the producer, though it's clear her soaring vocals lend the propulsive tune a hefty portion of its personality. "He started a tiny drum and bass record label back in the day, now here he is with its first number one? That’s incredible for him. He owns that."
Regardless, the breakout smash success of her first number one looks very much like the dress rehearsal, the overture or prelude to the main act: Rita Ora solo. If "Hot Right Now" has temporarily rocked the British pop chart, her solo material is about to blow its mind.
Rita Ora began singing as at age six. This is where the magic started: "What drew me most to singing was the fact that I could make a noise that made me feel good about myself. I used to sing poems. It was just about doing something that inspired a reaction. It was about self-esteem, even back then, at a young age. I made a noise, the reaction was positive. Simple as that. I could sing my feelings. It was a new, exciting way of expressing myself. This brand new communication device. I understood the power of it straight away."
Rita was born the second of two girls in war-torn Kosovo at the start of the 90s. Her mother, father and elder sister decamped to London before her first birthday. "I wasn’t made to feel aware of what we had come from," she says, "but obviously when you grow up you get to learn something of what your parents went through to get you where you are today. I owe them everything."
Guided by her innate performance instinct, as well as her developing and hugely impressive powerhouse vocal range, she began dipping her toes into the local music industry in West London as an early teen. She managed to keep one step ahead of the stop-starts and false alarms of anyone treading tentatively into the shark pond of the London creative elite, enjoying notable highs.
Rita has a natural propensity toward mixing street-beats with pop. Her music is the contents of her young brain spilling out into song. The sounds she heard on the streets of Notting Hill, the brassy calypso and raga of Carnival mingling with the ringtone pop emanating from fast food joints; the splash and funk of the locale’s black music history engaging with the elegant noise of gentrification. If she sounds black and white, hard and soft, rich and poor, it is because her world is full of those competing factions too. She just learned to set it all to song. "My first record," she says, "had to sound exactly like my life."
Equally, her brilliantly developing sense of style is a dynamic and deliberate mismatch of high and low fashion. A ball-gown, Louis Vuitton shoes and a biker jacket make perfect sense to Rita’s unique fashion instinct. Costume jewelry is interchangeable with opulent bling. She says working with a stylist "is just like playing dressing up with your friends before you go for a night out, with a few more contacts." Rita loves to rock platinum blonde hair. At the prospect of going brunette, she recalls: "I tried a wig on in Top Shop recently and just thought, never again." She also loves her signature red lipstick, and was delighted to see young fans at her recent London showcase who had already caught on to her signature red smackers. "They were all rocking red lipstick on the front row! Yes. Fierce."
Though Rita is signed to a modeling agency, it is clearly in music where she is about to shine. Her debut UK single "R.I.P." is a thrusting, compelling ode to lost love. Sitting around the peripheral borders of pop, R&B, rock, rave and dusted off with a sugar-coating of immaculate heartbreak, "R.I.P." thunders upon the very first listen. It was written by the current master-craftsman of relationship drama, hip hop connoisseur, Drake: "I had the hugest crush on Drake," she gushes. "Then I met him, sweetest guy ever and it evolved into a great friendship. I can’t believe he gave me such a great song!" The song was produced by the titans of underground/overground crossover British dance, Chase and Status and also features a guest rap from that pocket dynamo, Tinie Tempah. "I wanted to keep it British," Rita explains. "I need to rep for the UK!" Yet for all its invincible, diamond-plated credentials, this is very much Rita Ora’s opening shot, and she really does own it.
Rita’s debut U.S. single, “How We Do (Party),” is an infectious pop-rock party anthem paired with her stunning vocals. The single first premiered on New York’s Z100 on March 23rd and quickly became Just Jared & KIIS FM’s Pick of the Week. Lyrically, “How We Do (Party)” celebrates being young and having fun, as Rita sings, “We're tearing up the town, 'cause that's just how we do" over production duo The Runners' irresistible guitar and drum driven beats. Rita and The Runners have created one of the most addictive tunes of 2012, and "How We Do (Party)" is sure to be an essential on every playlist this summer. "I had to learn my pop instinct," she says. "The lyrics had to be tough because the song is so immediate. I wanted that twist. This is about the feeling of waking up in the morning and wanting to take another whiskey shot," she says, looking embarrassed for all of five seconds, "We’ve all been there. Haven’t we?"
There’s plenty more where that came from. Rita Ora has fashioned a debut album that is ready to stake its claim on the world stage. She has become a huge priority for JAY Z’s Roc Nation. The music icon introduced her personally to the American public with a surprise visit to one of the US’s premier radio stations Z100 earlier this year. "I was so nervous!’ she enthuses "but so excited too!".
The superstar cast of artists that have lined up to work with her reads like an award ceremony of modern urban musical excellence, from the left-field margins right to the heart of mainstream, including Diplo, Switch, Stargate, and The-Dream, in addition to Chase & Status and Drake. The result is a monopoly stronghold on future pop supremacy. "I can’t believe how lucky I’ve been," she says, "that these people have even given me the time of day, let alone clicked with me in making my album." She name drops "Rock The Life" – a ridiculously catchy, mid-tempo R&B growler – and the beautifully delivered ballad, "Love and War" as her other album favorites, before the world picks its own.
It’s time for Rita Ora to dive in headfirst and see how her unique talent plays out. With support slots on the DJ Fresh and Coldplay tours this year she’s ready. ‘I am so nervous,’ she repeats. ‘Now is when I’m put to the test. I don’t even know what to expect. I have to dive in. I’ve just got to do it.'
― Strangers look on with a discernible, barely contained ‘wow’. (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 20 November 2013 15:15 (eleven years ago) link
http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/music-arts/rita-ora-hospitalized-collapsing-photo-shoot-article-1.1521336
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Wednesday, 20 November 2013 17:13 (eleven years ago) link
put your hands in the air if your hot right now
― but my heart is full of woah (NickB), Wednesday, 20 November 2013 17:15 (eleven years ago) link
(hopefully for a speedy recovery from that one of course)
― but my heart is full of woah (NickB), Wednesday, 20 November 2013 17:16 (eleven years ago) link
http://www.popmatters.com/feature/176475-black-vinyl-confessions-of-a-music-collector/
On the Hard Day’s Night recordings and others, the Beatles created the template for what we now call power pop. And on that day, in 1972 or 1973, the Beatles’ pop had the power.
The whole thing is pretty dull, really.
― SWM seeks intrinsically and gravely disordered action (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Monday, 2 December 2013 00:30 (eleven years ago) link
Look up the definition of "wasting one's energy" and underneath it is "mocking PopMatters in 2013" pretty much.
― Murgatroid, Monday, 2 December 2013 00:34 (eleven years ago) link
I've never really read Popmatters (and I guess I won't start). Just kind of stunned by how dull and lacking in any kind of insight that article was.
― SWM seeks intrinsically and gravely disordered action (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Monday, 2 December 2013 00:48 (eleven years ago) link
like reading paint dry
― CANONICAL artists, etc., etc. (contenderizer), Monday, 2 December 2013 01:01 (eleven years ago) link
You mean your posts
― 乒乓, Monday, 2 December 2013 01:02 (eleven years ago) link
yes, excuse me, reading your posts dry
― CANONICAL artists, etc., etc. (contenderizer), Monday, 2 December 2013 01:04 (eleven years ago) link
sic burn tho
http://youheardthatnew.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/dayoFireworks_500.jpg
― CANONICAL artists, etc., etc. (contenderizer), Monday, 2 December 2013 01:08 (eleven years ago) link
PopMatters has published some good stuff from some good writers (I'm not counting my own work among this, fyi) but the site has a serious quality control issues that make it something of a chore to sift through. Also, an over-reliance on lists, but that's hardly limited to that site.
― a fifth of misty beethoven (cryptosicko), Monday, 2 December 2013 03:09 (eleven years ago) link
I know that the AV Club, esp their music section, fits into the same category as PopMatters in "not even worth discussing really" but I love how they think that artists writing songs for other fellow artists is a novel idea and worth publishing a listicle about: http://www.avclub.com/article/overflowing-cups-12-acts-who-wrote-for-other-artis-106083
― Murgatroid, Monday, 2 December 2013 06:53 (eleven years ago) link
hahahaha jesus christ
― some dude, Monday, 2 December 2013 06:57 (eleven years ago) link
like, i enjoy Evan R's work there and think he's fighting the good fight at a place that has all but given up on covering music, but i kinda wanna put him on the spot and ask if he maybe raised his hand when that thing was coming together and pointed out why a list with 12 artists on it was a bad idea for that topic.
― some dude, Monday, 2 December 2013 07:00 (eleven years ago) link
love how in that very simple list they still manage to confuse "writing a song for someone else" with "writing a song and then it gets covered by someone else" (Nothing Compares 2 U, I Feel For You -- i only read the prince one so i assume his isn't the only case)
― my whole family is catholic so look at the pickle i'm in (zachlyon), Monday, 2 December 2013 07:11 (eleven years ago) link
very sus that they lead with a picture of Fun and their entry just says the members used to be in different bands, and then compliments them on how they've grown as songwriters
― i also enjoy in line skateing (spazzmatazz), Monday, 2 December 2013 07:15 (eleven years ago) link
I will say, however, that they should be given props for placing all the entries on the same page and not making the listicle a slideshow as well (as they've always done with these things, and something I hope they continue doing, even if I never read them anymore). It's the faintest praise ever, but still.
― Murgatroid, Monday, 2 December 2013 07:25 (eleven years ago) link
spazzmatazz and murgatroid posting garbage back-to-back
― buzza, Monday, 2 December 2013 07:28 (eleven years ago) link
http://thequietus.com/articles/14291-warpaint-review
okay, it's not the worst but i don't think i've read a more off-putting final sentence
― tench and pike, scaup and snipe (NickB), Friday, 17 January 2014 09:04 (eleven years ago) link
Appalling piece. Can't spell psychedelia either.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Friday, 17 January 2014 12:09 (eleven years ago) link
There's been an irresistible twilight, road movie grind to their music, all half-asleep grooves and stoned humping
mmmmmm
― tench and pike, scaup and snipe (NickB), Friday, 17 January 2014 12:33 (eleven years ago) link
Lol at equating lack of twitter beefs with reticence.
― pearly-dewdrops' bops (monotony), Friday, 17 January 2014 13:05 (eleven years ago) link
this might be the worst job anyone has ever done at interviewing
http://blog.thecurrent.org/2013/12/112-words-from-bonnie-prince-billy/
― Ronnie James 乒乓 (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 23 January 2014 00:58 (eleven years ago) link
lol 'I probably couldn’t tell you anything you couldn’t learn over the Internet.'
― j., Thursday, 23 January 2014 01:01 (eleven years ago) link
ahahahaha
― pessimishaim (imago), Thursday, 23 January 2014 01:03 (eleven years ago) link
That is both terrible and weirdly perfect.
― Simon H., Thursday, 23 January 2014 01:04 (eleven years ago) link
Aw
― he drummed, pompously (dog latin), Thursday, 23 January 2014 01:30 (eleven years ago) link
When the interviewee asks a question, you gotta answer with a firm "hey! I'll ask the questions around here, pal" followed by some nachos to smooth things over
― Sufjan Grafton, Thursday, 23 January 2014 01:36 (eleven years ago) link
BPB was one of the first artists I ever interviewed, face to face, back in 1997, and remains perhaps the most purposefully difficult and evasive I've ever met. I've never really been able to enjoy his music since, because he was so unnecessarily obstructive and dickish.
― the "Weird Al" Yankovic of country music (stevie), Thursday, 23 January 2014 07:50 (eleven years ago) link
Though yes those are some heinous questions.
― the "Weird Al" Yankovic of country music (stevie), Thursday, 23 January 2014 07:51 (eleven years ago) link
Interviewed him twice during the same promo cycle a few years back (once for an article, the second time cause the local campus station pulled me in last minute cause they knew I was a big fan of him). The first time, he was fantastic while the second time at the radio station, he was evasive as stevie said, but not enough that I was too annoyed or anything.
― Murgatroid, Thursday, 23 January 2014 07:55 (eleven years ago) link
(and as for whether he recognized my voice, I don't think so - first time was on the phone while the second time was face to face)
― Murgatroid, Thursday, 23 January 2014 07:57 (eleven years ago) link
Surely that's her first ever interview with a musician. It's comically bad but I cut student journalists a lot of slack.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 23 January 2014 09:50 (eleven years ago) link
imo it's very bad form to be dragging student journalists itt. save it for the pros or pro websites
― lex pretend, Thursday, 23 January 2014 10:06 (eleven years ago) link
yeah, as someone who has graded a large amount of student journalism, it can be much much worse than this (and surely that's the point)
― the "Weird Al" Yankovic of country music (stevie), Thursday, 23 January 2014 10:18 (eleven years ago) link
Yeah, it's not like I'm in any rush to reprint my handful of student interviews. The bar is low.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 23 January 2014 10:18 (eleven years ago) link
(ie you write badly as a student because you don't know better, and then you learn better, and then you become better)
― the "Weird Al" Yankovic of country music (stevie), Thursday, 23 January 2014 10:19 (eleven years ago) link
(xp)
Will Oldham was the first artist I ever interviewed. Although I was almost sick with nerves beforehand, he was no problem at all, and acceptably forthcoming. I finished the call by thanking him for "dispelling the myth that you are a difficult interviewee". No excuses, no slack!
― mike t-diva, Thursday, 23 January 2014 12:08 (eleven years ago) link
I don't think that Oldham was being particularly difficult, i just think that everyone has to start somewhere and it's bad form to rip into student journalists who haven't worked out how to do an interview yet.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 23 January 2014 12:12 (eleven years ago) link
also the Q&A format really leaves no room to paper over a bad interview, which can happen to anyone and isn't necessarily a marker of the journalist's skill
― lex pretend, Thursday, 23 January 2014 12:20 (eleven years ago) link
and more than anything else interviews are something you HAVE to learn on the job, there's no formula for a good one, a lot of it is intuition, and the more experience you get at them the better you become
― lex pretend, Thursday, 23 January 2014 12:22 (eleven years ago) link
I'm just glad I didn't do many interviews for the university paper because I shudder to think how many musicians I'd have alienated with dumb questions back then.
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 23 January 2014 12:24 (eleven years ago) link
Perhaps Oldham is difficult because he's such a classic student journalist interview
― badg, Thursday, 23 January 2014 13:14 (eleven years ago) link
Hey guys I work really closely with our intern program. In fact I have 2 multi page feature articles written by college interns that will be in the next issue. They will be going out in 8 million issues of the magazine. We've had tons of kids that were just as young write great stuff. Thing is you have to challenge them, send stuff back, make them do it over, work at it. Writing for a living is almost impossible if you're good so no ones doing this kid any favors by trekking her it's ok not to prep for an interview or to publish shit that is this bad. So I'm not being some meanie to student, I work with great interns every day and some have gotten jobs after because we didn't treat them with kid gloves. We respected them enough to give them real criticism. They aren't babies.
They don't get paid. If you're not going to at least help them learn what it really takes to do the job well, you are just wasting their time.
― Ronnie James 乒乓 (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 23 January 2014 14:45 (eleven years ago) link
m@tt OTM
― SHAUN (DJP), Thursday, 23 January 2014 14:50 (eleven years ago) link
Writing for a living is almost impossible if you're good
Strange state of affairs w all these gr8 opportunities for unpaid interns.
― UK Cop Humour (Bananaman Begins), Thursday, 23 January 2014 14:53 (eleven years ago) link
We do ours through schools, it's something they apply for. It's a 3 month temporary term to ensure that 1) they come in understanding that this is not a promise of eventual employment 2) we don't keep stringing them along as indentured servants.
I myself started as an unpaid intern.The lack of jobs in writing is due to the large scale meltdown of the publishing industry.
― Ronnie James 乒乓 (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 23 January 2014 15:01 (eleven years ago) link
That cool w you bananaman?
― Ronnie James 乒乓 (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 23 January 2014 15:02 (eleven years ago) link
& lex is right, being a good interviewer take time, but teaching kids that it's ok to be lazy and not even bother to do any homework isn't helping.
― Ronnie James 乒乓 (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 23 January 2014 15:04 (eleven years ago) link
teaching kids that it's ok to be lazy and not even bother to do any homework isn't helping.
who here is doing that? i think the sentiment is that this thread shouldn't be for piling on student journalists, not that someone shouldn't tell the interviewer that they flunked this one out, and how.
― the "Weird Al" Yankovic of country music (stevie), Thursday, 23 January 2014 15:14 (eleven years ago) link
This wasn't published on a student site, that's a professional national public radio site.
― Ronnie James 乒乓 (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 23 January 2014 15:20 (eleven years ago) link
It's not like I'm trolling student newspapers, it's considered a major outlet of music coverage in my city
― Ronnie James 乒乓 (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 23 January 2014 15:21 (eleven years ago) link
Shit. I misunderstood... okay, I take it all back...
― the "Weird Al" Yankovic of country music (stevie), Thursday, 23 January 2014 15:24 (eleven years ago) link
Ah ok I see why ppl reacted that way... For the Brits this is sort of like a BBC site equivalent
― Ronnie James 乒乓 (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 23 January 2014 15:26 (eleven years ago) link
Yes, that's the website for Minnesota Public Radio
― SHAUN (DJP), Thursday, 23 January 2014 15:32 (eleven years ago) link
In that case it can gtfo
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 23 January 2014 15:42 (eleven years ago) link
http://blog.thecurrent.org/2013/12/15-minutes-in-fargo-with-martin-zellar/
looks like she asks the same basic questions to everyone
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Thursday, 23 January 2014 15:53 (eleven years ago) link
A lot to learn here:
"Well, after listening to some of your 'stuff' (sure), I’d agree (not committing) with the people (they exist) who said (ready to blame them if this doesn't go well) it’s a type of (open to interpretation of course) alternative, indie style (two descriptors make it feel descriptive!)."
― Evan, Thursday, 23 January 2014 16:38 (eleven years ago) link
Yeah, I mean these are definitely a failure of whoever's running the intern program there. "Being published" is not the same as "learning."
― maura, Thursday, 23 January 2014 16:40 (eleven years ago) link
imo there are few learning experiences more important than getting shot down hard. I know some people find the experience too upsetting, but, you know, grow some skin already.
― signed, J.P. Morgan CEO (Hurting 2), Thursday, 23 January 2014 16:48 (eleven years ago) link
sure, but i mean the fact that these pieces have been published is a sign that nobody is being 'shot down hard' in the long or the short run.
― maura, Thursday, 23 January 2014 17:05 (eleven years ago) link
Isn't NPR's business model centered around publicly humiliating interns anyway?
― lisa 龜 (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 23 January 2014 17:10 (eleven years ago) link
xp editors have ceded this responsibility to commenters now
― the "Weird Al" Yankovic of country music (stevie), Thursday, 23 January 2014 17:11 (eleven years ago) link
NPR != MPR, though?
― SHAUN (DJP), Thursday, 23 January 2014 17:12 (eleven years ago) link
re The BPB, do you think there might be some chance that no one with experience was willing to do the interview, precisely because of his terrible reputation, at which point it was thrust on to the intern with five minutes' notice? Because it certainly doesnt read like said intern had lobbied hard to interview a hero, does it?
― Unsettled defender (ithappens), Thursday, 23 January 2014 20:26 (eleven years ago) link
― maura, Thursday, 23 January 2014 17:05 (3 hours ago) Permalink
right, that was exactly what I meant by my post
― signed, J.P. Morgan CEO (Hurting 2), Thursday, 23 January 2014 20:42 (eleven years ago) link
Everyone undertaking a conversation with such a fantastic and unusual person should do a good bit of research before getting on the phone. You should be able to find out whether or not he's been to Minneapolis pretty easily with some internet research. Then you can skip straight to questions about the movies he's been in, his facial hair, the evocative lyrics he's written, where he lives, and the stuff not yet on the web. What made you want to talk to him in the first place? Don't underestimate how helpful publicists can be to brainstorm good discussion topics, and they'll definitely know ways to get their clients talking.
― this harmless group of nerds and the women that love them (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 23 January 2014 23:40 (eleven years ago) link
So tell me more about your facial hair and evocative lyrics. Also where do you live?
― this harmless group of nerds and the women that love them (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 23 January 2014 23:41 (eleven years ago) link
Looking at it, it looks like it could have been an email or gchat interview. Those come out horribly sometimes, especially if the interviewee responds with single line answers and the interviewer isn't prepared to interrogate further.
― he drummed, pompously (dog latin), Thursday, 23 January 2014 23:59 (eleven years ago) link
The interviewer looked like she had no idea who he is as evidence by the line I broke down slightly upthread. I don't think any blame is on BPB.
― Evan, Friday, 24 January 2014 00:05 (eleven years ago) link
wouldn't you be a little insulted that MPR was wasting your time with this interviewer who clearly didn't care? what's he supposed to do?
― Ronnie James 乒乓 (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 24 January 2014 00:13 (eleven years ago) link
to this writer's credit she wrote a better story on transgender issues than 99% of the professional critics reviewing the against me! album.
― katherine, Friday, 24 January 2014 00:27 (eleven years ago) link
(which is a false equivalency, yes, but A) if we're talking about "doing a good bit of research"... and B) everyone in college writes inexperienced stuff, because they're inexperienced, and the grind of the internship cycle / online publishing just means people can read it.)
― katherine, Friday, 24 January 2014 00:35 (eleven years ago) link
Even if she were interviewing a complete nobody that would be a sorry, half-assed excuse for an interview.
― Burt Stuntin (Hurting 2), Friday, 24 January 2014 17:34 (eleven years ago) link
Feel like at this point, mocking the AV Club's music writing is like mocking a student paper's music writing (speaking of being topical to this thread!), both are shooting fish in a barrel but AVC shouldn't have gotten to this point, they shouldn't be this bad.
I bring this up because of their "Same Love" piece, written for the Grammys. I'm sure what was written in it (rap doesn't say anything about civil rights, but Macklemore is here to save everyone) was written by a lot of straight music writers but ugh.
At least in their music, hip-hop’s biggest artists weren’t too concerned about civil rights in 2013: Jay Z may have donated the “charity” of his “presence” at the occasional Trayvon Martin rally, but his album was more focused on reiterating that he is still very rich, while Kanye West eloquently quoted Martin Luther King’s “thank God almighty… free at last!” to refer to unrestrained breasts. Meanwhile, on the most pressing civil rights issue of the times—gay marriage, which he professes to support—the exhaustingly clueless Eminem suggested on “Rap God” that he might “break a motherfuckin’ table over the back of a couple faggots and crack it in half.” In the face of such squandered opportunities to use rap to say something meaningful about anyone’s rights, it was utterly refreshing to see the somewhat geeky, un-posturing Macklemore (along with utterly nondescript sidekick Ryan Lewis) step up to the plate and deliver thoughtful commentary on the changing tide on gay rights in America.…Lyrically, Macklemore’s ruminations aren’t always profound (Wow, people can sure be nasty in anonymous YouTube posts!), but “Same Love” feels empowering simply because he’s so earnestly addressing the topic at all.
…
Lyrically, Macklemore’s ruminations aren’t always profound (Wow, people can sure be nasty in anonymous YouTube posts!), but “Same Love” feels empowering simply because he’s so earnestly addressing the topic at all.
http://www.avclub.com/article/macklemore-amp-lewis-same-love-is-more-than-a-pro--200929
― Murgatroid, Sunday, 26 January 2014 03:34 (eleven years ago) link
http://blog.thecurrent.org/2013/12/15-minutes-in-fargo-with-martin-zellar/looks like she asks the same basic questions to everyone
I love Oldham, but reading this one basically made me think, "See Will? That's how you answer an underprepared kid's questions in a kind, reasonable, professional manner."
― alpine static, Sunday, 26 January 2014 05:52 (eleven years ago) link
i was thinking about starting a thread of screenshots of avclub's terrible new article titling but i'm uncertain of its mass appeal
― worthless lucubrations w/ ill-concealed apathy bro (zachlyon), Sunday, 26 January 2014 06:51 (eleven years ago) link
looking at just the titling is hate-reading's version of "just the tip"
― Murgatroid, Sunday, 26 January 2014 06:54 (eleven years ago) link
http://s18.postimg.org/jhuhbt3vd/royals.png
― worthless lucubrations w/ ill-concealed apathy bro (zachlyon), Sunday, 26 January 2014 06:55 (eleven years ago) link
oh my god, Todd VanDerWerff is terrible enough when he stays in his own lane
― Murgatroid, Sunday, 26 January 2014 06:56 (eleven years ago) link
ikr!
and yeah i never read the articles because i'm trying to not drive myself to violence and the titles are literally enough for an entire lifetime of hate
― worthless lucubrations w/ ill-concealed apathy bro (zachlyon), Sunday, 26 January 2014 06:59 (eleven years ago) link
i should post quotes from Todd's ode to Royals' finger snaps to rile you up
― Murgatroid, Sunday, 26 January 2014 07:01 (eleven years ago) link
haha the first line: "It’s the finger snaps, I think." no that's it for me.
the other hilarious thing is that with their disgusting redesign they also decided to ramp up their # of regular features 5000% so every time i visit there are like eight new supposed regular features i'm seeing for the first time and will possibly never see again and every one has some long introductory paragraph explaining the regular feature
it seems tragically difficult to maintain it all and now they're probably realizing they could just scrap the regular features thing and be like every other website on the internet
― worthless lucubrations w/ ill-concealed apathy bro (zachlyon), Sunday, 26 January 2014 07:03 (eleven years ago) link
I think they have a regular column dedicated to food scenes in movies, which is a nadir of something
― Murgatroid, Sunday, 26 January 2014 07:06 (eleven years ago) link
seriously i have never seen these before this week:
SketchhistoryInternet Film SchoolKeyboard GeniusesWhat Are You Playing This Weekend?Stop the Presses!Firsties
― worthless lucubrations w/ ill-concealed apathy bro (zachlyon), Sunday, 26 January 2014 07:06 (eleven years ago) link
oh god, "Firsties"
insert ouroboros.jpg here
― Murgatroid, Sunday, 26 January 2014 07:08 (eleven years ago) link
Internet Film School isn't too bad, it's actually written by Scott Eric Kaufman of the Lawyers, Guns and Money blog; he also teaches visual rhetoric at UC Irvine. But yeah, overall AVC has gone right over a cliff.
― Ian from Etobicoke (Phil D.), Sunday, 26 January 2014 13:26 (eleven years ago) link
At this point I only read the Newswire and select TV stuff. The music coverage has always been suspect at best, though.
― Simon H., Sunday, 26 January 2014 14:16 (eleven years ago) link
no, not always.
― lollercoaster of rove (s.clover), Sunday, 26 January 2014 15:24 (eleven years ago) link
Hi there, UCI employee here. Known Scott for a while but he left a year or two ago and now lives in Baton Rouge. And yes, the best writer of the current AVC bunch by a mile.
― Ned Raggett, Sunday, 26 January 2014 15:33 (eleven years ago) link
I like Ignatiy Vishnavetsky a lot too, he's way too good to be writing for AVC, but whatever, I bet they pay better than any other gig he's had, save that time he co-hosted Ebert Presents or whatever it was called.
― Murgatroid, Sunday, 26 January 2014 15:55 (eleven years ago) link
As far back as I can remember, at least. Did it have a non-crappy heyday?
― Simon H., Sunday, 26 January 2014 16:01 (eleven years ago) link
Admittedly I did like their metal column. 'Till it got axed.
― Simon H., Sunday, 26 January 2014 16:50 (eleven years ago) link
sean o'neal's a treasure and they're lucky to have him
not a huge fan of the stuff i've read from ignatiy, never sure what the hype is about
― worthless lucubrations w/ ill-concealed apathy bro (zachlyon), Sunday, 26 January 2014 18:25 (eleven years ago) link
http://www.buzzfeed.com/perpetua/macklemore-grammys
this is as bad as you think
― Murgatroid, Monday, 27 January 2014 22:06 (eleven years ago) link
i don't really remember the dates i liked the av club for music. there was a period around 2002-2005 that i read it pretty frequently and treated it as a 'second opinion' after the voice that i tended to trust more than e.g. most glossies, and then i sorta drifted away from paying attention and i couldn't tell you what happened since why. from that period there were a bunch of names that ended up showing up elsewhere/around both online and in print that were all pretty decent too. i think a lotta good ppl probably passed thru there over the years.
― lollercoaster of rove (s.clover), Monday, 27 January 2014 22:56 (eleven years ago) link
there’s certainly no other major rapper willing to be as overtly pro-LGBT on a record
this is surely false - plz counter, ILX
get the feeling that perp is ignoring a lot of female rappers there for a start
― i assume "Little Joey" (imago), Monday, 27 January 2014 22:58 (eleven years ago) link
"i think a lotta good ppl probably passed thru there over the years."
yeah -- in the current publishing climate, "too good for __________" is a weird thing to say about any writer.
― katherine, Tuesday, 28 January 2014 00:09 (eleven years ago) link
nicki fucking minaj
― worthless lucubrations w/ ill-concealed apathy bro (zachlyon), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 02:46 (eleven years ago) link
was the article about the importance of pharrell's hat any good?
― ^ enlightening post (sarahell), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 02:54 (eleven years ago) link
av club was early on in taking a catholic approach across genres. wide-ranging coverage, including serious reviews of pop albums, etc. better than most alt-weeklies. i was in chicago at the time and the reader had a good music section but it was sort of specific and featurish. for general reviews and coverage the av club (which i read thru the print edition) was way better than any other weekly i could get my hands on, physically.
― lollercoaster of rove (s.clover), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 03:15 (eleven years ago) link
omg are we going to count on him to defend the racist music industry every few weeks now?
― dyl, Tuesday, 28 January 2014 04:14 (eleven years ago) link
Just seen this from 2012http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/culture/lucyjones/100063781/should-paul-simon-have-defied-a-un-boycott-to-make-graceland-in-south-africa-under-apartheid/
"Music-lovers will find it difficult not to take his side, as Philip Glass, Paul McCartney, David Byrne and Oprah do in the film. It is said that he put a “human face on apartheid” and raised awareness about what was happening in South Africa. It is said that without his chutzpah Ladysmith Black Mambazo and other musicians wouldn't have had so much global success. It is even said that without Graceland, there would be no hiphop".
― ۩, Tuesday, 28 January 2014 22:21 (eleven years ago) link
read that last sentence again
what the
― SHAUN (DJP), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 22:26 (eleven years ago) link
it is even said by morons that without Graceland, there would be no hiphop
― tylerw, Tuesday, 28 January 2014 22:29 (eleven years ago) link
oh wow
― Burt Stuntin (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 22:37 (eleven years ago) link
it is even said that without graceland, there would be no martin luther king
― i want to say one word to you, just one word:buzzfeed (difficult listening hour), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 22:39 (eleven years ago) link
now say that in the voice of Herman Cain
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 22:40 (eleven years ago) link
ok this is like 10x more minor, but it really irks me when people miss the point of this line:
So he took off to the home of Elvis, saw the 'Mississipi Delta shining like a national guitar' and eventually decided to just go with it.
by not capitalizing National. The line is a reference to National brand resophonic guitars, which are very silvery and shiny, and are also used a lot in blues. Yes, there's also a play on words, with the mississippi delta being like a "national" guitar of the united states, but that makes no fucking sense without the reference. Why would a national guitar of the US be shiny?
― Burt Stuntin (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 22:40 (eleven years ago) link
it is said it is shiny
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 22:41 (eleven years ago) link
Clearly, art cannot exist in a vacuum, in some sealed-off Arcadia in the clouds. But then… how I adore Graceland. I remember exactly where I first heard it, sitting on the floor of a friend’s room in my first year of university, drinking cheap red wine. There’s a moment in the film where the drummer breaks into a grin at the riff of You Can Call Me Al. Perhaps we should just be glad it exists – but even more so that apartheid is over.
― Burt Stuntin (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 22:44 (eleven years ago) link
The Magic of "Graceland"By Jay NordlingerJanuary 28, 2014 5:32 PM 43 Comments
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 22:46 (eleven years ago) link
not to put too fine a point on it
― PSY talks The Nut Job (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 22:47 (eleven years ago) link
meanwhile in MN, Meagan Pittelko is writing the most heartfelt thank-you note of her life
― SHAUN (DJP), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 22:47 (eleven years ago) link
http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/culture/lucyjones/100065085/this-gotye-and-call-me-maybe-mash-up-could-be-number-one-for-the-rest-of-the-yeardecadehistory/
― Burt Stuntin (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 22:47 (eleven years ago) link
mon-wed
TV Club 10Adapt and DieThe Single FileOne-Season Wonders, Weirdos and Wannabes
― worthless lucubrations w/ ill-concealed apathy bro (zachlyon), Wednesday, 29 January 2014 06:15 (eleven years ago) link
It is even said that without Graceland, there would be no hiphop
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 29 January 2014 10:30 (eleven years ago) link
"without Graceland, there would be no hiphop"
1 result (0.32 seconds)
― soref, Wednesday, 29 January 2014 12:03 (eleven years ago) link
At av club andy battaglia was great back in the day.
― Tim F, Wednesday, 29 January 2014 12:06 (eleven years ago) link
Oh, apparently the 'no hip hop' argument is made in the Under African Skies documentary, rather than just being something the telegraph blogger invented. So I suppose she is correct that 'it is (even) said'
― soref, Wednesday, 29 January 2014 12:09 (eleven years ago) link
She didn't bother to take it to task so one can presume she believed it to be true.
― ۩, Wednesday, 29 January 2014 12:58 (eleven years ago) link
sometimes just reporting the words is enough
― rock nobster (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 29 January 2014 13:00 (eleven years ago) link
Paul Simon time-traveled to the Bronx 1971 and performed Planet Rock at the Under the Sea dance.
― Burt Stuntin (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 29 January 2014 15:17 (eleven years ago) link
it is believed that "Bridge Over Troubled Water" by Grandmaster Paul & Gar-Funkenstein prophetically refers to the Marley Marl/KRS-One beef of the mid-late 80s.
― Just noise and screaming and no musical value at all. (Colonel Poo), Wednesday, 29 January 2014 15:23 (eleven years ago) link
Little known fact but he also paved the way for bands like Operation Ivy and the Mighty Mighty Bosstones with his song Ska-Bro Fare.
― keiji cretins (NickB), Wednesday, 29 January 2014 15:36 (eleven years ago) link
― Just noise and screaming and no musical value at all. (Colonel Poo), Wednesday, January 29, 2014 10:23 AM (13 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
ftw
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Wednesday, 29 January 2014 15:40 (eleven years ago) link
also recorded the early diss track "A Message to Benedict Art" after his group broke up
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Wednesday, 29 January 2014 15:45 (eleven years ago) link
lol @ Ska-Bro Fare
― Deafening silence (DL), Wednesday, 29 January 2014 15:49 (eleven years ago) link
I heard he hard-sonned Papoose in a battle last year in disguise, under the moniker "50 Wayz"
― Burt Stuntin (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 29 January 2014 16:08 (eleven years ago) link
I Am A Roc Marciano
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Wednesday, 29 January 2014 16:54 (eleven years ago) link
The Only Living B-Boy in New York
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Wednesday, 29 January 2014 16:57 (eleven years ago) link
Paul Simon time-traveled to the Bronx 1971 and performed Planet Rock at the Under the Sea dance.― Burt Stuntin (Hurting 2), Wednesday, January 29, 2014 10:17 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Burt Stuntin (Hurting 2), Wednesday, January 29, 2014 10:17 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Afrika! Afrika, it's Marvin. Your cousin, Marvin Bambaataa. You know that new sound you're looking for? Well, listen to this!
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 29 January 2014 17:01 (eleven years ago) link
omg lol
― SHAUN (DJP), Wednesday, 29 January 2014 17:02 (eleven years ago) link
set...SPIKE!
― Burt Stuntin (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 29 January 2014 17:03 (eleven years ago) link
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/music/why-is-pop-music-stuck-on-the-same-old-song/article16557019/
why doesn't Beyonce write songs about Robbe-Grillet novels
― struggle blogger (Andre Gunder Frank 3000), Thursday, 30 January 2014 08:36 (eleven years ago) link
can't believe that the guy who brought us "When it comes to selfies, James Franco could take a lesson from Lady Gaga" and "Can winter socks be both warm and dressy?" could stoop to this
― Squidward Ka-Spel (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 30 January 2014 08:41 (eleven years ago) link
In hip hop, the verses can be chanted rather than sung
*takes notes*
― Merdeyeux, Thursday, 30 January 2014 09:40 (eleven years ago) link
Five'll get you ten he's never read Alain-Grillet in his life. Otherwise he would have known that I Am Sasha Fierce is Beyonce's Les Gommes.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Thursday, 30 January 2014 09:50 (eleven years ago) link
He also wrote this, lol: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/the-truth-about-publishing-its-full-of-hotties/article4322712/
― longneck, Thursday, 30 January 2014 09:57 (eleven years ago) link
But I have never in my whole career made a real pass at one of my colleagues or, I think, been flirtatious to the point of making someone seriously worried about my attention. Even when I was single.
Why has this guy not been arrested already?
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Thursday, 30 January 2014 10:05 (eleven years ago) link
What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. I love songs. I sing them in the shower sometimes. They can be poignant or cheery or angry and they can have catchy and satisfying melodies. There’s nothing wrong with songs.
Very long new board description
― Deafening silence (DL), Thursday, 30 January 2014 10:34 (eleven years ago) link
All songs – all of them, every single one, that is to say 100 per cent – must have a four-four time signature.
That's Burt Bacharach put in his place then.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Thursday, 30 January 2014 10:45 (eleven years ago) link
Songs are great. I love songs. I sing them in the shower sometimes. They can be poignant or cheery or angry and they can have catchy and satisfying melodies.
RUSSELL @ KFC.EDU
― wilful brony (DJ Mencap), Thursday, 30 January 2014 12:20 (eleven years ago) link
Oh, jeez, Russell Smith. He was a promising novelist that never lived up to the promise, then became Canada's most cringeworthy columnist. He's also a jerk and a snob, but that's getting ad-hominem.
― is olympic hamsterwheel a thing? (staggerlee), Friday, 31 January 2014 03:05 (eleven years ago) link
thu/fri
Who In the World Is Camero...Albums That Time ForgotBlock & TackleExpert Witness
― worthless lucubrations w/ ill-concealed apathy bro (zachlyon), Saturday, 1 February 2014 03:04 (eleven years ago) link
forgot i screencapped this
https://31.media.tumblr.com/0d40d8336fd30bab7c6f86f685b0ae43/tumblr_mwsquzE5kM1qzb8z0o1_400.png
― worthless lucubrations w/ ill-concealed apathy bro (zachlyon), Sunday, 2 February 2014 03:45 (eleven years ago) link
dig that up for the woody allen thread?
― scott c-word (some dude), Sunday, 2 February 2014 03:49 (eleven years ago) link
just a coincidence but i sincerely await the avc column title about it
― worthless lucubrations w/ ill-concealed apathy bro (zachlyon), Sunday, 2 February 2014 04:03 (eleven years ago) link
Are these the 500 worst pieces of music writing ever?
http://rateyourmusic.com/list/schmidtt/rolling_stones_500_worst_reviews_of_all_time__work_in_progress_/1/
― davey, Thursday, 20 February 2014 08:42 (eleven years ago) link
unfortunately some of them are still seared into my brain
One would assume that anyone wanting to criticise old music criticism, ripped out of its original time and context, should be able to tell the difference between verbs transitive and intransitive.
The writing about "the 500 worst pieces of music writing ever" is one of the worst pieces of music writing ever. Another lazy, entitled parasite who only wants writing that agrees with them.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Thursday, 20 February 2014 09:18 (eleven years ago) link
http://corpus.byu.edu/coca/x3.asp?xx=1&w11=seared&w12=into&r=
― bamcquern, Thursday, 20 February 2014 09:57 (eleven years ago) link
What this guy really hates isn't the general standard of Rolling Stone reviews. He hates himself because if he was any good as a writer, Rolling Stone would have given him a job, and THAT'S what's rankling him.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Thursday, 20 February 2014 10:06 (eleven years ago) link
That may be true but the notion that professional music writing functions as a meritocracy is laughable.
― tsrobodo, Thursday, 20 February 2014 10:50 (eleven years ago) link
Even if it did, he wouldn't have got in. Does Christian Hoard owe him some money, or something?
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Thursday, 20 February 2014 11:09 (eleven years ago) link
True, it's a lousy enterprise but boy, that review of Curtis gets everything wrong. I always get a kick out of seeing clueless contemporary reviews of future classics.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Thursday, 20 February 2014 11:12 (eleven years ago) link
This is true, but if you want bad and wrongheaded music writing, then read this.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Thursday, 20 February 2014 11:27 (eleven years ago) link
Great on American music, clueless about European music is how I approach Bangs.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Thursday, 20 February 2014 11:34 (eleven years ago) link
I read this book over the weekend and I see how good a job Greil Marcus did of getting LB’s genuinely great writing into the first anthology. “Great on American music”? Have a look at his article about Wet Willie.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Thursday, 20 February 2014 11:40 (eleven years ago) link
Greil "when I said 'what is this shit' I actually meant..." Marcus.
― Mark G, Thursday, 20 February 2014 11:54 (eleven years ago) link
lol @ their argument against my weeknd review. SORRY YOUR CRYBABY DRUGGO SEXIST MAKES AWFUL MUSIC THAT CAN BE DEMOLISHED SUCCINCTLY. editing: maybe abel should try it sometime
― maura, Thursday, 20 February 2014 15:19 (eleven years ago) link
Yeah, well no one is forcing you to listen to this thing in one sitting.
― Inside Lewellyn Sinclair (cryptosicko), Thursday, 20 February 2014 15:26 (eleven years ago) link
Hardly think that makes a difference. A lot of his songs don't justify their length.
― tsrobodo, Thursday, 20 February 2014 17:22 (eleven years ago) link
This guy really hates xhuxk
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Thursday, 20 February 2014 18:16 (eleven years ago) link
This guy hates everybody. You have to worry about anyone who can write 500+ angry entries without any jokes.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Thursday, 20 February 2014 18:24 (eleven years ago) link
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Thursday, 20 February 2014 09:18 (9 hours ago) Permalink
OTM. I actually kind of enjoy what another poster upthread called "clueless" reviews of "future classics. It's refreshing to see that someone listening to a "classic" record with fresh ears, at the time, might have come to a different conclusion about it, even if I don't agree with that conclusion. And sometimes there are nuggets of honest truth in them that get kind of buried in all the worshipfulness that comes later, e.g. the bit about Hendrix's lyrics being pretty banal. That's often true.
― Burt Stuntin (Hurting 2), Thursday, 20 February 2014 18:32 (eleven years ago) link
It IS fun to have an archive of notable initial reactions from RS to scroll back through.
― Evan, Thursday, 20 February 2014 19:13 (eleven years ago) link
― Inside Lewellyn Sinclair (cryptosicko), Thursday, February 20, 2014 10:26 AM (4 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― tsrobodo, Thursday, February 20, 2014 12:22 PM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Nah, was just quoting the writer's witty retort to Maura's review.
― Inside Lewellyn Sinclair (cryptosicko), Thursday, 20 February 2014 19:34 (eleven years ago) link
Aah I see, my bad. Didn't actually read past the first 3 or 4. The idea of 500 petty and vindictive reviews of other people's reviews depresses me in ways that I don't understand.
― tsrobodo, Thursday, 20 February 2014 22:18 (eleven years ago) link
there's the new board description
― we sold our Solsta for Rock'n'Roll (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 20 February 2014 22:53 (eleven years ago) link
The idea of 500 petty and vindictive reviews of other people's reviews depresses me in ways that I don't understand
depresses me in ways i understand completely. it's fucking depressing, for one thing. might be worth a glance if the takedowns were funny, but they're not - just reams of whiney bullshit about nothing.
― contenderizer, Friday, 21 February 2014 06:36 (eleven years ago) link
i don't know why you gotta drag whiney into this.
― eric banana (s.clover), Friday, 21 February 2014 06:55 (eleven years ago) link
contenderizer otm
― you are clinically deaf and should sell you iPod (stevie), Friday, 21 February 2014 07:43 (eleven years ago) link
Speaking of Rolling Stone, this seemed to get a lot of people into a tizzy: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/berghain-the-secretive-sex-fueled-world-of-technos-coolest-club-20140206
― Chewshabadoo, Friday, 21 February 2014 08:03 (eleven years ago) link
using the descriptor "emo" as a test case I think we still have at least five years before the kind of ppl who comment just to go DON'T CALL IT EDM accept that they're fighting a losing battle
― imago bantz and the deems context (DJ Mencap), Friday, 21 February 2014 08:11 (eleven years ago) link
I think that RS article is great, taught me a lot about Berlin I didn't know.
― my father will guide me up the stairs to bed (anagram), Friday, 21 February 2014 08:57 (eleven years ago) link
HERE'S a new candidate. And it's from the editor, even.
http://www.nme.com/blogs/nme-blogs/alex-turners-brits-speech-was-everything-rocknroll-is-meant-to-be
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 21 February 2014 12:31 (eleven years ago) link
lock thread
― micah, Friday, 21 February 2014 14:04 (eleven years ago) link
As I said on the Brits thread, it's a bit inelegantly put, but I do think the writer has a point.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Friday, 21 February 2014 14:10 (eleven years ago) link
best thing is that it never explains who the hell Alex Turner is
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Friday, 21 February 2014 14:11 (eleven years ago) link
that is good because 99.9% of people reading would know
― nashwan, Friday, 21 February 2014 14:13 (eleven years ago) link
except... it does?
― sent as gassed to onto rt dominance (DJP), Friday, 21 February 2014 14:33 (eleven years ago) link
(or were you looking for more than "front man of Arctic Monkeys who won the biggest music award given out by Great Britain"?)
― sent as gassed to onto rt dominance (DJP), Friday, 21 February 2014 14:35 (eleven years ago) link
I don't see that sentence in the piece.
I see this: "For the frontman of the UK's biggest band"
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Friday, 21 February 2014 14:51 (eleven years ago) link
I got that from the title of the Youtube embed.
I mean, I'm not arguing that this is an amazing piece of writing or anything, just that that particular criticism seems off when the entire thesis of the piece seems to be "this dude who won an award gave a speech"
― sent as gassed to onto rt dominance (DJP), Friday, 21 February 2014 14:55 (eleven years ago) link
whowhatwhenwherewhyhow
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Friday, 21 February 2014 14:56 (eleven years ago) link
Which is not what any of the thesis of the piece is (xp).
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Friday, 21 February 2014 14:57 (eleven years ago) link
New Yorker style required: "Recently, Alex Turner, the frontman of Arctic Monkeys, an alternative rock band from Sheffield, England, accepted an award at a ceremony held annually by the British Phonographic Industry, colloquially known as the Brits."
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Friday, 21 February 2014 14:59 (eleven years ago) link
Turner hereafter referred to as Mr Turner.
― you are clinically deaf and should sell you iPod (stevie), Friday, 21 February 2014 15:03 (eleven years ago) link
just the words "Arctic" and "Monkeys" appearing somewhere in the piece would have been just fine.
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Friday, 21 February 2014 15:05 (eleven years ago) link
Last year he spoke a lot about the writing style of John Lennon of The Beatles
― Mark G, Saturday, 22 February 2014 00:15 (eleven years ago) link
ha ha Alex Turner is as famous as John Lennon I get it
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Saturday, 22 February 2014 01:48 (eleven years ago) link
i just love that the famous rock star industry is in such dire straits that the fucking arctic monkeys are the best torchbearers anyone could scrounge up
kinda like ten years ago when the white stripes were the only modern band big american mags felt comfortable putting on the cover
― a commentary on self-absorbed youth culture in the social media age (zachlyon), Saturday, 22 February 2014 02:43 (eleven years ago) link
Jack's a pretty great "rock star" though - eccentric, idiosyncratic style, good interviewee, intriguing "concept". Arctic Monkeys dude is just A N Other indie bloke, albeit one who somehow got Josh Homme's cellphone number.
― you are clinically deaf and should sell you iPod (stevie), Saturday, 22 February 2014 08:43 (eleven years ago) link
thank you, i thought i was going mad for a while there
― we sold our Solsta for Rock'n'Roll (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 22 February 2014 08:45 (eleven years ago) link
where can I purchase this speech
― Hongro4/4Ass (wins), Saturday, 22 February 2014 09:51 (eleven years ago) link
could do with having my faith in "rocknroll" restored
― Hongro4/4Ass (wins), Saturday, 22 February 2014 09:52 (eleven years ago) link
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/worlds-most-sampled-song-change-beat-fab-5-freddy-180949863/http://bit.ly/1c4OvAW
― PSY talks The Nut Job (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 25 February 2014 17:03 (ten years ago) link
forks, just because someone read something out loud on youtube you saw doesn't make it true
― wavy tare's cashout flicks (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 26 February 2014 02:18 (ten years ago) link
http://www.whosampled.com/The-Winstons/Amen,-Brother/
vs
http://www.whosampled.com/Beside/Change-the-Beat-(Female-Version)/
What's with the arctic monkey's Fonzie hair? Is he a "ted"?
― sXe & the banshees (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 26 February 2014 03:31 (ten years ago) link
I remember when they first came out they looked like kids who would go to a midnight opening to buy a ps3
― sXe & the banshees (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 26 February 2014 03:32 (ten years ago) link
Whiney, did u really try to call me out as being a dillettante with a whosampled.com link?
― PSY talks The Nut Job (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 26 February 2014 04:48 (ten years ago) link
submitted for your approval:
http://www.rockfreaks.net/albums/6720
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Wednesday, 26 February 2014 15:52 (ten years ago) link
reads like it has been Google-translated from another language
― Kim Wrong-un (Neil S), Wednesday, 26 February 2014 15:54 (ten years ago) link
even parke puterbaugh nods
― j., Wednesday, 26 February 2014 15:59 (ten years ago) link
So you might ask: what is our focus? The majority of magazines cater to only one kind of audience. Rockfreaks.net caters to those who have long ago realized that good great music exists in each and every genre. Whether it's grindcore, indie rock, tough guy hardcore, gothic metal, pop punk, post-rock, emo, death metal or mainstream rock, each genre has it's own pile of crap, but if you dare to scratch enough underneath the surface, and you'll find gems. Guaranteed.
NOTE: We DO NOT cover pop, hip-hop, dance music, etc. We won't review it.
― The Buzzing of Summer Tweets (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 26 February 2014 16:13 (ten years ago) link
hahahahahahahaha
― you are clinically deaf and should sell you iPod (stevie), Wednesday, 26 February 2014 16:15 (ten years ago) link
"Underneath the surface, you'll find gems. Unless it's black."
I propose an entryist campaign of ILXors applying to write for rockfreaks.net, then we can subvert the system from within
― Kim Wrong-un (Neil S), Wednesday, 26 February 2014 16:25 (ten years ago) link
wait does it really say "good great music" on the site itself? if so, genius
― the tune was space, Wednesday, 26 February 2014 16:28 (ten years ago) link
ah it's Danish. I suppose some unfamiliarity with English can be forgiven. But still DEATH TO THE ROCKISTS
― Kim Wrong-un (Neil S), Wednesday, 26 February 2014 16:30 (ten years ago) link
great music varies- some of it is good
― Evan, Wednesday, 26 February 2014 16:34 (ten years ago) link
From a college newspaper review that's not worth vilifying by linking, but I love this faint praise:
If you are a fan of staid, indie melodies and retro-modern beats, then Angel Olsen's new album "Burn Your Fire for No Witness" is probably for you. Although by no means warm or exciting, Olsen's newest compilation is a testament to the fact that heartbreak can help create the most interesting music.
― something of an astrological coup (tipsy mothra), Wednesday, 26 February 2014 16:45 (ten years ago) link
it says "realized that good great music exists in each and every genre"
― soref, Wednesday, 26 February 2014 16:46 (ten years ago) link
xp bit of a Marilyn Hagerty vibe to that one
― imago bantz and the deems context (DJ Mencap), Wednesday, 26 February 2014 16:50 (ten years ago) link
that sentence really hedges its bets
― 4. Nels Cline and My Uncle Eat Soup at Panera Bread (3:37) (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 26 February 2014 17:27 (ten years ago) link
The Angel Olsen one is amazing. Had to google for the whole review. I like this sentence: "That being said, Olsen's music is not the type you dance along with in the car."
― Eyeball Kicks, Wednesday, 26 February 2014 19:13 (ten years ago) link
some days i feel like the only person in the world who isn't on the retro-modern beats bandwagon
― a commentary on self-absorbed youth culture in the social media age (zachlyon), Thursday, 27 February 2014 01:20 (ten years ago) link
http://s29.postimg.org/6m3s3v093/image.png
just imagining someone mixing meat loaf and goth in a pot
― a commentary on self-absorbed youth culture in the social media age (zachlyon), Sunday, 2 March 2014 00:34 (ten years ago) link
http://s14.postimg.org/k4vs1pa8x/av2.png
yes, that's typically how it happens
avclub routinely has some of the worst writing around.
― you are clinically deaf and should sell you iPod (stevie), Sunday, 2 March 2014 00:35 (ten years ago) link
Lmao that headline
― MISTERSNRUB (some dude), Sunday, 2 March 2014 01:17 (ten years ago) link
with one weird song
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Sunday, 2 March 2014 05:13 (ten years ago) link
Not the worst piece of music writing ever, but an example of how writers find all that counting and math stuff very difficult at times.
You can now watch a clip of them performing “Losing My Edge” below and check out the 38-song tracklist.
The Long Goodbye:01 “Dance Yrself Clean”02 “Drunk Girls”03 “I Can Change”04 “Time to Get Away”05 “Get Innocuous!”06 “Daft Punk Is Playing at My House”07 “Too Much Love”08 “All My Friends”09 “Tired / Heart of the Sunrise”20 “45:33 Intro”21 “You Can’t Hide (Shame On You)”22 “Sound of Silver”23 “Out In Space”24 “Ships Talking”25 “Freak Out / Starry Eyes”26 “Us v Them”27 “North American Scum”28 “Bye Bye Bayou”29 “You Wanted a Hit”30 “Tribulations”31 “Movement”32 “Yeah”33 “Someone Great”34 “Losing My Edge”35 “Home”36 “All I Want”37 “Jump Into the Fire”38 “New York, I Love You But You’re Bringing Me Down”
http://www.stereogum.com/1667153/lcd-soundsystem-announce-live-album-of-final-concert/news/
― Position Position, Sunday, 2 March 2014 22:30 (ten years ago) link
i came across this allmusic review earlier today:
Music for Films, Vol. 3, is a set of mismatched pieces by Brian Peter George St. John le Baptiste de la Salle Eno (aka Eno). They are from his voluminous works for cinema, installations, shorts, and other related media. The disc contains 15 short pieces (only one is over five minutes). In that regard, there is a distinct similarity to his new wave pop music from the '70s. This CD is, however, all instrumental, largely electronic, and distinctly Eno. Despite their dissimilar origins, these tracks have definite cohesion. Eno injects avant-garde timbres and metallic textures into each composition. The flow is smooth, the atmospheres are vast, and the soundscapes are vivid. This is a very cool montage of Eno's work.
― Karl Malone, Sunday, 2 March 2014 23:02 (ten years ago) link
http://louderthanwar.com/in-defence-of-frank-turner/
a URL which delivers and then some
― trying to emulate Kirk Cobain with a shrill, shouting voice (DJ Mencap), Monday, 10 March 2014 11:54 (ten years ago) link
crikey... that's TERRIBLE.
― you are clinically deaf and should sell you iPod (stevie), Monday, 10 March 2014 12:08 (ten years ago) link
Author Bioian-critchley"I hate writing about myself as a writer so instead I got UK singer/songwriter Mike Morris writer / editor to do me justice: [Ian is] infectious and full of emotion, much like a high tempered fever going on a verbal rampage which will only end in tears and laughter. Never one to step shyly into a subject that no other man would touch with an infected ten foot pole! Fearless and a little brash at times but always honest and a damn good read!"
Yay?
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 10 March 2014 12:11 (ten years ago) link
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/1/18/Mike_Morris_TV-am_Headshot.jpg/220px-Mike_Morris_TV-am_Headshot.jpg ??
― you are clinically deaf and should sell you iPod (stevie), Monday, 10 March 2014 12:12 (ten years ago) link
not really music writing tbf to the lad
― Nooye's Vagge (Noodle Vague), Monday, 10 March 2014 12:15 (ten years ago) link
One reader of John Robb’s ‘An Open Letter To Frank Turner’ (view here) that was posted on this website commented
― I'm vaguely certain Warrington is the reason I'm a manic depressant (soref), Monday, 10 March 2014 12:15 (ten years ago) link
Frank really has more in common with Ghandi then he does with someone like Thatcher, so go fuck yourself.
"Go fuck yourself" - Ghandi
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Monday, 10 March 2014 12:22 (ten years ago) link
I don't know if that's the same guy as Gandhi though.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Monday, 10 March 2014 12:23 (ten years ago) link
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_I5jWivtqr-k/TNGsuCNmS7I/AAAAAAAAAM4/5N1kka2Vjgw/s400/Makeup+of+garbage+graph.png
If we place the article somewhere on this graph it would most likely be in the same spot as glass on the Y axis and roughly about the same distance along on the X, though in the opposite direction.
― eardrum buzz aldrin (NickB), Monday, 10 March 2014 12:25 (ten years ago) link
I need to say again, this is one of the most terrible pieces of writing of any kind that I have ever read. It is truly the defence that the execrable Turner deserves.
― you are clinically deaf and should sell you iPod (stevie), Monday, 10 March 2014 12:36 (ten years ago) link
was gonna bump Frank's v own thread for this on the grounds that it indeed isn't really music writing... but something drew me towards this one instead
― trying to emulate Kirk Cobain with a shrill, shouting voice (DJ Mencap), Monday, 10 March 2014 12:47 (ten years ago) link
"wank-bond-villain-looking villain, Adolf Hitler"
― inside out trousers (dog latin), Monday, 10 March 2014 12:56 (ten years ago) link
new display name btw
it's certainly punk grammar
― Nooye's Vagge (Noodle Vague), Monday, 10 March 2014 12:59 (ten years ago) link
BUY WANK BONDS
― bizarro gazzara, Monday, 10 March 2014 14:01 (ten years ago) link
Man, if you could buy bonds in wank... imagine the shorts trading on the those.
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Monday, 10 March 2014 14:03 (ten years ago) link
sad. every clueless girlfriend/cool record dude cliche on one page. what if pomplamooose wrote record revieews
http://alltherecords.tumblr.com/
― scott seward, Saturday, 15 March 2014 15:33 (ten years ago) link
basically just raises my feminist hackles. yes i have feminist hackles.
― scott seward, Saturday, 15 March 2014 15:38 (ten years ago) link
But she's not a music writer? Does that really belong here? It just looks like she's having a bit of fun.
This project was my idea, inspired by maybe one too many glasses of wine last weekend, when I was in charge of changing the music. “I can’t believe there are so many records here that I have never listened to. I should try to listen to all of them. And then write about it.” So here we are.
― Scooby Doom (۩), Saturday, 15 March 2014 16:07 (ten years ago) link
it's in public. it's music writing. a bit of fun is fair game. i don't care if someone is an amateur. i was an amateur for years.
― scott seward, Saturday, 15 March 2014 17:13 (ten years ago) link
BE COOL ITS JUST A BIT OF FUN
― you are clinically deaf and should sell you iPod (stevie), Saturday, 15 March 2014 17:14 (ten years ago) link
it's in public. it's music writing.
if this is the criteria, then I nominate all Youtube comments
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Saturday, 15 March 2014 18:58 (ten years ago) link
honestly that site probably gets read more than most 'professional' music writing because of its shareability (read: buying into clichés of how women experience music compared to men)
― maura, Saturday, 15 March 2014 18:58 (ten years ago) link
i only skimmed it cos who gives a fuck but the amount of art of pretend ignorance etc going on was bad enough on its own
― pings can only get wetter (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 15 March 2014 19:33 (ten years ago) link
faux-naive bloggy voice
― eric banana (s.clover), Saturday, 15 March 2014 20:01 (ten years ago) link
oh yeah that's the one
― pings can only get wetter (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 15 March 2014 20:27 (ten years ago) link
https://31.media.tumblr.com/4c0ab27bcc2166acb1a62f7213bf3943/tumblr_inline_n1xwdcUmcR1sauz6x.jpg
the copy of INFINITE JEST and the iPhone and the coffee all in the frame is just too much
― perfect puppy (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 15 March 2014 20:42 (ten years ago) link
yeah but look a Richard Wright book included in sight of the camera
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 15 March 2014 20:43 (ten years ago) link
haha that leapt out at me too
― post-nodern music player (wins), Saturday, 15 March 2014 20:48 (ten years ago) link
coffee, though, really? It's a pretty popular beverage iirc
― post-nodern music player (wins), Saturday, 15 March 2014 20:49 (ten years ago) link
an iphone, how dare she
― linda cardellini (zachlyon), Saturday, 15 March 2014 20:54 (ten years ago) link
they must've spent hours setting up that shot, those fucking [i'm not sure, insert whatever "owns an iphone and drinks coffee and has a copy of infinite jest on bookshelf implies in 2014]
― linda cardellini (zachlyon), Saturday, 15 March 2014 20:55 (ten years ago) link
Oh hey, we have finally reached the point where "I don't even own a copy of Infinite Jest" is the new "I don't even watch TV".
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Saturday, 15 March 2014 20:58 (ten years ago) link
lol at whiney being outraged at them owning books, drinking coffee, but totally down w/ the sweatpants
― balls, Saturday, 15 March 2014 21:07 (ten years ago) link
http://31.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_l4q2h9wWsU1qc6hm5o1_500.jpg
sicko renee zellwegger holds four coffees while reading infinite jest on her iphone kindle app.
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Saturday, 15 March 2014 21:07 (ten years ago) link
if this is some kind of nascent blog-to-book deal that's one thing but most of the posts here have like 9 notes, some of them from her best friend
― katherine, Saturday, 15 March 2014 21:39 (ten years ago) link
God, reading that blog is like eating (not chewing, eating) that obnoxious soft pink gum that starts out hard but ends up floury and you can't ever take it out of your mouth because it just winds up sticking to everything.
― a lot of really bad records changed my life (staggerlee), Sunday, 16 March 2014 01:21 (ten years ago) link
what
― linda cardellini (zachlyon), Sunday, 16 March 2014 01:41 (ten years ago) link
Just a suggestion but what if the alltherecords woman actually is that naive? And like "buying into cliches" cos they apply to her? It ws boring so I didn't read much, bt she seemed nice enough.
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Sunday, 16 March 2014 02:03 (ten years ago) link
so this is the end result of compulsory college education. thanks, obama!
― j., Sunday, 16 March 2014 02:04 (ten years ago) link
There isn't anything inherently wrong w someone (male/female/whatever) not knowing anything abt music, is there?
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Sunday, 16 March 2014 02:05 (ten years ago) link
yes i think you nailed why people might not enjoy this blog, it is because they judge the author for not knowing about music. that is clearly what is happening in this thread.
― eric banana (s.clover), Sunday, 16 March 2014 02:16 (ten years ago) link
http://www.stereogum.com/962491/deconstructing-grimes/news/
Don't know if this has been posted yet but I think it is totally the worst piece of music writing ever. Everything about it is infuriating, but nothing more so than the writer's never really qualified assertion that Grimes' "disembodied" singing is "infantilized" and means she isn't a strong female agent. Fuck ascribing literal political content to aesthetic choices. Grimes is great. She can sing like an elven robot if she wants to.
― Treeship, Sunday, 16 March 2014 02:19 (ten years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7DE1EfSZVIA
― scott seward, Sunday, 16 March 2014 02:20 (ten years ago) link
OK what is going on then?
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Sunday, 16 March 2014 02:21 (ten years ago) link
Of course, Grimes’ cyborg unicorn stance is an updated ideal on the continuum of the asexuality that a certain strain of indie rock values, up to and including twee
So?
― Treeship, Sunday, 16 March 2014 02:23 (ten years ago) link
wait so is that like an updated buffalo stance
― j., Sunday, 16 March 2014 02:28 (ten years ago) link
(sorry i started talking abt a new topic.)
― Treeship, Sunday, 16 March 2014 02:36 (ten years ago) link
Fine by me, that blog wasn't "music writing" in the first place anyway
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Sunday, 16 March 2014 02:44 (ten years ago) link
Seen this being passed about pretty much with this accompanying line every time "shit band but even shittier review"
http://www.nme.com/reviews/the-twang/15140
― Scooby Doom (۩), Sunday, 16 March 2014 03:03 (ten years ago) link
I just hate that article so much. The writer wants Grimes to be a totally different kind of musician and doesn't even once engage with the album on its own terms.
― (Positively) Nakhchivan Horn Street (Treeship), Sunday, 16 March 2014 03:06 (ten years ago) link
that twang review is good in an nme eating their own sort of way
― nakhchivan, Sunday, 16 March 2014 03:08 (ten years ago) link
the old build em up knock em down?
― Scooby Doom (۩), Sunday, 16 March 2014 03:09 (ten years ago) link
the twang were awful so i doubt anyone will have much sympathy
― Scooby Doom (۩), Sunday, 16 March 2014 03:10 (ten years ago) link
uh I don't know what is crossposting with what anymore but julianne is a really great writer who's explained that piece before and imo doesn't deserve to be mentioned with the stuff in this thread
― katherine, Sunday, 16 March 2014 03:16 (ten years ago) link
Idk anything abt the writer. It's definitely a competently written piece i just fiercely disagree with it.
― (Positively) Nakhchivan Horn Street (Treeship), Sunday, 16 March 2014 03:22 (ten years ago) link
Like, i don't want to disparage this writer as a whole and god knows i appreciate the difficulty of writing criticism without overreaching in one's claims, but this particular article struck me as extremely off the mark to the point where i found myself thinking about it tonight, two years after reading it.
― (Positively) Nakhchivan Horn Street (Treeship), Sunday, 16 March 2014 03:30 (ten years ago) link
Julianne is a good writer sure but this piece is grossly conflating "what I'm hearing and typing" with "the axis of the author's abilities/intentions". Any discussion of Grimes sounding "infantile" has got to acknowledge that her choices on this record come from the fact that it's The Third Record That She Has (Self-)Produced. Ascribing notions of negating-self and erasing-womanness because she is a junior-producer (compared to Carey's male crew of hirelings) is, to me, exploring the extant reaches of divergence between "what you think it is, as a writer-listener" and "what it actually is, as a musician"
On a baseline level, early crit of Grimes' "I made this on Garageband" statements (equal parts disclaimer and statement of fact) led some to believe that she was deliberately pursuing a twee, thin, amateur standpoint; she had nothing but a computer and a keyboard when making this record so save these discussions for your major-label drop-screens, I guess?
― continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 16 March 2014 03:41 (ten years ago) link
I don't think this Grimes piece doesn't belong in a "worst music writing ever" thread but definitely could start its own "Poptimism proved its point many years ago, we all love Aaliyah now, please stop this myopic exclusion of homemade/DIY/reactionary/feminist/transgressive music based on the fact that it sounds 'unprofessional'" thread
― continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 16 March 2014 03:53 (ten years ago) link
*belongs, not "doesn't belong".
― continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 16 March 2014 03:55 (ten years ago) link
julianne is a really great writer who's explained that piece before
Hmm. I don't know what this means exactly, but if you've had to "explain" something you've written then the original piece has surely failed in its intent.
― Position Position, Sunday, 16 March 2014 08:27 (ten years ago) link
nme twang review is fine, i really don't see what is "bad music journalism" about it, unless you are a member of the twang.
― you are clinically deaf and should sell you iPod (stevie), Sunday, 16 March 2014 08:33 (ten years ago) link
A 150-word Twang review is stretching the definition of writing anyway - what would be a good one? - but I hate stuff like "trundling about aimlessly like a doddery tortoise who can’t remember if it even wants another bit of lettuce but is ambling on regardless". Just meaningless and unfunny. Why do you need "trundling", "aimlessly", "doddery" and "ambling" in the same sentence anyway? We know how tortoises move.
― Eyeball Kicks, Sunday, 16 March 2014 12:20 (ten years ago) link
it means she's addressed this criticism before, forget where
― katherine, Sunday, 16 March 2014 17:19 (ten years ago) link
Pretty OTM here.
Re: that Grimes piece, I wish critics would at least think twice before calling music "asexual" or "sexless" or whatever, and think about if there's maybe more precise verbiage they could use. When I read shit like that, more than anything it makes the critic sound like a dopey college kid who just read Freud in a literary theory class.
― intheblanks, Sunday, 16 March 2014 21:42 (ten years ago) link
My Husband's Stupid Record Collection just published her take on Albert Ayler's Spirits Rejoice. I really don't know if it belongs in this thread but I am fascinated and deeply disturbed by this blog. I can't decide if it's the ultimate troll or there's something more there...
http://alltherecords.tumblr.com/post/79768774507/albert-ayler-spirits-rejoice
― Badmotorfinger Debate Club (MFB), Monday, 17 March 2014 04:56 (ten years ago) link
I wish critics would at least think twice before calling music "asexual" or "sexless" or whatever, and think about if there's maybe more precise verbiage they could use.
i don't think it's about verbiage, i think it's more about that fact that demanding artists be "sexual" -- or in this case, tap into the "dark arts of womanness" (sic) -- is a weird thing to do.
― Treeship, Monday, 17 March 2014 05:05 (ten years ago) link
that is how like 99% of the living human population would respond?
it's one of my favorite records ever (actually the only ayler album i've heard entirely) but i find her review less annoying than his bit
― linda cardellini (zachlyon), Monday, 17 March 2014 05:05 (ten years ago) link
i don't care what most people would say. it's not cool to use the expression "the emperor has no clothes" ever, really, but especially in regard to albert ayler.
― james franco, Monday, 17 March 2014 05:11 (ten years ago) link
xp I didn't word it well, but that's what I was trying to get across. It's demanding artists express a very specific version of "sexuality," whether or not it's aligned to the artists' goals.
I feel like in the post-poptimism age, "asexual," "sexless," or similar terms have become as stale as old rockist dudes saying something isn't "dangerous" or "rebellious" or whatever.
― intheblanks, Monday, 17 March 2014 06:10 (ten years ago) link
It did however, lead to this exchange after that WaPo Arcade Fire review:
https://twitter.com/Chris__Richards/status/395251870622425088
― intheblanks, Monday, 17 March 2014 06:12 (ten years ago) link
intheblanks onthemoney
― you are clinically deaf and should sell you iPod (stevie), Monday, 17 March 2014 09:41 (ten years ago) link
lol it's made it to fact http://www.factmag.com/2014/03/16/a-librarian-rates-her-husbands-stupid-record-collection-one-at-a-time-on-this-ace-blog/
― all is fair in love and womp (monotony), Monday, 17 March 2014 11:08 (ten years ago) link
not sure someone's perfectly genuine thoughts about their husband's record collection should be lumped in with examples of terrible music criticism, but feel free to snark away everyone.
― Angkor Waht (Neil S), Monday, 17 March 2014 11:18 (ten years ago) link
No idea why people're being such dicks abt this blog tbh, it's exactly like zachlyon said, vast majority of ppl wld respond like this to Ayler etc
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Monday, 17 March 2014 11:39 (ten years ago) link
Otoh I'm beginning to enjoy her blog quite a bit so
"Before I started listening to this, I was waiting for my tea to be ready, so I sat down and looked at the cover."
― Eyeball Kicks, Monday, 17 March 2014 11:52 (ten years ago) link
OK, every time I try to read that blog, it crashes my browser (it must have some autoembedded player in it) but from what I've read, it is very, very different from what I was expecting, due to the comments in this thread.
What raises *my* feminist hackles is when a woman does a thing, and then everyone goes on to criticise her for the thing being ~too stereotypically feminine~ or ~not stereotypically feminine enough~ ergo whatever the woman has done, it is RONG and use "~feminism~" as a justification for it.
I was expecting her to make a big deal of her gender, and she doesn't. What she makes a big deal over, is that she is a Non Music-Fan, and describes how a Non Music-Fan listens to and processes unfamiliar music. At some point (and I'm not sure where, because I don't read it in her writing, but I sure read it all over this thread) the responses of "Non Music-Fan" has been gendered into "clueless girl". Combine that with pictures of an attractive hipster-ish young woman: ILX OUTRAGE.
I dunno; I don't *gender* her responses. It happens to be a woman writing about her husband's record collection. I have several confused and confounded ex boyfriends who could have written *that exact blog* of wrestling with my record collection and going "WTF is this Experimental Audio Research record, I think there are maybe synths on it?" But I doubt that would have attracted anything like the attention, because: gender. People are reading this blog, not as "non music fanatic listens to records" but either as "ISN'T IT SO CUTE WHEN (CLUELESS) GURLS LISTEN TO MUSIC" or as "OMG ISN'T IT AWFUL WHEN PEOPLE CALL GIRLS CLUELESS ABOUT MUSIC, I DON'T LISTEN TO MUSIC LIKE THIS!!!"
When the thing is, at no point does *she* ever seem to conflate "clueless" and "girl" and "non music fan". She admits to being "non music fan" and yes, it's sexist to conflate "girl" and "clueless" and "non music fan" but it's the people reading that blog and bringing their preconceptions and doing the heavy lifting of generating the sexism here.
But, like I said, there is nothing ILX likes to do more than hate on attractive young women Doing Things in public, and extra double ILX points if you can somehow position your hatred as "feminist".
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Monday, 17 March 2014 12:35 (ten years ago) link
- usually enjoy writing about music from an outsider perspective and BB otm that there's not necessarily anything wrong with the project per se but that woman's writing voice is really annoying BUT what are we doing going in on amateurs without a significant audience when this world is full of terrible professional writing
- julianne e.s. is one of the best writers in the game right now and while i wouldn't criticise grimes on those terms i don't see anything that bad about that piece
― lex pretend, Monday, 17 March 2014 12:45 (ten years ago) link
npr yuppie /= clueless girl
the annoyance and focus on this obscure little blog is bizarre though. someone somewhere on the internet is a moron, what else is new. at least w/ ott you have the angle of someone who was a tiny part of something huge now when it was also tiny and you get to watch and wonder when he's finally going to kill himself and how many other ppl he's going to take w/ him. this is just daniel stern's character from diner crossed w/ some denis leary mtv spot.
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 12:45 (ten years ago) link
julianne e.s. is one of the best writers in the game right now nine years ago
have long thought most pop cult crits should have short shelf lifes anyway and then move on to something potentially productive (actual journalism maybe, like john leland, or, if all other options have been exhausted, become an actual musician, create something, test yr theory), and shepherd's just another example of why.
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 12:49 (ten years ago) link
Criticism is creating something though.
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 17 March 2014 12:51 (ten years ago) link
Thank you v much BB/otm
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Monday, 17 March 2014 12:59 (ten years ago) link
"have long thought most pop cult crits should have short shelf lifes anyway and then move on to something potentially productive"
that's nice, are you offering everyone jobs
― katherine, Monday, 17 March 2014 13:08 (ten years ago) link
i think its pretty disingenuous to act like that blog everyone's talking about isn't written in the midst of huge shared cultural context regarding music knowledge and gender and nick hornsby and whatever, and its pretty disingenuous to act like the "oh look there are lots of words" uptalk-ish voice isn't just a _bit_ of a put on with some pretty gendered connotations. and as a whole the idea that there isn't some notion of how men and women listen to music latent in that blog, at least implicitly, and if someone sees something then its something "they" are bringing with them, that sort of puts the hammer down on most any cultural criticism.
i mean that said treating the blog as evil or something is pretty dumb.
― eric banana (s.clover), Monday, 17 March 2014 13:13 (ten years ago) link
crit can be creating something if it's fostering and developing a new idea and the art criticised is just a useful model organism, if there's some larger insight that still urgent long after whatever guinea pig you've spliced open has had an ihc run on it. this describes maybe 1% of the pop crit out there though. not to say other pop crit can't be useful as a consumer guide (whether the internet has rendered this purpose more or less necessary is still up in the air apparently), but even here at its peak its usefulness didn't compare to a record store clerk or dj. if you're part of that 99% and yr calling means that on a good day you still aren't as beneficial to humanity as a record store clerk after a few years it might be time to set yr sights higher, grow up. yknow, like daniel stern at the end of diner.
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 13:16 (ten years ago) link
katherine - https://fafsa.ed.gov
yeah, i don't think it's evil. it just bugged me. especially how the husband gets the last word on a lot of entries and "explains" things after she is done. there is a great piece of writing to be written about male/female music relationships and the tyranny of the record collection, but this isn't it. i see a lot of women stand behind their husbands/boyfriends in my store while the husband/boyfriend looks at records and the woman is literally only looking at whatever the man decides to look at and in a lot of cases - brace yourself - he will then hand the records he wants to the woman to hold for him as she follows him around the store and it drives me a little crazy. so, this blog just reminds me of that for some reason. i wish them well though. even if they bug me.
― scott seward, Monday, 17 March 2014 13:19 (ten years ago) link
but okay maybe i should have looked for a thread about blogs that bug you or whatever. sorry. i knew this would get attention from other sites though. the pomplamoosification factor and all.
― scott seward, Monday, 17 March 2014 13:20 (ten years ago) link
yeah focusing on this blog reminds me of the naming and shaming of bigots on twitter only there at least it's ppl saying actually toxic shit, there's an argument for heaping derision on anonymous morons. here the worst thing said is 'man i do not get this albert ayler record'. someone doesn't get free jazz the first time they listen to some. who would have imagined such a thing was possible.
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 13:22 (ten years ago) link
ok, the fafsa site, cool, will go pass that on to any 17-year-olds reading this
― katherine, Monday, 17 March 2014 13:23 (ten years ago) link
as far as the blog my only thought is "oof I might not put my initial thoughts to paper if it were me, but it isn't me, you go do your thing" -- I mean, more people probably have rather similar initial reactions to records than would admit it, and the thing's hardly 300 Sandwiches
― katherine, Monday, 17 March 2014 13:27 (ten years ago) link
especially how the husband gets the last word on a lot of entries and "explains" things after she is done
lol it kinda is 'mansplaining: the movie'. there have been alot of these 'let's play some hip obscure music for some old ppl/children/general unknowing innocents and then record their hilarious wrong reactions' things, a means of making fun of animal collective and making fun of ppl who don't even know this is animal collective how do you not know animal collective. there are small pleasures to be had from this - my dad used to always ask 'is this inxs?' to anything i played in the car, unless it was actually inxs in which case he would ask 'is this eurythmics?' - but they are small pleasures (and on the flip side i would usually ask 'is this the doobie brothers?' to anything he played in the car but tbf it usually in fact was the doobie brothers).
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 13:30 (ten years ago) link
I didn't read much of the blog, but it struck me as an expanded version of what a bunch of us were doing on the albums of the year results thread.
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Monday, 17 March 2014 13:38 (ten years ago) link
BOOM
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 13:39 (ten years ago) link
i totally did this with pitchfork's top 100 singles on my blog! and i was just as faux-clueless. but i'm OG faux-clueless. pre-blogger faux-clueless even. i'm probably just mad that everyone jumped on my steez over the years.
― scott seward, Monday, 17 March 2014 13:47 (ten years ago) link
naive comments are only illuminating if the person writing them makes them so -- if the writer's background somehow informs the decisions in an interesting way or whatever. i can see these two people finding this endeavor fun/amusing on a private level but i don't know why the rest of us need to be dragged into "the conversation". she's not really saying much of interest.
― we slowly invented brains (La Lechera), Monday, 17 March 2014 13:57 (ten years ago) link
It's not like they're forcing anyone to read it!
― Scooby Doom (۩), Monday, 17 March 2014 13:58 (ten years ago) link
that's truei didn't read much of it
― we slowly invented brains (La Lechera), Monday, 17 March 2014 14:01 (ten years ago) link
so she isn't dragging anyone in to it
― Scooby Doom (۩), Monday, 17 March 2014 14:05 (ten years ago) link
is anyone dragging anyone into reading their music journalism? and if so how do they do it?
― you are clinically deaf and should sell you iPod (stevie), Monday, 17 March 2014 14:25 (ten years ago) link
your cheque bounced stevie so im not reading yours anymore
― Scooby Doom (۩), Monday, 17 March 2014 14:32 (ten years ago) link
Just adding my vote to the not-having-much-of-a-problem-with-that-blog camp
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Monday, 17 March 2014 14:38 (ten years ago) link
Honestly I relate a little bit to the way she hears Albert Ayler even though I like Albert Ayler
My take on that blog is I didn't read it also why the hell would anyone read it
― post-nodern music player (wins), Monday, 17 March 2014 14:42 (ten years ago) link
Like I'm aware of the existence of "non-music fans" already. No offense to the man but I wouldn't read deems's music blog either
― post-nodern music player (wins), Monday, 17 March 2014 14:45 (ten years ago) link
I liked reading a few selections from it. I don't need her take on multiple Louis Armstrong records, but it's interesting to hear a "layperson's" take on certain kinds of nerdy music.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Monday, 17 March 2014 14:53 (ten years ago) link
i mean what if you just did the old gender flip with that blog? would it be as shareable? PROBABLY NOT. and i'm not sure why that isn't something that can be critiqued, especially since more people are probably reading it than, say, fact at this point.
― maura, Monday, 17 March 2014 14:57 (ten years ago) link
c or d: making amateur critical judgments about someone else's amateur critical judgments
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Monday, 17 March 2014 14:59 (ten years ago) link
it would be totally shareable no matter the gender
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:01 (ten years ago) link
it's an outsider's perspective on nerds, always very interesting
it would definitely not be as shareable, come on. i mean, viral content is all about reinforcing already existent stereotypes.
― maura, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:04 (ten years ago) link
maybe for you it is
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:05 (ten years ago) link
Premise of this blog reminds me of this:
wifeinspace.com
tho there the couple are engaged in the project together, which i think lessens that "this is the way men listen to albert ayler" tone
― Ward Fowler, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:06 (ten years ago) link
i gotta say the blog would be way better without his writing
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:08 (ten years ago) link
it should be noted that most of the responses i have seen to this have been really positive. most people like the high concept.
― scott seward, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:08 (ten years ago) link
think i like the album conceptually somtimes more than the execution. she's really obnoxious re: albert ayler
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:09 (ten years ago) link
yeah npr yuppie is not a sex linked trait but obv this plays w/ the hook of 'record nerd bf/poor ignorant gf', you can probably find some 'funny' sports variations of this (it's even a sitcom trope of sorts w/ some dum girl doing better at sports picks than the guys and omg she's just picking based on who has a prettier uniform!). also apparently they are literally npr yuppies, dude is apparently on on the media.
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:09 (ten years ago) link
and i do predict some level of buzzfrenzy. its only monday. saw it one more time on my facebook today. the first time i saw this was via one of the wolf eyes dudes on facebook. and again today via another wolf eyes dude. husband was a michigan noise show regular back in the day apparently.
― scott seward, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:11 (ten years ago) link
it's going to be a while before she reviews wolf eyes records
― Treeship, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:12 (ten years ago) link
http://www.reddit.com/r/vinyl/comments/20i1nt/lady_goes_through_her_husbands_records_reviews/
― Evan, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:12 (ten years ago) link
scott's always on about this npr stuff also! i gotta say man for someone who can't stand them tv dinners you sure do eat enough of them motherfuckers.
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:12 (ten years ago) link
lol at wolf eyes all flustered this morning over some tumblr
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:13 (ten years ago) link
glad all you guys are around to explain sexism and the way the internet works to me, whew
― maura, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:17 (ten years ago) link
i have a whole host of reasons for feeling the way i do about this particular blog, not the least of which is that such an experiment was once performed on me, only it was more high concept (there was an end goal) and it was never made public (though my husband did make lovely bound copies for the participants).
― we slowly invented brains (La Lechera), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:20 (ten years ago) link
okay, i'm out. seeya peeps lates. one luv.
― scott seward, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:21 (ten years ago) link
http://rlv.zcache.com/dont_ask_jeeves_ask_me_shirts-r4bc0b8ccd4e84a4384c634e900558a79_8n2rj_324.jpg
― Evan, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:21 (ten years ago) link
oh but the wolf eyes guys liked it! wanted to make that clear. they are nice enough fellas.
― scott seward, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:22 (ten years ago) link
scott, your pitchfork thing was hilarious
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:23 (ten years ago) link
maura otm, there's a super high degree of 'i am just a girl' going on in the way that makes it viralcomparable to a kid listening to records. or your stoner cousin. but less marketable as less "adorkable"; this video explains a lot of the appeal and derision imohttps://mtc.cdn.vine.co/r/videos/FBD07082241052805603967344640_14e61eb7a1d.4.8.15931423460955070825.mp4?versionId=Zt52IjShOoBU7Vp7Yxzbl0jRFfjuucsL
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:23 (ten years ago) link
yeah, i don't think it's evil. it just bugged me. especially how the husband gets the last word on a lot of entries and "explains" things after she is done. there is a great piece of writing to be written about male/female music relationships and the tyranny of the record collection, but this isn't it. i see a lot of women stand behind their husbands/boyfriends in my store while the husband/boyfriend looks at records and the woman is literally only looking at whatever the man decides to look at and in a lot of cases - brace yourself - he will then hand the records he wants to the woman to hold for him as she follows him around the store and it drives me a little crazy. so, this blog just reminds me of that for some reason. i wish them well though. even if they bug me.― scott seward, Monday, March 17, 2014 1:19 PM
― scott seward, Monday, March 17, 2014 1:19 PM
You know what? I am also familiar with this stereotype, both as a person who has worked in record shops, and spent a great deal of my life hanging around record shops.
But have you ever actually gone and asked those women why they are trailing around after their partners, instead of choosing their own records? Because I have spent a lot of time talking to women about music, and specifically about why they don't participate in music-culture more, even though they are interested in music and enjoy listening to it.
And one of the things that comes up in talking to women about why they don't participate in music more (whether that's women who don't make the purchases at a record shop, or women who are super into music and will make their own purchases, but don't participate in music forums etc.) one of the answers that comes up again and again is: the fear that they will be disparaged for their choices, be sneered at for the way they engage with music. Dudes in record shops will laugh at the CD you want to buy, and dudes on messageboard will tell you that are you ~listening wrong~ or engaging wrong.
So when you witness this whole phenomenon, as both a dude who works in a record shop and a dude who posts on a music messageboard, and you decide that the way to compensate for this is to: disparage a woman on a blog writing about music, for writing about music ~the wrong way~ I'm sorry, but you are contributing to this phenomenon way more than some librarian failing to understand an Albert Ayler record.
I think Maura gets at *something* when she says that it is the gendering of this blog, and how it reinforces stereotypes which is contributing to its "shareability". But I think there's a way to talk about that and address it, and a way to just contribute and reinforce those things. And this thread went down the wrong way.
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:24 (ten years ago) link
how about there's a super high degree of she's an outsider crashing into the nerdworld
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:24 (ten years ago) link
Anna Minard has been doing something very similar in The Stranger for years, a column called "Never Heard of 'Em."
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:24 (ten years ago) link
i dunno someone who has NEVER heard of Albert Ayler listening to Albert Ayler and writing about it? seems p. interesting to me
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:27 (ten years ago) link
you really don't think the tone is faux-naïf bloggy branwell? i mean, that whole bit where she learns about what a gatefold is...
― maura, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:27 (ten years ago) link
i didn't know the husband did that TLDR podcast--this is starting to seem like one of those dumb Hannah Rosin/David Plotz projects
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:28 (ten years ago) link
i hope my post wasn't the nail in the coffin there!
many women do not participate in music culture because of the unwanted attention it invites. this blog invites that sort of attention, which i find disappointing more than objectionable.
― we slowly invented brains (La Lechera), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:30 (ten years ago) link
i can't believe *some* people don't know about gatefolds
*rolls eyes*
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:31 (ten years ago) link
it does make me want to do a blog where I force your standard record bro to listen to the weird and varied world of any female artists whatsoever (this seems like an exaggeration but it's not) but something tells me the prose would not come out so publishable
― katherine, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:32 (ten years ago) link
As someone whose tone is *constantly* misread (being told I am faux when I am being genuine, being told I am angry when I am empassioned, and so on and so forth) I am very, *very* hesitant to read "naif" or "faux-naif" into the tone of any writer with whose work I am so little acquainted.
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:32 (ten years ago) link
i'm not saying 'i can't believe she knows what a gatefold is,' waterface. i'm saying that the way she talked about learning what it was involved extremely gendered language and affect, and those affects tie into how "shareable" the site overall is.
― maura, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:33 (ten years ago) link
i see a lot of women stand behind their husbands/boyfriends in my store while the husband/boyfriend looks at records and the woman is literally only looking at whatever the man decides to look at and in a lot of cases - brace yourself - he will then hand the records he wants to the woman to hold for him as she follows him around the store and it drives me a little crazy. - lol change 'woman' to 'kurt' and 'man' to 'courtney' and this is the story i've heard of when kurt and courtney were in athens. obv the gendering plays a role, it's a tumblr spin on according to jim, they don't make those dumb sitcoms where the wife is the slob loser and the husband is the mature adult that rolls his eyes at what a loser he's married (wait - is that what the good wife is about?), but the npr aspect is central, if this was some metal chick going wtf and laughing at her bf's anthrax records it wouldn't have nearly the shareability (though it would have considerably more readability).
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:33 (ten years ago) link
fair enough, branwell, maybe i've just been reading too many sites for women (cough) lately to see that tone as a little archly studied
― maura, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:34 (ten years ago) link
― katherine, Monday, March 17, 2014 3:32 PM (1 minute ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
ha otm
― lex pretend, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:34 (ten years ago) link
maura otm re tone
― we slowly invented brains (La Lechera), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:35 (ten years ago) link
this is kind of npr intern has never heard public enemy all over again also
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:35 (ten years ago) link
yeah i mean it's very 'lol at the dumb person' whether that dumb person is the guy who owns too many records or the woman who doesn't know how to properly discuss them
― maura, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:36 (ten years ago) link
everyone is terrible, the end
― we slowly invented brains (La Lechera), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:37 (ten years ago) link
I am also aware that women are rewarded for writing a ~certain way~ and disparaged for writing in ~certain other ways~ and it's very hard not to conform, maybe even subconsciously. But that does not mean that I am prepared to jump on a woman for expressing herself in a way that women are routinely taught and rewarded for expressing themselves.
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:37 (ten years ago) link
standard record bro has records by female artists. contemporary female artists otoh...
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:37 (ten years ago) link
Kate Bush for sure
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:38 (ten years ago) link
whatever we're all just contributing to the inevitable book proposal
― maura, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:38 (ten years ago) link
i bet this woman hasn't even heard ott's night bus mixtape
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:39 (ten years ago) link
You guys will all do this viral marketing shit for me when my book goes online, right? Nope, didn't think so. Baby my tone is bad.
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:39 (ten years ago) link
When I pulled this album off the shelf I said, “oh, it’s an open-y!” And Alex was all, “alright, do you want to know the technical term for that?” And I was all like, “shut up I’m looking at this,” because he was sounding condescending, but now, I’m over it and want to know. It’s called a “gatefold.”
OK this doesn't seem gendered to me, but what do I know? It just sounds like a couple's playful banter. But that's just my take on it.
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:39 (ten years ago) link
― maura, Monday, March 17, 2014 11:17 AM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
maybe you can start a blog where you look at "internet" sites and marvel at how many words they use and stuff and then a man can chime in and explain it to u? i think this could be something
― eric banana (s.clover), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:41 (ten years ago) link
My Exes' Stupid Browser Histories
― maura, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:42 (ten years ago) link
I guess what trips me up about this is that A) my internal monologue when approaching new records or new genres looks a lot like this, I *know* my internal monologue has looked a LOT like this for years -- does that make me a dumb girl? what about seward's thing on pitchfork, which was the same idea -- is he a dumb girl? or is it about what people are bringing to it (which, to be fair, seems to be a lot of the point).
and B) not all of it is as terrible as it's made out to be -- the hook is obviously to respond to the style and none of the substance, but like, the bit about the fertility calculator? that could completely go in a review. the bit about "it sounds like sawing through pipes" could completely be part of a capsule blurb or something.
― katherine, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:42 (ten years ago) link
'some of this stuff is awful enough to be actual pop criticism' is not the best defense. good enough for a capsule blurb! i guess this project does have merit.
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:47 (ten years ago) link
you guys laugh but w/ a little polish this thing could yield a nice listicle and then who's laughing?
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:48 (ten years ago) link
you guys say this is a turd and i know it just came out of my dog's ass but i'm telling you if you put some ketchup cheese and a pickle slice on it and put it between two buns you could sell it at mcdonalds so don't try to tell me it's not edible
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:50 (ten years ago) link
the pathology of a hack
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:51 (ten years ago) link
cool, except that wasn't what I meant at all. basically the vibe I get from this is "a lot of rough pre-draft notes." do I necessarily want to read someone's pre-draft notes, no; would Alex's hypothetical pre-draft notes blow up and be A Thing, probably not; do everyone's pre-draft notes resemble this, probably more than they want to admit
― katherine, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:51 (ten years ago) link
it's a blog it's not perfectit's still not that much worse than 99% of music shit you read online
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:53 (ten years ago) link
^
― katherine, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:53 (ten years ago) link
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-AZaK5xk4qZg/UyLSWyDehcI/AAAAAAAAgEY/TKVTuczcAmY/s1600/A+meeting+of+the+Mickey+Mouse+Club,+early+1930s.jpg
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:54 (ten years ago) link
Man, I just wrote out a post which is not even going on the passive-aggressive second thoughts posts thread. But instead I am going to self censor and not say what I'm really thinking here because that's ~what girls do~.
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Monday, 17 March 2014 15:54 (ten years ago) link
it's still not that much worse than 99% of music shit you read online
agreed, when i found out the npr connection i was like 'oh, that's why anybody has noticed this'. it's not worse than 99% of the music shit npr actually pays for.
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 15:59 (ten years ago) link
btw not that anyone asked, but the experiment i referred to above was not music-related
― we slowly invented brains (La Lechera), Monday, 17 March 2014 16:05 (ten years ago) link
"But instead I am going to self censor and not say what I'm really thinking here because that's ~what girls do~."
or maybe you're just growing up. it's never too late.
― scott seward, Monday, 17 March 2014 16:12 (ten years ago) link
Wow, you're still a condescending asshole, at least that hasn't changed.
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Monday, 17 March 2014 16:26 (ten years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E5TxpJVKKQ8
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 16:30 (ten years ago) link
this really isn't a good look, unless maybe branwell bell literally murdered your literal kittens
― katherine, Monday, 17 March 2014 16:35 (ten years ago) link
― post-nodern music player (wins), Saturday, March 15, 2014 4:49 PM (2 days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
ok WTF with this open goal going unexploited with the requisite Gang Starr joke?
― grape is the flavor of my true love's hair (Jon Lewis), Monday, 17 March 2014 16:36 (ten years ago) link
This blog... I just kind of wonder how useful it is. I think it's quite amusing in places. Only read the Albert Ayler one, and questions of gender aside, it does a good job of reiterating exactly the kind of thoughts that someone who is unfamiliar with this kind of music would say - 'it sounds like tuning up', 'it sounds like a dying animal' etc. These are common criticisms of jazz from the uninitiated (along with two favourites from my own partner: 'All the jazz you listen to is either crazy typing music or it sounds like Snoopy!') - they're not wrong, a lot of jazz does sound like this. Without maybe a bit of context and/or background, it can be hard to really tell much of it apart or understand what's going on. As someone who only recently came to jazz myself, in an admittedly willful way, (because it sounds like a lot of dying cartoon animals trying to type letters on out-of-tune instruments), it was only curiosity which drove me to try and acquire an appreciation for it. I found I could only do this by comparing different artists and eras, reading a bit about the historical, personal and philosophical contexts of the recordings, and listening to shitloads of it. Even this method felt unnaturalistic, like I was giving myself some sort of education as opposed to coming to jazz through some organic chance process. I guess any genre which was pre-formed before one had an awareness of it requires this unnatural approach to some extent - the opposite of discovering new music as it happens etc... So approaching this music in this methodical way is an interesting exercise, but it's the equivalent of getting me to write a blog about a car exhibition or a season of American football... maybe a bit LOL for a couple of entries but unless it's saying anything new, I can imagine it'd get pretty tiring and just piss people off after a while. So yeah, where was I? I have to question what this blog is for, other than being a fairly entertaining exercise in naif/not naif bloggery. Are music fans and/or non-music fans actually learning anything from it? Do we get any new incites here, or is it all going to be 'Wow, some songs are 11 minutes long!' kind of stuff?
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Monday, 17 March 2014 16:43 (ten years ago) link
i don't get the term "faux-naif". sometimes it seems like people use this term to describe people who are just being upfront about the stuff they don't know, and in my view the best nonfiction writing does that.
― Treeship, Monday, 17 March 2014 16:46 (ten years ago) link
Well I did enjoy the exchange between fictional insufferable ppl in waterface's parody quote up there, a+
Gonna go ahead an assume the actual blog yall are reading on purpose is nothin like that otherwise Jesus
― post-nodern music player (wins), Monday, 17 March 2014 16:49 (ten years ago) link
xpost I actually appreciate this attitude. Rather someone is upfront about what they don't know than someone who pretends they know what they're talking about but clearly hasn't got a clue. But there are two extremes here - there's "I know everything about everything" and there's "Duh, what are these funny spinny disc things, LOL" - both quite frustrating. A good writer does their best to fact check and research the gaps in their knowledge. I get that that's not the point of this blog - it feels more 'live-blogged' than anything else, so there's no time for background research. It can be viewed a bunch of ways I guess, I just don't know if it's more about music or more about being a newcomer to a subject or about couple relationships or about gender issues. To me it doesn't seem to fall happily into any of these categories and that's why people are arguing about it.
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Monday, 17 March 2014 16:53 (ten years ago) link
imo both of these people are 100% completely complicit in their own boring life together
― 69, Monday, 17 March 2014 16:53 (ten years ago) link
guess what
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 16:56 (ten years ago) link
― Treeship, Monday, March 17, 2014 4:46 PM (10 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
you're being faux-naif when you claim you don't know what this means
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 16:57 (ten years ago) link
who, me?
― Treeship, Monday, 17 March 2014 16:58 (ten years ago) link
speaking of fictional &c
― post-nodern music player (wins), Monday, 17 March 2014 16:59 (ten years ago) link
the quote i posted was real
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 17:00 (ten years ago) link
from the blog
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 17:01 (ten years ago) link
seriously though i think certain branches of the faux naif blog voice are intended as an antidote to the kind of writing you see so much of on the internet, where everyone is caustic and defensive and would rather lash out at people than admit weak spots in their arguments.
― Treeship, Monday, 17 March 2014 17:01 (ten years ago) link
what a disaster for Albert Ayler
― coops all on coops tbh (crüt), Monday, 17 March 2014 17:07 (ten years ago) link
"Well, yeah"
― Mark G, Monday, 17 March 2014 17:08 (ten years ago) link
The ayler piece at one point says "There is a lot of writing on the sleeve and back cover". I am all for affected styles, but lets not kid ourselves, that is an affectation.
― eric banana (s.clover), Monday, 17 March 2014 17:14 (ten years ago) link
― Treeship, Monday, March 17, 2014 1:01 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
there is also the passive aggressive faux naive bloggy voice which is my favorite, and also the VERY SHOUTY one with extravagant catachresis and that's not bad either.
― eric banana (s.clover), Monday, 17 March 2014 17:16 (ten years ago) link
lol christ xp
― post-nodern music player (wins), Monday, 17 March 2014 17:18 (ten years ago) link
Catachresis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaCatachresis is the name of many different types of figure of speech in which a word or phrase vastly has departed from traditional usage. Contents.Classification - Examples - Derrida, Spivak - See also
― Mark G, Monday, 17 March 2014 17:18 (ten years ago) link
xp cloves, the latter one isn't faux naif though. the shouty folks write like idiots but they never for a second approach their topics with humility or openness or even feign doing this.
― Treeship, Monday, 17 March 2014 17:18 (ten years ago) link
See, the thing is...
If I started a vaguely humorous blog about music, I might get a bunch of youse to have a butchers at it every so often.
Beyond that, who cares?
But then again, if I actually managed to get a 'readership', I daresay a bunch of people might decide to criticise what I say, but as I have no actual qualifications to prove or disprove my standpoint, most would not care either way.
If I got described as 'faux-naif', I think I'd pack it in.
But that's unlikely to happen, is it? Being described as faux-naif, I mean.
― Mark G, Monday, 17 March 2014 17:22 (ten years ago) link
Treeship, go post on the fucking Saddle Creek board or something
― perfect puppy (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 17 March 2014 17:25 (ten years ago) link
cool
― Treeship, Monday, 17 March 2014 17:25 (ten years ago) link
i don't get the term "faux-naif". sometimes it seems like people use this term to describe people who are just being upfront about the stuff they don't know, and in my view the best nonfiction writing does that.― Treeship, Monday, March 17, 2014 12:46 PM (37 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Treeship, Monday, March 17, 2014 12:46 PM (37 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
get on our level already, you've been here long enough, i'm not buying this
― perfect puppy (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 17 March 2014 17:26 (ten years ago) link
even the most cloying faux-naive voice is a million times more tolerable than certain message-board standbys like oh I don't know
get on our level
― (or if you must, "data") (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Monday, 17 March 2014 17:30 (ten years ago) link
http://typophile.com/files/ryan%20get%20on%20my%20level.jpg
― Evan, Monday, 17 March 2014 17:41 (ten years ago) link
treeship do you even lift?
― balls, Monday, 17 March 2014 17:44 (ten years ago) link
Jeez guys the term is "falsely naive"
― continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Monday, 17 March 2014 17:51 (ten years ago) link
Is there a thread categorizing the types of forum posts
― puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 17 March 2014 17:52 (ten years ago) link
guys the term is credulity-frontin'
― 1 P.3. Eternal (roxymuzak), Monday, 17 March 2014 17:53 (ten years ago) link
the hardman crew reserve the right to get their terms wrong in order to demonstrate their hardman bona fides
― (or if you must, "data") (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Monday, 17 March 2014 18:02 (ten years ago) link
faux sure
― coops all on coops tbh (crüt), Monday, 17 March 2014 18:04 (ten years ago) link
― Quinoa Phoenix (latebloomer), Monday, 17 March 2014 18:09 (ten years ago) link
idk maybe i'd be less salty about this if there were like more women who knew their shit writing about music and having it shared all over the place. MAYBE! </naïf>
― maura, Monday, 17 March 2014 18:32 (ten years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4wrL9z3Kvww
― maura, Monday, 17 March 2014 18:33 (ten years ago) link
sorry, i'm so salty, Treeship
tough love
*hugs*
― perfect puppy (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 17 March 2014 18:37 (ten years ago) link
you catch more flies with honey, WGW
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 18:40 (ten years ago) link
ime the type of ppl sharing this and going nuts over it are mostly dudes who are really proud when their hobbies are seen as weird or inscrutable
― 1 P.3. Eternal (roxymuzak), Monday, 17 March 2014 18:45 (ten years ago) link
whatever, music is weird. *giggles*
― eric banana (s.clover), Monday, 17 March 2014 18:46 (ten years ago) link
ime, it's you guys
― post-nodern music player (wins), Monday, 17 March 2014 18:47 (ten years ago) link
This is not humming music, but then it does start sounding like a familiar patriotic song that I can’t put my finger on, but still really messy and almost like a band doing sound check. It also occasionally sounds like the trumpet that’s played before a hunt or a horse race.
'sounding like a familiar patriotic song that I can't put my finger on' is a good way to describe some of ayler's compositions, and the idea of the trumpet functioning like a kind of call to arms - a summoning - is gd, too, it just kind of gets buried under a lot of more ho-hum stuff.
― Ward Fowler, Monday, 17 March 2014 18:54 (ten years ago) link
Can we all just take a minute to salute those writers who strike the old "disarming honesty" pose have the courage to stand up and say "know what? I don't know everything." Sure, they risk the ridicule of snarky internet bullies, but in admitting their shortcomings aren't these authors more human, more humble, more - goshdarn it, I'll say it - more noble?
― post-nodern music player (wins), Monday, 17 March 2014 18:57 (ten years ago) link
are you being serious?
― perfect puppy (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:00 (ten years ago) link
everything
― treeship's assailing (darraghmac), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:01 (ten years ago) link
in the era of Google, anyone writing for a paycheck — no matter how small — that plays what Maura calls "unfrozen caveman rock critic" deserves the ridicule they get
― perfect puppy (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:01 (ten years ago) link
ILX, where "admitting your blind spots" is a controversial stance.
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:04 (ten years ago) link
now i may just be a simple country hyper chicken but
― eric banana (s.clover), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:05 (ten years ago) link
the courage to take the time to learn things before you write them
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:05 (ten years ago) link
also idk this is almost too immaterial to really say but the popularity of this tumblr is going to determine the tone and quality of writing elsewhere
My Husband's Stupid Record Collection Happened To Me
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:11 (ten years ago) link
Lol whiney what the hell level are you even on
― post-nodern music player (wins), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:12 (ten years ago) link
since time immemorial whiney has been on that other level
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:13 (ten years ago) link
It's not like I was being subtle about it
― post-nodern music player (wins), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:15 (ten years ago) link
― continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Monday, March 17, 2014 12:51 PM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
can't we just keep pretending it means "honestly naive" or whatever the hell Treeship is thinking it does
― have a nice blood (mh), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:16 (ten years ago) link
tbrr tho she's not being "falsely naive"/faux-naif but "deliberately ignorant", the tone of the piece is written about 'look how ignorant I am about this music'; a writer being proud of one's ignorance is not something that even WGW is above
― continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:19 (ten years ago) link
If you pretend you have no knowledge or context, you can't be held to account when you screw up though, right? (Yes, you can.) It's one of the worst aspects of that style.
― have a nice blood (mh), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:23 (ten years ago) link
Could we admit that there's a difference between "admitting one's blind spots" and "deliberate ignorance"?
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:23 (ten years ago) link
I don't think anyone is denying that
― have a nice blood (mh), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:25 (ten years ago) link
I feel where Maura is coming from on this, but at the same time, having a big dumb record collection is a thing that skews so heavily male and is treated by record-collecting men as some kind of mysterious male talisman, and I feel like there's an aspect of this of demystification that I like. The sort of stereotypical "female" perspective whether you want to call it naive or faux-naive seems like a good tool for that job. I get that any amateur could just review records in an uninformed and amateurish way, but the fact that she is tackling "The Collection" seems like part of the point.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:27 (ten years ago) link
I don't think it's a great look but I think it emerged as a reaction to the much more prevalent tendency to act like everything can be reduced to its context. That's the context for the faux naif bloggy voice imo. It's about wanting to step outside the critical noise machine and make empirical observations as if for the first time.
― Treeship, Monday, 17 March 2014 19:29 (ten years ago) link
Think it's more about feeling like there's something intellectually dishonest about pretending to have a depth of knowledge about things you googled for half an hour.
― tsrobodo, Monday, 17 March 2014 19:34 (ten years ago) link
http://www.cultbritannia.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/2001-Baby-Earth.jpg
― perfect puppy (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:35 (ten years ago) link
that too
― Treeship, Monday, 17 March 2014 19:35 (ten years ago) link
Sorry my last post was xp to tsrobodo.
― Treeship, Monday, 17 March 2014 19:36 (ten years ago) link
Can we all agree that the most insufferable comment came from the husband
Alex Says: Even though I have 2 AC/DC records, I don’t really know their music all that well. I just collect records. It’s what I do. So I have two AC/DC records. Deal with it.I’m pretty sure I bought this album off my old pal Michael Troutman, mostly because I was very familiar with Will Oldham’s weird cover of Big Balls, and I was like “ok, I’ll check it out.”
― have a nice blood (mh), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:51 (ten years ago) link
100% yes
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:53 (ten years ago) link
uggghhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
― perfect puppy (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:55 (ten years ago) link
be cool, fuckface
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 19:59 (ten years ago) link
lol words.
― eric banana (s.clover), Monday, 17 March 2014 20:04 (ten years ago) link
It's what I do...Deal with it...Big Balls
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Monday, 17 March 2014 20:06 (ten years ago) link
My first impulse about this was that it was fake, because the "wife" seemed so ignorant in that stereotypical "clueless girl" way. I had only read the Arab on Radar one at that point.
― sarahell, Monday, 17 March 2014 20:23 (ten years ago) link
she's going to get a book deal, isn't she
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 20:30 (ten years ago) link
the world survived book deals for Stuff White People Like and Hipster Puppies, I don't see anything apocalyptically awful about it
― sarahell, Monday, 17 March 2014 20:36 (ten years ago) link
i didn't say it was awful
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 20:38 (ten years ago) link
other people upthread seemed to be framing it as such, sorry waterbro
― sarahell, Monday, 17 March 2014 20:39 (ten years ago) link
So I have two AC/DC records. Deal with it.
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Monday, 17 March 2014 20:44 (ten years ago) link
i've decided i don't have an opinion on this tumblr ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
― °ㅇ๐ْ ° (gr8080), Monday, 17 March 2014 20:47 (ten years ago) link
Oh, someone said "Book Deal"...
That's the new "Big payout from the press" innit?
― Mark G, Monday, 17 March 2014 20:54 (ten years ago) link
wtf is this innit shit
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 20:54 (ten years ago) link
i have like eight ac/dc records i think
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Monday, 17 March 2014 20:55 (ten years ago) link
ok you win. (xpost)
I had one, but I sold it last week.
― Mark G, Monday, 17 March 2014 20:56 (ten years ago) link
I like the way he says "I just collect records" as though it were like "collecting" dust -- just kind of happens to him, he can't necessarily be held accountable for their contents, etc.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Monday, 17 March 2014 20:59 (ten years ago) link
http://www.chicagoreader.com/imager/the-lipstick-killers-message/b/original/1227467/ae37/LipstickMessageMagnum.jpg
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Monday, 17 March 2014 21:03 (ten years ago) link
"Why do you have ten copies of Aqua's 'Barbie Girl' single next to an assortment of Boyd Rice albums?"
"I COLLECT RECORDS, OK?"
― have a nice blood (mh), Monday, 17 March 2014 21:04 (ten years ago) link
Remember that dude's art project from the last couple years where he was trying to collect as many copies of The Beatles' White Album as possible? This blog would be kind of funny if she inspected his record collection only to find it was like 1500 copies of one album
― have a nice blood (mh), Monday, 17 March 2014 21:05 (ten years ago) link
ten copies of barbie girl is not enough
― eric banana (s.clover), Monday, 17 March 2014 21:06 (ten years ago) link
[–]wacka4macca 18 points 1 day agoSome friends and I saw this tumblr and honestly, while it's great she's discovering new music, we don't like that she's perpetuating the stereotype that "women know nothing about music or records". My husband and I share a vinyl addiction but in record stores, I'm the one who gets asked dumb questions about my music knowledge or have people trying to "educate" me about really basic things. I know it's a guy dominated hobby, but there are women out there who are just as into it. Plus, she calls his record collection "stupid". :/
― Evan, Monday, 17 March 2014 21:19 (ten years ago) link
I just think it's weird that she supposedly has had no exposure to "her husband's records" until now, or like, she never accompanied him to a show by any of the artists or similar sounding bands? Is this common in relationships, because it was never the case with mine?
― sarahell, Monday, 17 March 2014 21:27 (ten years ago) link
If I had to hazard a guess I'd say that they probably have attended shows together but the majority of records covered so far are by non-touring acts or bands that predate their shared cultural experiences
― have a nice blood (mh), Monday, 17 March 2014 21:29 (ten years ago) link
re the white album guy, i fuckin' loved thishttps://soundcloud.com/dustandgrooves/white-album-side-1-x-100worth listening through to at least glass onion where the deviances start to stack and break down to pure noise
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Monday, 17 March 2014 21:32 (ten years ago) link
listening to the Beatles was so 4 yrs ago, forks
― sarahell, Monday, 17 March 2014 21:33 (ten years ago) link
Even he doesn't even seem to know why he owns AC/DC records for instance, it was merely his duty to acquire them.
xxp
― Evan, Monday, 17 March 2014 21:34 (ten years ago) link
dunno if you knew this sara, but they're played, like, everywhere
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Monday, 17 March 2014 21:37 (ten years ago) link
sorry for frontin' forks, it's true, beatles records are delivered to my front steps weekly along with the door tags for local pizza places. you should see my collection of beatles records
― sarahell, Monday, 17 March 2014 21:40 (ten years ago) link
are you trying out a bit or what
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 21:44 (ten years ago) link
i don't begrudge him for his ACDC comment. if you do collect records then you probably spend some time in dusty "friends of the library sales" and thrift stores and dollar bins and pick up TONS of shit that you just file in the "huh, may be interesting to hear at least once" shelf. the "deal with it" comment was kind of dumb but i think you people are overreacting.
― marcos, Monday, 17 March 2014 21:44 (ten years ago) link
I feel where Maura is coming from on this, but at the same time, having a big dumb record collection is a thing that skews so heavily male and is treated by record-collecting men as some kind of mysterious male talisman, and I feel like there's an aspect of this of demystification that I like. The sort of stereotypical "female" perspective whether you want to call it naive or faux-naive seems like a good tool for that job. I get that any amateur could just review records in an uninformed and amateurish way, but the fact that she is tackling "The Collection" seems like part of the point.― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Monday, March 17, 2014 3:27 PM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Monday, March 17, 2014 3:27 PM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
also this is otm
― marcos, Monday, 17 March 2014 21:47 (ten years ago) link
― marcos, Monday, March 17, 2014 9:44 PM (2 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
totally. not back in black tho
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 17 March 2014 21:48 (ten years ago) link
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, March 17, 2014 2:44 PM (3 minutes ago)
we are referring to a thread that happened before you started posting here
― sarahell, Monday, 17 March 2014 21:49 (ten years ago) link
vinyl sorta put me through college but collecting it seriously in 2014 seems like a really bad idea
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Monday, 17 March 2014 21:56 (ten years ago) link
This is where I kinda wanna stick my fingers in my ears and sing "la la la, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a maaaaaan la la la I'm a man" since my Record Collection is such a stereotypically male talismanic thing! Can I get the societal privilege and the extra 30% in my paycheque to go with my talismanic collection, please? And an end to all the gender dysphoria I feel when conversations take this tone?
But it's like we can't ever just dismantle or indeed just abandon the idea of this construction of masculinity, instead we gotta dissect some girl because her "tone" is "naif" or not.
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Monday, 17 March 2014 22:15 (ten years ago) link
""tone""
― eric banana (s.clover), Monday, 17 March 2014 22:17 (ten years ago) link
by abiding by and reinforcing conventional views of gender roles, hierarchy and taste, this blog has in fact caused us to question our very notions of selfness and society. this was clearly the plan all along do you see.
― eric banana (s.clover), Monday, 17 March 2014 22:18 (ten years ago) link
― sarahell, Monday, March 17, 2014 4:49 PM (28 minutes ago)
heh
― Corporal Clegg, you've got a lovely daughter (WilliamC), Monday, 17 March 2014 22:20 (ten years ago) link
Maybe it would be worse if it were fake -- in terms of perpetuating stereotypes and oppositions (record nerd dude, musically naive woman) -- whereas I think (based on numerous conversations with women who have male partners who are record nerds) those are detrimental and only so "true"
― sarahell, Monday, 17 March 2014 22:21 (ten years ago) link
I want to read the blog where the noize-rock bf repeats librarian gf's tales of octavo and quarto, and hey there's a dedication on the t.p. verso, and check out the hand-marbled endpaper on this one
that's going to be a viral blockbuster for sure
(actually maybe it is, the librarian blog network is kind of nuts)
― the ghosts of dead pom-bears (a passing spacecadet), Monday, 17 March 2014 22:23 (ten years ago) link
everything!
― treeship's assailing (darraghmac), Monday, 17 March 2014 22:26 (ten years ago) link
Sorry to butt in but... Seriously - who doesn't shout, 'OH YEAH! OH, IT’S SICK!' when they hear the synths on Afrique's Kissing My Love?
And her take on it is probably the wisest thing that's ever been said about it: 'Honestly, you should just play this entire album at your backyard bbq. Everyone would be really happy about it guaranteed.'
NAILED IT. And some folk are now going to be having BBQs this summer listening to House Of Rising Funk. Good on her and her husband's stupid record collection.
So the blog can't be all bad.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y7mtJ7qZVf4
I wish it was a bit funnier but then it's just a hobby blog and it wasn't written for me was it? Or anyone else on this board for that matter.
― Doran, Monday, 17 March 2014 22:26 (ten years ago) link
These types of discussions are so full of landmines even for people who agree with your point of view that it's not worth pursuing. Suffice it to say one of my best friends is a music nerd and she doesn't seem to worry what other people think about her nerddom. Then again I doubt she's challenged on her credentials very often and I understand that would be irksome.
― Gerald McBoing-Boing, Monday, 17 March 2014 22:31 (ten years ago) link
everyone i knew sharing this on facebook were fans of albert ayler and/or arab on radar, and it was more of a "some random person is writing about music i like a lot that doesn't get that much written about it" than a "oh i am a self-congratulatory obscurantist"
― sarahell, Monday, 17 March 2014 22:33 (ten years ago) link
Alex Says: I really thought this was going to be the one where Sarah said “I have nothing good to say about this album. It’s garbage.” This review is a testament to how open minded she is being about this project. This album just screams (literally) “I AM FOR DUDES.”
― niels, Monday, 17 March 2014 22:38 (ten years ago) link
that's gotta be some kind of gatefold technology i don't know about
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Monday, 17 March 2014 22:41 (ten years ago) link
what album?
― sarahell, Monday, 17 March 2014 22:44 (ten years ago) link
sorry, anthrax - among the living
― niels, Monday, 17 March 2014 22:48 (ten years ago) link
oh, it's an open-y!
― post-nodern music player (wins), Monday, 17 March 2014 22:48 (ten years ago) link
srsly don't know how anyone can read that & not be like, yeah, he is sounding condescending, but you are sounding like ralph wiggum
― post-nodern music player (wins), Monday, 17 March 2014 22:49 (ten years ago) link
deliberately
posted without comment from another listserv
Showed this thread to my wife, who likes pop radio, NPR, and most consumer stuff..."How precious." She then reignited her blowtorch and proceeded to melt copper, silver, and other fine metals into a jewelry form she carved over the weekend.What's problematic here? Them or us?
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Monday, 17 March 2014 22:56 (ten years ago) link
what's precious here? the blog or the metals?
― post-nodern music player (wins), Monday, 17 March 2014 22:57 (ten years ago) link
hey here's Kate Moss reviewing George Michael's new album
http://www.vogue.co.uk/news/2014/03/17/kate-moss-george-michael-album-review-symphonica
don't worry, she asks her husband's opinion too
― Charles, hatless (sic), Monday, 17 March 2014 23:10 (ten years ago) link
everything this story touches becomes noxious
― we slowly invented brains (La Lechera), Monday, 17 March 2014 23:11 (ten years ago) link
George turns up to her house to give her the album.
Does she like it?
What you reckon?
― Mark G, Monday, 17 March 2014 23:16 (ten years ago) link
who the hell only checks out AC/DC because Will Oldham covered them? I mean
http://whatshouldbetchescallme.tumblr.com/post/40501338427/when-a-girl-wont-stop-talking-about-herself
― the tune was space, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 00:09 (ten years ago) link
http://www.buzzfeed.com/whitneyjefferson/the-31-most-iconic-eye-rolls-of-all-time?sub=2060494_1099613
― the tune was space, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 00:10 (ten years ago) link
I mean... the "oh they lead such a boring precious life" stuff is the least offensive part of this, what sort of life should they instead be leaving ("the sort of life where they don't write a blog" is acceptable but kinda misses the point)
― katherine, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 00:15 (ten years ago) link
(wow, unfortunate typo there)
― katherine, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 00:16 (ten years ago) link
I would probably say "it's an open-y" irl
― coops all on coops tbh (crüt), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 00:23 (ten years ago) link
*opens thread*
"oooh it's a close-y."
― °ㅇ๐ْ ° (gr8080), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 00:25 (ten years ago) link
Haha I saw that blog a couple days ago & thought ah that's p funny ilx will have a shit fit about this
― gimme the lute (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 00:45 (ten years ago) link
everything is just a game to you, isn't it upper mississippi sh@kedown?
― Treeship, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 00:58 (ten years ago) link
Treeship, what do you think james franco would say about this situation?
― 龜, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 01:00 (ten years ago) link
TS: "isn't my ignorance ADORABLE" vs. "isn't my disinterest in sacred cows EDGY"
― the tune was space, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 01:02 (ten years ago) link
in the age of google (cf whiney) ignorance in the only rebellion left
― Treeship, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 01:08 (ten years ago) link
I am trying to figure out exactly why I want to tie this blog to the Upworthy-fication of Internet discourse and am drawing a blank
― Wahaca Flocka Flame (DJP), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 01:27 (ten years ago) link
white ppl
― no war but glass war (Lamp), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 01:30 (ten years ago) link
have you no shame at all
― no war but glass war (Lamp), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 01:31 (ten years ago) link
Shame is a pigment we only experience it temporarily thats why we go from red back to wite again after
― treeship's assailing (darraghmac), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 01:49 (ten years ago) link
I like the concept of that blog but the writing is so gluey. It's really, really gross. Compare with Anna Minard's "Never Heard of Em" entries linked way upthread, which are similar in many ways but, you know, actually readable and pretty entertaining. I'm not clever enough to analyze why that is, but I'm kinda sure Branwell knows, and she'll probably find a way to beat me up about it. Am I rewarding Ms Minard for performing gender in some record-nerd-approved way and punishing whatserface for doing it in a non-nerd-approved one? I dunno. I don't think so. Although some of the grossness derives from gender stereotypes or can be read that way, it's the cotton-candy disingenuousness that's the real problem for me. I'd hate pomplamoose (Mr Seward OTM about the similarities in tone and spirit between ILM's most-hated band and its most-hated blog IMO) just as much if they were a couple of dudes, or if the chick was the musician and the guy was the singer. And I hated what I read of that blog and am done thinking about it hopefully forever now, but I'll probably check in with Anna Minard once in a while for fun.
― a lot of really bad records changed my life (staggerlee), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 02:26 (ten years ago) link
― katherine, Monday, March 17, 2014 5:15 PM (3 hours ago)
they should have a life that conforms to those of me and my friends where everyone is fairly knowledgeable about semi-obscure music
― sarahell, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 03:55 (ten years ago) link
Indeed. One must fully be familiar with at least five sun ra recordings to live an exciting and fulfilling life.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 04:17 (ten years ago) link
wildly off-topic and i know you meant it glibly but which 5? i've been trying to get into sun ra for a while and his disco is so overwhelming
― Mordy , Tuesday, 18 March 2014 04:18 (ten years ago) link
oh wait sorry, I read the chart wrong, that data is inversely correlated
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 04:18 (ten years ago) link
Thanks to this thread I just wasted a half hour reading my husband's stupid record collection.
― JacobSanders, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 04:48 (ten years ago) link
I've never taken this thread title literally or seriously so I find it a bit bemusing how pretty much everything that gets posted here will get at least one "why are you guys so OUTRAGED by this for chrissakes its just a ___ why aren't you fighting the real enemy which is ___"
idk maybe some people are sitting there all hypertensive going THESE PEOPLE SHOULD BE EXECUTED but for me this is just another lol @ dumb shit on the internet thread. This blog is clearly really annoyingly written but I'm not annoyed cause I haven't read it. I don't think anyone has a duty to know more about music or be less boring or delete their shit blog.
― post-nodern music player (wins), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 07:12 (ten years ago) link
But they can go on about Imagine Dragons and the thrilling fact that they haven't heard them, and that would be fine
― Iain Mew (if), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 07:21 (ten years ago) link
this thread board has no desire for a voice of reason
― pings can only get wetter (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 07:24 (ten years ago) link
― pings can only get wetter (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 07:26 (ten years ago) link
fuck Imogen Dragoons
xXp That post was not made in earnest, dunno about that thread I haven't read it thrillingly enough
― post-nodern music player (wins), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 07:26 (ten years ago) link
I got that, it wasn't directed at you
― Iain Mew (if), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 07:28 (ten years ago) link
fuck "obscurity" fuck "nerdiness" fuck "difficultness" fuck "i don't get it" fuck expressing yr opinions fuck rating music fuck the plain listener fuck the girl/boy divide fuck "owning your ignorance"
― pings can only get wetter (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 07:29 (ten years ago) link
(not directed at any one body)
this thread has become the dry rot in the ilxor party wall for some reason
― pings can only get wetter (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 07:30 (ten years ago) link
wins thoroughly otm if i'm not being lucid enough
― pings can only get wetter (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 07:31 (ten years ago) link
the thing that bugs me most about the blog is that in some of the photos she is imitating the album cover image and in some of the photos she isn't, but there are a few where it's ambiguous and I can't tell if she is imitating the cover or not (I'm not outraged by this, though, just to be clear).
― The Cool Guy Files (soref), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 07:45 (ten years ago) link
On that AC/DC thing, I have a bunch of records that people have given me because they've been getting rid of old vinyl. Which is why I have the entire Guadalcanal Diary catalog that I've never listened to. I guess I'm asking, should I listen to it? Is it good? Do I need to have a quip for a future girlfriend?
― DonkeyTeeth, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 08:07 (ten years ago) link
Not being intentionally faux-naif bt on this at least it'd be nice if ppl didn't assume we all already know you write abt music, cos we don't
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 08:10 (ten years ago) link
Unless yr Ned
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 08:11 (ten years ago) link
this thread overnight has been even worse than the annoying and completely ignorable blog
― lex pretend, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 08:25 (ten years ago) link
Sorry, or Lex
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 08:26 (ten years ago) link
What rankles me slightly wrt that blog is that usually writers do that with kids, maybe the blog is satire?
― Slight damage to cover on top corner (chewed by a kitten) (Craigo Boingo), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 08:30 (ten years ago) link
Threads are ignorable too iirc!
― post-nodern music player (wins), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 10:57 (ten years ago) link
Hot new contender. Toxic levels of rockism and rongness.
http://www.esquire.com/blogs/culture/Julian_Casablancas_Is_Riding_Forth_To_Rescue_Rock_Again?click=feed
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 14:03 (ten years ago) link
But was it good? That’s hard to say.
― °ㅇ๐ْ ° (gr8080), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 14:23 (ten years ago) link
Wait. Julian Casablancas' new band is called The Voidz? For real? Um.
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 14:27 (ten years ago) link
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/03/18/music-criticism-has-degenerated-into-lifestyle-reporting.html
― maura, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 14:32 (ten years ago) link
No real mentions in that article of specifics to support his point.
― curmudgeon, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 14:36 (ten years ago) link
lol under daily beast headings
POLITICS ENTERTAINMENT WORLD NEWS TECH+HEALTH FASHION GREAT ESCAPES WOMEN BOOKS
― j., Tuesday, 18 March 2014 14:38 (ten years ago) link
lol, i was just coming by to roll that url into the room, shut the door and run
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 14:43 (ten years ago) link
the dry rot in the ilxor party wall
this is a beautiful bit of work noodle vague
― (or if you must, "data") (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 14:47 (ten years ago) link
'The Strokes saved rock'n'roll' is my least favourite common misconception in music revisionism. Is this an American thing? I guess I've heard the same case made for the Libertines, but it never felt that way to me.
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 14:50 (ten years ago) link
it's a fucking british thing
― waterbabies (waterface), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 14:57 (ten years ago) link
"Technical knowledge of the art form has disappeared from its discourse."
"I’ve just spent a very depressing afternoon looking through the leading music periodicals."
"And I read some reviews of albums, and got told by “‘critics” (I use that term loosely) that they were “badass,” “hot,” “sexy,” “tripped-out,” and “freaky.”"
Kind of reads like an editorial from the Onion.
― MikoMcha, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 14:57 (ten years ago) link
'The Strokes saved rock'n'roll' is my least favourite common misconception in music revisionism. Is this an American thing
lol iirc this was almost 100% a british music press thing, it reeks of it
― marcos, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 14:57 (ten years ago) link
xp waterface yes
hi 5 marcos
pretty sure british publications have a cover template that has an empty photo slot and insert-band-name spot that reads "____ Are Here to Save Rock n' Roll!!!"
― have a nice blood (mh), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 15:02 (ten years ago) link
disappointed that ted gioia doesn't know that totally shredding is a v. precise term of praise, though he was supposed to be a discerning critic
― j., Tuesday, 18 March 2014 15:07 (ten years ago) link
He IS a discerning critic: he read several music publications lying on his coffee table
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 15:07 (ten years ago) link
Serious question: Have you guys heard of Ted Gioia before today?
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 15:09 (ten years ago) link
"the leading music periodicals"
http://www.neh.gov/files/imagecache/neh_large/divisions/preservation/images/papersbg.jpg
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 15:09 (ten years ago) link
I follow him on Twitter. He's fairly well-known.
― maura, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 15:10 (ten years ago) link
I know him because of jazz stuff
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 15:16 (ten years ago) link
know of him, I mean
x-posts but only if you really believe that "The NME" and "the British Music Press" are synonymous.
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 15:17 (ten years ago) link
i have his history of jazz sitting on the shelf next to me
― j., Tuesday, 18 March 2014 15:17 (ten years ago) link
This really stuck out at me:
The pentatonic scale is a simple concept—just five notes (do, re, mi, so, la) we all learned as children.
"we all". Because yes, I learned what a pentatonic scale was, as a child, but only because my parents were wealthy enough to afford private music lessons. He's blaming the music press when he seems to omit how much musical education has been slashed from the majority of schools. (I have no idea what any of his "football" terminology means either, but hey.)
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 15:20 (ten years ago) link
cmon public schools have pianos with black keys too
― j., Tuesday, 18 March 2014 15:22 (ten years ago) link
People have technical conversations about music all the time, they just use different vocabularies, values, terms, etc. Or tools for that matter. There's so much wrong about piece - but it mostly seems to stem from its belief in a singular public, a set of norms to assess best practice, a single sonic language. I mean, that article can't be serious. It's too crazy.
― MikoMcha, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 15:26 (ten years ago) link
My public school taught us basic musical concepts, but I do have a feeling that fewer public schools do it now, and that really does pain me, a lot. But I don't think that's the or a primary reason why a review of Justin Bieber doesn't read like NYTimes Classical Music criticism.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 15:28 (ten years ago) link
― MikoMcha, Tuesday, March 18, 2014 11:26 AM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Right, e.g. I just randomly opened a pitchfork review just now and the term "motorik" appeared in the first paragraph -- that, in a way, is a technical musical term.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 15:30 (ten years ago) link
yeah to me the things gioia says about technical knowledge betray kind of a questionable assumption that it's only jazz and classical criticism that call for 'specialized' knowledge (thus dedicated musically-focused criticism). shit, what kind of music doesn't?? and the pressures from there being eight million different musics competing for attention probably have a lot more to do with the choices critical venues ended up making than straight up venality and vapidity.
― j., Tuesday, 18 March 2014 15:31 (ten years ago) link
Although it's never a good idea to discount the power of venality and vapidity in any avenue of human endeavor.
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 15:36 (ten years ago) link
But I was told music is a universal language!
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 15:53 (ten years ago) link
it's kind of funny bc pentatonic scale is abt as close to a universal musical language as we havebut it's arrant madness to think "we all" were taught wtf a pentatonic scale is in school. I was in fucking BAND (alto sax) for most of grade school and high school and no one ever told us that, prob because there are no pianos in band.
― grape is the flavor of my true love's hair (Jon Lewis), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 16:20 (ten years ago) link
he didn't say we were all taught what a pentatonic scale was, he said we all learned those notes
― coops all on coops tbh (crüt), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 16:25 (ten years ago) link
i was only taught what pentatonic was in a backhand way, because the music composed with it was apparently either primitive or pop
― goole, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 16:27 (ten years ago) link
man that Casablancas article is horrible
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 16:29 (ten years ago) link
i was only taught what pentatonic was in a backhand way
you mean backfingered way
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 16:32 (ten years ago) link
Guitarists tend to know what a pentatonic scale is because it's the easiest way to solo over most rock songs. Others probably have no particular reason to learn it if they're not studying seriously.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 16:35 (ten years ago) link
in my elementary school music class we learned about it when we played with xylophones
― j., Tuesday, 18 March 2014 16:43 (ten years ago) link
What's so bad about that last article? I only had time to read the first few paragraphs.
― Evan, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 16:52 (ten years ago) link
lots of hype on the Voidz, I know they are opening for Fear and TSOL at a pizza place in the OC at the end of the month
― gimme the lute (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 16:55 (ten years ago) link
Man up, it's only the bland old pentatonic scale, not something genuinely exotic like a Hungarian Minor, for instance. Plus, HC Jr. is not only about the melody and harmony but also that rhythmic element you guys love so much: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yD3iaURppQw&feature=youtu.be
― I Forgot More Than You'll Ever POLL (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 17:03 (ten years ago) link
"For most people living in the world, circa 1920, music was embedded into their life, not chosen as a lifestyle accessory. But gradually, over the next several decades, music’s value as a pathway of personal definition came to the forefront of our culture. Sometimes the shift was barely perceptible, but in retrospect we can gauge its profound impact. For example, people in rural America didn’t choose country music during the early decades of the 20th century, but were literally born into its ethos; yet by the ’70s, country music had evolved into a lifestyle choice, a posture adopted by millions who never roped a steer or herded cattle, but still wanted to affiliate themselves with the values espoused by the songs."
Ah, remember the good old days when you'd rope your own steer!
― MikoMcha, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 17:18 (ten years ago) link
lol most old country singers were singers because they were lazy and didn't want to work! which is smart if you ask me
― Little Nicky Pizza loved that rascal Rust (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 17:19 (ten years ago) link
america, with its rich history of being born into things
― j., Tuesday, 18 March 2014 17:20 (ten years ago) link
I think maybe it was Peter Guralnick who pointed out (to me, anyway), that country music came to prominence precisely when Americans were LEAVING the countryside in droves.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 17:22 (ten years ago) link
the guy who wrote that's brother was head of the NEA and fairly conservative
― sarahell, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 17:24 (ten years ago) link
Finally something that makes sense.
― MikoMcha, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 17:29 (ten years ago) link
the annoying thing about this article is that it actually does make baby steps toward knowing what it's talking about -- citing editorial changes in publications, attempting to tie it to mass cultural changes (which is usually bunk but at least dude's trying) -- and then pins it all on the critics again, as if the reason "gossip and fluff" dominate the music press is just that their critics aren't smart enough
― katherine, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 17:32 (ten years ago) link
i assume we (the audience) are just getting what we pay for at this point
― sarahell, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 17:33 (ten years ago) link
the examples it cites are weird too -- I guess "dressing like a robot" is supposed to be a reference to Daft Punk, but _Random Access Memories_ had loads of people talking about the music! (the album all but strongarmed you into it but still.) are his idea of the "leading music periodicals" US Weekly or something? or maybe he's just reading the news blurbs and nothing else?
― katherine, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 17:35 (ten years ago) link
Statement about country music is a great oversimplification but not completely wrong. For the story of someone who was pretty much born into that world, read Charlie Louvin's book. For the more complex picture, read Creating Country Music: Fabricating Authenticity, by Richard A. Peterson.
Know people have a beef with the Gioia brother, but thought Ted's jazz website was very good and his books all have something to recommend. Also like Dana's speculative fiction website, plus he is a big fan of ILB favorite Tom Disch.
― I Forgot More Than You'll Ever POLL (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 17:41 (ten years ago) link
Sure, I'm willing to entertain for a second the gross generalization, but what sort of imaginary is being invoked for a time when music wasn't a "lifestyle" choice?
Seriously, reminds me of:
Fry: Now for some good old 20th century tv, ah TV: Do you remember a time when chocolate chip cookies came fresh from the oven? Pepperidge Farm remembers. Fry: ah those were the days TV: Do you remember a time when women couldn't vote and certain folk weren't allowed on golf courses? Pepperidge Farm remembers.
― MikoMcha, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 17:54 (ten years ago) link
I don't know how much of the popular Country music in the 70s was about ropin' steers, but then in the 20s people really did have fiddle contests with the devil
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 22:43 (ten years ago) link
The sports commentary comparison is deeply flawed. Part of the reason sports commentators talk about this stuff is because they've got so much time to fill not because they're necessarily shining exemplars of criticism. Hours and hours worth, every single day.
If it was my/your job to commentate on an entire Cure gig every day and do several hours worth of pre amble and post-gig analysis on top of that, we'd probably start padding with a lot of technical talk as well.
"Lovely use of triplets by Porl Thompson there - if that isn't pentatonic I don't know what is. And I don't know about you Bob but that's got to be the longest version of A Forest I've heard since The Head On The Door tour. 37 minutes long by my reckoning. I'm looking forward to some paradiddles from Lol Tolhurst later..."
― Doran, Tuesday, 18 March 2014 22:51 (ten years ago) link
When I see an article about the state of music criticism open with a screengrab from Almost Famous I make sure to sit up and pay attention.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Tuesday, 18 March 2014 22:56 (ten years ago) link
http://24.media.tumblr.com/0860ecc1906405fc8587f5ca7630202c/tumblr_n2nk3dbVzW1qzbo9ao1_500.jpg
i think we can all agree on this
― Karl Malone, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 00:04 (ten years ago) link
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Tuesday, March 18, 2014 6:56 PM
we really need to push for new rock critic stock photos
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 02:54 (ten years ago) link
http://cdn.stereogum.com/img/derogatis.jpg
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 03:00 (ten years ago) link
I feel like enough time has passed since his laudable interview about R Kelly that it's OK to make fun of DeRo again.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 03:01 (ten years ago) link
the gioia essay seems like the stupidest possible take on a v interesting subject
― ogmor, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 12:15 (ten years ago) link
looks like the internet happened to our favorite tumblr:
http://alltherecords.tumblr.com/post/80062534211/brb
A lot of the criticism of this blog is that it plays up this idea that women’s voices are marginal or less important, but for all that has been written, no one has made any effort to reach out to me for comment, or even to ask me a question. One article got my name wrong throughout. It’s clear that critics are more interested in making me a symbol of some harmful stereotype than understanding what this is, or who I am. Talking to me might make that difficult. It might humanize me.
I’m not trying to be someone I’m not. I couldn’t write this blog if I didn’t know who I was and what I like. Unfortunately for my critics what I like often isn’t all that gender transgressive. But that’s not bad or something that I should be ashamed of.
The same holds true for Alex, with whom I’d happily do a blog where he has to read a pile of my favorite children’s books, or go to 10 of my favorite ballets, or go to soul cycle with me for a month and write about it - parts of my life of which he is completely culturally ignorant. The reason we did this project instead of any of those is because of the two of us I’m cooler and more adventurous.
So, if this blog has put me in the category of women with controversial ideas and opinions, then I will happily join it. It’s not my responsibility to compromise who I am in the name of subverting gender stereotypes. And it’s not fair to say that every project that involves a man and a woman should have it’s main focus be gender. I just wanted to comment on the music. I wanted to write in a style I enjoyed, I wanted to learn something new, and I wanted to do something creative with the guy that I love. “Let’s lie on the living room floor and listen to records together!” I have the best marriage ever.
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 13:43 (ten years ago) link
poor girl
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 13:44 (ten years ago) link
I've only just seen the Gioia article/discussion, so sorry if I'm retreading old points, or if everyone's bored of it. But I agree with ogmor, and it's actually something I've wondered about a fair bit myself.
Problems with the article: * how the hell is he only just noticing the social aspect of music journalism NOW? * writing off the social and tribe-forming aspects of music is just stupid. * agree with someone upthread who said "totally shreds" is actually quite a specific musical statement, and discounting this shows the author isn't up on his musical knowledge, which goes against his entire point. * overly-technical journalism is, quite frankly, boring. * overly-technical playing is often even more so.
I was going to write a point-by-point "things I agree with" column too, but actually, despite agreeing with the idea that the music should be talked about in music journalism, I don't see a vast lack of this in the publications I read, so agreeing with it seems to miss the point. What I *have* had problems with, though, is that some journalists don't just elide technical aspects, but get them wrong - I can't cite right now, but things I've noticed in the past include mistakenly calling things waltzes when they're in the wrong time signature, or misusing terms like melisma. I think if you're going to be a music journalist, you should actually be able to do more than go "this feels like a samba", when it isn't one. Or calling things "krauty" - I'd like to see more effort go into explaining connections like this, because it rapidly becomes meaningless.
xxp: arrrrrgh fuck off if this blog has put me in the category of women with controversial ideas and opinions - no, no it really hasn't.
― emil.y, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 13:49 (ten years ago) link
is it me or is the idea of certain kinds of music being "gender transgressive" a bit clumsy?
― pings can only get wetter (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 13:51 (ten years ago) link
AC/DC isn't gender transgressive?
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 13:53 (ten years ago) link
The reason we did this project instead of any of those is because of the two of us I’m cooler and more adventurous.
C'mon
― waterbabies (waterface), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:00 (ten years ago) link
Portlandia sketches continue to write themselves.
― Evan, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:00 (ten years ago) link
At this point, there is nothing that this woman could say in defence of herself or her actions that you lot would not tear into shreds. I am judging you lot, not her, at this point.
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:04 (ten years ago) link
lol ok dude
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:05 (ten years ago) link
or lady or whoever
like that post wasn't a classic cartman-on-maury self defense!
screw you guys, i'm going home, i mean to scotland
― waterbabies (waterface), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:06 (ten years ago) link
at this point
― two bunny rabbits on mushrooms singing Proclaimers songs (onimo), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:07 (ten years ago) link
Judging ilxors wow that's different, real game changer
― bi-polar uncle (its OK-he's dead) (Phil D.), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:07 (ten years ago) link
I'm getting kinda sick of female music writers or fans whose entire hatred of her and her schtick, when pressed more than half a centimetre boils down to "why does she get an audience and a book deal and I don't".
If your response to that is anything along the lines of "the publishing world is sexist and rewards certain tropes" fine and fair enough. If your response is to throw even more shit at a woman who is likely getting enough shit from the internet for just Doing Stuff In Public While Female, then I have no time for you.
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:09 (ten years ago) link
i'm sorry, are we not allowed to say that her tone is feeding the sexist-publishing-world beast? because it absolutely is. writing is a performance, like it or not.
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:10 (ten years ago) link
evvvvverything
― treeship's assailing (darraghmac), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:12 (ten years ago) link
not really sure why BEING AGAINST OPPRESSION OF THE CAR-COMMERCIAL-READY TWEE is such a popular argument among the defenders of this site. time and time again i've said that my big 'problem' is how this site's tone reinforces stereotypes of How Women Should Relate To Music and marginalizes those who fall outside of that category—a phenomenon that happens with all *sorts* of content that goes viral, because the "share" or "like" button is linked more to the lizardy part of the brain than any other.
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:12 (ten years ago) link
and how that stereotype-reinforcing tone is, consciously or un, made for maximum sharing.
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:13 (ten years ago) link
I repeat: I have had my "tone" (regardless of what my intended tone actually was) criticised by people with axes to grind and worldviews to reinforce far too many times to ever call out a specific woman's "tone". I'm not playing that game. I've been at the receiving end of it too many times.
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:13 (ten years ago) link
No matter what "tone" a Woman Doing Stuff In Public takes, it will never be *right* for someone. There is no win here.
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:14 (ten years ago) link
and i repeat that i'm dismayed at how this site is read more widely than music writing by women who know their stuff and don't have to package their knowledge in a shiny happy domestic-life box, and how i'm thinking about why "women listen to music like THIS" ideal is propagated more than women just talking about music as people first. (it also is related to my dismayed thinking about whether or not my writing life would be easier if i wrote more on sites "for women," and why that is.)
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:15 (ten years ago) link
like fine, let a thousand twee flowers bloom, but don't do so at the eradication of those buds that look like weeds at first glance
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:16 (ten years ago) link
maybe it's more an issue of "style" or "voice" or some other writerly term, than "tone"
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:16 (ten years ago) link
RELATED TOPICS: why are esquire and gq 'general interest' magazines, why did lilith fair not book worthy female instrumentalists, would an 'i listen to my wife's records' blog have had each entry accompanied by a cutesy photo with twee-life signifiers in the frame
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:18 (ten years ago) link
I'm not even as outraged about this blog as a lot of writers (although that says more about me and my ability to be outraged this year, which is mostly deadened) but saying that the only reason female music writers have an issue with this blog is because they're jealous is... kind of crappy? (and also a bit... weird, given you mentioned people misreading women's tone/intentions.)
― katherine, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:26 (ten years ago) link
The same holds true for Alex, with whom I’d happily do a blog where he has to read a pile of my favorite children’s books, or go to 10 of my favorite ballets, or go to soul cycle with me for a month and write about it - parts of my life of which he is completely culturally ignorant.
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:28 (ten years ago) link
but katherine that's just how women are, all tone-policing and jealous
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:29 (ten years ago) link
I have had my "tone" (regardless of what my intended tone actually was) criticised by people with axes to grind and worldviews to reinforce far too many times to ever call out a specific woman's "tone"
What your intended tone was is not really here or there. What matters is how it's perceived by others.
― my father will guide me up the stairs to bed (anagram), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:31 (ten years ago) link
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:34 (ten years ago) link
isn't the tone in line with the entire perspective of the project (the life) that all of this can be undertaken in an utterly noncommittal way?
i keep thinking about that ac/dc record. how a guy 'who just collects records' and has like half a dozen certain ratio records can have TWO ac/dc records just because of will oldham covering 'big balls' and can really know almost nothing about ac/dc (not as if they're not generally a constant presence in popular music culture for the last 40 years!) and hardly even have listened to the records (WHICH ARE GREAT).
it's not surprising that the husband works for NPR because THEIR LIFE IS NPR. their little corner of the apartment is ikeaed the fuck out, his hobby is to collect records, her new hobby is to write about her reactions to things on the internet, and the entire project takes the form of going one by one through a giant list of things and generating reactions to them, seriatim, with no logic to it other than the fact that these records in alphabetical order are the ones her husband happened to acquire.
I just feel like I have heard this song so many times at this point that I don’t feel any real emotions about it.
sometimes she has some, sometimes she doesn't. sometimes they're personal and sometimes they're banal. but they get written anyway because the point is to register the occurrence of 'feelings', opinions, etc. in response to the series of props for stimulating the occurrence of opinions, feelings, etc.
against that backdrop, why SHOULDN'T it grate that the voice she adopts resorts readily and regularly to these gendered 'o you boys and your silly record collections' poses and 'i just don't know about any of this' poses and 'poking fun at the pretensions of the pretentious' poses? because against that backdrop the entire point of every reaction to everything is to render it as anodyne as possible, so that the only way it could possibly have any effect is through the suggestion that by becoming more tasteful and sensible (in the way that the accumulation of culturalized junk prompts you to, not through anything in it but through its being curated, organized, listed—and by conforming with the blanded out requirement to assent within the bounds of polite disagreement about what culture is) things will just generally be improved in some vague way.
― j., Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:38 (ten years ago) link
j OTM. Most revealing thing about this is their surprise that anyone is annoyed, because twee NPR lifestylers have no idea how irritating their shit can be.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:42 (ten years ago) link
To some
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:44 (ten years ago) link
twee NPR lifestylers have no idea how irritating their shit can be
well given their disproportionate media representation as the apotheosis of what american youth should be, this isn't too surprising
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:47 (ten years ago) link
j mainly otm.
but like where do you suggest i buy my new couch from because i'm lazy but i was thinking ikea because my current couch is from a place with "cheap" somewhere right in the name and the middle turned out to have cardboard and not springs and it just sort of fell in, so you know i was thinking of stepping it up. and you know i would like a couch, but not a couch that causes me to render things in an anodyne light.
― eric banana (s.clover), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:48 (ten years ago) link
It isn't that they bought the couch at Ikea; it's that their idea of home decor is as impersonal as a Hilton lobby.
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:50 (ten years ago) link
I just read the Anthrax entry:
Look you guys, I’m really liking it. It’s oddly beautiful, but I feel like it’s really hard for girls to get to know this kind of music. I would NEVER want to see this band live, even though I’m really liking the music. It would be too violent and too dangerous, and that sucks. And yet I’m not blaming the people who feel the need to get “caught in a mosh,” upon hearing this. It’s probably exhilarating, but sitting on the couch listening to it is fun in a totally different way. Why does music have to be such a division of the sexes sometimes?
my idea of home decor is i would like to step it up and have a couch that has springs is that a statement
― eric banana (s.clover), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:51 (ten years ago) link
why should your home decor be personal.
i have piles of papers around. i suppose they are my personal papers unique to me.
On top of everything else: kinda loving the idea that they're going off to Scotland where the guy can apologize for liking AC/DC and everyone there will look at him like he's insane.
― Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:51 (ten years ago) link
i really like maura's tone.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:52 (ten years ago) link
great sustain too
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:53 (ten years ago) link
― eric banana (s.clover),
"Impersonal" would be "Look, dear, put your papers in this beautiful electric blue 11 X 17 box in polished wood that I bought in Target."
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:53 (ten years ago) link
ikea expedit shelves are the best for records tbqf
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:53 (ten years ago) link
why does home decor have to be such a division of the sexes sometimes?
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:54 (ten years ago) link
bit of a #humblebrag, as my social media sphere is personally handcrafted, but I haven't seen one positive mention of this blog. I find the tone too banal-to-pandering to want to bother reading it, but as - again - i haven't been faced with an actual fan of it - I don't really feel on shitting on it either (though i also don't have a problem with women critiquing it and being frustrated by its virality).
― da croupier, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:54 (ten years ago) link
Pockets of Scotland/Glasgow have higher concentrations of these kind of people than anywhere else in the world. They'll fit in perfectly.
― Eyeball Kicks, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:55 (ten years ago) link
i got caught in a mosh last night and i liked it
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:56 (ten years ago) link
OK, is this the worst piece of home decor ever?
― two bunny rabbits on mushrooms singing Proclaimers songs (onimo), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:56 (ten years ago) link
my wife's stupid peacock feather collection
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:56 (ten years ago) link
bit of a #humblebrag, as my social media sphere is personally handcrafted
share the name of the Upper East side boutique where you bought this sphere
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:56 (ten years ago) link
I said personally!
― da croupier, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 14:59 (ten years ago) link
artisanal friend requests
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:00 (ten years ago) link
Try these:
http://designdininganddiap✧✧✧.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/Industrial-Decorative-Spheres-Made-From-Cereal-Boxes-v✧✧✧@Tarynat✧✧✧.j✧✧
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:00 (ten years ago) link
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-H6M6koEvLIQ/UWD_muxY_mI/AAAAAAAAMSk/Sey2FtBFc-c/s1600/DSC_0140.JPG
you can take your balls everywhere you travel
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:01 (ten years ago) link
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-xsE3CIu3rtA/TZVM3-iDKiI/AAAAAAAACmE/URNbn3PbIMM/s320/p15247nrgb8.jpg
― I Forgot More Than You'll Ever POLL (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:05 (ten years ago) link
j. mostly otm about the npr effect, or the way things can become neutralized in the name of "good taste" and how this is a kind of hegemonic pov that should be resisted. but i want to add that there's nothing inherently wrong with being anodyne. there is a place for aesthetics that seek to soothe rather than provoke, especially in the area of home decor, but in music too, and painting, and anything else. there is a way in which i am not super interested in picking apart this woman's personal life and her apartment.
― Treeship, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:06 (ten years ago) link
The reason this is getting more attention than music-writing by women who know their shit is that it has an angle. Ordinary, knowledgeable. music writing just doesn't get zoomed around the internet, period.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:09 (ten years ago) link
it has an angle THAT TIES INTO EXISTING STEREOTYPES.
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:11 (ten years ago) link
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:11 (ten years ago) link
why do you think all the worst, most self-image-reinforcing shit on buzzfeed gets shared further than anything else?
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:12 (ten years ago) link
it's practically begging for a Buzzfeed response: "10 Things Your Girlfriend Says About Your Record Collection"
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:12 (ten years ago) link
i don't care about her life, i care about her instantiation of a cultural phenomenon, as e.g. exemplified in the way that this is a project, and is readily set up as a project, simply by virtue of resolving to write about these records in order and style the project as
My Husband's Stupid Record CollectionWhere I listen to my husband's record collection, one record at a time, and tell you what I think.
with header image and house style (here is a record, here i am holding it) and etc.
… which is then the automatic object of momentary interest
when there are writers like maura or katherine or deej or whiney or so many others showing how it could be done (think about how much shit they know and how hard they work to capture moods and sensibilities and tie music to its contexts and put something of themselves at stake), and even amateurs who can poke their heads out into the same public space without automatically ceding anything that might have been individually or personally important to them about the products of culture that they identify as their reason for doing so
― j., Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:14 (ten years ago) link
the high concept is a winner. no doubt. i really thought you guys were gonna just shrug when i posted this but i also knew that you were gonna hear about it a lot this week and i'd see that ol' ilx fire.
when i did that pitchfork thing i got like 5 zillion more hits on my blog than i ever have before. again, high concept. it ain't rocket science. though i certainly didn't expect it. i dunno how much these people expected it. the attention, i mean. but they are pretty savvy so maybe they knew they had something.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:18 (ten years ago) link
"a winner" in the sense that it's easy to grasp and very linkable/clickable.
what would get more Google hits: "Pitchfork" or "my husband"
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:19 (ten years ago) link
http://www.artic.edu/aic/collections/citi/images/standard/WebLarge/WebImg_000256/190741_3056034.jpg
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:21 (ten years ago) link
the title of my blog post was catchy and easy to grasp too. just write about pitchfork and you'll do fine. 10,000+ blog hits versus i dunno 200+ average on the regular.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:23 (ten years ago) link
she is the best damn music writer i have read in ages and i am crazy crazy jealous, like knowing what harper lee was up to her teens & 20s level jealous. just for the record.
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:25 (ten years ago) link
― scott seward, Wednesday, March 19, 2014 11:18 AM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
scott the reason that thing got a zillion hits was it was full of very funny easy to find one liners about and lots of people of have heard of. the concept there is "scott is mean and casually dismissive and funny" more than any particular format to hang that hat on.
― eric banana (s.clover), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:30 (ten years ago) link
well I had completely missked skot's pitchfork thing until now, so at least this discussion produced something good
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:36 (ten years ago) link
actually the most hits i got was after j. hopper linked it on rookiemag. i was a teen sensation for a minute there.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:40 (ten years ago) link
I have a million and one things to say to Maura and Katherine about this, which would probably be better said in (semi-)private on Tumblr or wherever, because this is starting to feel uncomfortable. And yet. Damn the cross-posts.
1) The whole "ooh you're just jealous" thing. You know what, in a world where there is only allowed to be One Woman Anything (remember, you're talking to the girl whose band was not signed by a label who loved us "because we already have a girl band!") it is an awful warping lens. Where the one woman who succeeds gets held up as some kind of benchmark. And instead of hating on the system whereby only one woman is allowed through (and then has to speak for ~all women~) it is *really* easy to get caught up in "it's not fair that this woman got the book dead/record deal/whatever and why not these other great women who totally deserved it (including me)". It would be dishonest of me not to include myself in this group. Of course I am jealous that this woman gets hundreds of thousands of readers, and my little blog gets 250 and I will never get a book deal ever. You know what? There are dude writers who I cannot stand and everyone tosses their 8000 word thinkpieces around on twitter and I just think "why the fuck do you even like this boring masturbatory toss" but the thing is, no one holds up these boring ~dudely writers~ as a benchmark whose mastubatory thinkpieces hurt or harm other male writers. So why do we do it to this woman? I think that Maura is right to go after the *system* rather than the woman, but then turns around and starts criticising the woman's tone or style or voice. Which leads us to:
2) This is something that comes off the Gurl Thread. It's something that ENBB said to me, which has resonated in my head for a long time afterwards. I am a gender non-conforming/genderqueer/whatever woman. I get extra added shit, in addition to the normal every day shit of being read as female, for being this way. I have, in the past, got very angry at women who *do* perform "stereotypically female" roles and enjoy stereotypically female activities and conform to ~feminine stereotypes~. Because my sense was, "lady you are making things so much harder for people like me." Because my sense was, they were just going along with What Society Told Them To Be, and they got an easy ride because they were able to conform to "pretty" and to "gender stereotypes" and therefore got all the Nice Stuff that was denied me, because I couldn't and wouldn't. And we butted heads on this a lot, but what she said was very true: it's not that simple. Many women do and enjoy ~stereotypically feminine things~ not because they are brainwashed by society but because that is who *they* are. It is not my place to judge whether a woman who performs femininity a certain way is doing it because it's her genuine gender expression or because she's brainwashed by patriarchy and the cis-tem, maaaan. I can certainly criticise the *system* that rewards feminine women and punishes genderqueer persons with nice things like societal approval and publishing contracts. But criticising a woman for being stereotypically feminine and performing in a way that TIES INTO EXISTING FEMININE STEREOTYPES? NOPE. I learned the hard way that's not on. And that's what I see every time I see women criticising *this woman* for "making it harder for the rest of us!"
3) Tone/style/voice whatever you want to call it. Living in Britain, my only exposure to this "NPR twee" thing you keep talking about is vague awareness of threads I avoid because they are overly American and also clusterfucks. She writes like a LadyBlog, yes. Surprise! SHE IS WRITING A LADYBLOG! It's like there are two conflicting narratives in this thread: A) she is some mastermind of marketing who is deeply embedded in "NPR culture" and also is a librarian who has read a thousand books and therefore knows exactly what it takes to Write A Best-Selling Blog Crossover and so she has deliberately constructed this "Faux Naif" tone to exactly nail the right tone to push record-snob-man-buttons into making her blog a smash viral hit with instant publisher appeal!!! result!!! B) She is an amateur writer who knows very little about music, and writes about music as a Non-Music-Fan who writes like a LadyBlogger in LadyBlogTone because... (get this!) she reads a lot of LadyBlogs! Which of these narratives is true? A little of both? Somewhere inbetween? I don't feel qualified to call it. Maybe Maura has way more experience in public and can tell more easily what the aim of someone's prose is than I can? This is possible. It is also possible that I am completely missing the cultural context of WHY THESE PEOPLE ARE SO TERRIBLE because "NPR twee" is not a part of my experience and if it were, I'd hate it like I hate... oh I dunno Charlie Brooker or some British equivalent?
4) On letting down the team. I come from the other side of this. I know that I write with a tone which attracts *disapproval* from Serious Music Fan Men (and also many, many women). Because, basically, I aspire to write with the breathless enthusiasm of the 15 year old fangirl I used to be. I try to write about the emotions that music inspires in me. Some of these emotions are, um, salacious. OH MY GOD SHE'S TALKING ABOUT SEX AGAIN. I know it makes some men very uncomfortable when I talk about sex and music in this way. I also know, that in "serious fandoms" I often get taken aside by *other women* and told that I mustn't talk about music in such a ~fangirl~ way because it makes it harder for Serious Female Music Fans to be Taken Seriously, and not treated like raging fangirls who just want to fuck the boys onstage. And then we get to a point where I'm trying to review a band where the singer-dude is talking about fingerbanging and singing about threesomes and yet I must not mention sex or sexuality when describing my experience of this music because I might come off like a fangirl and let the team down. Right. So when I see other Female Music Fans talking about how Other Women must not reinforce bad female stereotypes, I really really get *my* hackles up.
I have spent way too long writing this to hit the back button now, even though sense tells me I really should and I'm going to get ripped apart, but there it is. Anyway, I have to go and look for a job now.
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:43 (ten years ago) link
can't you just have one thread where you make everything about you?
― j., Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:47 (ten years ago) link
good luck xp
― two bunny rabbits on mushrooms singing Proclaimers songs (onimo), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:47 (ten years ago) link
or maybe a blog involving reviews of every single blog post from that blog
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:47 (ten years ago) link
good luck with the job search!
kate, even though you can bug the hell out of me, i really do wish you well. and even though you think i'm an asshole. i wish the best for everyone here. and now i really gotta get the hell outta this place. i keep saying that...
― scott seward, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:49 (ten years ago) link
great post j.!
many xps, er the one from about an hour ago
― goole, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:50 (ten years ago) link
Oh man, I just opened this thread because it kept getting bumped. I gotta be honest, I don't even know why there is a controversy about this blog. The author reminds me of enough people I've met irl. I think this is a problem of not recognizing the diversity of humanity. Do you and your spouses share the same interests? My wife likes gardening. I like that she has a garden, but I don't really know what she's got in it. I could do a blog about my wife's weird eggplants and shit. Albert Ayler = kohlrabi, imo. I dunno.
― how's life, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:52 (ten years ago) link
my wife's stupid vegetable collection.tumbloggy.com
― eric banana (s.clover), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:54 (ten years ago) link
Dudes who go on at great lengths trying to make every thread on the board about themselves and their opinions and their must-read views on everything, criticising the woman who stands up and says "I have some gender-based relevant experience here" for omg you are making this thread ~all about you~": You're boring and I am so not here for you.
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:55 (ten years ago) link
sorry, Branwell (also hi Branwell, i didn't know you were you until just now), but i'm still allowed to bristle at the tone, which is totally overused to the point where it becomes damn nigh prescriptive. good luck with the job hunt.
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:56 (ten years ago) link
xp What's up with this kohlrabi? It doesn't even seem like a proper vegetable. Is it trying to be a proper vegetable? Are people just pretending to like it? I don't get it.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:56 (ten years ago) link
My wife's stupid vegetable drawer
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:57 (ten years ago) link
also i should note that i have, like, less than zero interest in ever writing for a ladyblog, and yet, because i am a cis-presenting heterosexual female that's the box i feel like i am being shoved toward constantly. the success of sites like this one only underlines that general shove. this is what i mean when i talk about online culture and the play-to-the-cheap-seats nature of virality (and probably online personals too, with their distillation of people into checkboxes and cutesy survey answers) rewarding those who conform (even uneasily) ever more disproportionately, to the point where the genuine misfits—even those who aren't really *that* ill-fitting, but are just enough—have even fewer safe havens.
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:58 (ten years ago) link
I completely get that. I even agree with almost all of it! It's bullshit that people get criticized for "fangirl" writing on style-not-substance, it's bullshit that the person writing this blog is undoubtedly facing a lot of sexist crap because she's a woman writing in a particular way (not from people in this thread but in general, in the same way it always happens -- I mean, for all the thinkpieces involving race and pop, the main takeaway the majority of people took from the Miley Cyrus fiasco was "oh my god she's such a slutty slut slutting it up," it's THOSE people). But it's also bullshit to then accuse the women who take issue with this blog that they are secretly just being jealous. Even if the reason it's so easy to get caught up in that, supposedly, is that worrying that you won't get readers or a book deal ever usually means worrying that you won't be able to pay rent / have a career in five years / save for retirement / other completely rational worries during a recession (zoom_in_on_my_empty_wallet.gif and all that), what you're essentially implying is that these women are in the anti-sexism game just for their own personal gain, which is some Tracy Flick shit that is really crappy to apply en masse.
(I'm not in the UK so I don't really know who the UK equivalent of NPR twee would be. Cath Kidston twee? I feel like that might be more analogous to Vera Bradley twee. But then literally a foot away from me are things by both of them, so even though it was a gift from my sister I AM TOTALLY NOT A PERSON TO TALK ON THIS MATTER. Again, their "NPR lifestyle" is literally the least offensive part of this. I don't give a fuck how much Ikea they display, they can fund the entire country of Sweden through the furniture in their apartment for all I care.)
― katherine, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 15:59 (ten years ago) link
Hi, please can you not use government names, thanks, I'll ask a mod to zap it. Cheers.
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:00 (ten years ago) link
I once got invited by a friend to write something for Jeffrey Goldberg's shortlived "jewsrock.com" site. I actually interviewed Norman Greenbaum, but I couldn't get him off of his canned interview answers, partly because he's a canned guy and partly because I was too timid to him off his canned answers. So I canned the project. And that site failed. It was a stupid idea anyway, probably about as stupid as the idea of a "lady" music blog.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:01 (ten years ago) link
i applied for a grant for maura magazine last year and this site got it instead http://boxxmagazine.com/
and... well.
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:04 (ten years ago) link
(also, I don't know who you are, or at least I don't know if I know who you are, but I would read a hypothetical music book by you based on the posts of yours I've read, so take that for whatever it's worth.)
― katherine, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:04 (ten years ago) link
I completely feel your frustration(s) for being pushed towards a certain narrative and a certain way of presenting! Which is what makes it so hard for me to discuss this without coming across as table-pounding. But it's a dose of "how do you combat a stereotype (without pissing on people who do, by design or accident conforming to it)?" This is what I mean by "you lose either way".
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:04 (ten years ago) link
Nina Persson is trying to make a kale salad with the least amount of noise possible.
Also http://boxxmagazine.com/category/male-boxx/
― waterbabies (waterface), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:05 (ten years ago) link
i think there has to be some combating that's perceived as pissing on the people. which may seem unfair, but that's why 'punching up' is more smiled upon than the reverse.
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:07 (ten years ago) link
the people who conform. at the very least, that pissing might make them think about the world outside their sphere.
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:08 (ten years ago) link
The author reminds me of enough people I've met irl.
There are people IRL?
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:08 (ten years ago) link
I guess my point is, that I don't know that this particular woman is actually "punching up"?
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:09 (ten years ago) link
Or rather, that pissing on this woman, in particular, is "punching up".
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:10 (ten years ago) link
When her "stupid" book about her husband's "stupid record collection" sells as much as JK Rowling, then it might be punching up. But I don't know how much blog crossover books even sell.
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:11 (ten years ago) link
i mean again it boils down to whether or not you see critiques of her tone that would happen to any other writer whose prose is elevated to a particular level of popularity as 'pissing on.' and please don't tell me that she should be protected because it's 'just a tumblr' — tumblr is a publishing platform with a lot of potential for having its authors widely read and passed around (and it's not like writers at a lot of sites these days have their work edited, either)
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:12 (ten years ago) link
"tumblr is a publishing platform with a lot of potential for having its authors widely read and passed around" = "it'll be great exposure"
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:14 (ten years ago) link
(and it's not like writers at a lot of sites these days have their work edited, either)
Or authors of books
― waterbabies (waterface), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:14 (ten years ago) link
We're going round in circles at this point, but I don't think she should be protected for "being just a Tumblr" but more like "criticising a specific women's tone" is a lose-lose proposition.
I think we are going to have to agree to disagree on this one, because I can't state that any more clearly than I did in the long post above.
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:15 (ten years ago) link
if criticizing a specific woman's tone is a lose-lose proposition then women lose extra because they'll never be given the opportunity to grow for fear of offense. good luck with your job interview.
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:16 (ten years ago) link
Lol wait did these chuckleheads really get a book deal
― post-nodern music player (wins), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:26 (ten years ago) link
no, people are just preemptively mad in case they do
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:28 (ten years ago) link
So everyone's just jealous of a fictional publishing contract from the future & that's why they don't like this shit blog, cool
― post-nodern music player (wins), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:32 (ten years ago) link
Oh, for fuck's sake.
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:33 (ten years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lXXVPlrY974
― Treeship, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:33 (ten years ago) link
that might've been fair when the blog had like 9 readers and her best friend but it's legitimately viral now, it's not like it's some one-in-a-million possibility
― katherine, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:34 (ten years ago) link
yeah, katherine otm. especially with the npr connection, i think the odds of them getting a book deal are 50/50 at least
― Treeship, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:35 (ten years ago) link
p What's up with this kohlrabi? It doesn't even seem like a proper vegetable. Is it trying to be a proper vegetable? Are people just pretending to like it? I don't get it.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Wednesday, March 19, 2014 11:56 AM (38 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
doesnt' taste like a proper vegetable
― how's life, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:35 (ten years ago) link
Except the ppl criticising it now itt are the same ppl who were criticising it then. So were they jealous before?
― post-nodern music player (wins), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:37 (ten years ago) link
kohlrabi is a root not a vegetable i thought?
― Mordy , Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:37 (ten years ago) link
root vegetables are vegetables. vegetables are just any edible part of a plant that isn't the fruit.
― Treeship, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:38 (ten years ago) link
Right
― post-nodern music player (wins), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:39 (ten years ago) link
yes!
― Treeship, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:40 (ten years ago) link
is that like anti vegitransgressive normativity. cabbage-shaming is real ppl
― eric banana (s.clover), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:42 (ten years ago) link
To piss or to punch up, that is the question.
― Position Position, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:43 (ten years ago) link
― Treeship, Wednesday, March 19, 2014 12:38 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
this is blowing my mind. vegetables are just defined by their absence of seed. fruit/vegetable
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:43 (ten years ago) link
Are you guys being faux naif?
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:47 (ten years ago) link
while we're at it... what exactly is a legume?
they are a musical. . . fruit
― waterbabies (waterface), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:49 (ten years ago) link
Then what are pulses?
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:50 (ten years ago) link
pulses are the ones with open-ys
― coops all on coops tbh (crüt), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:52 (ten years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GTxMZG-lQG4
― how's life, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:52 (ten years ago) link
Knowledge is knowing tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is knowing not to put it in a fruit salad
;_; rip
― treeship's assailing (darraghmac), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 16:54 (ten years ago) link
Depending on what else is in the fruit salad couldn't it work? Like with cherry tomatoes or something? Wisdom ain't shit.
― tsrobodo, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 17:01 (ten years ago) link
why do i hate that artist thing that people keep posting on my facebook so much? why am i such a jerk?
― Evan, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 17:03 (ten years ago) link
Yeah I mean some things that are technically fruits are classed as veg (aubergine,cucumber &c). When it comes to usage theres no hard & fast rule
― post-nodern music player (wins), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 17:04 (ten years ago) link
BlogHer Food '14 is coming to Miami on May 16 & 17 -and you are invited
― curmudgeon, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 17:19 (ten years ago) link
really tempted to go down to the animal shelter and bring home a tiny chihuahua for my tumblr-to-book "my owner's stupid record collection"
― open-y, ob-la-da (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 17:37 (ten years ago) link
Could be hip.
― Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 17:38 (ten years ago) link
it'll be problematic when the writing voice of your chihuahua matches well to that of a 1997 taco bell commercial
― POO: the blossom or full flower of the evening (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 18:03 (ten years ago) link
I have absolutely no problem with this couple undertaking this blogging experiment and they can write it in whatever tone they want! But when people share the heck out of it, and it's brought to my attention in the social media sphere multiple times and mentioned much more than other, more insightful projects, that don't happen to conform to a male/female couple dynamic that enforces a certain status quo then yeah, I think it is worth evaluating why this person's writing is both popular and inquiring as to why they are making certain stylistic choices.
It's easy to paint our media, especially our entertainment media, as a system that is top-down with the powers that be reinforcing stereotypes and the status quo through their choices of programming to broadcast/print. The other half of the reality is that people will popularize grassroots ventures that reinforce these things, too. I'm sorry if it's ugly and I hope people aren't getting in the faces of this woman and her husband, but feedback is deserved when the stage is large.
― have a nice blood (mh), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 18:46 (ten years ago) link
maybe someone should just write them a nice letter saying that a lot of people are enjoying their blog because they think she is a silly woman who doesn't get music and he's an idiot manchild who hoards objects he doesn't even listen to and that's how their words are read
― have a nice blood (mh), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 18:48 (ten years ago) link
okay...have any other ilxors not yet weighed in on My Husband's Stupid Record Collection the Tumblr Page and Possible Future Book? *checks watch*
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:04 (ten years ago) link
― °ㅇ๐ْ ° (gr8080), Monday, March 17, 2014 3:47 PM (2 days ago)
― °ㅇ๐ْ ° (gr8080), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:06 (ten years ago) link
noted
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:07 (ten years ago) link
Scrutiny comes with the territory. Don't really understand why she feels that she should be exempt from it.
― tsrobodo, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:09 (ten years ago) link
now the third time you've weighed in about your lack of opinion xxp
― Mordy , Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:11 (ten years ago) link
how many times has the cock crowed?!????
― j., Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:12 (ten years ago) link
there's been a lot of posts, just want to make sure everyone knew
― °ㅇ๐ْ ° (gr8080), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:13 (ten years ago) link
I missed your previous two posts re: opinion-not so thanks gr80.
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:14 (ten years ago) link
I have opinions about this tumblr. Thanks.
― PONOPONOPONO (seandalai), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:14 (ten years ago) link
just want to say that this has been my favorite part of the discussion thus far
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:15 (ten years ago) link
good to know.
― °ㅇ๐ْ ° (gr8080), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:16 (ten years ago) link
you're welcome
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:16 (ten years ago) link
: )
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:17 (ten years ago) link
When can we get back to making fun of the AV Club?
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:24 (ten years ago) link
even when avclub was a plausibly defendable thing their music writing was horrible
― balls, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:28 (ten years ago) link
― open-y, ob-la-da (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, March 19, 2014 10:37 AM (1 hour ago
when someone on fb first posted about this blog, I was going to have my mom review my record collection. It would have sounded as culturally aware and focused on taking breaks to get beverages and snacks as this blog does, written by someone who is most likely way younger than I am.
I was just operating on the assumption that someone this woman's age and of her background (not to mention her husband's) would find the music more familiar-sounding and have more points of reference.
― sarahell, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:29 (ten years ago) link
That kid who wrote the top ten jazz albums listicle wuz robbed
― I Forgot More Than You'll Ever POLL (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:29 (ten years ago) link
xp -- someone in philly did a series of youtube videos a lil while back where they went to this diner and asked old folks who are regulars there to listen to current pitchforky type music
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:35 (ten years ago) link
sounds great.
― °ㅇ๐ْ ° (gr8080), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:36 (ten years ago) link
it's actually a diner in fishtown that I've been to but can't remember the name, and I also can't remember the name of the series
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:36 (ten years ago) link
it was pretty good
oh i was gonna write the whole thing myself, but in my mom's voice -- take a dozen or so pics of mom doing various mom things and photoshop the records into them -- maybe incorporate some of mom's recipes and pictures of food, because people like food more than music anyway
― sarahell, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:37 (ten years ago) link
*logs on to twitter*
― waterbabies (waterface), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:38 (ten years ago) link
*retweets sarah hell's tweet*
― waterbabies (waterface), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:39 (ten years ago) link
i did this with a group of children at a school with a sympathetic teacher back when i was doing the tofu hut
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:42 (ten years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Il84l6zg5o
The title of this song sounds like a song used in a video game. Once I heard the song, I loved it. I like rock and heavy metal, usually. I like this, because it's really energetic and beyond upbeat. I like some morbid things, mostly books. Very good. I also like the name of the band: Three Inches of Blood. I like most morbid things. Some morbid things are somewhat intriguing, because sometimes I find it easy to relate to. Like if you or a friend have experienced something morbid, like death or a terrible disease, you can understand what it feels like. I don't know if that was at least an okay explanation. I really enjoy this song. I would definitely put this on my iPod.
ZZZZZZZZZZZ. This is so so so BORING it makes me want to fall to sleep on a pillow or take a nap and I hate taking naps so that's how boring it is. There are some things I like about it but its kind of weird. I like the screaming part and stuff like the "wwhhoooooaaaaa". Umm yeah, it sounds like a song some punk or rocker type chick/dude would listen too. Just not ME.
THE ORCS ARE AFTER ME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! YOWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW!!!!!!!!!!! They are destroying their instruments. Get them a dictionary and teach them proper etiquette. I still dont know what they are saying.
YAAAAAAA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ROCK OUT MAN!!!!!!!!!! YA!!!!!!! I wouldn't put this on my i-pods, but it's a cool power metal song. It has an awesome beat and I find the screaming quite amusing. I hear the band's name is "Three Inches of Blood". SWEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEET! hee hee...
Student 5: Once our teacher read the lyrics to the group, I really liked them! That was so cool... Blood....
The title sounds interesting, like a title from a movie or video game. I like this. It's heavy metal kind of cool, very energetic. The voice sounds like a cartoon character singing/yelling into the microphone. This is a cool band! I can't really understand the lyrics, but I don't mind.
It is crazy. They have a name that could get them gunned down. They sound Asian. What are they saying?
I'm not a really big rock fan, but I recommend this song to rockers. I think it will make you wanna scream and if you have a lot of hair you can shake it really hard and smash your things on the floor. It's a song to let out anger or a song to go kill someone.
Starts out with the usual screaming dark guy. Of course, I can hear the constant pounding of the drums and loud melody of the guitar. The guy is trying to scare me but unfortunately all attempts fail. When I listen to the lyrics (which I can barely hear) "slay the whatever", the band reminds me of some depressed Lord of the Rings fans.
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:45 (ten years ago) link
it was 2007. i shoulda stuck with it and i would be a rich youtube bastard.
they were seventh graders btw. Probably did about twenty of those.
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:48 (ten years ago) link
at the very least you'd get a mention itt ;)
― °ㅇ๐ْ ° (gr8080), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:50 (ten years ago) link
don't pick on those seventh graders, they meant well
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:51 (ten years ago) link
they're adults now
― sarahell, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:53 (ten years ago) link
fucking hell, you're righti am old
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:54 (ten years ago) link
but seriously, wouldn't millions of people rather read what my 68 year old mom thinks of Orthrelm than some neckbeardy professional music writer?
― sarahell, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:55 (ten years ago) link
they're jaded hipsters now.
― how's life, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:55 (ten years ago) link
probably normcore tbh
Alright, found it!https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u5MZV29xotU
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:56 (ten years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u5MZV29xotU
is "normcore" a thing outside of nyc?
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 19:57 (ten years ago) link
oh yeah. i'm in a suburban starbucks right now and nearly everyone here is totally normcore.
― Treeship, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 20:03 (ten years ago) link
whiney, you really need to caption a pic of Treeship's dog.
― sarahell, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 20:05 (ten years ago) link
treeship does your dog sometimrs forget the second half of your name and pee on you by accident
― waterbabies (waterface), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 20:07 (ten years ago) link
#pioneer
http://skotrok.blogspot.com/2012/01/rufus-and-scott-review-90s-indie-rock.html
― scott seward, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 20:37 (ten years ago) link
Is that the website in which Maria asks skot about his record and paperback collections?
― I Forgot More Than You'll Ever POLL (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 20:39 (ten years ago) link
scott's writing is the best because he's heard all kinds of wild shit and writes impressions off the cuff
I most appreciate when he makes a comparison to something I'd never think was related but it totally makes sense
― have a nice blood (mh), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 20:42 (ten years ago) link
scott's writing is like faux-naive-cubed, or it's not really faux-naive at all, it's just super loosened up, almost unhinged
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 20:47 (ten years ago) link
yeah, I don't think it's naive at all, just loose
― have a nice blood (mh), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 20:47 (ten years ago) link
its fuckin sweet is what it is
― waterbabies (waterface), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 20:48 (ten years ago) link
yeah it has an "i've listened to too much music and gone a bit mad" quality that makes it charming, although I'm gonna stop now bc I feel weird about talking in the third person about you scott as you are in this thread
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 20:49 (ten years ago) link
sup scott
― °ㅇ๐ْ ° (gr8080), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 20:53 (ten years ago) link
Hey Maura, it's Rob K, yr former co-worker.
What is the result that you want out of this? Should the woman apologize for doing a project that caught more eyeballs than likely she and annoying "OOH look at my All in the Family record, that will impress the WFMU dealers" husband did. Was she supposed to know that doing this project was going to play into an admittedly fraught context that makes making a living for you me and a lot of people reading this even more difficult? Should she have been stopped from doing the project? the internet, mass culture and the interstice of both frequently result in stupid shit: being defensive about a project this admittedly unlettered and hapless woman enacted with no malice that I can discern seems counter-productive.
― veronica moser, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 21:24 (ten years ago) link
well this didn't just get totally uncomfortable and weird
― katherine, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 21:27 (ten years ago) link
Wasn't under the impression that she was unlettered? 400 books, etc.
― how's life, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 21:30 (ten years ago) link
What is the result that you want out of this?
this like one step above accusing someone of being pro-censorship because they object to some discriminatory or prejudicial aspect of a song or film or etc
― Treeship, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 21:31 (ten years ago) link
really glad a man stepped in to speak truth to power
― open-y, ob-la-da (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 21:31 (ten years ago) link
this admittedly unlettered and hapless woman
...um, did I just read this?
― Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 21:34 (ten years ago) link
http://eyesareout.files.wordpress.com/2013/09/meh-ro7354.gif
― open-y, ob-la-da (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 21:36 (ten years ago) link
unlettered and hapless!
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 21:38 (ten years ago) link
90% of music reviewers are male writers of all kinds10% are twee women
the problem isn't the twee woman
delete yourself
― have a nice blood (mh), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 21:39 (ten years ago) link
sorry, that should read "music reviewers that are widely shared this week"
there are women who are excellent music reviewers who do it for a living but they're getting a lot less attention than this one
― have a nice blood (mh), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 21:40 (ten years ago) link
This was a fun thread once
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 21:44 (ten years ago) link
look I'm not going to play the zing game with you guys: sneering is the default setting for Mr W, and I do not wish to develop skills as such.
I was asking this of ME, as I used to work with her, and I tried to phrase it respectfully and not mansplainy. As for the question re: the result, I'm curious and I fail to see how the above phrasing is at all accusatory. 72 hours into this and there seems to be unwarranted defensiveness; it's chum for a nest of disaffected rock critics feeding off one another, struggling to accept that that writing about music for $$$ is more difficult than it used to be.
If ME feels like me addressing her as a former colleague is uncool, then my bad. Here and on my FB feed there are debates that are raging re; this, and I wanted for her to see my question without wading through tons of comments, and this seemed to be the easiest way to achieve that.
Mr raggett and Mr Sotosyn : "hapless" and "unlettered" refers to the woman's observations on music. She said stuff that was dumb, which I thought is the reason that everyone is annoyed with the project? I forgot momentarily that she is a librarian.
― veronica moser, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 21:52 (ten years ago) link
debates are raging/dudes are mansplaning
― waterbabies (waterface), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 21:53 (ten years ago) link
popcorn.gif
― chive on you crazy diamond (diamonddave85), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 21:54 (ten years ago) link
I like how the initials make it read like cookie monster
― POO: the blossom or full flower of the evening (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 21:55 (ten years ago) link
see I don't know about her intentions but her reviews read to me like she was playing a part, and I didn't see the point in her doing so.
writing about music for $$$ is more difficult than it used to be.
you don't say!
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 21:55 (ten years ago) link
ook I'm not going to play the zing game with you guys: sneering is the default setting for Mr W, and I do not wish to develop skills as such.
go hard or go home
― open-y, ob-la-da (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 21:55 (ten years ago) link
its 2014 ffs have we not gotten over mansplain
― treeship's assailing (darraghmac), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 21:58 (ten years ago) link
No, because it is something that actually exists, contrary to what you and I have experienced as men.
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:00 (ten years ago) link
hi rob! i think i've said like 10x that i just wish women who weren't writing with a ladyblog-ready gimmick would get even half as much shine as this site has. i really do think viral culture has made the marketplace for reading a lot more stereotype-cleaving, and the reaction to this site only makes my theory more plain.
(and her defensiveness about nobody talking to her seems misplaced, since her husband was more than ready to leap to her defense on twitter and metafilter and other places too.)
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:00 (ten years ago) link
― open-y, ob-la-da (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, March 19, 2014 5:55 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
srsly you don't step in the arena and then say I'm not here to gladiate
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:00 (ten years ago) link
(to wit: https://twitter.com/maura/status/445769042633445376)
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:01 (ten years ago) link
omg got murgsplained
― treeship's assailing (darraghmac), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:03 (ten years ago) link
Unlettered and Hapless should have been what Morrissey called his autobiography.
― Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:05 (ten years ago) link
Wanted to ask some M some questions. didn't come to fuck with anyone, gladiate, whatever it is you henny youngmans do…
― veronica moser, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:06 (ten years ago) link
do you not got email on that thing
― j., Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:07 (ten years ago) link
henny youngmans
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:07 (ten years ago) link
i'd have to read a lot more of the tumblr to get a more solid opinion, which i probably won't do, so gr80 otm probably. wu-wei, man.
i'd be more forgiving if the writing were more insightful about the music, if there was some spark there about what happens in the room when these particular records are playing. but on that level it didn't grab me.
or if there was some kind of interesting or funny window into these two people's lives as such but what's there didn't do much for me either -- admittedly this falls into a bunch of minefields and i doubt i'd be moved by something more 'personal' anyway.
i haven't ventured out into the wider internet on this (let alone FB, fuck) but there's absolutely no doubt this woman is generating a shitton of misogynist energy in response. that's bullshit, of course. but i don't see any of the posters here on ilx engaging in that. i really don't. this couple is already a living breathing ilx stereotype and the thread here has been pretty respectful of them as people.
again i think j. and maura have been pretty much right: both in form and in content this is another example of one li'l bit of america's elite talking about itself to itself w/o much wit or zip to make it worth it.
― goole, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:08 (ten years ago) link
is this thing really all that viral anyway? I haven't heard about it from anyone outside of this thread.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:11 (ten years ago) link
*christopher nolan twist*
― treeship's assailing (darraghmac), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:15 (ten years ago) link
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, March 19, 2014 6:11 PM (8 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
^this
― open-y, ob-la-da (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:22 (ten years ago) link
i know chris isn't on facebook, but it's all over there
― maura, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:25 (ten years ago) link
ok, maybe my friends just don't really post stuff about music crit very often
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:26 (ten years ago) link
i wouldn't want to be "friends" with anyone who posted that Tumblr in earnest
― open-y, ob-la-da (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:29 (ten years ago) link
what if they were nice ppl and loyal friends and were nice to you?
― Little Nicky Pizza loved that rascal Rust (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:35 (ten years ago) link
what if their sandwich artistry was just superb
― goole, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:36 (ten years ago) link
yeah i went back to that well but come on
wow between the people who posted that tumblr in earnest and the people that made fake coachella posters, whiney must have like no friends anymore
― sarahell, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:36 (ten years ago) link
xxxp i've heard about it on multiple music nerd/industry lists/threads/facebooky type things. it hits all the right notes for people who care too much about the things that we do but probably renders as near invisible to anyone who doesn't.
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:41 (ten years ago) link
― maura, Wednesday, March 19, 2014 11:04 AM (6 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:50 (ten years ago) link
I'm not in the same music crit circles so the only people I've seen posting about this are ILXors.
― coops all on coops tbh (crüt), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:52 (ten years ago) link
the ppl that are gonna share this sincerely are no doubt the ppl who shared that stupid STRANGERS MEET AND KISS video
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:53 (ten years ago) link
Rob K seems cool
― polyphonic, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:58 (ten years ago) link
i'm just so glad i love sports so i don't have to think about ILX type stuff all the time
― Little Nicky Pizza loved that rascal Rust (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 22:58 (ten years ago) link
That boxx magazine place has zero comments on basically all of their articles
― polyphonic, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 23:00 (ten years ago) link
yeah that's p wack maura should have got that scrilla :/
― Little Nicky Pizza loved that rascal Rust (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 23:01 (ten years ago) link
yeah but 'boxx' is more shareable, stop being counter-productive
― mattresslessness, Wednesday, 19 March 2014 23:05 (ten years ago) link
― I Forgot More Than You'll Ever POLL (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 23:10 (ten years ago) link
Which I guess is no doubt still the same as crüt
― I Forgot More Than You'll Ever POLL (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 23:14 (ten years ago) link
This thing kind of reminds me of a list of top people under 30 who are changing the media. Most of them are people who've made it big on twitter or youtube doing fairly tried and tested stuff like cookery shows or humorous vine vids, but with an entrepreneurial 'twist'. And that twist is they're all able to market their personalities through social media. Part celebrities, part web moguls, part PR merchants, they've all got their own shtick to wield and they're all doing well out of it. Made me wonder how much I had ever been told to 'sell myself' growing up. The idea was something I had to learn slowly, especially by the time I had to do job interviews. But it never felt like something I ought to do naturally. I wonder if, especially for millenials, this is all becoming just a part of success; developing an online persona as a kind of amplification of oneself in order to get noticed. I can imagine a time in the not so distant future when the internet is full of 'branded personalities' trying to get noticed. Guess this kind of thing has been happening on ilx since it began - the louder, more controversial, funnier posters and their respective sockpuppets commanding the most attention from the rest of the board.
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 23:46 (ten years ago) link
*the list was in the guardian the other day
several gigging musician types and college radio people I know posted it
― have a nice blood (mh), Wednesday, 19 March 2014 23:48 (ten years ago) link
dog latin u may enjoy this:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/generation-like/
― °ㅇ๐ْ ° (gr8080), Thursday, 20 March 2014 00:24 (ten years ago) link
a non-ILX person posted it on my fb. i looked at it and then came here to see how bad you fucktards were gonna be crying about it. Real music writing is mad boring and i would never even click on any let alone read some, but if you have a clownish gimmick tumblr i will definitely read a page or two of it.,.. hope that was helpful
― Hungry4Ass, Thursday, 20 March 2014 00:25 (ten years ago) link
Gr80 sadly can't watch it in UK
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Thursday, 20 March 2014 00:33 (ten years ago) link
― veronica moser, Wednesday, March 19, 2014 6:06 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― j., Wednesday, March 19, 2014 6:07 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
^^ all time
― eric banana (s.clover), Thursday, 20 March 2014 00:40 (ten years ago) link
whatever it is you henny youngmans do…
Take my whiney...please
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Thursday, 20 March 2014 01:04 (ten years ago) link
what i took away from this tumblr is that the husband has a pretty boring record collection.
― call all destroyer, Thursday, 20 March 2014 01:19 (ten years ago) link
dog latin v much otm, I know of a couple of ppl who've turned blogs into bookdeals and their personae were a big part of that success, afaik
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Thursday, 20 March 2014 01:23 (ten years ago) link
what about a la-z-boy brand sofa? is that better than ikea. forget music i'm worried about where i sit every day help me please.
― eric banana (s.clover), Thursday, 20 March 2014 01:32 (ten years ago) link
Ikea seems a weird signifier to pick out - everyone I know has Ikea stuff - but maybe it's different in the US?
― robocop ELF (seandalai), Thursday, 20 March 2014 01:35 (ten years ago) link
everyone in the US has ikea furniture too
― Mordy , Thursday, 20 March 2014 01:37 (ten years ago) link
you have to have a car to get to IKEA tho
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Thursday, 20 March 2014 01:38 (ten years ago) link
and a special plate for the metaballs
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 20 March 2014 01:39 (ten years ago) link
meatballs too
horseballs
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Thursday, 20 March 2014 01:39 (ten years ago) link
they have the best horseballs though
― robocop ELF (seandalai), Thursday, 20 March 2014 01:42 (ten years ago) link
uh…j. and s. clover: I thought my questions were relevant to an extensive discussion taking place and posted them as such… jesus christ, rock critics are so fucking defensive and thin-skinned…
― veronica moser, Thursday, 20 March 2014 01:48 (ten years ago) link
no offense but you came onto a message board basically saying "I'm posing this question to one person and one person only"
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Thursday, 20 March 2014 01:54 (ten years ago) link
he's posted here before this iirc
― sarahell, Thursday, 20 March 2014 01:55 (ten years ago) link
has anyone else googled "veronica moser" yet?
― Treeship, Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:01 (ten years ago) link
Woah
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:04 (ten years ago) link
haha moser's posted for awhile and is generally a good poster albeit unlettered but this is kinda hilariously wtf
― balls, Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:08 (ten years ago) link
― Mordy , Wednesday, March 19, 2014 8:37 PM (29 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
this is completely wrong. ikea furniture exists inside major urban centers, but the majority of the country has no ikea stores. the nearest ikea to me is a ~4 hour drive, and the second-closest is 5.5 hours, and I live in an area of about a half-million people. so people have ikea things, but they have either made a trek to get it (which could be a signifier) or they have moved from somewhere with it (signifier)
― have a nice blood (mh), Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:09 (ten years ago) link
love treeship all 'moser? where do i know that name from?'
― balls, Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:10 (ten years ago) link
dang treeship just made a salient point, I think
or possibly a prurient point
― have a nice blood (mh), Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:11 (ten years ago) link
naw! not part of the inner circle here (which has its own biases and byways, which y'all should acknowledge if you have any balls) but I've been here for 8 years!
tell me what is wrong with saying that whatshername's shit is dumb! if I was wading into the weeds about a subject that I had no prior knowledge in the computer world, I would strive very very hard to try to say something that was illuminating re: my own impressions and how it would impact upon the wider world.
― veronica moser, Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:23 (ten years ago) link
tell us more about your balls
― j., Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:25 (ten years ago) link
― veronica moser, Wednesday, March 19, 2014 9:48 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
if i meet one i'll keep it in mind.
(there are two ikeas around me. i got to one without a car once and walked around a while. we ended up buying some meatballs, some fuzzy slippers, and some spatulas. also the fish roe in a metal tube. that stuff is great. the other ikea you really do need a car to get to. you can also order some but not all ikea stuff on the internet. it comes flat! the sofas maybe not so flat, i dunno.)
― eric banana (s.clover), Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:25 (ten years ago) link
we have an Ikea sofa it is excellent
― robocop ELF (seandalai), Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:27 (ten years ago) link
Pretty sure that Ikea deliver so why would you need to drive there? (unless of course you really need their meatballs)
― tsrobodo, Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:29 (ten years ago) link
is that a good startup? ikea meatball delivery?
― eric banana (s.clover), Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:30 (ten years ago) link
if it is, you can't have it i thought of it first
― eric banana (s.clover), Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:31 (ten years ago) link
"tell us more"… that's some memespeak, straight out of willy wonka with his hand on his chin… use your own verbiage…jesus be original!
― veronica moser, Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:31 (ten years ago) link
What as in actually driving to Ikea to buy their meatballs and then delivering them to people?
Would that be legal?
― tsrobodo, Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:32 (ten years ago) link
i love ikea
― Treeship, Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:32 (ten years ago) link
Sorry, the website www.meatbal.ls cannot be found.
― robocop ELF (seandalai), Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:32 (ten years ago) link
aww :(
It is not possible to register a new second-level domain in .ls. New registrations are only taken at the third level, below one of the existing second level domains.
― robocop ELF (seandalai), Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:34 (ten years ago) link
ikea only delivers near their stores, they ship by the most costly method possible outside their range :/
― have a nice blood (mh), Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:36 (ten years ago) link
and yeah CW, that's big talk from an Internet tough guy! have you ever talked that way in someone's face? you appear to be of the generation who has found it convenient to talk shit without saying shit in person without conventional consequences.
― veronica moser, Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:38 (ten years ago) link
Aah, well that would be a shame.
On a brighter note I found these stupidly overpriced but nonetheless irresistible covers for my bed.bemz.com/en-gb/product-page/product/bed-frame-covers/id/gri21/grimen/d2201/graphite-grey/
― tsrobodo, Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:39 (ten years ago) link
do you think it's a good idea to use the phrase "talk shit" with a display name of veronica moser
― have a nice blood (mh), Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:42 (ten years ago) link
drove my friend to ikea during a snowstorm back in december because she was fed up with her apartment not being furnished and couldn't wait any longer. i think we were the only customers there. one of the most relaxing evenings i've ever had.
― Treeship, Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:44 (ten years ago) link
how were the meatballs
― j., Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:46 (ten years ago) link
we didn't eat there. the food at ikea is awful but that's part of its charm.
― Treeship, Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:47 (ten years ago) link
veronica moser is all about shit at all times
― veronica moser, Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:51 (ten years ago) link
^ gets it...
― Treeship, Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:51 (ten years ago) link
I accidentally went to ikea on the free breakfast morning once, meaning to eat something while there, and the food was fine but all kinds of old people showed up just for the food!
Just goes to show that old people will go all the way to Ikea in suburban Minneapolis for a free food
― have a nice blood (mh), Thursday, 20 March 2014 02:53 (ten years ago) link
http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2011-07-07/business/ct-biz-0707-ikea-shadow-business-20110707_1_ikea-side-businesses-joseph-roth
― °ㅇ๐ْ ° (gr8080), Thursday, 20 March 2014 03:08 (ten years ago) link
At a glance thought the url was suggesting that ikea was doing shadow business with Sephiroth.
― tsrobodo, Thursday, 20 March 2014 03:13 (ten years ago) link
What is funny is that St. Louis is in an even worse spot for ikea customers than Des Moines
― have a nice blood (mh), Thursday, 20 March 2014 03:18 (ten years ago) link
The Burbank ikea is my least favorite place in the world
― POO: the blossom or full flower of the evening (Sufjan Grafton), Thursday, 20 March 2014 05:09 (ten years ago) link
Don't even have IKEA in NZ :((((
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Thursday, 20 March 2014 05:14 (ten years ago) link
Would subscribe to a katherine + maura + branwell round-table blog, great posts yesterday
― continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Thursday, 20 March 2014 06:07 (ten years ago) link
I believe that Maura and Katherine have actual publications where you can subscribe and do exactly that?
(Albeit without me coming in and rambling about fingerbanging.)
― "Endemic. What does that mean, man?" (Branwell Bell), Thursday, 20 March 2014 08:13 (ten years ago) link
Theres a bus runs to the ikea in finglas, even got fittings like an airport bus for flatpack stuff
― treeship's assailing (darraghmac), Thursday, 20 March 2014 08:22 (ten years ago) link
Glad i don't drive as it stops me being a horrible person. can anyone point me towards an outlet that sells roll-up furniture made entirely out of balsa wood and plastic screws so I can just carry it home under my arm?
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Thursday, 20 March 2014 08:33 (ten years ago) link
christ i hate flatpacks but it's not mainly an aesthetic thing
― fhingerbhangra (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 20 March 2014 08:34 (ten years ago) link
My flatpacks come from Argos because it's across the road.
― Fingerbang On A Can (Branwell Bell), Thursday, 20 March 2014 09:06 (ten years ago) link
Life is like a large branch of IKEA with a meat grinder at the exit. Which is why I buy my record shelves from IKEA.
― Doran, Thursday, 20 March 2014 10:06 (ten years ago) link
spend your last day on earth assembling your own pine-look mfc coffin
― eardrum buzz aldrin (NickB), Thursday, 20 March 2014 10:24 (ten years ago) link
have you ever talked that way in someone's face? you appear to be of the generation who has found it convenient to talk shit without saying shit in person without conventional consequences.
What language was this google-translated from
― IKEA because you do (wins), Thursday, 20 March 2014 10:51 (ten years ago) link
Can we go back to nitpicking editing errors on P4K yet?
― Position Position, Thursday, 20 March 2014 11:18 (ten years ago) link
This got weird
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 20 March 2014 14:04 (ten years ago) link
the past couple of days itt may just constitute the least funny sequence of posts on ilx ever, which is saying a lot
― lex pretend, Thursday, 20 March 2014 14:06 (ten years ago) link
not coming from you it ain't...
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Thursday, 20 March 2014 14:06 (ten years ago) link
Now that was quite funny
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Thursday, 20 March 2014 14:17 (ten years ago) link
yeah, that one..
― Mark G, Thursday, 20 March 2014 15:05 (ten years ago) link
nearly 700 new posts because of this article. Was it really that big a deal?
― Scooby Doom (۩), Thursday, 20 March 2014 15:06 (ten years ago) link
was it worth it, people?
― socki (s1ocki), Thursday, 20 March 2014 15:07 (ten years ago) link
http://31.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m4ftzo0vxk1r4119so1_500.jpg
― bi-polar uncle (its OK-he's dead) (Phil D.), Thursday, 20 March 2014 15:08 (ten years ago) link
what were we supposed to be doing otherwise
― (or if you must, "data") (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 20 March 2014 15:12 (ten years ago) link
partying
― socki (s1ocki), Thursday, 20 March 2014 15:20 (ten years ago) link
there's a bunch of stuff i should have been doing besides ilx these past few days
― Treeship, Thursday, 20 March 2014 15:26 (ten years ago) link
judgy people be judgin
― waterbabies (waterface), Thursday, 20 March 2014 15:37 (ten years ago) link
if I have a publication this is news to me
― katherine, Thursday, 20 March 2014 15:57 (ten years ago) link
congrats!
― Evan, Thursday, 20 March 2014 15:58 (ten years ago) link
title it "kat scratch fever", post a bunch of pictures of you looking confusedly at album covers with your cute kitten and apply for some grant money
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 20 March 2014 16:00 (ten years ago) link
alas, the cute kitten exists in the same hypotheticalspace as the publication. is coffee twee enough
― katherine, Thursday, 20 March 2014 16:18 (ten years ago) link
not really. do you knit? maybe you watch adventure time? i can loan you some pottery if that's helpful.
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 20 March 2014 16:20 (ten years ago) link
coffee + oversized sweaters should do it. Hold the mug with both hands too.
― Evan, Thursday, 20 March 2014 16:44 (ten years ago) link
Coulda spent all this time unironically reading other people's opinions on music on another site
― treeship's assailing (darraghmac), Thursday, 20 March 2014 17:02 (ten years ago) link
Whatever constitutes ironic reading I'm sure it's a v worthwhile pursuit
― every moser (wins), Thursday, 20 March 2014 17:06 (ten years ago) link
can't wait until she reviews scotland
― waterbabies (waterface), Thursday, 20 March 2014 17:09 (ten years ago) link
Youve got a login idk why you're looking back at me wins
― treeship's assailing (darraghmac), Thursday, 20 March 2014 17:10 (ten years ago) link
STOP TRYING TO BE FUNNY YOU ARE ALL PAINFUL
― lex pretend, Thursday, 20 March 2014 17:14 (ten years ago) link
I think Lex's idea of hell is being forced to cook for the members of Mumford and Sons while they perform stand up comedy. (To be fair, most would think this.)
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 20 March 2014 17:15 (ten years ago) link
my idea of hell is having to listen to lex rant about what he finds unfunny for eternity. thank god either ilx or i will die one day + this suffering will come to an end.
― Mordy , Thursday, 20 March 2014 17:17 (ten years ago) link
go lex!
― goole, Thursday, 20 March 2014 17:19 (ten years ago) link
Someone is holding me down and forcing me to click links and read posts too.
― Evan, Thursday, 20 March 2014 17:22 (ten years ago) link
sorry, just found it a bit amusing (probably more to me than anyone else) to oversleep and wake up into a world where people think I've got my own publication
― katherine, Thursday, 20 March 2014 17:24 (ten years ago) link
i enjoy reading ilm threads when they're not being shitted up with five million posts about a completely irrelevant amateur blog or WAY WAY WORSE people desperately trying and completely failing to be "funny"
― lex pretend, Thursday, 20 March 2014 17:25 (ten years ago) link
xp katherine is one of the few posters in this thread who has not been painful to read
humor is the worst
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 20 March 2014 17:26 (ten years ago) link
I laughed at my own one joke here.
― Evan, Thursday, 20 March 2014 17:27 (ten years ago) link
Lex doesn't do humor because he's not American.
― Scooby Doom (۩), Thursday, 20 March 2014 17:28 (ten years ago) link
― Mordy , Thursday, March 20, 2014 5:17 PM (13 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Not sure you fully get the concept of "hell"
― robocop ELF (seandalai), Thursday, 20 March 2014 17:32 (ten years ago) link
british and irish people are in no way exempted from my criticism
― lex pretend, Thursday, 20 March 2014 17:32 (ten years ago) link
it's other ppl, right? xp
― Mordy , Thursday, 20 March 2014 17:33 (ten years ago) link
trigger warning: any thread about "is this the worst x ever" is probably going to be full of people cracking jokes. it's MST3K for rock writers.
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Thursday, 20 March 2014 17:56 (ten years ago) link
Except MST3K was funny.
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Thursday, 20 March 2014 17:57 (ten years ago) link
There are publications where you are publicated in print, Katherine, which Goon Tie could purchase if he wanted to read more. Is what I meant. I think.
― Fingerbang On A Can (Branwell Bell), Thursday, 20 March 2014 18:28 (ten years ago) link
I subscribe and purchase! was commenting positively about your (pl., x3) particular exchange
― continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Thursday, 20 March 2014 19:02 (ten years ago) link
julianne e.s. is one of the best writers in the game right now
― lex pretend, Monday, March 17, 2014 8:45 AM (3 days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Fair play to Lex, that was one of the funniest jokes in this thread. All downhill from there.
― Position Position, Thursday, 20 March 2014 19:39 (ten years ago) link
Is there a thread that is safe for jokes?
― Evan, Thursday, 20 March 2014 19:43 (ten years ago) link
Just Can't Get Enough: New Wave Hits Of The '80s, Vol. 1
― sarahell, Thursday, 20 March 2014 19:45 (ten years ago) link
Snigger warnings
― treeship's assailing (darraghmac), Thursday, 20 March 2014 19:58 (ten years ago) link
can't wait to see 14 more of those polls
― open-y, ob-la-da (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 20 March 2014 20:05 (ten years ago) link
he should make them each a month long for voting
― Scooby Doom (۩), Thursday, 20 March 2014 20:14 (ten years ago) link
jezebel weighs in:
http://jezebel.com/oh-the-unbelievable-shit-you-get-writing-about-music-a-1547444869?utm_campaign=socialflow_jezebel_facebook&utm_source=jezebel_facebook&utm_medium=socialflow
― Darin, Thursday, 20 March 2014 22:05 (ten years ago) link
― Scooby Doom (۩),
He doesn't do humour, either.
― EZ Snappin, Thursday, 20 March 2014 22:13 (ten years ago) link
nothing in this thread qualified as humour
― lex pretend, Thursday, 20 March 2014 22:32 (ten years ago) link
in yr opinion are u statler or waldorf
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 20 March 2014 22:34 (ten years ago) link
i don't know who those are
― lex pretend, Thursday, 20 March 2014 22:34 (ten years ago) link
http://gifrific.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/Terminator-Smile.gif
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Thursday, 20 March 2014 22:35 (ten years ago) link
this is actually one of the better things jezebel has run lately
― katherine, Thursday, 20 March 2014 22:36 (ten years ago) link
― lex pretend, Thursday, 20 March 2014 22:34 (2 minutes ago) Permalink
Were you raised in the woods as a child?
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Thursday, 20 March 2014 22:38 (ten years ago) link
Maybe the Muppets aren't as big of a cultural force in the UK as it is here in North America.
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Thursday, 20 March 2014 22:39 (ten years ago) link
ok which of the two ronnies are you then
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 20 March 2014 22:40 (ten years ago) link
i've never seen the muppets, my childhood was tv-free
― lex pretend, Thursday, 20 March 2014 22:41 (ten years ago) link
never seen (though have heard of!) the two ronnies either
the muppets were massive here. I had the full bedspread etc when i was 3
― Scooby Doom (۩), Thursday, 20 March 2014 22:43 (ten years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SK6TVqbsKVk
― katherine, Thursday, 20 March 2014 22:48 (ten years ago) link
Reagan or Van Zant
― Little Nicky Pizza loved that rascal Rust (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 20 March 2014 22:57 (ten years ago) link
That Jezebel piece is surprisingly fair and has a great deal of OTM about it.
― Fingerbang On A Can (Branwell Bell), Thursday, 20 March 2014 23:21 (ten years ago) link
yeah I dug it
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 20 March 2014 23:38 (ten years ago) link
I agree w Maura and Ann re turnabout "My Wife's Stupid Record Collection". But I hope the brave guy writes better than Sarah O'Holla.
― dow, Thursday, 20 March 2014 23:40 (ten years ago) link
Either way, I'm sure Jezebel will be all over it, and rightfully so.
― dow, Thursday, 20 March 2014 23:42 (ten years ago) link
Some of the comments on that Jezebel piece, wow. The ones from women are illuminating and the ones from that d and d guy are hilarious.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Friday, 21 March 2014 01:01 (ten years ago) link
I mostly like the article in spite of having that annoying forced casual style. I didn't really like the end about how people should just write what they feel maaaaaaan.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Friday, 21 March 2014 01:03 (ten years ago) link
i liked that part!
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Friday, 21 March 2014 01:26 (ten years ago) link
Men write about music like this, women write about music like this.
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Friday, 21 March 2014 01:28 (ten years ago) link
*fart*
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Friday, 21 March 2014 01:34 (ten years ago) link
It's just one of those things that sounds like a vaguely good idea, but how many music reviews like that would you really want to read? Plus I think most good music writers write with both knowledge and feeling.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Friday, 21 March 2014 01:38 (ten years ago) link
That'd be ideal, bt way too often that knowledge doesn't work in a record's favour. I'm sick of googling for reviews of something I'm loving cos I want to read more and finding a bitter critic going "This sounds like something I heard 20 years ago so it's worthless", esp as I've p much always heard those things too and somehow don't let it ruin everything NOW for me
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Friday, 21 March 2014 01:53 (ten years ago) link
Maybe that's just dudes on Twitter tho
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Friday, 21 March 2014 01:54 (ten years ago) link
If you're a woman and you do a thing, you can't *ever* just do a thing (bad or good), you do a thing, and there's 700 posts worth of people's ~feelings about women~ attached to you and your thing.
And it gets super tiresome and tedious after a while.
― Fingerbang On A Can (Branwell Bell), Friday, 21 March 2014 05:07 (ten years ago) link
― post-nodern music player (wins)
what nonsense ad-hom shit is this tho
― treeship's assailing (darraghmac), Saturday, 22 March 2014 00:18 (ten years ago) link
FP'd him
― POO: the blossom or full flower of the evening (Sufjan Grafton), Saturday, 22 March 2014 00:22 (ten years ago) link
appreciate it
― treeship's assailing (darraghmac), Saturday, 22 March 2014 00:31 (ten years ago) link
deems yr music blog is gr8, peace brother
― set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 22 March 2014 01:48 (ten years ago) link
wait is there an actual darragh blog?
― ogmor, Saturday, 22 March 2014 14:25 (ten years ago) link
Christ no
Its the suggestion that there might be that piqued me tbph
― treeship's assailing (darraghmac), Saturday, 22 March 2014 16:50 (ten years ago) link
It's called New Moaners Express
― Scooby Doom (۩), Saturday, 22 March 2014 17:01 (ten years ago) link
my hopes raised for a minute there. surely you could at least have a thread where you could offer yr thoughts on whatever pub bands/radio tunes/hold music catches yr ear day to day
― ogmor, Saturday, 22 March 2014 17:02 (ten years ago) link
quite sure im not alone amongst ilxors in considering that a nightmare idea
― treeship's assailing (darraghmac), Saturday, 22 March 2014 18:35 (ten years ago) link
you can't shy away from controversy
― ogmor, Saturday, 22 March 2014 19:34 (ten years ago) link
I wouldn't read it but rest assured I would post the url itt
― every moser (wins), Saturday, 22 March 2014 19:39 (ten years ago) link
FP'd again
― POO: the blossom or full flower of the evening (Sufjan Grafton), Saturday, 22 March 2014 19:46 (ten years ago) link
lolz
― treeship's assailing (darraghmac), Saturday, 22 March 2014 19:49 (ten years ago) link
So does wins have a blog then?
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Sunday, 23 March 2014 00:18 (ten years ago) link
http://www.salon.com/2014/03/23/get_lucky_rick_moody_and_dean_wareham_debate_daft_punk_disco_and_whether_pleasures_should_be_guilty/
Rick Moody comments worst music writing
― have a nice blood (mh), Monday, 24 March 2014 02:34 (ten years ago) link
Christ
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Monday, 24 March 2014 02:39 (ten years ago) link
It keeps getting worse and worse
Wait until he says he's down with current rap and cites backpacker faves of 2000
― have a nice blood (mh), Monday, 24 March 2014 02:41 (ten years ago) link
'This exchange began as a Facebook thread'
― j., Monday, 24 March 2014 02:44 (ten years ago) link
I, too, like some disco. (Although if we are speaking of black music from the ’70s I would rather listen to funk almost any day.)
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Monday, 24 March 2014 02:44 (ten years ago) link
Part of my problem with the Hollywood sound of the very expensive “Random Access Memories” (meaning, in this argument, the selective forgetting of one’s origins) is that it conceals what is French, or it makes the argument that what is French is only “ripping off black music,” when that is far from the truth. There’s a whole history of African-American jazz and soul artists going to France for more respect (Nina Simone comes to mind), there’s a whole history of French artists (Django Reinhardt) borrowing American idioms and bringing something nativist to them. But I feel like there’s a quantum change in “Random Access Memories,” in that what the French robots bring to the proceedings is that absence of the nativist. They bring superior hiring capabilities, and astute marketing.
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Monday, 24 March 2014 02:49 (ten years ago) link
half the comments in the second half are like shit that'd come out of a clueless grandparent's mouth, which makes you furtively glance from side to side, hoping anyone within earshot doesn't take them seriously
― have a nice blood (mh), Monday, 24 March 2014 02:50 (ten years ago) link
wow this is the worst garbage i have tried to read in months, it's like reading a first draft of a student paper
and it's long, too!!
― j., Monday, 24 March 2014 02:51 (ten years ago) link
when he says something indicating he probably doesn't like that kind of music he's comparing this song to but it is indicative of something he thinks has _legitimacy_ so it gets a pass
*vomit*
― have a nice blood (mh), Monday, 24 March 2014 02:53 (ten years ago) link
But the French robots apparently do not know about “Trans,” or rather, they are too cynical to care about “Trans,”
I find four-four tyrannical a lot of the time (which is why, e.g., I revere “Trout Mask Replica,” or the music of Ornette Coleman)
Haim is when I reach for my revolver (metaphorically)
I actually love black music, love the blues (especially the country blues), love New Orleans jazz, love hard bop (a lot), love free jazz (I admire Sun Ra without restraint), love Mingus and the Art Ensemble of Chicago and James “Blood” Ulmer, and Ornette, love Coltrane, love almost every period of Miles Davis (except the smoove comeback albums), and I even love a fair amount of hip-hop (I am on the record as regards the Roots, but also Blackalicious, Deltron 3030 and other “underground” hip-hop artists), lest it should be assumed that I only like black music in retrospect. But I found a lot of disco, back in the day, sort of dull.
Rick Moody is the worst.
Generally with Wareham until this: a whole lot of bad songs: “I Like the Nightlife,” “Ring My Bell,” “Boogie Oogie Oogie,” “Boogie Wonderland,” “Boogie Nights,” “I’m Your Boogie Man.”
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Monday, 24 March 2014 10:03 (ten years ago) link
I'd like to thank the ILXOR upthread who informed me that IKEA were ceasing production of expedit record shelving. I got the last remaining four by four birch effect shelving unit in my local branch to go with my other shelves and me and my Gary Numan picture discs thank you.
― Doran, Monday, 24 March 2014 10:03 (ten years ago) link
There was a thread (I swear Mark S started it back in the mists of time but I can't find it) about "words or phrases that cause you to completely lose faith in a piece of writing". You know, stock phrases like "but (pop singer) didn't even write the tracks!" or "come on, (techno artists) aren't even playing ~real instruments~" or the like, which are so "wow, you have nothing to say to me about music" that you instantly stop reading and hit the back button?
I've got a new one now, and it's "Interpol are just a xerox of Joy Division" and he says that in like the second paragraph. So even though, well, I still haven't got around to listening to that Daft Punk album (because who has the time for such a duty listen) I can safely say that Mr Moody has nothing of value to add to any discussion. Except maybe the occasional LOL that people are pulling out itt.
― You had great style (and style is worthwhile) (Branwell Bell), Monday, 24 March 2014 10:37 (ten years ago) link
As ever didn't click thru but ay ay ay what a clueless tool
― every moser (wins), Monday, 24 March 2014 10:56 (ten years ago) link
Why read any piece of music crit when you can just have ILX rip it to pieces for you.
Why listen to any of today's popular albums when you can just have ILX listen to them for you and tell you what to think.
Hurrah!
― once more unto the DUVOON (Branwell Bell), Monday, 24 March 2014 10:59 (ten years ago) link
Comments in reviews most likely to put you off buying a record or going to a gig
― my father will guide me up the stairs to bed (anagram), Monday, 24 March 2014 11:01 (ten years ago) link
No, it wasn't that one. It was phrased "things that cause you to lose confidence in a piece of writing" because it wasn't that it would put you off *buying the record*, it was things that made you realise that the *writer* did not actually know what they were talking about, and therefore you should not pay attention to the rest of the review.
― once more unto the DUVOON (Branwell Bell), Monday, 24 March 2014 11:05 (ten years ago) link
The word "tunesmith" would do it for me..
― Mark G, Monday, 24 March 2014 11:15 (ten years ago) link
Possibly this is the thread?
"Use other words please."
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Monday, 24 March 2014 11:26 (ten years ago) link
Found it:
http://www.ilxor.com/ILX/ThreadSelectedControllerServlet?boardid=40&threadid=42731
^^^want this, but specifically for *music* writing
― once more unto the DUVOON (Branwell Bell), Monday, 24 March 2014 11:26 (ten years ago) link
i was thinking of "use other words please" as well!
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Monday, 24 March 2014 11:27 (ten years ago) link
(Actually, it was something a few weeks ago that made me think of that thread. A real candidate for "worst piece of music writing ever" - I was reading this truly poorly written rock bio of The Cure (don't ask why I was reading this piece of shit, there were reasons, OK) and I'm slowly losing confidence in both the writer's grasp of the band's work and also his understanding of metaphor, let alone knowing anything about music in general. And first there was the assertion that the line "something small falls out of your mouth and we laugh" on Pornography was, literally, about an object falling from a person's mouth. Then on about page 200, there was the blithe description of the ~influence~ of Simon Gallup's basslines on "Carlos D, the bass player for My Chemical Romance" and I just started falling about laughing and gave up on reading the rest of the book (which was, admittedly, only 20 pages left at that point) because if you can't do basic and easily-established fact-checking like *that*, why on earth should I believe you about hearsay like who punched Lol Tolhurst during the recording of The Head On The Door? Come on!)
((I really need to shut up, stop posting and ring Lambeth Council now.))
Anyway! Rick Moody, huh. What a carry-on.
― once more unto the DUVOON (Branwell Bell), Monday, 24 March 2014 11:35 (ten years ago) link
Generally with Wareham until this: /a whole lot of bad songs: “I Like the Nightlife,” “Ring My Bell,” “Boogie Oogie Oogie,” “Boogie Wonderland,” “Boogie Nights,” “I’m Your Boogie Man.” /
Why read any piece of music crit when you can just have ILX rip it to pieces for you.Why listen to any of today's popular albums when you can just have ILX listen to them for you and tell you what to think.Hurrah!
― We Shield Millions Now Living Who Will Never Die (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 24 March 2014 11:43 (ten years ago) link
Branwell, was it "Never Enough"?
― how's life, Monday, 24 March 2014 11:52 (ten years ago) link
Not this one then (which I do own) ?
http://www2.gol.com/users/fusae/newday/bookpix2/be01cbig.jpg
― Mark G, Monday, 24 March 2014 11:57 (ten years ago) link
It was indeed "Never Enough". More than enough to know that you don't know what you're talking about, thank you very much.
― once more unto the DUVOON (Branwell Bell), Monday, 24 March 2014 12:04 (ten years ago) link
^^^ that one's an oral history of sorts. I own it.
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 24 March 2014 12:04 (ten years ago) link
I made it a couple chapters into the book, since I heard that most of it was cobbled together from "Ten Imaginary Years" (currently unavailable on ebook), but I was struck in the prologue how Apter compared the crowd of a Cure show in 1987 or something to a Britney Spears crowd in the 2000s.
― how's life, Monday, 24 March 2014 12:15 (ten years ago) link
FBI should be called to investigate this sicko
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Monday, 24 March 2014 13:34 (ten years ago) link
There's a special place in hell for writers of crappy opportunistic rock biographies who can't even compensate for the absence of first-hand interviews by doing proper research or crafting a single memorable sentence. And of course they sell anyway. I do cherish the corny titles though - there's an Emeli Sande one just out called Read All About It.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Monday, 24 March 2014 13:37 (ten years ago) link
i can imagine somebody writing a piece of criticism where i agreed with literally every opinion they had and it wd still feel like a valid and interesting piece of criticism, so it's not just about being RONG but about certain kinds of (often wilful?) RONGness
― very important cultural opinions (Noodle Vague), Monday, 24 March 2014 13:39 (ten years ago) link
"where i disagreed", sorry
― very important cultural opinions (Noodle Vague), Monday, 24 March 2014 13:40 (ten years ago) link
rick moddy is suxh a boob
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 24 March 2014 13:40 (ten years ago) link
I think the French robots know about trans. I think the French robots heard about trans from some rock journalist who interviewed them in 2001, and after the interview the French robots bought a copy of trans and listened to it and said "this album is pretty dope". That is my uneducated guess about the French robots' relationship to that Neil Young album. Like Rick Moody's, it has no bearing on anything ever.
― every moser (wins), Monday, 24 March 2014 13:58 (ten years ago) link
Mostly, the full-colour glossy ones, I just buy (well - bought, as I don't think I've bought one since I left my early 20s) for the pictures so who cares if it's third hand pre-digested received wisdom.
But I mean, actual basic factual RONGness, like assigning the bass player of the support band on the tour you've been talking about for the past 20 pages to a completely random unrelated band... that's just like, you're not even trying here.
― once more unto the DUVOON (Branwell Bell), Monday, 24 March 2014 14:02 (ten years ago) link
this dude is somebody's racist uncle, isn't he
― have a nice blood (mh), Monday, 24 March 2014 14:02 (ten years ago) link
the french robots may have heard Trans but they were too cynical to appreciate it as deeply as Moody does
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Monday, 24 March 2014 14:16 (ten years ago) link
they hired people to listen to Trans for them
― °ㅇ๐ْ ° (gr8080), Monday, 24 March 2014 16:33 (ten years ago) link
Are they accepting applications?
― Little Nicky Pizza loved that rascal Rust (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 24 March 2014 17:08 (ten years ago) link
they need units to sample and hold
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 24 March 2014 17:10 (ten years ago) link
back in my younger days, i actually enjoyed some of rick moody's books. what's amazing to me about this piece is that it actually was published (and that moody was probably paid for it)! not just for the opinions but that it is a ridiculously long ramble. is this the way salon is now?
― tylerw, Monday, 24 March 2014 17:14 (ten years ago) link
hahahahe's like frank deford of music now?
― we slowly invented brains (La Lechera), Monday, 24 March 2014 17:15 (ten years ago) link
ameri-hornby
― scott seward, Monday, 24 March 2014 17:18 (ten years ago) link
oh dang that was a good zing, LLyou too, scott
I was thinking about this on the drive into work this morning and realized that at some point he had to have reread his own words in the dialogue and still thought it was worth publishing. He really does think these things!
― have a nice blood (mh), Monday, 24 March 2014 18:18 (ten years ago) link
frank deford=A+
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 24 March 2014 18:19 (ten years ago) link
http://www.mediabistro.com/tvnewser/files/2010/11/frankd.jpg
"Haim is when I reach for my revolver (metaphorically)"
he looks like Vincent Price
― we slowly invented brains (La Lechera), Monday, 24 March 2014 18:27 (ten years ago) link
kind of amazing that you can talk about an album for that long and really say nothing about it, but really say a whole lot about yourself
― have a nice blood (mh), Monday, 24 March 2014 18:31 (ten years ago) link
Rick Moody wears a cool hat
http://ewshelflife.files.wordpress.com/2009/11/rick-moody_l.jpg
― polyphonic, Monday, 24 March 2014 19:45 (ten years ago) link
nope
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 24 March 2014 19:46 (ten years ago) link
also that's not London, that's Milwaukee
Break it on down!
― how's life, Monday, 24 March 2014 19:48 (ten years ago) link
Breakin' it Down with Waterface
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 24 March 2014 20:05 (ten years ago) link
non-rap fan writes about technical speed, doesn't recognize joey badass as a professional rapperhttp://fivethirtyeight.com/datalab/the-fastest-rapper-in-the-game/
Joey Bada$$, who manages 180 wpm, is the best amateur of the bunch
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 25 March 2014 14:42 (ten years ago) link
may belong in the rap genius thread as the pernicious "i googled it so i understand it" influence seems to be the biggest problem
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 25 March 2014 14:43 (ten years ago) link
i wouldn't exactly be surprised if internet rapper joey badass had a dayjob or side hustle
― open-y, ob-la-da (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 25 March 2014 14:53 (ten years ago) link
you don't think he's a professional rapper?
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 25 March 2014 15:00 (ten years ago) link
I had no idea that Joey Bada$$ was having some success. His profile looks like he started off as an amateur there so I guess he is the test case in the sample here of whether speed increases your chances of making it!
― tsrobodo, Tuesday, 25 March 2014 15:01 (ten years ago) link
Everyone starts out as an amateur
― Little Nicky Pizza loved that rascal Rust (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 25 March 2014 15:11 (ten years ago) link
Someone needs to tell the dork who wrote that article that rapping quickly does not automatically equate to being a talented rapper.
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Tuesday, 25 March 2014 16:22 (ten years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K1thvEtGM5M
1:30
― open-y, ob-la-da (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 25 March 2014 16:26 (ten years ago) link
Well, it didn't work for Silver Bullet
― Mark G, Tuesday, 25 March 2014 19:35 (ten years ago) link
You just know that, as soon as the italicized finale of that article was written, the author did that stereotypical "lean back-cross your arms-look 'tough'" move was ubiquitous among jerks mocking rap in the 90s.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Tuesday, 25 March 2014 20:50 (ten years ago) link
Joey Badass is a 19-year-old dude, why are grown men worrying about his side hustle?
― DonkeyTeeth, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 07:03 (ten years ago) link
Chip-Fu is the most amazing rapper of all timez
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 14:32 (ten years ago) link
Normally I'd get pretty annoyed if someone added something that they haven't yet read and really have no intention of reading but, y'know, fuck everyone connected with this:
Twee: The Gentle Revolution In Music, Books, Television, Fashion, And Film
The blurb alone is the worst thing ever:
New York Times, Spin, and Vanity Fair contributor Marc Spitz explores the first great cultural movement since Hip Hop: an old-fashioned and yet highly modern aesthetic that’s embraced internationally by teens, twenty and thirty-somethings and even some Baby Boomers; creating hybrid generation known as Twee. Via exclusive interviews and years of research, Spitz traces Generation Twee’s roots from the Post War 50s to its dominance in popular culture today.
Vampire Weekend, Garden State, Miranda July, Belle and Sebastian, Wes Anderson, Mumblecore, McSweeney’s, Morrissey, beards, artisanal pickles, food trucks, crocheted owls on Etsy, ukuleles, kittens and Zooey Deschanel—all are examples of a cultural aesthetic of calculated precocity known as Twee.
In Twee, journalist and cultural observer Marc Spitz surveys the rising Twee movement in music, art, film, fashion, food and politics and examines the cross-pollinated generation that embodies it—from aging hipsters to nerd girls, indie snobs to idealistic industrialists. Spitz outlines the history of twee—the first strong, diverse, and wildly influential youth movement since Punk in the ’70s and Hip Hop in the ’80s—showing how awkward glamour and fierce independence has become part of the zeitgeist.
Focusing on its origins and hallmarks, he charts the rise of this trend from its forefathers like Disney, Salinger, Plath, Seuss, Sendak, Blume and Jonathan Richman to its underground roots in the post-punk United Kingdom, through the late’80s and early ’90s of K Records, Whit Stillman, Nirvana, Wes Anderson, Pitchfork, This American Life, and Belle and Sebastian, to the current (and sometimes polarizing) appeal of Girls, Arcade Fire, Rookie magazine, and hellogiggles.com.
Revealing a movement defined by passionate fandom, bespoke tastes, a rebellious lack of irony or swagger, the championing of the underdog, and the vanquishing of bullies, Spitz uncovers the secrets of modern youth culture: how Twee became pervasive, why it has so many haters and where, in a post-Portlandia world, can it go from here?
― Doran, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:17 (ten years ago) link
"Years of research"
― Doran, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:18 (ten years ago) link
examples of twee include beards + pickles?
― Mordy , Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:20 (ten years ago) link
I don't see the problem with that blurb but I also don't care to read a book about twee so, yeah.
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:24 (ten years ago) link
XP: Ha ha ha. Was just posting about the pickles.
I was ready to smash something to pieces until I read the phrase "artisanal pickles" and now I just feel despondent.
― Doran, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:24 (ten years ago) link
can we shoot this book and writer into the sun?
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:25 (ten years ago) link
there is a lot of talk on the indiepop list about this twee book right now. some are dreading it. i'm looking forward to seeing just what a carnival-mirror-image of "twee" spitz manages to capture.
― mike a, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:25 (ten years ago) link
XXXP: I guess it's a personal POV that Bon Iver, pickles and couple blogging is better than acid house, drum and bass and hardcore but it was enough to spoil my afternoon.
― Doran, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:27 (ten years ago) link
obviously no one's read it yet, but i suepect the music will be the least of the twee book's concerns.
― mike a, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:27 (ten years ago) link
the first great cultural movement since Hip Hop
― j., Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:29 (ten years ago) link
my prediction: pamplemoose gets two chapters; orange juice, half a page; the pastels, a passing mention.
― mike a, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:31 (ten years ago) link
my jaw was wrenched into an expression of horror by that part, and wasn't returned to it's proper place by any words following xp
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:31 (ten years ago) link
"why don't you gently revolve on this"
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:34 (ten years ago) link
So, is Marc Spitz twee's Greil Marcus or Twee Greil Marcus?
― MV, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:35 (ten years ago) link
New York Times, Spin, and Vanity Fair contributor Marc Spitz
stopped reading here
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:37 (ten years ago) link
one might say that the book description is worthy of a spitz take
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:38 (ten years ago) link
I like how it traces the "roots of twee" to...children's literature
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:38 (ten years ago) link
A lot of this stuff passes me by, and I tend to think "not for me, really" but the level of *vitriol* that gets hurled at anything of this aesthetic... well, I find it kinda baffling really.
Like this vitriol says a lot more about the people who are expressing it than it does any (perceived or real) lifestyle of the people involved. It's one of ILX's uglier emotions.
― conspicuous unconsumption (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:44 (ten years ago) link
the old "says a lot more about the people doing the criticizing" saw
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:46 (ten years ago) link
It's PR fluff but is it possible we're actually offended by the idea that this book makes the case that his definition of "twee" is a cultural force the size of hip hop?
I mean, not that offended. It might be a good book, might be a bad one, but that's pretty ridiculous on its face. I think you're mistaking water cooler conversation for actual vitriol.
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:48 (ten years ago) link
what's worst, standing around the water cooler talking about how you can't believe some judge's opinion on a singing competition television show, or standing around debating whether someone's posited take on a cultural force is valid
they're probably both bad, but it's ok to have opinions
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:49 (ten years ago) link
Spitz posts on ilx?
― Mordy , Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:50 (ten years ago) link
from that "i listen to my husband's records" blog:
Part of me feels like I want to be avant garde enough to get this, but then another part of me feels like the emperor isn’t wearing any clothes!
she's talking about albert ayler! :(
And he was like, “Yeah, this album has gotten a lot of play.” Um, who am I even married too?!?
i dunno about you folks, but i don't know that i would get to the point of wanting to marry someone if they were so "amused" and condescending toward my tastes. i don't expect them to share exactly the same tastes (though having some common ground seems important) but... sheesh.
― espring (amateurist), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:51 (ten years ago) link
sorry I'm late to the party.
xpost isn't this the same author who wrote a memoir about being a punk rock drug addict wannabe badass? seems an odd follow-up subject.
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:51 (ten years ago) link
lol amateurist
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:51 (ten years ago) link
husband writes:
, this isn’t music that’s easy to listen to or to have on in the background, because you kind of have to dialogue with it
i actually do listen to a lot of this stuff in the "background"--or at least while I'm writing, reading, whatever.
― espring (amateurist), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:52 (ten years ago) link
Given the amount of ILX discourse on the subject, yes, I'd say it does *seem* to occupy a large space in the cultural landscape.
― conspicuous unconsumption (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:53 (ten years ago) link
"the" cultural landscape: well, *your* cultural landscape
― conspicuous unconsumption (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:54 (ten years ago) link
what are you guys discussing now; it's hard to keep up w/ this thread.
― espring (amateurist), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:54 (ten years ago) link
battle raps
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:55 (ten years ago) link
"twee" pickles
― conspicuous unconsumption (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:56 (ten years ago) link
actually reading around the blog isn't terrible; mostly annoying for her sort of pumped- faux-naive blogvoice.
― espring (amateurist), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:57 (ten years ago) link
arrrgh
pumped-up faux-naif
Let's just fold husband's record collection blog discussion into twee discussion to make things easier for everyone.
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 18:59 (ten years ago) link
the idea that beards and artisanal pickles are twee kind of ignores the bike messenger types who are definitely into both
my gutter punk/crust punk friend ended up marrying someone who is definitely from the more northeastern us farmy/punk side of things and they'd be all about beards and pickles and they're not twee at all
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:00 (ten years ago) link
Feel like I should at this point, start a list of Things I Only Know About Because ILX Goes On About Them So Much:
1) NPR2) Portlandia3) Poomplamouse4) Wes Anderson
Actually, wait, no, Wes Anderson I think might be real because Daniel Kessler mentioned him the other day, but I'm still not entirely sure that Daniel Kessler isn't an ILX0r (or perhaps collectively hallucinated by ILX and made flesh) so I dunno.
No, this is not "faux-naif" or whatever. These are literally things I only ever see discussed on ILX and nowhere else in my world.
― conspicuous unconsumption (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:02 (ten years ago) link
my main objection to the blurb is that it seems to conflate a lot of different things + aesthetics into a category so large it might as well be meaningless. i don't see how the book can handle that - if it really does cover beards, pickles AND Garden State.
― Mordy , Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:03 (ten years ago) link
I thought the same thing. It seems like this book is probably stretching the definition of twee to include everything that the official market of "NPR yuppie" want to read about.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:04 (ten years ago) link
Examples: Girls, This American Life, Pitchfork, Arcade Fire, Morrissey
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:06 (ten years ago) link
Who's Daniel Kessler?
― Position Position, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:06 (ten years ago) link
I may be off the mark, though, haven't had my twee-dar calibrated recently
there are probably literally hundreds of things I read about on ilm/ilx before anywhere else?
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:07 (ten years ago) link
Not to mention Nirvana! I'm gonna go listen to twee classic "Scentless Apprentice" now.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:08 (ten years ago) link
lol imago to thread re: his take on american cinemahttp://www.digitalspy.com/movies/news/a560046/the-grand-budapest-hotel-beats-need-for-speed-at-uk-box-office.html
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:09 (ten years ago) link
It's not "heard about first on ILX" - it is literally "never hear discussed, anywhere else *except* on ILX".
― conspicuous unconsumption (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:13 (ten years ago) link
I don't know who this Daniel guy is but I'm guessing the fact that people out there in the world randomly talking about things is evidence that they're maybe not evidence of americentricism
Is it possible that ilx is just a lot more diverse than the groups we see outside ilx
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:13 (ten years ago) link
(Daniel Kessler is some weird figament that I think Nabisco invented, or assembled and manufactured wholesale from bits of ILM posts I made in like 2001/2 and somehow made flesh and sold to Pitchfork and the NME. So I don't think he counts as "not ILX".)
― conspicuous unconsumption (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:15 (ten years ago) link
* furiously googles *
oh he's some american dude I didn't know the name of
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:15 (ten years ago) link
stop being so americentric in your references!!!!
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:16 (ten years ago) link
psst he's not American.
― conspicuous unconsumption (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:16 (ten years ago) link
i thought NPR and BBC world service were sister corps?
― Philip Nunez, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:16 (ten years ago) link
local NPR station plays BBC world service stuff for an hour or so every afternoon
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:17 (ten years ago) link
I was aware of the existence of something called the NPR, which was the radio equivalent of PBS, but the idea that there is this "NPR tweefuX0r yuppie" demographic that needs servicing with all this weird shit you guys discuss... I call shenanigans.
― conspicuous unconsumption (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:18 (ten years ago) link
Anyway, I have some Orcadians to meet so I can't stay and argue this. And Daniel Kessler: is still British.
― conspicuous unconsumption (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:21 (ten years ago) link
lol that was the point
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:21 (ten years ago) link
I notice on world service they'll be really confrontational with guests and the guests kind of take it, but when terry gross digs up something uncomfortable you can hear the glares.
― Philip Nunez, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:23 (ten years ago) link
mh bang on the money upthread. It's obviously the hip hop comparison, the weird name check of pickles and the complete absence of mention of any bands from the period when twee was a (completely valid) small p political stance such as Tallulah Gosh and the Pastels etc. I'd be equally irate if a book on goth ignored Bauhaus but mentioned the Hot Topic clothes franchise.
― Doran, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:24 (ten years ago) link
Oh, and as per thread... it's really, really badly written.
I think if you're truly British you're used to shrugging off criticism and making your case clearly? That is what I get from it. xp
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:24 (ten years ago) link
I actually didn't mean to be disparaging with that "NPR Yuppie" thing earlier. I listen to NPR all the time and could probably be described as an NPR Yuppie myself. I just was trying to use shorthand for a demographic much desired by the publishing industry, due to a variety of reasons. Honestly, this book seems less like a book about twee and more a book about "things educated urban yuppies are really into."
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:27 (ten years ago) link
xp on the last one, @BB
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:29 (ten years ago) link
"white college-educated democrats over the median income" takes too long to type out
― goole, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:29 (ten years ago) link
yeah, I'm probably a NPR yuppie by most metrics. that's why it's so easy to recognize the insidious trends creeping around the edges, we can smell variations in our own.
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:35 (ten years ago) link
― conspicuous unconsumption (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, March 26, 2014 2:18 PM
in my city several years ago the local/regional npr affiliate (a lot of this runs on affiliates, ours is a large one which exports a lot of programming across the country, very successful and influential etc.) opened up another spot on the dial that caters DIRECTLY to this demographic by playing a curated mix of indie music (as opposed to straight classical, which another station does, or say a mix of jazz and/or world musics, which many similar stations do).
they are a thing in the u.s. what is particularly aggravating about them as a thing is that, all small-d or big-d democratic affinities aside, the association with public radio amounts to staking a claim to be part of / represent 'the best of what has been' said/thought/made/etc despite how patently narcissistic and nonrepresentative this demographic's tastes, fads, appropriations etc. are
― j., Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:47 (ten years ago) link
terry gross is a shitty interviewer
― goole, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:48 (ten years ago) link
*uncomfortable glare from terry gross*
― Philip Nunez, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:50 (ten years ago) link
you guys need to be more accepting, i must imply
― zxc, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:51 (ten years ago) link
is there anyone else doing long radio-format interviews with subjects of that tier other than terry gross in the us?
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:57 (ten years ago) link
hugh hewitt
― goole, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 19:59 (ten years ago) link
lol im a Bobby Fischer Yappie wannabe Hyppie
― zxc, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 20:00 (ten years ago) link
On the Ham Radio of Sir-Mix_Alot with Hugh Jackman, I am crzzzkkhghh sitting in for Terry Gross, over
― zxc, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 20:01 (ten years ago) link
so wait we're actually arguing about whether or not NPR is some obscure entity only known about and discussed on ILX?
opened up another spot on the dial that caters DIRECTLY to this demographic by playing a curated mix of indie music (as opposed to straight classical, which another station does, or say a mix of jazz and/or world musics, which many similar stations do).
i'm telling jeremy messersmith what you said
― Little Nicky Pizza loved that rascal Rust (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 20:21 (ten years ago) link
no, one person is
― Scooby Doom (۩), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 20:22 (ten years ago) link
ha fair enough
― Little Nicky Pizza loved that rascal Rust (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 20:27 (ten years ago) link
no, that it's only discussed by americans and that britishes don't mention their radio stations on mixed-country threads
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 20:28 (ten years ago) link
terry gross is underrated as an interviewer. bottom line, she gets people to talk, a lot.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 20:29 (ten years ago) link
ilx's hatred for things that are "npr" is just as funny an example of the narcissism of small differences as its hate for pitchfork used to be
― socki (s1ocki), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 20:29 (ten years ago) link
it's funny but it's JUSTIFIED
― j., Wednesday, 26 March 2014 20:35 (ten years ago) link
s1ocki otm
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 20:36 (ten years ago) link
the complete absence of mention of any bands from the period when twee was a (completely valid) small p political stance such as Tallulah Gosh and the Pastels etc
You do know the difference between a sales blurb (pitched at a US audience) and an actual full-length book, right? If Spitz ignores those bands in the text you'd have a point but only an idiot would include micro-selling UK indie bands in a thumbnail summary rather than Girls, Arcade Fire and Wes Anderson. It feels a little petty to complain about omissions before you've read the book.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 20:36 (ten years ago) link
it's easier to criticize things that you actually engage with
I had this argument with my mom a lot as a kid, when I would be so critical of things. "Hey, if I don't care about something, I never talk about it!"
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 20:36 (ten years ago) link
it's fun to imagine this putatively horrible article you are all talking about from the comments you're making.
― espring (amateurist), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 21:03 (ten years ago) link
DL: I disagree completely I'm afraid. Even if you're only taking commercial factors into consideration, I still make you completely wrong. For example, I've commissioned features on both bands in the last 12 months and they were both read by a very substantial amount of people. And presumably if a lot more credence was given to where this 'movement' actually came from then perhaps there wouldn't be loads of people shaking their heads at the idea of this book before it's even appeared. And we're looking at potential customers here - I've got to say that finding space to mention 'really awesome yummy pickles' but not The Pastels (a fairly well known band when it comes down to it) then they've lost me as a reader and presumably a lot of other people as well.
But yeah, if it's just some crass cash in on beige Hyundai couple and interesting pickles lifestyle shit designed to rake in cash - then fair play to them for not being idiots.
― Doran, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 22:34 (ten years ago) link
Given a few moments to catch my breath, I'd like to downgrade my completely to slightly.
― Doran, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 22:51 (ten years ago) link
Doran's points make a lot more sense to me than the usual ILX static about "NPR and artisanal pickles" or whatever. Like setting out to write a book about a genre and not actually mentioning the originators of the genre is a completely valid complaint. I do understand it's a populist book aimed at an American audience, but it does advertise a fundamental lack of depth not to mention where the thing comes from and what it was invented for.
― conspicuous unconsumption (Branwell Bell), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 22:52 (ten years ago) link
I agree with s1ocki.
― ∞, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 23:00 (ten years ago) link
In fairness to the people bringing up NPR, the blurb does mention This American Life.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 23:02 (ten years ago) link
this american life is not on npr
― socki (s1ocki), Thursday, 27 March 2014 00:33 (ten years ago) link
it was on PRI, but they have parted ways, and have not announced their new distributor.
― socki (s1ocki), Thursday, 27 March 2014 00:34 (ten years ago) link
It's not distributed by NPR, but certainly is played by a rather large proportion of NPR affiliates.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Thursday, 27 March 2014 00:44 (ten years ago) link
npr is a feeling, slocki
― j., Thursday, 27 March 2014 00:46 (ten years ago) link
I mean technically it's a product of Chicago Public Media, which is Chicago's NPR member organization, but this is getting down into the weeds of public radio production/distribution.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Thursday, 27 March 2014 00:50 (ten years ago) link
♫ Non-profits your new boyfriend's too stupid to know about ♫
― Philip Nunez, Thursday, 27 March 2014 00:57 (ten years ago) link
Yeah, c'mon, This American Life is absolutely played on NPR stations.
For non-US folks, NPR indie is definitely a thing here. Growing up in the US, NPR was the radio station my grandparents would listen to for lite classical and soothing talk radio. In other words, it was the middlebrow radio station. So for most US folks on here, I think the fact that they've shifted toward bland indie pop is quite notable as it is a glaring indicator of where US middlebrow culture is today.
Don't know if that helps explain some of the comments above, but suffice it to say that NPR is widely broadcast across the country and is not the invention of ilxor fever dreams.
― nitro-burning funny car (Moodles), Thursday, 27 March 2014 01:09 (ten years ago) link
I don't know, Moodles, you say NPR, but you might mean PRI or American Public Media, which are obviously super-distinct and full of their own unique cultural signifiers.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Thursday, 27 March 2014 01:11 (ten years ago) link
yeah shift of a lot of npr stations from classical to kcrw indie is some tragic shit
― balls, Thursday, 27 March 2014 01:14 (ten years ago) link
NPR is absolutely symbolic of a certain upper-middle-class aesthetic and weaksauce political liberalism.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Thursday, 27 March 2014 01:18 (ten years ago) link
I think most media-savvy Americans would get that NPR is associated with a sort of "effete latte liberal" stereotype.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Thursday, 27 March 2014 01:20 (ten years ago) link
npr is just shorthand for public sponsored radio right? like, i don't know if WHYY = NPR but i call it npr when talking to ppl about what i heard during my commute
― Mordy , Thursday, 27 March 2014 01:20 (ten years ago) link
^ i'm replying to this. like if u listen to terry gross, ira glass, the bbc, morning edition, all things considered, car talk, whatever - you're listening to npr i don't care what your station calls itself
― Mordy , Thursday, 27 March 2014 01:21 (ten years ago) link
xxp: how about just "liberal" without all the qualifiers?
― how's life, Thursday, 27 March 2014 01:21 (ten years ago) link
like, what other liberals are left after NPR listeners?
― how's life, Thursday, 27 March 2014 01:28 (ten years ago) link
Xpost
I have never heard of PRI until right now and have no idea what the distinction is between it and NPR. Maybe This American Life is broadcast on radio stations that also broadcast NPR?!?
― nitro-burning funny car (Moodles), Thursday, 27 March 2014 01:29 (ten years ago) link
teamsters???
― j., Thursday, 27 March 2014 01:30 (ten years ago) link
― how's life, Wednesday, March 26, 2014 9:28 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
sad but true question
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Thursday, 27 March 2014 01:31 (ten years ago) link
I think there's a spectrum of left people who do at least some NPR listening, but the archetype is sort of the social-issues-only liberal. You know, for gay rights, "against racism," thinks charter schools are pretty alright, doesn't consider class politics much.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Thursday, 27 March 2014 01:34 (ten years ago) link
I think PRI and the like are content makers who sell programs to individual NPR stations.
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Thursday, 27 March 2014 01:36 (ten years ago) link
@Mordy and Moodles xpost, Sorry, my post was an unsuccessful attempt to be funny after the assertion upthread that "this american life is not on npr." Looking back, what I posted looked sincere and ridiculous.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Thursday, 27 March 2014 01:37 (ten years ago) link
groups that are obviously democrat-aligned? seriously? local public radio listeners are a drop in a bucket compared to the majority of the party.
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Thursday, 27 March 2014 01:41 (ten years ago) link
Growing up in the US, NPR was the radio station my grandparents would listen to for lite classical and soothing talk radio. In other words, it was the middlebrow radio station. So for most US folks on here, I think the fact that they've shifted toward bland indie pop is quite notable as it is a glaring indicator of where US middlebrow culture is today.
Yes exactly. This is what I honestly find interesting about the Spitz book. It is not an exploration of twee as an 80s/90s musical genre (though it sounds like he'll get into that). It is about a whole swath of cultural products of the past decade or two that are defined by descriptors like safe, tasteful, nostalgic, sincere, handcrafted, etc. That's absolutely a thing, and "twee" is the word I most often see applied to the broad aesthetic, even if you could argue about whether it adequately describes all of the examples thereof. If your primary connotation of "twee" is the Pastels, then it probably doesn't.
― jaymc, Thursday, 27 March 2014 01:53 (ten years ago) link
alternate title: limpdick
― waterbabies (waterface), Thursday, 27 March 2014 02:02 (ten years ago) link
jaymc otm, although when I first learned the word "twee" I thought of it more narrowly -- Pomplemousse would fit, Zooey Deschanel, the "put a bird on it" sketch on Portlandia (but not EVERYTHING parodied by Portlandia). But I guess he's using it more broadly to describe a kind of warm fuzzy middlebrow.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Thursday, 27 March 2014 02:05 (ten years ago) link
jaymc v otm
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Thursday, 27 March 2014 02:05 (ten years ago) link
like "farm-to-table brunch" is not something I think of as "twee" although it definitely fits this broader thing being described
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Thursday, 27 March 2014 02:06 (ten years ago) link
is he just rewriting bobos in paradise?
― balls, Thursday, 27 March 2014 02:10 (ten years ago) link
If only there were a David Brooks penned book of music crit....
― nitro-burning funny car (Moodles), Thursday, 27 March 2014 02:14 (ten years ago) link
hey guys I don't even live in the northern hemisphere but PRI is a distributor/syndicator of radio programming AFAIU
― Charles, hatless (sic), Thursday, 27 March 2014 03:00 (ten years ago) link
hemispherist
― mookieproof, Thursday, 27 March 2014 03:03 (ten years ago) link
the hazards of using r*p g*n**s for hard statistical analysis: http://fivethirtyeight.com/datalab/the-fastest-rapper-in-the-game/
― katherine, Thursday, 27 March 2014 03:32 (ten years ago) link
(less for the writing, per se, than the dilettantism -- joey bada$$ has a release with sony and shawn chrystopher was on an owl city song, but they're "amateurs" I guess; linking that "cash"/"girls" thing with only the vaguest "this is probably not a serious indicator of anything" handwave, etc)
― katherine, Thursday, 27 March 2014 03:41 (ten years ago) link
agreed on all points kat but beat you to it - OK, is this the worst piece of music writing ever?
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 27 March 2014 03:53 (ten years ago) link
Neither of you're even suggesting it's the worst ever music piece tho right?
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Thursday, 27 March 2014 03:58 (ten years ago) link
"The seriously flawed and poorly considered music writing thread s THATAWAY pal"
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 27 March 2014 04:55 (ten years ago) link
xp I'm old-fashioned Doran. I don't believe in slamming a book for omissions until I've read the book and know what's actually in there.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Thursday, 27 March 2014 09:51 (ten years ago) link
NPR ILX is absolutely symbolic of a certain upper-middle-class aesthetic and weaksauce political liberalism.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Wednesday, March 26, 2014 9:18 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― socki (s1ocki), Thursday, 27 March 2014 13:39 (ten years ago) link
I only know about the semiotics of "NPR listener" because of ILX but it seems to fit an analogy to UK shorthand use of "Guardian reader".
― robocop ELF (seandalai), Thursday, 27 March 2014 21:25 (ten years ago) link
sounds about right
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Thursday, 27 March 2014 21:32 (ten years ago) link
npr listeners are probably the reason the guardian has an auto-selecting 'us edition' now on their website
― j., Thursday, 27 March 2014 21:37 (ten years ago) link
be the change you want to see in the world! - http://slate.me/1jYHqR7
― balls, Friday, 28 March 2014 16:01 (ten years ago) link
Owen's good at this
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Friday, 28 March 2014 16:08 (ten years ago) link
wrong thread for owen's piece
― lex pretend, Friday, 28 March 2014 16:09 (ten years ago) link
holy shit, owen managed to get an almost unanimously positive comments section
― katherine, Friday, 28 March 2014 16:12 (ten years ago) link
thought i'd seen some kvetching about the song choice from boring rockist scum on there but ugh comments sections anyway. nice piece tho!
― invent viral babe (Noodle Vague), Friday, 28 March 2014 16:14 (ten years ago) link
i just liked that he managed to w/ a pretty soft touch destroy the idiocy of the moody piece and counter the idiocy of the other 'music critics don't actually talk about music' piece and at the same time provide an actually pretty great of smart pop writing instead of just another inside baseball outrage du jour.
― balls, Friday, 28 March 2014 16:15 (ten years ago) link
like this one better than the katy perry piece fo shomostly cuz i hate the kp song
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Friday, 28 March 2014 16:18 (ten years ago) link
not a katy perry fan (there are...aspects of her i like i guess) but 'teenage dream' is a classic
― balls, Friday, 28 March 2014 16:22 (ten years ago) link
But the first chord of the progression isn’t A minor, it’s D minor. The song slides smoothly back to it each time (“I’m up all night to get some”). The insistence of the D minor creates the aural illusion that the song could in fact be in the minor mode of D Dorian—D E F G A B C. Note that the D Dorian scale contains all the same notes as A Aeolian, all the same keys on the piano. The only difference is what key you start on.
Um, no, the first chord is B minor. It goes B minor, D major, F# minor, E minor.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Friday, 28 March 2014 16:42 (ten years ago) link
*N.B. this song is actually in F# Aeolian, not A Aeolian, but for casual readers, I stuck with the white keys. Also, I deliberately omitted mentions of added-7’s in my chord descriptions because of an inconsistency in notational unity between classiclers and jazzers, omitted also for irrelevance.
― nitro-burning funny car (Moodles), Friday, 28 March 2014 16:44 (ten years ago) link
Maybe THIS is the worst piece of music journalism ever?
The new music recommendation services driven by music analytics and made possible by the wholesale migration of listeners into the cloud via streaming services, says Roberts, will encourage us to “explore new music.” Relying on the brute force of a search function to try to find good new stuff in a catalog of 25 million or more songs is hopeless. There’s no way to find the juicy stuff without the music industry taking an active stance. This is the surveillance state quid pro quo. The more we know about you, the better we can make your life. It’s a brave new world of new music.
― schwantz, Friday, 28 March 2014 16:44 (ten years ago) link
oh yeah, just saw that, xp
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Friday, 28 March 2014 16:44 (ten years ago) link
I like the exercise of doing analysis of pop songs in music theory terms. My problem is when he veers into qualitative stuff. His explanation for why the song works could just as easily be my explanation for why I find the song so static and boring.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Friday, 28 March 2014 16:45 (ten years ago) link
Also this:
Katy Perry may have captured the world’s attention with her enormous eyeballs, but as I argued earlier this week, the reason “Teenage Dream” went to No. 1 and remains in radio rotation is that it is a textbook example of the excellence and supremacy of the rules of Western music theory.
is kind of a misunderstanding of what music theory is and does
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Friday, 28 March 2014 16:47 (ten years ago) link
"The song that the key is in" is in fact the least interesting (and most easy to discern) aspect of musicological analysis, and I've deliberately been using the simplest possible keys to describe the chordal relationships, a) because it keeps it simple for casual listeners, and b) because it trolls people who care about meaningless bullshit
Thanks for the kind words, guys. I'm hoping that my hints that this whole line of analysis is white-people-pop-centric bullshit are not going over people's heads
― continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Friday, 28 March 2014 16:48 (ten years ago) link
i.e. "the supremacy of the rules of Western Music Theory"
― continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Friday, 28 March 2014 16:49 (ten years ago) link
which is why musicological criticism only takes you so far. I can explain why the unstressed meter in a Marianne Moore verse creates suspense, but not why this same technique still produces what is to you a boring poem.
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 28 March 2014 16:50 (ten years ago) link
we've been primed by years of hongro
― balls, Friday, 28 March 2014 16:51 (ten years ago) link
cool, I would actually even see if they can put that NB upfront next time because it just threw me off the whole first time I read your analysis. It would probably be interesting for me to try to figure out why the Get Lucky chord progression doesn't work for me. I think there's actually something that feels forced about some of the jumps from one chord to the next that prevents it from having that "fascinating endless circle" effect that some songs with repeating progressions have for me.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Friday, 28 March 2014 16:58 (ten years ago) link
I do like Owen but going all Geir in your first paragraph is a real turn-off.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Friday, 28 March 2014 16:58 (ten years ago) link
in that it's such an inaccurate and lazy assumption that it brings the entirety of the rest of the piece into question.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Friday, 28 March 2014 16:59 (ten years ago) link
Like something about the voice leading maybe doesn't work for me but I can't nail down what it is. xp
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Friday, 28 March 2014 16:59 (ten years ago) link
I totally get that this is tongue-in-cheek, but it really is incredibly interesting, so I can't work out if you're sort of failing, or if the modulation b/w "of course this is bullshit" and "here's a genuinely helpful music primer" is included in the point.
― emil.y, Friday, 28 March 2014 17:00 (ten years ago) link
I deliberately omitted mentions of added-7’s in my chord descriptions because of an inconsistency in notational unity between classiclers and jazzers, omitted also for irrelevance.
― Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 28 March 2014 17:00 (ten years ago) link
I mean actually, most chord progressions don't fall entirely along a single mode, maybe it's the fact that does that bothers me.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Friday, 28 March 2014 17:01 (ten years ago) link
i kinda think you should get a shouts and murmurs page with one of these just to make it clear what the deeper intent is
― We hugged with no names exchanged (forksclovetofu), Friday, 28 March 2014 17:02 (ten years ago) link
― Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 28 March 2014 17:17 (ten years ago) link
But then when somebody called "Giant Steps" and counted it off, well...
― Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 28 March 2014 17:20 (ten years ago) link
Another thing I really dislike about Get Lucky is the way the "We've come too far to give up who we are" hits the same degree of each of the four chords (the third), i.e. parallel motion/voice-leading. This is a really boring way to write a melody, especially where each third lands squarely on the first beat of the bar.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Friday, 28 March 2014 20:37 (ten years ago) link
are you competing for the worst piece of music writing?
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Friday, 28 March 2014 20:37 (ten years ago) link
@ Marcello, yes, I thought I was being sufficiently tongue-in-cheek with "supremacy" to tip people off that though this is fun, and I hope instructional, it's not meant to form any basis of criticism. I'm going whole-hog next week so people aren't mislead
@ Hurting 2 that "parallel movement with the third in the upper voice" trick is the basis of a hundred Zimmer / Horner / Newton Howard scores, "The Thin Red Line" immediately springs to mind. People really like the sound of it, esp. in that brand of 00s indie music (whatever is the first song on Sufjan's "Illinoise" but also every other Sufjan song, The National "England", every Joanna Newsom song).
― continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Friday, 28 March 2014 21:53 (ten years ago) link
these are p great
― puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Friday, 28 March 2014 21:55 (ten years ago) link
As a black person, whenever I see someone taking about music theory in terms of race I get unreasonably angry.
― Wahaca Flocka Flame (DJP), Friday, 28 March 2014 22:07 (ten years ago) link
the one Miranda July cd i heard was decidedly un-twee...super harrowing scary stuff not for nighttime listening.
― brimstead, Friday, 28 March 2014 22:19 (ten years ago) link
DJP me too
― continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Friday, 28 March 2014 23:33 (ten years ago) link
I really like Miranda July for the record - the films I've seen and her short story collection. It's a shame she's lumped in with all that Little Miss Sunshine stuff.
― Doran, Saturday, 29 March 2014 00:07 (ten years ago) link
which is why musicological criticism only takes you so far.
What is the *place* you're referring to that musicology cannot attain (and that, presumably, something else can)?
― timellison, Saturday, 29 March 2014 04:02 (ten years ago) link
place: flavor townsomething else: donkey sauce
― Belgian Flanders Albums Chart (Sufjan Grafton), Saturday, 29 March 2014 04:08 (ten years ago) link
i fear the troll is too subtle. also i think i mentioned elsewhere, its u&k when talking about teenage dream to talk about Bonnie McKee.
but otoh these articles are great!
― eric banana (s.clover), Saturday, 29 March 2014 04:09 (ten years ago) link
Thanks s.clover. I'm not experienced enough of a writer to trust myself, and so far the troll-signifiers have just been pissing off people who think I'm taking digs at "academic writing as a whole" which is, y'know, unfortunate. I'm writing an explain about "why all Gaga's songs sound the same (and why this is a good thing) and why Bad Romance will be a longtime radio staple" but after that I think I'm gonna get out while I'm ahead
― continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Saturday, 29 March 2014 07:07 (ten years ago) link
Owen, I love these two articles. I think there is a place for academic analysis of pop culture (it's sort of why I joined ILX in the first place). Wished more people were going that way instead of down the Buzzfeed style route.
― Jill, Saturday, 29 March 2014 09:13 (ten years ago) link
was going to post those owen reviews here; glad there's discussion about them. they are great. i don't get why there aren't more like it. sports fans crave hyper-complex analysis about offensive formations in football; defensive strategies in basketball; the nuances of pitchers' approaches to particular batters. i don't see why music fans wouldn't want similarly hyper-complex analysis of new records. plus, it's good to learn things, and these reviews are good teaching tools. anyway, they are great to read, and i hope there will be more.
― Daniel, Esq 2, Saturday, 29 March 2014 20:56 (ten years ago) link
srsly.
― how's life, Saturday, 29 March 2014 22:23 (ten years ago) link
Yeah I really like musical analysis and enjoy the pieces overall. Even if you can't explain why a piece is good or not good or why one person loves it and another is bored by it, it's still interesting to examine what the song is doing and how.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Sunday, 30 March 2014 00:41 (ten years ago) link
people complained that the steely dan 33.3 was too dry - which it was - but they attributed that dryness to how it focused mainly on what was going on musically, which was a breath of fresh air for me
― (or if you must, "data") (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Sunday, 30 March 2014 00:48 (ten years ago) link
I know it sounds a bit assholish to say this, but I feel like a lack of musical education is a big part of why that kind of reaction happens. Being able to analyze what's going on formally in a song is actually a great pleasure. Obviously it's going to be boring as shit to read that if you can't follow it though.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Sunday, 30 March 2014 00:57 (ten years ago) link
Even if you can't explain why a piece is good or not good or why one person loves it and another is bored by it
I would completely disagree that this is a shortcoming of musicological analysis, if that's what you mean.
― timellison, Sunday, 30 March 2014 01:28 (ten years ago) link
I am not at all afraid to be the asshole who says that ppl don't know enough about musical analysis to be talking about music, esp since I know exactly enough music theory to get through my various musical endeavors
― Wahaca Flocka Flame (DJP), Sunday, 30 March 2014 03:17 (ten years ago) link
This is kind of turning into a subthread that has nothing to do with the thread anymore, but I also feel like music itself would be better if both artists and audiences had broader musical knowledge. I mean there's lots of great really simple pop music, but today compared to, say, 1965, or 1975, or 1985, I feel like there is so little that ISN'T simple. I just feel like there's less harmonic and melodic variety and imagination in today's pop music. Formal musical education isn't about playing or writing "right" imo but about opening up possibilities -- how to find 12 other chords I could go to from this chord that would also sound good, how to write a melody that doesn't just follow the root or third, how to do stuff that isn't obvious to the ear but actually might sound cool anyway.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Sunday, 30 March 2014 03:36 (ten years ago) link
And I don't want to get into the whole "there are other kinds of musical knowledge" thing, because of course there are. There's knowledge relating to rhythm and texture and feel and style and all that stuff is really important, so I guess I'm just saying "knowledge" in terms of harmony and melodic writing.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Sunday, 30 March 2014 03:37 (ten years ago) link
It's a frustrating exercise for me, because like "I have so much to say about Lady Gaga!" but at the same time I cannot, actually, get through reading a single fucking wikipedia page breakdown of any Sibelius symphony, they have been dissected so irrelevantly and uninterestingly by musicologists who, instead of identifying the innovative features in the orchestration or handling-of-material, just throw their "it's in b-minor and then goes to G-major" dicks around. Seriously if you want to see "worst piece of music writing ever" just look at a wiki for a Tchaikovsky symphony, I'll be over here slitting my wrists
― continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 30 March 2014 05:53 (ten years ago) link
what I'm trying to say is: musicology is awesome but musicologists need to take an atavan or fifty
― continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 30 March 2014 05:55 (ten years ago) link
I think there is a place for academic analysis of pop culture (it's sort of why I joined ILX in the first place). Wished more people were going that way instead of down the Buzzfeed style route.
If you're interested, fwiw, academic music theorists have been doing plenty of analysis of popular music over the last couple of decades (especially considering that it's hard to come up with something new to say about Bach). You could start with Music Theory Online maybe, which usually runs a piece on popular music, is a top journal in the field, and is usually relatively readable: http://www.mtosmt.org/issues/issues.php
This issue was completely devoted to rock music, for example: http://www.mtosmt.org/issues/mto.11.17.3/toc.17.3.html
This is something of a 'classic' book: http://www.amazon.ca/Understanding-Rock-Essays-Musical-Analysis/dp/0195100050
Kyle Adams's work on rap and Lori Burns's work generally (http://www.music.uottawa.ca/faculty/burns.html, has a few MTO articles, has written book chapters on Lady Gaga, Dixie Chicks, and Rihanna if you're concerned that the pop being analysed isn't always pop enough) are usually great.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 30 March 2014 12:05 (ten years ago) link
Sorry, the Dixie Chicks thing was an article.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 30 March 2014 12:06 (ten years ago) link
― timellison,
Well, let me return to the example I used about versifying. I can argue that Frost's use of iambic tetrameter in "Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening" enforces the mind-numbing regularity of the speaker's mission, most notably in the line "And miles to go before I sleep." But I could also argue that the unyielding beat of that tetrameter reduces the poem to a greeting card. Frost's choice of meter is a fact; what you and I deduce from those facts is an opinion.
I'm not at all suggesting a musicological approach is flawed, only that mentioning a series of facts about clusters and time signatures and chord sequences still adduce opinions.
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 30 March 2014 12:21 (ten years ago) link
Blind drunk when typing those last two posts, sorry to any musicologists
― continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 30 March 2014 12:59 (ten years ago) link
Ha, I mean, Wikipedia is probably not the best source for quality musicological writing. I suspect that people are confusing musicology and music theory on this thread though.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:01 (ten years ago) link
Was wondering about that. What would you say is the difference?
― Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:03 (ten years ago) link
Ime, on this side of the Atlantic at least, a simple explanation would be:music theory = formal/structural analysis of music (which includes model composition at the undergrad level)musicology = humanities or social science approaches to the study of music
I think that in Europe, what I would call music theory can be included as a sub-discipline of musicology, actually, which would weaken my original point.
(Grove on musicology fwiw (they don't have a "music theory" article!):
The term ‘musicology’ has been defined in many different ways. As a method, it is a form of scholarship characterized by the procedures of research. A simple definition in these terms would be ‘the scholarly study of music’. Traditionally, musicology has borrowed from ‘art history for its historiographic paradigms and literary studies for its paleographic and philological principles’ (Treitler, 1995). A committee of the American Musicological Society (AMS) in 1955 also defined musicology as ‘a field of knowledge having as its object the investigation of the art of music as a physical, psychological, aesthetic, and cultural phenomenon’ (JAMS, viii, p.153). The last of these four attributes gives the definition considerable breadth, although music, and music as an ‘art’, remains at the centre of the investigation.A third view, which neither of these definitions fully implies, is based on the belief that the advanced study of music should be centred not just on music but also on musicians acting within a social and cultural environment. This shift from music as a product (which tends to imply fixity) to music as a process involving composer, performer and consumer (i.e. listeners) has involved new methods, some of them borrowed from the social sciences, particularly anthropology, ethnology, linguistics, sociology and more recently politics, gender studies and cultural theory. This type of inquiry is also associated with ethnomusicology. Harrison (1963) and other ethnomusicologists have suggested that ‘It is the function of all musicology to be in fact ethnomusicology; that is, to take its range of research to include material that is termed “sociological”’
A third view, which neither of these definitions fully implies, is based on the belief that the advanced study of music should be centred not just on music but also on musicians acting within a social and cultural environment. This shift from music as a product (which tends to imply fixity) to music as a process involving composer, performer and consumer (i.e. listeners) has involved new methods, some of them borrowed from the social sciences, particularly anthropology, ethnology, linguistics, sociology and more recently politics, gender studies and cultural theory. This type of inquiry is also associated with ethnomusicology. Harrison (1963) and other ethnomusicologists have suggested that ‘It is the function of all musicology to be in fact ethnomusicology; that is, to take its range of research to include material that is termed “sociological”’
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:14 (ten years ago) link
In the US/Canada, ime, I think it would more common for theory/composition to be combined in a department or 'area' within a department as for theory/musicology to be combined, although the latter is definitely not unheard of.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:18 (ten years ago) link
@ Sund4r I keep up with that journal but have learned to skip the articles about pop rock and rap. My ish is that those pop articles seem intended for an audience of no-one. The language is too academic for people who're interested in Radiohead, and Radiohead is too easily parsed for people who can comprehend an academic theoretical approach. I mean:
“Paranoid Android” was composed and recorded by the alternative rock band Radiohead and appears on their widely acclaimed album OK Computer (1997).(9) As Radiohead critics and fans point out, the title of the rock song references the fictional character “Marvin the Paranoid Android” from Douglas Adams’s 1978 BBC radio comedy series The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, which was later adapted into a series of books. Unlike Adams’s comedic portrayal of the depressed robot Marvin, however, Radiohead’s “Paranoid Android” appears to depict a socially alienated and anxiety-ridden persona surrounded by a society consumed by the trappings of capitalism––one of several themes that the album explores. Power (“When I am king”) and materialism (“gucci”; “yuppies”) generate self-importance (“Why don’t you remember my name”) and excess (“piggy”), threatening to consume, impair, and silence (“With your opinions which are of no consequence at all”) in the desire for more (Example 1a). The fear and realization that the capitalist machine has participated in the formation of the subject and created, as a condition of possibility, the potential to equate the valuation of material goods with identity and self-worth, provokes a split subject––a “paranoid android” who recognizes that its individual thoughts and ambitions may also be a product of the capitalist machine (“Please could you stop the noise . . . from all the unborn chicken voices in my head”).(10) The plea to be cleansed (“Rain down on me from a great height”) from the markers of a capitalist identity proves futile in the song’s final section; the potential for grace and intervention is met with a cynicism that God may be passive (“God loves his children, yeah!”), leaving the persona no escape from Pandemonium. That all of the individuals in “Paranoid Android” are condemned to the same fate, regardless of social status or wealth, lends an ironic twist to the song’s ending.
― continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:20 (ten years ago) link
My eyes glazed over there too but that's just like an introductory paragraph about the song more generally, though, right? The meat of the piece is the actual musical analysis.
I totally disagree with this!:
Radiohead is too easily parsed for people who can comprehend an academic theoretical approach.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:31 (ten years ago) link
Even under the rubric of Theory, don't different people use it to mean different things at different times? An old school classical guy might be referring to something out of the common practice period, particularly the law as laid down by Rameau in 1722, whereas a recent Berklee grad is walking around with his head stuffed up with Chord Scale Theory?
― Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:32 (ten years ago) link
My eyes glazed over too but I hadn't put together where the title "Paranoid Android" came from so I learned something.
― Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:34 (ten years ago) link
*moves to the other thread*
― continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:36 (ten years ago) link
Sure, but they're both doing structural/formal analysis of music. They're just working with different repertoire. They could still present at similar conferences, etc. Anyway, I better go mark some counterpoint.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:36 (ten years ago) link
(Xp)I guess what I am trying to say is if you define theory as something like "the study of what chords go together and what melodies go with them" then there are different approaches to theory and some explain certain things better than others. What is surprising or not done in one theory is not surprising and done all the time in another. If you don't take this into account then theory is kind of a strawman.
*ok I'm leaving too*
― Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:39 (ten years ago) link
(Something about tyranny of theory, blah blah blah)
― Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:45 (ten years ago) link
I want to continue this discussion just in the more specific "talking about articles" thread instead of the "lol at this guy" thread
― continually topping myself (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 30 March 2014 13:54 (ten years ago) link
Should we start a new thread for theory and pop or take it here?: Rolling Music Theory Thread
(I don't think math & music would be the right place.)
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 30 March 2014 15:11 (ten years ago) link
Yes, the math & music thread is too specialized, but that rolling theory thread looks fine. Plus I'm sure it will makeTim happy.
― Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 30 March 2014 15:15 (ten years ago) link
Moved.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 30 March 2014 15:20 (ten years ago) link
Yes, but like with any discussion about things other than facts, you usually proceed without undercutting what you're doing by asserting that you'll never be able to communicate and that everyone's frame of reference is entirely alien to your own.
What I do definitely "veers into qualitative stuff," as Hurting 2 put it. In fact, that's the whole point of it.
― timellison, Sunday, 30 March 2014 18:10 (ten years ago) link
I think very few music theorists would claim that certain chord progressions or melodic leaps in certain contexts or certain kinds of voice leading sound objectively "better" or "worse" than others, but they might describe "effects" that they create, as well as how they rate in certain historical periods in terms of what is more or less common, what would be more or less expected, etc. Of course, all this stuff can be shaped by culture and by individual music experience, so it gets to be a bit of a mindfuck. A very simplistic but classic example is that the very fact that a major key sounds "happy" and a minor key sounds "sad" has been shown to be culturally conditioned, and there are cultures where minor is not associated with "sad" at all.
There's a quote I love from Marc Ribot that playing a standard is like playing a duet with the audience's memory. But in a way all music plays a duet with the audience's expectations -- you're used to hearing a certain chord progression resolve a certain way and suddenly someone fakes you out and has it not resolve but move to a series of chords that leads to a key change. Even if you don't know how to identify what you hear in music theory terms, you still hear it. But then if you aren't used to the chord progression resolving a certain way in the first place, you might not experience the exciting "surprise" of it moving in a different direction. It's not much different than when a film plays with a trope -- if you don't know the trope, the play isn't very meaningful to you.
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Monday, 31 March 2014 02:04 (ten years ago) link
A very simplistic but classic example is that the very fact that a major key sounds "happy" and a minor key sounds "sad" has been shown to be culturally conditioned, and there are cultures where minor is not associated with "sad" at all.
― Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 31 March 2014 02:10 (ten years ago) link
Pharrell's house
― fauxpas cola (darraghmac), Monday, 31 March 2014 02:41 (ten years ago) link
Ah
― Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 31 March 2014 02:52 (ten years ago) link
is Pharrell's house close to Daryl's?
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 31 March 2014 02:52 (ten years ago) link
well this ain't exactly a peer-reviewed journal, buthttp://www.nme.com/blogs/nme-blogs/the-science-of-music-why-do-songs-in-a-minor-key-sound-sad
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Monday, 31 March 2014 03:04 (ten years ago) link
well this ain't exactly a peer-reviewed journal, butBetter not let Sund4r see that.
― Bristol Stomper's Breakout (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 31 March 2014 03:07 (ten years ago) link
hey guys she's baaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaack
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 31 March 2014 19:27 (ten years ago) link
update: she listened to a record at the wrong speed
Gird your loins, ILX. http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/06/magazine/the-pernicious-rise-of-poptimism.html?_r=0
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Friday, 4 April 2014 15:44 (ten years ago) link
In the guise of open-mindedness and inclusivity, poptimism gives critics — and by extension, fans — carte blanche to be less adventurous. If we are all talking about Miley Cyrus, then we do not need to wrestle with knottier music that might require some effort to appreciate.
Preach
― waterbabies (waterface), Friday, 4 April 2014 15:46 (ten years ago) link
Hahaha that URL is straight trolling ilx
― Raptain Chillips (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 4 April 2014 15:46 (ten years ago) link
the rise of.... what decade is this?
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Friday, 4 April 2014 15:48 (ten years ago) link
*closes tab when he mentions The Great Beauty as an example of something of quality*
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Friday, 4 April 2014 15:50 (ten years ago) link
There's some Morbzbait in there too:
I spend most of my time, professionally speaking, writing about movies and books, and during quiet moments, I like to entertain myself by imagining what might happen if the equivalent of poptimism were to transform those other disciplines. A significant subset of book reviewers would turn up their noses at every mention of Jhumpa Lahiri and James Salter as representatives of snobbish, boring novels for the elite and argue that to be a worthy critic, engaged with mass culture, you would have to direct the bulk of your critical attention to the likes of Dan Brown and Stephenie Meyer. Movie critics would be enjoined from devoting too much of their time to “12 Years a Slave” (box-office take: $56 million) or “The Great Beauty” ($2.7 million), lest they fail to adequately analyze the majesty that is “Thor: The Dark World” ($206.2 million).
― bi-polar uncle (its OK-he's dead) (Phil D.), Friday, 4 April 2014 15:50 (ten years ago) link
Saul Austerlitz is the author of “Sitcom: A History in 24 Episodes From I Love Lucy to Community.”
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 4 April 2014 15:51 (ten years ago) link
a guy who wrote a book on sitcoms complaining about critical obsession with pop
(xp) Like freakytrigger never happened.
― Tompall Tudor (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 4 April 2014 15:52 (ten years ago) link
oof didn't notice that, that's bad
― waterbabies (waterface), Friday, 4 April 2014 15:52 (ten years ago) link
the book he wrote i mean
haha not finishing it though since so many popists have done not actually engaging w/ rockism critiques of rockism it only seems fair to get it in the other direction. writing this however - the indie hero Stephin Merritt of the Magnetic Fields was accused of being a racist for expressing his appreciation for the song “Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah,” from the (actually racist) Disney musical “Song of the South,” and his general dislike of hip-hop and not mentioning merritt's comments about the kkk or having no use for black musicians post-integration seems willfully dishonest. anyhow if there's any demographic that's shown its ability to not respond to every piece of navel gazing troll bait that comes across its rock critics so i'm sure this will pass unnoticed pretty quickly.
― balls, Friday, 4 April 2014 15:55 (ten years ago) link
I mean, the piece makes like, one or two good points nestled amongst all the misrepresentation.
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Friday, 4 April 2014 15:59 (ten years ago) link
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, April 4, 2014 10:51 AM (7 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
this was like the 'drummer for the rock band gay dad' of 2014 punchline
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:00 (ten years ago) link
I'm surprised there's no mention of HAIM.
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:03 (ten years ago) link
FWIW I remember way back when I first came around these parts (maybe ten years ago? Yeesh) and was first discovering what poptimism was about, I asked that same question about why mid 30s/40s men were devoting so much ink to music aimed at 12-year-old girls.
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:05 (ten years ago) link
it still makes no sesne to me
― waterbabies (waterface), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:06 (ten years ago) link
these articles always come from such a weird place, like they'd be more convincing if they were arguing we should pay more attention to keiji haino or whatever--but it's always this anxious distinction between what's popular and what's...less popular.
― ryan, Friday, 4 April 2014 16:08 (ten years ago) link
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Friday, April 4, 2014 11:05 AM (6 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
yeah don't get me wrong i often wish the big name pop critics would step away from the pop charts more often and look at some of the more critically unexplored corners popular (in the broad sense) music particularly outside of indie. This article isn't really making this argument, though
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:12 (ten years ago) link
(which is to say, sometimes it feels like the SFJ/Ann Powers focus is on "Indie, or very popular music" to the detriment of genre writing)
(I guess since Jon is at the Times you can throw hip-hop into that formulation too)
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:13 (ten years ago) link
the author of the book on sitcoms forgets that his favorite Hollywood entertainment was also studio garbage too.
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:16 (ten years ago) link
guys guys he's corny and clueless about sitcoms also, let's not turn this into a tv vs pop thing.
― balls, Friday, 4 April 2014 16:20 (ten years ago) link
It's like the NYT editors decided, "We should print a counterpoint to the Dan Kois 'Cultural Vegetables' piece from a few years back. In the interests of fairness, we'd better make sure it's equally stupid."
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:20 (ten years ago) link
Still waiting for the poptimist gadfly messiah to revolutionize from within.
― Tompall Tudor (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:23 (ten years ago) link
complaining that brilliant art is routinely ignored by the critical consensus is fine; I do it vehemently
however, the brilliant and ignored art he mentions in his article is fairly mainstream & has an extant critical discourse around it
consequently it all comes off as indier-than-thou mithering
― halber mensch halber keks (imago), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:24 (ten years ago) link
http://furia.com/pjs/voter_686209.html#2013
― j., Friday, 4 April 2014 16:26 (ten years ago) link
we need more professional writers writing about stuff nobody wants to read about
― twistent consistent (Noodle Vague), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:27 (ten years ago) link
hmmmmm trying to connect poptimism in music criticism to the gossip mill-style coverage of pop music in the media in general is really reaching. also the part where he quotes the kelefa sanneh 2004 piece to portray poptimism as basically "reverse rockism" is lolsobad. there may have some good points in there but i am too lazy to trim out all the cabbage to find them. (we poptimists ARE that lazy after all -- appreciating the national takes way too much effort for my feeble brain.)
― dyl, Friday, 4 April 2014 16:28 (ten years ago) link
in truth much of the mainstream pop music that is rapturously covered in the media over the past decade is still justified by rockist ideals in the press, but apparently that is "poptimism"
― dyl, Friday, 4 April 2014 16:29 (ten years ago) link
non-ilmer on my facebook after i posted this:
"NYT trolling ILM."
― scott seward, Friday, 4 April 2014 16:30 (ten years ago) link
ryan otm about the "keiji haino" thing. This article's stance isn't "Hey, it's a big, wide world out there with tons of non-charting music that might be awesome!" Austerlitz instead takes the ever popular stance of "What, so I"m not allowed to like Springsteen anymore and still be cool? What the hell?!"
I mean, The National album he mentioned hit #20 on the Pazz n Jop poll referenced at the top of the article. The idea that it's "kryptonite" in the current critical discourse is a little silly.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:30 (ten years ago) link
ahahahaha omg lol @ his ballot
this truly is the vanity of not getting a decent pop critic job offer isn't it
― halber mensch halber keks (imago), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:31 (ten years ago) link
Unless he really thinks that #20 is so low for that National album that it amounts to a slap in the face to sophisticated music fans everywhere
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:32 (ten years ago) link
every "my music is deeper and more complicated than yours" stance is open to that kind of outflanking tho, which is why it's an idiot move in the first place
― twistent consistent (Noodle Vague), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:32 (ten years ago) link
I thought P&J stopped being vaunted when the voice got bought and canned everyone
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:34 (ten years ago) link
It's like he starts his article with a bad assumption and then rolls from there
i'm probably one of 2 or 3 ILMers who ever dares to try to put a stick in poptimism's whirring spokes, and i'll give ciara vs the national to ciara in a blaze of glorious & righteous truth
― halber mensch halber keks (imago), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:37 (ten years ago) link
the national is like the worst possible example I can think of if you want to make some kind of case for more "sophisticated" and "difficult" music deserving more attention relative to pop.
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:38 (ten years ago) link
steven hyden at the top of his similar ballots list deeply unsurprising
― balls, Friday, 4 April 2014 16:38 (ten years ago) link
lmaoooo really
― maura, Friday, 4 April 2014 16:41 (ten years ago) link
He also wrote: http://www.amazon.com/Money-Nothing-History-Beatles-Stripes/dp/0826429580
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:41 (ten years ago) link
You are watching as a history of the moving image unfolds onscreen, but this history will not take note of D.W. Griffith or Jean Renoir, nor will King Kong or Jaws make an appearance
the national plays arenas! a movie about them just came out!
― kaygee, Friday, 4 April 2014 16:45 (ten years ago) link
well that's my weekend sorted
― twistent consistent (Noodle Vague), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:47 (ten years ago) link
Alfred is killing it. Don't know what the heck lj is on about.
― Tompall Tudor (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:51 (ten years ago) link
The paragraph where he blames poptimism on piracy makes zero sense.
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:52 (ten years ago) link
The dissolution of a shared musical mainstream means that my Speedy Ortiz or Ka may be gobbledygook to someone whose musical hero is Sky Ferreira.
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 4 April 2014 16:52 (ten years ago) link
― twistent consistent (Noodle Vague), Friday, April 4, 2014 12:32 PM (2 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
^^^^^^
― some dude, Friday, 4 April 2014 16:54 (ten years ago) link
Dude needs new friends.
― maura, Friday, 4 April 2014 16:54 (ten years ago) link
i hope they never stop publishing articles like this
― coops all on coops tbh (crüt), Friday, 4 April 2014 17:00 (ten years ago) link
Haha, crüt otm
― Tompall Tudor (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 4 April 2014 17:00 (ten years ago) link
ILX will be down for a few hours this evening (GMT) for maintenance by, oh, let's say ... Moe
― Tompall Tudor (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 4 April 2014 17:19 (ten years ago) link
at least we now have a serious contender for 2014 worst. no faux-cutesy blog post this. the paper of record!
― scott seward, Friday, 4 April 2014 17:28 (ten years ago) link
the fundamental misunderstanding of this piece is the idea that pop criticism isn't "specialized"
i think this guy is conflating, like, people writing about whether lorde or miley cyrus or katy perry is racist (thinkpiece culture, basically) with actual engagement w/ the music aside from line reading a ubiquitous single. pitching pieces about pop music is not a way to make a living.
― le goon (J0rdan S.), Friday, 4 April 2014 17:35 (ten years ago) link
Case in point regarding two artists he mentions: As far as I can tell, late period Strokes sell more records than Sky Ferreira, regardless of "poptimist" cred.
The whole piece has no real acknowledgment that writers are maybe not just striking a stance, that maybe they feel passionately about the Beyonce record or the Sky Ferreira record. The tone of the whole thing is, "C'mon, you guys don't really like this dreck, you're obviously too smart for it! This is clearly just 'penance' on some level."
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Friday, 4 April 2014 17:40 (ten years ago) link
i'm really sorry half of FT's mission has gotten lost in later discussions of "poptimism"
The goal was to treat pop music like "serious" music, but _also_ to write about serious music "like pop music", c.f. tom's articles on Charlemagne Palestine, etc. and plenty of things that Sinkah pushed later on, etc.
To look _just_ at the call for a different treatment of pop is to miss the point entirely. Its a call for a different notion of critical discourse.
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Friday, 4 April 2014 17:43 (ten years ago) link
and like lool at living in a pitchfork dominated era and thinking 'poptimism' (however defined) somehow won
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Friday, 4 April 2014 17:44 (ten years ago) link
i'm probably one of 2 or 3 ILMers who ever dares to try to put a stick in poptimism's whirring spokes, and i'll give ciara vs the national to ciara in a blaze of glorious & righteous truth― halber mensch halber keks (imago), Friday, April 4, 2014 11:37 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Um do you not read like all the posts that happen about all kinds of non mainstream pop music every single day? Or are you suggesting like everyone on, say, the ilx brigade thread should be butting in to Beyonce threads telling everyone to listen to Robbie Basho?
Actually though I'd love to make lex listen to Basho actually
― Raptain Chillips (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 4 April 2014 17:46 (ten years ago) link
Rule of thumb: If you're writing a big generalising piece about the problem with music criticism then there's at least a 50% chance that the problem with music criticism is you.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Friday, 4 April 2014 17:52 (ten years ago) link
ewing still underrecognized as critic shockah
― j., Friday, 4 April 2014 17:54 (ten years ago) link
Well he hasn't been employed by a big-name pub in North America. But, you know, how could you accuse someone of having a bunch of Beggars and Columbia records in his year-end top 10 of not looking hard enough?
― maura, Friday, 4 April 2014 17:59 (ten years ago) link
link some robbie basho here!
― halber mensch halber keks (imago), Friday, 4 April 2014 18:03 (ten years ago) link
all music is garbage and pop culture is garbage and the internet is garbage and human life is garbage just sayin
― coops all on coops tbh (crüt), Friday, 4 April 2014 18:05 (ten years ago) link
i think 'published' critics who obviously have no qualms about poking around ilm ought to pay a tax for every piece they place that shows they learned nothing and contributed nothing
― j., Friday, 4 April 2014 18:05 (ten years ago) link
I'm losing my edge.I'm losing my edge.I can hear the footsteps every night on the decks.But I was there.I was there at the first indie rock thread on ILM.I was there when the noize piece hit pitas.I was there.
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Friday, 4 April 2014 18:32 (ten years ago) link
ground zero poptimist manifesto: http://freakytrigger.co.uk/ft/2000/01/do-you-feel-real-and-if-so-id-like-to-know/
in retrospect less a disciplinary matrix than a consultant's quadrant chart, but nonetheless...
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Friday, 4 April 2014 18:37 (ten years ago) link
who ever dares to try to put a stick in poptimism's whirring spokesDon't know about sticks, but there a might have been a baseball card here and there.
― Tompall Tudor (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 4 April 2014 18:56 (ten years ago) link
Sorry, rounders.
Recasting the 'rockism/popism' discourse -- and music critical discourse -- for 2005 (and beyond)
― Tompall Tudor (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 4 April 2014 18:57 (ten years ago) link
That NYT piece is like a bunch of people who hate pop and want to keep it in its critically-reviled box having their very own "Feminism? That's all very well and good, but what about men? Where's the men's rights movement, eh, eh, eh?" moment.
― oh, boy, .GIF! That's where I'm a Viking! (edwardo), Friday, 4 April 2014 19:01 (ten years ago) link
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/8/85/TWWL.jpg
― Tompall Tudor (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 4 April 2014 19:03 (ten years ago) link
pop music is not feminism
― coops all on coops tbh (crüt), Friday, 4 April 2014 19:28 (ten years ago) link
Yes, that's exactly what I meant in that sentence. Definitely.
― oh, boy, .GIF! That's where I'm a Viking! (edwardo), Friday, 4 April 2014 19:33 (ten years ago) link
yep
― coops all on coops tbh (crüt), Friday, 4 April 2014 19:34 (ten years ago) link
true but I don't think it's a coincidence that the description of critics he uses are shrill cheerleaders who shout. (liking speedy ortiz doesn't negate this)
― katherine, Friday, 4 April 2014 19:51 (ten years ago) link
This article reads like an elaborate self-justification which in the writer's heart of hearts he knows is wrong.
― Tim F, Friday, 4 April 2014 21:10 (ten years ago) link
Scott Seward Greenfield Ma 1 hour agoIf you are young and considering writing about music for fun or profit, read this piece very carefully. AND THEN NEVER WRITE LIKE THIS. Or think like this, if you can help it. Think harder and listen to a LOT of music. All kinds. From every era. And read a ton. Anything you can get your hands on. Read and listen as much as humanly possible. Listen closely. REALLY listen. Inspiration can come from the most unlikely places.
― scott seward, Saturday, 5 April 2014 04:17 (ten years ago) link
i couldn't help myself...
UM, is that freakytrigger essay Sterling posted like widely read and acknowledged and/or anything? it says "457 views" and it is really crazy and great and I wish I'd read it ten years ago, five years ago, or yesterday
― poopsites attract (flamboyant goon tie included), Saturday, 5 April 2014 05:26 (ten years ago) link
FT migrated from one place to another - Blogger to Wordpress iirc- a few years ago, and a few of us copied everything across, article by article. The hits count you see there today means the hits since then; I don't know that anyone bothered to make a note of the figures for hits up to that point. If I happen across an obtuse shepherd I'll ask.
― Tim, Saturday, 5 April 2014 10:48 (ten years ago) link
I've inwardly made a ???-face any time Lex has talked about "realness" :( I wish I'd read that essay first
― poopsites attract (flamboyant goon tie included), Saturday, 5 April 2014 12:50 (ten years ago) link
Only 457 people read freakytrigger but all of them etc. etc.
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Saturday, 5 April 2014 17:18 (ten years ago) link
lol scott
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Saturday, 5 April 2014 17:20 (ten years ago) link
B-b-but...
― Tompall Tudor (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 5 April 2014 17:22 (ten years ago) link
re the FT post, now it's 804 views :-D
and yeah, the counter started from zero at some point after migrating to WP which was many years after it was first published - so it's languished in the blogging long tail. gonna promote it to our front page 'featured posts' for a bit.
― Britain's Obtusest Shepherd (Alan), Saturday, 5 April 2014 18:12 (ten years ago) link
i'm glad someone agrees with me...
https://twitter.com/benratliff
― scott seward, Saturday, 5 April 2014 19:02 (ten years ago) link
thumbs_up_mr_natural_smiley.jpg
― Tompall Tudor (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 5 April 2014 19:04 (ten years ago) link
I'm a big
― Tim, Saturday, 5 April 2014 23:19 (ten years ago) link
It's true that I am a big. But why I, or my trousers, chose to make that clear on this thread is not obvious. As you were.
― Tim, Saturday, 5 April 2014 23:29 (ten years ago) link
Your big big pants
― Ned Raggett, Sunday, 6 April 2014 02:43 (ten years ago) link
Who will be the 1000th reader of that piece. There should be a prize, anyone has 20p to spare?
The poptimism 'oh where has it gone?' discussion and that NPR blog sorta mesh into one.
Certainly -- this is waayy back in the day -- ILM had pop as driver for posts and discussion but also an openness to everything on the margins and beyond, which is why there are threads on any pop group, indie group or Robert Ashley and the like in new answers. This is a good thing, despite all the fragmentation that has always been there.
What hasn't happened is that its never been an environment where non-experts -- i.e. people that like music but don't have record collections could come in and talk about it with not even that much of a commitment or stake in it. So an equivalent of NPR person could not post here, would get shouted at and would probably go away.
Yes it was changing the discourse but also to include a wider set of attitudes and expertise. It could only grow with others, and in that sense it was a disaster.
― xyzzzz__, Sunday, 6 April 2014 12:37 (ten years ago) link
a few non-experts have worked on their expertise tbf, and a few are still proudly non-experts :D
― halber mensch halber keks (imago), Sunday, 6 April 2014 12:47 (ten years ago) link
'experts' needs to be more fully defined. Its just as much about non-listening or talking about a time when you loved music and now don't, for example. I think there are a few of those on 'Popular', where a new fashion/scene came in and something in them 'broke'. But something is there, a desire to participate and talk, not least because you are surrounded by people in your daily life that still listen and feel importance.
― xyzzzz__, Sunday, 6 April 2014 13:13 (ten years ago) link
i shared that fake-real taxonomy with some friends last night and they seemed very convinced. a million views by sundown.
― Merdeyeux, Sunday, 6 April 2014 14:00 (ten years ago) link
Merdeyeux and his Million Mates
― robocop ELF (seandalai), Sunday, 6 April 2014 15:09 (ten years ago) link
"its never been an environment where non-experts -- i.e. people that like music but don't have record collections could come in and talk about it with not even that much of a commitment or stake in it"
Totally disagree, that describes me to a tee and I love ILM, even post in it some.
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Sunday, 6 April 2014 23:43 (ten years ago) link
what the shit is that NYT piece
i should be glad i was offline all weekend, right?
have you all killed austerlitz yet?
― lex pretend, Monday, 7 April 2014 15:08 (ten years ago) link
The narcissism of small differences there is bizarre. I could understand if he was a classic rock bore but his Pazz & Jop ballot includes Sky Ferreira, MIA, Daft Punk and Haim (the last two being poptimist hotbed ILM's top single and album of 2013) so I don't even know why he's pissed off. He likes Sky and Haim but not Lorde or Icona Pop? You can't squeeze an argument into a gap that narrow.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Monday, 7 April 2014 15:22 (ten years ago) link
he likes guitars
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Monday, 7 April 2014 15:23 (ten years ago) link
he doesn't carehe loves it
― I made a grave mistake with my balloon at the end (forksclovetofu), Monday, 7 April 2014 16:11 (ten years ago) link
― some dude, Monday, 7 April 2014 16:19 (ten years ago) link
I am a proud expert on every subject i discuss on ilx
― très hip (Treeship), Monday, 7 April 2014 16:53 (ten years ago) link
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 7 April 2014 16:53 (ten years ago) link
My guess is he thinks Sky and Haim "transcend" pop through craft and emotion, whereas the others are generic or mercenary or shallow or something.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Monday, 7 April 2014 17:18 (ten years ago) link
hey likes frank ocean too so it can't just be guitars
― Raptain Chillips (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 7 April 2014 17:21 (ten years ago) link
This pop, R&B and hip hop is fine but that stuff, oh dear me no, I need to write a NYT essay about the cultural poison of people who like that.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Monday, 7 April 2014 17:34 (ten years ago) link
Ok this article was kind of bad but you guys are strawmanning the shit out of it.
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Monday, 7 April 2014 18:40 (ten years ago) link
Like I don't think he's taking issue with any particular artist being written about/voted for, he's just arguing the balance overall has shifted in a direction he doesn't exactly like.
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Monday, 7 April 2014 18:59 (ten years ago) link
It's not strawmanning. I'm genuinely confused by it. If critics of mainstream pop were giving it a free pass or neglecting other kinds of music - music's equivalent to The Great Beauty - he would have a case but they're not, and Rolling Stone/MOJO/Uncut still exist to celebrate the rock canon, as do commenters like this:
Unfortunately since May 12, 1972, the release date of Exile on Main Street, there has been precious little music in the rock genre that would qualify as art, London Calling and Nevermind being glorious exceptions.
Or this guy:
more like ploptimism
As with all polemics it only makes sense if you name names instead of blaming some nebulous army of poptimists (especially confusing as he respects arch-poptimist Jody Rosen)
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Monday, 7 April 2014 19:19 (ten years ago) link
I'm confused wrt his mention of The National, who're about as far from a "serious rock band" as I can imagine, neither serious-as-in-academic nor rock (I think of them as a pop band with rock signifiers, like Interpol, and, as I mentioned on Facebook, the National fans I know are or would-also-be fans of Haim and Sky).
― poopsites attract (flamboyant goon tie included), Monday, 7 April 2014 19:42 (ten years ago) link
I mean if it was all a preamble to a base-hit for Zs I wouldn't feel the same confusion/horror
― poopsites attract (flamboyant goon tie included), Monday, 7 April 2014 19:44 (ten years ago) link
looks like an old fashioned case of someone's very specific personal opinion being assumed to have universal pertinence. The pile of (by NYT Mag standards) semi-obscure band namedropping in the final dozen-or-so paragraphs strikes me as a sign of an author that may have realized the idea wasn't standing fully erect by essay's end.
― I made a grave mistake with my balloon at the end (forksclovetofu), Monday, 7 April 2014 19:45 (ten years ago) link
Don't the National have the super earnest U2 thing going on though?
― brimstead, Monday, 7 April 2014 19:45 (ten years ago) link
I think The Naitonal is definitely serious-as-in=academic. Bryce Dessner composes for the Kronos Quartet, among many other contemporary classical things
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Monday, 7 April 2014 19:54 (ten years ago) link
From wikipedia: "Most recently the brothers played with the Copenhagen Philharmonic in a concert billed as 'Sixty Minutes Of The Dessners.'"
Also, they may be a pop band, but they're a pop band whose tone is primarily serious. Like them or not, I don't think their music is particularly light or sunny.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Monday, 7 April 2014 19:57 (ten years ago) link
Various other-projects does not make their music any more-or-less "pop". Do you hear any contemporary classical influence in the music of The National? I don't.
― poopsites attract (flamboyant goon tie included), Monday, 7 April 2014 19:58 (ten years ago) link
They're definitely a pop band; I wasn't denying that. And there's definitely Steve Reich in their music, say, in Fake Empire
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Monday, 7 April 2014 20:02 (ten years ago) link
For the record, here's the man himself, from the NYT a few years ago:
One early admirer of “Sorrow” is Steve Reich. (Bryce sometimes sends him songs.) Reich says the National combines “a classic rock ’n’ roll sound using repeated bass lines and pulses that have cropped up more recently. They’re the latest incarnation of a classic rock ’n’ roll band.” Speaking of “Sorrow” and “Vanderlyle Crybaby Geeks,” another cut Reich likes on the new album, he said: “A major is their gold key. The melody note will be repeated but the bass and harmony will change. You’ll find it all over my music, a lot in the ‘Mother Goose’ of Ravel, and as far back as Bach. It works very well.”
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Monday, 7 April 2014 20:03 (ten years ago) link
You can totally take that with a grain of salt, or as a cheap appeal to authority. It kind of is! But I do think you can hear this stuff in their music, and that they can still be a pop band.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Monday, 7 April 2014 20:04 (ten years ago) link
a pop band with an overwhelming tone of "seriousness," I might add.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Monday, 7 April 2014 20:06 (ten years ago) link
I've been thinking about the Austerlitz essay for the last two days.
An uninformed reader would not be blamed for interpreting Austerlitz's points as these:
1) Music critics these days prefer pop to other genres.2) Such "poptimist" critics are not discerning about the pop they like, as long as it's popular.3) This is truer now than it used to be.
However, none of these really hold up.
Since Austerlitz himself uses Pazz & Jop as symbolic of the state of music criticism, let's take a look at last year's albums list. Four albums in the top 20 (Kanye West, Daft Punk, Beyonce, Drake) have generated hits that have landed in the top 40 of the Billboard Hot 100. That's the exact same number that did so in 2003 (OutKast, Fountains of Wayne, Jay-Z, 50 Cent). While other albums high on the 2013 P&J list have had modest commercial success and have received airplay on commercial radio (Vampire Weekend, Kacey Musgraves), others are decidedly outside the mainstream (Savages, Deafheaven). What's more, there are plenty of 2013 albums that went platinum and generated chart hits that Pazz and Jop voters barely acknowledged (One Direction, Imagine Dragons, Luke Bryan).
― jaymc, Monday, 7 April 2014 20:07 (ten years ago) link
I definitely think that there's been a shift in critics' outlooks within the past decade that's a direct result of the rockism/poptimism debates of the early '00s, but Austerlitz dumbly simplifies that to "everyone now prefers anything popular to anything else."
― jaymc, Monday, 7 April 2014 20:13 (ten years ago) link
Actually, that in itself is a dumb simplification of his argument. But in places, that's how it reads.
― jaymc, Monday, 7 April 2014 20:17 (ten years ago) link
Yeah, hurting 2 is otm about the article being about unhappiness with general direction more than individual acts.
My feeling is that, previously, the most coverage and actual critical passion in the music press was devoted to "serious" rock, with "the best" of other genres cherry-picked for coverage. That's definitely the way it felt when I was a teenager 20 years ago reading Rolling Stone and the like.
Agree with jaymc about the shift. Now instead of occasional articles about "pop" focused purely on the consensus "best," there's a lot more coverage of a wide variety of artists. That's what bothers Austerlitz.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Monday, 7 April 2014 20:19 (ten years ago) link
Of course "the best" of other genres was often based on a particular rock dude viewpoint, which is how you get Arrested Development winning Pazz n Jop
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Monday, 7 April 2014 20:23 (ten years ago) link
Obviously a major problem with his piece is choice of barometer of "music criticism" -- lots of people ITT have already pointed out "hello, pitchfork?"
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Monday, 7 April 2014 20:25 (ten years ago) link
Wait; Interpol are a pop band? Does that make it OK for me to like them, then?
― Branwell Bell, Monday, 7 April 2014 20:27 (ten years ago) link
My problem is thinking of pop as a "genre."
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 7 April 2014 20:28 (ten years ago) link
More of an "intent"?
― Evan, Monday, 7 April 2014 20:31 (ten years ago) link
"Pop" is in 3 different senses, a genre, and a methodology/intent and a space to be occupied.
Discussions of "Pop" should clarify which sense(s) are meant!
― Branwell Bell, Monday, 7 April 2014 20:35 (ten years ago) link
He doesn't seem to consider the methodology aspect. You can have a rockist reading of Beyonce or a poptimist reading of the Strokes. To SA, poptimism = liking mainstream pop.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Monday, 7 April 2014 20:42 (ten years ago) link
Wrote this on fb earlier today; goes along w/ what jaymc says above:
Calling "poptimism" the "reigning style of music criticism today” would be deluded -- if not a blatant lie -- even if poptimism actually existed. That NYT writer's favorite album last year, by the National, placed #20 in Pazz & Jop; Queens Of The Stone Age, who he pretends he's so out of fashion for liking, finished #21. (He had the 68th most typical ballot in the poll, out of 453 voters, according to Glenn Mcdonald's math -- not exactly out in left field somewhere!) Some artists who finished even higher: Deafheaven, Jason Isbell, David Bowie, Arcade Fire, Disclosure, Savages, Neko Case, Kurt Vile, My Bloody Valentine, Chance The Rapper -- one of a few hip-hop artists up there -- and, at #2, Vampire Weekend. In the top 20 the year before: Japandroids, Tame Impala, Swans, Grimes, Beach House, Dirty Projectors, Jack White, Cloud Nothings, Father John Misty, Bruce Springsteen, Alabama Shakes, Sharon Von Etten, for starters. Whose definition of "reigning" "poptimism" do those artists fit, exactly? How exactly are Taylor Swift and Ke$ha dominating over them, critic-appraisal-wise, any more than, say, Madonna dominated over the Mekons or Husker Du or whoever back in the day? The argument here seems to be that critics shouldn’t write about a certain kind of hitmaker *at all*. Which, sorry, is ridiculous.
― xhuxk, Monday, 7 April 2014 21:05 (ten years ago) link
listening to "sorrow" now on headphones. it's pretty!
the lyrics are terrible though
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Monday, 7 April 2014 21:50 (ten years ago) link
Danny Bowes OTM
http://blogs.indiewire.com/criticwire/criticwire-survey-groupthink
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Tuesday, 8 April 2014 16:29 (ten years ago) link
i keep forgetting to ask if the nyt guy has ever actually written about music before. all i hear about is the sitcom book.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 8 April 2014 17:36 (ten years ago) link
i've never really witnessed the sort of pile-ons those film critics talk about in music criticism. it's actually sort of odd that so few music crit beefs are actually about specific opinions about specific releases, there's very much a chacun à son gout mentality.
which isn't to say some forms of groupthink don't exist but it's less to do with critical assessment and more to do with "neutral" attention (sites reporting news about certain artists but not others), and it's nothing to do with poptimism or pop-leaning critics. (i assume this has been said, but just because megastars like beyoncé and t-swift get critical attention - though by no means consensus critical love! - this doesn't mean that pop as a genre is respected, let alone celebrated! pop artists beneath a certain level of success and/or without certain "credibility" dog whistle signifiers get absolutely no respect, and all the old rockist arguments get trotted out. for example, like taylor swift among uk critics prior to her latest album.)
― lex pretend, Tuesday, 8 April 2014 17:51 (ten years ago) link
Lindsay Zolandz's recent Tumblr post about critics and audiences made me realise that I'm glad that music critics engage in less navel-gazing than film critics and UK ones less than US ones. As a critic I love reading this stuff but it's irrelevant to all but a handful of readers.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Tuesday, 8 April 2014 18:57 (ten years ago) link
I think the narrative voice in, say, The Wire's interviews is about as navel-gazing as anything, although with a bit of a stuffy academic air
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Tuesday, 8 April 2014 19:07 (ten years ago) link
I don't know, I don't think the film critic world is that much more "navel-gazing" than the music critic world at all. I think they both have certain insularities that will always look like "navel-gazing" to people outside that realm..
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Tuesday, 8 April 2014 19:55 (ten years ago) link
I mean, for example, in my experience, you're definitely more likely to find a pointless personal story in a music review than in a film review. Or a really moving personal story! But still.
how are we defining "navel gazing" -- staring at lint until you glean insights?
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 8 April 2014 20:07 (ten years ago) link
yeah, it's maybe not really worth me starting an argument about. But having read a lot of music and film criticism, neither really seems "more 'navel-gazing'" to me, and I couldn't quite understand the blanket statement that music-critics engage in less navel-gazing.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Tuesday, 8 April 2014 20:15 (ten years ago) link
By navel-gazing I mean interactions between critics and talk of a critical community, as in Lindsay's piece, not the tone of reviews. There's no way that music critics, at least British ones, would be asked to offer their insights into the response to a review like the EW Under the Skin one which sparked the Indiewire post. We'd just bitch about it on Facebook.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Tuesday, 8 April 2014 20:31 (ten years ago) link
― jaymc, Monday, April 7, 2014 8:13 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
I think what has had a bigger impact than those debates is social media (and more broadly internet publishing), which has increased critics' exposure to one another's work/tastes in a manner that has made it a lot harder for critics to doggedly plough their furrow and assume everyone else is wrong. In general, there's a lot more tolerance for the idea that, even if you don't like X, someone else doing so is just fine (I can think of notable exceptions to this rule, but that's what they are - exceptions). I don't think this was predominantly caused by the rise of "poptimism" but the more pragmatic matter of being connected to, and friends (or "friends") with, other writers who are talking about X. At a more basic level, everyone using social media is faced with these tastes divergences regularly - after you've realised that X friend is actually ideologically totally opposite to you, liking slightly different music seems like a minor point.
This is in contrast to when both critics and readers could more effectively self-select the kinds (and topics) of music criticism they would be regularly exposed to. And the less you actually read a type of criticism, the easier it is to assume the worst of it.
(kinda ironic given that in other ways the internet has facilitated so much self-selection - political news being an obvious case in point)
There's a reason this has been written by a relative "outsider" (a tv/film critic) - as much as we might say "hello, pitchfork", no pitchfork writer today would express the opinions contained in this piece.
I think there was a similar dynamic with the jazz guy's article - only someone who was in fact totally oblivious of popular music coverage 90% of the time could then airily put it all in the same box.
― Tim F, Tuesday, 8 April 2014 20:34 (ten years ago) link
xp I don't really know how one Indiewire piece, one that was really more about the idea of "groupthink" or "pile-on" reactions to critical writings in the internet age, is somehow evidence of the vast scope of film critic navel-gazing. It's not like there aren't plenty of reaction pieces, blogposts, or forum posts about controversial or misguided pieces of music criticism.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Tuesday, 8 April 2014 20:47 (ten years ago) link
Honestly that's not really even unique to arts criticism at all, people are always talking about the way the internet changes the way people interact and react to written content (see Tim F's good point above). Don't know if that's really navel gazing.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Tuesday, 8 April 2014 20:49 (ten years ago) link
good *points*, I mean
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Tuesday, 8 April 2014 20:50 (ten years ago) link
hi i wrote a piece about all thishttp://noisey.vice.com/blog/the-new-york-times-sucks-poptimism
― maura, Wednesday, 9 April 2014 20:33 (ten years ago) link
lol that url!
― I made a grave mistake with my balloon at the end (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 9 April 2014 20:35 (ten years ago) link
Can't (and don't want to try to) speak for the state of music criticism, but I will say that as a reader, I often get the impression that writers are approaching from the point of view of "what will be most likely read" or "what will be understood by the most people". My sense is that most criticism is presented as a survey of something that has already been discussed a lot beforehand, and the review itself is recap, presented in general terms. I can see how this can seem hiveminded, and though I do also notice that, I don't think they are necessarily one and the same phenomena.
Furthermore, I don't think that strategy is inherently bad. Criticism *should* be written so that people can understand it, arguably especially to people who aren't terribly familiar with what's being discussed. One reason I can't stand a lot of art criticism is because I feel like it's written to only be understood by people in the art world, or other critics.
However, I also think it is much easier to write something that will be grasped by the most people...when you're writing about music or art that in and of itself has already demonstrated to appeal to the most people. There's an understanding that gets grandfathered in, so you don't have to write an intro paragrpah explaining where the music came from, or why it's being discussed. I also think that when writers approach things in this way, they forgoe (imo unfortunately) the personal perspective, and don't let me as a reader know why they in particular are writing about this music. In that way, user reviews at Amazon or messageboards are actually more valuable, even though you have to sift through a lot of them to get a broader sense of the music/album. /2cents
― Dominique, Wednesday, 9 April 2014 20:50 (ten years ago) link
xpost love the picture
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Wednesday, 9 April 2014 20:52 (ten years ago) link
this popular "critic" gives silly answer to silly question in this trolling videohttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=be_HVMwiBAM
― niels, Thursday, 10 April 2014 09:19 (ten years ago) link
"Poptimism" is not about blindly accepting every piece of radio-ready music that comes down the pike and hailing it as the next important thing. Instead, it's about throwing out the artificial distinctions that elevate Serious Mass-Appeal Music (usually made by men, and with guitars) over Frothy Bubbly Stuff (which often appeals to women as much as, if not more than, it does men).
All that needs to be said really.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Thursday, 10 April 2014 11:13 (ten years ago) link
When I saw that the link was a video I knew it'd be that guy! xpost
― Evan, Thursday, 10 April 2014 11:43 (ten years ago) link
Has Anthony Fantano been discussed on ILM? Am I wrong in thinking he's one of the most popular critics in the game right now? Dude is regularly clocking over 100,000 views of his videos on YouTube.
― Position Position, Thursday, 10 April 2014 12:58 (ten years ago) link
how many of those are accidental clicks though
― j., Thursday, 10 April 2014 14:17 (ten years ago) link
I always thought it'd be funny if someone cut his hands off so that when he gesticulated it would just be these bloody stumps splattering blood on his walls.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Thursday, 10 April 2014 14:26 (ten years ago) link
lol someone sent me a really angry message after i deleted a sentence about tim hecker's virgins being anthony fantano's favorite album of 2013 from that album's wiki page
― dyl, Thursday, 10 April 2014 14:44 (ten years ago) link
A lot of gimmicky earnest bands come from his area of Connecticut.
― Evan, Thursday, 10 April 2014 15:13 (ten years ago) link
dude is terrible, would be nice w/ the bloody stumps for hands... also n1 @ dyl for deleting lame wiki-reference.
seems like the guy just repeats consensus opinions, but he comes off as the worst, maybe because he makes it seem as if all his opinions are "special" or "important" or "very clever" or just cool when obv they're not lol...
keeps showing up in my related videos on youtube, accidentally saw a few of his "reviews".
― niels, Thursday, 10 April 2014 20:22 (ten years ago) link
on a positive note his name reminds me of brian fantana :)
http://www.quotesworthrepeating.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/Brian-Fantana-195x271.jpg
― niels, Thursday, 10 April 2014 20:24 (ten years ago) link
Anyone complaining about Fantano needs to do a YT search for coverkillernation. Holy fucking shit is that guy awful - the ultimate IMN (= Internet Metal Nerd). I think the worst thing about these guys is they're so stilted in their word choice and delivery, like they wrote up everything they're going to say without any thought for how those words would sound leaving someone's mouth as speech.
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Thursday, 10 April 2014 20:33 (ten years ago) link
Animal Collective’s music didn’t just accompany my life, it embodied and sometimes even validated it. Here was a band that not only seemed to think that the bare fact of existence was as fucked-up and confusing as I did, but also managed to replicate that confusion in sound. Biking across campus, I listened to Sung Tongs' alternate-reality smashes at pitiless volumes, staring at my peers, thinking, "Damn, it’s weird to have eyeballs—could I love an insect if insects had eyeballs too?" Naturally, my academic advisors thought I was on the right track.
― ▴▲ ▴TH3CR()$BY$H()W▴▲ ▴ (Adam Bruneau), Thursday, 10 April 2014 21:49 (ten years ago) link
oh god
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Thursday, 10 April 2014 21:50 (ten years ago) link
wait do insects not have eyeballs I am confused
― How dare you tarnish the reputation of Turturro's yodel (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 10 April 2014 21:53 (ten years ago) link
i like that guy. he's nice. and he ilxors, no? i forgive him his youthful indiscretions. even though i despise animal collective.
i also don't think that video guy is that terrible. he's got his thing. he's working it. he can talk coherently. he could be a LOT worse.
― scott seward, Thursday, 10 April 2014 21:57 (ten years ago) link
I apologize for bringing that up. Just these days, psychedelic pseudo talk is insanely grating to me.
― ▴▲ ▴TH3CR()$BY$H()W▴▲ ▴ (Adam Bruneau), Thursday, 10 April 2014 21:58 (ten years ago) link
nah, it's cool. it's public music writing on a music site. i've read other stuff of his that i've enjoyed is all. he's hardly the worst of anything.
― scott seward, Thursday, 10 April 2014 22:03 (ten years ago) link
That AC one is cuet IMO.
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Thursday, 10 April 2014 23:13 (ten years ago) link
I mean, it's kind of bloggy and personal but I think if it were a different band this kind of writing would get an easier pass.
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Thursday, 10 April 2014 23:15 (ten years ago) link
― scott seward, Thursday, April 10, 2014 10:03 PM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
a marked contrast to your reaction to the feeble woman writing about her husband's record collection
this is no better i wonder why you're cool with it
― lex pretend, Thursday, 10 April 2014 23:25 (ten years ago) link
hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
― mattresslessness, Thursday, 10 April 2014 23:30 (ten years ago) link
does this have nearly the high profile the record collector blog did? is npr pimping this dude's writing? is there a dearth of male critics writing about music professionally and then you have maybe one of the more influential and powerful media networks in america promoting this garbage instead? does it play into existing sitcom worthy stereotypes? is it a concept blog? what npr shows does dude work on? which npr affiliate does he work for? is it in new york?
― balls, Thursday, 10 April 2014 23:44 (ten years ago) link
can't believe scott has the audacity to give someone a pass because he likes their other stuff
― ogmor, Thursday, 10 April 2014 23:49 (ten years ago) link
someONE or someMANGUYMALENOTLADYone?
― some dude, Thursday, 10 April 2014 23:59 (ten years ago) link
some DUDE obv
― balls, Friday, 11 April 2014 00:03 (ten years ago) link
"I mean, it's kind of bloggy and personal"
he has his own column. i think he can write whatever he wants. his tastes are hardly my tastes. but i think he's a decent writer. i mean he writes about one of my favorite groups here but then sadly he has to bring up vampire weekend which almost kinda ruined it for me but it's still a decent enough thing:
http://pitchfork.com/features/secondhands/9251-in-the-land-of-the-sophisticated-savages/
― scott seward, Friday, 11 April 2014 00:49 (ten years ago) link
and the record collection thing really was worse than most things to me. it just made me cringe a lot. is she still working her way through the stacks?
― scott seward, Friday, 11 April 2014 00:50 (ten years ago) link
― waterbabies (waterface), Friday, 11 April 2014 01:21 (ten years ago) link
the feeble woman― lex pretend, Thursday, April 10, 2014 7:25 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― lex pretend, Thursday, April 10, 2014 7:25 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Nice. She should really rename her blog that.
― Position Position, Friday, 11 April 2014 11:08 (ten years ago) link
The author of that AnCo article is the best critic writing whose tastes rarely intersect with mine.
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 11 April 2014 11:15 (ten years ago) link
Mike Powell is a great writer imo.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Friday, 11 April 2014 11:18 (ten years ago) link
See his essay-interview last year with Ariel R.
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 11 April 2014 12:10 (ten years ago) link
otm. powell's piece about new age at pfork was really great as well
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Friday, 11 April 2014 13:03 (ten years ago) link
This AP review of Outkast at Coachella was written based on the livestream, which he admits:
http://www.the-review.com/ap%20entertainment/2014/04/12/outkast-reunite-headline-coachella-festival
Basically the lows:
*The Grammy winners performed two dozen tracks -- seen via its livestream on YouTube -- as they celebrated 20 years in music since the release of their 1994 debut, "Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik."
*They crowd seemed energetic -- especially across social media -- but that was hard to hear at times through the livestream.
You think?
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 12 April 2014 12:39 (ten years ago) link
this is the same dude who called nin's "hurt" a Johnny Cash cover. he's one of the absolute worst working right now.
― maura, Saturday, 12 April 2014 14:21 (ten years ago) link
(And his editors are just as culpable.)
― maura, Saturday, 12 April 2014 14:22 (ten years ago) link
i like the _concept_ of reviewing livestreams. i mean its much more likely that i'll watch one than drag my ass to some overcrowded mess of an arena or encampment or whatever to watch some people from a great distance.
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Saturday, 12 April 2014 17:03 (ten years ago) link
I wouldn't confuse watching with reviewing a livestream. Especially if in the latter case you're actually going to claim that the crowd seemed into it, but it was hard to tell, because you weren't, you know, there.
It was really hot in Austin today, or at least that's what the weather channel said.
It was super-crowded at the club, or so my friend told me.
The sound was muffled and terrible, or at least so it seemed on the amateur recording of the show I just downloaded.
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 12 April 2014 17:43 (ten years ago) link
at least half of event coverage on the internet is based on crappy livestreams, which I know isn't the same thing as a live review but undoubtedly does affect things
― katherine, Saturday, 12 April 2014 18:04 (ten years ago) link
i mean it is far more useful to me to suggest if i would enjoy watching a livestream than going to this festival, since there is a possibility i'll watch the livestream, and zero possibility i'd go to that festival
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Saturday, 12 April 2014 18:06 (ten years ago) link
Eh, I hear the crowds on the livestreams suck.
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 12 April 2014 18:08 (ten years ago) link
nb: a large reason i wouldn't go to a festival is precisely the crowd, so
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Saturday, 12 April 2014 18:10 (ten years ago) link
Man, this seems to be a theme:
http://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/music-festivals/6050402/coachella-2014-the-replacements-soldier-through-problematic
So it says only a few hundred watched the band, and then half wandered off, and many were unenthusiastic. Saw somewhere a mention of other low turnouts for "heritage" acts like Bryan Ferry or Neko Case (?). I want to see a piece about what acts people actually were excited to see, unless that is too hard to discern from the stream.
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 12 April 2014 18:18 (ten years ago) link
coachella is one of those fests that sells out before the lineup is announced, so for people to not be into the bands isn't too surprising. festivals of its ilk have "music" maybe eighth or ninth on its list of priorities, just under sunscreen vendors and ahead of mist tents
― maura, Sunday, 13 April 2014 12:57 (ten years ago) link
Is this officially the beginning of the Coachella backlash?
― austinato (Austin), Sunday, 13 April 2014 14:14 (ten years ago) link
"the beginning"
― Bryan Fairy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 13 April 2014 14:23 (ten years ago) link
God let's hope so
― Now I Am Become Dracula (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Sunday, 13 April 2014 14:33 (ten years ago) link
Ban festivals
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Sunday, 13 April 2014 14:41 (ten years ago) link
God let's hope so― Now I Am Become Dracula (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Sunday, April 13, 2014 9:33 AM (6 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Guess who's not being asked back to the ESPN U College FolkZone Sponsored by Mountain Dew Code Red?
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Sunday, 13 April 2014 20:52 (ten years ago) link
I want to see a piece about what acts people actually were excited to see, unless that is too hard to discern from the stream.
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, April 12, 2014 6:18 PM (
During the Replacements set it appears folks preferred Girl Talk and the dance music tent
from the Billboard article Josh linked
As the set wore on, more crowd members wandered away from the stage, perhaps to catch Girl Talk on the main stage or get ready for Zedd's massively packed performance in the Sahara Tent.
― curmudgeon, Monday, 14 April 2014 13:38 (ten years ago) link
girl talk is one of those acts that are massive among the festivalgoer demographic, to everyone (or maybe just me)'s continual surprise
― katherine, Monday, 14 April 2014 13:52 (ten years ago) link
you may be too young for the replacements, but you are never too old for fun.
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 14 April 2014 13:59 (ten years ago) link
i am surprised girl talk is still popular
― dyl, Monday, 14 April 2014 14:36 (ten years ago) link
dancing is still popular
― Mayor Manuel (La Lechera), Monday, 14 April 2014 15:01 (ten years ago) link
(although dancing to the replacements is fun too, i bet most of the crowd wouldn't be quite as buoyant as at the girl talk tent. )
― Mayor Manuel (La Lechera), Monday, 14 April 2014 15:02 (ten years ago) link
i can't believe someone who's modus operandi is literally toying with the most popular songs at the moment is still popular, why won't these kids do the right thing and watch a 54-year-old man ironically cover kiss?
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 14 April 2014 15:05 (ten years ago) link
? They haven't covered Kiss in years, idiot
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 14 April 2014 15:08 (ten years ago) link
They haven't done anything in years
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 14 April 2014 15:09 (ten years ago) link
nice comeback!
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 14 April 2014 15:09 (ten years ago) link
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, April 14, 2014 11:09 AM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
they reunited. reuniting is a thing right
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Monday, 14 April 2014 15:17 (ten years ago) link
The important thing to remember here is that The Replacements have always been super boring.
― Wahaca Flocka Flame (DJP), Monday, 14 April 2014 16:05 (ten years ago) link
I've not heard them but ppl call them "the mats" right? That's lame
― forum enthusiast (wins), Monday, 14 April 2014 16:11 (ten years ago) link
http://www.salon.com/2013/10/17/keep_the_replacements_out_of_the_rock_hall/
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Monday, 14 April 2014 16:13 (ten years ago) link
the mats is short for the placemats.
you put food on placemats.
thats not lame
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Monday, 14 April 2014 16:14 (ten years ago) link
Yeah I figured that was what it stood for. Lame
― forum enthusiast (wins), Monday, 14 April 2014 16:26 (ten years ago) link
what else do you put food on? tables? c'mon now!
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Monday, 14 April 2014 16:27 (ten years ago) link
I like food and putting it on stuff and I'm not saying I could come up with a better wacky nickname for this band the replacements, I'm just saying: lame
― forum enthusiast (wins), Monday, 14 April 2014 16:30 (ten years ago) link
get over it
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 14 April 2014 16:30 (ten years ago) link
Never
― forum enthusiast (wins), Monday, 14 April 2014 16:32 (ten years ago) link
The continuing success of Girl Talk is pretty baffling to me. Is Kid808 still really big too?
― ▴▲ ▴TH3CR()$BY$H()W▴▲ ▴ (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 14 April 2014 16:33 (ten years ago) link
tbf girl talk sucks ass
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Monday, 14 April 2014 16:40 (ten years ago) link
I have a lot of friends who love girl talk but personally idgi. I wanted to like him.
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Monday, 14 April 2014 16:45 (ten years ago) link
Girl Talk basically just does the DJ Z-Trip thing, right? Does it go any deeper than that? Fun enough stuff. I don't know if I would check out him or Zedd though. Definitely not the Replacements.
― take a piece of mr. baxter's hand (how's life), Monday, 14 April 2014 16:49 (ten years ago) link
festivals of its ilk have "music" maybe eighth or ninth on its list of priorities, just under sunscreen vendors and ahead of mist tents
^^^this
― How dare you tarnish the reputation of Turturro's yodel (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 14 April 2014 16:52 (ten years ago) link
Girl Talk is horrible
― How dare you tarnish the reputation of Turturro's yodel (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 14 April 2014 16:53 (ten years ago) link
Yes
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 14 April 2014 16:55 (ten years ago) link
z trip >>>>
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Monday, 14 April 2014 16:57 (ten years ago) link
legendary Minneapolis post-punk collective
Are the Replacements post-punk or a collective?
― how's life, Monday, 14 April 2014 16:58 (ten years ago) link
maybe they should be replaced by a good band like staind
― markers, Monday, 14 April 2014 16:59 (ten years ago) link
they usually all chipped in for beer, is that a collective?
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 14 April 2014 17:36 (ten years ago) link
i'm guessing you mean kid606 and not so much i guess?girl talk live is a bit baffling; he sorta has a party with a bunch of audience members on the stage with balloons and shit and then there are rings of subparties into the crowd and everyone else holds up their phones and tapes the entire proceeding? i wish that sort of thing was exciting to me.
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Monday, 14 April 2014 18:11 (ten years ago) link
the success of this musician who routinely takes the most popular music in the world and then throws a big dance party with it is totally baffling
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 14 April 2014 19:08 (ten years ago) link
Ugh, I fucking hate girl talk. Are they really even still um like a thing anymore?
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Monday, 14 April 2014 19:10 (ten years ago) link
He's not even a girl!
― how's life, Monday, 14 April 2014 19:13 (ten years ago) link
It doesn't matter. It's popular as long as popular songs remain popular.
― Evan, Monday, 14 April 2014 19:14 (ten years ago) link
and dancing remains popular as well
― Mayor Manuel (La Lechera), Monday, 14 April 2014 19:23 (ten years ago) link
As long as girls and talking remain popular.
― how's life, Monday, 14 April 2014 19:28 (ten years ago) link
i think it's fair to ponder the enduring popularity of a mash-up act considering the decline of mash-ups as an area of interest outside of that one act's career
― some dude, Monday, 14 April 2014 19:50 (ten years ago) link
I don't know if the crowds into Girl Talk are the kind of people that can be concerned with how hip the concept of mash-ups are, the mash-ups will be popular (in festival type settings) as long as the mashed up songs remain current.
― Evan, Monday, 14 April 2014 19:56 (ten years ago) link
the success of this musician who routinely takes the most popular music in the world and then throws a big dance party with it is totally baffling― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, April 14, 2014 7:08 PM (48 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Monday, 14 April 2014 20:00 (ten years ago) link
i've seen his show three times and each was worse and more eyeroll-inducing than the previous. and yes i am aware that people still like dancing and listening to top 40 radio (or even recurrent hits, which is what comprises the majority of gt's work)
― dyl, Monday, 14 April 2014 20:05 (ten years ago) link
So what is everyone struggling with then?
― Evan, Monday, 14 April 2014 20:09 (ten years ago) link
Again, the crowd he is attracting aren't analyzing the act in the slightest they're just all "OMFG I LOVE THIS SONG TOO"
― Evan, Monday, 14 April 2014 20:13 (ten years ago) link
Almost like what a DJ does.
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 14 April 2014 20:30 (ten years ago) link
yeah but a DJ is just like peanut butter, or jelly. Girl Talk mixed the peanut butter and the jelly in the same proprietary jar.
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Monday, 14 April 2014 20:31 (ten years ago) link
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, April 14, 2014 4:30 PM (8 seconds ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-l4nq-K82Kqo/Tz5OLnwW8hI/AAAAAAAAAyg/vVZ3SaAyIJc/s1600/wee-bey-gif.gif
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 14 April 2014 20:32 (ten years ago) link
bafflement is at his continued longevity as a top-tier artist and general amazement that his kinda not really somewhat unique schtick has managed so long, mostly untouched and unchanged, when (fer instance) andrew wk is third stage if that these days
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Monday, 14 April 2014 20:33 (ten years ago) link
this link is failing at the moment but i thought ilx knew this take as definitive?
http://www.vulture.com/2010/11/girl_talk_americas_coolest_wed.html
11/18/2010 at 2:45 PM
Girl Talk: America’s Coolest Wedding D.J.
By Nitsuh Abebe
― goole, Monday, 14 April 2014 20:34 (ten years ago) link
link wouldn't work for me
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Monday, 14 April 2014 20:36 (ten years ago) link
oh you kind of said that
it's... otm
XP YES I KNOW
― goole, Monday, 14 April 2014 20:36 (ten years ago) link
But Americans don’t dance to dance music — we party to rock and hip-hop. [...] And the dynamic of his mixes isn’t the slow, sweaty rise and fall of a club — it’s the amped-up blur of a house party. All Day represents countless hours of tricky editing, but Gillis can give it away for free, because his real product is the crazed mobile house party of his live show — and a lot of Americans will take that over a good D.J. any day. For better or worse, Girl Talk is built for this country in a way none of its predecessors were.
― goole, Monday, 14 April 2014 20:37 (ten years ago) link
if the url is any indication i can't argue
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Monday, 14 April 2014 20:37 (ten years ago) link
that link doesnt work
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 14 April 2014 20:37 (ten years ago) link
his kinda not really somewhat unique schtick
I think he has a skillset, musical ability, conceptual framework and links to both plunderphonic and DJ culture that the 50,000 LOOK IT IS NEUTRAL MILK HOTEL AND NAS NASTRAL MILK HOTELLMATIC HAR HAR IN THE AEROPLANE OVER THE OOCHIE WACHIE *jizzes on belly* mash-up artists have lacked
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 14 April 2014 20:38 (ten years ago) link
as a child of the bloggy mashup culture i agree with that but the "wedding party" dynamic is anathema to me
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Monday, 14 April 2014 20:40 (ten years ago) link
*jizzes on belly*
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 14 April 2014 20:43 (ten years ago) link
nb: i did not agree with *jizzes on belly*
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Monday, 14 April 2014 20:46 (ten years ago) link
http://www.tattoostime.com/images/17/jesus-tattoo-on-chest-belly.jpgJesus on belly.
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 14 April 2014 20:47 (ten years ago) link
Milk out my nastralls
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Monday, 14 April 2014 20:49 (ten years ago) link
@ whiney's post
this is some all-american stuff right here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ySZHeosB0rI
― scott seward, Monday, 14 April 2014 20:53 (ten years ago) link
its the american version of that verve video.
― scott seward, Monday, 14 April 2014 20:54 (ten years ago) link
ILX's Girl Talk hatred is one of the most misguided things ever on this site. "Only WE can be music geeks! Everyone's OTAKU now! Ugh!" Seriously reeks of Star Wars fans complaining about chewbacca tea cozies or something
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 14 April 2014 21:15 (ten years ago) link
i'm actually surprised you're not hating on him
― markers, Monday, 14 April 2014 21:17 (ten years ago) link
i've always rode for Girl Talk
this is just the aftertaste of the goon-culture days when everyone besides me and xhuxk was too shook to have any opinion on rap different than ethan's at risk of being called a herb or a kid-fucker
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 14 April 2014 21:17 (ten years ago) link
herbs...kid fuckers..curbs...herb fuckers!herb fuckers on the bench!/arlo guthrie
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Monday, 14 April 2014 21:24 (ten years ago) link
http://www.sonofnostalgiazone.com/prodimages/InsideBaseball03xx.jpg
― waterbabies (waterface), Monday, 14 April 2014 21:25 (ten years ago) link
*rolls eyes, dies*
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Monday, 14 April 2014 21:28 (ten years ago) link
my dislike of girltalk came more from a vahid/"dahnce" POV than whatever ethan-phobic projection yr going on abt
chewbacca tea cozies
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 14 April 2014 21:28 (ten years ago) link
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, April 14, 2014 5:15 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, April 14, 2014 5:17 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
You are starting to overheat. I just don't like girl talk.
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Monday, 14 April 2014 21:30 (ten years ago) link
goon-culture days when everyone besides me and xhuxk was too shook to have any opinion on rap different than ethan's
dude fuck you
― How dare you tarnish the reputation of Turturro's yodel (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 14 April 2014 21:30 (ten years ago) link
it's funny how that post is like the mirror image of what he's accusing *the entire rest of ILM* of doing
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Monday, 14 April 2014 21:31 (ten years ago) link
i understand why ilx doesn't like girl talk but my guess is that it boils more down to politics than snobbery. white suburban dude remixing popular radio for hipster listeners is never going to get broad acceptance here. it is just close enough to actual pop music to feel uncanny
― Mordy , Monday, 14 April 2014 21:38 (ten years ago) link
i just can't believe girl talk doesn't play his own instruments and write his own songs. can't we all agree that's what's really wrong with music nowadays?
― smhphony orchestra (crüt), Monday, 14 April 2014 21:39 (ten years ago) link
ok, in retrospect, that ethan post was cray on my part hahaha
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 14 April 2014 21:39 (ten years ago) link
it is just close enough to actual pop music to feel uncanny
I think there is something to this
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Monday, 14 April 2014 21:57 (ten years ago) link
i haven't heard much girl talk stuff but i know i didn't hate it. it felt more rap-oriented or hip-hop than indie/hipster stuff usually does. i can totally believe people lose their shit to it live. i mean i am an olde-tyme sampling/remix/megamix/edit fan, and i think he's got something. dunno if i could listen to a whole album of it, but in the 80's he might have been a cool freestyle edit/remix dude. maybe. i wouldn't mind hearing some of his good rap remixes. he must have some. or production for other people like that freeway thing.
― scott seward, Monday, 14 April 2014 22:21 (ten years ago) link
i mostly just remember the girl talk black sabbath thing and i was into that. but then i loved rick rubin's we will rock you remix, so, you know...
― scott seward, Monday, 14 April 2014 22:22 (ten years ago) link
yeah whiney i know you didn't start posting til like 2005 or whatever but i can assure you ethan was not the hip-hop consensus in early days. i liked that first really big girl talk mix (the one w/ the neutral milk hotel mashup), i kinda enjoyed it as similar to soulwax mixes etc only coming from an american perspective so there was this rooting in hip-hop and altrock and classic rock and amerindie instead of like betty boo and gary numan, reminded me of danger mouse's parties in the late 90s (he'd always get the crowd going to 'holland 1945' also). felt a little hilarious and really? to see ppl putting it on their year end lists but it was a good workout mix. the later ones didn't do as much for me and i was kinda surprised ppl were still enthusiastic about the guy, like whiney treating him like he's an unparalleled dj god is kinda amazing, but i don't doubt this guy could get a crowd ecstatic, as long as he didn't play any outkast i guess.
― balls, Monday, 14 April 2014 22:32 (ten years ago) link
i was just thinking of the mid-2005 days when ethan and strongo were dogpiling on ol' Girl Talk
I mean, the thing I loved about him was that he came from the arty, quasi-political Negativland/John Oswald world of plunderphonics and somehow made it commercially viable. He's not some dude just slapping Jeezy YYYYEEEAAAHSSSS on Jimmy Eat World songs.
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 14 April 2014 22:43 (ten years ago) link
yeah i've heard so many shittier versions of what he does just from schmucks around town (which must mean there's hundreds of these guys in america alone) and these guys never hesitate to stop the party or the flow of what they're doing regardless of whether ppl are enjoying it to do some lazy 'look at me, i downloaded this app on my ipad!' trick or some clever drop, though really i'm talking more five to eight years ago, most of those guys are doing straight brostep now, i guess due to the decline of hip-hop w/ white millenials.
― balls, Monday, 14 April 2014 22:52 (ten years ago) link
it's not that I'm baffled that girl talk is popular, more that I forget they exist roughly every other year
― katherine, Monday, 14 April 2014 23:56 (ten years ago) link
girls keep talking, girls always...work it out
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 14 April 2014 23:59 (ten years ago) link
MUSIC CRITCS ARE THE ART OF PRETEND FORGETFULLNESS
― balls, Monday, 14 April 2014 23:59 (ten years ago) link
oh for fuck's sake
― katherine, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 00:06 (ten years ago) link
apologies for not properly following the writing guidelines from a 10-year-old thread
― katherine, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 00:08 (ten years ago) link
o but you did!
― balls, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 00:11 (ten years ago) link
don't sweat it -- you're in good company.
(ironically i forgot about that thread)
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 00:12 (ten years ago) link
it's just a funny affectation, everybody does it
― balls, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 00:42 (ten years ago) link
i did mit mystery hunt this year and one of the puzzles was based off girl talk's discography:
http://web.mit.edu/puzzle/www/2014/puzzle/monster_potatoes/
― maura, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 00:50 (ten years ago) link
oh and here's the solution:http://web.mit.edu/puzzle/www/2014/puzzle-solution/monster_potatoes/
― maura, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 00:52 (ten years ago) link
and guess who figured out the conceit of the puzzle
that's right
freelance hellraiser?
― balls, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 01:22 (ten years ago) link
Whiney otm
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 02:05 (ten years ago) link
I saw Girl Talk play to 120 ppl above a pub in 2006, it was great
would not go anywhere near the 1600-cap theatre shows he's played since
check my awesome two-bladed snobbishness!
― brock out with your cock out (sic), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 02:05 (ten years ago) link
saw Girl Talk play to 120 ppl above a pub in 2006, it was great
yet how many of these attendees went on to form bands?
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 02:21 (ten years ago) link
you don't start a band after seeing Girl Talk, you put you iPod in shuffle mode and find yourself unable to stop skipping to the next track every 30 seconds
― posi riot (some dude), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 02:25 (ten years ago) link
I had no idea ILM hated Girl Talk and kinda wish this thread gave me a better idea of why, tbh. Scott otm too, I'm still loving his ep w Freeeway a lot so far as him doing hiphop stuff goes
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 02:27 (ten years ago) link
i just lump him in with the likes of matt & kim at this point, which is probably more the fault of me seeing him at bamboozle '09 than anything else
― maura, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 02:28 (ten years ago) link
haha i have no idea what matt and kim sound like but had this vague assumption in my head that you have just completely overturned
― balls, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 03:08 (ten years ago) link
and yeah echoing girl talk's kinda lineage in plunderphonics if you listen to the mix before night ripper you get more of a sense of that. as much eye rolling and tiresomeness eventually (well, pretty quickly i guess actually) came out of that mashup moment there's still alot there i remember fondly. also, for ppl who don't know, jason forrest aka donna summer became some kind of motivational sales coach guy, his motivational album (?) is on spotify. this, sadly, isn't but is still awesome - http://grooveshark.com/#!/search/song?q=Jason+Forrest+10+Amazing+Years
― balls, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 03:17 (ten years ago) link
wait wait wait that's not really the same jason forrest is it?! the motivational guy???
― Evan, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 03:18 (ten years ago) link
oh i mean girl talk and matt & kim at this point serve the 'festival music' function of being made for partying/glowsticking/dancing along with. girl talk just has more recognizable hooks than his compadres (although the time i saw axwell and he dropped songs by rhcp, the fray, and coldplay into his set probably dovetails with gt's sustaining appeal).
actually this (terrible) piece on outkast's place in the edm-heavy festival land kind of sums up gt's appeal at this point
http://edm.com/blog/why-its-EDMs-fault-Outkast-flopped-coachella-2014
― maura, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 03:20 (ten years ago) link
haha i actually have no idea - i've looked at pics of both and been like 'maaaybe?', i might have prosopagnosia though, i have my doubts about my temporal lobes.
― balls, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 03:26 (ten years ago) link
I did the same thing.
https://scontent-b-lga.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-frc3/t1.0-9/1534276_697687620264711_26413011_n.jpghttp://www.viceland.com/blogs/nl/files/2010/01/j_forrest_05_cut_web.jpg
aaargh I need answers
― Evan, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 03:52 (ten years ago) link
https://scontent-a-lga.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-frc3/t1.0-9/1656012_715049978528475_1406772524_n.jpghttps://encrypted-tbn3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTPiMTtobWVE9cN7stmCTfYR78VH9f0Z3xUfugyqZXo9YMlvtcL
― Evan, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 03:55 (ten years ago) link
Yes, I'm absolutely trying to kill the thread.
― Evan, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 03:56 (ten years ago) link
Maura that piece makes a lot of sense, unpleasantly written tho it may be, think hipster crowds've been heading in this direction since early 00s/electroclash rly
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 04:09 (ten years ago) link
Donna summer is fuckin awesome btw
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 06:21 (ten years ago) link
Oh yeah that doesn't seem to be the same guy (Donna Summer/motivational speaker), too bad
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 06:25 (ten years ago) link
Fwiw i don't hate Girl Talk, it's just kind of amazing. I saw him around a decade and the crowd for the show was really small and not really dancing or even really all that into it, just there because he was Girl Talk and he had some buzz. And yeah at the time it felt like last gasps from electroclash not the start of some big-name festival guy. I mean, if I knew how music worked, maybe I would be in Girl Talk's place.
― ▴▲ ▴TH3CR()$BY$H()W▴▲ ▴ (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 15:05 (ten years ago) link
I don't listen to Girl Talk but I get it. Also, in interviews Gillis is surprisingly thoughtful about the process.
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 15:13 (ten years ago) link
dude was a doctor of some sort doing this shit on the weekend if i remember correctlyand yes, I can't help but appreciate his no samples cleared freebie mixes distributed on the internet back when that was a fairly novel conceit. plus i liked night ripper as much as the next kid with a limewire accountbut much like no one coulda assumed cee-lo would be the darling of the reality show set, I don't remember anyone saying "this girl talk guy, he's a definite draw on the festival circuit for the next ten years, that's bankable money there"
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 15:14 (ten years ago) link
Not everyone's as abreast of the musical zeitgeist as your average ILMer, not least festival audiences. That's not meant to be snobby, in fact I'm often surprised at how quickly Ilxors are ready to reject a style as being old hat when to the rest of the world it's only just kicking off. Thinking about dubstep -> EDM; minimal techno -> deep house etc... If the mashup scene feels a bit ten-years ago to us, it's bound to appeal to a broad range of people who just want to dance around to pop songs in a tent.
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 15:15 (ten years ago) link
Hey, I never would have guessed the guy behind the low hanging fruit that was The Grey Album would quickly go on to be a principal collaborator with Cee-Lo, the dude from the Shins, Beck, U2, Black Keys, Damon Albarn and others.
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 15:19 (ten years ago) link
in a world where this guy i've never heard of is worth 42 mil anything is possible:
http://www.celebritynetworth.com/richest-celebrities/richest-djs/judge-jules-net-worth/
― scott seward, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 15:26 (ten years ago) link
I've never heard or heard of Judge Jules, but I suspect I would rather listen to Girl Talk.
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 15:27 (ten years ago) link
UK trance/Ibiza stalwart. NB. not a qualified judge.
― Angkor Waht (Neil S), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 15:35 (ten years ago) link
Judge Jules is still a going concern eh? That's a blast from 1999.
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 15:35 (ten years ago) link
judge jules >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> girl talk
― lex pretend, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 15:36 (ten years ago) link
perpetually dumb. should have called it How Big Of A Jerk Are You?
http://www.buzzfeed.com/perpetua/how-much-of-a-music-nerd-are-you
― scott seward, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 16:53 (ten years ago) link
not music writing really...just took over my facebook...
― scott seward, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 16:54 (ten years ago) link
should have called it How Big Of A Jerk Are You
the title and URL already mix'n'matches 'nerd' and 'snob' so maybe they already do on the front page or something
― From Tha Crouuuch To Da Palacios (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 16:59 (ten years ago) link
just say no to quizzes
― maura, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 17:05 (ten years ago) link
ugh I couldn't even get through five tickboxes of that, def should just be called "are you a dick"
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 17:06 (ten years ago) link
And fuck all of these buzzfeed quizzes.
Failure to support our clickbait, page view, slideshow economy could spell disaster for the recovery.
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 17:08 (ten years ago) link
http://i.lv3.hbo.com/assets/images/series/enlightened/episodes/season-01/10/burn-it-down-1024.jpg
― maura, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 17:10 (ten years ago) link
that guy man
― waterbabies (waterface), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 17:13 (ten years ago) link
Jesus http://www.npr.org/blogs/therecord/2014/04/15/301440765/why-we-fight-about-pop-music?utm_source=facebook.com&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=npr&utm_term=nprnews&utm_content=20140415#partthree
― waterbabies (waterface), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 17:29 (ten years ago) link
how is that bad
― katherine, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 17:45 (ten years ago) link
where do i start
― waterbabies (waterface), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 17:54 (ten years ago) link
ann powers and carl zoilus are two of the best pop critics working
― katherine, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:06 (ten years ago) link
i just scanned that but it read pretty fucking great actually
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:13 (ten years ago) link
just because they are the best dont make that article good
― waterbabies (waterface), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:14 (ten years ago) link
We still have this spectacle of people (mostly straight white men of a certain age) angry that we treat music made with drum machines, or for dance floors, or with rapping (unless it's "political"), or by Beyoncé with the same respect and depth of thought we'd devote to anthems sung by bands of guys with guitars
Strawman City
― waterbabies (waterface), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:15 (ten years ago) link
brb getting popcorn
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:16 (ten years ago) link
stale popcorn
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:18 (ten years ago) link
if you look at the comments on this or any similar article it'll quickly become clear it isn't a straw man at all
― katherine, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:19 (ten years ago) link
Plus, look at that 60 Minutes/Vanity Fair poll mentioned. The Washington Post comment board is often filled with such comments in regards to certain music articles.
― curmudgeon, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:23 (ten years ago) link
Worst comments thread I've read, ever :(
― poopsites attract (flamboyant goon tie included), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:25 (ten years ago) link
oh yeah comments on a news article, like i'm gonna read those and learn something. not.
― waterbabies (waterface), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:25 (ten years ago) link
online comments are such bs
kinda miss the days when not every fuckin' thing on the internet was followed by line after line of hateful garbage
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:27 (ten years ago) link
website guest books > comments sections
― Sufjan Cougar Mellencamp (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:29 (ten years ago) link
thank you for visiting my website. please sign my guestbook.
― Sufjan Cougar Mellencamp (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:31 (ten years ago) link
so cordial
The worst passage Wilson writes isn't the "strawmanning" thing, but the part where he weirdly opens part 4 by saying we shouldn't use "poptimism" basically because it sounds lame, but we should still use "rockism."
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:38 (ten years ago) link
otherwise katherine otm, this piece has no business being in this thread. Ann Powers being thoughtful and excellent as always
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:39 (ten years ago) link
1. Don't insist that pop be hip. A good chunk of mainstream music gains inspiration from more cutting-edge stuff — always has. (Remember when The Monkees went psychedelic?) But plenty of it plays by other rules: It could be rooted in Christian contemporary music, emo, or soft rock. That doesn't make it less meaningful; it just takes work to understand these other legacies. It's cool if you find John Legend corny, but respect that for millions his grounding in group harmony singing and Bacharach balladry signals sophistication. Respect values other than your own.
2. Understand that selling records is the point. The major players in creating mainstream pop don't care about integrity, in the restrictive sense. They're collaborators, and they're interested in making money. So yes, Dr. Luke encourages his ingénue protégés to trade in feminine stereotypes (sometimes in highly questionable ways), and Avicii goes for obvious beats. Great pop sneaks in subtleties to enrich and even sometimes undermine the obvious elements that make a song pop out of the radio. Appreciating that requires an adjustment of one's aesthetics. Recognize the value in familiarity and big gestures.
3. Acknowledge that the assembly line is a cornerstone of pop. Since the days of Tin Pan Alley, pop's spirit has been one of energizing collaboration and seat-by-the-pants innovation. There's little room in this game for purist notions of artistic integrity. "We Can't Stop" has seven writers and was originally intended for Rihanna. What's interesting about the song is how it transformed in the process of becoming Miley Cyrus's signature. Know the limits of this kind of production while also noticing where the soul can slip in.
4. Physically connect with the mainstream, but don't presume you know what its different corners are all about. Lindsay Zoladz recently wrote on her Tumblr about attending a Miley concert and realizing that — at least sometimes — she wanted to write for the Bangerz, Miley's devotees, not for her fellow Pitchfork nerds. I applaud her insistence that music obsessives need to look outside the confines of their own tribe and learn from non-fetishists. But the desire to identify can sometimes obscure that "otherness" you mention, even for poptimists. As enriching as it is to feel good in a crowd of strangers, it's equally useful to go where things are less comfortable. For every charming fan you might meet at a non-hipster show, there's a drunk one, and one whose political views are really different than your own, and one who (if you go see Kirk Franklin or Mary J. Blige) might ask you to pray with them. As you've said, encountering the other can be difficult — for poptimists too. It should be difficult. Insight comes from wrestling with the awkwardness.
5. Go beyond Beyonce. I think we all need to acknowledge that King Bey is not your average diva-bear, and that putting her on a best-list is not an adventurous move. Assignment for all poptimists: have an opinion about the Jason DeRulo album that drops today.
I've rambled on with my unsolicited advice, and now there's no room to talk about rock! I hope we can take that up in the next round. One thought: in his excellent feature on EMA — whose album The Future's Void is one of my 2014 faves — Sasha Frere-Jones almost calls her music rock, but instead says it's a "hairy, occasionally digital beast." I like that phrase. It sounds like what Jimi Hendrix would play now. In other words, to trace where rock went, we have to agree on what it is. And that isn't easy.
Enlighten me,
AKP
I think this is good, but at the same time I feel a kind of paradox in it, in that it prescribes a very detached and above-it-all style of engagement with music that is almost exclusively going to be the domain of critics, and hence detached from the way most people, even "music fans", engage with music. It also doesn't really leave room for an ideological position against pretty much anything at all in music, which in turn just leaves you with voracious consumerism as the default ideology.
But yeah, it's certainly not "worst music writing" it's quite good -- both of them are quite good.
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:39 (ten years ago) link
hot garbage
"Wrestling with the awkwardness" and respecting non-hip values brings me back to another few thoughts about shame, music and identity. Perhaps it's because music as an art form is so fundamentally abstract — a vibration in the air that produces a sound in the brain, rising almost like a thought — that it makes us feel so tentative and unsure about its status and its meanings. So it gets surrounded with visible signs like fashion and photographs, ranked by charts every week and annual lists, straining to make a form so ineffably mobile to hold still.
― waterbabies (waterface), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:40 (ten years ago) link
you guys can say something is "good" but that doesn't make it good
― waterbabies (waterface), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:41 (ten years ago) link
are you in character right now or what
― goole, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:42 (ten years ago) link
oh no music makes me tentative and unsure
*rubs hands together, sobs*
― waterbabies (waterface), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:43 (ten years ago) link
waterface making us all realize the emperor has no clothes
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:44 (ten years ago) link
*takes off his bathrobe*
― waterbabies (waterface), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:45 (ten years ago) link
thinking "rockism" is a valid concept to discuss doesn't instantly validate "poptimism" any more than "racism" validates the idea of "reverse racism"
i always thought of 'poptimism' as a tongue-in-cheek ILM/freaky trigger joke and find it mildly horrifying to see that become the official branded term for not being rockist or w/e
― posi riot (some dude), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:45 (ten years ago) link
i find the popism/rockism debate kind of stifling and restrictive so i have no stakes in that article, but waterface you are basically offering no argument besides saying "this sucks." i'm guilty of doing that often enough but i just wanted to point that out.
― marcos, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:48 (ten years ago) link
If music makes people tentative and unsure in it's meanings, b/c it's so abstract, maybe we should spend less time trying to understand what it all means through long boring articles and more time enjoying it. charts and lists trying to "make" music hold still is totally a silly and stupid concept. you're not making it hold still by ranking your favorite albums.
― waterbabies (waterface), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:51 (ten years ago) link
Well, no, he took off his bathrobe.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:51 (ten years ago) link
read the wilson/powers convo now, it's really good. def not just rehashing the r*ckism debate but actively trying to go beyond it a bit.
― lex pretend, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:51 (ten years ago) link
^^i'm talking about the last quote I pulled
also the concept of feeling shame for liking something is something i cannot deal with. like what you like.
― waterbabies (waterface), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:52 (ten years ago) link
Perhaps it's because music as an art form is so fundamentally abstract — a vibration in the air that produces a sound in the brain, rising almost like a thought...
this strikes me as maybe the most upside down idea ever. the author thinks music is more abstract than visual art? has he been to a live show? in hearing music, you sense the collision of particles with mass. it's like the artist is throwing shit at you. this is more abstract than looking at a sculpture?
― Sufjan Cougar Mellencamp (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:52 (ten years ago) link
also telling that as tired as we find that debate, how many official texts do we even have on it? let's talk about love and that sanneh essay and, less explicitly, tom ewing's columns. that's pretty much it?
― lex pretend, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:52 (ten years ago) link
1,000,000,000,000,000 ILM threads
― marcos, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:55 (ten years ago) link
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:57 (ten years ago) link
Hermann von Helmholtz was otm in "On the Sensations of Tone as a Physiological Basis for the Theory of Music" when he wrote it in the 19th century.
― Sufjan Cougar Mellencamp (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 18:59 (ten years ago) link
how many official texts do we even have on it?official texts? what are you, a rockist?
― marcos, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:02 (ten years ago) link
the poptimist manifesto by marx and engels
― posi riot (some dude), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:10 (ten years ago) link
the 'journo chat' format, gross
― j., Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:20 (ten years ago) link
― posi riot (some dude), Tuesday, April 15, 2014 1:45 PM (29 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
yeah back when these things were being hashed out it seemed to be one variety of non/anti-rockism, alongside, idk, dissensus, reynolds, marcello's blog, k-punk (but he wrote more about politics and theory eventually), the voice music page in toto. and none of them got along!
wow that's a pretty anglo list isn't it.
― goole, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:25 (ten years ago) link
to say nothing of the huge range of rap crit and the writers that came out of that
― goole, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:28 (ten years ago) link
I can't even with discussions of "rockism" and "popism" in 2014...
Pretty much every critic under 35 just sees pop and rock as two acceptable types of music that you get emails in your inbox about and then turn into content for traffic. The identity politics stuff about "ROCK BANDS PLAYING REAL ROCK MUSIC" is for comment section people and olds. No one gives a fuck about this crap anymore
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:35 (ten years ago) link
editors who are aiming for the conflict=pageviews thing dohow quickly you forget young skywalker
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:36 (ten years ago) link
"anymore"
― markers, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:37 (ten years ago) link
like, i saw maura's NYT is fulla shit article passed around a lot in the past week or so and, while it's a well written piece, i think the main draw for virality there is FITE
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:37 (ten years ago) link
I'm back from lunch. What'd I miss? Problem solved?
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:37 (ten years ago) link
yeah, forks, nyt really scoring a slam dunk by riling up the 100 people in the rock critic jerk. deft use of noisey's editorial strategy. david carr is rap game mr burns wringing his hands and saying excellent that he got a katherine st asaph tumblr post and a @maura twitter rant, the sound of cash registers ricocheting in the background
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:39 (ten years ago) link
its so disheartening to see people even READING, let alone ENGAGING with the NYT article. It's a 10-year-old argument about a thing that doesn't even exist w/r/t all the working critics who know how to use the internet, i.e., the ones who will still have a job in 5 years
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:40 (ten years ago) link
Going back to that strawmanning thing, I understand the general sentiment Wilson's expressing here:
"We still have this spectacle of people (mostly straight white men of a certain age) angry that we treat music made with drum machines, or for dance floors, or with rapping (unless it's 'political'), or by Beyoncé with the same respect and depth of thought we'd devote to anthems sung by bands of guys with guitars.")
But I think that painting with such a broad brush doesn't do his argument any favors rhetorically, and actually overlooks a specific facet of "rockism." Which is this: rockist critics ALWAYS had time for a handful of R&B/pop/hip-hop artists, whether it was Motown in the late 60s or Timbaland in the late 90s. But that didn't mean that these genres or the artists who worked in them were getting anywhere near the critical analysis in mainstream publications that they deserved.
But when Wilson or whoever describes rockist types as only liking rock music, it makes it super-easy for people like Austerlitz to counter with, "Here's a list of dance-floor friendly things I'm on the record as liking!"
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:42 (ten years ago) link
i haven't thought this through in detail, but is the insipid thing in that piece not just that it takes up the ethical aspect of the rockism/poptimism/etc. debates in the same post-neoliberal-web-academic-privilege-questioning framework that everything (esp. at npr) is taken up into now? which is tiresome in connection with rockism/poptimism because it fritters away the artistic/aesthetic core of those ideas and supposes that they're really just coded moral postures that need a good dose of genteel thoughtfulness to be suitably broadened, to dissipate the conflicts about them.
i feel like there's an almost compulsive re-framing going on throughout too.
― j., Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:42 (ten years ago) link
there'll be jobs in five years?
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:44 (ten years ago) link
mostly making quizzes about what grimes songs are you
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:44 (ten years ago) link
or how rockist you are
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:45 (ten years ago) link
or, you know, aggregating things
― j., Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:45 (ten years ago) link
Also, from upthread and otm:
He doesn't seem to consider the methodology aspect. You can have a rockist reading of Beyonce or a poptimist reading of the Strokes. To SA, poptimism = liking mainstream pop.― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Monday, April 7, 2014 1:42 PM (1 week ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Monday, April 7, 2014 1:42 PM (1 week ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:48 (ten years ago) link
How Rockist are you? quiz would get smoe clicks. Somebody oughta get on that.
― brio, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:48 (ten years ago) link
I'll delete the post. Sorry I said anything.
― katherine, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:49 (ten years ago) link
there, deleted. please let me know what is and is not acceptable as a topic to write about on my blog in my spare time.
― katherine, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:50 (ten years ago) link
oh come on, k, your post was great
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:51 (ten years ago) link
katherine that was one of my favorite things i've read about music criticism ever
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:51 (ten years ago) link
crazy xposts hooboy whiney i think you of all folks would get that conflict, regardless of investment in either side of the argument, draws attention outside of rock critania. questions about whether this stuff MEANS anything, well i dunno. the argument one way or another about crusty rock vs. glitterpop are pretty meaningless to me as a listener and as a publicist, most of the people I know who like the most kawaii k-pop are also scandimetal nerds. as a principled argument, i'm against purism and segregation as a point of faith.
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:52 (ten years ago) link
i'm against purism and segregation as a point of faith.
haha so are most accused of being rockists
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:54 (ten years ago) link
its so disheartening to see people even READING, let alone ENGAGING with the NYT article
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:56 (ten years ago) link
mmm pretty sure there's a very popular Lorde song specifically about this crap
― poopsites attract (flamboyant goon tie included), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:57 (ten years ago) link
put your piece back up, katherine, #noshots
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:58 (ten years ago) link
katherine you always bring the real shit
― j., Tuesday, 15 April 2014 19:59 (ten years ago) link
― j., Tuesday, April 15, 2014 3:42 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Just wanna say I think this is a good post and describes something pretty well that I haven't been able to put my finger on. In a slightly oblique way it reminds me of that article I read about how the Google execs handled a disruptive protest calmly through "mindfulness" techniques.
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:02 (ten years ago) link
well, if you expect any NPR writer to tell its audience it's full of shit it ain't happening
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:05 (ten years ago) link
just a guess but isn't that compulsive reframing symptomatic of the culture shifting? same way that articles written a decade or more ago have a tendency to look far more sexist or classist or racist than they were intended as? tho i suppose there's a fair bit of "fuckin hell can't i just like led zep and call it (c)rap; what else do they want to pry from my cold dead hands" always going on
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:09 (ten years ago) link
could be, i was noticing it more as a concomitant of the deliberately point-free 'convo' format, like a constant will to sweep idea-oids into the maw of the content-feed out of avoidance of actually just saying a thing as themselves, in their voices, not in the auto-distancing npr 'we' voice
― j., Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:15 (ten years ago) link
j.'s post is really interesting. Curious as to what is meant by "post-neoliberal" in this context. I've previously heard "neoliberal" mainly used to describe laissez-faire economic policies; I think theres a specific cultural definition or context I don't understand here. Obviously arts/culture and economics are closely linked, just a little unclear on the specific meaning here.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:15 (ten years ago) link
my kneejerk reaction to neoliberalism is "Democratic sellout."
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:18 (ten years ago) link
xp ah, you mean the "i'm not saying but i hear people are saying" method that keeps the 24 hour news cycle humming until something happens to a rich person
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:24 (ten years ago) link
no, everyone is right, it was wrong for me to get sucked in
― katherine, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:24 (ten years ago) link
this spectacle of people (mostly straight white men of a certain age) angry that we treat music made with drum machines, or for dance floors, or with rapping (unless it's 'political'), or by Beyoncé with the same respect and depth of thought we'd devote to anthems sung by bands of guys with guitars.
Seriously does "this spectacle" exist? It seems more like a self-satisfied dig at mostly imaginary squares... and even if they do exist, isn't a music critics primary job not to give a fuck what that kind of person would think?
― brio, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:26 (ten years ago) link
they exist
― goole, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:28 (ten years ago) link
like the Republicans they hate they're dying too.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:28 (ten years ago) link
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, April 15, 2014 3:35 PM (48 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
otm
― posi riot (some dude), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:29 (ten years ago) link
but who cares if they exist? it's like a visual art critic spending forever debating the "my 5 year old could do that" people.
― brio, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:30 (ten years ago) link
in my experience if you talk to people -- i was gonna say educated people of a certain age, but really it's anybody -- about what should be valued in music and you get a lot of romantic talk about authenticity and truth and realness and the test of time. it's like a reflex almost.
on the other hand i think most people who hold these views hold them pretty lightly. it's a majority view but only a small chunk of them are cluttering up youtube comment boxes in anger about it.
― goole, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:32 (ten years ago) link
it's like a visual art critic spending forever debating the "my 5 year old could do that" people.
i suppose, but art critics write in a narrow sense with gallerists and curators and broadly to people who go see art and pick up art publications; that's a pretty tight focus.
music critics talk to a general public, the same public that listens to the radio, hears songs on commercials and tv, sees the super bowl halftime show. i think the 'base' opinion just looms larger in the whole deal.
― goole, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:35 (ten years ago) link
write in a narrow sense *to gallerists etc, i mean
i do agree that i wish critics would exercise a little hegemonic muscle and just write about whatever as if the question was settled, but as long as my parents are alive, having the argument is going to catch eyes.
― goole, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:37 (ten years ago) link
intheblanks, i don't know what i mean (i would like to understand 'neoliberal', as a term of critique/abuse, better than i do). something like, the recognition that marketification of society, privatization of everything possible, is an untenable solution to social problems...
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/03/08/neoliberalism-and-higher-education/
but more than that, the icky post-internet last-ditch efforts to do something about those problems by, like, doubling down. incorporating a healthy dose of… hep branding, crisp design on the cheap, fee structuring, intonations about the perplexities of identity, chuckling about the all-too-human need to make a dollar, an entrepreneurial perspective on ethics and culture combined with an opinion-page passivity about politics and a whole-foods presumptiveness about who 'we' are and what's important to us…
i don't know, like i said, i haven't thought about this, just skimming that 'convo' makes me feel gross. but i think the important thing is the core that's barely touched by a lot of what they were talking about, which i'm summing up tendentiously w/ 'post-neoliberal' (and the word 'npr' heh). and that's the aesthetico-ethical valence of those ideas about music and criticism, which it seems is reduced to almost nothing.
― j., Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:40 (ten years ago) link
I just don't buy that there's a "spectacle" of angry old white dudes worried about drum machines, rap, and Beyonce in 2014. The vast majority of people who might be angry about any of this stuff do not care enough to get angry about any of this stuff anymore.
Also maybe some people spout the same old golden age of authenticity test of time stuff - but that now includes drum machines, rap, and Beyonce for many
― brio, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:42 (ten years ago) link
xp Thanks for the response, definitely gives me a better understanding of what you meant
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:43 (ten years ago) link
hmmm....the way I understand neoliberalism as practiced by American Democrats since the 1980s is a diluted form of Republicanism that takes for granted that unions destroy industry, Wall Street should be respected, and market forces to be encouraged so long as abortion rights and gays are protected.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:44 (ten years ago) link
"music isn't as good as when I was 16" is not a thing that will ever go away - but I don't think it's a critical stance worth debating any more than "I want a painting that matches my couch"
― brio, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:44 (ten years ago) link
parachuting into this thread to say that i think it's important to lay out counterarguments to things in the nyt, given that when i get the inevitable 'so what do you do' question from people not in the ilx hivemind i can have something to point to that *isn't* in the paper of record
(also forks clearly you didn't read to the piece's last graf, which sums up the 'fite' aspect imo)
also david carr had nothing to do with that piece
― maura, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:47 (ten years ago) link
Nah; music critics talk to each other, and to music geeks (who would be music critics if they could type a coherent sentence). Normal people don't give a shit. They listen to the radio, they buy CDs at Target or Walmart or from Amazon, and they don't give a fuck about a review or a thinkpiece. The crucial task of the music critic right now is to get normal people to give a shit, because that's the path to turning music criticism back into a paying gig.
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:48 (ten years ago) link
I just don't buy that there's a "spectacle" of angry old white dudes worried about drum machines, rap, and Beyonce in 2014.
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:49 (ten years ago) link
alfred, that is no doubt accurate. i am thinking of the kind of 'neoliberal' that gets thrown around by leftist academics as a term of cultural critique. i suppose that that blanket usage includes, say, normalization of gay marriage (and associated things) as ~the~ political end goal vis a vis sexuality, status quo acceptance of economic arrangements that only need to be broadened/enjoyed more widely to achieve social justice, etc etc
i'm not sure offhand what the parallel would be in that case, of avowedly liberal/progressive positions taking over anti-progressive contentions as basically correct, but no doubt they're in there.
― j., Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:51 (ten years ago) link
Normal people ... listen to the radio, they buy CDs at Target or Walmart or from Amazon
Is this 2005
― polyphonic, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:51 (ten years ago) link
maura, i read the piece all the way through; i'm talking solely about optics and virality and not your message or the quality of writing... both of which, I hasten to repeat, I'm in appreciation of / agreement with you on! But when your URL includes the-new-york-times-sucks, I would argue that the FITE quality is the primary selling point that's pushing the article to people outside the inner circle.
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:53 (ten years ago) link
i mean, if anything, i'm co-opting the points in your last graf here
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:54 (ten years ago) link
Alfred, I've heard that as the political definition, basically "Third Way" technocratic Democrats. The main definition I was familiar with before that was specific to economic policies advocated by people like Milton Friedman, which is totally related to the definition you laid out but also not perfectly the same thing. Hadn't encountered it in the discourse around culture and was curious to learn more.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:55 (ten years ago) link
of course they exist - but are they any kind of "spectacle"? anything that needs to be debated, or talked about in terms of defining critical parameters? are they really ANGRY about what rock critics write? the rockist horde is pretty much made-up at this point
― brio, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:55 (ten years ago) link
sorry xpost to forks there
― brio, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:56 (ten years ago) link
ahhh that makes sense, intheblanks and j
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:58 (ten years ago) link
I think there's kind of a false populism to the approach Ann Powers is describing, one that, like I said, is really only suited to critics whose job it is to listen to and consider everything. When I was younger, having angry, prejudiced opinions about music was part of the passion and fun of being a music fan. Now I don't have those so much anymore, but I also just don't feel as much desire to force myself to consider music that doesn't appeal to me. I mean I still have curiosity and will still give almost anything at least one listen, but I just don't have the time and energy for the sophisticated, all-embracing tolerance she suggests. I'm perfectly willing to concede that I might be missing something interesting about the way Miley Cyrus's presence alters the meaning of a song written for Rihanna, I just don't have a reason to care.
I never liked Lester Bangs at all, but I get why people liked Lester Bangs, because he writes about music in a way that touches on the connection his readers feel with liking and disliking certain kinds of music. There are people who write about pop and dance music with the same kind of fervor, including many all the time on ILM, and I like that spirit. All this "consider the fact that they are trying to make money" stuff still feels bloodless to me. I don't have a problem with people writing thinkpieces about Miley Cyrus or any other artist. It's all worth writing about. But I find writers that mistrust their gut opinions about things too much to be very dull.
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 20:58 (ten years ago) link
brio, i dunno about critical parameters but they have buying power and disproportionate impact because of it in much the same way that country (where people still routinely buy physical media) does. They spend money on tickets, they buy albums in digital and physical format, they buy the t-shirt and the magazine and that makes them an industry rudder that determines a certain type of market and reflective discourse. Or maybe we're talking different types of inside baseball here; that is entirely possible too.
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 21:04 (ten years ago) link
maybe so... I guess I'm just wondering what any of that has to do with critics writing about Beyonce or Rihanna or whatever, who are also HUGE
I think mostly I'm saying the angry white guy who's mad about drum machines, rap, and Beyonce is just a dated old and not particular useful trope
whole "rockist" thing seems super dated to me now. maybe they're talking about their image of country fans but don't wanna say that?
― brio, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 21:10 (ten years ago) link
i think 'technocratic' is a good word there, if there were just the right counterpart to that perspective in the sphere of ethical/social/private culture, that would be perfect.
a lot of the times when this sort of a recurrent mess is on my mind i think of the picture nietzsche paints in the first two untimely meditations of the state of culture as basically one in which there's a constant bustle underway to know all the little factoids about everything little thing in all the ages, so as to count oneself as cultured, without ever incorporating any of it, without ever being fundamentally dissatisfied with the resultant failure to grow from within or really change in any way, risk anything. (that's a bad summary.) it's basically the food-review internet that katherine mentioned the other day on her tumblr, or the npr music model of 'here's another cultural thing!', or (i'm saying) the tepid reframing of fights-about-music in that wilson/powers convo into the territory of no-fault humane universality.
i don't know how but i feel like the posture is simultaneously agreeing, what you listen to matters for who you are (matters ethically, spiritually, politically, etc.), while also in practice not really believing that it matters. and it comes across, that disbelief.
― j., Tuesday, 15 April 2014 21:11 (ten years ago) link
'here's another cultural thing!'
could easily be the name of an NPR program
and yet another great post from j
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 21:14 (ten years ago) link
I don't know how but i feel like the posture is simultaneously agreeing, what you listen to matters for who you are (matters ethically, spiritually, politically, etc.), while also in practice not really believing that it matters.
Also the fact that the critic's approach doesn't actually reflect that "mattering" since it's so flat and all-encompassing
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 21:17 (ten years ago) link
Tell me more about "normal people", ILX.
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 21:22 (ten years ago) link
they listen to Stockhausen and Albert Ayler
― smhphony orchestra (crüt), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 21:23 (ten years ago) link
but only from their husband's stupid record collections
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 21:27 (ten years ago) link
me and Hurting at the same place age- and interest-wise it sounds like
― How dare you tarnish the reputation of Turturro's yodel (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 21:31 (ten years ago) link
do you like your husband's stupid record collection?
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 21:32 (ten years ago) link
well I was referring to this part in particular:
I also just don't feel as much desire to force myself to consider music that doesn't appeal to me. I mean I still have curiosity and will still give almost anything at least one listen, but I just don't have the time and energy for the sophisticated, all-embracing tolerance she suggests. I'm perfectly willing to concede that I might be missing something interesting about the way Miley Cyrus's presence alters the meaning of a song written for Rihanna, I just don't have a reason to care.
― How dare you tarnish the reputation of Turturro's yodel (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 21:35 (ten years ago) link
esp when the particulars in question (in this case Miley and Rihanna) are clearly not designed to speak to me or anything I care about.
― How dare you tarnish the reputation of Turturro's yodel (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 21:36 (ten years ago) link
right, I mean if you want me to think about the fact that they're out to sell records, well they're not out to sell records to me!
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 21:43 (ten years ago) link
to be clear I'm not complaining that there's not enough cultural media out there catering to the tastes of aging straight white dudes, it's just that in general pop music is not really aimed at me. that's cool, I don't have a problem with it, but don't expect me to care about it or strawman me with various accusations of prejudice if I'm not interested.
― How dare you tarnish the reputation of Turturro's yodel (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 21:46 (ten years ago) link
so i was right. cool.
― waterbabies (waterface), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 21:48 (ten years ago) link
katherine is really a great poster and I really hope one day she stops with the passive aggressive god-SORRY-i-guess-i-should-just-jump-off-a-CLIFF schtick
― forum enthusiast (wins), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 21:49 (ten years ago) link
No amount of intellectualizing is ever going to make me enjoy MC. Lots of the point people bring up also have to do with authenticity, but a pop authenticity. The idea that she is "Doing whatever she wants" is some form of pop authenticity. The idea that the process of manufacturing pop product in itself somehow lends validity to it is another instance of pop authenticity. Dividing the audience into a binary of "Haters" and an un-labelled group encompassing fans, casual mainstream music listeners, and sophisticated/post-rockist pop critics alike is pop authenticity.
― ▴▲ ▴TH3CR()$BY$H()W▴▲ ▴ (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 21:50 (ten years ago) link
I'd say the odds are against it but I have no idea what you're referring to so whatever
― How dare you tarnish the reputation of Turturro's yodel (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 21:52 (ten years ago) link
dnftt
― scott seward, Tuesday, 15 April 2014 22:36 (ten years ago) link
please keep feeding the troll, it's kind of funny
― Wahaca Flocka Flame (DJP), Tuesday, 15 April 2014 23:31 (ten years ago) link
apologies for being passive-aggressive, it wasn't intended that way but obviously intention isn't really the thing
― katherine, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 00:12 (ten years ago) link
anyway anyone who claims there is no longer a critical mass of people who are worried about drum machines/rap/Beyonce in 2014 should spend the next year or two telling people they write about miley cyrus and really liked her album (doesn't matter if you did or not) and see what kind of reactions you get
― katherine, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 00:15 (ten years ago) link
The problem with that thought experiment is that there are a myriad of reasons to dislike the Miley Cyrus album beyond being a rockist.
― Wahaca Flocka Flame (DJP), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 00:29 (ten years ago) link
Like, it's perfectly reasonable to be a fan of hip-hop influenced pop music and think "We Can't Stop" is braying, misshapen garbage; disliking that song and its album does not actually mean that all you want to listen to is Neil Young.
― Wahaca Flocka Flame (DJP), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 00:33 (ten years ago) link
katherine OTM, frustrated with this entire discussion, most non-writers I know have no idea about these terms and what they are, and a NYT article is gonna be many people's entry point, it's important to comment and rebut etc. etc. instead of assuming that everybody in the world is on a page, up to date-- you can't assume those who aren't aware of these terms are "old" and/or not into music writing.
― flamboyant goon tie included, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 00:37 (ten years ago) link
But disliking this album sometimes meant that you wanted to listen to Imagine Dragons.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 00:38 (ten years ago) link
Well... no. I wanted to listen to Kelly Rowland.
― Wahaca Flocka Flame (DJP), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 00:42 (ten years ago) link
(also: Lorde)
― Wahaca Flocka Flame (DJP), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 00:44 (ten years ago) link
brb gonna listen to "Kisses Down Low" for the 15,345th time.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 00:48 (ten years ago) link
this feels pretty strawmanny especially on ILM where a lot of the anti-orthodoxy views wrt to pop vs. rockism are pretty distinctly influenced by white guys and sometimes and former posters of a certain age like xhuxk and kogan etc etc
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 01:31 (ten years ago) link
Dear flamboyant goon tie which Lorde song were you talking abt being abt REAL ROCK being REAL MUSIC
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 01:32 (ten years ago) link
her seger cover
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 01:44 (ten years ago) link
i am totally listening to the Steve Miller Band right now. and the BC bud has really kicked in. shout out to the Hudson's Bay Company.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 01:50 (ten years ago) link
Well, jokes on me for wading in here, but "rockism" doesn't need to only apply to rock music, obv. Rockism imo is the dead puppy borne out of performative music practice, i.e. "people playing things", oldest trick in the book, you've got tonnes of people walking away from "learning instruments" with a taste for music that is visibly performed, and an appreciation for apparent skill in that performance. If you think that this is out-of-style, you just need to check out I dunno Imagine Dragons or Clean Bandit or Youtube videos of people playing things-- and rockism happens when some twisted/young/dumb/frustrated individuals (many-of-them powerful) will take this taste for performed music and twist it into "Miley sucks and is for children". Discussions about "the authenticity of a performance" are going to always exist while people enjoy performed music. Many of Lorde's artistic decisions, i.e. the format of her live instrumentation (stripped down, all sound sources visibly "performed"), the monologues she delivers onstage, the lyrics of "Royals", suggest that she comes from a background in performative arts and values things like authenticity. Same goes for The XX. Would never accuse either act of fetishizing anything but think they value many of the same things that so-called rockists do.
― flamboyant goon tie included, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 02:03 (ten years ago) link
Ok that makes sense, thanks. Authenticity/honesty of some kind's p universally valued tho, isn't it? Like, how many beloved/critically discussed performers don't give a shit abt it (Dean Martin? The guy frm Limp Bizkit, maybe?), and do their audiences know?
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 02:15 (ten years ago) link
Sure sure but I'm looking for some Germanic extended version of the word that is the "implied evidence of authorship and/or musicianship" flavour of authenticity
― flamboyant goon tie included, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 02:17 (ten years ago) link
Well, Miley sucks and is for children. No one ever actually refutes this statement.
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 02:18 (ten years ago) link
Oh no, as opposed to Serious music for adult men
― brimstead, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 02:20 (ten years ago) link
metal is for children
― brimstead, Tuesday, April 15, 2014 10:20 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
wait a second, you are expanding my mind here
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 02:21 (ten years ago) link
my gosh, ten years on ILM and now thanks to you I finally get it
adults listen to the news on the way in to work, the rest of us are children, thank god
― j., Wednesday, 16 April 2014 02:24 (ten years ago) link
Serious music for adult men
perfect Nick Lowe sequel
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 02:27 (ten years ago) link
Adulthood is a social construct. I listen to Raffi on the way to work.
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 02:31 (ten years ago) link
The guy frm Limp Bizkit, maybe?
no the dudes from bizkit are serious abt what they do and Wes is a big nerd ass guitar mag zappa type dude they probably would talk yr fuckin ear off about how Tool are the greatest musicians that ever walked the earth and shit
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 02:32 (ten years ago) link
When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away cyrusish things.
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 02:35 (ten years ago) link
basically ppl holding up bores like the black keys as some ideal of real music and ppl write about some crappy miley song like it's fuckin ulysses are both equally annoying
the only other thing i have to say is that in that one thing the writer says that everyone should have an assignment to have an opinion about a jason derulo album that came out this week and if it's all the same to you i think i'll drink a bottle of scotch with a fistful of ambien and wait for the sweet relief of death instead
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 02:39 (ten years ago) link
Urghhh otm
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 02:43 (ten years ago) link
m@tt is relentlessly OTM
― Wahaca Flocka Flame (DJP), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 02:46 (ten years ago) link
even if i disagree, an article about miley like joyce would be way more entertaining (or at least potentially so) than some dad-rock cruft
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 02:53 (ten years ago) link
Matt otm. Although I never feel like I even see people writing seriously about bands like the black keys anymore. Maybe it's because I don't read paste - does that even exist still?
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 03:31 (ten years ago) link
No, mainly because it only contained terrible copy
― 龜, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 03:33 (ten years ago) link
they keep emailing me
http://www.pastemagazine.com/
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 03:33 (ten years ago) link
ppl write about some crappy miley song like it's fuckin ulysses
this is great
― markers, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 03:34 (ten years ago) link
Oh you mean serious literature for serious adult men? Burrrrrrn
― ביטקוין (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 03:36 (ten years ago) link
That'd be like DeLillo
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 03:44 (ten years ago) link
The way we tend to define this issue as revanchist rock music vs raunchy pop music kinda gets in the way, and makes it seem like the tension of ideas only exists in this extreme strawman form, as if the choice is between only Black Keys or Miley, or only one kind of value system or the other, in fixed opposition. Whereas in truth we're all pretty discriminatory in a multitude of different ways.
I think Wilson gets at this when he talks about his distaste for The Libertines, and the fact that often what we dislike most is stuff that we can project our own self-loathing onto.
I find the semi-articulated value systems behind (e.g.) both celebrations and criticisms of tumblr&b more interesting than those of Miley fans vs Miley haters or etc.
― Tim F, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 03:59 (ten years ago) link
Tim F sharp as usual. I think my will to participate in thought experiments of overcoming my own most deep musical prejudices is just waning lately, i.e. I am becoming old. I've come a long way but Im tired now.
― Doritos Loco Parentis (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 04:04 (ten years ago) link
I'm less interested in the "check your privilege bias" side of things per se than I am in thinking about what kind of criticism we need to see i.e. what arguments are actually worth having at this point, what sounds are worth defending and on what basis, what lines are worth drawing.
My pet bugbear with all of this is that the debate gets reduced to a fight over what we can or should listen to, rather than a fight over what's worth saying about what we listen to.
Seriously though, whether a critic likes X or Y is basically of zero interest to me if they're a boring writer, and if they're a good writer then I'm likely to find their taste interesting no matter what X or Y happens to be.
― Tim F, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 06:20 (ten years ago) link
tim otm but the debate is never going to happen on a purely abstract level, though the trouble with concrete examples is exactly what we've just seen - katherine used miley as an example, a good one to make a particular point, and then the thread turned into miley cyrus c/d.
the check-your-privilege side of things is very relevant to poptimism imo (you could use miley as an example for both sides here!) but really needs to exist in conjunction with a musical criticism - my bugbear about thinkpiece culture w/r/t pop songs is that it's so often done by columnists who may be good writers or have important thoughts on race or gender etc etc, but don't have much knowledge of pop music. how many miley thinkpieces deigned to even mention her music last year? or when sinéad waded in, how many mentioned her music? and an alarming amount of the latest round of sexualisation-in-the-music-industry thinkpieces apparently have no knowledge of anything that happened pre-rihanna.
i don't want to underestimate how much the r*ckism/poptimism argument STILL needs to be made, again and again, regardless of how over-it ilm is, because certain assumptions remain so pervasive, but as tim says at heart it's about good vs bad writing. but it needs a lot more specificity...
eg
what arguments are actually worth having at this point, what sounds are worth defending and on what basis, what lines are worth drawing.
well...what are your answers to these qs?
also have you actually seen anything that defends tumblr&b-as-tumblr&b? because i have not. only seen an endless stream of individual acts hyped up but little that defends the sound or scene above, say, blue-collar r&b.
― lex pretend, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 06:57 (ten years ago) link
"Tumblr&b"
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 07:01 (ten years ago) link
lol at thinking music journalism is important in any way and that people actually care about it
― online hardman, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 07:25 (ten years ago) link
imagine caring about "poptimism" or "rockism" and actually thinking that those ideas mean anything to anyone in the world outside of ILX.
Lex, the argument doesn't need to be made. People have enough to worry about already in their lives without the pressure of having to think "oooh, I dismissed a pop record, am I evil"
― online hardman, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 07:27 (ten years ago) link
everyone's a critic critic
― estela, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 07:29 (ten years ago) link
it wasn't even really a thought experiment, it is literally just what happens when you tell people in the real world, say people you might meet at a party or in a bar or at work, that you write about pop music (or listen to pop music in non-ironic fashion, for the "music writing doesn't matter" crowd.) obviously this is heavily self-selecting but it is self-selecting for anyone who thinks these people who will then judge you hard are strawmen. if miley isn't a good example justin bieber would work, or katy perry, or gaga. (beyonce isn't a great example, since her album is the "call me maybe" of its year -- i.e. major pop monocultural event that even the snobbiest of music snobs won't fault you for earnestly liking.)
― katherine, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 07:29 (ten years ago) link
beyoncé's also reached that point where she's enough of a cultural behemoth AND has been around long enough to have "paid her dues" such that, like kylie in the uk, most people just accept her presence
― lex pretend, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 07:36 (ten years ago) link
― online hardman, Wednesday, April 16, 2014 7:25 AM (4 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
weren't you stressing on here a while back about whether ppl liked your music writing and whether you'd be able to start getting paid off it
― From Tha Crouuuch To Da Palacios (DJ Mencap), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 07:37 (ten years ago) link
well, yeah, it'd be nice to get paid for something I do in my spare time. I don't expect anyone IRL to actually care about it though.
― online hardman, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 08:02 (ten years ago) link
Btw, my ire is aimed at thinkpiecy stuff
lol at thinking music journalism is important in any way and that people actually care about it― online hardman, Wednesday, April 16, 2014 7:25 AM (4 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalinkweren't you stressing on here a while back about whether ppl liked your music writing and whether you'd be able to start getting paid off it
Thank you for the reveal
― 龜, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 08:05 (ten years ago) link
Katherine, what do you care what these dumbass ppl think?
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 08:09 (ten years ago) link
because they're not "dumbass people" but they're friends, relatives, coworkers, smart people, average people, all sorts of people, at least some of whose opinions probably matter to you?
― katherine, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 09:21 (ten years ago) link
Sorry I didn't mean we shouldn't talk about miley, and she's probably a bad example of what I meant because she's so unique, and reactions to her (on all sides) cannot be reduced to "manufactured pop, would you kick with y/n" She's pretty fascinating of her own accord, as are reactions to her.
My point was more that acting as this debate is solely about chart pop vs authentic rock presents the issue only at its most extreme, ossified form. I would like to see examinations of these issues in more subtle settings where these ideas are impregnated but not explicated.
Which leads me to:
No I haven't! Exactly! It's just implied by the hype without being stated. Which is why I think it's worth unpacking.
That said Lex you're right that the moment specific artists are named it becomes about the artist rather than the thought process. Which is precisely my point: there are so many reasons to like or dislike a specific artist (see Boney Joan Rule) that it's misleading and ultimately not useful to make the argument about the artist per se - what needs to be addressed are the terms in which things are celebrated or dismissed, that's where the specificity of thought is.
― Tim F, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 10:49 (ten years ago) link
― katherine, Wednesday, April 16, 2014 5:21 AM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
The question remains, do we really need a New York Times thinkpiece so we can handle ourselves in situations where "The Black Keys fucking suck, bruh" would work just fine?
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 11:32 (ten years ago) link
― waterbabies (waterface), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 11:34 (ten years ago) link
Except one, as succinctly demonstrated above, is treated with far more vitriol and hyperbole than the other, so any pretence at parity immediately goes out the window.
― tsrobodo, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 11:41 (ten years ago) link
y'all need some lessons on being smug
http://media.timeout.com/images/resizeBestFit/100267107/660/370/image.jpg
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 11:44 (ten years ago) link
That's the expression I've mastered whenever people I know claim that Great Art is what lasts forever. One of our worst qualities as a culture is seriousness, which often scans as strained attempts at seriousness. To say "I don't care whether I like this song next week" is a signal to these people that You're Not Serious.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 11:50 (ten years ago) link
what is the nytimes piece and responses that everybody is talking about anyway? it's lost way above the fold.
― keep calm and nahkchivan (how's life), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 11:57 (ten years ago) link
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/06/magazine/the-pernicious-rise-of-poptimism.html?_r=0
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 12:03 (ten years ago) link
Btw it's twice now I've seen professing to like Bangerz as a gesture of whatever, which raises Alfred to "I don't care if I like this at all" and is p irritating tbh
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 12:04 (ten years ago) link
huh?
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 12:07 (ten years ago) link
Sorry. Like: saying I don't care if I like something next week is one thing, saying I like something irrespective of whether I actually do or not is another. A couple of times, counting upthread, ppl've used "liking" Bangerz as a tool to say "Hi I love pop, so there." Seems oddly specific
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 12:17 (ten years ago) link
I'm doing that at all. I'm citing one of the more pernicious anti-pop arguments used by the people katherine describes.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 12:18 (ten years ago) link
Yeah I didn't think you were
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 12:19 (ten years ago) link
*I'm NOT doing that all
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 12:24 (ten years ago) link
― tsrobodo, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 11:41 (1 hour ago) Permalink
Well tbf one of them is almost inescapable and the other one is highly escapable.
― Doritos Loco Parentis (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 13:36 (ten years ago) link
lol at the thought that miley is anywhere remotely near 'unescapable'
― balls, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 13:46 (ten years ago) link
back maybe 16 years ago britney was sort of the same cultural signifier miley is today. i'll rep for brit's stuff as more straight ahead enjoyable, but the same sort of discourse was going on, where unironic, nonpervy enjoyment of brit's music _as such_ was a really divisive thing to profess. and it was exactly this odd specificity, because so many, in general, cultural anxieties about art and taste were all projected into this one flashpoint of debate.
so if i said "i don't like britney, of course, but xtina has some real pipes" that would be an acceptable opinion. or if i said "mandy moore has some surprisingly good songwriting" that would be ok too (because for the most part she didn't [still rep for "wanna be with you" tho], but nobody i was talking to would know that!). but you couldn't just say "...baby one more time" was a great song without inspiring livid outrage.
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 13:49 (ten years ago) link
― balls, Wednesday, April 16, 2014 9:46 AM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Well people in the office lunchroom talk about her, she's in the free subway newspapers all the time, magazines, tv, etc. I can't even remember what the Black Keys look like. I can't remember the melody of a single Black Keys song.
― Doritos Loco Parentis (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 13:53 (ten years ago) link
I get facebook or youtube suggestions every few days about the latest parody-of-a-parody of wrecking ball
― Doritos Loco Parentis (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 13:54 (ten years ago) link
Look Hurting if you choose to engage w/current culture at all that's on you
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:00 (ten years ago) link
yeah just don't sit with those people in the lunchroom if you don't wanna talk about bangerz
― j., Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:02 (ten years ago) link
thx
― Doritos Loco Parentis (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:03 (ten years ago) link
http://www.theonion.com/articles/why-do-all-these-homosexuals-keep-sucking-my-cock,11150/
― balls, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:08 (ten years ago) link
I've done a pretty good job escaping both Miley and Black Keys with very little effort/intent. And I still haven't heard a note from the latest Beyonce; did it get radio play? However, I can't escape Katy Perry, Pink, Lorde, Rihanna and Lady Gaga's "Applause." These are the top 40 acts I hear everywhere, whether I want to or not.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:10 (ten years ago) link
Well yeah if you want to get specific, Miley was more inescapable around the time of that VMA thing, less so right now.
― Doritos Loco Parentis (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:12 (ten years ago) link
I can't escape people talking about people talking about people talking about Miley, though.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:14 (ten years ago) link
― estela, Wednesday, April 16, 2014 2:29 AM (6 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:14 (ten years ago) link
in 2014 if you're 'overexposed' to any kind of media it's a result of yr own choices, everything is very very avoidable, ed sullivan died a long time ago
― balls, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:15 (ten years ago) link
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, April 16, 2014 10:14 AM (4 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Inside Lewellyn Sinclair (cryptosicko), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:20 (ten years ago) link
yeah i feel like nothing is really inescapable today!
i think that's part of why this debate goes on a lot because it's mostly critics/writers writing for other writers and for so many years a lot of pop and culture writing was based around this idea that there was a large scale pop culture that everyone embraced...but that's all gone. i work with ppl about 10-15 years younger than me quite a bit because of the business i work in, and i find they don't seem to largely have a lot of these ideas of pop vs rock...like one guy was into amon amarth a lot and then he was into queen but now he's into some kind of subgenre of electronic music that kind of sounds like 80s tangerine dream that's called "OutRun" music (there's a subreddit)....and one woman that's only 25 i think responded when i tweeted about the new mazzy star how they were one of her favorites of all time! she was so little when even among the swan came out! i know she likes amanda palmer and beyonce, but she wears a The Who t-shirt to work too...
i dunno, just random.....there's nothing like how, say, thriller was back when i was a kid...i mean people might think that beyonce or taylor swift is really culturally huge but it's peanuts....my friend bought an imitation Beat It jacket at the JC Penny in my town of 3,500 ppl in the middle of nowhere....
So I guess I feel like Whiney's right the whole popism vs rockism thing is pretty much irrelevant anymore because there's not really mass scale pop or mass scale rock anymore
i feel like everyone that's arguing about it now are just the pop culture writer version of civil war reenacters, on some old battlefield that's grown over with weeds
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:21 (ten years ago) link
I have never, to the best of my knowledge, heard a Miley Cyrus song. And I had never heard Lorde until that Nirvana thing the other day. And the only Black Keys I've heard was a TV commercial? I think? Everything is escapable.
― bi-polar uncle (its OK-he's dead) (Phil D.), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:22 (ten years ago) link
but that idea that "this thing is more relevant than another" or "this music is really the next wave of where music is going and this other music is way retrograde and not where it's at" is hard to give up....but it's not true anymore...because everything is going everywhere and nowhere....
i'm listening to the one MGMT song that I like (Kids) and a minute ago I was listening to some old pre-war blues, all on Spotify... it's crazy
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:23 (ten years ago) link
but it was never about pop vs rock, and even among this brave new utopia you describe, old assumptions are still pretty pervasive
― lex pretend, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:24 (ten years ago) link
i mean it would be logical to think that the internet etc breaking down walls would mean that old hidebound values also get thrown out but it's interesting that this isn't happening
― lex pretend, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:25 (ten years ago) link
The question I guess is if being popular alone is enough to make something "relevant." I say no.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:26 (ten years ago) link
i say no as well, but it's a hard line to draw, and there are plenty of critics who aren't so much poptimists as just straight populists - if something's at #1, then it's relevant.
― lex pretend, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:27 (ten years ago) link
I think old hide bound values are totally being thrown away by ppl all the time, fratty type dudes that would have never gone to a rave are going to huge EDM shows in the US now...they don't give a fuck about hidebound anything
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:30 (ten years ago) link
yeah, it's questions of context and marketingthose same dudes will also do rodrigo y gabriela as fast as they'll do girl talk
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:32 (ten years ago) link
yeah exactly what i'm saying
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:34 (ten years ago) link
yeah but there are things that those dudes will disdain or dismiss for hidebound reasons...the specific goalposts shift all the time in terms of what's "acceptable" in any given demographic but the reasoning behind "acceptability" doesn't, really - some things will always be beyond the pale or mockable
― lex pretend, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:40 (ten years ago) link
One Direction, I guess
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:41 (ten years ago) link
well, indeed! or like bieber. it'll depend on the particular social group obv.
― lex pretend, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:44 (ten years ago) link
and don't forget that being seen to have varied/~eclectic~/wacky taste is a good thing to many
well, there's probably a sense in which this is true in the same way that almost no one has ever thought there was much value in reflecting in this way about anything. and the moments when what reflection there was had some kind of realistic prospect of 'affecting the culture' or whatever (not to a huge extent, but outside the circle of those mostly responsible for doing the reflecting), like say at the height of the rock era when there was a lot of ferment and a lot of creative and authoritative criticism being written—those moments are few and far between.
but the alternative is basically not thinking/talking about it at all, right? i think forks was right yesterday that there's a lot of instability/uncertainty when the culture is changing a lot very quickly. and that's one of the major points at which people engage in this kind of reflection.
i don't think it's irrelevant that one of the biggest 'thought leaders' (hem hem) in the rockism/poptimism debate has been tom ewing, since he happened to make such canny use of the internet for music-criticism purposes through times at which it was changing (the world at large) a lot. nor irrelevant that he was schooled as a historian and works as a market researcher.
― j., Wednesday, 16 April 2014 14:50 (ten years ago) link
i thought the original popists or w/e they were called were like early 80s NME type dudes who like MJ and scitti politti and stuff, like ex post punkers who embraced 80s pop
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 15:07 (ten years ago) link
i think ewing hearkened back to a lot of them?
but he started out in a climate where, like, post-nirvana punk/rock authenticity was re-entrenched (and quickly squandered w/ commercial debasement via yarling etc.), w/ new artsy 'quality' aspirational dimensions in britpop, 'no depression' style authenticity was valorized, indie rock's establishment was pretty firm and it was making overtures toward 'pop' posturing ('if only it could get on the radio') and genre dabbling, even the indie and rock types had started coming back around to the early 90s uk dance scene, u.s. rap was reaching the height of its combined commercial/critical ascendancy…
good context for a lot of those issues to come up in new ways
― j., Wednesday, 16 April 2014 15:17 (ten years ago) link
"So I guess I feel like Whiney's right the whole popism vs rockism thing is pretty much irrelevant anymore because there's not really mass scale pop or mass scale rock anymore"
pop is more private now. there are people who sell millions of albums and get millions of youtube hits and the public ,by and large, has no idea who they are. their fans are online and listening to them with headphones on.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 15:20 (ten years ago) link
j otm. One of the things abt those 90s times was that even if you were open to listening to pop, a lot of what you'd then hear was affirming values you were kinda trying to question (lots of Britpop stuff, Sebadoh/Pavement stuff, etc). P much noone could take pop as even worthy of listening to, unless they were yr 10 yrold sister
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 15:26 (ten years ago) link
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Songs_for_Peter_Hughes
Check out track 4
― waterbabies (waterface), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 15:28 (ten years ago) link
^^From 1995
― waterbabies (waterface), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 15:29 (ten years ago) link
People were always (maybe) listening to this stuff, just maybe not writing about it so much and with such volume. I blame the internet culture
Uh don't you mean credit? I liked Britney, just couldn't admit it to my bandmates
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 15:33 (ten years ago) link
xp dude, you ARE the internet culture
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 15:34 (ten years ago) link
your bandmates otm
― smhphony orchestra (crüt), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 15:37 (ten years ago) link
scott, i think that's very important, i'm just not sure it's limited to pop. most music now is private. maybe to an unprecedented degree.
i think the older coordinates for a rockism/poptimism debate had to do with a different map of what was public and private, relative to what—which maybe comes out in the way that the stuff i mentioned being in tom ewing's context had starker contrasts between mainstream/underground/respectable/not attributed to it.
maybe one reason that the debate can seem so muddled and wishy-washy a la powers/wilson is that in combination with the privatization of the listener/fan experience, the major site for anything prospectively 'public' about music has undergone a huge leveling of those old complex distinctions in status/respectability/purpose/whatever. like, what codes as 'pop' now is loosely inclusive of dance-pop, edm, country, rap, rock, 'folk', indie, etc., depending on the level of media-machine exposure you want to count. and relative to that extreme level of media visibility the choices have more to do with vulgarity-gentility/urbanity than with any of the old distinctions.
― j., Wednesday, 16 April 2014 15:53 (ten years ago) link
pop has always been that way though
― waterbabies (waterface), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 15:58 (ten years ago) link
Feel like pop just historically kind of faces an uphill battle in the rock-based music criticism lexicon, the split between the two happening at rock's birth (The Day The Music Died), and then continuing on from there. 60's pop was more or less immediately embraced by rockers (which was basically English bands doing R&B/pop covers) and certainly in the 60s rock was considered pop. Maybe the shift from singles to LPs (singles popularity peaking in the mid-60s) is to blame. At an rate it feels like every year the wool is pulled back, and nostalgia/re-contextualization/the leveling qualities of the internet/listener fragmentation puts a "this pop is OK" stamp on acts previously derided by rockists through kitsch or irony or genuine reappraisal. So once you had rock bands playing Monkees songs and now you have rock bands playing Fleetwood Mac songs, and in the future, I don't know, that's where my train of thought leaves the station. By the late 90s rock and pop were so intertwined (Avril Lavigne, pop-punk, nu-metal like Linkin Park) that it complicates things too much for me.
― ▴▲ ▴TH3CR()$BY$H()W▴▲ ▴ (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:30 (ten years ago) link
avril lavigne was not the late '90s, neither was linkin park
― katherine, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:35 (ten years ago) link
which sounds nitpicky but it's not -- I wasn't reading criticism back then but the general sense among laypeople was that linkin park and avril et al got their pop traction as a backlash to the huge teenpop boom that had essentially become synonymous with "pop" starting around 1999 or so.
― katherine, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:37 (ten years ago) link
Fleetwood Mac and the Monkees apparently not "rock bands" now.
― bi-polar uncle (its OK-he's dead) (Phil D.), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:37 (ten years ago) link
Nor were they appreciated as such during the peaks of their own careers.
― bi-polar uncle (its OK-he's dead) (Phil D.), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:39 (ten years ago) link
Well be honest there
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:40 (ten years ago) link
When was Fleetwood Mac NOT a "rock band" and when were they "derided by rockists?"
― bi-polar uncle (its OK-he's dead) (Phil D.), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:40 (ten years ago) link
Rot
― waterbabies (waterface), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:42 (ten years ago) link
When Stevie and Lindsey joined and they had massively huge hits. Yeah they rocked, bt did rock fans like them? Aside from that noone didn't. You were pointing out their lack of appreciation at careerheight
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:45 (ten years ago) link
http://books.google.com/books?id=jEeovH2wN9kC&lpg=PA86&ots=Ibiem3njLY&dq=%22Stevie%20Nicks%3A%20Lilith%20or%20Bimbo%3F&pg=PA86#v=onepage&q=%22Stevie%20Nicks:%20Lilith%20or%20Bimbo?&f=false
― waterbabies (waterface), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:47 (ten years ago) link
wow that's fucking horrible
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:48 (ten years ago) link
waterface, that's probably true that 'pop has always worked like that', but the context has changed because the current configuration/understanding of public/private distinctions has changed
i was struck by this bit from tiqqun's 'intro to civil war' this morning
https://24.media.tumblr.com/69183df6450cd55a81335de6e2c86b4a/tumblr_n422nhapvE1qcq6s5o1_500.jpg
in the sherry turkle book that ann powers refers to (re young people and their shame about what they should be liking vs not admitting to liking) a point she repeatedly makes is that people with networked lives, but especially the younger ones, are uneasy but fatalistic about the possibility of facts about their lives / private lives which are digitally accessible (usually because they themselves have volunteered them, in order to take advantages of the personal/social functions network technologies can serve) will be used against them in the future, end up being publicized, come back to bite them in the ass, etc. so there's a real confusion about where the boundaries of self are, what to make of the various pre-existing cultural understandings of self and society.
i don't know how accurate this is, but my perception is that some of the notable vanguard trends in musical taste/fashion of the past decade+, like noise, or field recording, or wandelweiser-style 'quiet' minimalism, or minimal techno, or extreme metal, are attractive partly because they look as if they could thwart the wrong kind of uptake into the public/pop/capitalist empire realm. (which makes pitchfork's uptick in metal coverage, or the phenomenon of black metal release features on npr, seem symptomatic.)
― j., Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:48 (ten years ago) link
I didn't think Fleetwood Mac was ever considered less 'rock' than Steely Dan or the Eagles?
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:51 (ten years ago) link
Included mostly for the quote "Never met anyone who didn't like Rumors"
― waterbabies (waterface), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:51 (ten years ago) link
xxp No, I was being sarcastic about the idea that Fleetwood Mac were some unappreciated nugget until rockists re-appraised them.
― bi-polar uncle (its OK-he's dead) (Phil D.), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:51 (ten years ago) link
I was responding to albvivertine. I got your sarcasm.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:52 (ten years ago) link
Well you incl the Monkees, which confused things
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:54 (ten years ago) link
(forgot to say, the leveling of various genres/styles that goes on in pop seems especially significant, once it reaches kind of an equilibrium and shows that it's able to accommodate them all, because music is a sort of window onto social experience / society, and for the pop-media-system to suggest that it more or less doesn't matter what your experience is—because everyone's got their preference and every preference has its representative—that it's just one more bit of information about your taste-profile and consumption habits, is basically to suggest that the non-pop counterparts that you might also happen to have a preference for are null as vehicles for / windows onto social experience / society.)
― j., Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:55 (ten years ago) link
I think the falling out of favor of "bimbo" in the discourse is at least a small step forward
― Doritos Loco Parentis (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:58 (ten years ago) link
And now sund4r you've reminded me of rock becoming same as pop for a while and that confuses things as well, corporate rock raises its head at some point
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 16:59 (ten years ago) link
What do you think has changed? Not saying you're necessarily wrong but it's not obvious to me. To me, it feels like pop music is inescapable to more or less the same extent that it always has been in my lifetime: you hear it in grocery stores, in malls, at the gym, at the office, at fast food places; songs turn up in movies and TV shows; pop stars are on the covers of magazines at the checkout stand; friends and co-workers talk about it. It's not like anyone was forcing you to listen to pop at home before the Internet. I'm quite sure my Mum had no idea who Cyndi Lauper or Paula Abdul were. (She does know who Lady Gaga is because of social media, on the other hand.)
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 17:00 (ten years ago) link
in 2014 if you're 'overexposed' to any kind of media it's a result of yr own choices, everything is very very avoidable, ed sullivan died a long time ago --balls
truth nuke
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 17:02 (ten years ago) link
Dude if you don't work at home/wear earbuds outside the home, not true
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 17:03 (ten years ago) link
I don't know, I was born in 1981, the first time I was aware of FM was "Don't Stop Thinking About Tomorrow" as early 90s Democrat boomer campaign pop.
― ▴▲ ▴TH3CR()$BY$H()W▴▲ ▴ (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 17:03 (ten years ago) link
Unless you somehow go out of yr way to studiously avoid singers you've never heard of xpost
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 17:04 (ten years ago) link
You can hear Lady Gaga on the radio in the supermarket and not go "Oh, is this Lady Gaga?"
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 17:06 (ten years ago) link
Come on, I was born in 1979 and I've been hearing Fleetwood Mac and Stevie Nicks on classic rock and AOR radio my whole life. "Rooms on Fire" was #1 on the US Mainstream Rock chart in 1989.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 17:07 (ten years ago) link
Otherwise I can't imagine any scenario where you're FORCED to reckon with pop music in 2014
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 17:07 (ten years ago) link
xxxxxpost
all the grocery stores i go to dont play top 40, neither does the gym i used to go to
for one, so many ppl i know just plug their iphone right into the aux jack of their car stereo and avoid radio altogether...i don't think MTV proper really plays many videos anymore (of course ppl always said that but i think it's true now?)....radio listenership and rating in FM are downward trending...more people that aren't listening to their
phone in the car are listening to sports talk, talk radio in general is the moneymaker now....
i think that in general listening to top 40 radio was more prevalent that it was now....also simply the factors of what pre-recorded music is available to buy. i lived in a town where all i could buy was the tapes and CDs at Wal-Mart (i was enough of a dork to drive an hour to musicland but most weren't), so generally that was more top 40 stuff...now the same kid could go on Spotify and have literally limitless choices
― j., Wednesday, April 16, 2014 11:48 AM (12 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
again this may be somewhat true but there's also the factor of it's easy to find things now, whereas in the late 80s or early 90s learning about black metal would have taken some serious tape trading or mail ordering....now if a kid is curious about noise or black metal or minimal techno, he can just listen to it, so it stands to reason that once obscure subgenres would grow in popularity
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 17:07 (ten years ago) link
there is that. i was thinking that these are ones that would have a hard time ever becoming pop. (minimal techno sure, but what would it mean? the music leaves it a blank.) and part of the attraction to a kind of music can have something to do with social life. unless you think that the only reason genres become popular at all is their intrinsic soundyness.
― j., Wednesday, 16 April 2014 17:13 (ten years ago) link
guys... the beatles
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 17:15 (ten years ago) link
just... the beatles
I somehow went a year without ever having heard Gotye and then heard it immediately upon stepping foot in a Subway
― flamboyant goon tie included, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 17:18 (ten years ago) link
Wasn't there a long time where Sgt. Pepper was seen as too soft, to pop to take seriously?
― ▴▲ ▴TH3CR()$BY$H()W▴▲ ▴ (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 17:18 (ten years ago) link
20 years ago today iirc
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 17:21 (ten years ago) link
you know if you leave the gotye cheese off your Subway, that's saves like 30 decibels
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 17:32 (ten years ago) link
(also yeah lol The Monkees but the Sex Pistols were covering them less than a decade after they were A Thing, and not particularly ironically like with e.g. "My Way.")
(and no I don't want to go into the Pistols being as manufactured as the Monkees were)
― bi-polar uncle (its OK-he's dead) (Phil D.), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 17:38 (ten years ago) link
― flamboyant goon tie included,
haha yes
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 17:38 (ten years ago) link
I haven't seen Whiney in years so I need to step foot in a Subway.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 17:39 (ten years ago) link
xpHow did you know it was Gotye?
― tsrobodo, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 17:59 (ten years ago) link
Or was that the first time you'd heard the song at all?
Funny that if you have no reference for the artist you could hear it repeatedly and still somehow tune it out.
― tsrobodo, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 18:00 (ten years ago) link
presumably if you hear in passing that there's a popular song called "Somebody That I Used To Know" and then walk into a fast food chain and hear a guy singing "NOW YOU'RE JUST SOMEBODY THAT I USED TO KNOW" you can do the math
― posi riot (some dude), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 18:08 (ten years ago) link
there was a gotye-alike on the radio a while ago, some kind of duet? with two dudes? i think? i never got to shazam the thing. i think 'on the radio' was a phrase in the refrain? my searching has surprisingly been fruitless. help me out here. asking for a friend.
― goole, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 18:15 (ten years ago) link
Simon and Garfunkel?
― waterbabies (waterface), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 18:15 (ten years ago) link
gotye's albums are enjoyable listens imo, just the second one is overplayed is all
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 18:20 (ten years ago) link
there was this really bad official press copy that showed up everywhere that said "Gotye (pronounced "go-ti-yay" or "Gauthier") is the alias of Australian electronic pop trickster Wally de Backer." That pops into my head and irritates me every time someone mentions Gotye.
― Doritos Loco Parentis (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 18:44 (ten years ago) link
I call him Goi-tah
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 18:50 (ten years ago) link
it's the "trickster" part that gets me the most. I see his stupid face and I think "electronic pop trickster." What the fuck is that supposed to mean?
― Doritos Loco Parentis (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 18:52 (ten years ago) link
makes him sound like he's popping out of corners wherever you go wearing a goofy hat and making elaborate hand shapes like Mystery or Criss Angel or Jamiroquai
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 19:00 (ten years ago) link
and saying "got ye!"
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 19:01 (ten years ago) link
http://evil-inc.com/images/blogart/trickster.jpg
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 19:02 (ten years ago) link
and saying "got ye!"― christmas candy bar (al leong)
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 19:29 (ten years ago) link
^^^^^^^^^^^^
― Tim F, Wednesday, 16 April 2014 20:21 (ten years ago) link
really? I assumed that was what his name was supposed to be a play on.
― Doritos Loco Parentis (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 21:16 (ten years ago) link
wikisez: The name "Gotye" is a pronunciation respelling of "Gauthier", the French cognate of Gotye's given Flemish name "Wouter".
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 21:19 (ten years ago) link
xp considering how much I'd read about it I think I actually guessed based on the Peter Gabriel-y production before it got to the chorus. True story though, Aug 2012, and def thought of Whiney while munching
― "got ye!" (flamboyant goon tie included), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 21:42 (ten years ago) link
def thought of Whiney while munchingdef thought of Whiney while munchingdef thought of Whiney while munchingdef thought of Whiney while munchingdef thought of Whiney while munchingdef thought of Whiney while munchingdef thought of Whiney while munchingdef thought of Whiney while munching
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 21:55 (ten years ago) link
yeah I zeroed in on that as well
― Doritos Loco Parentis (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 16 April 2014 22:01 (ten years ago) link
Whiney was at a munch?
― Scooby Doom (۩), Thursday, 17 April 2014 03:16 (ten years ago) link
Yeah he was looking for a sub obv
― forum enthusiast (wins), Thursday, 17 April 2014 06:11 (ten years ago) link
is that Steve Rude in Skot's post?
third one is the one with the international hit on it (first one is mostly sampladelic bricolage, second one is too but has some more song-y songs like Hearts A Mess)
To me, it feels like pop music is inescapable to more or less the same extent that it always has been in my lifetime: you hear it in grocery stores, in malls, at the gym, at the office, at fast food places; songs turn up in movies and TV shows; pop stars are on the covers of magazines at the checkout stand; friends and co-workers talk about it.
Grocery stores don't play pop music. Malls don't play pop music. The gym plays fairly terrible mersh dance usually, or silence, but I listen to podcasts or DJ mixes. The office doesn't play pop music. From walking past fast food places I don't think they play pop music? There's a bubble tea shop near work that does have a music video channel playing on TV though, I discovered a terrible will./Britney/Wayne collab there a month or so ago. If songs turn up in movies and TV shows presumably they're months or years past their moment of currency? Pop stars aren't on the cover of magazines at the checkout, it's soap stars and Kardashians and royals. Friends who write on Singles Jukebox sometimes talk about pop music at the pub, but not all that much. Co-workers don't, there's one who talks about pub rock bands from the '80s though.
― Gritty Shakur (sic), Thursday, 17 April 2014 09:37 (ten years ago) link
Yep, I don't hear much pop music in my day-to-day life. I've pretty-much managed to avoid 'Happy' so far, maybe in a TV ident or something.
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Thursday, 17 April 2014 09:54 (ten years ago) link
I'm still assuming that "Happy" is a Patrice Wilson cover.
― robocop ELF (seandalai), Thursday, 17 April 2014 11:02 (ten years ago) link
Yes, i still haven't heard Happy and actively had to seek out Blurred Lines last year, weeks after it charted. It's not like i live in a cave. The pop i listen to is the pop i choose to listen to.
This wouldn't hold for anyone who had to listen to the radio at work, though.
― Yuri Bashment (ShariVari), Thursday, 17 April 2014 11:13 (ten years ago) link
Yeah I work on the phones, so no music allowed in the office. I guess that's a blessing really, much as I'd love to have a job where I got to listen to tunes all day.
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Thursday, 17 April 2014 11:23 (ten years ago) link
Man, "Happy" and "Blurred Lines" are/were both pretty near inescapable. And if you tried, someone would slowly drive by your house blasting it, like an ice cream truck playing "Turkey in the Straw." You could hear it coming blocks away.
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 17 April 2014 11:48 (ten years ago) link
It's easy to avoid pop music in 2014 if you want to avoid it. There's people here who don't listen to the radio.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 17 April 2014 11:56 (ten years ago) link
I'm more familiar with 'Happy' because arseholes in my office go round singing it and it makes me want to strangle them.
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Thursday, 17 April 2014 12:01 (ten years ago) link
They play "Happy" on that Diddy-in-the-desert commercial that I see all the time on Hulu
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Thursday, 17 April 2014 12:16 (ten years ago) link
which to me makes it inescapable
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Thursday, 17 April 2014 12:17 (ten years ago) link
Would that "I don't even listen to pop music" were greeted with the same cultural suspicion as "I don't even own a TV" ...
(I can't even be accused of dropping a stink bomb in this thread with that, considering this thread is consistently pretty much nothing but one long stink-bomb-dropping)
― Branwell Bell, Thursday, 17 April 2014 12:20 (ten years ago) link
I think it's more like "I don't hear popular music in my day-to-day life unless I seek it out".
(I do hear popular music all the time - my daughter insists on listening to Capital FM in the car so I'm always up on whatever the latest Jason Derulo is)
― pick it up for ripple laser (onimo), Thursday, 17 April 2014 12:29 (ten years ago) link
which to me makes it inescapable --I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes)
If only there was some way to mute or fast-forward commercials oh well
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Thursday, 17 April 2014 12:37 (ten years ago) link
I think a good example is "What Does the Fox Say." I remember hearing about it, SPIN did an interview with the dude, it was a huge thing, but I never actively took the step of pulling it up on YouTube and pushing "play." It distinctly required every listener -- millions of them -- to take a step and DO SOMETHING, which is markedly different than radio or MTV. I finally heard it when SNL did the parody and I paused the skit and loaded it up on my computer like "Ok maybe it's time to hear this." Same thing with whatever the "Cups" song is called
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Thursday, 17 April 2014 12:41 (ten years ago) link
xpost that would involve effort
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Thursday, 17 April 2014 12:42 (ten years ago) link
This conversation is endlessly cycling. Can someone just post another stupid blog?
― Evan, Thursday, 17 April 2014 12:46 (ten years ago) link
the husband of My Husband's Stupid Record Collection said on his radio show last week that the Mountain Goats are mediocre
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Thursday, 17 April 2014 12:49 (ten years ago) link
I have never heard "What Does The Fox Say." I had never heard the "Cups" thing until my niece's high school show choir did it last weekend. I only ever heard "Blurred Lines" because it was playing by a DJ at a function I attended. I deliberately listened to "Get Lucky" because everyone was talking about its retro-disco sound. I had no idea that song on the P. Diddy car commercial was the "Happy" that everyone's discussing.
It's not like I don't listen to music -- I listen to tons of music! Even new music! I'm listening to new music right now! -- but you can avoid this stuff. It's simple.
― bi-polar uncle (its OK-he's dead) (Phil D.), Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:02 (ten years ago) link
WTF is 'Cups'?
(PS I don't even own a TV)
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:20 (ten years ago) link
Lmao at branwell subtweeting this thread
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:22 (ten years ago) link
I was thinking earlier about why I hate 'Happy' and that's because it's one of these songs that sounds like it was made for a car or bank advert. And now I find that it has been used already. See also that tragic 'I want to fly away' song by Lenny Kravitz
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:22 (ten years ago) link
If only ILM were the sort of place where people's listening choices were met with instant cultural suspicion...
― Matt DC, Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:25 (ten years ago) link
dog latin
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cmSbXsFE3l8
(my son learned it in music class and now habitually performs it any time he is presented with a cup and a table)
― keep calm and nahkchivan (how's life), Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:25 (ten years ago) link
https://www.google.ca/search?q=taylor+swift+magazine+covers&safe=off&client=safari&rls=en&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ei=rtVPU6Jy6ubwAZ6YgMAP&ved=0CAgQ_AUoAQ&biw=1240&bih=664
https://www.google.ca/search?q=katy+perry+magazines+covers&safe=off&client=safari&rls=en&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ei=ldVPU4XBD-XK8wGKlYCIBw&ved=0CAgQ_AUoAQ&biw=1240&bih=664
https://www.google.ca/search?q=lady+gaga+magazine+cover&safe=off&client=safari&rls=en&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ei=nNVPU7vRCajq8QG134G4BQ&ved=0CAgQ_AUoAQ&biw=1240&bih=664
And I guess we go to different gyms, stores, and fast food places (although, yeah, they might be just as likely to play rock stations or dance mixes). Admittedly, my perception could be coloured by teaching young kids who want to learn Taylor Swift or One Direction or Jason Mraz or Katy Perry or Demi Lovato songs.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:28 (ten years ago) link
I mean, unless you're making a distinction where some of those are rock or country or musical artists as opposed to 'pop' artists.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:30 (ten years ago) link
I didn't hear "Blurred Lines" until I started listening to the "hip hop & hits!" station to and from work (because the oldies and classic rock stations were pissing me off, and college stations were hit-or-miss at best). By the time I heard it, it was like six months old or something.
I still haven't heard the Frozen song.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:32 (ten years ago) link
― Evan, Thursday, April 17, 2014 8:46 AM (42 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:33 (ten years ago) link
And I guess we go to different gyms, stores, and fast food places (although, yeah, they might be just as likely to play rock stations or dance mixes).
I don't use a gym to work out, and I don't eat at fast food places, so there's two off the list. I don't even know what plays at the grocery store, I rarely pay attention. I think I heard 10,000 Maniacs there recently.
Also heard that one for the first time at my niece's show choir. Along with "Love On Top" and, for the first time in its entirety and not just the chorus, "Bad Romance."
― bi-polar uncle (its OK-he's dead) (Phil D.), Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:34 (ten years ago) link
I don't even know what plays at the grocery store, I rarely pay attention.
my Publix supermarket plays obscure Boz Scaggs, stuff like Jude Cole and Jennifer Paige and Bill Withers...I heard "Don't Disturb This Groove" last month.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:38 (ten years ago) link
My daughter is sick today we are watching Frozen
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:41 (ten years ago) link
Oh 'Cups' was in Pitch Perfect? I really liked that film.
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:43 (ten years ago) link
My son's fifth grade class put on a play last week, and there was a part in the middle where the kids danced to "Happy". Everyone in the audience, kids and adults, went absolutely batshit. Lots of suburban moms shaking their stuff in the aisles.
― nitro-burning funny car (Moodles), Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:52 (ten years ago) link
I guess I was hearing pop (or country) everywhere more when I lived in Regina tbh. (I moved across the country last summer and heard "Blurred Lines" in diners and fast food places across North America!) Tbf, the grocery store that is closest to my current apartment plays Joy Division and Jane's Addiction. So, yeah, if you're always in a bigger city, it might very well be easier to escape some of these things?
Frozen is awesome btw and I'm going to admit that I don't know what "Happy" is before I check out for the day.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:54 (ten years ago) link
My 7-year-old niece enjoys singing "Let It Go" over and over. I love her, but her singing voice ain't the greatest.
― nitro-burning funny car (Moodles), Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:56 (ten years ago) link
my cat won't stop meowing "lovefool" by the cardigans
― Sufjan Cougar Mellencamp (Sufjan Grafton), Thursday, 17 April 2014 13:58 (ten years ago) link
just picturing this...
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Thursday, 17 April 2014 14:02 (ten years ago) link
guys I'm pretty sure that all of your experiences can be extrapolated from mine and I listen to pop all the time so I don't know how you can claim that you don't hear it???!?
― forum enthusiast (wins), Thursday, 17 April 2014 14:07 (ten years ago) link
did someone says somehthng? Whats/? rock
― waterbabies (waterface), Thursday, 17 April 2014 14:09 (ten years ago) link
People Love Watching 'Happy' Pharrell Cry for Oprah (Video)
― keep calm and nahkchivan (how's life), Thursday, 17 April 2014 14:13 (ten years ago) link
don't you guys want to know what that's about?
― keep calm and nahkchivan (how's life), Thursday, 17 April 2014 14:15 (ten years ago) link
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=happy&l=1
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s2z8TpFV748
― waterbabies (waterface), Thursday, 17 April 2014 14:16 (ten years ago) link
Happy was in Despicable Me 2 before it was a hit #earlyadopter #dadswag
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 17 April 2014 14:21 (ten years ago) link
tbh those of you who don't grocery shop to the strains of delilah are missing out
― maura, Thursday, 17 April 2014 15:05 (ten years ago) link
I loved the post of all magazine covers. We can all relate to those times when you walk past a news stand and the cover blares Katy Perry's "Dark Horse" at you at a deafening volume
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Thursday, 17 April 2014 15:15 (ten years ago) link
Christ what a nightmarish vision
― forum enthusiast (wins), Thursday, 17 April 2014 15:18 (ten years ago) link
Lady Gaga puking on a human face, forever
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Thursday, 17 April 2014 15:21 (ten years ago) link
http://www.ilxor.com/ILX/ThreadSelectedControllerServlet?boardid=101
― When I Get To The Borad (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 17 April 2014 15:25 (ten years ago) link
They should make Us Weekly with that little chip they put in greeting cards that play 30 secs of a tune
― Juelz Fantano (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 17 April 2014 15:55 (ten years ago) link
ums, you shouldn't be giving that stuff away like that!
― keep calm and nahkchivan (how's life), Thursday, 17 April 2014 15:58 (ten years ago) link
here's happy and blurred lines for those who still haven't heard them yet
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 17 April 2014 17:23 (ten years ago) link
forks, what are those links? I keep getting a weird error message about "unusual traffic from your computer".
― keep calm and nahkchivan (how's life), Thursday, 17 April 2014 17:38 (ten years ago) link
i love the big showstopping frozen song. it's the best part of the movie!
my kids and their school have a talent/variety show tonight at the grange hall. i'll report back. got a lot of adele last year. rufus and his friend are doing ANOTHER of monsters and men song. *sigh* that's two years in a row. kinda hoping for a "wrecking ball". little kid solo at a keyboard doing stuff like that can make you cry like a baby a la langley music school.
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 April 2014 17:57 (ten years ago) link
sigh, they're youtube links to "don't worry be happy" and "got to give it up"youtube doesn't think i'm funny either
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 17 April 2014 21:40 (ten years ago) link
Is Bobby McFerrin some kind of joke to you?
― Sufjan Cougar Mellencamp (Sufjan Grafton), Thursday, 17 April 2014 21:49 (ten years ago) link
YouTube otm
jk don't worry be happy now
― Sufjan Cougar Mellencamp (Sufjan Grafton), Thursday, 17 April 2014 21:57 (ten years ago) link
*whistles a sad tune*
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Friday, 18 April 2014 05:43 (ten years ago) link
y'know i was working a show that bobby mcferrin headlined last year and at the end a couple of ushers wouldn't stop yelling "don't worry be happy!" during the encore applause and i thought at first they were making fun of him but as it happened they were just telling him to sing it. he completely ignored them.
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Friday, 18 April 2014 05:46 (ten years ago) link
So you could go and watch Bobby McFerrin live and not even get to see 'Don't Worry, Be Happy'? What kind of next level bullshit is that?
― Doran, Friday, 18 April 2014 07:55 (ten years ago) link
i'm assuming you're being facetious but on the off chance you're not: mcferrin has had a 25 year career since 'don't worry be happy' that includes about twenty albums and multiple grammy wins. don't worry will likely be the first line of his obit but it's not at all indicative of the range, scope and excellence of his work or of his pretty spectacular live performance
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Friday, 18 April 2014 08:20 (ten years ago) link
Bollocks to that
― recommend me a new bagman (darraghmac), Friday, 18 April 2014 08:48 (ten years ago) link
songs the kids did at the school talent show last night:
"wiccan lullaby" (!!!)
"ode to joy" (zzzzz...)
"falling slowly"
"shady grove" (bluegrass fever)
"letters i never sent"
"i am not a robot"
"up above my head" (trad gospel)
"i like to moo" (think this might have been an original...)
"gentle arms of eden" (commie folk)
"fur elise" (zzzz...)
"turning tables"
"the lion sleeps tonight" (trad zulu)
"maxwell's silver hammer"(trad paul)
"pompeii" (i dug this. never heard it. death rock.)
"royals"
"mountain sound"
"say something"
"drive by" (trad train)
"wagon wheel" (old crow song. the girl who sang it can really sing!)
"sing together" (more train!)
― scott seward, Friday, 18 April 2014 11:46 (ten years ago) link
and there was more. it was endless. it was like 3 & a half hours of sitting in the grange hall. i took multiple smoke breaks.
― scott seward, Friday, 18 April 2014 11:47 (ten years ago) link
sounds awesome
― waterbabies (waterface), Friday, 18 April 2014 13:07 (ten years ago) link
don't worry, will likely
― Vinnie, Friday, 18 April 2014 13:14 (ten years ago) link
For the record, I was being facetious. Being a fan of Wire, The Fall and suchlike, I'm all about bands not 'playing the hits' if they so wish. (Although I can't say I know much about Bobby M.)
― Doran, Saturday, 19 April 2014 01:26 (ten years ago) link
Post of magazine covers was a direct response to a poster saying that pop stars are not on magazine covers fwiw.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Saturday, 19 April 2014 21:10 (ten years ago) link
And my original point was not that pop music is absolutely inescapable for everyone as much as that it still seems relatively prevalent in the environment in a similar way as it used to be; I was also saying, just as much, that pop music was escapable before the Internet. I actually thought ums made some fair points in response to this btw (particularly to do with the limits on purchasing options for people in smaller markets pre-Internet) so thanks to him.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Saturday, 19 April 2014 21:16 (ten years ago) link
https://metro.co.uk/2014/04/13/nine-things-the-kids-of-today-will-never-understand-about-britpop-4696887/
― ۩, Monday, 28 April 2014 11:41 (ten years ago) link
oh yeah, i read that article a couple of weeks ago. half those things have nothing to do with Britpop. also - do kids these days not try and sneak into drinking establishments?
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Monday, 28 April 2014 11:43 (ten years ago) link
vshttp://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2014/apr/27/britpop-and-me-looking-back-not-in-anger-eva-wiseman
Britpop was our moon landing, except janglier. It was our Summer of Love, our Nelson Mandela's presidential years, our fall of the wall. It was the awkward suburban girl's Wonderful World of Colour. The never-kissed's big bang.
― ۩, Monday, 28 April 2014 11:44 (ten years ago) link
gonna venture that was not written with an entirely straight face
― From Tha Crouuuch To Da Palacios (DJ Mencap), Monday, 28 April 2014 11:50 (ten years ago) link
The ATP news feed on my fb posted a link to some Anthony bourdain yells at cloud piece on dance music and all the comments were ppl telling them off, lol. I suspect mischief on ATP's part. Didn't read the piece but seems like a candidate for this thread.
― paolo amusing eclectic revivals (wins), Monday, 28 April 2014 12:30 (ten years ago) link
oh yeah I skipped that one too
― popchips: the next snapple? (seandalai), Monday, 28 April 2014 12:35 (ten years ago) link
This kinda makes me want to back in time and not get bored w Britpop after a year or so purely to annoy Taylor Parkes
http://thequietus.com/articles/15092-blur-parklife-anniversary-review
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Monday, 28 April 2014 12:44 (ten years ago) link
related to earlier discussions: how editor's choices of title skews author's meaninghttp://www.pajiba.com/think_pieces/how-saloncom-rewrote-my-headline-and-turned-me-into-an-internet-troll.php
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Monday, 28 April 2014 14:40 (ten years ago) link
that taylor parkes article is briliant and doesnt belong here
― ۩, Monday, 28 April 2014 16:15 (ten years ago) link
The quest for clicks overrides the intentions of the author. Probably happens all the time.
― Doritos Loco Parentis (Hurting 2), Monday, 28 April 2014 16:17 (ten years ago) link
Those shiny compact discs were seriously expensive in 1994. We’ve since spent a fortune buying them again as downloads.
uhhh you know that you can rip a cd into your computer, right?
― marcos, Monday, 28 April 2014 16:21 (ten years ago) link
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Monday, 28 April 2014 16:44 (ten years ago) link
what??!
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Monday, 28 April 2014 16:46 (ten years ago) link
XXXP: Taylor writes his own headlines. It was a fair assumption as most don't but wrong in this case.
― Doran, Monday, 28 April 2014 16:47 (ten years ago) link
I love Taylor Parkes and agree that his article does not belong here, but at the same time his prose style remains so redolent of Melody Maker circa 1995 that it produces a weird sense of discombobulation. Every sentence makes me more nostalgic for Britpop (maybe even the experience of hating Britpop at the time) than most of the other shit I've read about it in these terrible weeks.
― Eyeball Kicks, Monday, 28 April 2014 21:52 (ten years ago) link
is there another thread where we're discussing this article? there's lots there to unpack (and i really like it). his fixation with the obnoxiousness of blur is really useful. did make me want to listen to lots of pulp and bbr and the other also-rans that don't fit in his (or britpop's) narrative.
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Monday, 28 April 2014 21:57 (ten years ago) link
(of course there's an impt sense in which pulp are hardly an 'also ran' so forgive me) (and then how does this then pivot into B&S idk)
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Monday, 28 April 2014 21:58 (ten years ago) link
why are there so many articles about Britpop lately?
― smhphony orchestra (crüt), Monday, 28 April 2014 21:58 (ten years ago) link
100-year WWI anniversary. It's all linked
― imago, Monday, 28 April 2014 21:59 (ten years ago) link
trench warfare = Melody Maker magazine
lord kitchener = jo whiley
― imago, Monday, 28 April 2014 22:01 (ten years ago) link
the somme = ok computer
― imago, Monday, 28 April 2014 22:03 (ten years ago) link
Somme less wasteful
― james lipton and his francs (darraghmac), Monday, 28 April 2014 22:33 (ten years ago) link
Sterling the discussions over on the britpop thread. Cant link from here tho, sorry
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Monday, 28 April 2014 22:36 (ten years ago) link
Crut its 20 years since parklife came out
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Monday, 28 April 2014 22:38 (ten years ago) link
20 years since 1st Korn album tlater this year. Just wait til those thinkpieces hit!
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Monday, 28 April 2014 22:39 (ten years ago) link
had to google Parklife tbh
― smhphony orchestra (crüt), Monday, 28 April 2014 22:43 (ten years ago) link
blur were shit
― paolo amusing eclectic revivals (wins), Monday, 28 April 2014 23:28 (ten years ago) link
weren't they
― paolo amusing eclectic revivals (wins), Monday, 28 April 2014 23:29 (ten years ago) link
^thinkpiece
mogwai thought so
they knew about middle class private school educated rockers pretending to be working class..
― ۩, Monday, 28 April 2014 23:30 (ten years ago) link
I remember seeing Blur in those days (I think it was in 1992 in Palo Alto, according to Songkick), and damn that was a lame show. They were crazy drunk and spent most of the show trying to push over the PA speakers...
― schwantz, Monday, 28 April 2014 23:38 (ten years ago) link
The Taylor Parkes piece is too muddled even though I agree that Britpop's aesthetic complacency was related to a larger political complacency that was rampant during the Blair/Clinton years. Don't really understand British class politics so I can't speak to that aspect of Blur's legacy. They sound stressful.
― très hip (Treeship), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 00:09 (ten years ago) link
From my own experiences political complacency in the UK was at it's peak in the period that lay between Blair's election and the war in Iraq. That's my own outlook as I was a student during that time and I was horrified at how few students were interested in current affairs. The number of people attending student fee protests on my campus were negligible, and this is Essex Uni we're talking about, a hotspot for lefty sit-ins during the seventies. Ibiza Trance and UKG were by far the most popular styles of music for students at that time.
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 08:47 (ten years ago) link
I put it here bc I honestly regretted reading it, and it left feeling quite favourable towards Britpop, so
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 08:49 (ten years ago) link
Of course a period of prosperity between the Cold War and 9/11 was going to be more apolitical but if you're going to blame Britpop for epitomising vacuous optimism and complacency then you should also blame dance music and nobody seems to be doing that.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 09:04 (ten years ago) link
That's what I'm saying. I'm not blaming dance music for being apolitical (although I remember being dismayed at the time at how dance music had lost its anti-authoritarian stance and was now being used to tout 2for1 WKDs on a Friday). But why is it suddenly Britpop that's being held to account for eliding politics? What were the Smiths, MBV, Ride, the Stone Roses and umpteen other popular pre-Britpop UK indie bands saying that the likes of Pulp and Blur weren't?
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 09:22 (ten years ago) link
it's sort of depressing how uk ilm is basically 100% britpop this week, above almost every current thing happening in music, even though half of you profess to hate it. get. over. it. as much time as i have for kicking it, obsessing about it to this degree either way is an admission of defeat
― lex pretend, Tuesday, 29 April 2014 09:23 (ten years ago) link
hoist by thine own petard, lex.
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 09:31 (ten years ago) link
although really we should keep discussion to the Britpop thread here, really: Britpop : Time For Reevaluation?
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 09:32 (ten years ago) link
the only dog I have in this horse is I downloaded a bunch of sleeper b-sides the other day and they are kind of great and now I am doubting everything (caveat: american)
(the piece doesn't belong in Worst Music Writing Evar at all, it is quite well-written, I just think I disagree)
― katherine, Tuesday, 29 April 2014 10:47 (ten years ago) link
the only dog I have in this RACE. SORRY I just got off a red-eye I wasn't even expecting to be allowed on and am tired etc
― katherine, Tuesday, 29 April 2014 10:48 (ten years ago) link
I didn't know this thread ws specifically for music pieces that're technically poor, soz
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 10:51 (ten years ago) link
given the amount of bad music writing that exists pretty sure that's a prereq for "worst evar"
― katherine, Tuesday, 29 April 2014 10:57 (ten years ago) link
Yeah, fair enough
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 11:05 (ten years ago) link
the ILM worst britpop ever spotify playlist
― ۩, Tuesday, 29 April 2014 11:19 (ten years ago) link
The Parkes-life article does fall foul of an over reliance on italics that the old UK music press loved so much.
― Position Position, Tuesday, 29 April 2014 12:20 (ten years ago) link
lol, britpop. i think we avoided most of the fallout here. people liked oasis for a minute in the u.s. and then they liked...gorillaz? and that was about it.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 29 April 2014 13:01 (ten years ago) link
and that verve song. we loved that verve song. and we embraced one blur song for are jock jam comps. thank you, blur.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 29 April 2014 13:02 (ten years ago) link
Yeah, in the US Britpop is pretty much Oasis = "remember that 'Wonderwall' song? No?" and Blur = that "woo hoo!" song played at baseball games.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 13:28 (ten years ago) link
does republica count?
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 14:22 (ten years ago) link
Republica is one of the best terrible bands
― chillin' on an "awesome pretzel" hoagie (DJP), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 14:25 (ten years ago) link
still think 'heads will roll' is the best republica song
― balls, Tuesday, 29 April 2014 14:31 (ten years ago) link
Baby I'm Ready to Go came instantly to mind, hook/singer and all so yeah kinda good at least given I haven't heard it in like 20 years
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 14:46 (ten years ago) link
on the rooftops sha-de-da. that one?
― how's life, Tuesday, 29 April 2014 14:49 (ten years ago) link
It's "shout it out" I think, bt yeah
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 14:50 (ten years ago) link
hm. don't like that as much.
― how's life, Tuesday, 29 April 2014 14:56 (ten years ago) link
Lyrical quibbles aside I think the singer ws Brazilian, or something, also they were too housey to be Britpop
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 15:04 (ten years ago) link
god yes the relentless rave beats
― you poll a lot, but you're not saying anything (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 15:07 (ten years ago) link
saw Republica play first support for Ned's Atomic Dustbin in Leeds last year. before Cud.
― Gritty Shakur (sic), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 15:08 (ten years ago) link
republica was a weird band, like roxette crossed with kmfdm and echobelly.
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 15:09 (ten years ago) link
Lyrical quibbles aside I think the singer ws Brazilian, or something
Wikipedia has Republica singer as of "Portuguese, Chinese and British descent", born in Nigeria.
― Eyeball Kicks, Tuesday, 29 April 2014 15:11 (ten years ago) link
still, ethnic quibbles aside
― From Tha Crouuuch To Da Palacios (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 15:13 (ten years ago) link
drugstore had the brazilian singer
― ricky don't lose that number nine shirt (NickB), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 15:13 (ten years ago) link
I wasn't being entirely serious, btw. And yeah I might've been thinking of Drugstore
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 15:16 (ten years ago) link
look they're all happy hardcore foreigners with ravey rhythms ok?
― you poll a lot, but you're not saying anything (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 15:16 (ten years ago) link
dude from flowered up was the keyboard/producer/writer. definitely britpop.
― ۩, Tuesday, 29 April 2014 15:38 (ten years ago) link
he was the keyboard? cool
― chillin' on an "awesome pretzel" hoagie (DJP), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 15:54 (ten years ago) link
http://fc08.deviantart.net/fs70/i/2012/240/b/2/the_regular_show_wallpaper_by_irv5567-d5crh3g.jpg
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 29 April 2014 15:57 (ten years ago) link
I'm slightly depressed that having a "dog in this horse" isn't a real thing. Was momentarily looking forward to using this phrase frequently all summer. May still do.
― Doran, Tuesday, 29 April 2014 21:50 (ten years ago) link
if this was c.jan '13 there'd be a joke about tescos and turduckens in there
― sktsh, Tuesday, 29 April 2014 22:06 (ten years ago) link
I feel kind of blessed that Britpop was just never a significant or noteworthy force in my life. It just kind of passed over me like a cloud. Small good things.
― Doritos Loco Parentis (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 30 April 2014 01:54 (ten years ago) link
Girls & Boys by Blur is a jam. Good job England
― dollar rave club (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 30 April 2014 02:46 (ten years ago) link
Girls & Boys the only blur i really need. love it so much. still probably my fave 80's homage of the last 25 years.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 30 April 2014 02:57 (ten years ago) link
when "Girls & Boys" was briefly Blur's big song in America i thought "they're huge in England, they must have good songs that are hits over there and then they just sent something uncharacteristically dumb over to break America." not only was i totally wrong but basically predicting "Song 2."
― some dude, Wednesday, 30 April 2014 03:53 (ten years ago) link
When Song 2 came out I remember thinking "this is weird, it seems like it should rock really, really hard, and yet somehow it doesn't quite"
― Doritos Loco Parentis (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 30 April 2014 04:05 (ten years ago) link
http://observer.com/2014/04/robert-mccormicks-daughter-responds-to-nyt-magazine-cover-story/
― curmudgeon, Wednesday, 30 April 2014 04:15 (ten years ago) link
this is why we can't have nice things
― whatchutola khomeini (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 30 April 2014 04:32 (ten years ago) link
I'm confused as to whose side I'm on.
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Wednesday, 30 April 2014 04:48 (ten years ago) link
“You’re not allowed to sit on these things for half a century, not when the culture has decided they matter,” Mr. Sullivan writes in the article, referring to the transcript.
― how's life, Wednesday, 30 April 2014 09:15 (ten years ago) link
~~someone~~ is gunning for a job w/ the salinger estate
― j., Wednesday, 30 April 2014 09:26 (ten years ago) link
This part is kinda unsettling:
Mr. Sullivan, for his part, defended his actions to the Observer in a telephone conversation shortly after the article was published.
“I won’t try to make it sound like I didn’t struggle with it,” he said of the ethical blurriness of the situation. “It’s not the kind of thing you want to do with every story.”
He added, however, that he was legally in the clear, as one cannot own somebody else’s speech, and Mr. McCormick’s transcript features the words of Elvie Thomas. (“You’re not allowed to sit on these things for half a century, not when the culture has decided they matter,” Mr. Sullivan writes in the article, referring to the transcript.)
Ms. McCormick called Mr. Sullivan’s comments “glib.”
“There is reason to believe this theft of my father’s research was their intention all along,” she said, “and that they have stolen far more from him than just the items Sullivan has publicly admitted.”
― curmudgeon, Wednesday, 30 April 2014 12:02 (ten years ago) link
i feel like nobody comes out of this well, which might be a cop-out but hey
― you poll a lot, but you're not saying anything (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 30 April 2014 12:09 (ten years ago) link
i guess it's hard for me to feel too much for either party, it's just two people from the same culture of eggheads that have made a cottage industry of fetishizing and collecting and hoarding precious facts and recordings about old blues singers. i guess if geechie or elvie were alive or if their families were complaining about how they never wanted to be found out or revealed i would have a problem, but honestly i feel for mccormick who seems like a real character and obviously is going through a lot of stuff, and who knows? maybe the sullivan is shady, but i kind of feel like none of this stuff really BELONGS to either of them
it was a hell of an article i will say that
― dollar rave club (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 30 April 2014 13:37 (ten years ago) link
He added, however, that he was legally in the clear, as one cannot own somebody else’s speech
But Sullivan published someone else's research without consent or (presumably) compensation. As a journalist, he should fucking understand that.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Wednesday, 30 April 2014 14:59 (ten years ago) link
i think the phrase "legally in the clear" draws an obvious distinction from "behaved ethically"
― you poll a lot, but you're not saying anything (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 30 April 2014 15:02 (ten years ago) link
Yeah seems like a dick move
― idontknowanythingabouttechnlolgeez (waterface), Wednesday, 30 April 2014 15:02 (ten years ago) link
i'm glad he did it. who knows, that old coot could burn his house down in the middle of the night. i support this theft. it was iphone pictures of documentation, right? i don't know the rules of consent when someone invites you into their home. can you get sued if you take a picture of someone's cat without their knowledge and post it on the internet?
― scott seward, Wednesday, 30 April 2014 16:10 (ten years ago) link
i am also in favor of frivolous lawsuits against the new york times for reasons of mental anguish though. i've wanted to sue them for this many times over the years.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 30 April 2014 16:11 (ten years ago) link
i mean i definitely did think about what that old coot was gonna think when he read the thing or if he was gonna have a heart attack or possibly burn his collection out of anger. but i think overall the thing was worth it. it's love and theft. that's the blues, baby. truman capote isn't really your friend. and neither are the hell's angels.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 30 April 2014 16:20 (ten years ago) link
'every journalist who is not too stupid or full of himself to notice what is going on knows that what he does is morally indefensible. he is a kind of confidence man, preying on people's vanity, ignorance, or loneliness, gaining their trust and betraying them without remorse.' - janet malcolm
― balls, Wednesday, 30 April 2014 16:27 (ten years ago) link
fair points
― idontknowanythingabouttechnlolgeez (waterface), Wednesday, 30 April 2014 16:34 (ten years ago) link
i don't think that family is comparable to a biker gang or a convicted murderer?
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 30 April 2014 17:32 (ten years ago) link
truman capote didn't just write about murderers. mentioned the hell's angels merely to point out that if you write stuff like the NYT piece you are gonna get heat. not beat up, probably, but heat nonetheless.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 30 April 2014 17:46 (ten years ago) link
A guy told me one time, "Don't let yourself get attached to any blues memorabilia you are not willing to walk out on in 30 seconds flat if you feel the heat around the corner."
― the glimmer man (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 30 April 2014 19:31 (ten years ago) link
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/men/the-filter/10744192/10-ways-Britpop-changed-modern-manhood.html
― ۩, Wednesday, 30 April 2014 20:12 (ten years ago) link
scott, it felt like a fair assumption you were doing an in cold blood / hst comparison there
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 30 April 2014 21:35 (ten years ago) link
answered prayers is where capote drew the charges of betrayal and was ostracized by his friends
― balls, Wednesday, 30 April 2014 22:28 (ten years ago) link
Not terrible but sexist:
http://blogs.miaminewtimes.com/crossfade/2014/04/haim_review_photos_miami_2014.php
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 1 May 2014 18:22 (ten years ago) link
Throughout their hour-plus set, the three sisters shook their luxurious manes and showed emotion by running fingers through their perfectly conditioned hair. If the music thing does not work out, they can count on a lucrative contract endorsing Neutrogena or Herbal Essences.
Remember when they said this about the Screaming Trees?
― how's life, Thursday, 1 May 2014 18:36 (ten years ago) link
and they can play!
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 1 May 2014 18:40 (ten years ago) link
what a fucking douche. Just when I start to think rockism is an irrelevant concept now.
― Doritos Loco Parentis (Hurting 2), Thursday, 1 May 2014 18:46 (ten years ago) link
look at those bitches with their hair
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 1 May 2014 18:49 (ten years ago) link
https://fbcdn-profile-a.akamaihd.net/hprofile-ak-prn1/t1.0-1/c40.0.160.160/p160x160/1969162_10203528575675858_44142269950046880_n.jpgChristopher Lopez from Facebook1 day ago
My thoughts in print lol
― Doritos Loco Parentis (Hurting 2), Thursday, 1 May 2014 18:50 (ten years ago) link
Because, at the moment, not only do their lyrics and stage presence not only lack sophistication, but none of their songs contain the timeless stupidity of a catchy hook like "MMMbop" had, though their "Wire" comes the closest.
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 1 May 2014 18:52 (ten years ago) link
lol at hurting going HAIM in the comments
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 1 May 2014 18:53 (ten years ago) link
yeah didn't mean to triple post that, hope that's fixed now
― Doritos Loco Parentis (Hurting 2), Thursday, 1 May 2014 18:56 (ten years ago) link
girls aren't sophisticated see
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 1 May 2014 18:59 (ten years ago) link
If you scroll back far enough in his reviews you find out he like Cat Power though so
― Doritos Loco Parentis (Hurting 2), Thursday, 1 May 2014 18:59 (ten years ago) link
fortunately every Bryan Ferry review I've ever written mentions his hair
A poll on that telegraph article up threadWorst Thing In This Daily Telegraph "10 ways Britpop changed modern manhood" Article
― ۩, Thursday, 1 May 2014 19:03 (ten years ago) link
Possibly the most notes I ever got on a Tumblr post was that time I went to an Interpol gig and reviewed their haircuts!
(granted, it may have been semi-parodic)
― Bramble Bluebell (Branwell Bell), Thursday, 1 May 2014 19:18 (ten years ago) link
Pretty sure most reviews of Hanson mentioned their hair too.
― ▴▲ ▴TH3CR()$BY$H()W▴▲ ▴ (Adam Bruneau), Thursday, 1 May 2014 19:19 (ten years ago) link
and Nelson, remember them? "The Timotei Twins"
― ۩, Thursday, 1 May 2014 20:00 (ten years ago) link
And the Beatles.
― ▴▲ ▴TH3CR()$BY$H()W▴▲ ▴ (Adam Bruneau), Thursday, 1 May 2014 20:04 (ten years ago) link
Yeah but that was because they looked like girls with girl hair and as such were unworthy of anything more complex in terms of criticism than "lol ur hair"
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 1 May 2014 20:05 (ten years ago) link
to be fair who didn't lol at Nelson's hair?
― ۩, Thursday, 1 May 2014 20:18 (ten years ago) link
not damaged/depressed = "not sophisticated" is an annoying trope in its own right, and one that probably overlaps with the gender stuff at issue here but is not exclusive to it
― Doritos Loco Parentis (Hurting 2), Thursday, 1 May 2014 20:22 (ten years ago) link
vmg's overall music-bloggage quality was pretty awful with a few exceptions (hi reed, thanks for being awesome) but miami's was always the most consistently embarrassing. good to see they're keeping it up
― maura, Thursday, 1 May 2014 21:19 (ten years ago) link
I've thought about pitching stories but
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 1 May 2014 21:20 (ten years ago) link
holy shit that quietus britpop article upthread
britpop's idea of a controversial loudmouth was louise wener? DO YOU THINK YOU MIGHT BE FORGETTING SOME PEOPLE
― 1 P.3. Eternal (roxymuzak), Thursday, 1 May 2014 22:33 (ten years ago) link
every member of HAIM has incredible hair. but i can't agree with that writer's assertion that their songs are unsophisticated.
― ginuwine's cousin (monotony), Thursday, 1 May 2014 23:29 (ten years ago) link
Yeah that's some lousy writing. They have hair, their songs are dumb like Hanson, and they have long hair like Hanson. That's pretty much all of the review, and yet it takes 2 pages to read.
― ▴▲ ▴TH3CR()$BY$H()W▴▲ ▴ (Adam Bruneau), Thursday, 1 May 2014 23:39 (ten years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YQ0v6pBkmdc
― katherine, Friday, 2 May 2014 04:49 (ten years ago) link
Yeah that's some lousy writing. They have hair, their songs are dumb like Hanson, and they have long hair like Hanson. That's pretty much all of the review, and yet it takes 2 pages to read.― ▴▲ ▴TH3CR()$BY$H()W▴▲ ▴ (Adam Bruneau), Friday, May 2, 2014 12:39 AM (9 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― ▴▲ ▴TH3CR()$BY$H()W▴▲ ▴ (Adam Bruneau), Friday, May 2, 2014 12:39 AM (9 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Don't forget the bit where everyone liked the songs (except for him) and how Haim should just shut up and not talk and just play with their hair instead.
― 1 pONO 3v3Ry+h1n G!!!1 (dog latin), Friday, 2 May 2014 09:57 (ten years ago) link
One of the band's biggest strategic mistakes was that while Danielle Haim does most of the vocals, her older sister Este was charged with the onstage patter, which seemed to be influenced by the Shoshanna character from the HBO series Girls.
A strategic mistake? Were they overrun by an army of Cimbri half-way through the set?
(also, I doubt a 27 year old based her personality on a character from a show that premiered 2 years ago.)
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Friday, 2 May 2014 18:29 (ten years ago) link
yeah but Haim are girls and the show is named GIRLS so you know i mean there's a pretty good link there
― dollar rave club (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 2 May 2014 18:33 (ten years ago) link
I hear they mapped out their strategy in kindergarten: Este would grow up to be more talkative and Danielle more reserved.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Friday, 2 May 2014 18:34 (ten years ago) link
Excited to see some genuinely execrable writing again itt. Now with added life coaching.
With the sisters ranging from being young to being kind of young (Este's the oldest at 27 and Alana's the youngest at 22), there is time for them to fall in and out of love, hitchhike around the Southwest, or have other meaningful and meaningless experiences that might help their lyrics and personas catch up to their musical skills.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Friday, 2 May 2014 18:36 (ten years ago) link
hitchhike around the Southwest,
is he basically telling them to go get murdered?
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Friday, 2 May 2014 18:38 (ten years ago) link
the southwest seems like a terrible region to hitchhike, so many long desert roads and stuff, wouldn't it make more sense to hitchhike in like the southeast where it's still warm but more dense?
― dollar rave club (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 2 May 2014 18:44 (ten years ago) link
also i'm p sure the haim album did well enough that they could buy like an old honda accord or something
hitchhike around the southwest, collecting topaz necklaces, bald eagle statuettes, and actual living lizards
― the glimmer man (Sufjan Grafton), Friday, 2 May 2014 19:03 (ten years ago) link
Spend your allowance on a bow and arrow set where the arrows have rubber plunger tips. Get some water at wall drug. Release a hit record.
― the glimmer man (Sufjan Grafton), Friday, 2 May 2014 19:05 (ten years ago) link
Form a Brit pop band with some Nevadans, like an inverse dire straits. See the Hoover dam. Check out those arches. Play to arenas full of adoring fans.
― the glimmer man (Sufjan Grafton), Friday, 2 May 2014 19:09 (ten years ago) link
WOW @ "there is time for them to fall in and out of love." that's rly gross.
― difficult listening hour, Friday, 2 May 2014 19:12 (ten years ago) link
Can't wait until Haim writes a song or two about falling in or out of love
― I got the glares, the mutterings, the snarls (President Keyes), Friday, 2 May 2014 19:15 (ten years ago) link
a prescription for success!
― the glimmer man (Sufjan Grafton), Friday, 2 May 2014 19:21 (ten years ago) link
re: the NYTimes Magazine piece on Geeshie Wiley and Elvie Thomas, McCormick's daughter posted the following to the fb "The Real Blues Form" page:
A few points:1) My father isn't “withholding” or “hoarding” his archive. He is actively working on getting his research out there. I am aware that there is widespread dissatisfaction with the speed at which he works. Bipolar disorder is a terrible thing to have to live with. He does the best he can.2) No one has any intention of burning the archive, setting it out by the curb for garbage collection, or otherwise allowing it be lost. My father has referred to it as his “monster” but it’s also his baby. It represents years of his labors, his hopes, and his dreams. He desperately wants it be preserved, as do I.3) That said, he is not going to just give it away to anyone. He has very strong feelings about how he wants it to be handled and preserved. As he has every right to, because it is his life’s work. He devoted years of effort to collecting this data and he is entitled to do whatever he wants with it. It is not in the public domain. It does not belong to “history.” It belongs to him. Whether you approve of his approach or the speed at which he works is irrelevant, because it’s his decision and no one else’s—not even mine. Your enthusiasm to get your hands on it does not magically give you a legal right to take possession of someone else’s property.4) He is not in this for the money. I am not in this for the money. That does not mean that money is not a factor, but it’s certainly not the most important one. When all is said and done, I am fairly certain that any money that might potentially be earned by my father’s work will be far outweighed by the investment that has gone into it over the years.5) There has been some talk of burglarizing his home to “rescue” his work. Please know that we take any and all such threats, even if intended as a joke, very seriously. Any such comments will be forwarded to our attorney and to local law enforcement in case anyone else should decide to follow in Sullivan’s and Love’s footsteps and steal from my father.6) There is absolutely no purpose in circulating some kind of petition to try and convince either me or my father to do whatever it is you think you want us to do. We don't need your harassment to understand the importance of either his research materials or his work based on them. We already get a daily stream of phone calls and emails from people who want to “help,” most of whom simply want to help themselves to my father's work. The last person whose assistance he accepted was Caitlin Love, and instead of doing the work my father needed her to do, she rifled through his files and stole what she wanted for her own—and John Sullivan’s—professional and financial gain.7) Indexing and preserving an archive containing decades of original research and notes is complicated. Writing a book (or in this case books) is complicated. Negotiating with universities, foundations, publishers, and agents is complicated. Living with bipolar disorder is complicated. Coping with age-related illnesses is complicated. There are no easy answers or simple solutions to my father’s problems. We are doing the best we can.My father still believes he can finish at least some of his work. That belief is what gets him out of bed every day. How dare you suggest that anyone has the right to take that away from him.If you really, really want to help, leave my father alone and let him work. Instead, call upon John Jeremiah Sullivan and Caitlin Love to return everything they removed from his home, and to refrain from using any more of my father’s work for their own profit.
1) My father isn't “withholding” or “hoarding” his archive. He is actively working on getting his research out there. I am aware that there is widespread dissatisfaction with the speed at which he works. Bipolar disorder is a terrible thing to have to live with. He does the best he can.
2) No one has any intention of burning the archive, setting it out by the curb for garbage collection, or otherwise allowing it be lost. My father has referred to it as his “monster” but it’s also his baby. It represents years of his labors, his hopes, and his dreams. He desperately wants it be preserved, as do I.
3) That said, he is not going to just give it away to anyone. He has very strong feelings about how he wants it to be handled and preserved. As he has every right to, because it is his life’s work. He devoted years of effort to collecting this data and he is entitled to do whatever he wants with it. It is not in the public domain. It does not belong to “history.” It belongs to him. Whether you approve of his approach or the speed at which he works is irrelevant, because it’s his decision and no one else’s—not even mine. Your enthusiasm to get your hands on it does not magically give you a legal right to take possession of someone else’s property.
4) He is not in this for the money. I am not in this for the money. That does not mean that money is not a factor, but it’s certainly not the most important one. When all is said and done, I am fairly certain that any money that might potentially be earned by my father’s work will be far outweighed by the investment that has gone into it over the years.
5) There has been some talk of burglarizing his home to “rescue” his work. Please know that we take any and all such threats, even if intended as a joke, very seriously. Any such comments will be forwarded to our attorney and to local law enforcement in case anyone else should decide to follow in Sullivan’s and Love’s footsteps and steal from my father.
6) There is absolutely no purpose in circulating some kind of petition to try and convince either me or my father to do whatever it is you think you want us to do. We don't need your harassment to understand the importance of either his research materials or his work based on them. We already get a daily stream of phone calls and emails from people who want to “help,” most of whom simply want to help themselves to my father's work. The last person whose assistance he accepted was Caitlin Love, and instead of doing the work my father needed her to do, she rifled through his files and stole what she wanted for her own—and John Sullivan’s—professional and financial gain.
7) Indexing and preserving an archive containing decades of original research and notes is complicated. Writing a book (or in this case books) is complicated. Negotiating with universities, foundations, publishers, and agents is complicated. Living with bipolar disorder is complicated. Coping with age-related illnesses is complicated. There are no easy answers or simple solutions to my father’s problems. We are doing the best we can.
My father still believes he can finish at least some of his work. That belief is what gets him out of bed every day. How dare you suggest that anyone has the right to take that away from him.
If you really, really want to help, leave my father alone and let him work. Instead, call upon John Jeremiah Sullivan and Caitlin Love to return everything they removed from his home, and to refrain from using any more of my father’s work for their own profit.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Friday, 2 May 2014 19:36 (ten years ago) link
damn
― marcos, Friday, 2 May 2014 19:39 (ten years ago) link
http://observer.com/2014/05/john-jeremiah-sullivan-responds-to-nyt-controversy-regarding-robert-mccormick/
― scott seward, Saturday, 3 May 2014 16:47 (ten years ago) link
neither side comes off remotely spotless here (piece is still great, I thought), but that "I wanted him to be a complicated but heroic figure" bit is one of journalism's worst magazine-writing chris evans impulses
― katherine, Saturday, 3 May 2014 17:59 (ten years ago) link
Neither side is spotless, but Sullivan's letter is pretty convincing. Which is not surprising, as he's a professional writer, and Susannah McCormick is not. But that stuff about L.V.'s family is compelling! I do think that his last point is a little optimistic; my guess is that when Robert McCormick dies this stuff is just going to be hoarded by his family.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Saturday, 3 May 2014 18:18 (ten years ago) link
Which is their right, and obviously better than the dump, but I don't think it's necessarily what Sullivan meant.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Saturday, 3 May 2014 18:19 (ten years ago) link
Not the worst ever, but something about this felt gratuitously nasty. Maybe it was the lazy use of "teenage girls" that set me off?
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/03/arts/music/lindsey-stirlings-music-combines-classical-and-dance.html?_r=0
― maura, Sunday, 4 May 2014 14:56 (ten years ago) link
nerdy ones!
― j., Sunday, 4 May 2014 15:09 (ten years ago) link
stupid nerds and their stupid study music
― j., Sunday, 4 May 2014 15:10 (ten years ago) link
This critic discussion format is aggravating too. I think it's because it reads like a closed dialogue, not like a dialogue with the reader. The reader is made to feel like a voiceless onlooker.
― jmm, Sunday, 4 May 2014 15:39 (ten years ago) link
There's that constant need for classical musicians and dancers to be "building upon" what has come before, always being progressive-- "how does this fit into the canon?" A hilarious conceit when you consider that both genres are period piece, the equivalent of civil-war reenactment. And this is of course the prevalent attitude. It's just as strange and dogmatic to me as "she probably made this extremely popular dubstep using presets"
― "got ye!" (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 4 May 2014 16:25 (ten years ago) link
The "who is it for?" question is a weird one, and Caramanica is better than that. To echo jmm's point, they could actually do some reporting and, like, go to a concert and talk to people about what they see in the music, and then tie that into their critical discussion. Hell, they could even go to a fan page.
But instead they choose to remain baffled because they can't fit the music into one of their preconceived archetype/stereotypes about audiences and target markets.
― good and relaxing like akon dont matter (intheblanks), Sunday, 4 May 2014 18:00 (ten years ago) link
they could actually do some reporting
music writing's epitaph
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Sunday, 4 May 2014 18:17 (ten years ago) link
i think most of the right things said above basically trace back to the motive for writing/publishing: 'we need a thing—well, here's a thing, say shit about it'
― j., Sunday, 4 May 2014 19:02 (ten years ago) link
it's like vanessa-mae never existed
― katherine, Sunday, 4 May 2014 20:36 (ten years ago) link
basically it's the old "classical crossover! it's classical, but like with POP! and DANCE! and NOT VIRTUOSIC!" saw with an added dash of "but teenage girls like it?" (which is weird, since it's usually "but middle-aged women like it?")
― katherine, Sunday, 4 May 2014 20:44 (ten years ago) link
you guys probably don't read metal magazines so you might have missed the worst music writer interview ever. hahahaha!
https://scontent-b-ord.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-prn2/t1.0-9/10325402_10152402830090908_8747120128821642114_n.jpg
― scott seward, Monday, 5 May 2014 00:29 (ten years ago) link
are those your kids? those kids look awesome.
― sitting on a claud all day gotta make your butt numb (forksclovetofu), Monday, 5 May 2014 05:26 (ten years ago) link
You shd frequent WDYLL
― Drugs A. Money, Monday, 5 May 2014 07:34 (ten years ago) link
HeyAre you a fan of The Replacements, Archers of Loaf, Nerf Herder, Smashing Pumpkins, Bottle Rockets, Urge Overkill, Me First And The Gimmie Gimmies, The Cult, Jane's Addiction, Fountains of Wayne, Ween, Garage version of Chixdiggit, Wilco, Modest Mouse, the Smithereens, The Del Fuegos, Talking Heads, Dinosaur Jr., Against Me, Modern Baseball, Tripping Daisy, etc. Mid-90's stew, Thin Lizzy, some Jonathan Richman & the Modern Lovers, Sloan's Chris Murphy straight-edging his way into The Queers-a slight Foo Fighters/Queens of the Stone Age vibe, but they sound more DIY.-a funnier and more upbeat version of Tigers Jaw or the Front Bottoms-like if Jon Spencer was trapped in a PopPunk band before discovering the Blues.We try to harness the power of the Who (which comes naturally to us), the musicality of Wilco (everyone knows how good they are), and the lyrical genius of Ween (though we don't even come close to doing the amount of drugs they do/have done, and therefore probably won't come close to the level of Buenos Tardes Amigo, Stroker Ace, or Piss Up a Rope). That said, when people say we sound like Pavement, Spoon, or The Hold Steady, we don't disagree. Pavement was awesome. Spoon makes cool records. Craig Finn sings nice. Those are our aspirations as well. Our music isn't heavy metal, though at times we get pretty heavy. It's kinda Indie Rock, but without all the irony. And it's kinda punk, though you wouldn't think that from looking at us. It's hard to look punk and not get thrown out of PTA meetings so we keep our punk on the inside.
― scott seward, Monday, 5 May 2014 20:43 (ten years ago) link
i know i know i got it in an e-mail, but still...
― scott seward, Monday, 5 May 2014 20:44 (ten years ago) link
Wilco (everyone knows how good they are)
I claim this song title.
― Khamma chameleon (Jon Lewis), Tuesday, 6 May 2014 17:11 (ten years ago) link
wilco (everyoneknowshowgoodtheyare)
― j., Tuesday, 6 May 2014 17:27 (ten years ago) link
Nobody seems to wonderWhat my band sounds likeI gotta find a wayfor this blurb to sayhow we sound,Everybody knowswe sound like Wilco
nah nah nahhhhh, nah nah nahhh nahhhhhh(Everybody knows)nah nah nahhhhh, nah nah nahhh nahhhhhh(Everyone knows how good they are)
― the glimmer man (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 6 May 2014 17:34 (ten years ago) link
A slight Foo FightersNOT SO MUCH!!!A trapped Jon SpencerHE'S OUT OF TOUCH!!!Kinda indieWE'RE EXPOSED!!!Everybody knowswe sound like Wilco
― Thus Sang Freud, Tuesday, 6 May 2014 18:22 (ten years ago) link
it comes naturally to uswe don't even come closewe don't even take drugswe don't piss up a rope
that said, we don't disagreethat said, there's no ironythat said, we're pretty heavythat said, we're kinda indie
nah nah nahhhh....
― fact checking cuz, Tuesday, 6 May 2014 18:38 (ten years ago) link
http://grantland.com/hollywood-prospectus/tyrese-is-hip-hops-first-billionaire/
― scott seward, Friday, 9 May 2014 22:35 (ten years ago) link
WEIRDEST story and headline anyway. since they are actually talking about dre.
― scott seward, Friday, 9 May 2014 22:36 (ten years ago) link
i guess it's a joke.
― scott seward, Friday, 9 May 2014 22:37 (ten years ago) link
but i don't get it.
haha that thing is hilarious
― some dude, Friday, 9 May 2014 22:58 (ten years ago) link
http://thequietus.com/articles/15274-coldplay-ghost-stories-review
Dunno if the Mr. Agreeable character was ever actually funny (not since I've been aware of it) but this is tiresome and unpleasant in ways quite far from the kind of deflation of celebrity I suppose it's trying to be. "Gwyneth Paltrow, that ghastly, gulping, giraffe-necked, sick-making long drink of carb-averse goop"?
― Merdeyeux, Tuesday, 20 May 2014 15:10 (ten years ago) link
Lefsetz loves it
― grindie cindy (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 20 May 2014 19:42 (ten years ago) link
I finally read that NYT Mag piece by Austerwhatzis from April -- so THAT's what poptimism is! like lool at living in a pitchfork dominated era and thinking 'poptimism' (however defined) somehow won
No one I know outside of the hardcore music fans are acquainted with Pitchfork, everyone knows that Justin Timberlake is "a great artist." Pee-mism has won.
― images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 20 May 2014 19:50 (ten years ago) link
stop
― grindie cindy (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 20 May 2014 19:51 (ten years ago) link
done.
(this is just like one of those internecine firefights btwn film critics that none of you know about)
― images of war violence and historical smoking (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 20 May 2014 20:06 (ten years ago) link
That review of Ghost Stories made me chuckle.
― Toni Braxton-Hicks (Turrican), Tuesday, 20 May 2014 20:38 (ten years ago) link
So is Ghost Stories somehow related to the new Call of Duty game?
― ▴▲ ▴TH3CR()$BY$H()W▴▲ ▴ (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 20 May 2014 20:55 (ten years ago) link
Enjoy...http://www.laweekly.com/westcoastsound/2014/05/21/10-reasons-why-1994-was-the-best-year-for-music?showFullText=true
― Rocky (ku4u1u), Thursday, 22 May 2014 00:03 (ten years ago) link
they save the best for last too @ #1
― ۩, Thursday, 22 May 2014 00:07 (ten years ago) link
it's a compelling argument tbh
― °ㅇ๐ْ ° (gr8080), Thursday, 22 May 2014 00:30 (ten years ago) link
no mention of Bee Thousand in the indie section
― relentlessly pecking at peace (President Keyes), Thursday, 22 May 2014 00:31 (ten years ago) link
suzy is mr agreeable?
― mookieproof, Thursday, 22 May 2014 00:33 (ten years ago) link
guys don't click come on you're just encouraging them
― maura, Thursday, 22 May 2014 01:37 (ten years ago) link
aaaand from my hometown "alt" weekly:
Miley Cyrus and Morrissey are basically the same person. One is a lyrical genius shrouded in sexual mystery who speaks on behalf of intellectualism, animal rights, and sordid youths, defying borders and generations. The other is famous for a butt that resembles uncooked turkeys, being naked, and sticking her tongue out.
When Morrissey was 23, he was "celibate." When Miley puts on a Michael Jordan jersey, she's rumored to have sex with Mike Will Made It. They both have signature hair styles. They both have rabid fan bases. They both love to annoy the opposition.
The likeness is striking. And now they both given it their all on stage, singing "There Is a Light That Never Goes Out."
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 22 May 2014 02:15 (ten years ago) link
Was certain the first graf was gonna pull the "and the other is Morrissey" switcheroo.
― Devilock, Thursday, 22 May 2014 03:06 (ten years ago) link
what is this magical rumor-granting jersey (and does it work in reverse?)
― katherine, Thursday, 22 May 2014 04:02 (ten years ago) link
― Devilock, Wednesday, May 21, 2014 11:06 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
yes, the old unswitched-switcheroo switcheroo.
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Thursday, 22 May 2014 05:06 (ten years ago) link
not sure what's supposed to be egregiously bad about that 1994 listicle thing. there's no good reason for it to exist but on that basis about 95% of contemporary music writing should be pasted here
― From Tha Crouuuch To Da Palacios (DJ Mencap), Thursday, 22 May 2014 07:52 (ten years ago) link
agree. compared to that telegraph britpop thing it's a shining voice of reason. also have to give props for juxtaposing darkthrone with ace of base in 10 and 9.
― now I'm the grandfather (dog latin), Thursday, 22 May 2014 08:15 (ten years ago) link
i think AG is like a vietnam vet he has flashbacks and freaks out at any mention of britpop
― dollar rave club (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 22 May 2014 16:51 (ten years ago) link
1994 was pretty sweet and there's plenty of good music mentioned but citing Counting Crows and Cranberries as evidence in your favor is odd.
― christmas candy bar (al leong), Thursday, 22 May 2014 16:55 (ten years ago) link
I dont like posting negative things, but i cant not post this - this is just jaw droppingly wrong and stupid, delivered with the authority of the expert who really has not the first clue. Each wrong headed assumption resting on another, this is easily the worst review ive ever read.
http://thequietus.com/articles/14332-various-hardcore-traxx-dance-mania-records-1986-1997-review
― anvil, Sunday, 25 May 2014 06:19 (ten years ago) link
http://i491.photobucket.com/albums/rr277/kadield/KickDog.gif
― Groovy Wordbender (soref), Sunday, 25 May 2014 09:12 (ten years ago) link
An inherent problem with dance retrospectives is that unless you already happen to have a vested nostalgic or archival interest in the era, it can be hard to find reasons to dip in. While it's not unusual for new ears to get turned on to latter-day rock and pop via oldies radio, compilations and the like, the forward thrust of electronic music leaves a scorched trail that proves tricky to travel back down. Dance fans are not expected to know their history.
lmao what
― My god. Pure ideology. (ey), Sunday, 25 May 2014 09:26 (ten years ago) link
its every line as well of it, you cant even isolate just one line. So authoritatively and definitely delivered! To be so sure, when you have so little clue
― anvil, Sunday, 25 May 2014 09:34 (ten years ago) link
But did you like my other reviews, anvil?
― now I'm the grandfather (dog latin), Sunday, 25 May 2014 10:45 (ten years ago) link
Reminds me of this classic Momus review:
"... this capsule encyclopaedia entry for Charlie Parker at first seems a model of lucidity and concision. Its air of infallible authority, though, is only skin-deep. I just don't accept that Parker's main contribution is in having shifted jazz from 'arpeggionic flurries' to 'chromatisism', and it doesn't help that one of those terms is mis-spelled and the other made up. There's nothing worse than authority trying to blind the reader with science which turns out, on closer inspection, to be voodoo."
― Sausage Party (Bob Six), Sunday, 25 May 2014 10:54 (ten years ago) link
This thread isn't for posting every article that you disagree with.
― dollar rave club (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Sunday, 25 May 2014 11:19 (ten years ago) link
It's not like the issue is the writer's Controversial Opinions, it's that...he appears to not know very much about what he is writing about.
I mean there are a bunch of downright factual inaccuracies all over it.
― My god. Pure ideology. (ey), Sunday, 25 May 2014 11:34 (ten years ago) link
Well you can ask him, he's right here
― dollar rave club (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Sunday, 25 May 2014 11:36 (ten years ago) link
I ain't getting into the mix of uk folx arguing dance stuff
I'd have thought that the thread where anvil and I were originally disagreeing about dance music two days ago would have been a better place to repost that. But I guess this thread has more prominence on ILM so I get why he put it here.
― now I'm the grandfather (dog latin), Sunday, 25 May 2014 11:45 (ten years ago) link
1,500 words on "blog rock"? Can do!http://grantland.com/features/blog-rock-clap-your-hands-say-yeah/
― Angkor Waht (Neil S), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 08:38 (ten years ago) link
1,500 good, thoughtful, interesting words imo. This thread needs to get back to baffling, barely literate garbage and clueless rockist trolling.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 12:57 (ten years ago) link
yeah fair enough, it's not so much the quality of the writing as the topic that made me raise my eyebrows. Carry on!
― Angkor Waht (Neil S), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 13:00 (ten years ago) link
hyden is garbage but i admit i didn't get past the first paragraph on that one
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 13:03 (ten years ago) link
he's a half-decent feature writer but he might be the worst critic out there
― call all destroyer, Wednesday, 28 May 2014 13:12 (ten years ago) link
half of that piece was about him trying to remember where he was the first time he heard tapes n' tapes, it was painful
I don't understand the case against Hyden. Garbage how?
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 13:20 (ten years ago) link
― call all destroyer, Wednesday, May 28, 2014 9:12 AM (12 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
That's half of all his pieces. His excruciating R.E.M. series on the AV Club was 60% where he was when Michael Stipe first started enunciating.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 13:28 (ten years ago) link
If critics were sportswriters, Hyden would be the Bill Simmons.Douglas Wolk=Matt Hinton etc.
― campreverb, Wednesday, 28 May 2014 15:38 (ten years ago) link
I've not read anything else by Hynden but his REM series was a good read I thought, mapping the ups and downs of being an REM fan in a way that chimed with my own experiences (and I'm sure many other readers'). I'm not always a fan of the anecdotal approach - that Colin Meloy Replacement books is a snooze and Nick Hornby's 31 Songs is the pits - but this worked well. And it's not like the piece lacked solid critical analysis either.
― Poor.Old.Tired.Horse. (Stew), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 16:07 (ten years ago) link
reading other people opine/narrate/write long form articles about their own taste is unbelievably boring to meit seems like a poor replacement for conversation too. that's what it sounds like -- a one-sided conversation. would prefer not to read that tbh.
― La Lechera, Wednesday, 28 May 2014 16:19 (ten years ago) link
i didn't mean that to sound so severe -- just that i would rather read music writing that is informative in a way that i can use. i'm sure the personal narrative serves a purpose for the people who read and write them.
― La Lechera, Wednesday, 28 May 2014 16:26 (ten years ago) link
his "critical analysis" tends toward the obvious and unnecessary, and his voice is so dull, his sentences so whatever, and always on some straight white guy rock bullshit
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 16:26 (ten years ago) link
Fair enough, but the 60% 'where I was when x happened' thing is way off. Revisiting the pieces, they're not particularly excitingly written, but they're solid enough, and do a decent job of contextualising the albums. Not a patch of Matthew Perpetua's Pop Songs project, granted, but hardly a candidate for 'worst writing ever'.
― Poor.Old.Tired.Horse. (Stew), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 16:32 (ten years ago) link
mapping the ups and downs of being an REM fan in a way that chimed with my own experiences (and I'm sure many other readers').
It did this for me too, and his experiences didn't strike me as particularly unique or noteworthy; but more to the point, he apparently made no attempt to relate or frame those experiences in a halfway interesting way.
Also, BradNelson OTM.
(and tbf, I wouldn't call his stuff the worst ever...maybe just profoundly unnecessary)
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 16:37 (ten years ago) link
lol you bringing up perp condemned him worse than i could
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 16:39 (ten years ago) link
how are you defining "straight white guy rock bullshit" in this context, Brad?
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 16:40 (ten years ago) link
lazily
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 16:41 (ten years ago) link
one of his recent grantland thinkpieces wondered for a million words whether coldplay were underrated, overrated, or properly rated
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 16:42 (ten years ago) link
he did one for pearl jam too. i literally cannot think of a worse format for criticism.
― call all destroyer, Wednesday, 28 May 2014 16:46 (ten years ago) link
Just saying for the record that I find Hyden more thoughtful and eloquent than most of the critics out there and I don't really get what Brad's talking about.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 16:47 (ten years ago) link
i guess i mean he approaches varieties of pop from a perspective thoroughly dyed by rock, or you know, like someone who wrote an interminable history of '90s alt rock for the av club
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 16:49 (ten years ago) link
it's cool i'm obviously just mad about how boring he is
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 16:50 (ten years ago) link
let's say you've been assigned to write a piece about blog rock. ok, not the best assignment, but you could make the most of it. would you let this be your actual critical take on voxtrot?
Now that I have heard several Voxtrot songs, I can confirm that this band is pretty OK and very blog-rocky. Imagine if the Smiths sounded exactly like a Smiths-like band from 20 years earlier, but never made a record as great as The Queen Is Dead that would influence Smiths-like bands 20 years in the future, and you have Voxtrot.
would you find it hilarious/clever to admit that you have only heard one song from the tapes 'n tapes album?
I remember quite liking The Loon’s opening track, “Just Drums.”2 The rhythm guitar part was excellent, the bass was rubbery, and the drum solo in the middle was triumphantly competent. I liked “Just Drums” so much that I don’t think I ever played the rest of the record. No, sir, I was fine with just “Just Drums,” thanks.
would you bore ppl by writing things like this?
For instance, I remember being really excited when I came across the Clap Your Hands Say Yeah album while perusing a CD jukebox at a bar in Madison, Wisconsin. And if you can come up with a blog-rockier sentence than that, I will send you the entire Annuals discography.
it's this voice he uses, sort of a lazy/detached internet commentator type of writing combined with endless amounts of first-person that make me wonder if he even likes writing music criticism.
― call all destroyer, Wednesday, 28 May 2014 16:58 (ten years ago) link
The rhythm guitar part was excellent, the bass was rubbery
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 16:59 (ten years ago) link
the turkey was chewy
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 17:00 (ten years ago) link
listening tapes 'n tapes song is hilarious, not very clever tho
― macklin' rosie (crüt), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 17:01 (ten years ago) link
http://www.syracuse.com/entertainment/index.ssf/2014/05/5_reasons_we_love_to_hate_dave_matthews_band.html#incart_m-rpt-2
comment section is unbelievable
― the portentous pepper (govern yourself accordingly), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 17:13 (ten years ago) link
too much time on ilx
― Look at this joke I've recognised, do you recognise it as well? (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 17:15 (ten years ago) link
imo we should all just read books and never the internet again
― ian, Wednesday, 28 May 2014 17:17 (ten years ago) link
^^truth bomb
― Pentatonic's Rendezvous Band (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 17:23 (ten years ago) link
i'm reading this right now. dude is opinionated as fuck! fuck you, bitch, jackie and roy rule!!
http://www.amazon.com/Biographical-Guide-Great-Jazz-Singers/dp/0375421491
― scott seward, Wednesday, 28 May 2014 17:31 (ten years ago) link
tapes 'n tapes
they are a real band? I thought markers made them up
― ۩, Wednesday, 28 May 2014 17:33 (ten years ago) link
A Guide To Great Jazz Singers should be one of those joke books where all the pages are blank.
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 28 May 2014 17:33 (ten years ago) link
great record
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=so-nEdceows
― saer, Wednesday, 28 May 2014 21:57 (ten years ago) link
I know that Ziggy Stardust was like one of David Bowie’s personas, right? I’m digging the cover of this album, he’s standing next to a bunch of garbage with his guitar and wearing an amazing jumpsuit (which kind of gives him a FUPA on the back cover.) The lighting is dim, it looks like it just rained. I think this record is trying to tell me a story. I’m finding the second half of the name of the album a little cumbersome. “And the spiders from Mars.” Wouldn’t it be better just to call it “The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust?” Doesn’t everyone always just refer to this album as Ziggy Stardust? No one ever mentions the spiders from Mars, but maybe I’ll feel differently after hearing this album, as I’ve never listened to it! The bottom right hand corner of the back cover says “To be played at maximum volume,” which I appreciate. I like little details like that that make you feel like the artist or the band are talking directly to you, the fan. I don’t know if he thought about it with that much detail, but I’d like to picture David Bowie thinking about some kid sitting in their bedroom in 1972, staring at the picture of him kind of looking androgynous and daring, and calling himself Ziggy Stardust and deciding, “I better tell them to play this at maximum volume, because they need that advice.
― go to evangelical agonizing eternal hell (Karl Malone), Thursday, 29 May 2014 22:59 (ten years ago) link
did Lex write that
― Οὖτις, Thursday, 29 May 2014 23:08 (ten years ago) link
ha I thought that was a parody, but no, she's still at it
― relentlessly pecking at peace (President Keyes), Thursday, 29 May 2014 23:12 (ten years ago) link
this person called up a professor at Cornell University and interviewed them at length for a 2,400 article that is entirely about Iggy Azalea not 'shouting out' Charli XCX on the verses of "Fancy"
http://thinkprogress.org/culture/2014/05/29/3443070/why-doesnt-iggy-azalea-give-charli-xcx-a-shout-out-in-fancy/
― ςὖτ ιτ Οὖτ (some dude), Thursday, 29 May 2014 23:49 (ten years ago) link
Halfway through the piece, literally every question is, "Yes, but why didn't she shout out Charlie XCX?"
― intheblanks, Thursday, 29 May 2014 23:59 (ten years ago) link
"if Charli XCX had been in charge of Cornell University and had given you your job, wouldn't you want to tell people that?"
― ςὖτ ιτ Οὖτ (some dude), Friday, 30 May 2014 00:03 (ten years ago) link
― intheblanks, Friday, 30 May 2014 00:04 (ten years ago) link
Feel bad for that Cornell prof, like someone with real questions about race, authenticity, and hip-hop could have done at least an interesting interview with him around Iggy Azalea. Instead he got this weird Charlie XCX stan demanding justice.
― intheblanks, Friday, 30 May 2014 00:06 (ten years ago) link
I love how bad that is, my only complaint is that it isn't long enough. I want to see ivy league professors pushed to breaking point
― ogmor, Friday, 30 May 2014 00:18 (ten years ago) link
stay tuned next week, when they sit down and watch every Icona Pop interview on YouTube and count how many times they mention Charli XCX
― ςὖτ ιτ Οὖτ (some dude), Friday, 30 May 2014 00:19 (ten years ago) link
I want to see more journalists using their powers to troll profs into bringing their exorbitantly-valued expertise to bear on one inane & misconstrued situation over & over again
― ogmor, Friday, 30 May 2014 00:25 (ten years ago) link
Haha
― intheblanks, Friday, 30 May 2014 00:33 (ten years ago) link
Can you imagine how many times that writer's coworkers and friends have heard a rant about this?
― intheblanks, Friday, 30 May 2014 00:34 (ten years ago) link
"It seems especially weird to me that Charli doesn’t get a shout-out in this song, given that Iggy is a rapper paying homage to all this classic rap."
― relentlessly pecking at peace (President Keyes), Friday, 30 May 2014 00:39 (ten years ago) link
lmaoooo amazing interview
― dyl, Friday, 30 May 2014 02:03 (ten years ago) link
fp Travis Gosa for not repping "Superlove"
― rage against martin sheen (sic), Friday, 30 May 2014 02:28 (ten years ago) link
i just keep thinking, if i were charli
― j., Friday, 30 May 2014 03:37 (ten years ago) link
why doesn't Iggy Azalea say "we want hen fap" on 'Fancy'?
― From Tha Crouuuch To Da Palacios (DJ Mencap), Friday, 30 May 2014 08:05 (ten years ago) link
What's with all those songs Lennon and McCartney wrote for other people where they don't spell out 'B.E.A.T.L.E.S.' in the bridge?
― now I'm the grandfather (dog latin), Friday, 30 May 2014 08:18 (ten years ago) link
This piece is blowing my mind.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Friday, 30 May 2014 08:44 (ten years ago) link
she says "called up" but the really long responses and tone deaf questions and the fact that it doesn't sound like a conversation kind of points to email interview
― Another great spree fucking. Shoot. (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 30 May 2014 13:15 (ten years ago) link
What is thinkprogress anyway
― Another great spree fucking. Shoot. (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 30 May 2014 13:18 (ten years ago) link
It's a lefty news site
― famous instagram God (waterface), Friday, 30 May 2014 13:40 (ten years ago) link
it's the journalism section of the Center for American Progress, a prominent liberal think bank.
― intheblanks, Friday, 30 May 2014 14:22 (ten years ago) link
think tank, I mean.
wow, that's fun
― Look at this joke I've recognised, do you recognise it as well? (forksclovetofu), Friday, 30 May 2014 17:00 (ten years ago) link
So am I fired up over nothing? I just think if I were Charli I’d be so annoyed that this song is huge and her name isn’t huge, too.I think we’re both dating ourselves here.
― Look at this joke I've recognised, do you recognise it as well? (forksclovetofu), Friday, 30 May 2014 17:01 (ten years ago) link
prof must be thinking "well i guess if you want to be a public intellectual, you gotta start somewhere" poor guy
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Friday, 30 May 2014 17:15 (ten years ago) link
i still don't understand why a white woman jacking an African-American artform should be obligated to shout out another white woman
― Another great spree fucking. Shoot. (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 30 May 2014 17:39 (ten years ago) link
Totally the most puzzling part of the piece, most hilariously captured in this statement by the interviewer:
Well, Charli is Tai. I think Iggy is savvy enough to know, what with all the appropriation controversy she’s already stirred, that it would be a very bad idea to cast Charli as Dionne.
― intheblanks, Friday, 30 May 2014 17:54 (ten years ago) link
Headline writers at ThinkProgress, realizing comic inanity of article, give it the headline "‘I’m The Realest’: The Authenticity Of Rap’s Newest Superstar, Iggy Azalea" to reflect the article they were hoping would get written.
― intheblanks, Friday, 30 May 2014 17:56 (ten years ago) link
I still don't understand why Iggy shouting Charli out is going to help her get famous more than a "Featuring Charli XCX" credit is
― relentlessly pecking at peace (President Keyes), Friday, 30 May 2014 17:59 (ten years ago) link
I don't know, it's probably somehow related to the imagined rules of shout-out etiquette that this writer believes have been universally applied throughout the world of hip-hop for the last 35 years.
― intheblanks, Friday, 30 May 2014 18:03 (ten years ago) link
I want to give a shoutout to FunkMaster Flex and all the DJs across the worldI want to give a shoutout to my nigga Lupe, I want to give a shoutout to my nigga Suge Knight, to my nigga Dr. Dre, Snoop DoggI want to give a shoutout to um,um, what's them niggas, OutkastI want to give a shoutout to them crazy niggas in parts of the world that I never been tooI want to give a shoutout to the Eskimos, I want to give a shoutout to the submarinesI want to give a shoutout to the Army, Air Force, Navy, MarinesKnow what I'm saying? Y'all playing my music in the submarines and the boats; play that shit know what I'm saying?It's called travelling music, bustin' ya ass style. Yo Big Baby Jesus; It's One Love.I give a shout out to all the women, I give a shout out to all the babies, all the munchkins, all across the world playa. I want to give a shoutout to all the school teachers. I give a shout out to um,um, Charli XCX
― Look at this joke I've recognised, do you recognise it as well? (forksclovetofu), Friday, 30 May 2014 18:07 (ten years ago) link
wait until she finds out big sean is uncredited on "problem"
― katherine, Friday, 30 May 2014 18:22 (ten years ago) link
This thing is incredible.
― On-the-spot Dicespin (DJP), Friday, 30 May 2014 18:29 (ten years ago) link
i want lots of articles like this. would read them all day.
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Friday, 30 May 2014 18:50 (ten years ago) link
Why doesn't Geddy Lee shout out Aimee Man on "Time Stand Still"?
― relentlessly pecking at peace (President Keyes), Friday, 30 May 2014 19:08 (ten years ago) link
nobody wants to hear Geddy Lee shout iirc
― the glimmer man (Sufjan Grafton), Friday, 30 May 2014 19:20 (ten years ago) link
He shouts like an ordinary guy
― dollar rave club (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 30 May 2014 19:38 (ten years ago) link
fact checking cuz to thread
― intheblanks, Friday, 30 May 2014 19:47 (ten years ago) link
wrt to the blog rock article, via ned http://www.cantstopthebleeding.com/guest-editorial-why-must-grantland-puke-all-over-my-rich-cultural-heritage
― wat is teh waht (s.clover), Friday, 30 May 2014 21:56 (ten years ago) link
http://www.noiseporn.com/2014/05/music-piracy-remain-illegal/
― Look at this joke I've recognised, do you recognise it as well? (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 4 June 2014 18:27 (ten years ago) link
Let me be clear: this IS theft. I’ve consulted with several attorneys about it and they concur.
― ogmor, Thursday, 5 June 2014 14:12 (ten years ago) link
I realize Clap Your Hands Say Yeah only sold a few tens of thousands of records, but every single person who bought one of those records went on to work in the tech industry.
Excellent
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Thursday, 5 June 2014 14:56 (ten years ago) link
Surely there are more important things to worry about in a world rife with war, natural disasters and noise pollution compliments of Avril Lavigne
This zing makes me think he's been working on this article for about ten years now, revising and revising, killing his darlings
― relentlessly pecking at peace (President Keyes), Thursday, 5 June 2014 16:39 (ten years ago) link
It took my tired mind a while to decipher what "noise pollution compliments of Avril Lavigne" was even supposed to mean.
― ₴HABΔZZ ¶IZZΔ (Hurting 2), Thursday, 5 June 2014 16:49 (ten years ago) link
sadly no: http://www.noiseporn.com/2014/04/avril-lavignes-hello-kitty-horrifying-racist/
So, when I heard “Hello Kitty,” the latest noise pollution spewed from Avril Lavigne, I was offended. I flew off the handle. I yelled “No!” I screamed “Stop!” but the radio kept playing the song. It was terrible…I tried to get away, but it was already inside my brain. It was the musical equivalent of waterboarding, and I’m pretty sure it violates article III of the Geneva Convention. I realize my opinion is subjective, but I’ve heard better sounds coming from dive bar restrooms (stay away from the chili con queso). I would compare this song to the dingleberries plastered on the ass of a mangy dog I saw wandering the street last night, but that would be an insult to dingleberries. I think I’ve made my point.
― Look at this joke I've recognised, do you recognise it as well? (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 5 June 2014 16:49 (ten years ago) link
yeah I just mean his grammar made it hard for me to compute. Like I thought someone was paying compliments to her.
― ₴HABΔZZ ¶IZZΔ (Hurting 2), Thursday, 5 June 2014 16:54 (ten years ago) link
Good to see him rise above Avril Lavigne by invoking language I used w my friends while goofing off in 7th grade.
― ▴▲ ▴TH3CR()$BY$H()W▴▲ ▴ (Adam Bruneau), Thursday, 5 June 2014 16:56 (ten years ago) link
Self-satisfied "I think I've made my point" a nice touch.
― intheblanks, Thursday, 5 June 2014 16:58 (ten years ago) link
I think he needed a third poop-related comparison to really nail the point
― relentlessly pecking at peace (President Keyes), Thursday, 5 June 2014 17:09 (ten years ago) link
In the Minds of Evil, the 11th long-player from venerable Tampa, Florida-based death metal prognosticators Deicide, invokes the bluesy, blistering, and robust cacophony of early albums like Legion (1992) and Once Upon the Cross (1995).
so many things wrong with this sentence.
― Neanderthal, Saturday, 7 June 2014 13:33 (ten years ago) link
starting with Tampa, Florida
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 7 June 2014 13:34 (ten years ago) link
like 'death metal prognosticators'? Do they foretell the future of death metal a la Nostradamus?
― Neanderthal, Saturday, 7 June 2014 13:38 (ten years ago) link
noted blues metal band Deicide
― Neanderthal, Saturday, 7 June 2014 13:39 (ten years ago) link
Well I'm a lunatic of God's creation - and my baby she done gone Well I'm a lunatic of God's creation - and my baby she done gone But when she meets that caco-daemon, that woman gonna find herself dead by dawn
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Saturday, 7 June 2014 15:22 (ten years ago) link
ok lol
― Neanderthal, Saturday, 7 June 2014 15:57 (ten years ago) link
loooool
― Slight damage to cover on top corner (chewed by a kitten) (Craigo Boingo), Sunday, 8 June 2014 12:57 (ten years ago) link
http://elitedaily.com/music/how-one-generation-was-able-to-kill-the-music-industry/593411/
"What brands understand is that music is an important part of Millennials’ identity. It’s more than entertainment for us. The music we listen to can be as important as how we dress and influences who our friends are."
Well done millennials, you invented music as an expression of identity. For the previous 50 years it was just entertainment but you fixed that. A pity you can't label the axes on a graph so that it makes any fucking sense.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Tuesday, 10 June 2014 21:04 (ten years ago) link
but cliff richards had 6.31 qed
― woof, Tuesday, 10 June 2014 21:19 (ten years ago) link
"the small corner of social media that I’m forced to inhabit as a rock critic"
― campreverb, Tuesday, 10 June 2014 21:51 (ten years ago) link
I can't work out that graph at all. Coldplay's 80 million records in 15 years = 0.14 somethings Cliff's 250 million records in a couple of centuries = 6.31 somethings
― Maurice Malpas Holiday Jotter Blues (onimo), Wednesday, 11 June 2014 09:04 (ten years ago) link
don't read elite daily.
http://www.theawl.com/2013/07/rich-kids-of-the-internet-inside-the-astounding-troll-hole-that-is-elite-daily
― maura, Wednesday, 11 June 2014 11:44 (ten years ago) link
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Wednesday, 11 June 2014 12:35 (ten years ago) link
Ugh
― That's How Strong My Dub Is (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 12 June 2014 01:40 (ten years ago) link
"because the headlines and content are a combination of Thought Catalog's realness and The Huffington Post's breadth."
lol i am barfing and laughing all at once
― j., Thursday, 12 June 2014 01:43 (ten years ago) link
kinda lol mostly vom
― shameless pureyors of slop-on-plate (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 12 June 2014 14:53 (ten years ago) link
"California has a very direct and unforgiving steam beer called Anchor. But in Hollywood nobody drinks Anchor, because they prefer fresh peach Bellinis.
Since arriving here three days ago, every part-time actor I’ve met drinking these Bellinis, alone in the Chateau Marmont, says this feeling of dreamy detachment I’m experiencing is a spell well known to marinate your mind’s eye after a few days on the West Coast. I suppose you could call it ‘Californication’."
― maura, Thursday, 12 June 2014 18:31 (ten years ago) link
"Lana might feel like she stares down a barrel of inevitable adversity, but her new album carries no sign of apprehension. ‘Born To Die’, and its eight-track ‘Paradise’ extension, was a luxurious and impressive record, a real fresh peach Bellini, enriched in ’50s and ’60s Americana, with the grandiose string sections, the beehive hairdo, and the fallen angel narrative. But it was clearly a record that had been through the tinkering mills. Shaken, stirred and thoroughly mixed."
― maura, Thursday, 12 June 2014 18:32 (ten years ago) link
"Like Lana, Marilyn Monroe wasn’t one without her detractors. “Success makes so many people hate you,” she once said, “I wish it wasn’t that way.” Similarly, some still see Del Rey’s femme fatale aura as a commercial angle aimed purely to incite lust and sell, sell and sell again. “Forget about singing,” begins a recent live review in The Chicago Tribune, “Lana Del Rey could’ve passed for a swimsuit model posing for paparazzi cameras on Friday at a sold-out Aragon”, epitomising how, to many, her enchantment will always be superficial.
But for more avid fans, her allure is artistically cavernous. Just like Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita, Truman Capote’s Holly Golightly, Charles Vidor’s Gilda, or even the original Carmen, yes, there is a surface of seduction – but beyond that image, there is deep play in action. Lana personifies a struggle between stability and freedom; she conveys expressions of escapism, a scramble for courage in the face of fatalism, a subconscious need to confess, a desire for power. This is no swimsuit competition."
― maura, Thursday, 12 June 2014 18:35 (ten years ago) link
I am a big fan of metaphors but those first two excerpts feel to me like the author spent all of the time s/he was supposed to spend listening to Lana Del Rey drinking Bellinis
although ultimately I approve because drinking > LDR
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Thursday, 12 June 2014 18:36 (ten years ago) link
can male writers please reread Lolita before referencing it in their horndog work
― maura, Thursday, 12 June 2014 18:39 (ten years ago) link
also DJP OTM
maura are you getting paid by google to make people google? cuz sharing hilariously bad writing sans link just benefits google.
― da croupier, Thursday, 12 June 2014 18:48 (ten years ago) link
http://www.clashmusic.com/features/american-dreamer-lana-del-rey-interviewed
― da croupier, Thursday, 12 June 2014 18:49 (ten years ago) link
i hope somebody at the site will get a laugh from someone having searched "lana del rey bellinis"
― da croupier, Thursday, 12 June 2014 18:51 (ten years ago) link
I’ll admit, while observing this backlash with disdain, there was a small and shameful slither of excitement and curiosity within me, which relished the fracas.
― da croupier, Thursday, 12 June 2014 18:54 (ten years ago) link
I don't get why someone would Google "bellinis" unless you're like "Oh, it's summer, I need cocktail ideas for my Bobby Flay bbq."
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 12 June 2014 19:03 (ten years ago) link
this reminds me of one of my favorite ILX stories:
people who've been on TV whom you've pwned
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Thursday, 12 June 2014 19:05 (ten years ago) link
hmmm...how do i share these quotes about recording...got a good one about the east village, some stuff about meeting dan auerbach there. hmm...lead with dan...then flash back to the east village...yes...but how do we segue...
Before Dan, there was December.
no...punchier...
Before Dan, there was December (New York, 2013, cold).
*pumps fist against chest, raises two fingers to mouth, kisses them, plants the fingers on a framed picture of joan didion*
― da croupier, Thursday, 12 June 2014 19:09 (ten years ago) link
see why the hell would you do this to a bellini
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/---dfQC8ILZ8/T9-o9piu1OI/AAAAAAAAAIY/5kGg04GTgMI/s400/1929.jpg
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 12 June 2014 19:13 (ten years ago) link
a bellini is a perfectly serviceable drink but it will always make me think first and foremost of paul bellini from the kids in the hall.
― Van Spleef & R. Kellz (get bent), Thursday, 12 June 2014 19:22 (ten years ago) link
lol me too
― balls, Thursday, 12 June 2014 19:25 (ten years ago) link
Those quotes kind of sounds like the writer just watched the movie Somewhere instead of actually going anywhere.
― Hier Komme Die Warum Jetzt (Hurting 2), Thursday, 12 June 2014 19:27 (ten years ago) link
lmao dan that story rules
also now i am just picturing the word 'bellini' being said repeatedly to the beat of 'good kisser'
― maura, Thursday, 12 June 2014 19:44 (ten years ago) link
i actually heard of paul bellini before i heard of a bellini
― da croupier, Thursday, 12 June 2014 19:46 (ten years ago) link
p sure that post is where i first heard of a bellini
― goole, Thursday, 12 June 2014 20:19 (ten years ago) link
some of us liked bellinis
― katherine, Thursday, 12 June 2014 20:47 (ten years ago) link
I went through a very short Bellini phase around 1998 when I got bored of brunchtime mimosas for a few months
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Thursday, 12 June 2014 20:52 (ten years ago) link
heard of the post-Don Caballero band Bellini after Paul Bellini but before the drink Bellini.
― intheblanks, Thursday, 12 June 2014 21:23 (ten years ago) link
Bellini was a good band.
― maura, Thursday, 12 June 2014 21:31 (ten years ago) link
bellinis >>>>> mimosas
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 12 June 2014 21:33 (ten years ago) link
A bellini sounds like a fucking cod-Italian slang word for the glans. As in "suck my bellini".
― ...and the trees are all kept equal by hatchet, axe and SAW! (Turrican), Thursday, 12 June 2014 21:43 (ten years ago) link
― maura, Thursday, June 12, 2014 4:31 PM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
IS a good band - saw em a couple years ago w.Shellac and I think they played the last Shellac ATP a year and a half ago!
― sinister porpoise (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 13 June 2014 00:13 (ten years ago) link
No Damon Che I presume?
― strychnine, Friday, 13 June 2014 00:26 (ten years ago) link
hahaha...no i don't think damon che generally gets asked back
was a younger guy, really good...their 2009 album The Perfect Prize of Gravity is really great
― sinister porpoise (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 13 June 2014 00:27 (ten years ago) link
He should just reactivate Thee Speaking Canaries.
― strychnine, Friday, 13 June 2014 00:32 (ten years ago) link
let me at this guy
http://www.villagevoice.com/2014-06-18/music/lionel-richie/
― son of a lewd monk (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 04:27 (ten years ago) link
Getting this far was hard enough but,
It'd be easy (like Sunday morning) to say Richie got lucky,
― tsrobodo, Wednesday, 18 June 2014 09:43 (ten years ago) link
http://cdn.soundpublishing.com/dailyweekly/MikeseelyAuthorPhoto01.jpg
― sci-fi looking, chubby-leafed, delicately bizarre (contenderizer), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 09:54 (ten years ago) link
The music Richie played was earnest and emotional, more reminiscent of Barry Manilow than Barry Gordy
― Angkor Waht (Neil S), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 11:03 (ten years ago) link
count the number of times he alludes to the music's race!
― Pew Nornographers (contenderizer), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 11:07 (ten years ago) link
That Richie article is probably the worst thing I've ever read because of this thread.
― You know something? He *did* say "well, yeah" a lot. (cryptosicko), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 11:55 (ten years ago) link
So it's the worst thing you ever read then?
― That's How Strong My Dub Is (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 12:28 (ten years ago) link
Dunno if yr knocking my poor syntax or what, but if so, make that "worst piece of writing that I've seen linked in this thread." Criticizing poor writing with more poor writing is admittedly LOL, but hey, no one's paying *me* for this shit.
― You know something? He *did* say "well, yeah" a lot. (cryptosicko), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 12:55 (ten years ago) link
Sorry, just meant it is hard to find worse than what is linked to on this thread.
― That's How Strong My Dub Is (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 13:07 (ten years ago) link
Back in 2004, when Richie, now 64, was at perhaps the nadir of his career, I interviewed him before a gig in Stuttgart, Germany. I asked if he'd had a dream the night prior, and whether it was awesome.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 13:19 (ten years ago) link
It remains to be seen whether history will be as generous to Obama, but odds are it will. As president, he's played the long game, confident his legacy will overcome any passing peccadilloes. He, like Lionel, has dreamed globally, viewing the world not in black-and-white, but in beautiful shades of beige. Fiesta forever, indeed.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 13:20 (ten years ago) link
xxpost
Oh, haha! Sorry, didn't mean to sound so butthurt.
― You know something? He *did* say "well, yeah" a lot. (cryptosicko), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 13:26 (ten years ago) link
It's okay – fiesta forever!
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 13:29 (ten years ago) link
DN changed in honour of that article
― Barry Gordy (Neil S), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 13:33 (ten years ago) link
"more reminiscent of Barry Manilow than Barry Gordy" is too perfect
xp! :D
― Kiss Screaming Seagull Her Seagull Her (DJ Mencap), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 13:35 (ten years ago) link
hah great minds etc.
― Barry Gordy (Neil S), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 13:36 (ten years ago) link
I'd given him the benefit of the doubt and assumed he was referring to some obscure artist. There must still be some residual respect for the Voice floating around my brain somewhere.
― tsrobodo, Wednesday, 18 June 2014 14:48 (ten years ago) link
this is the guy responsible for the 'black pop stars who should go country' piece that the vmg higher-ups slapped up on the voice's music blog immediately after my firing. good to know he's still churning out 'quality' 'content'
― maura, Wednesday, 18 June 2014 15:20 (ten years ago) link
Think the guy meant "Barry Geordie," the John Barry of Newcastle.
― That's How Strong My Dub Is (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 15:24 (ten years ago) link
Maybe should have just made that a screenname instead of a post, as is my wont.
Barry Geordie Gordy Obama
p sure that guy contributes to every DNC email with the subject line MAJOR DISASTER
― son of a lewd monk (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 15:41 (ten years ago) link
suggest barry
― Look at this joke I've recognised, do you recognise it as well? (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 15:46 (ten years ago) link
dancing on the glass ceiling
― macklemorange is the new wack (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 20:07 (ten years ago) link
and the Piece Of Music Criticism Most Easily Mistaken For An Onion Article Award goes to
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Wednesday, 18 June 2014 21:49 (ten years ago) link
I guess it's the Ezra Klein way to accept received opinion and call it "controversy"
http://www.vox.com/2014/6/17/5814038/heres-why-lana-del-rey-is-so-controversial
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 18 June 2014 23:37 (ten years ago) link
the phrase "even Pitchfork" appears in that twice
― macklemorange is the new wack (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 19 June 2014 02:09 (ten years ago) link
Indie-music blog Hipster Runoff labelled her the "most controversial broad in indie right now," saying that she carefully planned the hype around "Video Games" and was trying to trick the music world into believing that she was a self-made, American Dream Achieving, Indie-pop princess. Hipster Runoff split her coverage into two distinct camps (#teamlana and #efflana), with critics claiming that she was a poser and just a "failed mainstream artist."
― franklin, Thursday, 19 June 2014 02:21 (ten years ago) link
I can't even express how pathetic that Vox piece is. Is the humourless recounting of ultimately irrelevant, two-and-a-half-year-old online debates a thing now?
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Thursday, 19 June 2014 10:43 (ten years ago) link
you're soaking in it
― Pew Nornographers (contenderizer), Thursday, 19 June 2014 12:57 (ten years ago) link
welcome to the world of "explainer journalism" by people who have read wikipedia
― maura, Thursday, 19 June 2014 13:43 (ten years ago) link
[ Interest over time ]
now awaiting FT article disputing kelsey mckinney's data
― j., Thursday, 19 June 2014 14:18 (ten years ago) link
HOW SNOOP DOGGY DOGG BECAME SNOOP DOGG AND OTHER SHOWBIZ TRICKS TO FOOL U
― j., Thursday, 19 June 2014 14:26 (ten years ago) link
GWAR - real or fake?
― now I'm the grandfather (dog latin), Thursday, 19 June 2014 14:30 (ten years ago) link
Andrew W.K. - Steev Mike or Steve Harper?
― franklin, Thursday, 19 June 2014 14:35 (ten years ago) link
Yo Vox Is it true Vordul got sonned by a wite kid after a aol beef?
― relentlessly pecking at peace (President Keyes), Thursday, 19 June 2014 16:56 (ten years ago) link
"I do get that new releases on vinyl can get pricey – and therefore have the potential to create an elitist audience – but in a climate in which indie musicians can open for Radiohead and still not afford health insurance, anything that creates a way to bring real, live musicians closer to making monday off their work, so that that they can make more of it – hey, that's cool with me."
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/jun/21/vinyl-record-collector-sales-jack-white
― scott seward, Sunday, 22 June 2014 16:57 (ten years ago) link
can someone break that sentence down for me?
"So, even as yet another person in another underpaid creative field who is busy collecting probably one too many records, I'm happy to spend whatever I can afford."
that "even as yet" has got to go. you could probably learn that in a class somewhere.
― scott seward, Sunday, 22 June 2014 16:59 (ten years ago) link
"Rainy Day Records up the block, however, was the platonic ideal of a local record store: half dozen or so boxes of 45s (sorted by new, used and local bands)..."
i hate those used bands. they are the worst.
― scott seward, Sunday, 22 June 2014 17:02 (ten years ago) link
6 PEOPLE, 24 COMMENTS whood21 June 2014 12:56pm
I've just had a very nice avocado sandwich. Can I have a column, please?
― scott seward, Sunday, 22 June 2014 17:14 (ten years ago) link
a golden oldie. I am not British so I don't know how long John Harris has been giving the music coverage in the Guardian a bad name, but this has to be a low point for the publication:
http://www.theguardian.com/music/2007/jan/05/popandrock
― noir-ish need apply (Drugs A. Money), Sunday, 22 June 2014 21:36 (ten years ago) link
(Although it does use the word 'acme' in a sentence, which I rarely come across, so that's kinda cool I guess)
― noir-ish need apply (Drugs A. Money), Sunday, 22 June 2014 21:44 (ten years ago) link
John Harris continues to give music coverage in the Guardian a bad name to this day
http://www.theguardian.com/music/2014/jun/20/warpaint-cate-le-bon-st-vincent-rocks-future-is-female
― soref, Sunday, 22 June 2014 22:23 (ten years ago) link
That funk thing by JH makes a worse case than the student item in the first post. I got bored into giving up before even managing to get to the offensive part in that women in rock one, but then I don't think I got past the first paragraph either.
― now I'm the grandfather (dog latin), Monday, 23 June 2014 00:28 (ten years ago) link
factual errors and questionable theses you can drive a boom clap through:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/music/rockandpopfeatures/10905375/Is-Charli-XCX-the-new-Adele.html
― katherine, Monday, 23 June 2014 05:30 (ten years ago) link
Casey Kasem, Ronald Reagan and music’s 1 percent: Artificial “popularity” is not democracy
http://www.salon.com/2014/06/22/casey_kasem_ronald_reagan_and_musics_1_percent_artificial_popularity_is_not_democracy/
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 23 June 2014 05:40 (ten years ago) link
http://noisey.vice.com/en_ca/blog/jacques-greene-brought-back-house-music-for-the-people
― one time gaffled 'em up (one time), Monday, 23 June 2014 05:44 (ten years ago) link
A WHIFF OF SANITY in that Salon piece.
Christ, Casey Kasem as a fucking icon, and anyone who uses "centrism" re music needs a thrashing.
― son of a lewd monk (Dr Morbius), Monday, 23 June 2014 10:35 (ten years ago) link
I gave up/fell asleep when I got to the "centrism" bit. No point my getting annoyed about this or any of the linked Grauniad/Torygraph pieces because they are clickbait rather than proper music writing.
― Here he is with the classic "Poème Électronique." Good track (Marcello Carlin), Monday, 23 June 2014 11:12 (ten years ago) link
holy fucking fuck at that Noisey one - is Noisey one of the worst sites in history?
― online hardman, Monday, 23 June 2014 11:39 (ten years ago) link
― son of a lewd monk (Dr Morbius),
The point about centrism is the pearl in the shit. The rest is drivel.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 23 June 2014 15:14 (ten years ago) link
I have always liked "Bette Davis Eyes" fwiw
― son of a lewd monk (Dr Morbius), Monday, 23 June 2014 15:36 (ten years ago) link
post clip of karaoke performance plz
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 23 June 2014 15:38 (ten years ago) link
The kasem challops thinkpieces that spawned that salon article seem equally shit though. There's nothing "brave" about what Casey Kasem did, he was a pop DJ, not a music critic. He performed the exact function he was supposed to perform, for lots of money. It seems revisionist in a REALLY confused way to imagine that he was the underdog in a battle against...I don't even know what. It's like, you might credit someone like a George Plimpton for allowing value to sports within "intellectual" culture, but Marv Albert is a sports guy doing a sports guy's job for a sports-loving public.
― Hier Komme Die Warum Jetzt (Hurting 2), Monday, 23 June 2014 15:47 (ten years ago) link
The headline on the Salon thing -- "Artificial popularity is not 'democracy'" -- is the plaintive cry of losing student-government candidates everywhere.
I admit I didn't read many of the Kasem appreciations, but the ones I saw were less celebrations of him as a musical force than nostalgic childhood reveries. I never had any illusion that Casey himself was the one picking the winners, or that the show was somehow a manifestation of his taste. He was just the friendly guy who showed up with that week's news.
― something of an astrological coup (tipsy mothra), Monday, 23 June 2014 15:51 (ten years ago) link
Hurting 2 otm, at least with regards to the Slate piece that originally used the word "centrist." I like Casey Kasem a lot; he seems like a good guy, and obviously had a great voice and a talent for using it. But that Slate piece envisioned him a poptimist warrior-analyst who fought the good fight against rockism for years.
― intheblanks, Monday, 23 June 2014 16:10 (ten years ago) link
He was just the friendly guy who showed up with that week's news.
This is sort of the same thing as lots of people thinking of TV news anchors as journalists. (Including some TV news anchors, I bet.) I much prefer the UK term "newsreader," because that's all they do - read the news that other people gathered, while making sincere/trustworthy/empathetic faces.
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Monday, 23 June 2014 16:44 (ten years ago) link
Kasem didn't even like music
― Οὖτις, Monday, 23 June 2014 16:45 (ten years ago) link
these guys are from england and who gives a shit
― relentlessly pecking at peace (President Keyes), Monday, 23 June 2014 16:52 (ten years ago) link
I like Casey Kasem a lot; he seems like a good guy, and obviously had a great voice and a talent for using it. But that Slate piece envisioned him a poptimist warrior-analyst who fought the good fight against rockism for years.
― intheblanks, Monday, June 23, 2014 12:10 PM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Meanwhile, the actual good fight he fought has gone largely unremarked-upon in his obits: http://articles.latimes.com/1993-05-17/entertainment/ca-36376_1_aladdin-lyrics-magic
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Monday, 23 June 2014 17:22 (ten years ago) link
Yeah, it was cool to learn about his activism for better Arab-American representation in the media, including quitting the Transformers cartoon.
― intheblanks, Monday, 23 June 2014 17:37 (ten years ago) link
http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/books/2014/07/amanda_petrusich_s_do_not_sell_at_any_price_reviewed_by_sarah_o_holla.html
"What's the Right Way For a Woman To Listen To (Or Write About) Music?"
― relentlessly pecking at peace (President Keyes), Sunday, 13 July 2014 14:59 (ten years ago) link
I haven't read her blog in any detail, but that seems like a fairly reasonable piece.
― odd proggy geezer (Moodles), Sunday, 13 July 2014 15:17 (ten years ago) link
presented here less as evidence of bad writing, more a continuation of earlier discussion itt. The contention that women music writers tried to "shout her down" seems over the top, treating a brief bout of criticism on Twitter like #cancelcolbert or something.
― relentlessly pecking at peace (President Keyes), Sunday, 13 July 2014 15:25 (ten years ago) link
a brief bout of criticism on Twitter
Don't forget 60-70* irate thinkpieces on all the expected sites.
*exaggeration for effect
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Sunday, 13 July 2014 15:37 (ten years ago) link
I forget what position I took on the blog when it first emerged but that book review is anything but a bad or disingenuous piece of writing. It resonated with me. I wish more "average" listeners felt comfortable engaging with all kinds of music and talking about their experiences. Art is about staging encounters between audience and object; there shouldn't be any qualifications involved
― Treeship, Sunday, 13 July 2014 18:19 (ten years ago) link
are average listeners really given any insight by an average listener telling them about their average experience
― j., Sunday, 13 July 2014 18:28 (ten years ago) link
Idk you'd have to ask them. Her blog has a lot of readers so there's clearly some appeal there
― Treeship, Sunday, 13 July 2014 18:30 (ten years ago) link
If there's one thing we need to fight for, it's not the right of average listeners to opine at length.
― La Lechera, Sunday, 13 July 2014 18:33 (ten years ago) link
uggh
― maura, Sunday, 13 July 2014 18:41 (ten years ago) link
i want to read more about naive people engaging in things like records or drinking expensive wine without context because i suspect their reactions cut more to the essential properties of the thing (this seminal record is blah, this expensive wine tastes the same as box wine) unaided by the heavy lifting of the culture around it, but the sense I got from her record blog was she was actually pretty well-informed about what sort of space each record was supposed to occupy.
― Philip Nunez, Sunday, 13 July 2014 18:43 (ten years ago) link
"Opine" isn't what she does though. The blog is a journal of her listening experience. I've only read a few entries, but they're well written and probably relatable for people who feel intimidated by their local record shop. There are many levels on which one can engage with a work and she is candid about the lack of prior knowledge she brings to her listening. In an era when anyone can feign expertise using google, this is actually a cool thing to see.
― Treeship, Sunday, 13 July 2014 18:44 (ten years ago) link
sorry xp
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tS8oyl1gygs
― Don't Want To Know If Only You Were Lonely (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 13 July 2014 18:45 (ten years ago) link
that's fine for a blog, treezy. but what about the 'column space' that goes to thing-of-the-moment nonprofessional noncritics like her from media outlets looking to get their content on the cheap?
― j., Sunday, 13 July 2014 18:53 (ten years ago) link
exactly -- that's what blogging is for and blog on, avg ppl
― La Lechera, Sunday, 13 July 2014 18:59 (ten years ago) link
I for one welcome more non-specialist, regular joe, shoot-from-the-gut opinions being bruited about on the internet, because I have been starved for such opinions both in real life and on the blogosphere, as they have been drowned out by the so-called 'experts.'
― Don't Want To Know If Only You Were Lonely (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 13 July 2014 18:59 (ten years ago) link
Gotta say, Tree Cool, going on a message board frequented by rock critics in various states of employ and declaring, "I wish more major outlets would replace informed opinions with glorified Amazon reviews by, oh, whatever dumbass they can find" is A+ trolling.
― am0n alb4rn (Whiney G. Weingarten), Sunday, 13 July 2014 19:04 (ten years ago) link
hey that almost makes underemployment sound european and sexy
― j., Sunday, 13 July 2014 19:11 (ten years ago) link
I'd rather read your reviews than hers, Whiney, but the appeal of her blog is also obvious to me. She's a good writer and her posts aren't really comparable to Amazon reviews imo. I can't really do anything about the job market for writers and didn't say anything about who should and shouldn't be paid to write.
― Treeship, Sunday, 13 July 2014 19:16 (ten years ago) link
there is generally more/better writing on her blog than people give her credit for, probably because everyone stopped reading it after the outrage died down, "leave the writing to the REAL WRITERS" gatekeeping rarely sits well with me (column space/pay is a consideration but in a lot of cases I think it's deployed as an excuse) and in theory I love the idea of someone doing a project like this and gradually learning more about music and writing and confidence in one's own opinions, however:
- the review was mostly not about the book at all, and my main takeaway from it was "this book sounds fascinating and I want to read more about *it*"- the idea that something written by a woman, especially someone with as much of a resume as petrusich, is automatically a referendum on How Women Write About Music, sits even worse with me. put another way, I don't understand the mindset where you read/engage with a book like this and what you find most compelling/of interest for non-clickbait-chasing readers isn't "literally scuba diving to the bottom of a river to search for records" but "woman! writing!" or "my blog, let me tell you about it."
― katherine, Sunday, 13 July 2014 21:36 (ten years ago) link
yeah the article mainly made me aware of and curious about the book but the 'angle' of the piece seemed a little myopic
― some dude, Sunday, 13 July 2014 22:09 (ten years ago) link
the review was mostly not about the book at all, and my main takeaway from it was "this book sounds fascinating and I want to read more about *it*"
Also true of pretty much every book review ever published in The New Yorker, to be fair...
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Sunday, 13 July 2014 22:10 (ten years ago) link
there are ways of being 'not a REAL writer' and there are ways
― j., Sunday, 13 July 2014 22:18 (ten years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t9Y3mWDkB6o
― Don't Want To Know If Only You Were Lonely (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 13 July 2014 22:26 (ten years ago) link
According to wikipedia, the last song, “Spoon,” was Can’s only big hit. It was a hit single in Germany. Interesting, because it does not sound like a typical hit!
such good writing
― call all destroyer, Sunday, 13 July 2014 23:05 (ten years ago) link
boy that sure makes me want to check out can
― Neil Patrick Haggerty (get bent), Sunday, 13 July 2014 23:08 (ten years ago) link
If I want to read something amusing if relatively clueless, Chuck Klosterman already exists.
― Albiceleste Square Mall (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 13 July 2014 23:18 (ten years ago) link
lol i'm not sure i actually read that blog during the initial hub-bub. all in all it's some of most amateurish asinine garbage i've read in my life. all in all in all in all. all in all in all in all.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m0drC8qVMRk
― balls, Sunday, 13 July 2014 23:23 (ten years ago) link
the review was mostly not about the book at all, and my main takeaway from it was "this book sounds fascinating and I want to read more about *it*"Also true of pretty much every book review ever published in The New Yorker, to be fair...― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Sunday, July 13, 2014 5:10 PM (6 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Sunday, July 13, 2014 5:10 PM (6 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
most of those new yorker reviews just seem like the "reviewer" summarizing the book(s) and perhaps throwing in a few critical sentences so it passes as a review/critique. it almost seems like the design is to make actually reading the reviewed book(s) superfluous. IDGI.
― I dunno. (amateurist), Monday, 14 July 2014 05:01 (ten years ago) link
are you talking about the 'briefly noted' section? the new yorker for sure does thoughtful book essays.
― maura, Monday, 14 July 2014 15:26 (ten years ago) link
She's a good writer and her posts aren't really comparable to Amazon reviews imo.
Paris 1919:
Okay, we’re back to romance on side two with “Paris 1919.” This song has almost a musical feel to it
― famous instagram God (waterface), Monday, 14 July 2014 17:20 (ten years ago) link
I don't care if some idiot has a blog but praising the writing is a bridge too far
― Οὖτις, Monday, 14 July 2014 17:29 (ten years ago) link
Totally. Here's Trout Mask Replica
Looking at the picture of these hippies on the back cover though, and thinking about how the 1950’s were so straight and polished and then the world basically went crazy in the 60s, it makes you realize that you really can do whatever you want with music, and you should do it.
― famous instagram God (waterface), Monday, 14 July 2014 17:33 (ten years ago) link
gonna start "my wife's stupid science experiments" and make snide comments about what her bacterial slides look like
― some dude, Monday, 14 July 2014 17:49 (ten years ago) link
tmi
― am0n alb4rn (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 14 July 2014 17:51 (ten years ago) link
you really can do whatever you want with music writing
― famous instagram God (waterface), Monday, 14 July 2014 18:05 (ten years ago) link
this strain has kind of an... angular look
― Neil Sekada (Jon Lewis), Monday, 14 July 2014 18:05 (ten years ago) link
Here's Trout Mask ReplicaReplacing my copy of Stranded right now with that blog.
― I Need Andmoreagain (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 14 July 2014 18:09 (ten years ago) link
it's a long way to the top if you're gonna write a blog
― Neanderthal, Monday, 14 July 2014 19:35 (ten years ago) link
no, that's our whole complaint in this thread, that it's not long at all
― j., Monday, 14 July 2014 19:41 (ten years ago) link
lonnggg nightsimpossible oddskeepin my eye to the clickhoooole
― Neil Sekada (Jon Lewis), Monday, 14 July 2014 20:13 (ten years ago) link
Couple of local bands here did a gig where they covered McCartney's Ram in it's entirety. (I was there and it was fun). This review showed up in one of the local rags:
Sprïng and Synthcake took the stage to cover Ram, an album which has come to be recognized as an “archetypal indie-rock album.” With a few others dipping on stage occasionally, the sizable group possessed multidiscipline talent enough for a high fidelity capture of Ram’s features: numerous harmonies, keyboard stomping, silly vocalizations, brass instrumentation—the good stuff. The two bands were especially apt for the project given their psychedelic focuses. At risk of listing off the individuals on stage and their respective contributions, or overemphasizing any single person’s contributions, the set was extremely cohesive. Ram, for better or worse, was hated—and is adored—for being a light and fun album and the stage was rife with people who were having a good time. It’s great being able to share that.While it was an intimate event, when the main event had begun, numerous sans-baby-faced individuals had settled around the venue, undoubtedly there for the promise of Ram. As far as I could tell, they weren’t disappointed. It’s easy to feel like you’re on the outside looking in, but I think everyone at the Biltmore that night was in their element.
― everything, Wednesday, 16 July 2014 17:29 (ten years ago) link
"numerous [Comic] sans-baby-faced individuals"
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Wednesday, 16 July 2014 17:37 (ten years ago) link
Surprised no one posted this from like two weeks ago: http://arts.nationalpost.com/2014/07/07/concert-review-toronto-urban-roots-festival-sees-neutral-milk-hotel-july-talk-jeff-tweedy-turn-in-memorable-sets/
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Wednesday, 16 July 2014 17:40 (ten years ago) link
That deservedly attained cult status on Twitter and Facebook. I assumed I first came across it itt but maybe not.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Wednesday, 16 July 2014 17:45 (ten years ago) link
I still think it's satirizing live reviews.
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Wednesday, 16 July 2014 17:48 (ten years ago) link
The first rule of the "worst piece of music writing ever" thread is that entries could be confused with satire.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Wednesday, 16 July 2014 17:53 (ten years ago) link
But wow, Neutral Milk Hotel was mind-blowing. Lots of people have said they’re admirers but I didn’t know their stuff. The singer looked like he was on Duck Dynasty. Their music is sort of like Wilco, but dreamier.
― ©Oz Quiz© (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 16 July 2014 17:56 (ten years ago) link
― tylerw, Wednesday, 16 July 2014 18:00 (ten years ago) link
That reminds me of a shitty review of Dirty Projectors where whoever it was described their sound as a warped pavement record. Some people just have a very limited pool of artists they know about per genre so they'll desperately try to make comparisons that make no sense.
― Evan, Wednesday, 16 July 2014 18:28 (ten years ago) link
this song is just another rearrangement of the notes mozart used
― chikungunya manatee (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 16 July 2014 18:31 (ten years ago) link
Jeff Mangum reads "sort of like Wilco, but dreamier", disappears for another 15 years.
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Wednesday, 16 July 2014 20:47 (ten years ago) link
http://www.end-your-sleep-deprivation.com/images/awake-vs-rem-sleep-brain-activity.jpg
― ©Oz Quiz© (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 16 July 2014 22:05 (ten years ago) link
god, i hope so!!!!
― guwop (crüt), Wednesday, 16 July 2014 22:12 (ten years ago) link
I thought this was horrible: The 10 Biggest Classic Rock Douchebags
I know, let's shoot a few fish in a barrel, take down a few sacred cows, and scribble 1200 mostly snarky words about them. At some point the author goes from calling out douchebag behavior to simply complaining about their music which seems to be a different thing altogether, meaning he didn't even know his thesis, let alone that it sucked.
I am a fan of some of the musicians on this list and there's a few I don't much like. But the author made me want to get every boxset they cumulatively released, move in next door to the dude and play them at massive volume like they do to people holding hostages until he gave up music writing and became a circus clown.
― Loud guitars shit all over "Bette Davis Eyes" (NYCNative), Sunday, 20 July 2014 06:27 (ten years ago) link
i feel like LA weekly is sort of known for these kinds of lists where they claim that people widely regarded as great are actually the worst. i love dylan and reed as much as i love anything, but i still think it's sort of funny in a juvenile way to provoke classic rawk fans with these obviously disingenuous arguments.
― Treeship, Sunday, 20 July 2014 06:33 (ten years ago) link
like, they wrote this thing too about the "worst hipster bands" which was basically a list of the 20 most famous indie rock acts in america.
http://www.laweekly.com/westcoastsound/2012/08/23/the-20-worst-hipster-bands-the-complete-list
― Treeship, Sunday, 20 July 2014 06:35 (ten years ago) link
so their music section is basically old-ilx, except someone's getting paid for writing it?
― Kiss Screaming Seagull Her Seagull Her (DJ Mencap), Sunday, 20 July 2014 07:10 (ten years ago) link
Phil Spector?!
― campreverb, Sunday, 20 July 2014 13:49 (ten years ago) link
basically xp
― Treeship, Sunday, 20 July 2014 15:05 (ten years ago) link
C'mon, those olde-ilx discussions were much more interesting than this drivel.
― I Need Andmoreagain (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 20 July 2014 15:54 (ten years ago) link
[Editor's note: The Weekly staff is divided on Pink; for an argument in favor of his genius see our recent feature story. For the opposite opinion keep reading.]
― °ㅇ๐ْ ° (gr8080), Sunday, 20 July 2014 17:03 (ten years ago) link
I love that the case for Fogerty's douchiness hinges on him not accepting the "standard music rip-off deal" with grace and good humor.
Come on, John, it's just the standard deal! You know, the kind where you get ripped off! What's the big deal? Lighten up!
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Sunday, 20 July 2014 17:18 (ten years ago) link
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/move-over-rihanna-a-new-generation-of-female-rb-singers-are-taking-the-lead-9615001.html
― ey, Sunday, 20 July 2014 17:23 (ten years ago) link
yes all female r&b singers are locked in a battle with one another.
― everybody loves lana del raymond (s.clover), Monday, 21 July 2014 02:45 (ten years ago) link
there can only be one. too bad riri, you had a nice run.
From the Arts Desk review of Latitude:
From the sublime to the ridiculous, we stopped by Norma Jean Martine, a bluesy pop singer with soaring vocals and a warm, husky sound, before nipping in to catch some of the Swedish psychedelia that is Goat. They are everything that far-out festival fun should be - golden sequined kaftans, barefoot stomping, elaborate face masks, head dresses and costumed guitarists that could spawn their very own subculture. Would I want to go away and download these tracks? Probably not, but I sure as heck enjoyed getting down and cutting a rug to their experimental psychedelic beats.
― Unsettled defender (ithappens), Tuesday, 22 July 2014 13:24 (ten years ago) link
More from that Arts Desk review:
The American sisterly trio treated audiences to an array of musicality in their thunderingly original sound, almost as impressive as Este's range of terrifying faces as she went hard at her guitar (pictured, above right). If she's the personality in the band, middle sister Danielle is the serious, musically accomplished one while the "babyest of baby sisters" Alana, gets the percussion going as well as adding to the group's outstanding vocals. Cutting through the emotional BS (as she calls it) Este demands that the crowd get on each others' shoulders - most are too frightened to ignore her insistence, but they are rewarded with an invite into Haim's metaphorical home to jam with them and shake their "asses and titties" so hard that at least one of them sheds a tear. The audience try pretty hard. Haim let rip with an emotional honesty that was raw, endearing and impressive - maybe because as the last stop on their 2014 tour they gave all that they could. They certainly proved their worth and showed how they occupy an important space as a serious female rock band that can be enjoyed by a pop audience. They are the antithesis of Lily Allen, representing non-manufactured pop that can spring from Indie roots to get ahead on the strength of their individuality. They can shred and headbang with the best of them while we sing along to their radio-friendly hits like "If I Could Change Your Mind" and "The Wire", and party as hard as they want us to.
― Unsettled defender (ithappens), Tuesday, 22 July 2014 13:26 (ten years ago) link
Man why would you cut Goat's rug? That's what they sleep on!
― something of an astrological coup (tipsy mothra), Tuesday, 22 July 2014 13:26 (ten years ago) link
"the ____ that is ____" is always a terrible construction even when done better than it is there
― wins, Tuesday, 22 July 2014 16:05 (ten years ago) link
I sure as heck enjoyed getting down and cutting a rug to their experimental psychedelic beats
Worth repeating and marvelling at
― What is wrong with songs? Absolutely nothing. Songs are great. (DL), Tuesday, 22 July 2014 16:08 (ten years ago) link
they are rewarded with an invite into Haim's metaphorical home to jam with them and shake their "asses and titties" so hard that at least one of them sheds a tear
dying of lols
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Tuesday, 22 July 2014 16:28 (ten years ago) link
it's like HAIM fan-fic
― relentlessly pecking at peace (President Keyes), Tuesday, 22 July 2014 16:35 (ten years ago) link
I'm just imagining Haim on stage shouting "DANCE! DANCE UNTIL YOU CRY!"
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Tuesday, 22 July 2014 16:37 (ten years ago) link
i dont want to be around anyone whose titties are crying, let alone their asses
― Everyone is awful except you. Wait, no, you are also awful. (jjjusten), Tuesday, 22 July 2014 19:03 (ten years ago) link
why would you choose this thread of all places to take a stand about public breastfeeding? neither the time nor the place. smh @ u.
― ian, Tuesday, 22 July 2014 19:22 (ten years ago) link
this is a good thread to take a stand on public buttfeeding, tho
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Tuesday, 22 July 2014 19:23 (ten years ago) link
straight from the asshole of the critic to the mouths of the music-loving public
― ian, Tuesday, 22 July 2014 19:24 (ten years ago) link
wait, rewind for a second...sorry, I've been out in the woods for a few days. from that clip about the Ram show:
"sans-baby-faced individuals"
what in the world does this mean? does this mean...older people?
― alpine static, Wednesday, 23 July 2014 06:04 (ten years ago) link
it means the author is trying too hard
― chikungunya manatee (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 23 July 2014 14:53 (ten years ago) link
honestly, that thing (Ram show) is the kind of terrible writing I read a lot of in the alt-weekly and student publications where I live. twisting, turning sentences, grand proclamations presumably to make the subject sound important, lots of hot thesaurus.com action, shit that just doesn't fit together well. and stuff like this:
"At risk of listing off the individuals on stage and their respective contributions, or overemphasizing any single person’s contributions, the set was extremely cohesive."
― alpine static, Wednesday, 23 July 2014 15:39 (ten years ago) link
hahahaha
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Wednesday, 23 July 2014 15:44 (ten years ago) link
i think they mean it was more than the sum of its parts?
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 23 July 2014 15:45 (ten years ago) link
"At risk of listing off the individuals on stage and their respective contributions, or overemphasizing any single person’s contributions, the drapes were purple."
― chikungunya manatee (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 23 July 2014 16:13 (ten years ago) link
― ey, Sunday, July 20, 2014 5:23 PM (3 days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
so glad someone posted this in here
one of the worst writers (with the worst taste to boot) around rn
― lex pretend, Wednesday, 23 July 2014 16:15 (ten years ago) link
They are recognisable by their soft vocals, an alternative to the brash singing and hyper-sexualised style of Rihanna and Beyoncé, yet their music is deceptively tough, even harsh. Or it can be gossamer and strange, putting the “ether” into Aretha.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 23 July 2014 16:16 (ten years ago) link
literally every strawman of the indie-r&b fan who can't stand any other r&b
― lex pretend, Wednesday, 23 July 2014 16:19 (ten years ago) link
shouldn't that be "etha"
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 23 July 2014 16:19 (ten years ago) link
Putting the OSHA into Ke$ha
― before you die you see the rink (Jon Lewis), Wednesday, 23 July 2014 16:22 (ten years ago) link
Sufjan Grafton types his articles with the fingers on both hands, putting the "les paul" into Pau1 L3ster
― chikungunya manatee (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 23 July 2014 16:44 (ten years ago) link
how is posing nude with a georgia o'keefe flower 'rejecting explicit sexuality' btw, like has this guy just never seen a vagina
― maura, Wednesday, 23 July 2014 16:45 (ten years ago) link
he's putting the eureka in urethra
― Evan, Wednesday, 23 July 2014 16:48 (ten years ago) link
have to wonder how comfortable Kelela feels about being edited into sounding like she's intent on throwing shade at B and Riri
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 23 July 2014 16:50 (ten years ago) link
maybe that was her intent, maybe not, but she's hardly at risk of eclipsing either one of them any time soon
― odd proggy geezer (Moodles), Wednesday, 23 July 2014 16:58 (ten years ago) link
Throwing the shade in Sade.
― cwkiii, Wednesday, 23 July 2014 16:59 (ten years ago) link
"“There’s a generation out there who don’t have that many role models who aren’t using their bodies."
ARE BRAINS IN VATS SETTING BAD EXAMPLES FOR TODAY'S GIRLS
― katherine, Wednesday, 23 July 2014 17:02 (ten years ago) link
PL has always been very pleasant when we have communicated and I do think he has a genuine excitement about r&b, rap and pop music. Quite how he manages to maintain that excitement while disliking 99 per cent of what makes r&b, rap and pop functionally different from indie rock has always been a mystery though.
― Wristy Hurlington (ShariVari), Wednesday, 23 July 2014 17:14 (ten years ago) link
real life lol @ "brains in vats"
― intheblanks, Wednesday, 23 July 2014 17:14 (ten years ago) link
BRAINS IN VATS:
http://comicsalliance.com/march-modok-madness/
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 23 July 2014 17:20 (ten years ago) link
larf
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Wednesday, 23 July 2014 19:41 (ten years ago) link
http://www.quickmeme.com/img/75/75f0b2c7a64ca65b679dbe16b140aab6043d04f59eea1ae0db3f22a5630472a7.jpg
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 23 July 2014 21:00 (ten years ago) link
http://thirdculturecafe.com/2014/02/24/crackles-last-stand-by-david-a-singh-2/
― Evan, Friday, 25 July 2014 13:04 (ten years ago) link
Behind the cramped counter made for two, but manned by four, was always Amanda who would immediately reach for a pile of records stashed below as soon as she saw me. What then took place was purely non-verbal with her pointing to the pile, which meant, “Some new stuff in this week – I saved the good ones for you”, and me nodding and pointing to the shelves which meant, “No problems babe – let me just have a gander first”.
― Evan, Friday, 25 July 2014 13:06 (ten years ago) link
I have no intention of ever buying a turntable again – been there done that and I know it’s over. I live a stone’s throw from an Indie record store in Geneva. I never go inside – I don’t even stop. Like every fighter I know when to hang up my gloves. The future has never been clearer.
― Evan, Friday, 25 July 2014 13:07 (ten years ago) link
“No problems babe – let me just have a gander first”
― Barry Gordy (Neil S), Friday, 25 July 2014 13:11 (ten years ago) link
...Amanda
― relentlessly pecking at peace (President Keyes), Friday, 25 July 2014 13:13 (ten years ago) link
It reads like he's trying to narrate some kind of music journalism noir. Like there are supposed to be big dramatic drags of a cigarette between sentences.
― Evan, Friday, 25 July 2014 13:16 (ten years ago) link
lol at capitalization of "Indie" for no reason
― Neil Patrick Haggerty (get bent), Friday, 25 July 2014 18:45 (ten years ago) link
Who calls casual acquaintances/store clerks "babe," even telepathically?
― Treeship, Friday, 25 July 2014 18:47 (ten years ago) link
Dick Tracy
― chikungunya manatee (Sufjan Grafton), Friday, 25 July 2014 18:52 (ten years ago) link
the chronically undersexed
― a biscuit/donut hybrid called “bisnuts” (stevie), Friday, 25 July 2014 18:54 (ten years ago) link
every character Jason Sudeikis has ever played
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Friday, 25 July 2014 18:56 (ten years ago) link
infantilizers
― cross over the mushroom circle (La Lechera), Friday, 25 July 2014 19:14 (ten years ago) link
When I finally did make it to the counter I was a regular which Amanda would tell anyone who happened to be there: “Sorry mate, my customer’s here and I need to take care of him right now – maybe Jimmy can help you out when he’s done”. Then we would begin a familiar interaction with her opening each album one by one and playing them track-by-track. The store was mine. In between the conversation went something like: ”I saw your little girl and your missus yesterday going into Sainsbury’s – she’s growing ever so nicely – she’s going to be a real cracker she will”. She knew my family and I knew about hers: her mom, nana, brother and useless dad who had buggered off many years ago for a woman half his age. There was also the boyfriend; Mick the builder, who preferred to go on the piss every night with the lads than spend time with her.
No man in Amanda's life ever did right by her, except for me, her customer.
― intheblanks, Friday, 25 July 2014 19:43 (ten years ago) link
well now Waylon Jennings "Amanda" is going to be stuck in my head for the rest of the day
― Οὖτις, Friday, 25 July 2014 19:46 (ten years ago) link
I can only imagine that, while I gandered, she was waiting with breathless anticipation to see what I had chosen.
― intheblanks, Friday, 25 July 2014 19:47 (ten years ago) link
Waylon Jennings's "Amanda" is a great song to have stuck in your head. Now pick up a guitar and sing it. Key of D.
― banjoboy, Friday, 25 July 2014 20:23 (ten years ago) link
Let me put some vinyl onThe we can get it onAmanda
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Friday, 25 July 2014 20:25 (ten years ago) link
― intheblanks, Friday, July 25, 2014 3:43 PM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Garth Merenghi reflects on his record shopping days.
― Evan, Friday, 25 July 2014 20:47 (ten years ago) link
Let me put some vinyl onThe we can get it onAmanda― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Friday, July 25, 2014 1:25 PM
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Friday, July 25, 2014 1:25 PM
I was waiting for that.
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 25 July 2014 20:49 (ten years ago) link
Ugh so was I
― cross over the mushroom circle (La Lechera), Friday, 25 July 2014 22:07 (ten years ago) link
http://www.avclub.com/article/acdc-proved-theres-nothing-sexy-about-muddled-meta-207094
Like, it's totally fine to not like a band's biggest hit, but please write as if you have some inkling that it's the band's biggest hit
― da croupier, Friday, 25 July 2014 22:10 (ten years ago) link
The true failure of “You Shook Me All Night Long” is that it elicits the opposite emotions it’s attempting to champion. The song wants to be sexy and dangerous but, instead, it’s lifelessly limp. It may be a minor misstep on an otherwise classic album, but it’s one ruinous enough to bring any passionate proceedings to a grinding halt.
it's true! "you shook me all night long" is such a boner killer, no man you wanna get down with the ladeez you gotta put on side 1 of back in black, i mean "What Do You For Money Honey" into "Given The Dog A Bone" into "Let Me Put My Love Into You" GUARANTEED ACTION, JACKSON!
― da croupier, Friday, 25 July 2014 22:19 (ten years ago) link
is a grinding halt really totally terrible now
― j., Friday, 25 July 2014 22:21 (ten years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cz_lt8poAoM
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 25 July 2014 22:43 (ten years ago) link
i love that song but every time i hear it i think of Beavis and Butthead saying "don't forget to scrub your weiner," which is not especially sexy
― not pop, shambhala, where to buy weed (some dude), Friday, 25 July 2014 23:06 (ten years ago) link
i honestly can't think of an article where a guy debating a tune's value as fuckmusic came off well. it's just hilarious to be take a "no, for once ac/dc has truly failed as fuckmusic" stance on YOU SHOOK ME ALL NIGHT LONG. Like, the strip clubs have spoken, dude.
I almost want to give him the benefit of the doubt and assume he's just trolling rather truly that solipsistic
― da croupier, Friday, 25 July 2014 23:15 (ten years ago) link
rather than truly that solipsistic, rather
though obv shame on me for even looking at an "Av club writers discuss songs they find lacking in the sexy dept" feature
― da croupier, Friday, 25 July 2014 23:17 (ten years ago) link
it's probably hard to find any music sexy when you're stuck with the inner monologue of an AV club writer
― chikungunya manatee (Sufjan Grafton), Friday, 25 July 2014 23:20 (ten years ago) link
"this is gettin kinda se -** IRON MAN BLOOPERS **- xy oh man I lost it"
― chikungunya manatee (Sufjan Grafton), Friday, 25 July 2014 23:21 (ten years ago) link
by comparing a woman to a car (a metaphor so weak it deserves to be put on cinder blocks)
So what does he think of "Highway Star" and "Bang a Gong (Get It On)" and "Little Red Corvette"? I feel like this is a pretty common metaphor, also one that a genre like hard rock is practically made for.
― jmm, Friday, 25 July 2014 23:43 (ten years ago) link
Let me put some vinyl onThe we can get it onAmandavideo games
― Neil Patrick Haggerty (get bent), Monday, 28 July 2014 00:46 (ten years ago) link
Nothing says “bad bitch” like smoking an e-cigarette on stage – ask Lily Allen, who did just that in a sold out show at Festival Hall night. After a five-year long hiatus from the music industry, the ultimate anti-pop star is back with a bang.
http://www.tonedeaf.com.au/413201/heres-gone-lily-allens-splendour-sideshow.htm
― boney tassel (sic), Monday, 28 July 2014 05:06 (ten years ago) link
"After a recent onslaught of mixed reviews"
― Wristy Hurlington (ShariVari), Monday, 28 July 2014 07:03 (ten years ago) link
What the hell did I just read
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Monday, 28 July 2014 12:20 (ten years ago) link
"Tonedeaf.com"
― Treeship, Monday, 28 July 2014 13:32 (ten years ago) link
truly surprised #18 didn't chart higher
http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/19-worst-things-about-woodstock-99-20140731
― da croupier, Thursday, 31 July 2014 20:44 (ten years ago) link
can't decide whether the tone-deaf conflation of "sucky band" and "criminal assault" on this list beats that SPIN "worst things about the nineties" one that had the jerky boys, heroin, rave fashion and the lapd on it
― da croupier, Thursday, 31 July 2014 20:47 (ten years ago) link
poll:
2 Skinnee J's, 3, American Pearl, Big Sugar, Cyclefly, DDT, Gary Durdin & The Clay Pinps, Mike Errico, F.o.N., Full Devil Jacket, Gargantua Soul, Chris Glenn, Beth Hart Band, Immoral Fibres, Indigenous, Sherri Jackson, Liars Inc., Moe Loughran, Chris McDermott, Old Pike, John Oszajca ,Chris Pérez Band, Bijou Phillips, Pound, Pushmonkey, Johnny Rushmore, Linda Rutherford & Celtic Fire, Serial Joe, Simmi, Sticky Pistil, Stormy Mondays or Sugar Daddy
― Οὖτις, Thursday, 31 July 2014 20:51 (ten years ago) link
We're they looking for listicle ideas and someone said "what about the awful things that happened at Woodstock '99" or did someone pitch a recap of Woodstock '99 and someone said "make it a listicle"
Wonder if clickhole will beat them to "10 dumbest things that happened at altamont"
― da croupier, Thursday, 31 July 2014 20:59 (ten years ago) link
"You Won't Believe What Happened at this Who Concert!"
― Now you're messing with a (President Keyes), Friday, 1 August 2014 12:57 (ten years ago) link
"[Great White]'s headlining set was cut short when..."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sLw4xds3M_Q
― jmm, Friday, 1 August 2014 13:47 (ten years ago) link
this is gonna be hard to beat
http://www.philly.com/philly/opinion/inquirer/20140801_Keep_belting_out_the_inspiration__Piano_Man.html
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Friday, 1 August 2014 14:43 (ten years ago) link
"Unlike his other songs, the lyrics consist mostly of people or news events from 1949 to 1989, with the chorus "We didn't start the fire. It was always burning since the world's been turning."
Unlike his other songs
He has got songs which list news events from 1929-1938 though.
― 3kDk (dog latin), Friday, 1 August 2014 14:50 (ten years ago) link
"I'm still listening to the Piano Man and I'm still writing."
Maybe have a rethink on both these activities?
― 3kDk (dog latin), Friday, 1 August 2014 14:52 (ten years ago) link
I don't know how web portal philly.com will ever recover from a piece of friendly Billy Joel appreciation written by a PR associate at United Cerebral Palsy of Philadelphia
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 1 August 2014 15:02 (ten years ago) link
It was in today's Inquirer, I read it on newsprint!
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Friday, 1 August 2014 16:01 (ten years ago) link
i dunno, that's not like even in the top 200 on this thread imo
― sinister porpoise (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 1 August 2014 16:17 (ten years ago) link
What are the top ten?
― Evan, Friday, 1 August 2014 20:43 (ten years ago) link
I will cut some slack for an actual Catholic schoolgirl writing about Billy Joel. It's like a girl in a flatbed Ford writing about the Eagles.
― something of an astrological coup (tipsy mothra), Friday, 1 August 2014 20:52 (ten years ago) link
that sounds difficult
― Οὖτις, Friday, 1 August 2014 20:54 (ten years ago) link
only when they're on a gravel roadwhich is pretty much always
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Friday, 1 August 2014 21:08 (ten years ago) link
xpost to that Lily Allen review. A "ready and rearing audience"? Cows on their hind legs? Or parents bringing up their children?
― Unsettled defender (ithappens), Saturday, 2 August 2014 14:04 (ten years ago) link
???
http://www.newyorker.com/humor/daily-shouts/sonny-rollins-words
― scott seward, Saturday, 2 August 2014 16:48 (ten years ago) link
Sounds like a fancy-schmancy Onion article, but shorter, so it doesn't run its one gimmick as deeply into the ground. Coleman Hawkins was almost that bitter.
― bamcquern, Saturday, 2 August 2014 17:46 (ten years ago) link
I thought it was hilarious. But man, are the jazz dorks I know on Facebook weeping blood from their asses about it.
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Saturday, 2 August 2014 17:51 (ten years ago) link
they eat at Chipotle?
― Neanderthal, Saturday, 2 August 2014 17:51 (ten years ago) link
That's actually pretty funny, particularly once it gets to the Dexter Gordon and Miles Davis parts.
― Man, when I tell you she was cool, she was red hot, I mean she was (intheblanks), Saturday, 2 August 2014 18:14 (ten years ago) link
With not-too-much tweaking, some of those Rollins quotes could be legitimate. Leading up to his mid-70s hiatus, Miles pretty much did what "Rollins" describes.
And if the joke about him wanting to be an accountant is "haha, because of COURSE Sonny Rollins has been happily making tons of money as a musician for years!" that's pretty fucked up, considering how many decades of scuffling he and his contemporaries had to endure.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Saturday, 2 August 2014 18:18 (ten years ago) link
Particularly Onion-worthy:
People take turns noodling around, and once they run out of ideas and have to stop, the audience claps. I’m getting angry just thinking about it.
Sometimes we would run through the same song over and over again to see if anybody noticed. If someone did, I don’t care.
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Saturday, 2 August 2014 19:42 (ten years ago) link
Can't seem to open link, excerpts don't seem particularly clever.
― Erdős Number 9 Dream (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 2 August 2014 23:17 (ten years ago) link
And if the joke about him wanting to be an accountant
Believe at least one cat actually did leave jazz for a while to study to be an accountant- Ray Drummond, maybe.
― Erdős Number 9 Dream (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 2 August 2014 23:20 (ten years ago) link
No, not quite. He went to Stanford business school to work on an MBA then dropped out after one year to play bass full time.
― Erdős Number 9 Dream (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 2 August 2014 23:24 (ten years ago) link
http://jazztimes.com/articles/14542-ray-drummond
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aYt8B2RkqrM#t=249
― scott seward, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 04:50 (ten years ago) link
<3 sonny
― sinister porpoise (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 5 August 2014 14:30 (ten years ago) link
i really don't get why people are piss and vinegar'd about this
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 14:31 (ten years ago) link
seconded
― The beer was cold, but so was the glass, which drives me crazy. (stevie), Tuesday, 5 August 2014 14:37 (ten years ago) link
It was fucked because they didn't mention it was satire + Sonny Rollins isn't enough of a public figure to telegraph the joke.
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 5 August 2014 14:39 (ten years ago) link
i mean it was in the humor section with a large-font byline that clearly wasn't sonny rollins
and sure sonny rollins isn't paris hilton--but isn't 'playing to people who get it' kind of the NYers whole reason for being?
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 14:45 (ten years ago) link
artwork choice helped the perception too; using a photo and not an illustration made it seem more like a legitimate story.
― maura, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 14:46 (ten years ago) link
i worked out it was a joke by reading it. also it was v. funny.
― Daphnis Celesta, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 14:49 (ten years ago) link
i didn't think it was that funny! i'm just befuddled by the outrage.
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 14:51 (ten years ago) link
who knew jazz fans could be humourless, cranky?
― Daphnis Celesta, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 14:52 (ten years ago) link
who knew the New Yorker humor section could be a terrible non-funny, pseudo intellectual version of the Daily Currant?
― sinister porpoise (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 5 August 2014 14:54 (ten years ago) link
not outraged, didn't really think it was that funny though. i don't know, rollins has been known to be in somewhat poor health recently, would be a weird thing to publish and then have him (god forbid) pass away the next week or something.
― tylerw, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 14:55 (ten years ago) link
i mean rollins himself in that video just said "well at first i thought it was just some dumb Mad Magazine thing but not as funny but then people started believing it and attributing it to me so I got pretty annoyed that ppl would think i was disparaging jazz or discouraging young jazz players" which is p understandable
― sinister porpoise (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 5 August 2014 14:57 (ten years ago) link
― sinister porpoise (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, August 5, 2014 10:54 AM (4 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
hehehehe
― maura, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 14:59 (ten years ago) link
important info to me from this whole debacle is that rollins never let his sub to Mad Magazine lapse; that's devotion
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 5 August 2014 15:02 (ten years ago) link
what really should be remembered out of all of this is that rollins is and always has been a delightfully weird dude
― tylerw, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 15:06 (ten years ago) link
with a large-font byline that clearly wasn't sonny rollins
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, August 5, 2014 10:45 AM (20 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
You say this like no one on the internet has ever aggregated existing content and put their byline on it.
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 5 August 2014 15:07 (ten years ago) link
Taking this occasion to say Whiney otm, HOOS not
― That's His Grandmother Doug On Bass (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 5 August 2014 15:09 (ten years ago) link
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, August 5, 2014 3:07 PM (7 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
fair
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 15:16 (ten years ago) link
You say this like no one on the internet has ever aggregated existing content and put their byline on it.Whiney Kurt Vonnegut
― That's His Grandmother Doug On Bass (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 5 August 2014 15:48 (ten years ago) link
Editor’s note: This article, which is part of our Shouts & Murmurs humor blog, is a work of satire.
Django Gold is a senior writer for The Onion.
― Thus Sang Freud, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 16:03 (ten years ago) link
How is this not on the Onion thread yet? Or is it?James ReddBob Marley
― That's His Grandmother Doug On Bass (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 5 August 2014 16:08 (ten years ago) link
the satire note was added after the uproar
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 16:08 (ten years ago) link
they also tweeted about it like this:“If I could do it all over again, I’d probably be an accountant.” Sonny Rollins: In His Own Words http://nyr.kr/1tD6165 @tnyshouts[tagged with the humor account, but if you didn't know that ...]
― tylerw, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 16:11 (ten years ago) link
not that funny, but so obviously satire! And it had a byline (in the NYer) that wasn't Sonny Rollins.
The other day I trying to count the jazz musicians who'd become tailors and I came up with Walter Davis, Jr., Lil Hardin, and Jutta Hipp (well, seamstress). All pianists!
― bamcquern, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 16:16 (ten years ago) link
Still not sure what this is actually "satirizing." More like dumb "inversion," substituting all the artistry with struggles overcoming with po mouth complaining baout stuff. It's as if someone "satirized" Einstein by having him complaining about having to tune his violin and comb his hair.
― That's His Grandmother Doug On Bass (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 5 August 2014 16:24 (ten years ago) link
To cleanse your palate with something that is actually funny and shows a genuine appreciation of music and a keen eye for detail, read this- billed as a parody, not a satire- if you can get behind paywall: http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1975/06/23/the-bloomsbury-group-live-at-the-apollo
― That's His Brother Doug's Grandmother Over There (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 5 August 2014 16:30 (ten years ago) link
Still not sure what this is actually "satirizing." More like dumb "inversion,"
right i read the joke here as 'isn't it absurd to imagine this guy who publicly has taken such joy in this music for decades to have actually been truly miserable all along'
the tone deafness there being that of course, there was a lot of misery along the way
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 17:20 (ten years ago) link
Exactly. HOOS otm again!
― That's His Brother Doug's Grandmother Over There (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 5 August 2014 17:25 (ten years ago) link
I didn't read it as being "about" Sonny Rollins at all. I read it as using an interview with Sonny Rollins to point out the futility and pain that are the life of an artist in capitalist society. It's very much of a piece with a bunch of recent Onion stuff that's had people saying, "Wow, that's not funny, that's just depressing."
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 5 August 2014 17:42 (ten years ago) link
You, sir, are an idiot, and I do not know what your curvy Colombian wife sees in you, unless it is something in that ideogram.
― That's My Brother Doug's Grandmother On Bass (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 5 August 2014 17:44 (ten years ago) link
Sorry, I didn't mean that, I was just satirizing a certain posting style to demonstrate the depressing futility of even posting at all.
― That's My Brother Doug's Grandmother On Bass (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 5 August 2014 17:46 (ten years ago) link
I also took the piece to be about "artistic futility." whether or not you find it funny is up to taste but for me the premise of the "joke" seemed to depend on already having a high regard for Rollins/jazz as meaningful, etc.
― ryan, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 18:04 (ten years ago) link
precisely
― Daphnis Celesta, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 18:32 (ten years ago) link
it definitely didn't have a disclaimer in the print mag, right? i'd get my lawyers dewey, cheatham, and howe on the phone right away. mental anguish!
― scott seward, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 19:35 (ten years ago) link
It wasn't even in the print magazine - it was online-only. That's what's even more amazing about the response. Who knew all these old crybaby jazz fucks had even heard of the internet?
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 5 August 2014 19:36 (ten years ago) link
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-TwniIS2_C2w/TaK13AOntiI/AAAAAAAACmA/cOIfUqesS1I/s1600/Thing.jpgIt's Flag-Postin' Time!
― That's My Brother Doug's Grandmother On Bass (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 5 August 2014 19:40 (ten years ago) link
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, 5 August 2014 19:48 (ten years ago) link
So is this Django Gold the same kid who wrote the Ten Jazz Records You Must Own thing in the Voice a little while back, and now he is already senior editor at Teh Onion? Cream really rises to the top faster and faster in this best of all possible worlds we live in.
― Flan O'Brien, bibliotecario de Babel (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 02:21 (ten years ago) link
Whiney are you even serious here
this to you seems "fucked"? like I get that you'd die before reading the New Yorker but anybody who's read two issues of it knows Shouts & Murmurs is a humor column
― Now I Am Become Dracula (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 13:29 (ten years ago) link
You couldn't imagine a scenario where a piece of "humor" could mean aggregating funny quotes from a colorful personality who's not exactly famous?
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 14:31 (ten years ago) link
He is famous, you're just not into jazz. My entire week has been jazzers lolling about that piece
― fgti, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 14:45 (ten years ago) link
Well it's a good thing this was published in a niche publication like Jazz Times and not a national general interest magazine like the New Yorker with a 1M+ circulation. Dodged a bullet there!
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 14:51 (ten years ago) link
That could have been really embarrassing!
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 14:52 (ten years ago) link
Whiney this is your golden opportunity to write a very serious thinkpiece about the real harm done by a joke whose punchline is "one of the greatest living jazz players actually hates jazz." imagine all the clicks
― Now I Am Become Dracula (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 14:56 (ten years ago) link
the negative responses to the piece definitely have a lot to do w/ the profile of the pub and the subject. when's the last time Sonny Rollins was the subject of a high profile piece in a general interest publication? the same basic "joke" could've been done with, like, Bob Dylan, and it would've been totally unfunny then too, but it wouldn't have been vaguely unseemly for quite the same reason.
― some dude, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 14:57 (ten years ago) link
some dude otm.
still have yet to come across one of these token jazz musicians who are lolling at this. But I guess, to paraphrase Ian Faith, NYC is not a big jazz town.
― Flan O'Brien, bibliotecario de Babel (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 15:16 (ten years ago) link
xpost, yeah, if it was like Young Dro or Big Daddy Kane or Shalamar or the Bar-Kays, it would be the same problem
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 15:18 (ten years ago) link
someone post an example of terrible music writing please.
― 3kDk (dog latin), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 15:22 (ten years ago) link
nothing by me please.
The New Yorker also covers classical music
― fgti, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 15:37 (ten years ago) link
when's the last time Sonny Rollins was the subject of a high profile piece in a general interest publication?
About four years ago, in the New Yorker - doesn't fit high profile, but then again, the New Yorker probably gives more ink to Rollins than any other general interest publication
the error of this piece is that its humor seems mean because most people just don't give a fuck about jazz: fake Rollins is kinda right, most people don't care, no matter how immense his contribution to jazz is. so it's a mean joke: the idea that Sonny Rollins might feel like his craft, which is unassailable, has been a waste; that nobody gives a shit. kind of a mean joke. that notion that this rises somehow to some higher level of offense than "kinda mean" is a little baffling
― Now I Am Become Dracula (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 15:52 (ten years ago) link
4 years is a pretty long time, so that kinda helps my point imo.
― some dude, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 15:55 (ten years ago) link
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, August 6, 2014 11:18 AM (35 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
that reminds me, Nick Sylvester's old blog with lol hilarious fake interviews with rappers was terrible in a pretty similar way
you're a music critic, right? pitched any Sonny Rollins pieces lately?
― Now I Am Become Dracula (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 15:57 (ten years ago) link
― some dude, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 15:58 (ten years ago) link
rolling stone puts sex crimes in a flashback listicle but the real problem is jazz satire in the new yorker
― da croupier, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 15:59 (ten years ago) link
Sonny Rollins hasn't released new studio material since 2006, fyi. His last three albums are all called "Road Shows." Not sure sure what any publication is supposed to be doing to satisfy the "you don't get to joke about Sonny Rollins unless you're covering his shit on the regular" hurdle, but if you can name a general interest publication anywhere who gives him more coverage than the New Yorker, I'll be pretty surprised.
― Now I Am Become Dracula (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 15:59 (ten years ago) link
he has a whole journal dedicated to his sax sound fyi
― john wahey (NickB), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:03 (ten years ago) link
rollin's tone
well yeah that kinda makes the humor of the piece even more specious. graying legend pokes his head out of semi-retirement to denounce his life's work, oh the laughters out loud!
i'm not saying the piece is totally indefensible, but i don't really understand the basis upon which you're defending it other than the usual bullshit internet "freedom of speech means you can't say this was lame."
― some dude, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:03 (ten years ago) link
would you describe this as a "general interest" magazine
is that really something I would say, some dude? c'mon man. I'm not "defending the piece," I don't give a shit about it, I just think people getting heated about it are being ridiculous and honestly fronting
― Now I Am Become Dracula (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:11 (ten years ago) link
graying legend pokes his head out of semi-retirement to denounce his life's work, oh the laughters out loud!
no accounting for taste
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:13 (ten years ago) link
i gather that the reactions around the internet to this thing have run to some extremes. i don't really say anybody getting that heated, here, beyond thinking it's fair game for this thread.
― some dude, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:14 (ten years ago) link
But this is exactly why it's good satire. It's not meant to be "ha-ha" funny; it's meant to confront the ugly truth of how much American society really values the great artists in their midst. Real satire is rarely funny, and frequently seems cruel, because the reality it's pointing out is itself cruel and ugly and not fucking funny.
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:15 (ten years ago) link
there's a difference between being a part of a vehement backlash to a piece and being on the periphery saying "well, this backlash was pretty inevitable, what did the writer fucking expect" xp
― some dude, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:16 (ten years ago) link
rather than cruelly acknowledge their irrelevance to pop culture, jazz greats should be respected from afar silently until the artist dies, at which point a ten-song spotify playlist will be curated if the site has someone who could put that together. failing that, a solitary youtube of their tooting will do.
― da croupier, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:19 (ten years ago) link
or, y'know, just not make an 80-year-old icon have to get online and tell his fans, many of whom are probably also his age, that he didn't just denounce his whole career, a shitty McSweeney's post just made its way to a major magazine's site
― some dude, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:22 (ten years ago) link
that's what i said!
― da croupier, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:24 (ten years ago) link
Genuinely baffled that anybody is angry about this or that anybody couldn't tell it was a joke.
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:24 (ten years ago) link
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱)
― Harper Valley PTSD (WilliamC), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:25 (ten years ago) link
a shitty McSweeney's post just made its way to a major magazine's site
as part of a column that any reader over 18 knows is a humor column
― Now I Am Become Dracula (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:26 (ten years ago) link
that's cold, man, you think a 17 year old can't see the word 'humor' in the URL of a site's humor section?
― some dude, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:28 (ten years ago) link
our safesearch is set to "make the kid think all humor sites are true." no-one can challenge our asshole parenting style
― Now I Am Become Dracula (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:29 (ten years ago) link
the "omg i can't believe anyone would be fooled by this!" thing is mainly theoretical since the overwhelming majority of people who even read it did so after the brouhaha and SR's response already happened. but this probably popped up on the RSS reader or whatever of a few jazz fans who were momentarily confused and asked Rollins what was up, let's keep harping on how dumb they must be.
― some dude, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:30 (ten years ago) link
OK they're dumb. I don't know much about how Rollins talks and thinks and I could tell it wasn't him. You'd think his stans would have an advantage.
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:36 (ten years ago) link
everybody knows Rollins said he thought it was funny right
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-j3LfPYqSZs
and gave a reading roughly in line with 誤訳侮辱's, that it was kind of a cutting piece, and expressed concern that people might have thought it was real
then after he thinks about that for a while he seems to change his mind, but his take seems readable as "taken as humor, fine; if people take it seriously, a drag"
― Now I Am Become Dracula (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:36 (ten years ago) link
Oh fuck anyone who thought this might be srs, that's just goofy
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:41 (ten years ago) link
no one is saying people didn't know it was a humor column, aero, but the fact that "humor" on the internet in 2014 can mean "made up stuff" or "aggregated actual things that are also funny" is where the confusion lies...
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:46 (ten years ago) link
the irony of protecting old people from a humor column started circa the great depression
― da croupier, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:52 (ten years ago) link
it's about a year older than sonny rollins
― da croupier, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:53 (ten years ago) link
FAVE OUTRAGE:
http://nicholaspayton.wordpress.com/2014/08/04/on-the-new-yorker-satirizing-sonny/
"It’s about as funny as some White people think it is to let their kids run wild in a restaurant or on an airplane terrorizing the other patrons. It’s about as funny as how those kids grow up to be government officials who terrorize Africans or Palestinians."
― scott seward, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:56 (ten years ago) link
anchorman-escalated-quickly.gif
― Welcome to my spooooooky carnival! Hope I don't... blow your mind! (Phil D.), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:57 (ten years ago) link
#BAM
— Nicholas Payton aka The Savior of Archaic Pop
― da croupier, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 16:59 (ten years ago) link
Here’s one of the most respected American periodicals posting a picture of a somber-faced Sonny with a piece “in his own words,” rhapsodizing about how he hates music and he’s wasted his life. Where’s the humor in that?
Where indeed?
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 17:06 (ten years ago) link
― john wahey (NickB), Wednesday, August 6, 2014 5:03 PM (1 hour ago)
overlooked
― Number None, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 17:22 (ten years ago) link
― 3kDk (dog latin), Wednesday, August 6, 2014 11:22 AM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 17:28 (ten years ago) link
http://forum.minecraftpvp.com/uploads/default/8609/ed420441ea3f654e.jpg
― ♪♫ teenage wasteman ♪♫ (goole), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 17:33 (ten years ago) link
shame about the errant apostrophe
― john wahey (NickB), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 17:35 (ten years ago) link
Rollins Banned.
― Doran, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 19:25 (ten years ago) link
Rollins Suggest Banned.
― Doran, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 19:26 (ten years ago) link
Rollins rollins rollins I ain't slept in weeks
― Now you're messing with a (President Keyes), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 19:51 (ten years ago) link
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Tuesday, August 5, 2014 10:20 AM (Yesterday)
i took the joke to be, "well-respected artist is horrifyingly bitter about the complete futility of his life in a retrospective profile piece." we typically expect such things to consist of fondly-remembered peak experiences and reassuring life lessons. NYer piece upends the form, using rollins only as a jumping off point. all you need to know about him to get it is that he's a jazz dude. it'd work just as well with carl sagan or mary lou retton. the best jokes are all simple inversion: "that was the worst day of my life."
― Adding ease. Adding wonder. Adding (contenderizer), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 19:55 (ten years ago) link
no such thing as bad publicity imho
― everybody loves lana del raymond (s.clover), Wednesday, 6 August 2014 20:03 (ten years ago) link
it'd work just as well with carl sagan or mary lou retton. the best jokes are all simple inversion: "that was the worst day of my life."― Adding ease. Adding wonder. Adding (contenderizer), Wednesday, August 6, 2014 7:55 PM (56 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Adding ease. Adding wonder. Adding (contenderizer), Wednesday, August 6, 2014 7:55 PM (56 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
'isn't it absurd to imagine this guy who publicly has taken such joy in science for decades to have actually been truly miserable all along'
'isn't it absurd to imagine this woman who publicly has taken such joy in gymnastics for decades to have actually been truly miserable all along'
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 20:53 (ten years ago) link
idk i think imagining it as a joke about the lion in winter profile piece is exceedingly high concept but
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Wednesday, 6 August 2014 20:54 (ten years ago) link
I was looking for a DJ rich list and found this. I thought it was a parody at first - the Moby entry is particularly special.
http://www.top10covered.com/top-10-richest-djs-2014-net-worth
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Thursday, 7 August 2014 14:21 (ten years ago) link
Music has no boundaries and that is certainly true.
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Thursday, 7 August 2014 14:27 (ten years ago) link
that moby entry really is a treat
i dunno, that is just some one horse webpage, every entry is written by this guy:
About Author Manishk
Manish Khatri is an acclaimed writer who's good at what he's doing. He writes about various subjects related to relationships, social media, tech reviews, gadgets, health, travel, etc.
― john wahey (NickB), Thursday, 7 August 2014 14:29 (ten years ago) link
i did enjoy the characterisation of rooney as "this short player from England (who) looks to be very pale" from here though:
http://www.top10covered.com/top-10-best-football-strikers-world
― john wahey (NickB), Thursday, 7 August 2014 14:36 (ten years ago) link
that's not even Moby in the picture is it??
― lol on hoosly (crüt), Thursday, 7 August 2014 14:50 (ten years ago) link
we are all made of stars
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Thursday, 7 August 2014 14:56 (ten years ago) link
stellar buffoonery
― Flan O'Brien, bibliotecario de Babel (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 7 August 2014 15:12 (ten years ago) link
would have liked to hear some of those entries turned into a Wesley Willis song
― for sale: Bebe's boots, never worn (DJ Mencap), Thursday, 7 August 2014 15:33 (ten years ago) link
similar style to this site:
http://listdose.com/top-10-best-famous-jazz-musicians/
― soref, Thursday, 7 August 2014 15:40 (ten years ago) link
Benny Goodman is among the most respectable and famous Jazz musician, he is esteemed at such an extent that his clarinet is among the world’s most expensive musical instruments today
― Dedekind Cut Creator (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 7 August 2014 16:43 (ten years ago) link
Miles Devis
― lol on hoosly (crüt), Thursday, 7 August 2014 16:46 (ten years ago) link
http://www.top10covered.com/top-10-popular-countries-monarchical-government
― just sayin, Thursday, 7 August 2014 16:47 (ten years ago) link
[Nat King Cole] was very famous for his unique and pulchritudinous soft voice.
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Thursday, 7 August 2014 17:09 (ten years ago) link
Okay, that one is a keeper.
― Dedekind Cut Creator (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 7 August 2014 17:12 (ten years ago) link
― Dedekind Cut Creator (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 7 August 2014 17:16 (ten years ago) link
at least he acknowledges the importance of that Louis Armstrong classic “what a beautiful world is”.
― Brio2, Thursday, 7 August 2014 17:41 (ten years ago) link
― marcos, Thursday, 7 August 2014 17:44 (ten years ago) link
Music is a very important part of life, music has the power to change a person’s mood in a blink of an eye, it is capable of making you smile, and it is also capable of making a person cry. Music can bring a person back to life, it can make you enthusiastic, and it can inspire you.
― soref, Thursday, 7 August 2014 17:50 (ten years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4CK2hx377iU
― write 500 words of song (sleepingbag), Thursday, 7 August 2014 17:51 (ten years ago) link
music can make your soul less hungry, and it can feed your soul.
― Peeking at Peak Petty (Sufjan Grafton), Thursday, 7 August 2014 17:53 (ten years ago) link
describing Monk as a singer gives the game away. It seems quite mean sneering at someone who is just making "content" and grappling with English as a 2nd language. I'd guess the author knows this is a load of shite, it is the hacks who purr away at their perceptiveness and ingenuity whilst talking a load of shite who deserve the real contempt.
― autumn reckoning faction (xelab), Thursday, 7 August 2014 18:40 (ten years ago) link
http://sherly.mobile9.com/download/media/446/rastasmile_XXfBedHk.jpg
http://blogs.villagevoice.com/music/2014/08/in_defense_of_sublime.php
― scott seward, Friday, 8 August 2014 03:38 (ten years ago) link
i think this is really it. the one. the one we've been waiting for.
― scott seward, Friday, 8 August 2014 03:39 (ten years ago) link
I have so many feelings, probably too many
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Friday, 8 August 2014 03:45 (ten years ago) link
"I say this as a person who was sixteen in 1996" = the person who wrote this is not actually 16.
which might be the stunner for some.
― scott seward, Friday, 8 August 2014 03:49 (ten years ago) link
Miguel is like the fucking Rick Ruben of the O.C., doing what Ruben did at Def Jam (and with other acts, like the Beastie Boys)
― Adding ease. Adding wonder. Adding (contenderizer), Friday, 8 August 2014 04:14 (ten years ago) link
that line caught my eye too
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Friday, 8 August 2014 04:18 (ten years ago) link
fucking Rick Ruben ese
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Friday, 8 August 2014 04:32 (ten years ago) link
why does Kurt Cobain get treated like dead royalty and Brad Nowell get the bum rap of being the lesser-than frat-dude version?
because uh
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Friday, 8 August 2014 04:33 (ten years ago) link
My god, every line of this
Yeah, srsly
"But the third wave ska movement was a big and important one, ushering bands into the mainstream like the Aquabats, Reel Big Fish and, of course, No Doubt, while changing the way rock radio sounded forever."
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Friday, 8 August 2014 05:59 (ten years ago) link
http://www.theage.com.au/entertainment/music/why-beyonce-knowles-doesnt-deserve-mtvs-vanguard-award-20140808-101raz.html#poll
― uxorious gazumping (monotony), Friday, 8 August 2014 06:13 (ten years ago) link
xpso we're writing think pieces in response to stupid avclub clickbait now, huh?
― "trough lolly"??? (stevie), Friday, 8 August 2014 07:53 (ten years ago) link
The Sublime piece has a shaky premise--aren't they far more rated and loved than most dumbass 90s ska bands?
― Now you're messing with a (President Keyes), Friday, 8 August 2014 12:11 (ten years ago) link
fucking Rick Ruben ese― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Thursday, August 7, 2014 11:32 PM (Yesterday)
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Thursday, August 7, 2014 11:32 PM (Yesterday)
lolllllll
― °ㅇ๐ْ ° (gr8080), Friday, 8 August 2014 12:21 (ten years ago) link
Rick Ruben Blades
― ruffalo soldier (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 8 August 2014 14:03 (ten years ago) link
I grew up in the '90s, and guess what? Chicken butt.
― Welcome to my spooooooky carnival! Hope I don't... blow your mind! (Phil D.), Friday, 8 August 2014 14:47 (ten years ago) link
What I'm saying is, to your average sixteen-year-old music fan in 1996, Nirvana and Sublime could be enjoyed all the same. I say this as a person who was sixteen in 1996, loved both bands and saw no difference between one and the other.
This person is as old as me and this opinion seems like it's from someone who can name more than five pokemons
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 8 August 2014 14:59 (ten years ago) link
its like that piece was written just for you Whiney
― Maggie killed Quagmire (collest baby ever) (frogbs), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:01 (ten years ago) link
I mean, I'll tell it like it is, I definitely banged some Sublime in 1996, I can't lie — and I can even still ride for 40 Oz. to Freedom, mostly as a conceptual triumph.
But to see no difference between them and Nirvana would have been the opinion of an insane person, even in 1996. And to not recognize that in hindsight as someone approaching 35 is either willfully blind or unabashed trolling
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:04 (ten years ago) link
yeah i dunno...i mean....i guess to me back then there were like Major bands (nirvana, pearl jam, soundgarden, RHCP) and then like tons of alt rock radio bands, but i didn't necessarily see sublime as a bigger deal than marcy playground or garbage or w/e
― ruffalo soldier (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:08 (ten years ago) link
well, there were definitely 'sublime fans'. like, overlapping with the deadheads/phishheads who were also into alt rock and not just trapped in an alternate universe of tape-trading.
― j., Friday, 8 August 2014 15:12 (ten years ago) link
yeah i'm sure but i think for the average they weren't on the same level as nirvana
― ruffalo soldier (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:13 (ten years ago) link
lower level than the Offspring I think
― Euler, Friday, 8 August 2014 15:16 (ten years ago) link
I can even still ride for 40 Oz. to Freedom I can even still ride for 40 Oz. to Freedom I can even still ride for 40 Oz. to Freedom I can even still ride for 40 Oz. to Freedom I can even still ride for 40 Oz. to Freedom I can even still ride for 40 Oz. to Freedom I can even still ride for 40 Oz. to Freedom I can even still ride for 40 Oz. to Freedom I can even still ride for 40 Oz. to Freedom
― marcos, Friday, 8 August 2014 15:18 (ten years ago) link
the "average music fan" was probably listening to Snoop or Shania Twain or Alanis Morissette in 1996 anyway
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:18 (ten years ago) link
Sublime at the time felt to me like they had the same level of popularity as, say, Squirrel Nut Zippers, and I thought they'd vanish once the musical trend died down, and then I turned around and it had been like 10 years of randomly seeing Sublime t-shirts out in the wild and I was all "wait what the fuck happened here"
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:19 (ten years ago) link
"Chica Me Tipo"
No me importa que se lleva (It doesn't matter what you're wearing)Porque todo se quitara (Because it will all come off)Ay no puedo verlo (I can't see you)Ni en pintura (Not even in paint)
Cuando empecemos, no me dio cuenta (When we started, I didn't realize)De que luego, tuviera que pagar (That later I would have to pay)Pero, se dice tambien (but, it is also said)Me muera acostarme con ti (I'm dying to lay down with you)Con ti (with you)
No me propongo predicar (I don't propose to preach)Vive y dejar vivir (Live and let live)Pero el amigo (But a friend)Es un condon en el bolsillo (Is a condom in your pocket)
Yo no soy medico, no soy chapocero (I'm not a doctor, I'm not a joker)Solamente soy pobre, y ya estoy tan solo (I'm just poor, and now I'm so lonely)Pero si se cambie (But if she changes)Ella seria la mia (She will be mine)Para ser poseido en propeidad (To be possesed as property)en propeidad (As property)
I've got to get alive with youWhoa I cannot do?I will lay down anytime with herwith her.
― marcos, Friday, 8 August 2014 15:20 (ten years ago) link
brad nowell is a kurt cobainesque tragic genius to a lot of people so i don't think the comparison is that ridiculous. i think the article is right about the politics of taste that cause people to make a point of hating sublime and their shallow, garbage music.
― Treeship, Friday, 8 August 2014 15:21 (ten years ago) link
"40 Oz To Freedom"
You've got your hair permedYou've got your red dress onScreamin' that second gear was such a turn onAnd the fog forming on my window tells me that the morning hereAnd you'll be gone before too long
Who taught you those new tricks?Damn I shouldn't start that talk,but life is one big question when your starin at the clockAnd the answers always waiting at the liquor store, 40 oz to Freedom,so I'll take that walk.
And I know that ohhhh...I'm not comin backOhh not going backGod knows not going back
You look so fine when you lie it just don't show,That I know which way the wind blows40 oz to freedom is the only chance I have to feel good,even though I feel bad
And I know that ohhhh...I'm not comin backOhh not going backGod knows I'm not going backGod knows I'm not going back
― marcos, Friday, 8 August 2014 15:21 (ten years ago) link
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, August 8, 2014 10:18 AM (2 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
i mean average the type of kids that would care about nirvana and sublime...also it's not like nirvana wasn't selling mainstream numbers
― ruffalo soldier (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:22 (ten years ago) link
40z to freedom is the sublime album that people who were once a fan but are now slightly embarrassed about it will still say is "pretty good". it is not.
― marcos, Friday, 8 August 2014 15:22 (ten years ago) link
40 Oz to Freedom, conceptually, really was like smart that it came from a product of hip-hop fandom and college DJ culture (which Nowell was I think?)
Like doing Grateful Dead songs over the "Funky Drummer break," scratching a Minutemen album, doing a folk song about KRS-One, singing Bob Marley lyrics over a Just-Ice song — it all spoke to the post-Beasties smash-up culture they were trying to promote and attempt and see through the lens of smoked out cali loving surfer bros/dalmation enthusiasts
. Of course there's no shortage of awkardness ("DATE RAPE STYLEE") but I can get behind the message conceptually, plus they had good taste
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:23 (ten years ago) link
the way a crowd reacts when "Santeria" comes on in a crowded bar in 2014 vs how they react when "smells like teen spirit" comes on is p different ime
― °ㅇ๐ْ ° (gr8080), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:23 (ten years ago) link
brad nowell is a kurt cobainesque tragic genius to a lot of people so i don't think the comparison is that ridiculous.
I'mma stop you right here and opine that once you've gotten to "brad nowell is a kurt cobainesque tragic genius to a lot of people", you have jetted past "ridiculous" and are firmly into "full-on insane and laughable" territory.
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:24 (ten years ago) link
"a lot of people" does not equal "me"
― Treeship, Friday, 8 August 2014 15:25 (ten years ago) link
(note that I'm not saying that you're wrong or that what you're saying isn't true; just that fact is really fucking ridiculous)
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:25 (ten years ago) link
i'd put sublime and nirvana on roughly equal footing, maybe a slight edge to sublime for having catchier songs
― panda fiend (sleepingbag), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:26 (ten years ago) link
anyway sublime were HUUUUUUUGE when i was teenager. i lived in an almost entirely white suburb in the midwest and almost everybody loved them. kids who liked nirvana definitely liked sublime. the alt music fan in my town liked nirvana, sublime, rage against the machine, grateful dead, metallica, snoop, and bob marley pretty much equally.
― marcos, Friday, 8 August 2014 15:26 (ten years ago) link
The way a crowd reacts when you put on this has a reaction too
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pdEvL6jxUYA
but you don't see any thinkpieces about it
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:27 (ten years ago) link
not yet we don't.
― °ㅇ๐ْ ° (gr8080), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:28 (ten years ago) link
lets definitely turn this into a thread where white people with comfortable upbringings talk about what other white people with comfortable upbringings were into in the Nineties, considering they're all beginning to run the world now and have no self-awareness about it
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:28 (ten years ago) link
RIP Lou Dog
― ruffalo soldier (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:29 (ten years ago) link
i'm not white whiney, i'm hispanic
― marcos, Friday, 8 August 2014 15:29 (ten years ago) link
"white people"
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:30 (ten years ago) link
how about instead we turn this thread into a discussion of Invisible Man, how does that suit you?
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:31 (ten years ago) link
oops, sorry marcos!
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:31 (ten years ago) link
whiney doesn't see color, just tumblr wites
― ruffalo soldier (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:34 (ten years ago) link
WON'T SOMEBODY GET ME OFF OF THIS REEF
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:34 (ten years ago) link
this makes 40oz sound really cool fwiw
― Treeship, Friday, 8 August 2014 15:35 (ten years ago) link
just let that imaginary version live, don't listen to it
― ruffalo soldier (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:36 (ten years ago) link
http://i.imgur.com/4VMVDHO.gif
― °ㅇ๐ْ ° (gr8080), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:36 (ten years ago) link
i think the mash-up aesthetic, in the internet era, is kind of played and combining/curating disparate sounds in itself doesn't sound refreshing in 2014. that might be why i didn't notice all the stuff whine mentioend and just remember 40oz as this ska-rap album that has a song about date rape
― Treeship, Friday, 8 August 2014 15:37 (ten years ago) link
i dunno, it was a few years past faith no more and a bunch of shit that was already doing that general thing of combining the threads of so-cal stoner/skater/punk/whatever culture
― ruffalo soldier (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:38 (ten years ago) link
Can we get back to where we're all white here. Signed, One of Us White Guys That Are White.
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 8 August 2014 15:39 (ten years ago) link
Right, but Sublime took it the extra step and used actual source material like a hip-hop DJ would.
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 8 August 2014 15:40 (ten years ago) link
That awkward moment when you jam to a date rape song
― pictures of people who seem to have figured out how to use dropbox (wins), Friday, 8 August 2014 16:00 (ten years ago) link
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, August 8, 2014 3:28 PM (31 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― ruffalo soldier (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, August 8, 2014 3:29 PM (31 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― marcos, Friday, August 8, 2014 3:29 PM (30 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Friday, August 8, 2014 3:30 PM (30 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― da croupier, Friday, 8 August 2014 16:02 (ten years ago) link
maybe the white manager with no self-awareness is...you
― da croupier, Friday, 8 August 2014 16:04 (ten years ago) link
lot of whites moaning in here tonight
― The aim of Rooney is spot correct (Daphnis Celesta), Friday, 8 August 2014 16:05 (ten years ago) link
v telling that Lou Dog is black and white, makes you think
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 8 August 2014 16:06 (ten years ago) link
someday i'm going to bounce onto a thread bemoaning how it's nothing but white "ironic" fans of limp bizkit who've dabbled in rockcrit and now waste time in the office debating with other pedants about nerd trivia
oh wait no i'm not
― da croupier, Friday, 8 August 2014 16:11 (ten years ago) link
good to know
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 8 August 2014 16:16 (ten years ago) link
i sincerely hope you do
― da croupier, Friday, 8 August 2014 16:18 (ten years ago) link
http://www.sexyli.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/dalmatian-dog-glasses-paws-nose-animals.jpg
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 8 August 2014 16:18 (ten years ago) link
ayyy lmao
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 8 August 2014 16:19 (ten years ago) link
Can I nominate this Jed Perl piece on the arts? This seems not even wrong.http://www.newrepublic.com/article/118958/liberals-are-killing-art-insisting-its-always-political
― campreverb, Friday, 8 August 2014 16:22 (ten years ago) link
he took so long to get to an example of one of these art-denying liberals that i was shocked to see it was alex ross discussing classical music and not someone shitting on macklemore
― da croupier, Friday, 8 August 2014 16:27 (ten years ago) link
apparently liberals err on the side of acknowledging toxic politics circling art...does he think conservatives get the "appreciating beauty vs reason" scale right or do they err on the side of ignoring toxic politics, with him as goldilocks?
― da croupier, Friday, 8 August 2014 16:35 (ten years ago) link
my sublime story: as a white southern dude of a certain age, I never heard sublime in the 90's except for the megahits and they were brief background blips... i seem to remember thinking "what I got" was some kind of rip-off of beck's "where it's at" of all things. i don't think this so-cal stuff got much exposure in tennessee. luckily, cause my dad was a music nerd and a stoner, i WAS raised on a steady diet of marley, desmond dekker and prince buster, toots, jimmy cliff, hugh mundell, dillinger, ken boothe and so on tho'.i was working pr for (ahem) a cover group this past year and finally got around to listening to the album a time or two for the first time and it's my considered opinion that it is pretty horrible.that's all.
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Friday, 8 August 2014 16:56 (ten years ago) link
man I was wondering how long this was going to go on before Whiney went all "uggh white people"
― Maggie killed Quagmire (collest baby ever) (frogbs), Friday, 8 August 2014 16:59 (ten years ago) link
i bet
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 8 August 2014 16:59 (ten years ago) link
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, August 8, 2014 10:23 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
...
― ruffalo soldier (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, August 8, 2014 10:38 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
this is... interesting, but if FNM and sublime are the best examples of this culture then you all deserved worse than you got
― ♪♫ teenage wasteman ♪♫ (goole), Friday, 8 August 2014 17:09 (ten years ago) link
sonny bono and bob dornan win elections and your music is just comically horrible, maybe get your shit together "socal"
― ♪♫ teenage wasteman ♪♫ (goole), Friday, 8 August 2014 17:10 (ten years ago) link
music from socal to this day is generally not really good imo, the local music scene in l.a. is in partic boring.
― LIKE If you are against racism (omar little), Friday, 8 August 2014 17:18 (ten years ago) link
of course i listened to that sublime s/t a TON in college and it was everywhere for awhile. but not in the way nirvana was, at least where i was at. they feel like the new social distortion in terms of nostalgia tripping, albeit with a slightly different listening audience. only slightly, though, there's a lot of overlap.
― LIKE If you are against racism (omar little), Friday, 8 August 2014 17:28 (ten years ago) link
HIP-HOP SOUND COLLAGE PIONEERS SUBLIME
― scott seward, Friday, 8 August 2014 18:04 (ten years ago) link
everything sounds stupid if you put it in all caps
― Treeship, Friday, 8 August 2014 18:11 (ten years ago) link
The first time I ever encountered the whole "Bradley Nowell is a genius struck down in his prime" was when I stopped by a Best Buy early in the morning in 2006 and was waiting in line with like 10 dudes buying the three-disc(!) Sublime rarities box set, all of them speaking in reverent tones about how much they missed him.
― Bus Sex Teen Busted After Queef Beef (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Friday, 8 August 2014 18:18 (ten years ago) link
hip-hop sound collage pioneers sublime
does that sound better
― marcos, Friday, 8 August 2014 18:21 (ten years ago) link
I'm thinking of recording 30 tracks of myself farting and getting it onto Spotify under the name Sublime!
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Friday, 8 August 2014 18:23 (ten years ago) link
Best Sublime Albums List
List Criteria: This list includes studio albums only, so if you add an album make sure it's a proper studio release.Long Beach-natives Sublime aren't just one of the best 90s bands,but can be considered one of the best reggae bands and reggae rock bands. List of the best Sublime albums, including pictures of the album covers when available. This Sublime discography is ranked from best to worst, so the top Sublime albums can be found at the top of the list. To make it easy for you, we haven't included Sublime singles, EPs, or compilations, so everything you see here should only be studio albums. If you think the greatest Sublime album isn't high enough on the list, then be sure to vote for it so it receives the credit it deserves. Make sure you don't just vote for critically acclaimed albums; if you have a favorite Sublime album, then vote it up, even if it's not necessarily the most popular. If you want to know, "What is the Best Sublime album of all time?" or "What are the top Sublime albums?" then this list will answer your questions. Items here include everything from Sublime to 40 Oz. to Freedom.This list of popular Sublime CDs has been voted on by music fans around the world, so the order of this list isn't just one person's opinion. You may copy this list to build your own just like it, re-rank it to fit your views, then publish it to share with your Facebook friends, Twitter followers or with any other social networks you're on.less
1) 40 Oz. to Freedom 2) Sublime
3) Jah Won't Pay the Bills
4) Robbin' the Hood
― LIKE If you are against racism (omar little), Friday, 8 August 2014 18:24 (ten years ago) link
always been sorta curious about robbin the hood bc my idea of it matches whiney's description of 40 oz. upthread
but having grown up near socal i don't really need to go out of my way to listen to sublime
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Friday, 8 August 2014 18:29 (ten years ago) link
lol omar
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Friday, 8 August 2014 18:58 (ten years ago) link
― marcos, Friday, 8 August 2014 19:02 (ten years ago) link
also robbin the hood is shit, thrown-together garbage
good to know!
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Friday, 8 August 2014 19:13 (ten years ago) link
how did I have no clue that brad is a west coaster
― some dude, Friday, 8 August 2014 19:13 (ten years ago) link
faith no more are so much better/have so little in common with sublime it is barely conceivable
― "trough lolly"??? (stevie), Friday, 8 August 2014 19:31 (ten years ago) link
they are better but i think in the big picture there's a certain style of socal music, i would put chili peppers in there as well, like dudes who liked early rap and punk and minutemen and dub records and some metal and smoked shitloads of weed...
― ruffalo soldier (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 8 August 2014 19:40 (ten years ago) link
dekker and prince buster, toots, jimmy cliff, hugh mundell, dillinger, ken boothe and so on tho'.i was working pr for (ahem) a cover group this past year and finally got around to listening to the album a time or two for the first time and it's my considered opinion that it is pretty horrible.that's all.
When I was first listening to Sublime heavily, my manager from the ice cream shop I worked at (a black man maybe in his mid to late 20s) invited me and some other coworkers over to his apartment to smoke pot. On the way over, we were listening to some kind of alternative that he didn't like, so I asked him what he did like and he says "I'm into reggae." My coworkers and I got really excited. "You've gotta hear it." I was hoping for something better than "what the hell is this crap?"
― how's life, Friday, 8 August 2014 19:43 (ten years ago) link
your manager otm
― ruffalo soldier (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 8 August 2014 19:44 (ten years ago) link
― marcos, Friday, 8 August 2014 19:59 (ten years ago) link
First stoner I'd ever met who reacted that way.
― how's life, Friday, 8 August 2014 20:01 (ten years ago) link
this calls for Robert Stack in "Unsolved Mysteries" mode recitatoin
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 8 August 2014 20:03 (ten years ago) link
― [Fine Whines via] Treeship, Friday, August 8, 2014 8:35 AM (6 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Treeship, Friday, August 8, 2014 8:37 AM (6 hours ago)
wholesale dismissal of "post-beasties smash-up culture" (if that's what we're calling it now) in the indie aughts depresses me. not that the beastie boys (or ratm or sublime or the judgment night sndtrk or w/e) necessarily deserve a long shadow of active artistic influence, but it's sort of a drag that the interconnections between genres have been so thoroughly severed.
also, all this sublime talk reminds me of recent activity in the not guilty pleasures thread. when a artist becomes a comical icon of awfulness, trashing them becomes a bore. if nowell's "genius" wordplay weren't such a constant stream of casual slut-shaming misogyny, i'd feel some obligation to fake like sublime. as it is, i just figure they're someone else's thing. whiney?
― Adding ease. Adding wonder. Adding (contenderizer), Friday, 8 August 2014 22:52 (ten years ago) link
If you're bored with Sublime:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/opinions/wp/2014/08/08/all-that-jazz-isnt-all-that-great/
― EZ Snappin, Friday, 8 August 2014 23:05 (ten years ago) link
fuck that guy
― Adding ease. Adding wonder. Adding (contenderizer), Friday, 8 August 2014 23:09 (ten years ago) link
― j., Friday, 8 August 2014 23:20 (ten years ago) link
disparaging jazz like that seems inherently racist
― Treeship, Friday, 8 August 2014 23:21 (ten years ago) link
is it? i think it is.
inherently stupid
― The aim of Rooney is spot correct (Daphnis Celesta), Friday, 8 August 2014 23:23 (ten years ago) link
really if you find yourself writing a piece about why something you don't like is overrated have a think for a minute then stop doing it and go and do laundry or something else useful instead
― The aim of Rooney is spot correct (Daphnis Celesta), Friday, 8 August 2014 23:24 (ten years ago) link
that article is just trying to wind people up, relax
― brimstead, Friday, 8 August 2014 23:30 (ten years ago) link
I appreciated that these generous African American men deigned to share their art at a quite white New England liberal-arts school. But I just didn’t get their aesthetic.
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Friday, 8 August 2014 23:31 (ten years ago) link
being deliberately challopian doesn't make you not obnoxious
― The aim of Rooney is spot correct (Daphnis Celesta), Friday, 8 August 2014 23:33 (ten years ago) link
it's sort of a drag that the interconnections between genres have been so thoroughly severed. -contenderizer
is this true? grimes is pretty eclectic. death grips integrates rap with punk and industrial in a way that feels new.
― Treeship, Friday, 8 August 2014 23:34 (ten years ago) link
sorry to change topics
apology accepted. thanks, Treeship.
― brimstead, Friday, 8 August 2014 23:36 (ten years ago) link
cheapo "here's what i think" gen-y articles are a dime a dozen these days
― brimstead, Friday, 8 August 2014 23:38 (ten years ago) link
yeah but how good would your articles be if you were only being paid 83 cents to write them?
― Treeship, Friday, 8 August 2014 23:40 (ten years ago) link
83 cents?
― brimstead, Friday, 8 August 2014 23:45 (ten years ago) link
dime a dozen
― Treeship, Friday, 8 August 2014 23:45 (ten years ago) link
i don't know, ted koppel. what are your thoughts on all this?
― brimstead, Friday, 8 August 2014 23:48 (ten years ago) link
it's cool that dude got a C- in anthony braxton's class and decided to repay him by denigrating his chosen art form in the media
i took fiction writing from a pulitzer-prize-winning novelist, i'm pretty sure the american novel is kind of an embarrassment tho. where's my byline, wapo
― j., Saturday, 9 August 2014 00:04 (ten years ago) link
i think this sort of kneejerk academic reverence for / defense of jazz is the exact sort of reason the new yorker, washington post, etc should go ahead and publish millennial bullshit like this once in a while. does it really harm anyone to go ahead and admit that in the end, popular music really isn't that important
― panda fiend (sleepingbag), Saturday, 9 August 2014 00:05 (ten years ago) link
it harms the american spirit
― j., Saturday, 9 August 2014 00:08 (ten years ago) link
this is fun to listen to if you like jazz:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q-04Dey1SzQ
― scott seward, Saturday, 9 August 2014 00:18 (ten years ago) link
i just can't ignore these stupid articles. i really do know better. i swear. just ignore them. but i guess i'm just dumb...
i can be kinda dull-witted.
― scott seward, Saturday, 9 August 2014 00:20 (ten years ago) link
There’s not much difference between a screechy performance by avant-garde saxophonist Peter Brötzmann from 1974 and one from 2014.
See how Jazz doesn't advance? This one dude sounds just like he did 40 years ago.
― Now you're messing with a (President Keyes), Saturday, 9 August 2014 00:31 (ten years ago) link
justin moyer was the drummer for gay dad bass player for el guapo and supersystem.
― LIKE If you are against racism (omar little), Saturday, 9 August 2014 01:15 (ten years ago) link
I kept typing different responses to the dumb shit in this article, but keep erasing them for fear of taking the bait. Daphnis otm upthread, and it applies to this sorta shit too. This piece is the height of stupidity, I'mma go do some laundry, later gators
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Saturday, 9 August 2014 01:20 (ten years ago) link
Moyer also wrote a pretty tedious Wash City Paper article a couple years ago about "the Brooklynization of culture"
― some dude, Saturday, 9 August 2014 01:26 (ten years ago) link
i was ruminating on stupid things as i left for work. jazz is stupid because it does away with the words to popular songs. like they just get lost the jazz tubes and no one ever gets to hear them again. it would be better if jazz kept all the words and ditched the improvisation. then it would be more like the national and everyone could be happy. the fuck does this kind of thing even happen inside a person's head, much less get published?
― Adding ease. Adding wonder. Adding (contenderizer), Saturday, 9 August 2014 01:50 (ten years ago) link
the depth and character of condescension in the idea that ellington's "take the a train" is an "african american anthem" because it mentions sugar hill while mingus/dolphy's is a meaningless waste of blackness is overwhelming to contemplate
― difficult listening hour, Saturday, 9 August 2014 01:53 (ten years ago) link
really, don't bother
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Saturday, 9 August 2014 03:15 (ten years ago) link
urite obv
― difficult listening hour, Saturday, 9 August 2014 03:20 (ten years ago) link
yeh
― Adding ease. Adding wonder. Adding (contenderizer), Saturday, 9 August 2014 03:21 (ten years ago) link
late to the party ... and i know the decline of the Voice has been well-documented ... but the fact that that once-great publication published that pitiful Sublime piece is really, profoundly depressing
― alpine static, Saturday, 9 August 2014 05:30 (ten years ago) link
man that was one of their better argued more literary efforts
― everybody loves lana del raymond (s.clover), Saturday, 9 August 2014 05:47 (ten years ago) link
http://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-apps/imrs.php?src=https://s3.amazonaws.com/Morning-Mix/Images/author_images/140/Justin_Moyer140.jpg&h=90&w=90
this fucking useless pointless soulless douchebag is laughing at us all
― "trough lolly"??? (stevie), Saturday, 9 August 2014 10:10 (ten years ago) link
imagining miles davis pistol-whipping this motherfucker
― zombie formalist (m coleman), Saturday, 9 August 2014 13:42 (ten years ago) link
6. Jazz Artists Keep Pistol-Whipping Me
― Now you're messing with a (President Keyes), Saturday, 9 August 2014 13:46 (ten years ago) link
read this on the wp this am w/bloodboiling, knowing it was trolling/clickbait but still wondering how something so aggressively ignorant & philistine even gets published. not to mention just kinda dumb. like with that marginally more sophisticated but (to me) crushingly unfunny sonny rollins satire, it's hard to imagine white cultural icons getting the same treatment.
― zombie formalist (m coleman), Saturday, 9 August 2014 13:48 (ten years ago) link
http://www.undergroundbee.com/2009/03/21sxsw1/images/IMG_4660_JPG.jpg
Jazz let itself be co-opted. Marsalis’s critics say that he gives “too little attention to innovations in the form since the 1960s,” as the New York Times put it. But the main innovation since that era has been jazz’s business plan... I’m getting angry just thinking about it.
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 9 August 2014 13:55 (ten years ago) link
I used to don drag to perform. It was cool because it would fuck with people, you know, because I don’t think it’s very typical for straight men to do drag in the name of punk-cabaret, or whatever I was doing it in the name of…
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 9 August 2014 13:56 (ten years ago) link
oh justina
― zombie formalist (m coleman), Saturday, 9 August 2014 14:01 (ten years ago) link
Jazz is dead. Long live jazz.
― Dedekind Cut Creator (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 9 August 2014 22:15 (ten years ago) link
Best response to the Washington Post piece would be for Clickhole to reprint it verbatim.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Saturday, 9 August 2014 22:50 (ten years ago) link
guys that was all worth it for the eric dolphy youtube
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Sunday, 10 August 2014 10:08 (ten years ago) link
haha otm
― Man, when I tell you she was cool, she was red hot, I mean she was (intheblanks), Sunday, 10 August 2014 16:53 (ten years ago) link
Justin Moyer8/10/2014 1:45 PM EDTDear Readers: Per my below comments posted yesterday, this article was not intended as a serious analysis. To better understand the piece as parody, you should read an article I wrote back in 2012 about the Brooklynization of culture (written for another D.C. paper). This article is a parody of many idea shared there: things getting "mushy," music being "co-opted," and "fetishizing" certain music. I use some of the exact same language. In the 2012 article, I wrote: "On general principle and for the good of all, I stopped writing music criticism for money almost a decade ago." I stand by those words--and perhaps I should extend those comments to humor! Thanks again for reading.
― scott seward, Monday, 11 August 2014 13:56 (ten years ago) link
Joobajooba8/10/2014 11:03 PM EDTJustin, why on earth would you write that your piece is "not satire" then attempt to defuse the uproar by justifying it as a parody.? I read journalism to be informed, not lied to, misled, or duped by clickbait. And why should I go read something you wrote in 2012 in an attempt to understand the current drivel..? A piece needs to stand on its own. Columnists in this day and age need to have some pretty powerful and unique things to say to justify a reader's attention. This falls far short, and is an embarrassment to the Washington Post.
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Monday, 11 August 2014 13:59 (ten years ago) link
Justin Moyer8/9/2014 2:52 PM EDTDear Readers: The piece above is a work of parody and was not meant to be taken seriously. My apologies to anyone who thought it was real. The reasons given for jazz being boring and overrated are ridiculously flimsy and ill-informed. Ask anyone who knows me--I do not feel this way. I might as well have penned a column that says, "I don't understand soccer and thus it's boring and overrated." Sure, some Americans may concur, but such an exercise would only serve as a triumph of ignorance. Thanks for reading.
― scott seward, Monday, 11 August 2014 14:00 (ten years ago) link
Soooooo...the takeaway here is that the WP actually pays untalented writers to troll?
Sorry, don't buy it
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Monday, 11 August 2014 14:18 (ten years ago) link
hahaha i buy it entirely
― Sporkies Finalist (stevie), Monday, 11 August 2014 14:21 (ten years ago) link
poe's law
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Monday, 11 August 2014 14:34 (ten years ago) link
is the post claiming the non parody is a parody itself a parody
*punches self in face*
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Monday, 11 August 2014 14:35 (ten years ago) link
I assume "pays untalented writers to troll" has been the WP's business model for at least a decade now.
― Welcome to my spooooooky carnival! Hope I don't... blow your mind! (Phil D.), Monday, 11 August 2014 14:36 (ten years ago) link
https://s3.amazonaws.com/s3.weareultraviolet.org/images/G-will-cc.jpg
― maura, Monday, 11 August 2014 14:44 (ten years ago) link
http://www.foxnews.com/images/595763/0_61_320_012210_han_thiessen_0.jpg
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 11 August 2014 15:20 (ten years ago) link
http://cdn.self-titledmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/edie.jpg
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 11 August 2014 15:38 (ten years ago) link
Whiney, based on this one piece, this guy seems like a poorly formed joke to me too but repeated callbacks of the "he wears MAKEUP haw haw" variety are nagl
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Monday, 11 August 2014 15:50 (ten years ago) link
yes, a straight guy who dresses in dragface and called himself "E.D. Sedgwick," and i'm the nagl one
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 11 August 2014 15:54 (ten years ago) link
how INTOLERANT i am for making fun of the goofy/terrible electroclash side project of a white cis male woking on his creative nonfiction MFA
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 11 August 2014 15:59 (ten years ago) link
co-opting someone else's sub-culture to freak out the squares, maaan [at sxsw]
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 11 August 2014 16:00 (ten years ago) link
dude, you can flail if you want but why when dealing with a dude who is making a public ass of himself with his writing is your inclination to focus on him in drag rather than focusing on his public ass writing
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Monday, 11 August 2014 16:01 (ten years ago) link
i mean, you understand that's how it reads to an observer right? all the other sidebar commentary you got going on there is inside baseball
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Monday, 11 August 2014 16:03 (ten years ago) link
i mean seriously, after reading through that JAZZ SATIRE piece, fuck if i'm gonna intentionally try to find out more about this guy
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Monday, 11 August 2014 16:04 (ten years ago) link
because both of his "internet infamous" articles are about the co-opting other cultures, something he literally does as a performer
also, straight dudes who dress in drag just to be wacky/weird/subversive in 2014 is "i have black friends" level of rmde
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 11 August 2014 16:04 (ten years ago) link
or I guess DeSoto wasn't servicing the T0fu Hut in 2005?
― dilligaf escape plan (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 11 August 2014 16:06 (ten years ago) link
xp yeah but that's his POINT do u c and i daresay feeding into that in any way has you playing his game more than vice versaoh wait E.D. Sedgwick, I get it.
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Monday, 11 August 2014 16:07 (ten years ago) link
public ass writing indeed
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Monday, 11 August 2014 16:07 (ten years ago) link
we now have multiple guys from Dischord bands debating jazz music in the pages of the Post:http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/style-blog/wp/2014/08/11/all-what-jazz-or-how-to-declare-something-dead-without-listening-to-it/
― some dude, Monday, 11 August 2014 20:11 (ten years ago) link
rolling jazz & satire are dead thread 2014
― noballs (wins), Monday, 11 August 2014 20:15 (ten years ago) link
Waiting for Ian MacKaye to chime in in all caps.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Monday, 11 August 2014 20:22 (ten years ago) link
COMPETE COMPETE DO IT FOR THE BOYSJAZZ SAXOPHONISTS MAKE THE MOST NOISE
― Bus Sex Teen Busted After Queef Beef (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Monday, 11 August 2014 20:27 (ten years ago) link
the #2 google hit for me for "are we being ironic" is are-we-being-ironic-or-not-i-dunno anthems of a future generation
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Monday, 11 August 2014 20:32 (ten years ago) link
Eddie Sedgwick would have been better now that i'm thinking about iti'd like to stop thinking about it.
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Monday, 11 August 2014 20:34 (ten years ago) link
filler review from All Music for Rigor Mortis's s/t:
" Review by John Book
One of the few death-metal bands to be signed by a major label with their first album, they were dropped due to "poor" sales. It's an amazing album."
― Neanderthal, Monday, 18 August 2014 00:33 (ten years ago) link
Are there lots of 'community sourced' reviews on all music? I notice a lot of the more obscure reviews are way below the site's typical standards.
― i was a downy lad, and twee (stevie), Monday, 18 August 2014 08:33 (ten years ago) link
They seem to have less and less reviews every year now, and the length and quality is often dropping.
― curmudgeon, Monday, 18 August 2014 13:33 (ten years ago) link
Before launching into his second song of the evening, D’Angelo took off his jacket to reveal his frame. Once almost shockingly fit – a tiny person could scale the abdominal muscles on the Voodoo cover, if one were able to survive the overpowering sexuality of it all – D’Angelo, 40, is carrying some extra weight these days.
And so is his music.
― maura, Tuesday, 26 August 2014 14:59 (ten years ago) link
jesus
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 15:02 (ten years ago) link
OMG a piece of writing about a male pop star* which treats his body with the same level of objectification that female pop stars are just routinely subjected to!!!1!11
*Yes, I know, before you all jump on me: Racial implications are complicated. But still.
― Shugazi (Branwell with an N), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 15:05 (ten years ago) link
I don't think writing fallen Mandingo fanfic is the route we want to go down to combat sexism but that's just me.
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 15:08 (ten years ago) link
"And like his pendulous man-tits, D's newest joints wobbled in the deepening Brooklyn night before heaving skyward for a thundering and elephantine climax that left even his hungriest fans emitting soft burps of approbation"
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 15:10 (ten years ago) link
Heavy beats, weighty lyrics, fat low end
― flamboyant goon tie included, Tuesday, 26 August 2014 15:13 (ten years ago) link
Yeah, I know, it's racist tripe, and crossing another line into dismissive in a slightly sexist way towards his implied fans, in the way that "Serious Music Journalist Snides at Act Perceived as Popular With Women" always does.
(I still laughed though).
((I am admittedly a terrible person))
― Shugazi (Branwell with an N), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 15:15 (ten years ago) link
Exactly how much do you know about D'Angelo?
― tsrobodo, Tuesday, 26 August 2014 15:16 (ten years ago) link
I don't feel like having that particular clusterfuck today, so point taken. Peace out.
― Shugazi (Branwell with an N), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 15:22 (ten years ago) link
I haven't personally seen reviews that drift off into dreamlike sexual fantasies mid sentence regardless of the gender in question.
― Evan, Tuesday, 26 August 2014 15:22 (ten years ago) link
pretty sure that sort of idiot shit happens more to non-white male artists than you might guess, esp in the coded "intimidating size/physically imposing" way applied to rap dudes that i see way too much. nobody every led off a review throughline with Glenn Frey getting paunchy.
― Everyone is awful except you. Wait, no, you are also awful. (jjjusten), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 15:22 (ten years ago) link
"OMG a piece of writing about a male pop star* which treats his body with the same level of objectification that female pop stars are just routinely subjected to!!!1!11"
yes thank you for this sophisticated 'two wrongs make a right' analysis, well done
― maura, Tuesday, 26 August 2014 15:24 (ten years ago) link
gonna go google "d'angelo tiny abdominal muscles" to find out whether this publication is bigger or smaller than a breadbox
― da croupier, Tuesday, 26 August 2014 16:18 (ten years ago) link
ooh, bigger
― da croupier, Tuesday, 26 August 2014 16:19 (ten years ago) link
I'm even struck by how his face has a vague resemblance to a Nazi helmet — that sleek, matte finish, that dull glans sheen.
― a spectrum is taunting ur OP (wins), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 16:45 (ten years ago) link
oh gross.
― how's life, Tuesday, 26 August 2014 16:49 (ten years ago) link
shine bright like a cock head
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 16:51 (ten years ago) link
well THAT was fun to google
― da croupier, Tuesday, 26 August 2014 16:53 (ten years ago) link
how can sheen be dull and matte?
― EZ Snappin, Tuesday, 26 August 2014 16:53 (ten years ago) link
that's fêted pop critic simon reynolds btw, seemed relevant
― a spectrum is taunting ur OP (wins), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 16:55 (ten years ago) link
to the discussion, I mean, obv
can't believe Parade Magazine published these
― Peeking at Peak Petty (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 16:57 (ten years ago) link
briefly tempted to go with "fallen Mandingo fanfic" dn, reason won out
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 17:03 (ten years ago) link
― EZ Snappin,
he has been ever since he left "Spin City"
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 17:03 (ten years ago) link
badabing!
― EZ Snappin, Tuesday, 26 August 2014 17:05 (ten years ago) link
http://www.bite.ca/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/Clap-clap-clap.gif
― a spectrum is taunting ur OP (wins), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 17:07 (ten years ago) link
Jody Rosen (the other one) posted this on Twitter this morning, and it's a pretty good demo of a person who just yesterday started listening to pop/Beyonce deciding to write about it: http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/08/26/beyonc-is-our-indigo-girl-the-halcyon-90s-and-feminism-s-resurgence-in-pop-music.html
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 19:22 (ten years ago) link
it reads like the work of someone whose knowledge of everything they write about in that feature was sourced entirely from wikipedia this afternoon.
― you couldn't even wear a fedora if your lifes depended on it (stevie), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 20:24 (ten years ago) link
En Vogue had a standout hit on their own that continues to be a great feminist break-up record in “Never Gonna Get It,” a predecessor to Beyoncé’s “Single Ladies” in the realm of songs empowering women to tell those disrespectful ex-boyfriends where they can shove it.
this mix of declarative flatness with calculated informal breaks is exactly how my students write for the paper.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 20:25 (ten years ago) link
idk what people mean by "feminist" anymore
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 26 August 2014 20:40 (ten years ago) link
fortunately neither does anybody else apparently
Feminist: a person who believes in the social, political, and economic equality of the sexes
― Daphnis Celesta, Tuesday, 26 August 2014 20:42 (ten years ago) link
idk Marcotte doesn't usually write about music, does she? It's certainly better than when political op-ed writers would talk about gangsta rap groups like Nine Inch Nails.
― Now you're messing with a (President Keyes), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 23:41 (ten years ago) link
Yeah, that piece may have been banal but it's not like the writing or the thesis is worthy of this thread.
― Man, when I tell you she was cool, she was red hot, I mean she was (intheblanks), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 23:49 (ten years ago) link
I know that piece doesn't exactly reek of in-depth musical expertise, but if prominent feminist writers want to sometimes write a column about feminist messages in music, that seems fine with me.
― Man, when I tell you she was cool, she was red hot, I mean she was (intheblanks), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 23:51 (ten years ago) link
not that they need my approval, definite poor choice of words on that. Just mean that it's weird to see it show up in the worst music writing thread, right after the piece about how D'Angelo used to be capital-S sexy and then he gained weight
― Man, when I tell you she was cool, she was red hot, I mean she was (intheblanks), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 23:52 (ten years ago) link
I'm fine with it too, but not if it means disregarding entire eras of music (Rosen's Twitter feed spells it out pretty well what's wrong w/ it).
I'd rather discuss (and mock) pieces like this rather than the college paper shit that usually gets posted in this thread as of late.
(and I'll be honest, I'm not a huge fan of Marcotte, I'm still bitter about how she's handled criticism from feminist POC about various issues).
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Tuesday, 26 August 2014 23:54 (ten years ago) link
Yeah, fair point. I'm not a huge fan of Marcotte either.
― Man, when I tell you she was cool, she was red hot, I mean she was (intheblanks), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 00:04 (ten years ago) link
this jody rosen? http://tmagazine.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/06/03/beyonce-the-woman-on-top-of-the-world/
― rap steve gadd (D-40), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 00:33 (ten years ago) link
Yeah, that's him. I don't see your point.
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 00:52 (ten years ago) link
unfair, but kind of funny:
Beyonce: The Woman on Top of the WorldBy JODY ROSEN
A few years ago, Beyoncé Knowles was like any other record-breaking pop star in an already crowded field. Then something changed.
Jody Rosen @jodyrosen
"But somehow, seemingly overnight, things changed." The Somehow Seemingly Overnight Theory of History.
― Now you're messing with a (President Keyes), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 13:12 (ten years ago) link
This isn't funny or interesting enough to be in this thread tho, rly
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 13:19 (ten years ago) link
http://www.journalismjobs.com/Job_Listing.cfm?JobID=1602421
― maura, Wednesday, 27 August 2014 13:53 (ten years ago) link
that piece may have been banal but it's not like the writing or the thesis is worthy of this thread
― Adding ease. Adding wonder. Adding (contenderizer), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 14:11 (ten years ago) link
simon reynolds line is disgusting, tho
― Adding ease. Adding wonder. Adding (contenderizer), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 14:12 (ten years ago) link
Which line is that?
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 14:29 (ten years ago) link
the one about ll cool j's face looking like a nazi helmet
― lars von (Treeship), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 14:36 (ten years ago) link
and this is a guy who said that indie bands were racist for not incorporating enough "rhythm"
― lars von (Treeship), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 14:37 (ten years ago) link
or wait, that's sasha frere-jones. simon reynolds said that british indie fans didn't listen to r&b or hip-hop, which is probably true. point redacted.
― lars von (Treeship), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 14:38 (ten years ago) link
more offended by his comparing it to a penis, myself
― Adding ease. Adding wonder. Adding (contenderizer), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 14:39 (ten years ago) link
Reynolds' line about the nazi helmet is in response to LL comparing himself to Hitler, no?
― Position Position, Wednesday, 27 August 2014 14:50 (ten years ago) link
nazi dickhead ll cool j
― lars von (Treeship), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 14:53 (ten years ago) link
so since it somehow went unremarked, maura's link there is a CFP for the lead editor of the music department for the largest alt-weekly newspaper in San Francisco.The job requires hiring and maintenance of a staff of up to twenty freelancers, writing the lead article for the printed paper's music section on a weekly basis, director level consultation, editing for all web-published pieces and regular writing for the proprietary website. You're expected to give up nights and weekends to attend shows.That job is NOT full-time. It's a twenty hour a week gig with hourly pay and (presumably) no benefits. In San Francisco.Even in what is likely the best case scenario, being the lead music writer/editor of SF Weekly will not pay for your rent.That's the goal for anyone working as a music writer today. That's what a high-profile job looks like.Kids: run far far away from this field unless your parents are rich.
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 15:35 (ten years ago) link
This person will report and write the lead music story for the SF Weekly paper every week and will assign, edit, and write posts for the paper's music blog, All Shook Down. The ideal candidate will have professional experience covering Bay Area music, a deep knowledge and voracious interest in music of all genres, and the enthusiasm and energy to develop sources and find fresh, compelling stories.
20 hrs/wk, hourly rate
lol xpost
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 15:37 (ten years ago) link
i need a new job
― maura, Wednesday, 27 August 2014 15:38 (ten years ago) link
me too
― alpine static, Wednesday, 27 August 2014 16:54 (ten years ago) link
lol:
- Ability to turn out pristine, compelling copy with or without an editor
― alpine static, Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:06 (ten years ago) link
"Kids: run far far away from this field unless your parents are rich."
or do your own thing! start something good on your own. and work it. fuck all these crappy places. it's basically an entire industry BEGGING you to be creative and do something cool on your own.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:10 (ten years ago) link
has this been posted? i hate to link to laweekly and their clickbait pieces. i was actually surprised to see this in the print edition, i didn't realize they bothered wasting actual ink on this stuff.
http://www.laweekly.com/westcoastsound/2014/08/05/why-la-is-more-punk-than-new-york
― LIKE If you are against racism (omar little), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:16 (ten years ago) link
almost think this thread should be locked. it's bad mojo. the good music writing thread has cobwebs on it...
― scott seward, Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:18 (ten years ago) link
― Position Position, Wednesday, August 27, 2014 3:50 PM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
not really no
― a spectrum is taunting ur OP (wins), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:22 (ten years ago) link
couldn't agree more with "do your own thing! start something good on your own" and yes when that works it is awesome, but it's a cluttered, noisy world out there, it's hard to get something like that off the ground MUCH LESS bringing in revenue and unfortunately nobody's bills are going away. never mind finding the time to do it. again, i agree wholeheartedly but that's just easier said than done.
― alpine static, Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:32 (ten years ago) link
admittedly, i tend to be risk averse and have a mortgage and two little mouths to feed. doing something cool is a young person's game, i guess.
― alpine static, Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:34 (ten years ago) link
uh it's still kinda difficult for the single childless renter, too, trust
― maura, Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:44 (ten years ago) link
everything is easier said than done. i quit a union job that gave great health care and benefits to me and my family to open a used record store at the height of a recession. it ain't easy. being young helps. all kinds of things help. having a full time job and working on something else at night is rough. don't have kids if you can help it. it's just that SO MUCH of this internet and print stuff sucks SO bad. websites, free papers, newspapers, magazines. and if you aren't gonna get paid anything (or much) anyway, just do it on your own. if you can make a living as a print or web journalist churning out crap, that's fine. everyone has to eat.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:45 (ten years ago) link
can't remember the last time i did anything cool
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:45 (ten years ago) link
I ate some gelato the other day, that was cool
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:47 (ten years ago) link
most people will NEVER make a living with music writing, so why not just do stuff that interests you? or think of a cool project for you and your friends to work on. for fun?
i'm not even talking to people here. just...in general.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:49 (ten years ago) link
de capo best new gelato 2014
― ra's al goole (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:49 (ten years ago) link
it's just all so BAD. nobody with any brains should want to have anything to do with it. i don't care if it's huffpo or buzzfeed or the guardian or whatever. BAD!!
― scott seward, Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:50 (ten years ago) link
I've been running Burning Ambulance since 2010. I make no money from it; there aren't even ads on the site. Granted, entire weeks can go by without a post, and our daily pageviews hover in the low hundreds, but I'm happy with it, the artists I write about are happy with it, and that's enough. Monday to Friday, I do other stuff.
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:50 (ten years ago) link
Ugh, I don't want to start my own zine.
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:51 (ten years ago) link
I'm chewing a toothpick and fixing up my harley as I type. Is that cool?
― radioplay vs coldhead (dog latin), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:51 (ten years ago) link
idk are you getting paid for it
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:57 (ten years ago) link
did i mention how bad everything is?
― scott seward, Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:58 (ten years ago) link
"Ugh, I don't want to start my own zine."
duh, i'm not talking about you slackers. people with energy. and pep.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 27 August 2014 17:59 (ten years ago) link
writing essay-length posts on ilx is probably the easiest way to reach a receptive -- or at least reactive -- readership for your views on music.
― lars von (Treeship), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 18:00 (ten years ago) link
nothing is more discouraging than laboring away at a blog or something and having nobody read what you wrote.
― lars von (Treeship), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 18:01 (ten years ago) link
― lars von (Treeship), Wednesday, August 27, 2014 1:00 PM (4 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Flagged this post.
― Immediate Follower (NA), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 18:05 (ten years ago) link
here, NA. Cheers:
http://img4-2.myrecipes.timeinc.net/i/recipes/ck/03/03/honey-gelato-ck-434637-l.jpg
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 18:06 (ten years ago) link
― lars von (Treeship), Wednesday, August 27, 2014 7:00 PM (29 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
*throws up all over keyboard*
― famous instagram God (waterface), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 18:31 (ten years ago) link
this college radio DJ writing all over a soft machine record has provided me with my ur-blog entertainment for the day.
https://scontent-a-atl.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xap1/t1.0-9/10632697_10153289057817137_1283090260107719433_n.jpg
― scott seward, Wednesday, 27 August 2014 18:32 (ten years ago) link
even an ur-comment section!
waterface, why don't you start a zine?
― lars von (Treeship), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 18:37 (ten years ago) link
he's too busy working on his zing
― Star Gentle Uterus (DJP), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 18:38 (ten years ago) link
i used to love reading the write-ups on record sleeves at my college radio station, scott. there too people would often add little addendums to the original texts.
― lars von (Treeship), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 18:39 (ten years ago) link
Let's show the sinners that we have the stamina to keep up with this dangerous, tragic, uncertain world! Let's SPREAD CHRIST'S LOVE!!!
― Peeking at Peak Petty (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 18:47 (ten years ago) link
― ra's al goole (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, August 27, 2014 5:49 PM (59 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
class post
― BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Wednesday, 27 August 2014 18:52 (ten years ago) link
nothing is more discouraging than laboring away at a blog or something and having nobody read what you wrote
I definitely have been there though sometimes something cool happens like the time Andrew W.K. linked to one of my posts through FB and Twitter and I got like a 1000 views overnight
― Maggie killed Quagmire (collest baby ever) (frogbs), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 19:00 (ten years ago) link
flag boast
― post...aftermath (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 21:10 (ten years ago) link
(but really, that would be cool. congrats.)
― post...aftermath (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 27 August 2014 21:11 (ten years ago) link
alpine and scott otm throughout of course but there's something a bit sadistic about yelling "the old methods don't work, let us go boldly into the future" to people who just invested ten years diligently and intelligently trying to work by those old methods
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 28 August 2014 03:14 (ten years ago) link
The only reason our blog regularly got 100 views a day was because my mate wrote a listicle about the Top 10 beards in rock.
― radioplay vs coldhead (dog latin), Thursday, 28 August 2014 08:54 (ten years ago) link
"Old methods"? Who the hell spent their youth thinking writing abt music ws going to earn them money?
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Thursday, 28 August 2014 09:26 (ten years ago) link
there's something a bit sadistic about yelling "the old methods don't work, let us go boldly into the future" to people who just invested ten years diligently and intelligently trying to work by those old methods
its more sadistic to tell them the old methods do work when they patently don't. scott otm, on doing your own thing but also about this thread having bad mojo. i regularly unfollow because it gets me down but every new clusterfuck draws me back. but fuck it, of course there's terrible writing out there. but better to spend time focusing on the good, or doing your own.
― you couldn't even wear a fedora if your lifes depended on it (stevie), Thursday, 28 August 2014 09:47 (ten years ago) link
― sonic thedgehod (albvivertine), Thursday, August 28, 2014 5:26 AM (5 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
http://i717.photobucket.com/albums/ww173/prestonjjrtr/Smileys/smily1339.gif
― bozack horseman (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 28 August 2014 14:36 (ten years ago) link
:,(
― maura, Thursday, 28 August 2014 15:29 (ten years ago) link
http://mkalty.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/hang-in-there-baby.jpg
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 28 August 2014 17:17 (ten years ago) link
the old ways
― j., Thursday, 28 August 2014 17:23 (ten years ago) link
"the old methods" = getting an internship/freelance gig at a major publication, struggling and honing your craft while publishing wherever you can, getting a staff position at that publication.It was hardly a failsafe or a given that process could or world work but the presumption was that if you had the talent and diligence and put in the time, you could find a living wage if you were one of the hard-working and lucky ones to break through. cf to that SF job posting.
― go ahead. make vid where u rap about this new TMNT movie. (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 28 August 2014 17:27 (ten years ago) link
http://culture.pagannewswirecollective.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/wicker-man-lee.jpg
― Welcome to my spooooooky carnival! Hope I don't... blow your mind! (Phil D.), Thursday, 28 August 2014 17:31 (ten years ago) link
so normally I'd agree with the "bad mojo" stuff (even if it does veer perilously close to "just get a job making 94K and bennies!") and try to limit myself to the most abhorrent, mean-spirited and/or gross of the worst.
in that spirit, this is just a blurb but somehow condenses so much into three sentences:
http://seattlish.com/post/96123357756/erm-the-weeklys-bumbershoot-preview-for-la-luz-is
― katherine, Saturday, 30 August 2014 18:20 (ten years ago) link
It reads like he reverse-engineered the blurb from the Stooges reference
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Saturday, 30 August 2014 22:18 (ten years ago) link
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2014/09/jazz-after-politics/
Argh, fuck this fucking guy.
― 'arry Goldman (Hurting 2), Monday, 8 September 2014 18:57 (ten years ago) link
yeah, that was making the rounds among my jazz folks today including a few very incensed people
― the other song about butts in the top 5 (forksclovetofu), Monday, 8 September 2014 19:02 (ten years ago) link
way way too stupid to bother being incensed about
― Merdeyeux, Monday, 8 September 2014 19:07 (ten years ago) link
"too stupid" is not something this thread is concerned about, as it has been demonstrated previously
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Monday, 8 September 2014 19:09 (ten years ago) link
I find this guy persistently awful. It upsets me that he's the head of a music department at what's supposed to be a progressive college.
― 'arry Goldman (Hurting 2), Monday, 8 September 2014 19:11 (ten years ago) link
Moyer pretty effectively slays one sacred cow implicated in this: not all improvised music is great. Yes, improvisation has produced some wonderful music, but it has also imposed plenty of tedium on audiences over the years.
The strawman of "everyone, everywhere, throughout recorded history has consistently stated that all improvised music is always great" aside, how is he even allowed access to a computer, much less employed by a college?
Also, all music is improvised, but that's another argument.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Monday, 8 September 2014 20:01 (ten years ago) link
solid takedowns:http://shujaxhaider.tumblr.com/post/96913433533/in-response-to-john-hallehttp://dothemath.typepad.com/dtm/2014/09/without-a-song.html
― the other song about butts in the top 5 (forksclovetofu), Monday, 8 September 2014 22:02 (ten years ago) link
Ugh at original article, yay at takedowns.
― Good Time Charlie Don't Surf (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 8 September 2014 23:20 (ten years ago) link
ahahaha at all this
― everybody loves lana del raymond (s.clover), Tuesday, 9 September 2014 17:39 (ten years ago) link
all this poor writing out of a dumb parody piece that only hardcore sonny rollins fans would understand anyway
― the other song about butts in the top 5 (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 9 September 2014 18:20 (ten years ago) link
listening to miles davis' "get up with it" at a loud volume has helped me ignore these stupid jazz arguments. jazz is best when you listen to the music and avoid dumbfuck jazzheads arguing tired debates
― marcos, Tuesday, 9 September 2014 18:32 (ten years ago) link
^ yes, and this also applies to almost every other form of music.
― everything, Tuesday, 9 September 2014 18:38 (ten years ago) link
halle condescendingly underplays how truly revolutionary jazz was from a modernist standpoint, as a form of collage 1,000,000x more vital and generative than, say, cubism. however, he is right that it is like rock music now, or poetry, or the novel: an art form whose performance and appreciation is inseparable from nostalgia. it's "dead" in the sense that it's cultural moment has passed. in the present tense of listening, it can be vital and moving and everything else, but it is an activity that is neither mainstream nor underground, a museum piece. museums are great though.
― love (the band) loves to love love (Treeship), Tuesday, 9 September 2014 18:40 (ten years ago) link
museums are great though
― famous instagram God (waterface), Tuesday, 9 September 2014 18:43 (ten years ago) link
the first takedown forks linked is incredible:
This is not an argument against jazz. This is an argument against capitalism. To deny its victims pleasure, expression, and selfhood in the name of the Left is as odious as the apparatuses of the state themselves...Leftist cultural criticism becomes tedious when its practitioners claim that any artwork that does not single-handedly dismantle capitalism is thereby reactionary. It seems to me that the field should instead be characterized by a spirit of empathy and debate, two ideals epitomized by jazz. John Halle should listen closer.
― love (the band) loves to love love (Treeship), Tuesday, 9 September 2014 18:50 (ten years ago) link
paragraph 2:
Any doubts on that score can be answered with a trip to the wall of corporate sponsors of jazz in Lincoln Center, followed by a visit to Dizzy’s Coca Cola club, the center’s flagship concert hall.
― the other song about butts in the top 5 (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 9 September 2014 18:53 (ten years ago) link
Dizzy's is a dope place to see a show
― bozack horseman (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 9 September 2014 23:29 (ten years ago) link
Best set at Dizzy's is the aftershow, afterhours thing with the other band.
― Good Time Charlie Don't Surf (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 10 September 2014 00:55 (ten years ago) link
http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/2771-the-eminem-show/
Just came across this old pitchfork review -- i'm fine with the casual style if there's substance behind it, but this seems pretty flimsy. Maybe if i read p4k more i'd get it, idk
― chilli, Wednesday, 10 September 2014 01:21 (ten years ago) link
you dun goofed
― bozack horseman (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 10 September 2014 01:24 (ten years ago) link
idk. i think it was you who said that ilx is the old sow that eats her farrow.
― love (the band) loves to love love (Treeship), Wednesday, 10 September 2014 01:32 (ten years ago) link
is that review by glorious ilm saint and what?
― Now you're messing with a (President Keyes), Wednesday, 10 September 2014 02:01 (ten years ago) link
― the other song about butts in the top 5 (forksclovetofu)
my thoughts exactly. i'm glad this thread is here to document the weird chain reaction that rollins satire piece generated.
― borntohula, Wednesday, 10 September 2014 02:04 (ten years ago) link
Apologies if so, i might not be in on the joke. But i don't think the homophobic stuff is really acceptable either, even for '02
― chilli, Wednesday, 10 September 2014 02:40 (ten years ago) link
i did some contract work for jalc and have seen numerous shows at all the rooms; dizzy's is a great place to see a show and the aforementioned afterparty is loads of fun.
― the other song about butts in the top 5 (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 10 September 2014 03:21 (ten years ago) link
Apologies if so, i might not be in on the joke. But i don't think the homophobic stuff is really acceptable either, even for '02 --chilli
Hope you don't like Lil Wayne!
― bozack horseman (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 10 September 2014 03:30 (ten years ago) link
I don't really, but that's not relevant. When i'm listening to rap, reading messageboards etc i have a different set of expectations than when i'm reading music journalism
― chilli, Wednesday, 10 September 2014 06:20 (ten years ago) link
oh, ffs...
http://johnhalle.com/outragesandinterludes/?p=149
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Wednesday, 10 September 2014 22:29 (ten years ago) link
lol @ chilli
― example (crüt), Wednesday, 10 September 2014 22:31 (ten years ago) link
https://medium.com/cuepoint/were-all-djs-now-8d94ee912c6d
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 10 September 2014 23:18 (ten years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MtLnies1IIw
― maura, Wednesday, 10 September 2014 23:25 (ten years ago) link
This question can be a superb segue to a conversation about a genre or artist, but also I get to size up the depth of a person’s music knowledge and the quality of his or her tastes. If the friend replies “Britney Spears’ wedding to K-Fed,” I know I need to be more selective about who I spend time with.
I feel the same way about writers who make a K-Fed joke in 2014
― da croupier, Wednesday, 10 September 2014 23:30 (ten years ago) link
Around 30 years ago I saw my first real DJ — the scratchy-scratch kind — and began to understand what music selection and turntable talent and rocking a party was all about.
― da croupier, Wednesday, 10 September 2014 23:33 (ten years ago) link
http://mic.com/articles/98310/scientists-prove-what-we-all-secretly-think-about-people-who-love-pop-music
― maura, Wednesday, 10 September 2014 23:47 (ten years ago) link
Oh, so creativity is a quantitative measure.
― Herbie Handcock (Murgatroid), Wednesday, 10 September 2014 23:54 (ten years ago) link
Each summer, it’s like we dive into the pool in May and never clean the water from our ears. The Song of the Summer almost always sucks (except that one summer when, miraculously, Beyonce’s “Crazy in Love” beat out “Magic Stick” by 50 Cent and “Unwell” by Matchbox 20 to take the title); and yet we keep on breathlessly anticipating the Song of the Summer, as though by some miracle it will be made by Deerhunter this year.
Pro tip: Most people aren’t going to play Deerhunter at their kids’ pool party.
― maura, Saturday, 13 September 2014 15:07 (ten years ago) link
think you can be done for child abuse if you do
― Daphnis Celesta, Saturday, 13 September 2014 15:12 (ten years ago) link
I pity this "we"
― da croupier, Saturday, 13 September 2014 15:33 (ten years ago) link
But what really got people going nuts over Ryan’s sets was that he was playing songs from all these new bands that were emerging at the time. Most of these groups were coming out of the electroclash and NYC indie rock scenes, and many of them had “The” in their name. This prefix was how you could distinguish the cool new bands with the edgy new sound.
The Strokes, The Postal Service, The Hives, The Yeah Yeah Yeahs, The White Stripes, The Stills. The list goes on.
― maura, Wednesday, 24 September 2014 13:08 (ten years ago) link
those are some alarmingly bad sentences; also there's no "the" in front of yeah yeah yeahs.
― uxorious gazumping (monotony), Wednesday, 24 September 2014 13:20 (ten years ago) link
"the cool new bands with the edgy new sound"
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Wednesday, 24 September 2014 13:33 (ten years ago) link
The List Goes On were so overlooked
― I misuse (onimo), Wednesday, 24 September 2014 14:03 (ten years ago) link
The GAPDYs
― Now you're messing with a (President Keyes), Wednesday, 24 September 2014 15:10 (ten years ago) link
The List Goes On - Etcetera (Rough Trade, 2002)
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Wednesday, 24 September 2014 16:43 (ten years ago) link
Right around that time, there was a local band that was making noise in town. A friend who wrote in my high school ‘zine, Hey, Hipster, happened to play bass in the band, and Ryan was buddies with them too. Word was that they had been picked up by a big record label and they were going to do some shows in Europe. So we asked them if they would do one free show at our party before they left town. They agreed, and packed the house strictly through word of mouth, as for some reason we were not allowed to promote the appearance.
They entered the building already dressed like famous rock stars, wearing tightly-fitted sportcoats, black jeans with white belts and Reservoir Dogs’-esque skinny ties. They hit the stage and proceeded to rock the house, and shortly thereafter were quickly whisked away on a plane to the UK. The next time I saw them, it was on television.
That band was The Killers.
― LIKE If you are against racism (omar little), Wednesday, 24 September 2014 17:06 (ten years ago) link
and that's....
the rest
of the story
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 24 September 2014 17:08 (ten years ago) link
GOOD DAY
and that little boy who nobody liked...
...was brandon flowers.
― LIKE If you are against racism (omar little), Wednesday, 24 September 2014 17:10 (ten years ago) link
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/oct/03/-sp-in-defence-of-iggy-azalea-on-racism-naivety-and-a-twisted-cluster-of-exploitation
"Further, the interplay between gender and race occurring here only makes sense when you view it through the lens of neoliberal capitalism. Azalea thinks she is making art; TI, and the various producers and heavyweights who are behind her may legitimately appreciate her performance and her songwriting, but they also know they’re making money."
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Friday, 3 October 2014 09:07 (ten years ago) link
even worse than that pretty bad piece is seeing the uk liberal media class honking about how no one's allowed to make jokes any more like some harrumphingly unselfaware latter-day "pc gone mad" brigade
― lex pretend, Friday, 3 October 2014 11:53 (ten years ago) link
Hey if you want to weigh in on my Facebook thread please do. Aren't you in the UK liberal media class?
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Friday, 3 October 2014 12:47 (ten years ago) link
Lex, I think the dominant theme of that Facebook thread is not "PC is stopping us making jokes" but "If you're going to write a think piece, display some evidence of having thought about the subject in hand."
― Unsettled defender (ithappens), Friday, 3 October 2014 12:53 (ten years ago) link
Although I'm now at the point where all the think pieces tossed off in 10 mins at some editor's behest – some of which I've written, some of which I've commissioned, some of which I've resisted (including a request for one this week that I outright refused on the grounds it would be the equivalent of writing 1800 about Agadoo in 1984) – have blended into one endless stream of Miley-Thicke-Twerking-Allen-Nudity-Rihanna-Sex-Azalea-Porn-Race in my mind.
The good ones have taken the time to be more than think pieces, they've done reporting too – like Dorian's outstanding Blurred Lines piece. But so many do no more than say THIS IS WRONG. They do not debate or engage, they simply rage censoriously. They shut down debate by saying that if you disagree with the thesis you are yourself an oppressor, forgetting that the best way to oppress is not to say things, but to prevent things being said.
― Unsettled defender (ithappens), Friday, 3 October 2014 12:59 (ten years ago) link
oh i'm behind on my ilx usernames, didn't realise who re-make was. i did type a contribution to that thread but prob best for all involved that i deleted it.
on the one hand, thinkpiece culture is awful and even more than the tossed-off-in-10-mins pure reaction element, it really suffers from general cultural commentators wading in who neither know nor care about an artist's history or genre. how many of the endless miley/sinéad pieces last year mentioned either woman's music? (at least this piece seems to have attempted some legwork - i appreciated the bit about the political climate of '90s australia bc everything i've read about iggy focuses on where she doesn't come from but v little talks about where she does come from.)
on the other this isn't the first time i've seen british cultural commentators mock the very idea of taking a serious or political approach to pop culture and whinge about how they hate phrases like "check your privilege" and "problematic". i resent the idea that cultural commentators should aim to be light and jokey and never ever rock the boat. yay let's all become stuart fucking heritage (cf https://twitter.com/stuheritage/status/501651538562269184).
at times like this i very much feel like i'm not part of the uk liberal media class...
― lex pretend, Friday, 3 October 2014 13:06 (ten years ago) link
That's an entirely false opposition. Glib whimsy is not the only alternative to humourless, quasi-academic writing which shows no appreciation for the music it's discussing. Nor was anyone in that thread dismissing the idea of discussing pop culture seriously, far from it, only doing so with dead language and lazy second-hand ideas.
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Friday, 3 October 2014 13:11 (ten years ago) link
Personally, I wouldn't care if that piece was humourless as long as it was clued-up, rigorous and contained at least one decent line.
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Friday, 3 October 2014 13:13 (ten years ago) link
"dead language and second-hand ideas" could just as easily apply to half the jokey/let's-not-take-anything-seriously articles that slide past on a daily basis. "second-hand ideas" is pretty much the entire currency of most "funny" writing
― lex pretend, Friday, 3 October 2014 13:32 (ten years ago) link
Lex, I don't think anyone's saying bad funny writing is better than bad serious writing. Bad writing is bad writing.
― Unsettled defender (ithappens), Friday, 3 October 2014 13:35 (ten years ago) link
Yes. Let me make it clear. I am against bad writing. It is bad.
Glibness and pomposity are the two things I hate most of all in writing. If you can combine the two in one essay, oh boy.
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Friday, 3 October 2014 13:36 (ten years ago) link
no one's explicitly saying that, but there is SO MUCH bad funny/light writing around atm and hardly any of it gets called out in this way by that section of the uk media. (eg that terrible telegraph writer michael hogan, or indeed heritage.) yet bad writing that's attempting a political critique => ohhhh boy the floodgates of whinging about "check your privilege" open. (not just this thread, this is far from the first time i've seen these sentiments.) plus ofc the overall vibe i get is that funny writing is inherently superior to earnest writing.
― lex pretend, Friday, 3 October 2014 13:41 (ten years ago) link
Of course bad writing that offers a political critique is held to a higher standard than glib filler, because it's assuming the moral high ground and often making serious allegations. A protest song done badly gets more flak than a love song done badly.
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Friday, 3 October 2014 13:47 (ten years ago) link
Was writing this just as the above post was posted …
One reason for that, Lex, might be that no one expects a tossed off, unfunny piece to be important, and no one presents it as such. It's just a piece of crap, and people accept it as that (though Michael Hogan's pieces have had plenty of flak here, which is full of the UK media types who apparently don't criticise Michael Hogan). But a piece that presents itself as being serious and important deserves to be ripped apart if it's a piece of crap. In the same way that a shitty album from Jay-Z or Radiohead or whoever deserves to be ripped apart more than than a shitty album from Pigeon Detectives or the Courteeners.
But none of this gets away from the essential point that an awful lot of these think pieces are about shutting conversations down – "You have no right to say these things on this topic" – than about opening them up.
― Unsettled defender (ithappens), Friday, 3 October 2014 13:49 (ten years ago) link
it's often the casual, tossed-off stuff (whether entire pieces or just wannabe-funny asides) that really reinforces poisonous ideas and received wisdom tho.
i don't really think many pieces are saying "you have no right to think x/y/z". people have every right to think what they want, no one is going to arrest them for it. critiquing a song or artist for elements of racism or sexism isn't the same thing at all.
― lex pretend, Friday, 3 October 2014 13:57 (ten years ago) link
Not think, Lex - but plenty saying you have no right to say or do.
For example, at the most basic level, a lot of the pieces about twerking videos have taken as their starting point that you, Lily Allen, have no right as white woman to engage with this; or you, Mastodon, as white men have no right to engage with this. I personally think both those videos are crass and miss the mark and would have been better unmade. But why do Lily Allen and Mastodon have no right to engage? That's the shutting down of the conversation.
― Unsettled defender (ithappens), Friday, 3 October 2014 14:02 (ten years ago) link
that would be a pretty silly thing to argue as lily allen has been fully exercising her right to "engage" with twerking videos, and she is free to continue to do so, but consumers and critics also have the right to call that engagement racist. i don't think talking about structural racism or misogyny constitutes shutting down the conversation.
― lex pretend, Friday, 3 October 2014 14:19 (ten years ago) link
what's ppl's beef with the iggy azalea article exactly?
― ogmor, Friday, 3 October 2014 14:24 (ten years ago) link
Far more people are going to see the Lily Allen video than are going to read articles that attempt to shut down the conversation she's supposedly starting
― Yo Gotti Nutter Ting Hummin' (President Keyes), Friday, 3 October 2014 14:24 (ten years ago) link
My beef with the Iggy article is that it doesn't understand the history of pop, the industry of pop or the pleasures of pop, and does so with ponderous, lifeless prose. The bit where she holds up that daft TI/Iggy interview as a smoking gun, while obviously not realising that Ignorant Art was the name of Iggy's debut mixtape, is the nadir. No wait, the bit where she reveals, at length, that rappers like making money is the nadir. It's one long nadir.
There are good articles about Iggy and racial politics out there but this isn't one of them.
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Friday, 3 October 2014 14:28 (ten years ago) link
none of the articles criticising lily allen had the slightest chance of *stopping* her from doing anything. the ppl who actually had the capacity to shut down conversations are, like...her record label, commissioning editors, the ppl with the actual power, not a random bunch of social justice-leaning bloggers and freelance writers
― lex pretend, Friday, 3 October 2014 14:33 (ten years ago) link
fwiw, I agree with Lex re: shutting conversation down. If Blurred Lines proved anything, it's that all the online outrage in the world can't stop a record being colossally popular. Interviewed someone recently (not an alleged racist) who said that when he shuts the laptop and goes outside, all the blog venom effectively ceases to exist, which is true.
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Friday, 3 October 2014 14:37 (ten years ago) link
if I had yr tripartite understanding of pop (whatever that is) would the article suddenly leave a bad taste in my mouth? I have no idea what relevance the mixtape title has other than to corroborate the point, or what shortcoming is demonstrated by drawing attention to the money. yr criticisms only make sense for a reader who already knows what you think & agrees with it.
― ogmor, Friday, 3 October 2014 14:43 (ten years ago) link
But so many do no more than say THIS IS WRONG. They do not debate or engage, they simply rage censoriously. They shut down debate by saying that if you disagree with the thesis you are yourself an oppressor, forgetting that the best way to oppress is not to say things, but to prevent things being said.
umm. no. even the worst of such pieces do more than 'rage censoriously,' like at minimum they tend to explain why such art falls directly in line with a racist legacy and why it should be in the best interest of those who are serious about not perpetuating racism to avoid doing such things. the suggestion that such criticism, however poorly written, is THE REAL OPPRESSION is patently ridiculous but unfortunately a very common idea that tends to fill the comments sections of such articles without fail.
― dyl, Friday, 3 October 2014 14:47 (ten years ago) link
xp Not fussed about changing your mind. If you think it's a good idea to quote three lyrics in order to break the news that rappers are often interested in money, then good luck to you, happy reading.
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Friday, 3 October 2014 14:49 (ten years ago) link
why drop a link if you're not interested in making a case against it?
― ogmor, Friday, 3 October 2014 15:00 (ten years ago) link
I did and then you dismissed my case and I don't really care enough to get a dossier together.
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Friday, 3 October 2014 15:02 (ten years ago) link
your honour I move to have this article removed from the thread
― ogmor, Friday, 3 October 2014 15:06 (ten years ago) link
Denied.
― curmudgeon, Friday, 3 October 2014 15:23 (ten years ago) link
An editor should have shortened that 3 quote rappers making money section.
― curmudgeon, Friday, 3 October 2014 15:26 (ten years ago) link
A editor should also have pointed out that a reference to a mixtape title is not an emphatic confession of ignorance about race.
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Friday, 3 October 2014 15:36 (ten years ago) link
*rages censoriously*
― GhostTunes on my Pono (Sufjan Grafton), Friday, 3 October 2014 15:54 (ten years ago) link
http://www.coca-colacompany.com/coca-cola-music/magazines-blogs-or-both-preserving-the-craft-of-music-journalism-in-the-digital-era
Yet from the 60s and even through the 90s, rock journalists were stars in their own right. Music fans followed their favorite writers and knew them by name, as much as they knew their musical heroes' names. Critics walked side by side with the gods, and we relied on them to tell the story. Publications like Rolling Stone, Spin, Creem, and Mojo were sacred texts; they taught us about the true heroes of rock. The men and women who wrote these pieces were their translators, and the gospel is what they wrote.
― sleepingbag, Friday, 3 October 2014 15:55 (ten years ago) link
*against the dying of the write* xp
― Ƹ༑Ʒ (imago), Friday, 3 October 2014 15:56 (ten years ago) link
the rolling link to the tweets at the bottom is a treat
@COCACOLACOFacebook COO @sherylsandberg empowers & encourages female Coke employees during recent visit: http://t.co/buAZcdN7Vs #CokeUnbottled ^MP
― well-behaved wingmen really hate Mystery (DJ Mencap), Friday, 3 October 2014 16:16 (ten years ago) link
age age
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 October 2014 16:22 (ten years ago) link
xps the iggy azalea article seemed so unremarkable, I remain curious what ideas you'd need to esteem in order for it to seem heinous
― ogmor, Friday, 3 October 2014 19:16 (ten years ago) link
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-et-ms-becky-g-essay-20141006-story.html
"When is that last time you heard a new female rapper break through in the vein of, say, Kendrick Lamar or Frank Ocean?"
If that's the timeframe you're using, Nicki Minaj. Otherwise, this is more of a rap crossover problem than a female rapper problem, but Angel Haze? Shit, despite how much she generally sucks Iggy Azalea would probably qualify, though this article slots her into "empty calories" on grounds of... well, of something.
"What about high-profile female rockers competing with the Black Keys or Jack White?"
The rock charts are not exactly a bastion of female artists (well, they are until they get retconned out, like Lorde and Tove Lo), but: The Pretty Reckless was No. 1 on the Mainstream Rock chart and currently have a single in the Top 20. Before them were Dead Sara. Really, you could slot half a Vampire Diaries soundtrack into this question. Or Alabama Shakes.
"Surely there are Ed Sheeran types, girl singer-songwriters chasing him up the charts?"
Sara Bareilles? Ingrid Michaelson? Christina Perri? Just because everyone forgets this genre exists (and charts) doesn't make it stop existing.
― katherine, Monday, 6 October 2014 15:40 (ten years ago) link
probably could toss into that last category Colbie Caillat and gee I don't know TAYLOR SWIFT, although I guess she stops qualifying now
― katherine, Monday, 6 October 2014 15:45 (ten years ago) link
just like rapper Frank Ocean
― 'bate my lickhole (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 6 October 2014 15:55 (ten years ago) link
late to the party but i don't get the point of that iggy article, it just seems arbitrary to say "iggy is just a pawn being used by TI, the true villain" like why stop there, why go up one rung of the ladder to TI (with this sort-of implication that he's selling out his race) when TI is pretty far down the ladder himself? "we all hate iggy... but someone else is profiting off of her act!" iggy is also profiting off of it. she was already doing it before TI picked her up. there are "root problems" here and they go far beyond TI and the covery has no interest in actually talking about them directly
― linda cardellini (zachlyon), Monday, 6 October 2014 21:25 (ten years ago) link
"the covery" = "convery" idek
― linda cardellini (zachlyon), Monday, 6 October 2014 21:26 (ten years ago) link
http://drownedinsound.com/in_depth/4148321-kaleidoscopic-love--dis-meets-caribou
So this isn't a 'bad' piece of music journalism - it's pretty bog-standard stuff, not especially insightful, not particularly well written, but it's not insane or offensive or anything dreadful.
But it is littered with typos and errors and just clumsy sentences like this: "Someone who lists ‘crate-digging’ under their their list of hobbies"
And maybe it's the fact that I'm 35 and manage publications for a living and look after a style guide for an institution etc etc, but stuff like that just makes me feel sad now. I read stuff by 23-year-olds (including old stuff by 23-year-old me) and sigh and think "fgs worry less about metaphors and crazy adjectives and more about understandable subordinate clauses and not making errors and being understandable".
#old
― Hey Bob (Scik Mouthy), Wednesday, 8 October 2014 07:48 (ten years ago) link
Drowned in Sound has always been pretty sloppy, hasn't it? I don't expect any degree of competence from it. The reviews are pure junk writing.
― Eyeball Kicks, Wednesday, 8 October 2014 13:12 (ten years ago) link
I thought the AV Club Hateclub thing with Mary Timony was good, but the new one, with some comedian, talking about "Pink Houses," is so full of stupid. It's not my favorite song, but her reading of it is totally wrong and she gets all sorts of stuff wrong, especially silly since it's really just a poor man's death of the dream "Born in the USA." Like, she claims right-wingers use it in rallies, and blames the Coug, but the Coug has always told them to cut that shit out. And then the writer and comedian both think the pink house in the song is some sign of individuality, and not, like, a crappy pink house. And then the comedian rips on "Do They Know Its Christmas," which is a fair and easy target, but she does it all wrong, by claiming it's an example of Americans (?!) being up their own asses, even though it's overwhelmingly UK. And then she cites Bono's - who she notes is not American! - blurted "Tonight, thank God it’s them instead of you" as only quasi-ironic. I mean, it's a dumb line, but it's *entirely* sarcastic. And so on.
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 9 October 2014 14:30 (ten years ago) link
I never heard that line as sarcasm
― you walk on the street, grab the rock (President Keyes), Thursday, 9 October 2014 14:38 (ten years ago) link
maybe mid-80s Bono wasn't the right dude to give your ironic line to
― you walk on the street, grab the rock (President Keyes), Thursday, 9 October 2014 14:40 (ten years ago) link
Yeah, that's the totally fair criticism (or any criticism of Bono, really). But do people really hear his "tonight, thank god it's them instead of you!" blurt as an earnest, phew, at least we aren't starving in Ethiopia! I always heard it as Bono sarcastically accusing people of selfishly ignoring the famine as something happening to someone else somewhere else.
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 9 October 2014 14:50 (ten years ago) link
its obviously completely sarcastic. and it's it a 100% uk/irish recording?
― jamiesummerz, Thursday, 9 October 2014 14:53 (ten years ago) link
Except for Kool and the Gang!
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 9 October 2014 15:01 (ten years ago) link
I wouldn't call that line sarcastic. It's basically another way of saying "There but for the grace of God go I."
― goth colouring book (anagram), Thursday, 9 October 2014 15:05 (ten years ago) link
Well, he does say "God."
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 9 October 2014 15:07 (ten years ago) link
I just read that Bono and Geldof fought about the line as Bono thought it would be misinterpreted
to be honest I never listened to the lyrics of that song closely. I just kind of hear Bono's voice as signifier for mid-80s hypersincerity.
― you walk on the street, grab the rock (President Keyes), Thursday, 9 October 2014 15:08 (ten years ago) link
http://www.liketotally80s.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/best-christmas-song-photostrip.jpg
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 9 October 2014 15:12 (ten years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RrdAI3kwIbU
― example (crüt), Thursday, 9 October 2014 15:13 (ten years ago) link
lol yet another article calling frank ocean a rapper
also "shower" is pretty distinctive for a dr. luke production -- and it's wonderful besides.
― dyl, Thursday, 9 October 2014 15:23 (ten years ago) link
I am deeply suspicious of poetry professors who own albums by Stephen Malkmus & the Jicks.http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/19/magazine/streaming-music-has-left-me-adrift.html?referrer=
― campreverb, Monday, 20 October 2014 12:31 (ten years ago) link
it's little pink houses, plural, for you and me (yeah), how could that be a sign of individuality?
― j., Monday, 20 October 2014 12:50 (ten years ago) link
let's just skip that one, please
― ILOVEMASONNA (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 20 October 2014 14:20 (ten years ago) link
That article is shit
― i blow goat farts, aka garts for a living (waterface), Monday, 20 October 2014 14:34 (ten years ago) link
I am stunned that the opening sentence "It’s hard to imagine now, but there once was a time when you could not play any song ever recorded, instantly, from your phone" appeared on an editor's desk and did not immediately cause the piece to be spiked.
― bippity bup at the hotel california (Phil D.), Monday, 20 October 2014 14:47 (ten years ago) link
To be fair it could have been worded that way to be a joke.
― Evan, Monday, 20 October 2014 14:59 (ten years ago) link
could we really just not do this
― ILOVEMASONNA (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 20 October 2014 15:05 (ten years ago) link
It's not that hard to imagine a time like that
― i blow goat farts, aka garts for a living (waterface), Monday, 20 October 2014 15:09 (ten years ago) link
A lot of discussion of this article already on the Millennials Ask Old-Timers thread
― you walk on the street, grab the rock (President Keyes), Monday, 20 October 2014 15:22 (ten years ago) link
http://www.theguardian.com/music/musicblog/2014/oct/15/playlist-world-eek-islam-chipsy-souad-abdullah-maurice-louca-faycal-azizi(The first blurb)
― my jaw left (Hurting 2), Monday, 20 October 2014 15:22 (ten years ago) link
― Shepard Toney Album (dog latin), Monday, 20 October 2014 15:27 (ten years ago) link
Really it was just this line:
The tightly syncopated rhythmical assault is in a lot of ways analogous to carnival or marching musical forms such as soca, New Orleans second-line drumming, dancehall and calypso.
― my jaw left (Hurting 2), Monday, 20 October 2014 15:36 (ten years ago) link
otherwise the writing is fine
so it may not be the worst piece of music writing in the history of the world is what you're saying
― u2 removal machine (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 20 October 2014 15:37 (ten years ago) link
Is that a terrible line?
Seems like a very useful article.
― Wristy Hurlington (ShariVari), Monday, 20 October 2014 15:38 (ten years ago) link
IDK it seemed pretty o_O to me -- like what does it have in common with those styles of music other than being syncopated and not by white people?
― my jaw left (Hurting 2), Monday, 20 October 2014 15:45 (ten years ago) link
they all use a marching-style pattern
― Shepard Toney Album (dog latin), Monday, 20 October 2014 21:40 (ten years ago) link
YES! I've arrived…
― Doran, Monday, 20 October 2014 22:43 (ten years ago) link
http://www.artistdirect.com/entertainment-news/article/feature-5-reasons-logic-s-under-pressure-is-the-best-debut-of-2014/11247386
― based grandpa (noz), Tuesday, 21 October 2014 03:48 (ten years ago) link
resonances??
― u2 removal machine (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 21 October 2014 14:59 (ten years ago) link
pretty sure resonances is 100% not a word
i mean i'm not sure what we should be expecting from like, artistdirect, but even so woooooooooowwwww.
― slothroprhymes, Tuesday, 21 October 2014 16:22 (ten years ago) link
He must have meant 'resonations'. A literal symphony of them.
And I had no idea artistdirect was still a thing
― leprous mottlings of disturbing funghi (ultros ultros-ghali), Tuesday, 21 October 2014 16:23 (ten years ago) link
resonances is definitely a word
― I can't make my waterface turn into a *fart* (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 21 October 2014 16:54 (ten years ago) link
checked, it is indeed, but it still sounds mad ridiculous in plural form and is unnecessary in the context of that review
― slothroprhymes, Tuesday, 21 October 2014 17:22 (ten years ago) link
I agree. It is a widely used word in my field, so it doesn't sound weird anymore. 'A symphony of resonances' is terribly lol, though, and I plan to use it if I ever come across some bad glass.
― I can't make my waterface turn into a *fart* (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 21 October 2014 17:27 (ten years ago) link
Hahahahahahahaha!
I mean credit to the New York Times there -- after the Dan Brooks thing, they realized that if you're going to troll, leave it to a total fucking pro.
― Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 22 October 2014 11:52 (ten years ago) link
a gathering of bare-armed, bare-legged lovers of song and smokers of pot
Frank Bruni received money to write this.
While recording devices have liberated many of us from commercials on television, the rest of our lives are awash in ads. They’re now nestled among the trailers at movies. They flicker on the screens in taxis.
Cause, meet effect!
They’re woven so thoroughly into sporting events, from Nascar races to basketball games, that it’s hard to imagine an era when they weren’t omnipresent. But in a story earlier this year on the website Consumerist, Chris Moran reported that 20 years ago, only one of the major-league baseball stadiums had a corporate moniker, Busch Stadium in St. Louis.
"Hi dere, I have never heard of Wrigley Field (built in 1914)!"
― bippity bup at the hotel california (Phil D.), Wednesday, 22 October 2014 12:45 (ten years ago) link
He's a talented man.
― Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 22 October 2014 13:36 (ten years ago) link
maybe he only watches the World Series?
― I can't make my waterface turn into a *fart* (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 22 October 2014 13:59 (ten years ago) link
“Keep Austin Weird” is the Texas capital’s unofficial slogan, a clue to its proudly subversive soul.
can we talk about how Austin is really not weird, like, at all?
― u2 removal machine (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 22 October 2014 14:39 (ten years ago) link
i feel like it got some rep because it was in texas and slightly more "quirky" than dallas
Keep (X) Weird
― Just noise and screaming and no musical value at all. (Colonel Poo), Wednesday, 22 October 2014 14:42 (ten years ago) link
I'm a super dilettante when it comes to Texas but for what it's worth, I found Houston to be a LOT weirder than Austin. Or a lot more bohemian, arty and exciting at least.
― Doran, Wednesday, 22 October 2014 16:32 (ten years ago) link
Austin is weird gone mainstream, so isn't actually that weird anymore. From my experience the past few years Houston and Dallas weird are still out on the fringes so lack that homogenizing factor.
― EZ Snappin, Wednesday, 22 October 2014 16:50 (ten years ago) link
austin has livenationed up, totes
― LIKE If you are against racism (omar little), Wednesday, 22 October 2014 16:53 (ten years ago) link
Keep Austin Weird, brought to you by Doritos.
― EZ Snappin, Wednesday, 22 October 2014 16:54 (ten years ago) link
Performing “Summertime Sadness,” Lana Del Rey told a lover to “kiss me hard before you go.” Would she be texting him later with a Samsung Galaxy, the smartphone for which the stage on which she appeared was visibly named?
What hope do antisystemic movements have if LDR has deserted us?
― one way street, Wednesday, 22 October 2014 17:00 (ten years ago) link
Thanks for this dumb link, Ted Giola.
http://consequenceofsound.net/2014/10/smart-people-listen-to-radiohead-and-dumb-people-listen-to-beyonce-according-to-new-study/
― polyphonic, Wednesday, 22 October 2014 22:19 (ten years ago) link
oops I mean Gioia
― polyphonic, Wednesday, 22 October 2014 22:20 (ten years ago) link
enraging
― example (crüt), Wednesday, 22 October 2014 22:22 (ten years ago) link
this is a much better candidate than most stuff that gets posted in here
― ogmor, Wednesday, 22 October 2014 22:25 (ten years ago) link
Soca
Reggaeton
― ILOVEMASONNA (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 22 October 2014 22:31 (ten years ago) link
poor meghan trainor
― example (crüt), Wednesday, 22 October 2014 22:32 (ten years ago) link
http://virgil.gr/
― the final twilight of all evaluative standpoints (nakhchivan), Wednesday, 22 October 2014 22:35 (ten years ago) link
this isn't even a new study, this shit resurfaces every year or so
― katherine, Wednesday, 22 October 2014 22:39 (ten years ago) link
If they're so smart why do they listen to radiohead
*clink*
― 龜✊ (wins), Wednesday, 22 October 2014 22:43 (ten years ago) link
wordsandideasthatmakeyoudumb.virgil.gr
― everybody loves lana del raymond (s.clover), Wednesday, 22 October 2014 23:35 (ten years ago) link
that chart was worthwhile for me just for making it clear that jazz is dumb
― my jaw left (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 22 October 2014 23:38 (ten years ago) link
http://musicthatmakesyoudumb.virgil.gr/musicdetails.php?music=Beethoven
i think what this suggests is that students at elite schools are cornball conformists just like every other batch of students, they just have learned to say the name of THE MOST FAVED COMPOSER IN ALL OF CLASSICAL MUSIC alongside their otherwise typically normal tastes as a way of signalling their aspirations to appreciate, or belong to, some kind of more refined coterie than the one they actually live in, which mostly listens to… U2, jack johnson, and the beatles lol
― j., Thursday, 23 October 2014 00:10 (ten years ago) link
any study that says "dumb people listen to jazz, smart people listen to red hot chili peppers'....man idk
― LIKE If you are against racism (omar little), Thursday, 23 October 2014 00:12 (ten years ago) link
those poor kids w/a 1316 have spent so long studying they have no time for any music and they still can't crack 1400
― LIKE If you are against racism (omar little), Thursday, 23 October 2014 00:13 (ten years ago) link
every music study sucks
― maura, Thursday, 23 October 2014 04:03 (ten years ago) link
like, just blow it all up and start over
― maura, Thursday, 23 October 2014 04:04 (ten years ago) link
Rip it up and start again, I'd say.
― Thus We Frustrate Kid Charlemagne (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 23 October 2014 04:11 (ten years ago) link
Friend on fb just posited the theory that Counting Crows ranked so high in this because people with high SAT scores like counting.
― how's life, Friday, 24 October 2014 11:42 (ten years ago) link
This could be worse, but there's something about reading a writer struggling to praise something he likes that's more awkward than reading someone ripping on something he doesn't like or doesn't understand (which is the usual DeRo mo). Lots of this reads like DeRo holding on for dear life, which may be why the piece is 80% preamble and modest payoff:
http://www.wbez.org/blogs/jim-derogatis/2014-10/return-aphex-twin-110978
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 27 October 2014 13:59 (ten years ago) link
Amherst College 1419 1430 83% 31 (~1365) 17% 1648 amherst Amherst, MA1. The Shins ... 5. Radiohead ... 7. Beethoven ... 9. David Bowie ...
15 Williams College 1414 1420 97% 31 (~1385) 20% 2003 williams Williamstown, MA1. Coldplay 2. The Beatles 3. U2 4. Jack Johnson 5. Radiohead 6. Counting Crows 7. Bob Dylan 8. Guster 9. The Killers 10. Red Hot Chili Peppers
― Allen (etaeoe), Monday, 27 October 2014 14:19 (ten years ago) link
Colorado School of Mines 1244 1250 59% 28 (~1240) 75% 3310 mines Golden, CO1. Metallica ... 3. Linkin Park 4. Lifehouse ... 6. John Mayer 7. Disturbed 8. Country 9. Bob Dylan ...
― Allen (etaeoe), Monday, 27 October 2014 14:20 (ten years ago) link
i know a dweeby hyper-catholic oil-industry dude who for some reason is really enthusiastic about metal, that explains a lot
― j., Monday, 27 October 2014 14:58 (ten years ago) link
Lifehouse!
― $0.00 Butter sauce only. No marinara. (Sufjan Grafton), Monday, 27 October 2014 15:39 (ten years ago) link
they played a casino near me recently! i had no idea they were still a band or still had a following
― u2 removal machine (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 27 October 2014 16:28 (ten years ago) link
"No Name Face" 33 1/3 written from the perspective of a Colorado School of Mines freshman hearing "Hanging By a Moment" for the first time
― $0.00 Butter sauce only. No marinara. (Sufjan Grafton), Monday, 27 October 2014 16:51 (ten years ago) link
This could be worse, but there's something about reading a writer struggling to praise something he likes that's more awkward than reading someone ripping on something he doesn't like or doesn't understand (which is the usual DeRo mo). Lots of this reads like DeRo holding on for dear life, which may be why the piece is 80% preamble and modest payoff
Also, DeRo continues to call him "THE Aphex Twin."
― jaymc, Monday, 27 October 2014 19:41 (ten years ago) link
Saw this article linked and thought of this thread. http://i.imgur.com/Ya2j4NR.png?1
― rushomancy, Tuesday, 28 October 2014 10:48 (ten years ago) link
That is kinda wondrous
― pecker shrivellage (imago), Tuesday, 28 October 2014 10:55 (ten years ago) link
Third para especially a masterpiece
― pecker shrivellage (imago), Tuesday, 28 October 2014 10:56 (ten years ago) link
it's got a touch of objective game reviews.
― woof, Tuesday, 28 October 2014 11:17 (ten years ago) link
https://medium.com/@boma23/dear-artists-no-one-cares-if-you-put-out-new-music-bc03f9aebc6d
― maura, Tuesday, 28 October 2014 17:49 (ten years ago) link
Chance The Rapper hasn’t put out a project in almost 2 years
18 months and counting. A regular Axl Rose.
― you walk on the street, grab the rock (President Keyes), Tuesday, 28 October 2014 17:59 (ten years ago) link
Let me give you another example. Hoodie Allen...
nope.
― how's life, Tuesday, 28 October 2014 18:04 (ten years ago) link
You’d think at this point people would quit going to his shows maybe, but they just keep coming, and coming. 60,000 people showed up for his Lollapalooza set even though he had toured the entire country twice the year previous and hadn’t put out music in over a year.
60,000 people showed up to Lollapalooza SPECIFICALLY for Chance the Rapper, then promptly left afterwords, leaving the grounds completely deserted
― u2 removal machine (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 28 October 2014 19:02 (ten years ago) link
i know a dweeby hyper-catholic oil-industry dude who for some reason is really enthusiastic about metal, that explains a lot― j., Monday, October 27, 2014 9:58 AM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
you need music you can still hear above the deafening industrial sounds of an oil rig
― I dunno. (amateurist), Tuesday, 28 October 2014 19:26 (ten years ago) link
If you're going to do clickbait put your back into it son. The only good thing about this is the picture of Dave Grohl waiting for a train in the snow, which I'm sure he does all the time.
http://www.bdcwire.com/the-pretender-why-i-cant-stand-dave-grohl/
(Usual thread caveat: probably not literally the worst piece of music writing ever)
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Monday, 17 November 2014 17:28 (ten years ago) link
the writing itself is pretty wack, the argument is one i can understand
― give kawhi his damn eyedrops (slothroprhymes), Monday, 17 November 2014 17:33 (ten years ago) link
"I say this firmly, and people look at me like they just walked out of a warm porta-potty at Bonnaroo. Their face contorts to an expression somewhere between anger and confusion – they know they’re supposed to be appalled but forget why – until they finally blast out a large 'WHAT?'"
Yes I'm sure people give a shit.
― Evan, Monday, 17 November 2014 17:36 (ten years ago) link
the physical symptoms of receiving a challop
― ILoveMeconium (President Keyes), Monday, 17 November 2014 17:38 (ten years ago) link
xxp to myself: i wouldn't be nearly as snide and dickish making the same argument bc grohl isnt even close to that hateable despite his goofily earnest rockism
― give kawhi his damn eyedrops (slothroprhymes), Monday, 17 November 2014 17:39 (ten years ago) link
I can only name about Foo Fighters songs and think they're dull as mud and I don't think this makes me a straight-talking maverick. This self-aggrandising "yeah I went there" approach is silly. Also, Grohl's problem isn't that he's not "real" enough.
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Monday, 17 November 2014 17:41 (ten years ago) link
"I just don't like thing that some people like, it's just my gut reaction" is such a terrible premise for an entire thinkpiece, it's like showing people arty photos of your turds.
― my jaw left (Hurting 2), Monday, 17 November 2014 17:46 (ten years ago) link
"This self-aggrandising 'yeah I went there' approach is silly."
Yeah, I don't think I've ever seen this used in a situation where I found the (whatever) stance as edgy as the writer wants me to think. Yet there's always a little story about how the writer SHOCKED somebody they were talking with this opinion (like what I pasted upthread).
― Evan, Monday, 17 November 2014 18:08 (ten years ago) link
I'm SHOCKED if I meet someone who passionately loves the Foo Fighters.
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 11:06 (ten years ago) link
You weren't here when Aja posted I suppose..
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 12:14 (ten years ago) link
I've met (worked with) at least 3 people who passionately love the Foo Fighters. Two of them are/were women under 25.
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 14:59 (ten years ago) link
The other was Taylor Hawkins.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 15:11 (ten years ago) link
The enthusiasm of my total bro cousin (studying grad school economics in London, natch) for the Foo Fighters knows no bounds.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 15:27 (ten years ago) link
http://theconcourse.deadspin.com/foo-fighters-sonic-highways-is-the-so-so-rock-doc-gene-1660615929
concourse did a much more reasonable, non-hot-takey version of criticizing sonic highways than the pompous hate-screed posted upthread
― give kawhi his damn eyedrops (slothroprhymes), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 19:13 (ten years ago) link
hmm who is this mysterious anthony miccio character and can we get him to post here I wonder
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 19:21 (ten years ago) link
has any other musician switched instruments mid-career like DG?off the top, I can only think of Phil Collins...........
― m0stlyClean, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 21:39 (ten years ago) link
You mean are there other musicians who can play more than one instrument? Yes. Lots. Most of them actually.
― everything, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 21:43 (ten years ago) link
Karen Carpenter
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 21:48 (ten years ago) link
Miles Davis
Scarface
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 21:49 (ten years ago) link
kanye
― give kawhi his damn eyedrops (slothroprhymes), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 21:52 (ten years ago) link
yeah but come on, MC is talking about people who were pretty much exclusively associated with one primary instrument and switched mid-career.
― my jaw left (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 21:53 (ten years ago) link
scarface and kanye actually work pretty well
Miles Davis was known for playing the trumpet for the vast majority of his career - then abruptly switched to organ for a large portion of this electric period
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:00 (ten years ago) link
Drummer of B52s became their guitarist.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:01 (ten years ago) link
Carpenter drummed and sang for the first half of her career, then p much just switched to singing (just like our man Phil)
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:01 (ten years ago) link
Bobby Gillespie lolz
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:02 (ten years ago) link
DJ Quik's kinda done this - switching back and forth from production and rapping
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:04 (ten years ago) link
Brian Wilson (he def stopped playing bass altogether at some point iirc)
Kim Deal
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:05 (ten years ago) link
Stevie Wonder
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:06 (ten years ago) link
(ie from singin + harmonica to I PLAY EVERYTHING)
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:07 (ten years ago) link
When?
― the incredible string gland (sic), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:07 (ten years ago) link
xpost re Kim
― the incredible string gland (sic), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:08 (ten years ago) link
Pixies (bass) to Breeders (guitar)
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:09 (ten years ago) link
Beastie Boys
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:10 (ten years ago) link
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, November 19, 2014 5:00 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Yeah but no one is ever gonna mainly associate Miles with the organ, and he played trumpet on all the records he played organ on (unless there's one I'm not thinking of).
― my jaw left (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:12 (ten years ago) link
where does this "mainly associate" come from? the question was strictly about mid-career instrument switching
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:14 (ten years ago) link
even if that did matter, do you really think Grohl is "mainly associated" with his shitty guitar+vocals and not his drumming in Nirvana?
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:15 (ten years ago) link
I'm saying he didn't really "switch" he just started also playing organ, it wasn't a collins or grohl type thing where their primary band role completely changed.
― my jaw left (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:15 (ten years ago) link
I think for a lot of people the image of Grohl that comes to mind first would be frontman of foo fighters, yeah.
― my jaw left (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:16 (ten years ago) link
I'm saying he didn't really "switch" he just started also playing organ
ok fine
don't agree about Grohl but whatever
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:17 (ten years ago) link
Father John Misty
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:18 (ten years ago) link
you're overestimating the shitty younger generation
― my jaw left (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:18 (ten years ago) link
Dennis Wilson
John Cale
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:19 (ten years ago) link
ven if that did matter, do you really think Grohl is "mainly associated" with his shitty guitar+vocals and not his drumming in Nirvana?
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, November 19, 2014 5:15 PM (4 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
what planet do you live on
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:21 (ten years ago) link
Bill Clinton
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:21 (ten years ago) link
the planet where Nirvana is one of the biggest bands of all time and the Foo Fighters are that shitty band that happened afterwards
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:22 (ten years ago) link
me too, mate
― ©Oz Quiz© (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:22 (ten years ago) link
that's not a planet it's an age
― maybes bakin' maybes (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:22 (ten years ago) link
Age Planet
― ©Oz Quiz© (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:24 (ten years ago) link
― Οὖτις,
You slipped from sales to aesthetic judgment here
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:25 (ten years ago) link
I mean if you don't pay attention then say so but Foo are huge for anyone who came of age 1997-2004.
have they sold more records than Nirvana?
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:45 (ten years ago) link
Shakey ishttp://iv1.lisimg.com/image/1564715/600full-flight-of-the-navigator-screenshot.jpg
― my jaw left (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:55 (ten years ago) link
really wanted to post "mainly associated with singing, mainly associated with drumming, let's just agree he's mainly ass" but i've been disrespectful enough today
― da croupier, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:56 (ten years ago) link
grant hart would be relevant point of comparison for grohl, except sounding a bit like husker du never really brought him any great success
― john wahey (NickB), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 22:57 (ten years ago) link
afaict Foo Fighters have not actually sold more records than Nirvana
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 23:03 (ten years ago) link
that'll show all the nobody who argued otherwise
― da croupier, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 23:03 (ten years ago) link
I would think there would be some connection between record sales and the band DG is "mainly associated" with but agree this whole tangent is stupid
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 23:05 (ten years ago) link
I feel dumb pointing this out but dave grohl wasn't the front guy in nirvana and that might affect people's perception of what his main deal is
― john wahey (NickB), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 23:11 (ten years ago) link
the error in that logic is the idea that if more people have an album you drum on than an album you sing on, more people know you as a drummer than as a singer. if you spend 20 years fronting a platinum-gold level band after drumming for a multi-platinum band for 3, just saying the earlier band sold more ignores the fact of how long you've been in bigger light and for what.
― da croupier, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 23:16 (ten years ago) link
He only played on two of the Nirvana albums btw.
― everything, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 23:21 (ten years ago) link
giant derp @ just-woken-up me re Deal, sorry Jo Wiggs still ♥ u boo, Ladies Who Lunch 4eva
― the incredible string gland (sic), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 23:22 (ten years ago) link
It just seems pretty obvious to me that what MC meant was artists who go from being widely known as the instrument x player of a band to being widely known as the instrument/role y guy of a different band, and I don't think there are tons of examples of that.
― my jaw left (Hurting 2), Wednesday, 19 November 2014 23:22 (ten years ago) link
xxxp yeah but people don't know drummers
also, what instrument is phil collins supposed to be known for? his voice? (or synthesizers??) i feel like, ignoring what singers think of themselves (their special and unique talents etc), for musicians playing an instrument and also being able to sing competently should not really be counted as, like, an exception.
Lloyd Ryan recalled: "Phil always had a problem with reading. That was always a big problem for him. That’s a shame because reading drum music isn’t that difficult."
― j., Wednesday, 19 November 2014 23:23 (ten years ago) link
http://www.toughpigs.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/trailer11.jpg?9d7bd4
― everything, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 23:28 (ten years ago) link
http://www.nme.com/images/gallery/LemmyKitKatAdGb040412.jpg
― everything, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 23:30 (ten years ago) link
http://29.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_ltqr9p3w7J1r1np10o1_500.jpg
― everything, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 23:34 (ten years ago) link
this:has any other musician switched instruments mid-career like DG?
is a much, much broader category than this:
artists who go from being widely known as the instrument x player of a band to being widely known as the instrument/role y guy of a different band
which are two v v different things
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 23:42 (ten years ago) link
cuz there are tons of musicians that switch instruments mid-career - the main difference is there are not a ton of musicians who are "like DG" in the sense of being widely known as instrument x player of any band
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 19 November 2014 23:43 (ten years ago) link
Fatboy Slim
― ILoveMeconium (President Keyes), Thursday, 20 November 2014 00:07 (ten years ago) link
John Maclean
― Οὖτις, Thursday, 20 November 2014 00:08 (ten years ago) link
Don Henley
― everything, Thursday, 20 November 2014 00:24 (ten years ago) link
Bruce Willis
― $0.00 Butter sauce only. No marinara. (Sufjan Grafton), Thursday, 20 November 2014 00:24 (ten years ago) link
Christopher Guest
― everything, Thursday, 20 November 2014 00:27 (ten years ago) link
hey guys, didn't mean to stir up confusion...
i was asking about
"artists who go from being widely known as the instrument x player of a band to being widely known as the instrument/role y guy of a different band"
...because as someone pointed out, just playing more than one instrument is not that uncommon.....
probably could have worded it better, but just a quick post spurred by idle curiosity....
also, great shot of lemmy.....
― m0stlyClean, Thursday, 20 November 2014 04:32 (ten years ago) link
this thread made me go back and listen to Big Me, which i regret
― a total laugh package (s.clover), Thursday, 20 November 2014 04:48 (ten years ago) link
grant hart would be relevant point of comparison for grohl, except sounding a bit like husker du never really brought him any great success― john wahey (NickB), Wednesday, November 19, 2014 4:57 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Except Grant was a main songwriter and sang in Husker Du
― i did it all for the 'nuki (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 20 November 2014 18:06 (ten years ago) link
so... are we all pretending that deej's Chief Keef review never happened or did no one else see it
― the farakhan of gg (DJP), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 21:55 (ten years ago) link
for reference: http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/20027-chief-keef-gucci-mane-back-from-the-dead-2big-gucci-sosa/
― the farakhan of gg (DJP), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 21:56 (ten years ago) link
idk if anyone thought it was bad???
― hanley ramirez ordering a pizza (slothroprhymes), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 21:59 (ten years ago) link
I find Deej's tireless efforts to cast Keef as anything more than a nihilistic moron p baffling but it's not like the piece is badly written/constructed. Deej is a good writer who knows what he's doing
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 25 November 2014 22:02 (ten years ago) link
I don't see how anyone could read the sentence He plays his own narrative close to the vest, letting his story loom below his elliptical rhymes like ice cubes in a glass and not notice that it is saying the exact opposite of what it's supposed to say, for starters.
― the farakhan of gg (DJP), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 22:03 (ten years ago) link
people who like keef are v dedicated to defending him on what are occasionally shaky grounds, but that particular review is overall solidly written minus the overcooked sentence here and there (and who, among people who professionally or as amateurs write about music, hasn't written one of those?)
― hanley ramirez ordering a pizza (slothroprhymes), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 22:10 (ten years ago) link
I must be missing something cuz that sentence parses correctly to me - close-to-the-vest and keeping things below the surface are related metaphors.
idk why I'm defending this, I find Keef unlistenable
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 25 November 2014 22:10 (ten years ago) link
see now im trying to again after ignoring it for like...well over a year
i can see the appeal better now (by far) than i could then - it's one of the closest things rap has to punk sensibilities that isn't, like, fucking ill bill or odd future (barf)...but in a universe where gunplay and waka flocka fill that void & are also capable of nuanced/emotional stuff amid the chaos, why bother?
― hanley ramirez ordering a pizza (slothroprhymes), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 22:15 (ten years ago) link
*trying it again
Ice cubes float and most glasses are transparent. He's trying to suggest hidden depths by using imagery that is all surface and visibility.
― the farakhan of gg (DJP), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 22:19 (ten years ago) link
ah it's a fun review, i love deej's writing about keef just because it's so adorbs to me, or i wish i could hear the keef that deej hears
this also made me lol
Like King Louie, he will lock into a particular pattern for several lines, using extreme slant rhymes ("I just hit a stain, finagle/ I just hit a stain, finito"), as if trying to demolish the distance between words themselves, or to camouflage his thoughts. He’s made rhyming a word with itself into an art form of its own—he likes to complete the circuit early, or to let words stay static while the meaning shifts ("Nigga don’t slip, you lose it, then you lose it").
― i did it all for the 'nuki (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 22:24 (ten years ago) link
Ice cubes float and most glasses are transparent.
ok well he should have gone for the iceberg metaphor but obviously the part of the image he was trying to emphasize was the beneath the surface part
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 25 November 2014 22:26 (ten years ago) link
He’s made rhyming a word with itself into an art form of its own
yeah this was lolz
let words stay static while the meaning shifts ("Nigga don’t slip, you lose it, then you lose it").
i really like this about keef. it reminds me of mallarmé in a way -- the same word (or sound) deployed in different contexts can mean ten different things. of course, keef's rhymes are pretty limpid compared to the density of the poetry i'm thinking of, but still.
― I dunno. (amateurist), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 22:30 (ten years ago) link
basically i dont just know why one doesnt just transfer this enthusiasm to like...3 other, better, less blatantly sociopathic rappers from the same scene
because yeah...you dont have to have complex rhymes to make powerful statements but his are almost always neither, just rage & there are rappers who do rage better from his scene and various others
― hanley ramirez ordering a pizza (slothroprhymes), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 22:33 (ten years ago) link
the same word (or sound) deployed in different contexts can mean ten different things.....like a basketball, player
i want to go on the record though i think deej is a great hip hop writer for real & i liked reading that review
― i did it all for the 'nuki (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 22:34 (ten years ago) link
― hanley ramirez ordering a pizza (slothroprhymes), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 22:41 (ten years ago) link
thought of a sidebar stemming off this but will post in goon thread
― hanley ramirez ordering a pizza (slothroprhymes), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 22:42 (ten years ago) link
using extreme slant rhymes ("I just hit a stain, finagle/ I just hit a stain, finito")
technically "two three-syllable words that begin with f" rather than a "slant rhyme," but hey, who gives a shit about terminology
― The Complainte of Ray Tabano, Tuesday, 25 November 2014 23:04 (ten years ago) link
I'm gonna assume he pronounces it fin-ay-go
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 25 November 2014 23:18 (ten years ago) link
Deej's opinions and theories about Keef are generally batshit insane, but certainly well-argued and well-written.
Ideally they would be published in a place like the Chuck Eddy-era Village Voice instead of a place so rooted in "editorial voice" but w/e
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 26 November 2014 15:18 (ten years ago) link
im not going to defend my review on ilx bc i think thats prob bad form / bad precedent but i dont think keef is either nihlistic or a sociopath, at least any more so than boosie or spice 1 or any other gangster rapper throughout history, w/ age & experience artists evolve & early boosie is all "the one who rap bout killin, shootin, marijuana distribution"—def feel like those ideas have been foisted on keef due to the discussion around chicago violence that blew up around him, people blame him in a way they wouldnt do to idk c-bo or someone...its very strange
― deej loaf (D-40), Saturday, 29 November 2014 20:22 (ten years ago) link
actually, i will defend the ice cube thing bc wtf that totally makes sense, when you drop ice cubes in a glass a tiny piece of them pokes above the water and the rest *looms* below
― deej loaf (D-40), Saturday, 29 November 2014 20:33 (ten years ago) link
http://www.ginnytonkin.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/Do-not-think-it-means.jpeg
― The Complainte of Ray Tabano, Sunday, 30 November 2014 03:18 (ten years ago) link
Not music, but if there's ever been anything worse, it would drive the insane maaad:
http://www.examiner.com/article/robert-de-niro-book-darkest-secrets-shawn-levy-book-alleges-drugs-bad-temper
― dow, Sunday, 30 November 2014 03:31 (ten years ago) link
xp ffs its exaggerated for scale obv
― deej loaf (D-40), Sunday, 30 November 2014 12:02 (ten years ago) link
it was an obv reference to iceberg theory but i wanted to shift to a less cliche'd image
― deej loaf (D-40), Sunday, 30 November 2014 12:07 (ten years ago) link
"While some may only recognize him in more recent movies like “American Hustler,” [De Niro]’s talents go way back to earlier films in the 1970s and then into the 1980s."
― MaudAddam (cryptosicko), Monday, 1 December 2014 03:36 (ten years ago) link
That De Niro piece reads like it was written by a computer.
― rising stones cross (anagram), Monday, 1 December 2014 08:40 (ten years ago) link
people who like keef are v dedicated to defending him on what are occasionally shaky grounds, but that particular review is overall solidly written minus the overcooked sentence here and there (and who, among people who professionally or as amateurs write about music, hasn't written one of those?)― hanley ramirez ordering a pizza (slothroprhymes), Tuesday, November 25, 2014 10:10 PM (6 days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― hanley ramirez ordering a pizza (slothroprhymes), Tuesday, November 25, 2014 10:10 PM (6 days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
I often read back my own reviews and realise I'm as guilty of this as anything. Do any more experienced writers have a particular way of avoiding these kinds of sentences, or is it just down to practice and knowing when to reel oneself in?
― Piss-Up Artist (dog latin), Monday, 1 December 2014 10:10 (ten years ago) link
low-hanging fruit I know but
http://www.forbes.com/sites/nickmessitte/2014/12/03/on-hozier-why-is-take-me-to-church-so-popular/
― katherine, Friday, 5 December 2014 01:32 (ten years ago) link
page 1 is relatively unremarkable throat-clearing, page 2 is the same old horseshit (cherry-picked lyrics? griping about Swedes? misspelled pop artists' names? yup yup yup), but page 3 is a horseshit tour de force
― katherine, Friday, 5 December 2014 01:36 (ten years ago) link
― rising stones cross (anagram), Monday, December 1, 2014 3:40 AM (3 days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
it's examiner, it probably was (or by an article-spinning app)
― katherine, Friday, 5 December 2014 01:41 (ten years ago) link
are there good three-page (web) reviews?
― mookieproof, Friday, 5 December 2014 02:09 (ten years ago) link
In terms of lyrical subject—and deftness of imagery—“Take Me To Church” has much more in common with James Joyce’s A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (or Frank McCourt’s Angela’s Ashes) than with the preposterously sexualized transformation of Nic Jonas or Ariana Grande
!!!
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Friday, 5 December 2014 11:14 (ten years ago) link
http://www.artistempathy.com/blog/the-pomplamoose-problem-artists-cant-survive-as-saints-and-martyrs
haven't actually read it but it's a think piece on pomplamoose so ... shruggy emoticon
― Mistah FAAB (sarahell), Friday, 5 December 2014 21:13 (ten years ago) link
It's actually good. It's not about Pomplamoose really, it's about the way American society treats its artists.
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Friday, 5 December 2014 21:19 (ten years ago) link
yeah p good piece
― Οὖτις, Friday, 5 December 2014 21:20 (ten years ago) link
the forbes piece is like.......ever time i think we've reached a cellar for wites writing sanctimoniously about the triumphs (or lack of attention paid to) "real" music, we fall even lower
― hanley ramirez ordering a pizza (slothroprhymes), Friday, 5 December 2014 21:23 (ten years ago) link
also i had never heard of pomplamoose (i know rite total ILX party foul, i have been led to believe) and...um wut
not like "this prob sucks" necessarily, i haven't tried it, but the overall explanation of what they are....i think "um wut" will remain a fair reaction regardless of how they sound
― hanley ramirez ordering a pizza (slothroprhymes), Friday, 5 December 2014 21:25 (ten years ago) link
wait, were people really criticizing Pomplamoose for over-paying their band? Given all of their annoying traits, this seems like one of the least objectionable things they could do. Or am I missing some crucial detail?
― Free Me's Electric Trumpet (Moodles), Friday, 5 December 2014 21:26 (ten years ago) link
but for real though, why is that Hozier song so popular
― example (crüt), Friday, 5 December 2014 21:26 (ten years ago) link
― Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Friday, December 5, 2014 4:19 PM (2 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Not a good example though. The situation with Pomplamoose just shows that nobody wants to sympathize with fucking Pomplamoose (especially when they're asking for it).
― Evan, Friday, 5 December 2014 21:27 (ten years ago) link
i feel like i pay attention to & enjoy a lot of pop music and i have no fucking clue who hozier was, and after reading this goddamned forbes piece idk if i have any desire to even try it for music-anthropology reasons
― hanley ramirez ordering a pizza (slothroprhymes), Friday, 5 December 2014 21:32 (ten years ago) link
Consumers and supporters of the “music wants to be free” ethos picked apart the numbers and decided that Pomplamoose spent too much money on lights and on pay for their back-up band.
No, it was touring musicians who questioned the lighting costs (and the relatively expensive motels every single night). And I don't recall a single word in any of the anti-Ploose pieces that implied they were paying their band too much; even the most vitriolic responses said something along the lines of, "(but at least they paid their band)."
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Friday, 5 December 2014 21:40 (ten years ago) link
no mention yet of the homophobic piece about the Peter Pan musical that Gawker ran?
― EZ Snappin, Friday, 5 December 2014 21:48 (ten years ago) link
i try to avoid gawker if possible w/ the exception of deadspin but it does not surprise me that they ran such a thing
― hanley ramirez ordering a pizza (slothroprhymes), Friday, 5 December 2014 21:55 (ten years ago) link
that said they also like to pay lip service to moral stances so they can assuage their consciences (the ones who have functioning consciences, so, not hammy noles) over their denton-enforced dive-bombs into content aggregation for the sake of DEM CLICKZ, so, its double annoying when they do shit like that
― hanley ramirez ordering a pizza (slothroprhymes), Friday, 5 December 2014 22:03 (ten years ago) link
there was definitely some question of "why did they HAVE 6 salaried people on their month long tour if it meant they toured at a loss?" before the Patreon info bubbled up, but that's not the same as asking why the salary was so high
― da croupier, Friday, 5 December 2014 22:11 (ten years ago) link
the big irony of that "artists can't be saints or martyrs" piece is that this all started because pompladude wrote a faux-confessional about how his band ain't rich because they chose to tour at a loss
― da croupier, Friday, 5 December 2014 22:16 (ten years ago) link
he sold HIMSELF as a martyr
― da croupier, Friday, 5 December 2014 22:17 (ten years ago) link
https://scontent-b-iad.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xpf1/v/t1.0-9/10462836_10153511319012137_7867710557987849448_n.jpg?oh=4ed5ed594ca71b54567d50be5b2dad5d&oe=54FAE6B5
https://fbcdn-sphotos-d-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-xpf1/v/t1.0-9/14428_10153511322072137_6083905235496799694_n.jpg?oh=9ba57a71aa5b30af1fa08cdd56d36e50&oe=551C2845&__gda__=1425900420_77aac503d5c0da5216d13cfb663efc88
― scott seward, Friday, 5 December 2014 23:17 (ten years ago) link
That gawker piece is a abomination on like a million levels
http://morningafter.gawker.com/peter-pan-live-was-the-worst-three-hour-drag-show-weve-1667018164
― a strawman stuffed with their collection of 12 cds (jjjusten), Saturday, 6 December 2014 03:14 (ten years ago) link
Love the idea of some music nerd sharpening his critical knives to skewer those darn musical theater types that beat him up in high school. Make sure you cram as many references to embarrassing gayness in there as you can, you shitheel.
― a strawman stuffed with their collection of 12 cds (jjjusten), Saturday, 6 December 2014 03:18 (ten years ago) link
they also like to pay lip service to moral stances so they can assuage their consciences
I almost wish they wouldn't. When the two modes collide and you get sanctimonious gossip it's the worst.
― Re-Make/Re-Model, Saturday, 6 December 2014 11:41 (ten years ago) link
oh god i so did not miss this style of music writing. we have to go back
http://ratter.com/your-2015-coachella-friday-headliner-is-fucking-drake-1671889461
― maura, Thursday, 18 December 2014 19:32 (ten years ago) link
that's well suited to this thread; made me kinda ill to read
― a stupid red mute juggalo (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 18 December 2014 19:33 (ten years ago) link
unless you are a medieval Venetia or Cher Horowitz don't say ducats imo
― tl;dr, gukbar, morbis detrius (wins), Thursday, 18 December 2014 19:35 (ten years ago) link
yeah it's just gross on multiple levels
― maura, Thursday, 18 December 2014 19:36 (ten years ago) link
it's like a parody of what everyone thought gawker was when it launched
Bros have felt like music journalism doesn't "get" them, so this helps.
― Evan, Thursday, 18 December 2014 19:42 (ten years ago) link
Ms. Rac-Tan
― tl;dr, gukbar, morbis detrius (wins), Thursday, 18 December 2014 19:44 (ten years ago) link
Are you bigger than Drake? Get at me, zel✧✧✧@rat✧✧✧.c✧✧.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 18 December 2014 19:45 (ten years ago) link
― EZ Snappin, Friday, December 5, 2014 4:48 PM (1 week ago) Bookmark
buncha straight men in this thread calling a gay man a homophobe.... welcome to 2014
― J0rdan S., Thursday, 18 December 2014 19:52 (ten years ago) link
I know nothing about the writer, but the piece read as classic bullshit musical theater = gay.
― EZ Snappin, Thursday, 18 December 2014 20:09 (ten years ago) link
just scanned through it and there is literally nothing homophobic about it. i can see how one might think so if one's basic understanding of gayness-as-identity is lowest common denominator musical-theater-ness, but that would be actually homophobic.
― languagelessness (mattresslessness), Thursday, 18 December 2014 20:19 (ten years ago) link
Pretty sure a bunch of us saw the article as homophobic. Which it is. Also it's written from a position of complete gleeful ignorance about the subject at hand, and badly written at that. Maybe he should add an "I'm gay, btw" to the article to clear everything up to the casual reader.
― a strawman stuffed with their collection of 12 cds (jjjusten), Thursday, 18 December 2014 20:22 (ten years ago) link
being funny with gleeful ignorance is a great position to write from, actually
― J0rdan S., Thursday, 18 December 2014 20:45 (ten years ago) link
Should I make a comment about social justice warriors scooping up the low hanging fruit or would that be misconstrued?
― Vic Perry, Thursday, 18 December 2014 20:45 (ten years ago) link
i can see how one might think so if one's basic understanding of gayness-as-identity is lowest common denominator musical-theater-ness, but that would be actually homophobic.
but anyway, mattresslessness has it
― J0rdan S., Thursday, 18 December 2014 20:47 (ten years ago) link
"being funny with gleeful ignorance is a great position to write from, actually"
So you were a big fan of the wife writes about her husbands record collection thing then
― a strawman stuffed with their collection of 12 cds (jjjusten), Thursday, 18 December 2014 20:55 (ten years ago) link
After I read the part about how beating on pots and pans was analogous to beating off, this immediately sprang to mind:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iHLEA2HNR98
― the farakhan of gg (DJP), Thursday, 18 December 2014 21:00 (ten years ago) link
― J0rdan S., Thursday, December 18, 2014 8:45 PM (16 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
larry the cable guy fan here
― da croupier, Thursday, 18 December 2014 21:04 (ten years ago) link
Let's all construe the statement in the most simplistic way possible. That will make a strong statement against gleeful ignorance.
― Vic Perry, Thursday, 18 December 2014 21:06 (ten years ago) link
don't curse our darkness, complex it up for us
― da croupier, Thursday, 18 December 2014 21:08 (ten years ago) link
So:
perpetuating LCD tropes = not-homophobic
dismay at LCD tropes = homophobic
Gotcha.
― EZ Snappin, Thursday, 18 December 2014 21:08 (ten years ago) link
i haven't seen the peter pan musical and don't care to, but from what i can surmise, from clips and coverage, it's exactly the kind of gay minstrelsy hetero culture latches onto to share in the fabulousness (and then draw a line in the sand with "homophobic" when someone takes issue with its representation of gayness or boringness or w/e). get a clue morans
― languagelessness (mattresslessness), Thursday, 18 December 2014 21:20 (ten years ago) link
it's very gay ghetto. i don't think saying that's boring is homophobic.
― languagelessness (mattresslessness), Thursday, 18 December 2014 21:24 (ten years ago) link
get a clue morans
― languagelessness (mattresslessness), Thursday, 18 December 2014 21:25 (ten years ago) link
Rufus Wainwright is boring.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 18 December 2014 21:27 (ten years ago) link
Young Thug is not boring.
it's not homophobic in criticism to point out that something is cribbing from or has taken on the qualities of gayness/gay culture
― J0rdan S., Thursday, 18 December 2014 21:31 (ten years ago) link
ty
― languagelessness (mattresslessness), Thursday, 18 December 2014 21:36 (ten years ago) link
and sorry for use of the g-word.
― languagelessness (mattresslessness), Thursday, 18 December 2014 21:37 (ten years ago) link
The lineup has been shit the last couple years – COME AT ME.
anybody taken him up on this offer yet?
― ƋППṍӮɨ∏ğڵșěᶉᶇдM℮ (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 18 December 2014 21:57 (ten years ago) link
http://www.vanyaland.com/2014/12/18/state-pop-2014-average-person-doesnt-give-shit-music-still-popular/
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 22 December 2014 14:26 (ten years ago) link
classic URL
A bot generated that article, yes?
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 22 December 2014 14:38 (ten years ago) link
Headline OTM, not reading the article tho
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 22 December 2014 15:32 (ten years ago) link
Don’t get me wrong, the purging of the popular music star is far from finished; but it is hard to miss that there used to be dozens of household names generated each year, whereas now entire genres of music are subsisting entirely on vapors still whiffing around from the 1980s. When recorded sound became a possibility more than a century ago, experimental genius and notable asshole Thomas Edison reckoned that those cylinders containing electrical audio would be most useful for archiving political speeches for posterity; instead, that recorded sound created gods on earth of all types of singers and music-makers, and for a good century a formidable industry was built that took a singer of songs, allowed their voice to imprint within the minds of listeners everywhere. Within decades, we let our music stars determine the attitude of our times and become the erotic politicians that taught us how to comport ourselves as we interfaced with all strata of society.
But the all-seeing eye of modern technology has destroyed the god by shattering the myths that allowed us to take a rock band or a pop singer and let them swell in our mind into a personal deity to be worshipped at our own appointed household shrines. Sure, lots of people still bought, say, the new Taylor Swift or Beyoncé album — but no one but a prepubescent child would actually think that these people mean or say anything of any significance.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 22 December 2014 16:04 (ten years ago) link
love the mixed metaphors, treacly mix of serious and vulgar.
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 22 December 2014 16:05 (ten years ago) link
first one of '15 http://www.cvltnation.com/is-veganism-changing-the-face-of-extreme-music/
appreciate this website isn't in line for a Pulitzer but even so this is astonishingly incoherent
― ganglier than the Pantilimon statue (DJ Mencap), Monday, 5 January 2015 11:35 (ten years ago) link
Yeah, he seems to be coming from a vague position of 'veganism is happy hippy stuff so it's changing the militant image of extreme music' or something, but that's fatally undermined by the first things that came to my mind: youth crew, Earth Crisis, etc etc.
― wronger than 100 geir posts (MacDara), Monday, 5 January 2015 12:13 (ten years ago) link
'White rappers are always difficult to comprehend'
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/12/29/the-cultural-crimes-of-iggy-azalea.html
― campreverb, Monday, 5 January 2015 14:22 (ten years ago) link
I like the idea that "Real hip-hop fans" are defined by their inability to let go of questionable Grammy victories.
― da croupier, Monday, 5 January 2015 14:54 (ten years ago) link
i'm being unkind here buthttp://diffuser.fm/classic-means-of-music-discovery/
Who would I be if the greasy kid in my high school music theory class hadn’t told me, with rapture in his eyes, about Neutral Milk Hotel?
― shmup....smug....shmub....shmug.... (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 7 January 2015 15:50 (ten years ago) link
http://www.avclub.com/article/fugazis-promises-bleak-honest-213040
― man alive, Wednesday, 7 January 2015 16:04 (ten years ago) link
The general concept of promises is great, but as Fugazi notes, actual “promises are shit.” That’s the basic message of “Promises,” from the group’s excellent 1989 EP Margin Walker. Singer and guitarist Ian MacKaye begins the song singing about how “Words and expressions / All these confessions / Of where we stand / How I see you / And you see me” are essentially meaningless. Promises are super and everything, but they don’t mean shit if there’s nothing but words there to back them up. Moreover, if you’re a committed significant other, friend, worker, brother, sister, etc., then you don’t need to go into absolutes to be loyal and to be there for someone. As MacKaye sings later in the song, “You will do what you do / I will do what I do / We will do what we do.”
It’s a message that could be perceived as a little bleak, especially set against MacKaye’s blunt and accented expletives, but it’s also a solid one, if you think about it. Promises might sound sweet, but they can be broken with just one word, glance, or stray thought. Stay true to yourself by doing what you want, when you want—keeping others in mind, of course—and you’ll never need to make another promise again.
― man alive, Wednesday, 7 January 2015 16:05 (ten years ago) link
smdh
http://i.imgur.com/POQp55x.jpg
― 龜, Friday, 9 January 2015 11:54 (ten years ago) link
Has been bugging me for ages, so: Tiny Mix Tapes on Oozing Wound's latest. Sneering tone and parade of familiar "insights" presented as damning profundities irritates me to no end.
― contenderizer, Friday, 9 January 2015 12:14 (ten years ago) link
otoh, obviously not the worst piece of music writing ever
― contenderizer, Friday, 9 January 2015 12:18 (ten years ago) link
Inherent Jest. Infinite Vice.
― Minaj moron (Re-Make/Re-Model), Friday, 9 January 2015 12:33 (ten years ago) link
youtube.com
― Ratt in Mi Kitchen (Neil S), Friday, 9 January 2015 12:43 (ten years ago) link
wincing so damn hard
― Ottbot jr (NickB), Friday, 9 January 2015 12:48 (ten years ago) link
h/t to fallen ilxor LG for that btw
― 龜, Friday, 9 January 2015 12:51 (ten years ago) link
if you absolutely must describe metal bands/records as being "false" I don't think tinymixtapes is the best arena in which to do it
― Pair of fun gals argue about the days in a week :-) (DJ Mencap), Friday, 9 January 2015 13:17 (ten years ago) link
Highlights from the TMT review:
In a musical world populated by so many fake and false genres, metal stands out as perhaps the most irredeemably fraudulent of them all. It’s said that metal is angry, indignant music, music that funnels rage into condensed explosions and shoots it at a corrupt universe. But when was the last time you observed metal’s “anger” actually causing someone to cower in fear, make amends for a wrong, provoke an imflammatory response, or incite any of the effects that serve to invest anger with its particular, everyday meaning? Probably never. Metal’s power to shock and disturb has been lost in the decades of repetition, inbreeding, and overfamiliarity, leaving it in a position where it’s no longer a disaffected rupture along an otherwise tranquil continuum, but rather one tranquil continuum among many, churning an endless simulation of itself and the “fury” that it’s reduced to so many empty signifiers.
Its four-bar exchanges may be as powerful as hell, so powerful that the band whip themselves through the gears with agitated finesse, but this is a duplicitous show of power and strength, since like all metal it’s ultimately the result not of brute muscle and physical exertion, but of the modern guitar equipment (e.g., pedals and amplifiers) that allows a few gentle strums and picks to be magnified beyond all recognition and a few nerdy dudes to hide their limitations behind torrential yet artificial walls of gain and fuzz.
Consequently, when flurries like the caustic “Bury Me With My Money” and the Darkthrone-esque “Genuine Creeper” hurtle at full speed in a blaze of tremolo picking and fried power chords, the resulting force and rancor are more expressions of the technologies that enable them — and by extension the social and economic structures that produce these technologies — than of the band’s own inherent resources and qualities. Rather than critiquing their world, they unintentionally end up affirming their dependency on it for their own being and individuation, so that the animosity of the semi-epic “When the Walls Fell” becomes another example of falseness, insofar as its biting crunch and air-raid leads make a show of attacking a system that its dependency in fact perpetuates.
― contenderizer, Friday, 9 January 2015 13:32 (ten years ago) link
tiny mix tapes is the worst
― dyl, Friday, 9 January 2015 17:00 (ten years ago) link
Paul Foster Anderson's "Inferrent Vest"
― man alive, Friday, 9 January 2015 17:28 (ten years ago) link
that irish times picture is amazing
― Tanukious D' (wins), Friday, 9 January 2015 19:47 (ten years ago) link
the little snippet of the above review just adds to the glory
― Tanukious D' (wins), Friday, 9 January 2015 19:48 (ten years ago) link
this guy couldn't have done it betterhttp://matablog.matadorrecords.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/harvey_head_big.jpg
― tylerw, Friday, 9 January 2015 19:48 (ten years ago) link
Review of "Anthony Braxton Diamond":
http://www.365bristol.com/review/anthony-braxton-diamond/194/
― you've got no fans you've got no ground (anagram), Friday, 23 January 2015 20:39 (ten years ago) link
"a sequence of arbitrary, terrifying sounds reminiscent of a cat being castrated or a particularly eye-watering, post-vindaloo bowel movement. "
― (extremely quan voice) My Lifestyle (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 23 January 2015 20:46 (ten years ago) link
link no work
― Οὖτις, Friday, 23 January 2015 20:48 (ten years ago) link
things to do in bristol
― emo canon in twee major (BradNelson), Friday, 23 January 2015 20:49 (ten years ago) link
it may be bad music writing, but it certainly is striking imagery
― walid foster dulles (man alive), Friday, 23 January 2015 20:50 (ten years ago) link
It needs a forward slash at the very end which I did c&p but for some reason doesn't show up. Trust me, it's worth it.
― you've got no fans you've got no ground (anagram), Friday, 23 January 2015 22:20 (ten years ago) link
http://starling.rinet.ru/music/index.htm
― Karl Malone, Saturday, 21 February 2015 16:57 (ten years ago) link
it's the worst and the best. maybe most people have already stumbled upon it. it hails from the golden days of internet. you can scroll down to brian eno or whatever and read tens of thousands of words and opinions that are occasionally enlightening (it happens often enough that it makes you want to keep scrolling) but on the whole, make no sense at all.
― Karl Malone, Saturday, 21 February 2015 16:59 (ten years ago) link
I just assumed you'd dug up something from Christgau.
― clemenza, Saturday, 21 February 2015 17:17 (ten years ago) link
I remember this one. I would come across both this guy and Pierro Scaruffi by looking up certain bands.
― Vic Perry, Saturday, 21 February 2015 17:29 (ten years ago) link
this is kind of like christgau, but if christgau allowed himself 3000+ words per album
― Karl Malone, Saturday, 21 February 2015 17:43 (ten years ago) link
Not sure what's going on but I've read two very different versions of what Kim Gordon said about LDR and anyways I'm getting tired of seeing music mags try to start some beef or something. Particularly here it feels really gross.
― ©Oz Quiz© (Adam Bruneau), Saturday, 21 February 2015 17:56 (ten years ago) link
and arguments b/w women
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 21 February 2015 17:58 (ten years ago) link
http://starling.rinet.ru/music/captain.htm#Replica
― Kibbutzki (Jaap Schip), Saturday, 21 February 2015 17:59 (ten years ago) link
I mean it's cool that feminism is being discussed on P4K, but how about in terms beyond "This woman said this mean thing about this other woman not being feminist! Meow!"
― ©Oz Quiz© (Adam Bruneau), Saturday, 21 February 2015 18:00 (ten years ago) link
xpost this is kind of amazing: http://starling.rinet.ru/music/zratings.htm
― Karl Malone, Saturday, 21 February 2015 18:01 (ten years ago) link
I'm sure there are more interesting parts of Kim Gordon's book than the section that deals with her husband and this.
― ©Oz Quiz© (Adam Bruneau), Saturday, 21 February 2015 18:01 (ten years ago) link
lol i haven't thought about starostin in yeeeeaaaarssss
― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Saturday, 21 February 2015 18:08 (ten years ago) link
ahh ... mark prindle.
been a long time since i visited his site.
― mark e, Saturday, 21 February 2015 18:16 (ten years ago) link
Starostin & Scaruffi are both auto-didact, super-systematizers with differing yet equally narrow aesthetics. (Scaruffi I can at least raid for album suggestions in the avant garde area, so he's more useful). Next to these two, Christgau seems like the most open-minded, acknowledging-his-own-subjectivity-guy in the world.
― Vic Perry, Saturday, 21 February 2015 18:24 (ten years ago) link
I'm really glad ILX has finally caught up to /mu/ with the Christgau vs. Scraruffi vs. Fantano debates
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Saturday, 21 February 2015 18:45 (ten years ago) link
That's awesome happy for you Whiney :)
― kurt kobaïan (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 21 February 2015 20:42 (ten years ago) link
it's so great to see him in his element
― describing a scene in which the Hulk gets a boner (contenderizer), Saturday, 21 February 2015 20:55 (ten years ago) link
http://only-solitaire.blogspot.com
George Starostin's taste (and writing style) has loosened up somewhat in recent years, but it's amazing that he's been keeping up his "review bands alphabetically" blog for 4.5 years and he's still only on the letter B (for Bon Jovi).
― i ain't marchant anymore (unregistered), Saturday, 21 February 2015 21:20 (ten years ago) link
*5.5 years
― i ain't marchant anymore (unregistered), Saturday, 21 February 2015 21:22 (ten years ago) link
starostin dude is unreadable. one paragraph oughta be enough to warn people away forever:
"That said, all of these factors are still not enough to account for the band's passing into utmost oblivion (together with other great British blooze bands, such as Ten Years After or Taste). Because, in a certain sense, these guys symbolize everything about yer basic early Seventies rock, that loud, raunchy, sloppy hippie music as opposed to, say, acid hippie music. And at least they never tried to 'fashionize' their music by carefully avoiding heavy metal and glam rock trends. Throughout all of their six studio albums, they remained what they were: a naive, drug-addled, heart-on-the-sleeve, hair-down-the-waist bunch of idealistic young men trying to find consolation in blues riffing and folkish whining amidst a sea of problems. They just weren't particularly talented, but who was particularly talented? Gary Glitter? And, for my two cents, I'd at least take Paul Rodgers' voice over Robert Plant's any day of my horrid life."
― scott seward, Saturday, 21 February 2015 21:23 (ten years ago) link
I still really like reading all those Prindle/Starostin/one-guy-with-a-website music reviews and am sad that that whole scene totally died off.
― Mr. Snrub, Saturday, 21 February 2015 22:25 (ten years ago) link
ilx's own glenn m. is the only one of them worth reading.
― scott seward, Saturday, 21 February 2015 22:35 (ten years ago) link
You are talking about this? http://www.furia.com/page.cgi?type=log
― Mon-El in the Middle (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 22 February 2015 05:26 (ten years ago) link
the war against silence entries:
http://www.furia.com/page.cgi?type=twas&id=issues
― scott seward, Sunday, 22 February 2015 20:12 (ten years ago) link
http://diffuser.fm/box-sets-arent-meant-for-you/
Let’s jump ahead about 50 years. The current holder of the Jimmie Rodgers baton is one Bruce Springsteen, a globally popular musical storyteller coming off of the biggest album of his career. Born in the USA would eventually sell 30 million copies worldwide. (To put that in perspective, hit your thumb with a hammer. Now do that 29,999,999 more times. Thirty million is a lot; also, put some ice on that thumb.)
― Maybe in 100 years someone will say damn Dawn was dope. (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 4 March 2015 00:33 (nine years ago) link
really puts it in perspective
― you can buy your hair if it won't grow (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 4 March 2015 00:35 (nine years ago) link
And so while we in the media continue to report on the inevitable death of physical media, any artist who attracts enthusiastic fans remains a candidate for a lavish box set. As I write this, I’m staring lovingly at my Miles Davis: The Complete Columbia Album Collection. I’m also shaking my head at the online auction prices for Insane Clown Posse‘s recently released The First Six which is, of course, a seven-disc set that’s fetching prices not too far below the great Miles’ 53-disc box.I can shake my head all I want, but the simple truth is that ICP didn’t make The First Six for me any more than Victor made that very first Jimmie Rodgers album for fans of Enrico Caruso. It’s a priceless treasure to the Juggalos, and that’s why the idea of the box set remains a viable one even after 80 years.But seriously, Led Zeppelin, enough already.
I can shake my head all I want, but the simple truth is that ICP didn’t make The First Six for me any more than Victor made that very first Jimmie Rodgers album for fans of Enrico Caruso. It’s a priceless treasure to the Juggalos, and that’s why the idea of the box set remains a viable one even after 80 years.
But seriously, Led Zeppelin, enough already.
― Maybe in 100 years someone will say damn Dawn was dope. (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 4 March 2015 00:38 (nine years ago) link
a priceless treasure to the Juggalos
This has a real nice poetic ring to it.
― ©Oz Quiz© (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 4 March 2015 02:26 (nine years ago) link
http://noisey.vice.com/blog/fugazi-politics
― five six and (man alive), Monday, 9 March 2015 03:42 (nine years ago) link
Fast-forward thirteen years, and it’s all too easy to draw straight lines, not just to the increasingly unstable geopolitics of Eastern Europe and the Middle East, but to the deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and Eric Garner in New York City—both of whom were killed by police officers while unarmed. When protests erupted over the deaths, police responded with heavy-handed action that sounds awfully similar to what MacKaye described in 2002. War and police brutality seem fairly straight-forward to gentrification and the link between neighborhoods and the housing market. Last November, Dave Grohl fretted that Austin, Texas, was losing its artsy character during an interview promoting the Sonic Highways series.
― five six and (man alive), Monday, 9 March 2015 03:45 (nine years ago) link
Who is Jen Trification, and why do war and police brutality seem straight-forward to her?
― Team Foxcatcherwatcher (Sufjan Grafton), Monday, 9 March 2015 06:30 (nine years ago) link
Last November, Dave Grohl fretted that Austin, Texas, was losing its artsy character during an interview promoting the Sonic Highways series.
Surprised the writer didn't mention Nirvana's Ferguson anthem "I Swear That I Don't Have a Gun."
― ancient texts, things that can't be pre-dated (President Keyes), Monday, 9 March 2015 11:00 (nine years ago) link
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/mar/09/pop-political-british-musicians-paloma-faith
― sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Monday, 9 March 2015 11:17 (nine years ago) link
taking shots at a member of ILM's favourite band, whatever next
― Reader, I murder dem (DJ Mencap), Monday, 9 March 2015 11:42 (nine years ago) link
I had a suspicion I'd see that linked.
― afriendlypioneer, Monday, 9 March 2015 12:20 (nine years ago) link
Raccoon Tanuki writing for the Guardian now?
― ancient texts, things that can't be pre-dated (President Keyes), Monday, 9 March 2015 16:53 (nine years ago) link
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiator_(album)#mediaviewer/File:Radiator-SFA.jpg
― cr4bdbgs, Monday, 9 March 2015 18:35 (nine years ago) link
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/6/67/Radiator-SFA.jpg
― cr4bdbgs, Monday, 9 March 2015 18:36 (nine years ago) link
why does this piece get commissioned and written over and over again
― lex pretend, Monday, 9 March 2015 18:55 (nine years ago) link
old people
― daed bod (Noodle Vague), Monday, 9 March 2015 18:58 (nine years ago) link
they forget they commissioned things. it's tragic
― ancient texts, things that can't be pre-dated (President Keyes), Monday, 9 March 2015 19:01 (nine years ago) link
Hate to be cynical about it since I'm a huge fan, but he's got a "protest" album coming out in a month or two (which he mentions near the end). Pretty good number of comments, too.
― afriendlypioneer, Monday, 9 March 2015 19:04 (nine years ago) link
anything > 0 = a pretty bad number of comments
― daed bod (Noodle Vague), Monday, 9 March 2015 19:06 (nine years ago) link
I'm surprised that anyone cared enough to comment. The essay didn't say much, but I guess he hit enough soft targets (UKIP) to warrant a reaction.
― afriendlypioneer, Monday, 9 March 2015 19:07 (nine years ago) link
i grew up on british protest music...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JctNVfE06l4
― scott seward, Monday, 9 March 2015 19:10 (nine years ago) link
http://thetalkhouse.com/music/talks/luke-haines-the-auteurs-black-box-recorder-talks-noel-gallagher-and-the-scourge-of-dad-rock/
Not sure if this qualifies as worst or best:
But even after all the above, Noel comes across as a decent enough guy. He’d be OK in the pub. (Well, he probably wouldn’t be OK with me in the pub after this.) You’d trust him to look after your cat as well. (Although I wouldn’t trust him with my cat, not after this.) But it’s his reactionary fear of the extraordinary, and the clapped-out Cloughie act, that need questioning. These are ultra-conformist times we live in; the imagination is unwelcome, the maverick is unwelcome and the weirdos need not bother turning up. The music industry and the publishing industry are grasping at straws to survive. The middlebrow media have a stranglehold on culture, and art is, amazingly, still seen as “not for ordinary people.” Poverty abounds. No one wants to hear a rich man boasting, but when Noel speaks, people listen. As for the records, they sound like they’re getting harder and harder to make. Noel never seems like he’s had any fun making them. The slow turning of the cogs in his brain grinding to a halt is almost audible. So, as Noel has all the money in the world — as he is often so keen to tell us — maybe it’s time to give up.
― afriendlypioneer, Monday, 9 March 2015 19:51 (nine years ago) link
Oh I love the Haines piece. The Ciaran one is full of the usual ignorant generalisations though.
― Minaj moron (Re-Make/Re-Model), Monday, 9 March 2015 20:30 (nine years ago) link
Haines piece calls Noel Gallagher's slow songs bollards, I'm going to go for 'best'
― Leonard Pine, Monday, 9 March 2015 20:44 (nine years ago) link
not really sure this is "writing" exactlyhttp://www.buzzfeed.com/carlanka/reasons-why-you-should-be-following-jme-on-twitter
― Maybe in 100 years someone will say damn Dawn was dope. (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 12 March 2015 20:23 (nine years ago) link
"The most logical expansion for UMG, WMG and Sony is to embrace online video stars from YouTube, Vine and Snapchat"
uh, sure big-picture cuepoint guy, maybe you should talk to karmin
― maura, Friday, 13 March 2015 16:52 (nine years ago) link
whatever i know i have an Officially Chapped Ass after getting totally lowballed by that company to start a music collection, but jesus christ the intersection of edm idiocy and mba idiocy fueled by tech dollars is just... the worst thing
― maura, Friday, 13 March 2015 16:54 (nine years ago) link
also i mean all of these 'online video stars' make their bones by covering popular songs... that are initially disseminated by umg, wmg, and sony. maybe this guy is just advocating for the snake-eating-its-tail process to be sped up?
― maura, Friday, 13 March 2015 17:08 (nine years ago) link
or maybe he doesn't actually consume music and is instead lost in a thicket of spreadsheets and impressive-sounding numbers
― maura, Friday, 13 March 2015 17:09 (nine years ago) link
what a great time to be alive
just in case you needed reminding how bad drowned in sound is
http://drownedinsound.com/releases/18698/reviews/4148809?ticker
― to pump a bit of lye (imago), Friday, 20 March 2015 09:31 (nine years ago) link
Whoa! I didn't know Chilly had a new album out. Must investigate.
― Mr. Snrub, Friday, 20 March 2015 14:08 (nine years ago) link
i don't know enough to say whether that review is right, did pique my interest
― kurt kobaïan (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 20 March 2015 15:43 (nine years ago) link
"What was once accepted and ignored is now the target of pieces of writing like this one."
http://www.popmatters.com/feature/191920-get-hard-and-get-angry/
― Brio2, Thursday, 2 April 2015 19:15 (nine years ago) link
I agree that that piece is a total failure when it comes to music writing
― DJP, Thursday, 2 April 2015 19:24 (nine years ago) link
Attributing it to Ethan Cohen rather than Etan Cohen is never not funny though.
― Ethnically Ambiguous / 28 - 45 (ShariVari), Thursday, 2 April 2015 19:30 (nine years ago) link
Like many of the Nintendo Generation (born between 1977 and 1982), I’m offended by everything.
― Maybe in 100 years someone will say damn Dawn was dope. (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 2 April 2015 19:39 (nine years ago) link
― guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 2 April 2015 19:41 (nine years ago) link
wait is that my generation, i've never felt so accurately identified before. finally!!
― j., Thursday, 2 April 2015 19:44 (nine years ago) link
wait i want to be in the nintendo generation, but i come from the year 1983. guess i have to be a millienial and be really selfish but also really important to the future but also good at adapting to new technologies instead
― Karl Malone, Thursday, 2 April 2015 19:46 (nine years ago) link
"With the George W. Bush presidency being bookended by Freddy Got Fingered and Role Models, both interesting examples of ‘00s shock value comedy, there was a furor in the air, an feeling that shit wasn’t right, and we were plunging further into doom. The Obama era is more about how to rectify such social ills."
― Brio2, Thursday, 2 April 2015 19:52 (nine years ago) link
as a nintendo generation spokesperson, we are letting you in karl malone
― Maybe in 100 years someone will say damn Dawn was dope. (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 2 April 2015 19:53 (nine years ago) link
77-82 is a pretty tight turnaround for a whole generation
― Brio2, Thursday, 2 April 2015 19:59 (nine years ago) link
Mark Palermo co-wrote the 2012 theatrical teen horror sci-fi comedy Detention, distributed by Sony Pictures.
― That shit right there is precedented. (cryptosicko), Thursday, 2 April 2015 20:00 (nine years ago) link
xpost fuck yeah! now i regret selling my bright blue NES bag last year.
http://galleryplus.ebayimg.com/ws/web/311124260128_4_0_1/500x500.jpg
― Karl Malone, Thursday, 2 April 2015 20:01 (nine years ago) link
"I wish to register my disdain at the disgust and outrage which has greeted this, er, admittedly disgusting and outrageous film"
― their fantastic and relevant debut single, ‘Times Are Hard’ (Bananaman Begins), Thursday, 2 April 2015 20:02 (nine years ago) link
well, you know the nintendo generation... offended by everything.
― Brio2, Thursday, 2 April 2015 20:03 (nine years ago) link
fucking mario
― Evan, Thursday, 2 April 2015 20:07 (nine years ago) link
yeah, its pretty dumb to make a point about overreactions to art that's perceived as offensive in reaction to something that...looks like it might be genuinely offensive (i haven't seen it, probably won't, i think my assumption can be safely made)
sorta like fuckin patton oswalt yesterday!
― pimento is a cheese, some call it the caviar of the south (slothroprhymes), Thursday, 2 April 2015 20:09 (nine years ago) link
i remember when the super nintendo came out it wasn't launched in the uk (and europe?) till about a year after it was out in the US and Japan, so some game heads would buy ones imported from Japan- the Japanese version was called the 'Super Famicom'. How 'bout that.
― their fantastic and relevant debut single, ‘Times Are Hard’ (Bananaman Begins), Thursday, 2 April 2015 20:12 (nine years ago) link
I remember when this thread was about shitty music writing.
― EZ Snappin, Thursday, 2 April 2015 20:48 (nine years ago) link
nintendon't kill my vibe
― Maybe in 100 years someone will say damn Dawn was dope. (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 2 April 2015 21:09 (nine years ago) link
i remember i was conflicted, misusing my threadfluence
― pimento is a cheese, some call it the caviar of the south (slothroprhymes), Thursday, 2 April 2015 21:09 (nine years ago) link
http://whereistheprotestmusic.tumblr.com/
― lex pretend, Friday, 3 April 2015 06:29 (nine years ago) link
Terrible articles
― got a long list of ilxors (fgti), Friday, 3 April 2015 12:59 (nine years ago) link
That protest thing is hilarious
― kurt kobaïan (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 3 April 2015 14:39 (nine years ago) link
http://blog.sfgate.com/morford/2015/04/10/carly-rae-jepsen-makes-heads-explode/
feat. bonus ilxor diss
― Number None, Sunday, 12 April 2015 20:47 (nine years ago) link
that one is pretty bad all right! i don't think i've ever pictured stoned hipsters reading pitchfork. more like earnest high school kids.
― scott seward, Sunday, 12 April 2015 21:14 (nine years ago) link
lol @ "yoga columnist, admirer of trees" in his bio
who are these people who still think statements like that are big truth to power moments? aside from the otts and auks and austerlitzes, of course.
― slothroprhymes, Sunday, 12 April 2015 21:37 (nine years ago) link
"Mark has been described a few ways -- as a Lenny Bruce character, or as a Generation X Hunter S. Thompson, or as a liberal redneck," Kershner said. "He has a following, but he's always close to the edge."
everyone gets older faster these days
http://www.sfgate.com/business/article/3-Staffers-Suspended-Over-SF-Gate-Column-2937413.php
― maura, Sunday, 12 April 2015 21:51 (nine years ago) link
got an couple hours?
― austinato (Austin), Sunday, 12 April 2015 21:55 (nine years ago) link
All of those descriptions of Morford are too flattering, even liberal redneck.
― polyphonic, Sunday, 12 April 2015 21:59 (nine years ago) link
Is it still 2004 in San Francisco?
― ciao, o rank cunt (Whiney G. Weingarten), Sunday, 12 April 2015 22:09 (nine years ago) link
fixie bike jokes is some real trenchant social commentary in 2015
― ciao, o rank cunt (Whiney G. Weingarten), Sunday, 12 April 2015 22:11 (nine years ago) link
what about microbrew zings tho
― slothroprhymes, Sunday, 12 April 2015 22:42 (nine years ago) link
Nice to see he takes time out of his schedule of yoga therapy and admiring trees to engage in pointless culture-bashing rants. Nothing more enlightened than jokes about PBR.
― ©Oz Quiz© (Adam Bruneau), Sunday, 12 April 2015 22:46 (nine years ago) link
aside from the otts and auks and austerlitzes
― Premise ridiculous. Who have two potato? (forksclovetofu), Monday, 13 April 2015 01:39 (nine years ago) link
this one is actually the worst
― And let’s say a new Hozier comes along, and Spotify outbids you (Sufjan Grafton), Monday, 13 April 2015 05:41 (nine years ago) link
pretty sure it's lifted from a Frank Barone column written for Everybody Loves Raymond, though
― And let’s say a new Hozier comes along, and Spotify outbids you (Sufjan Grafton), Monday, 13 April 2015 05:46 (nine years ago) link
just about every sentence of that is completely moronic
― pissbaby nobody in the corner (DJ Mencap), Monday, 13 April 2015 07:42 (nine years ago) link
“Bro! Did you read our Carly Rae bit? Can you believe us? We are so meta! I bet no one saw that coming. How hipster can you get, but to like the least hipster act there is in this modern world right now? Someone punch me in the face!
“Next up, we praise a Kardashian. Shut up! Who wants a PBR?”
yeah boy do they ever have the writer of that carly rae jepsen piece pegged, such an indie loving hipster
― kurt kobaïan (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 13 April 2015 20:20 (nine years ago) link
http://www.vox.com/2015/4/21/8441443/hozier-profile-interview
reading this actually hurt me; I am a broken man
― DJP, Tuesday, 21 April 2015 20:55 (nine years ago) link
article nails that "sponsored content" feel
― Is It Any Wonder I'm Not the (President Keyes), Tuesday, 21 April 2015 21:05 (nine years ago) link
totally unaware of Hozier up to now. reads like Russell Brand's Infant Sorrow lead singer character
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 21 April 2015 21:07 (nine years ago) link
"He's a naturalist. He plucks the guitar strings with his fingers."
get the fuck outta here
― the tune was space, Tuesday, 21 April 2015 21:08 (nine years ago) link
picks are so artifical
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 21 April 2015 21:10 (nine years ago) link
"Most of the songs are meaty, desperate, and honest about the world we live in."Hozier 2015: Meaty, Desperate and Honest About the World We Live In
― Premise ridiculous. Who have two potato? (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 21 April 2015 21:11 (nine years ago) link
"He's a naturalist. He plucks the guitar strings with his fingers, while naked."
― DJP, Tuesday, 21 April 2015 21:11 (nine years ago) link
"He refuses to brush his fluffy mane of brown hair, writes his songs based off a feeling, and doesn't let a piece of plastic come between him and his chords"
His guitar tech has to put his capo on for him.
― moans and feedback (Dinsdale), Tuesday, 21 April 2015 21:12 (nine years ago) link
Where other artists hire songwriters to build out their hits for them, Hozier wrote his in an attic.
― difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 21 April 2015 21:13 (nine years ago) link
"Hozier's set is lit with electronic candles"
you'd think he'd go with real candles
― moans and feedback (Dinsdale), Tuesday, 21 April 2015 21:17 (nine years ago) link
http://imgc.allpostersimages.com/images/P-473-488-90/67/6718/FVLA100Z/posters/a-shot-in-the-dark-a-peter-sellers-1964.jpg
― da croupier, Tuesday, 21 April 2015 21:18 (nine years ago) link
Most of the songs are meaty, desperate, and honest about the world we live in.
― Bookmark No Bingus Permalink (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 21 April 2015 21:31 (nine years ago) link
http://meatcampbaptistchurch.org/
― Bookmark No Bingus Permalink (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 21 April 2015 21:34 (nine years ago) link
can't tell if people are deliberately confusing naturalist with naturist itt
― neetsooh ebebay (wins), Tuesday, 21 April 2015 21:35 (nine years ago) link
not that either has anything to do with guitar playing
― neetsooh ebebay (wins), Tuesday, 21 April 2015 21:36 (nine years ago) link
#standup4nudists
― mattresslessness, Tuesday, 21 April 2015 21:50 (nine years ago) link
Hozier fan 'completes' "perfect interview". Is that possible for you?
― Bookmark No Bingus Permalink (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 21 April 2015 21:58 (nine years ago) link
there are no guitar picks taped to the tall mic stand in front of him. He refuses to brush his fluffy mane of brown hair, writes his songs based off a feeling, and doesn't let a piece of plastic come between him and his chords.
this really is one of the dumbest things I've ever read
― intheblanks, Tuesday, 21 April 2015 22:03 (nine years ago) link
he should just stretch his own fingers over a fretboard and resonator and play them
― Bookmark No Bingus Permalink (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 21 April 2015 22:05 (nine years ago) link
MEATY 'n' DESPERATE
― Premise ridiculous. Who have two potato? (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 21 April 2015 22:06 (nine years ago) link
hoping that guitar pick thing is just a reductio ad absurdum parody of the discourse of authenticity
― intheblanks, Tuesday, 21 April 2015 22:08 (nine years ago) link
bet u could get some cool sounds flicking the free end of a sounding rod
― mattresslessness, Tuesday, 21 April 2015 22:08 (nine years ago) link
he should save that for the tour bus
― Bookmark No Bingus Permalink (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 21 April 2015 22:10 (nine years ago) link
I bet he authentically picks food out his teeth with just his fingernails, too.
― Evan, Tuesday, 21 April 2015 22:12 (nine years ago) link
wow this is a misfire right from the first sentence
― goole, Tuesday, 21 April 2015 22:12 (nine years ago) link
knew I was done with Hozier when I caught him using a waterpik
― Bookmark No Bingus Permalink (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 21 April 2015 22:15 (nine years ago) link
"Hozier is also 6-foot-5. When he takes the stage at the Lincoln Theatre in Washington, DC, in March, wearing all denim and carrying a guitar that sparkles under the lights, he towers over the other members of his band."
Between this and all of the marketing for Tobias Jesso Jr. making a big deal over him being 6-foot-7, are we treating music like the NBA draft now?
― klonman, Tuesday, 21 April 2015 22:16 (nine years ago) link
"Andrew Hozier-Byrne is a titan — musically and literally. He plays music professionally, and he is also one of the first divine issue of Gaia and Uranus"
― goole, Tuesday, 21 April 2015 22:18 (nine years ago) link
"Long wingspan, averaged 10 songs per hype cycle"
― klonman, Tuesday, 21 April 2015 22:19 (nine years ago) link
When he takes the stage at the Lincoln Theatre in Washington, DC, in March, wearing all denim and carrying a guitar that sparkles under the lights, he towers over the other members of his band."
This reminds me of a student who once wrote, "Because he was tall, he looked over the heads of his classmates."
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 21 April 2015 22:19 (nine years ago) link
just pitching in from the ilx brigade weirdos but fingerpicks are tough to learn but ultimately really help your articulation and devlopment as a fingerstyle player, step yo game up hozier
― kurt kobaïan (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 21 April 2015 22:26 (nine years ago) link
― klonman, Tuesday, April 21, 2015 5:16 PM (10 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
a long, athletic true senior from arizona state, hozier has an explosive first move, but questions about his toughness and commitment to defense have scouts questioning his ability to be a true NBA wing. excellent at penetrating the lane, he needs to develop a go-to post move and improve his three-point shooting. still, his upside and his ability to play naked and without guitar picks should make him a mid-first round draft pick. playing in the right system, perhaps for greg popovich or t-bone burnett, he could develop into a solid rotational 3 in the league
― kurt kobaïan (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 21 April 2015 22:29 (nine years ago) link
man my fat thumb never goes into those things right, always feels like i've got a c-clamp on in about 10 minutes
xp lmao
― goole, Tuesday, 21 April 2015 22:30 (nine years ago) link
pssh picks are for small-handed 5-8 manlets.
― klonman, Tuesday, 21 April 2015 22:31 (nine years ago) link
― kurt kobaïan (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, April 21, 2015 6:29 PM (1 minute ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
And in FULL DENIM! Amazing.
― Evan, Tuesday, 21 April 2015 22:32 (nine years ago) link
Damn, DJP - I just rushed here to post that as soon as I saw it
― RAP GAME SHANI DAVIS (Raymond Cummings), Tuesday, 21 April 2015 22:59 (nine years ago) link
I think we have a winner (and not just for the year)
― RAP GAME SHANI DAVIS (Raymond Cummings), Tuesday, 21 April 2015 23:04 (nine years ago) link
Yeah we have a winner, every sentence of that can be quoted for maximum bullshit. We may as well shut down this thread and all of ILM for that matter
― meaty, desperate, and honest about the world we live in (ultros ultros-ghali), Wednesday, 22 April 2015 01:23 (nine years ago) link
i never thought a turd could be that many words big before
― j., Wednesday, 22 April 2015 01:44 (nine years ago) link
I like to imagine Edward Sharpe reading this article and muttering "I was this close."
― klonman, Wednesday, 22 April 2015 02:19 (nine years ago) link
everybody's favorite fuddy-duddy outdoes himself
https://www.commentarymagazine.com/article/love-songs-rip/
― in-house pickle program (m coleman), Saturday, 2 May 2015 11:15 (nine years ago) link
fissiparous adjective fis·sip·a·rous \fi-ˈsi-p(ə-)rəs\Definition of FISSIPAROUS
: tending to break up into parts : divisive <fissiparous tendencies within a political party>
― in-house pickle program (m coleman), Saturday, 2 May 2015 11:18 (nine years ago) link
I'm all for improving my vocabulary, even at this late stage in the game, but hey "divisive" would read better in my untutored editorial view
― in-house pickle program (m coleman), Saturday, 2 May 2015 11:22 (nine years ago) link
Teachout is SO heavy-handed and predictable, you can smell his cliched argument and conclusions from a mile away
― in-house pickle program (m coleman), Saturday, 2 May 2015 11:24 (nine years ago) link
"For one thing, Gioia has given us a book about lyrics, not music. He has little to say about the specifically musical matters upon which one might have expected a trained musician to shed light."oh how the worm turns
― maura, Saturday, 2 May 2015 15:00 (nine years ago) link
'why don't you focus on the muuuuuusic, mannnn' - every annoyed music aficionado of a certain age
― maura, Saturday, 2 May 2015 15:01 (nine years ago) link
good to see tesla finally getting their due
― j., Saturday, 2 May 2015 15:11 (nine years ago) link
terry teachout is certainly of a certain age - late 50s or early 60s - though judging from his writing you'd think he's over 100. he's obsessed with the "music maaaan" issue too, regularly trots out his own experience as a "professional jazz musician" to set himself about the yapping critical pack. in his infuriating bio of duke ellington he actually had enough chutzpah to patronize the duke about his lack of schooling in classical european composition methods and theory. unlike terry, you see, who understands the proper way to compose a symphony
― in-house pickle program (m coleman), Saturday, 2 May 2015 15:21 (nine years ago) link
you do realize the irony of these charges being levied against mr. 'why is music writing becoming lifestyle reporting' right
― maura, Saturday, 2 May 2015 15:48 (nine years ago) link
oh yeah this guy, now i remember that dopey daily beast article. so teachout's review is turf-protecting; stay off my lawn, interloper
― in-house pickle program (m coleman), Saturday, 2 May 2015 15:57 (nine years ago) link
don't care how skilled a musician gioia may be, any critic who refers to himself as a "music scribe" is deficient as a prose stylist
― in-house pickle program (m coleman), Saturday, 2 May 2015 16:01 (nine years ago) link
in his infuriating bio of duke ellington he actually had enough chutzpah to patronize the duke about his lack of schooling in classical european composition methods and theory. unlike terry, you see, who understands the proper way to compose a symphony
Teachout is so fundamentally dopey, and I refuse to go near that Ellington bio for the reason you mentioned, which he boiled down to, "Ellington never wrote a great long work, because that's not what he was about, nor should he have been, and he should've studied proper European compositional methods in order to compose the great long work he should never have composed."
Also, this little nugget of dumbfuckery from the Nat'l Review around the time of the book's release:
LOPEZ: One of the “peculiarities” of Duke Ellington’s career, you write, is that “he was a major composer but not an influential one.” Why is that? How does that happen?TEACHOUT: He wrote great music, but his techniques were so intensely personal and unique unto himself that they were for all intents and purposes inimitable. Hence he didn’t influence anybody — all that other artists could do was play his songs in their own ways.
TEACHOUT: He wrote great music, but his techniques were so intensely personal and unique unto himself that they were for all intents and purposes inimitable. Hence he didn’t influence anybody — all that other artists could do was play his songs in their own ways.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Saturday, 2 May 2015 16:17 (nine years ago) link
now THAT right there is one of the dumbest things i've ever read. wow.
― scott seward, Saturday, 2 May 2015 16:48 (nine years ago) link
― ©Oz Quiz© (Adam Bruneau), Saturday, 2 May 2015 18:02 (nine years ago) link
wow. how do you not say that out loud, catch yourself and go, er, wait, sorry, i didn't think this through did i
― Leonard Pine, Saturday, 2 May 2015 18:44 (nine years ago) link
i mean i kinda get what he's getting at there but even if i agreed with it which i don't there are lots better ways to phrase the point
― Premise ridiculous. Who have two potato? (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 3 May 2015 00:24 (nine years ago) link
I picked up that biography in the library, looked up several late albums including Far East Suite, saw that Teachout dismissed them or didn't even mention them, and put it right back.
― Vic Perry, Sunday, 3 May 2015 03:20 (nine years ago) link
I actually read the Ellington book, and I thought it was pretty good. I found his analysis of the larger works interesting; he makes a reasonable argument that Ellington wasn't actually composing long-form works, just creating medleys of shorter pieces and adding framing devices. He also argues that Ellington's tendency to procrastinate and write to deadline (and frequently blow deadlines) ultimately harmed his work. Both of these seem like reasonable perspectives to me. But I'm not a huge Ellington fan; in general, I find a little of his music goes a long way for me. Four or five tunes at a stretch is plenty, especially because he insisted on using vocalists so often.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Sunday, 3 May 2015 12:40 (nine years ago) link
renowned procrastinator duke ellington...
― scott seward, Sunday, 3 May 2015 16:08 (nine years ago) link
Hence his famous catchphrase, "We will love you madly tomorrow."
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Sunday, 3 May 2015 16:13 (nine years ago) link
the guy just didn't get enough done in the time allotted...
― scott seward, Sunday, 3 May 2015 16:16 (nine years ago) link
"Four or five tunes at a stretch is plenty"
sadly this is in line with a lot of hepcats i know who own a copy of money jungle and nothing else...
― scott seward, Sunday, 3 May 2015 16:18 (nine years ago) link
dook smellington
― salthigh, Sunday, 3 May 2015 19:57 (nine years ago) link
he makes a reasonable argument that Ellington wasn't actually composing long-form works, just creating medleys of shorter pieces and adding framing devices.
With varying degrees of contortion, one could say this about any long-form work by any composer. I think Teachout's view is a combination of the John Hammond (and borderline-racist) "Hey, you're supposed to just be a swing/dance band! Stop trying to aspire to more than that!"; and the generally Eurocentric "no, THIS is what constitutes a long-form work! Stop trying to reinvent/redefine it!"
And if Teachout believes Ellington's work suffered due to procrastination, this means that a) Ellington released half-realized work at some point in his lifetime (evidence of which is as yet nonexistent); or b) Teachout (and no one else) has access to Ellington work that, presumably supported by documentation, was not sullied by procrastination, and Teachout is therefore able to make an informed comparison/judgement.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Sunday, 3 May 2015 23:14 (nine years ago) link
I'll go out on a limb with a half-baked thesis - hopefully the cheesy crusty parts will be edible though:
Teachout dismisses late Duke Ellington because:1) Some of it gives equal billing to Billy Strayhorn, hence working against the "exploited Billy Strayhorn" angle2) Some of it was undeniably achieved after the death of Strayhorn, hence working against the "after 19xx, he was nothing without Strayhorn" angle.
I don't have the background knowledge to defend these so do shoot away...I suspect I'm not entirely wrong either
― Vic Perry, Monday, 4 May 2015 01:28 (nine years ago) link
"With varying degrees of contortion," you can claim Teachout is saying almost anything you want. Read the book. I'm not suggesting I agree with him 100% across the board, but I'd be more interested in discussing it with people who'd read it.
What I'm characterizing as procrastination, btw, is multiple projects - stage shows, movie musicals, etc. - that fell through because Ellington promised people a full score, then never got around to writing one and attempted to fob off producers with existing leftovers.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Monday, 4 May 2015 02:54 (nine years ago) link
As someone who loves ie Far East suite, in a sentimental mood, Afro-Eurasian eclipse, 70th birthday concert, money jungle et al--I think there's a pretty legit argument that ellington's most significant work, the perfection of the aesthetic he divised, was not in his long form symphonic works but in his three minute sides for like, okeh records. I think this is a pretty standard line on Ellington at this point ! 3 minute records was the canvas he was built for, at least in terms of recorded output
― deej loaf (D-40), Monday, 4 May 2015 04:27 (nine years ago) link
Yesss ^^ it's possible to feel this way w/o being a condescending dick about it like TT. I'm not one to cry racism at the drop of a stereotype but TT also clucks his tongue at Duke's prolific infidelity during a long marriage in a superior tone that suggests well, you know how these black guys are...
― in-house pickle program (m coleman), Monday, 4 May 2015 10:51 (nine years ago) link
I'm mostly basing my characterization of Teachout's contortions on his "(Over)praising Ellington" essay. When Teachout writes, "The idea, I guess, is to push him up into the classical-music arena: he played in Carnegie Hall, therefore he's serious. And that's completely wrong. Duke Ellington is serious because he is Duke Ellington" I think he's otm. But elsewhere in the essay, he's critical of Ellington for aspiring to lengthier works because Ellington didn't have the tools necessary to realize works Teachout thinks Ellington should never have attempted. If Teachout simply thinks Ellington's longer works aren't fully realized, that's fine (if a bit predictable -- and Teachout, in his essay, gives no indication of trying to meet the works on their own terms). But as I noted upthread, he's critical of Ellington for not studying that which Teachout thinks he never should have studied anyway.
I would hope that Teachout fleshed these scenarios out within the context of, say, Ellington having to constantly keep his band on the road in order to meet payroll. But I found his Armstrong bio underwhelming, and since Teachout apparently doesn't know what the word "influential" means, I'll skip the Ellington book.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Monday, 4 May 2015 14:38 (nine years ago) link
XP-that's interesting, I thought the Armstrong bio was...well, delightful. I thought it was warm, enlightening, thorough and sympathetic. I guess he used all his compassion on Armstrong though. I somewhat regularly read his sightings column, which is to say when I can stand it, so I'm not surprised he blows it on Ellington.which isn't too often.
― campreverb, Monday, 4 May 2015 14:46 (nine years ago) link
second place is still open tho
― 2-chords, a farfisa organ and peons to the lord (contenderizer), Saturday, 9 May 2015 22:08 (nine years ago) link
lol contenderizer
― Eric Burdon & War, On Drugs (Cosmic Slop), Sunday, 10 May 2015 02:15 (nine years ago) link
This one is so bad I'm providing it via donotlink. http://www.donotlink.com/framed?704999
― bae sremmurd (monotony), Wednesday, 13 May 2015 07:32 (nine years ago) link
not saying there's any edit of that which could make it worthwhile but it's a textbook 'pick out the most obnoxious sentence and make it the headline' dealie
― pull blart, maul cops (DJ Mencap), Wednesday, 13 May 2015 07:52 (nine years ago) link
have a go heroes
― Keith Moom (Neil S), Wednesday, 13 May 2015 08:29 (nine years ago) link
Famous Briton Dolores O'Riordan
― Just noise and screaming and no musical value at all. (Colonel Poo), Wednesday, 13 May 2015 12:40 (nine years ago) link
xpost to the meme that will not diehave a go and a smile
― “audience participation” otherwise known as “touching” (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 13 May 2015 13:25 (nine years ago) link
http://www.newrepublic.com/article/121794/other-peoples-playlists-spotifys-secret-social-networki have a real sore spot for "i typed in a phrase and look at all these big numbers" writing and the faux naif patina is grating
Keep going, listening to snippets of songs or speech. See what tugs at your ears. It’s one of the more satisfying ways I know to spend an hour. At the end you know something.
People lament the ascendance of pop culture. Just because Katy Perry is in charge doesn’t mean that Charles Ives is out in the cold. He has 57,643 listens for his 1906 composition “The Unanswered Question.” Honestly, I don’t care what people like, only who they were and what they thought. I want a way for people to mark their paths through all this sound, so that I might follow.
― “audience participation” otherwise known as “touching” (forksclovetofu), Monday, 18 May 2015 18:20 (nine years ago) link
I start with someone popular but a bit weird, like Peter Gabriel, and then I click on the “Related Artists” tab and up pops a set of similar musicians: Sting, Dire Straits, Roxy Music.
It makes me wonder, what the hell is wrong with my friends? One listens to too much classical; another is far too into electronica. There’s the music critic who loves her 1970s metal, the Depeche Mode-obsessive, and a host of other breeds of snob or miscreant.
There's also the clueless asshole his friends might think is a friend.
― Vic Perry, Monday, 18 May 2015 19:29 (nine years ago) link
"[Selena Gomez]'s music is produced via a complex industrial process involving engineers, songwriters, and coaches" -- gee, you don't say
― katherine, Monday, 18 May 2015 22:53 (nine years ago) link
I actually thought the piece was OK but "this pop music is so artificial, unlike every other form of music, but it's an earworm anyway :(" is the laziest trope of music writing by non-music writers
― katherine, Monday, 18 May 2015 22:57 (nine years ago) link
"At the end you know something."
This is so brilliant. Some kind of pure idiot savant green tea zen sloaneering.
― ©Oz Quiz© (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 18 May 2015 23:20 (nine years ago) link
Also that is possibly the weakest playlist ever. This whole article is like a robot trying to read tea leaves.
― ©Oz Quiz© (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 18 May 2015 23:25 (nine years ago) link
this is kind of great though-"Watching other people listen to music is too much like knowing their sexual proclivities: You start out curious and end up horrified."
― campreverb, Monday, 18 May 2015 23:28 (nine years ago) link
just a note, archive.today is a better way to not give websites traffic than donotlink, which only really affects a site's google pagerank, which isn't a thing as much as it was a few years back
― maura, Tuesday, 19 May 2015 01:03 (nine years ago) link
About that New Republic article:
-Since when is Blancmange "weird"? I can think of quicker ways to find obscure synth pop. Like typing it in.
-One can never listen to too much electronic music
― Freeland Avenue (I M Losted), Wednesday, 20 May 2015 22:15 (nine years ago) link
I have not read the piece yet but I'm going to put it here based on this subhead:
"Is it time for a disruptor to change what songs look and sound like?"
― katherine, Wednesday, 27 May 2015 01:27 (nine years ago) link
nope, not great at all
― katherine, Wednesday, 27 May 2015 01:34 (nine years ago) link
Lmaooooo
― Keith Mozart (D-40), Wednesday, 27 May 2015 02:06 (nine years ago) link
cuepoint just always wins this thread
― maura, Wednesday, 27 May 2015 02:32 (nine years ago) link
this only tenuously qualifies as music writing but it's enough to crowbar it into any thread with 'worst ever' in the title http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/news/uk-shops-that-sound-like-the-hottest-rappers-of-2015-10276462.html
― pull blart, maul cops (DJ Mencap), Wednesday, 27 May 2015 11:48 (nine years ago) link
hardly the worst of its problems, but there are two number sixes there.
― Keith Moom (Neil S), Wednesday, 27 May 2015 12:57 (nine years ago) link
For her "Butterfly" single and video, Mariah Carey intended to finally let go of all her inhibitions, insisting on rubbing her bare vagina all over the camera's lens. Eventually, the director fought for a reshoot, not out of fear of offending, but because the footage looked like "a giant squid attacking a sub." Mariah still forced her ideas into the single packaging, suggesting she squeeze the head of her kitten, Nipples, between her thighs. The art director note d they could achieve the same effect in graphics editing, but Mariah insisted on grounds of realism and "that look of pained resignation." Tommy Mottola wasn't havin' it, and sold the image to Lords of Acid.
http://pitchfork.com/features/staff-lists/6194-the-worst-record-covers-of-all-time/7/
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Thursday, 28 May 2015 17:24 (nine years ago) link
way to take Nantucket to task for their visual identity
― like a giraffe of nah (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 28 May 2015 17:47 (nine years ago) link
Terrible, unfunny article there. Goddamn.
Balls to the Wall posters prompted Deutschland dads to retool the focus of their "we need to talk" talks from satanism to sexuality, especially upon learning Accept's singer and guitarist, Udo Dirkschneider and Herman n Frank, translate loosely as "silicon buttplug" and "her lady penis."
Great work, guys!
― Jim Gillette's unused octave (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Thursday, 28 May 2015 21:40 (nine years ago) link
BTTW is a fantastic album cover on multiple levels
― pull blart, maul cops (DJ Mencap), Thursday, 28 May 2015 22:38 (nine years ago) link
As is Smackwater Jack,which I doubt they have ever seen a real copy of, since the point of the cover is that its got a weird shiny part and a matt part, sort of creating two images however you look at it. Plus, inside the gatefold is the funniest pic.
― everything, Thursday, 28 May 2015 23:32 (nine years ago) link
guys that is literally a ten year old story
― Keith Mozart (D-40), Thursday, 28 May 2015 23:44 (nine years ago) link
yea i was wondering who was gonna say it first lol
like how is it remotely trenchant/relevant to bring up a decade-old piece by a dude who was a punchline right out the gate (deservedly so, his writing sucks) but hasn't made so much as a peep as far as i know or care in any way that the average person would see...like om gosh pitchfork did dumb things then and now what a brave truth-to-power statement
― slothroprhymes, Friday, 29 May 2015 00:48 (nine years ago) link
*but hasn't made so much as a peep as far as i know or care in any way that the average person would see in like 5 years
― slothroprhymes, Friday, 29 May 2015 00:49 (nine years ago) link
On the other hand nothing wrong with visiting that Kid A review once in awhile.
― Evan, Friday, 29 May 2015 01:09 (nine years ago) link
given that this thread was started to clown an article in a zero budget British university newspaper I think that Pitchfork is also fair game
I know this is 'rolling terrible music writing thread' by any other name but most articles tend to only be written right after they're published and then never again so
― pull blart, maul cops (DJ Mencap), Friday, 29 May 2015 07:13 (nine years ago) link
I don't normally believe in "so bad it's good" but that Brent D's Kid A review is the exception that proves the rule. Every sentence is pure magic.
― DJP, Friday, 29 May 2015 15:10 (nine years ago) link
Haha omg I was seriously just reading the p4k worst albums cover thing like last weekend
― you can now get married in a church of bacon (Drugs A. Money), Saturday, 30 May 2015 05:26 (nine years ago) link
i can recite huge chunks of the kid a review from memory
― difficult listening hour, Saturday, 30 May 2015 05:34 (nine years ago) link
comparing this album to other albums is like comparing an aquarium to blue construction paper
something about witnessing the stillbirth of a baby while also watching it "play in the afterlife on imax"
― difficult listening hour, Saturday, 30 May 2015 05:35 (nine years ago) link
those first 3 covers are classic, what the hell
― brimstead, Saturday, 30 May 2015 05:35 (nine years ago) link
iirc it has a single lucid and effective metaphor ("kissing around a big nose"), like a flawed rug, xp
― difficult listening hour, Saturday, 30 May 2015 05:37 (nine years ago) link
Vice Exclusive: People should dance at dance partieshttps://thump.vice.com/en_us/article/if-you39re-facing-the-dj-you39re-getting-dance-music-wrong
Perhaps our attention spans are such now that we constantly need a focal point. It could be tied to our worrying inability to 'do nothing', without inevitably flicking our phones open. In a club setting, we are hard-wired to search for what we assume to be the central point of meaning in the room, rather than allowing the music (a more abstract sensory focal point) to possess us like a sexy demon.
Dancing doesn't have to be funny or embarrassing (unless, of course, you're one of those chiefs that starts doing the worm and the splits, like a town fair acrobat). Let's have a boogie, or at least do something more expressive than the mimicking of scraping dog shit from your shoes for three hours. Not to get all "good old days," but a glance at a video of the acid house era, or a story from Studio 54, will quickly illustrate the simple truth: we are getting it wrong. The time has come to take ownership of this epidemic, to accept that we're uncoordinated and uncool. The DJ isn't there to be stared at. They are there to be forgotten completely.
― like a giraffe of nah (forksclovetofu), Monday, 1 June 2015 20:18 (nine years ago) link
Madonna' - "Allow The Music (A More Abstract Sensory Focal Point) To Possess Us Like a Sexy Demon" [Let's Have a Boogie Remix]
― like a giraffe of nah (forksclovetofu), Monday, 1 June 2015 20:19 (nine years ago) link
In a club setting, we are hard-wired to search for what we assume to be the central point of meaning in the room, rather than allowing the music (a more abstract sensory focal point) to possess us like a sexy demon.
Either I stopped going out to clubs at the right time of my life or this is the dumbest, most inaccurate thing I've ever read
― DJP, Monday, 1 June 2015 20:30 (nine years ago) link
rather than allowing the music to possess us like a sexy demon
to think i was just considering having a new dn
― slothroprhymes, Monday, 1 June 2015 20:38 (nine years ago) link
xp what the fuck does "the central point of meaning in the room" mean? like the thing/person with the most potential for metaphor? lol
― rather than allowing the music to possess us like a sexy demon (slothroprhymes), Monday, 1 June 2015 20:39 (nine years ago) link
i also feel like a lotta fuckin club inhabitants (or ppl dancing in plain old bars) have very much accepted that they're uncoordinated and uncool or don't know it and think theyre the bees' drunken knees
― rather than allowing the music to possess us like a sexy demon (slothroprhymes), Monday, 1 June 2015 20:41 (nine years ago) link
people who who can't just dance and enjoy themselves without everyone else around them dancing are the worst
― DJP, Monday, 1 June 2015 20:46 (nine years ago) link
allowing a more abstract sensory focal point to possess us like a sexy demon
― example (crüt), Monday, 1 June 2015 20:49 (nine years ago) link
is that piece written by a NYer? Lots of people don't actually like dancing here that think they do
― Keith Mozart (D-40), Monday, 1 June 2015 21:14 (nine years ago) link
the really hilarious thing for me is that "the central point of meaning in the room" in a nightclub is the bar
― DJP, Monday, 1 June 2015 21:17 (nine years ago) link
Perhaps our attention spans are such now that we constantly need a focal point. It could be tied to our worrying inability to 'do nothing', without inevitably flicking our phones open.
this is p forced as society-is-in-the-guttering goes, seeing as people have been imploring the sentiment of this article since before mobile phones were at all ubiquitous
that said this doesn't seem especially awful to me
― pull blart, maul cops (DJ Mencap), Monday, 1 June 2015 21:39 (nine years ago) link
So crazy that people will pay to see a famous DJ and then want to watch them perform.
― ©Oz Quiz© (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 2 June 2015 00:19 (nine years ago) link
Let's have a boogie
sounds like a character talking in a '95-era Blur song.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 2 June 2015 00:25 (nine years ago) link
Sounds like a budget Status Quo best of
― Jim Gillette's unused octave (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Tuesday, 2 June 2015 00:49 (nine years ago) link
‘Shoegaze,’ was an industry in-joke. One that made Swervedriver’s career trajectory rather atypical. Cut by the hardy brambles of their peers, the belated Creation Records outlanders had to combat against the bias monopolisation of the early 90s UK music press. Performing in the shadows of Oxford’s recently reformed Ride, the band were vehemently paralleled to their era’s contemporaries. Yet their international success was prompt and brash. Their commerciality appealed instantly to the US; soused in the waves of Seattle grunge and scouting for the next Andy Bell. Yet Swervedriver were opposed to the niche they had been advertised as. Swervedriver were never the doyens of shoegaze but the British answer to America’s swell of alternative rock.
http://crackmagazine.net/article/music/swervedriver-scala/
― bizarro gazzara, Wednesday, 17 June 2015 15:24 (nine years ago) link
here he is!
http://static1.squarespace.com/static/52fc36d4e4b012d3648f10d5/t/53082d4de4b035db717077aa/1393044814075/137638-andy-bell-joe-was-not-prepared-for-x-factor-experience.jpg
― Keith Moom (Neil S), Wednesday, 17 June 2015 15:26 (nine years ago) link
What language was that Swervedriver piece originally written in?
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 17 June 2015 15:49 (nine years ago) link
Christ, this bloke could be some kind of genius
Swans end with Bring The Sun/Black Hole Man. The sound is immeasurable. You end up feeling different, like you’ve completed a dianetics conditioning session. There’s a sense of relief but also one that yearns to be back inside Swans’ cocoon. Every time you get the opportunity to see Swans, it’s like they pour salt in to your mind’s eye. Gira’s group are the controllers of chaos and still one of the only bands where the manic euphoria they inflict is truly authentic.
― 'come around to your house and fuck your ho' (paraphrase) (Bananaman Begins), Wednesday, 17 June 2015 15:54 (nine years ago) link
Technology has aided in shivving the rigid red tape of convention lassoed around live performances. This is all the more generative for electronic music. If the sounds that fall upon our ears are altogether alien, it is technology’s job to help us visualise in the mind’s eye what we hear. And as the synthesis of synth and sight propel themselves into the future, so too do the performances.
― 'come around to your house and fuck your ho' (paraphrase) (Bananaman Begins), Wednesday, 17 June 2015 15:56 (nine years ago) link
There are very few metal bands that permit themselves to shed the trite doldrums of despair. Weedeater’s image is dictated by the doom they wield, the beer they consume and the weed they smoke. Their gruesome attitude is without guise. Their mannerisms are wholly believable and consequently relatable. This is what makes their show so deafeningly gratifying. Tonight also showcases new material aiding in crystallising Weedeater’s imminent future releases. This group’s burgeoning bong riffing seems to have no intention of expiring.
― 'come around to your house and fuck your ho' (paraphrase) (Bananaman Begins), Wednesday, 17 June 2015 16:02 (nine years ago) link
'vehemently paralleled to their era’s contemporaries'
grrr, you are so similar to other similar bands!
― aaaaablnnn (abanana), Wednesday, 17 June 2015 17:38 (nine years ago) link
"the belated Creation Records outlanders had to combat against the bias monopolisation"
That's some Google Translate magic
― Continue your brooding monologue (Re-Make/Re-Model), Thursday, 18 June 2015 15:11 (nine years ago) link
it's kind of like a rockhacksmithery version of those FB macros about how the brain can still read words even when the letters are all jumbled. everything he's written makes sense but all the word choices are super odd
― there was a lot of beer and people doing sit ups, (laughs) (DJ Mencap), Thursday, 18 June 2015 15:57 (nine years ago) link
why do so many people want to be music writers?
― lil dork (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 18 June 2015 15:58 (nine years ago) link
deep desire to be loved, receive free links to 128k advance mp3s
― j., Thursday, 18 June 2015 16:01 (nine years ago) link
to get girls
― Οὖτις, Thursday, 18 June 2015 16:02 (nine years ago) link
are right about everything, need people to know this
― confessions of hellno (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 18 June 2015 16:44 (nine years ago) link
connect to albums by bands as if they are g.i. joe figures, want to play with them forever
― e-bouquet (mattresslessness), Thursday, 18 June 2015 16:48 (nine years ago) link
nv & matt otm
― imago, Thursday, 18 June 2015 18:08 (nine years ago) link
Free Swervedriver tix
― Continue your brooding monologue (Re-Make/Re-Model), Thursday, 18 June 2015 19:43 (nine years ago) link
Weedeater man those dudes are some scary fuckin rednecks they look like they'd knife you I think dude was drinking cough syrup onstage
― kurt kobaïan (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 19 June 2015 01:18 (nine years ago) link
The guy who wrote the Swervedriver review is a mine of pure gold.
On Swans: "Beneath faded spotlights, Thor Harris gently strokes a gong. His beating causes an almost erosive ambience. Minutes and minutes and minutes go by. The climate is still. Members of the group trickle in one at a time. Michael Gira arrives last. He reapplies fabric to his elbow as a cushion against the body of his guitar. The volume grows and voices are lost in the ramshackle."
He's versatile, too – he can be bad an all genres. Here is on JME: "Yet while JME preaches over the fruits of veganism and the toils of A&R depravity, there is a storming vocal aggression that uppercuts the purls of his production. Behind the computer console accreditations, the Nazir Mazhar citations and internet meme quotes is an unquenched ferocity fuelled by the desire to be self-sufficient in an unforgiving social climate."
And interviewing Dylan Carlson: “I joke I only had one good idea in my lifetime and have decided to run with it.” He laughs earnestly, winter winds bayonetting at his lungs as he relieves the catarrh from his throat. Carlson is currently travelling with his bandmates Adrienne Davies and Dom McGreevy to the north of England, a place he treasures for its folklore and sardonic humour. There’s this giddy movement to his delivery. “Obviously I’m as happy as pig in shit to be back in the UK,” he cracks another chesty cackle.
― Unsettled defender (ithappens), Friday, 19 June 2015 12:12 (nine years ago) link
his use of language really is unique, isn't it?
― bizarro gazzara, Friday, 19 June 2015 12:18 (nine years ago) link
Not totally unique; there's a jazz critic, Derek Taylor, who's almost as bad. It's thesaurus addiction - write a clear sentence, then pull the book out and pick the most obscure possible replacement for each word.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Friday, 19 June 2015 12:19 (nine years ago) link
it's not just replacing words, though, the structure is nutso too
― bizarro gazzara, Friday, 19 June 2015 12:24 (nine years ago) link
I don't know how you end up writing like that if English is your first language (or even second tbh). It's not bad like most of the writing on the thread is bad. It's truly bizarre.
― Continue your brooding monologue (Re-Make/Re-Model), Friday, 19 June 2015 12:31 (nine years ago) link
"he cracks another chesty cackle" -- are we sure he's not just randomly quoting Finnegans Wake?
― something totally new, it’s the AOR of the twenty first century (tipsy mothra), Friday, 19 June 2015 12:58 (nine years ago) link
OH fuck
I think I met this guy's roommate at a Weyes Blood gig on Tuesday, he had to use my phone to access Facebook and his contact was called Tom Watson. I asked whether the MP or the golfer. It transpired to be someone yet greater
― imago, Friday, 19 June 2015 13:05 (nine years ago) link
I mean, now that there's an orotund London critic game, it's time to convect those stakes upon a rising thermal blast of soliloquy
― imago, Friday, 19 June 2015 13:07 (nine years ago) link
Tom Watson @onetongue Jan 8Twelve dead journalists amounts to a populace of thought and satire destroyed. Their pens are the mightiest weapons forged. Very sad.
― imago, Friday, 19 June 2015 13:10 (nine years ago) link
Skepta’s emotional strong-arming gives off an intensely thick-skinned impression.
― 'come around to your house and fuck your ho' (paraphrase) (Bananaman Begins), Friday, 19 June 2015 13:46 (nine years ago) link
This virtual revelation from Skepta caused a potent reaction last year when That’s Not Me came at loggerheads with commercial audiences, heralding a so-called return to form for grime.
― 'come around to your house and fuck your ho' (paraphrase) (Bananaman Begins), Friday, 19 June 2015 13:47 (nine years ago) link
If Jane Austen wrote about grime
― boat of boats (dog latin), Friday, 19 June 2015 14:04 (nine years ago) link
That must be the first use of the word "catarrh" since 1940.
― geoffreyess, Saturday, 20 June 2015 02:40 (nine years ago) link
http://www.mediafire.com/view/scu1gnym05a8xc9/1930019_509053615505_5042_n.jpg
― geoffreyess, Saturday, 20 June 2015 02:51 (nine years ago) link
Beneath faded spotlights, Thor Harris gently strokes a dong. His beating causes an almost erosive ambience. Minutes and minutes and minutes go by. The climate is still.
― example (crüt), Saturday, 20 June 2015 02:53 (nine years ago) link
"he cracks another chesty cackle"
totally my stripper name...
― scott seward, Saturday, 20 June 2015 03:04 (nine years ago) link
I interviewed Dylan Carlson last year and he didn't sound at all phlegmy to me.
― wronger than 100 geir posts (MacDara), Saturday, 20 June 2015 15:45 (nine years ago) link
It was a revolution of the solar cycle ago when Dylan Carlson and this writer exchanged passionate thrusts of verbosity. No rheumy eruptions could be detected from where I resided, like all hominid creation, in a prison of flesh.
― hardcore dilettante, Saturday, 20 June 2015 17:58 (nine years ago) link
Think he's nailed Fucked Up here. Nothing else need be written about them.
Despite his premature death clock ticking, Abraham and his band of matured Lost Boys are forever scrutinising their ageing subculture. Unlike 2011’s flagrantly ceremonious rock-opera David Comes to Life, their newly released Glass Boys is a disciplined ten-track study of combating age and the music industry. It’s a record of genuine purity, stripped of its predecessor’s conceptual guises. “This record is like all of us giving the best version of what we’ve ever done,” Abraham raves doubtlessly.
― Unsettled defender (ithappens), Sunday, 21 June 2015 19:28 (nine years ago) link
Flagrantly ceremonious! Premature death clock ticking!Matured lost boys!Genuine purity!
They read like bad Titus Andronicus lyrics.
shades of eye of argon
― difficult listening hour, Monday, 22 June 2015 06:46 (nine years ago) link
"Abraham raves doubtlessly"
I'm glad the AI that wrote the fake newspaper articles in Sim City 2000 is still around and has moved on to music criticism, really missed that guy
― undergraduate dance (a passing spacecadet), Monday, 22 June 2015 09:08 (nine years ago) link
in fact, thank you stranger for my new display name
― Abraham raves doubtlessly (a passing spacecadet), Monday, 22 June 2015 09:09 (nine years ago) link
Dammit, you beat me to it
― Continue your brooding monologue (Re-Make/Re-Model), Monday, 22 June 2015 09:14 (nine years ago) link
Monday morning treat for the real headz:
http://thequietus.com/users/7759
http://thequietus.com/articles/10111-quicksand-slip-reissue-review
Hardcore’s Youth Crews were suffering from a spot of biological decline and required something slightly decelerated to get angry to. Amongst punk’s wilting complacency and Seattle’s slow-broiling illegitimacy, missing links began to occur. Bands had too many influences and not enough coherent fluidity between them.
― 2011’s flagrantly ceremonious rock-opera (Bananaman Begins), Monday, 22 June 2015 10:06 (nine years ago) link
"It was 1993 - one year before Kurt Cobain swallowed a mouthful of Remington."
The new Jim Thompson is born.
― Unsettled defender (ithappens), Monday, 22 June 2015 11:07 (nine years ago) link
a mouthful of remington? http://files1.coloribus.com/files/adsarchive/part_27/279655/shaver-remington-shaver-w-doug-flutie-and-victor-kiam-1989-600-13296.jpg
― appropriation and whatnot (stevie), Monday, 22 June 2015 11:19 (nine years ago) link
I changed my coherent fluidity this morning.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 22 June 2015 11:20 (nine years ago) link
(have sneaking suspicion i am guilty of a number of this guy's sins myself tbh)
― appropriation and whatnot (stevie), Monday, 22 June 2015 11:20 (nine years ago) link
hey fashioned abrasive intelligence, enmeshed with instrumental chaos. It was absolute pandemonium. Yet all the mess and disharmony seemed professionally maintained. The irrefutable severity of tracks like 'Head To Wall' and 'Lie And Wait', elevate beyond anarchy. As snares penetrate incessant hi-hat slaps, sludgy riffs travel like aggressive circle pits. They permeate an authentic dissonance, accentuated by Shreifels’s husked, tonal wails.
Stop. Using. Words.
― Continue your brooding monologue (Re-Make/Re-Model), Monday, 22 June 2015 12:01 (nine years ago) link
"The soulful whines of John Legend".
Dorian, I'm spiking your Nina Simone piece and getting Tom Watson to rewrite it.
― Unsettled defender (ithappens), Monday, 22 June 2015 12:30 (nine years ago) link
why would you capitalize "Youth Crews"? like they were the Whig Party or something. maybe the capital Y is okay. it's a sub-genre...but even those don't get capitalized...hmmm....
― scott seward, Monday, 22 June 2015 14:54 (nine years ago) link
grammar rules not my strong suit...
― scott seward, Monday, 22 June 2015 14:55 (nine years ago) link
Dictionary.com has never heard of the word "consilient."
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Monday, 22 June 2015 14:57 (nine years ago) link
this is a certain kind of earnest solipsistic dude writing: the boy who thinks he can build style while retaining his authenticity by using a thesaurus, rather than reading good prose written by other humans....
― Swag Heathen (theStalePrince), Monday, 22 June 2015 15:14 (nine years ago) link
http://www.cine-vue.com/search/label/Tom%20Watson?max-results=30
During the making of Metropolis (1927) Germany was caught in a tundra of political restructure and cinematic prosperity. Beneath the cindered waste cast aside by the First World War was a fatherland set for reform by the Weimar Republic and a film industry set to take the world stage. The so-called 'ethic of change' was in the air and the country's cultural isolation was dwindling. With the realities of war being all too real, the Expressionist movement was en vogue and German auteurs were at the forefront of an artistic uprising. The likes of Robert Weine and Fritz Lang were paving a macabre, fantastical path that would reshape the forms of storytelling. Deep in metaphor, heaped in rhetoric.
― 2011’s flagrantly ceremonious rock-opera (Bananaman Begins), Monday, 22 June 2015 16:27 (nine years ago) link
It's fortune telling and chaos as death that riddles Wiene's fantastical landscape. At the time, Caligari was said to have unsettled its audiences. Critics applauded its ability to "squeeze and turn and adjust the eye". It was also said to be a criterion for the slowly emerging intentions of Nazism. This is by and large a warped overstatement of a film that was impossible not to influence generations of artists, thinkers and, ultimately governing societies. Wiene's film was an inspiring footnote to the ever-increasing ascendancy of twenties Dada and Surrealism.
― 2011’s flagrantly ceremonious rock-opera (Bananaman Begins), Monday, 22 June 2015 16:29 (nine years ago) link
Approximately a year ago today, a swarm of antipathy left London in a choke-hold as a series of riots engulfed the capital. What began as a peaceful protest against police brutality mutated into a beast more brutal than anyone could have envisaged. Described as 'copycat violence' by the media, thousands upon thousands took to the streets in a tirade of hateful ignorance. And from this ignorance stemmed an easy target - youth culture. Thankfully, Tarun Thind's 2010 assured short English aims to bring vital balance to the debate.
― 2011’s flagrantly ceremonious rock-opera (Bananaman Begins), Monday, 22 June 2015 16:31 (nine years ago) link
his writing is a tundra of magisterial clichés and fantastical imagery, a swarm of antipathetic words embracing the reader in a choke-hold of helpless delight
― drash, Monday, 22 June 2015 17:10 (nine years ago) link
Approximately a year ago today, a swarm of antipathy left London in a choke-hold
pfah, they shoulda took the train
― something totally new, it’s the AOR of the twenty first century (tipsy mothra), Monday, 22 June 2015 18:27 (nine years ago) link
"As snares penetrate incessant hi-hat slaps, sludgy riffs travel like aggressive circle pits. They permeate an authentic dissonance, accentuated by Shreifels’s husked, tonal wails."
Nothing beats that feeling when your authentic dissonance gets fully permeated by.... I have no idea...snares maybe? Sludgy riffs? what is a husked wail, let alone a husked tonal wail?
― Fatalist AmandaPalmistry (irrational), Monday, 22 June 2015 21:29 (nine years ago) link
"The Shreifel's Husked Tonal Whale, a rarity in these sludgy riffs, permeates the authentic dissonance only to be attacked by a roaming gang of aggressive Circlepits, whose snares penetrate the beast's incessant hi-hat slaps."
― like a giraffe of nah (forksclovetofu), Monday, 22 June 2015 21:36 (nine years ago) link
That reads better tbh
― Fatalist AmandaPalmistry (irrational), Monday, 22 June 2015 21:47 (nine years ago) link
I have a BS in copy
― like a giraffe of nah (forksclovetofu), Monday, 22 June 2015 22:19 (nine years ago) link
'Permeate', tbh, has needed a couple decades in the penalty box for... at least a couple decades
― demonic mnevice (Jon Lewis), Monday, 22 June 2015 23:50 (nine years ago) link
I'm getting this needlepointed.
― wronger than 100 geir posts (MacDara), Tuesday, 23 June 2015 11:54 (nine years ago) link
Dylan Carlson and this writer exchanged passionate thrusts of verbosity.
can believe this
― 2011’s flagrantly ceremonious rock-opera (Bananaman Begins), Tuesday, 23 June 2015 11:56 (nine years ago) link
Is everyone taking Tom Watson inspired user names now?
― Flagrantly ceremonious whines of John Legend (ithappens), Tuesday, 23 June 2015 12:20 (nine years ago) link
Just changed mine again so we don't get too many people being flagrantly ceremonious.
― Roaming gang of aggressive circlepits (ithappens), Tuesday, 23 June 2015 12:21 (nine years ago) link
how do we go about inviting tom watson to ilm btw
― bizarro gazzara, Tuesday, 23 June 2015 12:24 (nine years ago) link
"Swarm of Antipathy" sounds like a Suffocation song (or album title).
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 23 June 2015 12:35 (nine years ago) link
speaking of antipathy
http://www.vox.com/2015/6/25/8840233/art-metal
― j., Thursday, 25 June 2015 13:54 (nine years ago) link
"what value is there in saying that I like Rihanna and Tegan and Sara? Everybody likes Rihanna and Tegan and Sara."
― Badmotorfinger Debate Club (MFB), Friday, 26 June 2015 04:04 (nine years ago) link
that's the kind of thing that makes me want to stop talking about music in any medium in case there's even a sliver of a chance I come off like that
from what I understand of this dude though that isn't the kind of emotion he wrestles with right
― there was a lot of beer and people doing sit ups, (laughs) (DJ Mencap), Friday, 26 June 2015 09:04 (nine years ago) link
I thought that piece was overall quite good. Are you saying that one part ruined the whole thing for you?
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Friday, 26 June 2015 10:24 (nine years ago) link
are any of those bands particularly arty? they're all pretty accessible through the medium of weed.
deboer way too self-impressed shocker
― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Friday, 26 June 2015 10:34 (nine years ago) link
Think about the audience, though. This piece is on Vox - therefore it's aimed at, and being read by, half-aspie Poli Sci nerds who think listening to Sleater-Kinney means they're still hardcore, even though they spend all day fellating members of Congress in print. Introducing those people to metal is tough work, and even though to the half-aspie music nerds of ILM all these bands are gonna be the usual suspects and last decade's news, there are still plenty of people who've never heard them. Also, I like this part; it's a sentiment that needs emphasizing more often:
"If you don’t like it, you don’t like it. This is music, not church. 'It’s not for me' is one of the most freeing, most useful statements you can make."
Honestly, it's not perfect or anything, the High On Fire blurb in particular is kinda lazy (though I like the fact that he rides for Snakes for the Divine, 'cause I like that album a lot too - a clean production job really benefited them). But overall, the writing is much better - in terms of quality of prose, clarity of thinking, and absence of glaring spelling errors and grammatical fuck-ups - than 90 percent of Pitchfork, never mind the shit that usually lands in this thread. And frankly, that Tom Watson guy has set way too fucking high a bar for someone who can come up with something as funny as "The last time I tried to play a Sunn 0))) album I caught my dog writing a suicide note" to clear.
Based on this evidence, I would much rather read DeBoer on music than on politics.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Friday, 26 June 2015 12:14 (nine years ago) link
the thought is sophomoric
― j., Friday, 26 June 2015 14:38 (nine years ago) link
half-aspie Poli Sci nerds who think listening to Sleater-Kinney means they're still hardcore
yawn at ever thinking of an audience in this way
― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Friday, 26 June 2015 14:39 (nine years ago) link
yeah I mean doing a piece like this with a plan to appeal to your hypothetical audience's worst hypothetical nature just seems sad and self-defeating
― there was a lot of beer and people doing sit ups, (laughs) (DJ Mencap), Friday, 26 June 2015 16:09 (nine years ago) link
point ...................................................... you
― for sale: baby shoes, never worn your ass (katherine), Friday, 26 June 2015 16:49 (nine years ago) link
^ permeating slow-broiling illegitimacy imo
― 2011’s flagrantly ceremonious rock-opera (Bananaman Begins), Friday, 26 June 2015 17:10 (nine years ago) link
If Tom Watson never makes it here I could try to post more like him, if you like
― rahrah avis (imago), Friday, 26 June 2015 17:33 (nine years ago) link
should I have any idea what that means
― for sale: baby shoes, never worn your ass (katherine), Friday, 26 June 2015 17:56 (nine years ago) link
lmao freddie deboer's debut dive into the DC media spawning tank and it's THIS
i can't type lololololololol enough
― goole, Friday, 26 June 2015 18:53 (nine years ago) link
Man "half-aspie" is gross & mean
― kurt kobaïan (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 3 July 2015 22:31 (nine years ago) link
are you surprised
― for sale: baby shoes, never worn your ass (katherine), Friday, 3 July 2015 22:32 (nine years ago) link
a 9/10 review of a deserving album but horrifying on pretty much every other level:http://www.spin.com/2015/06/review-vince-staples-summertime-06/
― some dude, Monday, 6 July 2015 00:16 (nine years ago) link
writer seems like a real charmer toohttp://defamer.gawker.com/read-the-insanely-weird-emails-this-music-journalist-se-1413243759
that kind of nonsense is what ILX sometimes sounds like at its worst
― like a giraffe of nah (forksclovetofu), Monday, 6 July 2015 00:19 (nine years ago) link
i agree, he does kind of write like ljagger
― some dude, Monday, 6 July 2015 00:22 (nine years ago) link
to borrow a phrase of WC’s
― j., Monday, 6 July 2015 00:31 (nine years ago) link
that writing is so early 2000s, it's kind of adorable in its just-outta-undergrad righteousness.
― A Smedley Adoption (get bent), Monday, 6 July 2015 06:56 (nine years ago) link
that whole "i just blew your mind, can you even stand it???1!!!" tone.
i mean i think people do still write "i'm blowing your mind" pieces (hot takes ahoy), but now they're couched in concern-troll language instead of openly oozing spite.
― A Smedley Adoption (get bent), Monday, 6 July 2015 07:09 (nine years ago) link
So ILM is still doing "aspie" in 2015, huh? Maybe we can bring back "cripple" and "spastic" if we work real hard.
― I might like you better if we Yelped together (Phil D.), Monday, 6 July 2015 14:34 (nine years ago) link
Is there, like, a non-ableist word we can use for "aspie"/"autist" that describes when someone attention to detail and weird obsessions move from being cute/passionate to being a little... unhealthy?
― lil dork (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 6 July 2015 14:47 (nine years ago) link
Because I would don't want to surrender my right to make fun of posts like this
lol they put pierce after poehler alphabetically― da croupier, Tuesday, January 27, 2015 7:32 PM (5 months ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalinki was kinda hoping P-Z would be totally out of order after that, which would be a wainish bit of random humor, but no― da croupier, Tuesday, January 27, 2015 7:34 PM (5 months ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― da croupier, Tuesday, January 27, 2015 7:32 PM (5 months ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
i was kinda hoping P-Z would be totally out of order after that, which would be a wainish bit of random humor, but no
― da croupier, Tuesday, January 27, 2015 7:34 PM (5 months ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― lil dork (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 6 July 2015 14:48 (nine years ago) link
Editor’s note: It has been brought to SPIN’s attention that this review, published last week, includes factual inaccuracies about Staples (such as an implication about drug use) and language that has been interpreted as stereotypical or racially insensitive. We regret these oversights during the editing process, take full responsibility for the error in judgment, and apologize to anyone who was offended.
― curmudgeon, Monday, 6 July 2015 14:58 (nine years ago) link
^ forgot to also apologise for the burdensome writing, protracted metaphors and doleful point-making, but at least it's a start eh?
― cod latin (dog latin), Monday, 6 July 2015 15:10 (nine years ago) link
"It has been brought to SPIN’s attention" jfc
― ♛ LIL UNIT ♛ (thomp), Monday, 6 July 2015 15:26 (nine years ago) link
given that the issue likely had much to do with it being rushed into publication without an editor or subeditor looking it at properly, that seems like a fair and candid choice of words
― and she's baconing like she's never baconed before (DJ Mencap), Monday, 6 July 2015 15:41 (nine years ago) link
https://twitter.com/kissoutthejams/status/606094147448143872
― lil dork (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 6 July 2015 15:43 (nine years ago) link
so the editorial oversight is no one on earth looked at it before hitting publish
― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Monday, 6 July 2015 15:45 (nine years ago) link
editorial is "over" putting their "sight" on what they publish
― lil dork (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 6 July 2015 15:45 (nine years ago) link
as sympathetic as I am to editors/copy editors not getting work, I think the more likely scenario is that an editor looked at it and didn't see a thing wrong
― for sale: baby shoes, never worn your ass (katherine), Monday, 6 July 2015 16:17 (nine years ago) link
oh definitely
― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Monday, 6 July 2015 16:22 (nine years ago) link
(for the record, when I wrote for spin the line edits I got back were quite good; different editor though)
― for sale: baby shoes, never worn your ass (katherine), Monday, 6 July 2015 16:24 (nine years ago) link
― goole, Friday, June 26, 2015 1:53 PM (1 week ago
rly starting to hate this dude
― j., Wednesday, 8 July 2015 03:13 (nine years ago) link
are you on twitter j? his last honest working class metalhead scold act was in fine form today
― goole, Wednesday, 8 July 2015 04:04 (nine years ago) link
yes that is why the hate can't be left in peace to die naturally
― j., Wednesday, 8 July 2015 04:14 (nine years ago) link
This is a breakup record on a number of levels—the most obvious one being the dissolution of a romantic relationship, but also a split with the guitar as a primary instrument of expression and even the end of the notion that Tame Impala is anything besides Kevin Parker and a touring band of hired guns.
― The Bends by Radiohead (imago), Tuesday, 14 July 2015 14:45 (nine years ago) link
But he’s also somehow the best and most underrated rock bassist of the 21st century, and it’s not even close on either front.
― The Bends by Radiohead (imago), Tuesday, 14 July 2015 14:47 (nine years ago) link
has Ian Cohen always been this fucking idiot? come on ilx and defend yourself, man
The chorus ("I'm a man, woman/ Don't always think before I do") finds him in league with Father John Misty's I Love You, Honeybear and My Morning Jacket's The Waterfall, taking an unsparing and often unflattering look at masculinity and romance, examining what qualifies as biological instinct and what qualifies as mere rationalization for wanting to fuck around and/or be left alone.
― The Bends by Radiohead (imago), Tuesday, 14 July 2015 14:49 (nine years ago) link
pitchfork will always ride for abysmal sensitive-man-holding-dick privileged nonsense fucking indulgent shit smeared all over our willing faces like this & latterday sun kil moon, they will never change, it's final, let's stop paying them or their idiot music any attention
― The Bends by Radiohead (imago), Tuesday, 14 July 2015 14:50 (nine years ago) link
an unsparing and often unflattering look at masculinity and romancean unsparing and often unflattering look at masculinity and romancean unsparing and often unflattering look at masculinity and romancean unsparing and often unflattering look at masculinity and romancean unsparing and often unflattering look at masculinity and romance
― The Bends by Radiohead (imago), Tuesday, 14 July 2015 14:51 (nine years ago) link
― The Bends by Radiohead (imago), Tuesday, July 14, 2015 10:50 AM (15 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
You know, the hot opinion on /mu/ right now (though I don't know how sincere it is) is that p4k only covers and supports black artists anymore
― lil dork (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 14 July 2015 15:08 (nine years ago) link
― The Bends by Radiohead (imago), Tuesday, July 14, 2015 10:47 AM (22 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
basically yes
― slothroprhymes, Tuesday, 14 July 2015 15:11 (nine years ago) link
A New Music and a New Criticism: Dissent in the Age of the Internet
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Friday, 17 July 2015 14:03 (nine years ago) link
Scientists say that punk was not ‘a revolution’ in music, and much as I admire science for its ceaseless exploration of the boundaries of understanding, in this case scientists have got it wrong
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 17 July 2015 14:11 (nine years ago) link
finally a thinkpiece about punk
― This is for my new ringpiece, so please only serious answers (Noodle Vague), Friday, 17 July 2015 14:12 (nine years ago) link
with all due respect, science
― j., Friday, 17 July 2015 14:14 (nine years ago) link
a sentence worthy of David Brooks.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 17 July 2015 14:15 (nine years ago) link
i beg to differ, science
― j., Friday, 17 July 2015 14:15 (nine years ago) link
Guys. Remember the legendary 'was the drummer for Gay Dad' essay?
Per Mike Daddino on Twitter, turns out the author of this piece was the bassist for Bloc Party.
NOT KIDDING.
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 17 July 2015 15:28 (nine years ago) link
if there's a rock'n'roll thinkpiece heaven, they must have an ok band
― Most Scientifically Beautiful Face (President Keyes), Friday, 17 July 2015 15:34 (nine years ago) link
LOL i want to see that lab w scientists in lab coats handling The Ramones first album.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 17 July 2015 16:16 (nine years ago) link
https://hollywoodrevue.files.wordpress.com/2013/02/rock-and-roll-mouse.png
― Immediate Follower (NA), Friday, 17 July 2015 17:07 (nine years ago) link
What is that from? It looks familiar.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 17 July 2015 18:06 (nine years ago) link
rock n roll high school
― Οὖτις, Friday, 17 July 2015 18:26 (nine years ago) link
Freshman profundity. Something tells me we're going to see a lot more Cuepoint in this thread from now on.
― Adam J Duncan, Saturday, 18 July 2015 02:07 (nine years ago) link
http://whyideletedyourpromoemail.tumblr.com/
pretty lolzy
― davey, Thursday, 23 July 2015 19:39 (nine years ago) link
^not as good as ned's fbook feed
― D-30 (gr8080), Thursday, 23 July 2015 20:54 (nine years ago) link
i thought ned was just moonlighting
― j., Thursday, 23 July 2015 20:57 (nine years ago) link
After we broke up, I started record- ing new songs on my own. Filtering them through Crass, the Oblivians, and classic guitar riff-rock like Ted Nugent’s ‘Cat Scratch Fever’ and Foreigner’s ‘Juke Box Hero,’ they took on a similar feel to what I was after.
based on that description I'd prolly give this a shot
― Hector Ringtone (DJ Mencap), Thursday, 23 July 2015 21:27 (nine years ago) link
It's the one coherent bit in the whole feed. (And no, not my tumblr -- but it IS a friend of an ILXor.)
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 23 July 2015 22:14 (nine years ago) link
http://www.vulture.com/2015/07/all-74-led-zeppelin-songs-ranked.html
i no doubt committed some of the same sins as a callow young rockwriter but holy shit, this just may be the worst piece of music writing ever. led zep song by song with more ad hominem attacks, sneering self-righteous moral judgements, cloth-eared musical analysis, wooden prose, unsupported assertions and just plain rong opinions. sure "counterintuitive" arguments are a big part of the clickbait strategy these days but a lot of this just feels contrary and calculated. written like a stunted clone of christgau & derogatis. ugh.
― got the club going UP on a tuesday (m coleman), Thursday, 30 July 2015 20:53 (nine years ago) link
Looks like the Stones get off tour and dude has too much time on his hands
― dick wet with chickenshit (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 30 July 2015 20:54 (nine years ago) link
Off topic slightly, but "Hots On For Nowhere" (#72 out of 74) is one of the few Led Zeppelin songs I actively like. Meanwhile, "Hot Dog" is #28. Was this randomly generated?
― mike a, Thursday, 30 July 2015 21:24 (nine years ago) link
uh, as I'm sure that both Whiney and MC know, that guy has been around forever and does seem to be possessed of particular variety of midwestern, Dero-reminiscent smug jackassery, but he hacks it out more baldfaced-ly than dero. It takes a lot for me to side with albini, who reps a a lot of midwestern quasi-puritanism himself, but his putdown of Wyman was really funny.
whiney: do you like Jidenna "Classic Man"? do you like "whip/nae nae""?
― veronica moser, Thursday, 30 July 2015 22:09 (nine years ago) link
on first glance I didn't think the Zep list was that terrible other than the remarks about Bonham (who cares) and Plant's lyrics (deserved but who cares).
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 30 July 2015 22:13 (nine years ago) link
Love "Classic Man"
Whip/Nae Nae just seems like kind of a formless jumble of existing dances. Weirdly generic compared to even like "Chicken Noodle Soup"
― dick wet with chickenshit (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 30 July 2015 22:41 (nine years ago) link
Do the keyword, do the hashtag
now drop and do the google trend
― dick wet with chickenshit (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 30 July 2015 23:04 (nine years ago) link
i love watch me! it's a fun dumb song and it's perfectly calibrated and a good throwback to mashed potato / shangalang / camelwalk type shout-em-out-and-do-em songs.i predict a long and fruitful career for the singer j/k that is the most one hit wonder i have ever heard
― let's not get too excited w/ the ouches (forksclovetofu), Friday, 31 July 2015 02:07 (nine years ago) link
eh i took the bait on the zep thing. it happens. otherwise we're cool for the summer.
― got the club going UP on a tuesday (m coleman), Friday, 31 July 2015 11:29 (nine years ago) link
This SPIN "cover story" is really something else:
http://www.spin.com/featured/vince-staples-summertime-06-interview-cover-story/
― dick wet with chickenshit (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 31 July 2015 15:15 (nine years ago) link
dog bites man girlfriend
― bizarro gazzara, Friday, 31 July 2015 15:18 (nine years ago) link
I keep getting up from the table to call my girlfriend, who is, understandably, pissed at the dog for biting her, and pissed at me for not being with her. Staples, who is in person as genial as he is pragmatic and frank on record, offers to reschedule. He gets it. “Dogs try you, bro,” Staples offers. “Maybe your dog had a bad day.”
Lydia Davis level
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 31 July 2015 15:26 (nine years ago) link
nu-SPIN has this weird SJW slant in everything they cover (ie, the quasi-paedo pandering in teenpop writing, calling out Shamir for fat-shaming) but then is like totally tone-deaf when it comes to running racist reviews by stalkers or this "can't my girlfriend respect that a man is working" rant
― dick wet with chickenshit (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 31 July 2015 15:28 (nine years ago) link
no way i'm progressing beyond that byline
― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Friday, 31 July 2015 15:28 (nine years ago) link
Gah, this is all your fault Klosterman.
It’s tempting to read too deep into this story, twist it into some hackneyed metaphor for how Staples sees no such thing as absolute good or absolute bad in the world. And from what I can tell, both from music and in conversation, he definitely does sort of believe those things. But he’s not trying to make a greater statement about the world here, he’s just trying to help me out. (Both the dog and my girlfriend are fine, by the way.)
― A swarm of antipathy (Re-Make/Re-Model), Friday, 31 July 2015 15:41 (nine years ago) link
that is a shall we say interesting way to put a hook on that interview
― let's not get too excited w/ the ouches (forksclovetofu), Friday, 31 July 2015 15:42 (nine years ago) link
finally a longread from the ryan schreiber of millenial rap writing
― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Friday, 31 July 2015 15:42 (nine years ago) link
Actually if you cut that pointless, alienating "cool story bro" first section the rest of the profile's OK.
― A swarm of antipathy (Re-Make/Re-Model), Friday, 31 July 2015 15:44 (nine years ago) link
Actually if you cut that pointless, alienating "cool story bro" first section the rest of the profile's OK.― A swarm of antipathy (Re-Make/Re-Model), Friday, July 31, 2015 11:44 AM (1 second ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― A swarm of antipathy (Re-Make/Re-Model), Friday, July 31, 2015 11:44 AM (1 second ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
When it’s time to order our food, Staples orders like a quarterback calling a play. “We’re going chicken sandwich, cole slaw on the side, right?” he begins. “And I want the mac and cheese served as the side. OK and also, we need two smoked beef links. Is there a type of bread we can get to go along with that? Let’s get a sandwich roll on the side. What is buttermilk pie? We’ll talk about that in a minute. It sounds live.”
― dick wet with chickenshit (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 31 July 2015 15:44 (nine years ago) link
summertime '14
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 31 July 2015 15:45 (nine years ago) link
we'll talk about that in a minute
― j., Friday, 31 July 2015 15:45 (nine years ago) link
He’s only 21, but to borrow a phrase from Mobb Deep’s Prodigy, his mind is old.
― dick wet with chickenshit (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 31 July 2015 15:46 (nine years ago) link
xp Why is that so terrible? It tells you something about how Staples talks and behaves. I don't love this guy's writing, I'm not going to print this piece out and frame it, but the intro's so noxious that I was pleasantly surprised to find the rest was solid.
This is when print can be better for you than online. The intro would have been cut for space reasons in a heartbeat. Editors who save you from yourself are also helpful.
― A swarm of antipathy (Re-Make/Re-Model), Friday, 31 July 2015 15:48 (nine years ago) link
OK, I'm dialling back that faint praise after reading "his body is a repository of small, inconsequential motions that add up to a flurry of activity."
― A swarm of antipathy (Re-Make/Re-Model), Friday, 31 July 2015 15:49 (nine years ago) link
yeesh
― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Friday, 31 July 2015 15:50 (nine years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N5EnGwXV_Pg
― dick wet with chickenshit (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 31 July 2015 15:50 (nine years ago) link
OK and also, we need two smoked beef links. Is there a type of bread we can get to go along with that? Let’s get a sandwich roll on the side.
paging vince staples to the 'a hot dog is' thread, sounds like he may have some valuable points to make
― bizarro gazzara, Friday, 31 July 2015 15:51 (nine years ago) link
America’s the cause. Vince Staples is the effect.
Huh?
― geoffreyess, Friday, 31 July 2015 15:56 (nine years ago) link
that wyman zep thing is so random and funny
― da croupier, Friday, 31 July 2015 19:21 (nine years ago) link
why the hell did vulture belch out some old school rolling stone dude going "BAH!" 74 times
i hope they have him do another for sabbath: the ozzy years
― da croupier, Friday, 31 July 2015 19:22 (nine years ago) link
Spin Lolla recap:
But if there was ever a valid reason to cram by an outdoor stage and stand shoulder-to-shoulder with a crowd of thousands (each enjoying various shades of sobriety), then it would be to watch an original Beatle sing “Blackbird” and “Hey Jude.”
An original Beatle.
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 1 August 2015 19:05 (nine years ago) link
none of these new-fangled Beatles for me, thank you
― let's not get too excited w/ the ouches (forksclovetofu), Saturday, 1 August 2015 20:30 (nine years ago) link
eh, caveman was alright
― balls, Saturday, 1 August 2015 21:42 (nine years ago) link
caveman singing in the dead of night
― a poetic ODE to FORNICATION (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Sunday, 2 August 2015 00:16 (nine years ago) link
The art of the cover version is as much about re-animation as it is performance, raising the temperature of a stark original to an incandescence that was always lurking at its heart bringing dead songs back to life, which is certainly true of The Velvet Underground's 'Ride Into The Sun' and Brian Eno's 'Here Come The Warm Jets'. A low key invocation of the former blossoms into belligerent rock roar. Whispering, halting vocals dream and distil the music bays and protests in full fury, with a fierce rhino-hide guitar solo at its core. Wah wah pedal delirium and a brisk pace customise Eno's original into a repository of exposition and extension, pushing out the parameters into a hulking mass of guitar-oriented glory with an iron-hard carapace.
http://thequietus.com/articles/18286-bardo-pond-record-store-day-trilogy-review
― sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Tuesday, 4 August 2015 10:37 (nine years ago) link
a first-time effort surely
― j., Tuesday, 4 August 2015 13:27 (nine years ago) link
OK, the idea that cover versions of VU or Eno's tracks bring 'dead songs back to life' seems pretty misguided, but that's not the worst piece of music writing ever.
― MikoMcha, Tuesday, 4 August 2015 15:52 (nine years ago) link
it's very overwritten but its point is clear enough I think
if ppl want to treat this thread as 'rolling music writing which annoyed me for one reason or another' however then so be it
― Hector Ringtone (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 4 August 2015 16:24 (nine years ago) link
it wouldn't even be the worst piece of music writing today https://archive.is/ZkPs3
― for sale: baby shoes, never worn your ass (katherine), Tuesday, 4 August 2015 16:29 (nine years ago) link
that deserves to be itt, everything about it is bad
― Hector Ringtone (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 4 August 2015 17:01 (nine years ago) link
This dude is three years younger than me, but that's apparantly enough distance to where you would use the phrase "the elusive manic pixie dream girl type" without any self-awareness
― dick wet with chickenshit (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 4 August 2015 17:02 (nine years ago) link
i'm not gonna read all these, did any of the writers seal the deal?: http://noisey.vice.com/columns/first-dates
― dick wet with chickenshit (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 4 August 2015 17:04 (nine years ago) link
illusion never changed into something real
― welltris (crüt), Tuesday, 4 August 2015 17:09 (nine years ago) link
i guess the headline would change if someone found out that mac demarco was a patient, sensuous lover
― dick wet with chickenshit (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 4 August 2015 17:10 (nine years ago) link
30+ paragraphs by a self-professed "music writer," a (begrudging) half-sentence about his subject's music
― da croupier, Tuesday, 4 August 2015 17:10 (nine years ago) link
forget it, croup, it's noiseytown
― dick wet with chickenshit (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 4 August 2015 17:11 (nine years ago) link
so it looks like most of these are just frothy q&as, wonder why this time they decided to bless us with the writer's internal monologue. maybe they were worried readers would assume they thought of her as more than just a 18-year-old spankbank entry?
― da croupier, Tuesday, 4 August 2015 17:15 (nine years ago) link
because everyone can relate, man, we're all 18-to-34-year-old males
― for sale: baby shoes, never worn your ass (katherine), Tuesday, 4 August 2015 17:17 (nine years ago) link
https://simpsonswiki.com/w/images/thumb/d/d7/Nuts_and_Gum.png/250px-Nuts_and_Gum.png
― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Tuesday, 4 August 2015 17:18 (nine years ago) link
lol crut
― killfile with that .exe, you goon (wins), Tuesday, 4 August 2015 17:19 (nine years ago) link
Only 3 of those articles were written by men.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 4 August 2015 17:57 (nine years ago) link
yes and the rest are q&as, not first-person narratives, as i mentioned in the post the post you're quoting is referring to
― da croupier, Tuesday, 4 August 2015 17:58 (nine years ago) link
The title of the article is also I Went On A Date With Everyone's Crush, Natalie Imbruglia. compare that to I Went on a Date with My High School Crush: Taking Back Sunday's Adam Lazzara or simply A First Date With... Sky Ferreira
― da croupier, Tuesday, 4 August 2015 18:00 (nine years ago) link
though i wouldn't put it past noisey to follow this with a woman's hot'n'heavy I Tried To Fuck Brandon Boyd For All Of Us, though i bet incubus' music would get more than a half-sentence of acknowledgement in that
― da croupier, Tuesday, 4 August 2015 18:06 (nine years ago) link
god that Imbruglia thing is next-level worthless
― the naive cockney chorus (Simon H.), Tuesday, 4 August 2015 18:07 (nine years ago) link
jeeeeesus. those aren't just embarrassing, they're offensive
― let's not get too excited w/ the ouches (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 4 August 2015 18:10 (nine years ago) link
not if I had anything to do with it it wouldn't xxp
― Hector Ringtone (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 4 August 2015 18:14 (nine years ago) link
prove me wrong, dj mencap. prove me wrong.
― da croupier, Tuesday, 4 August 2015 18:17 (nine years ago) link
ugh. reading that made me want to put on more clothes
― difficult-difficult lemon-difficult (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 4 August 2015 21:04 (nine years ago) link
and lock my door
― A swarm of antipathy (Re-Make/Re-Model), Wednesday, 5 August 2015 00:08 (nine years ago) link
http://www.out.com/positive-voices/2015/8/06/was-80s-new-wave-casualty-aids
Not even close to the worst piece of music writing ever, but this feels like such a missed opportunity on such a fascinating topic. I really would like to read a more thorough piece of writing on this that didn't feel so underdeveloped and end with an oh no you didn't joke about fisting.
― The New Gay Sadness (cryptosicko), Sunday, 9 August 2015 02:19 (nine years ago) link
<3 mark simpson
― pop addicts should "do their thing", whatever that may be (soref), Sunday, 9 August 2015 08:45 (nine years ago) link
http://www.sandiegoreader.com/news/2015/aug/11/classical-one-text-message/#
"Debussy was the first composer up. His Danse sacree et danse profane is not Claire de lune or Prelude to the afternoon of a fawn. This is hard core impressionism and it’s not really easy listening even though there is a harp involved."
― rushomancy, Saturday, 15 August 2015 14:06 (nine years ago) link
I found the linernotes to the Quicksilver Messenger Service live at the Kabuki theatre pretty risible. The writer decided that the short form was QSM in the first sentence and seems to have kept it consistent throughout the rest of the text. I didn't read right through it since it's a writer I tend to find pretty naff anyway.
― Stevolende, Saturday, 15 August 2015 15:58 (nine years ago) link
*ctrl + f "high fidelity," finds nothing*
http://grantland.com/hollywood-prospectus/side-1-track-1-straight-outta-compton-and-the-best-first-songs-ever/
i dont necessarily hate steven hyden but it is like peak obliviousness to base an article around a 5-minute scene in a movie from 18 years ago - a scene ridiculing this sort of geekery - and not even credit it
― slothroprhymes, Tuesday, 18 August 2015 19:16 (nine years ago) link
He mentions "Championship Vinyl" at one point and links to the scene
― thom yorke state of mind (voodoo chili), Tuesday, 18 August 2015 21:11 (nine years ago) link
That said, it's a dumb article and whatever fun it would be is ruined by too many arbitrary rules
― thom yorke state of mind (voodoo chili), Tuesday, 18 August 2015 21:12 (nine years ago) link
Is it my limited understanding of English, or would Eazy 'cuckolding' someone's sister mean doing something Eazy would probably not do?
― Frederik B, Tuesday, 18 August 2015 21:32 (nine years ago) link
*facepalm* i don the idiot hat for missing the champ vinyl link xxp
remain irritated tho that all the non-rock inclusions read like, "uugggghhhhh i GUESS i'll put beyonce/young jeezy/daft punk in there" due to hyden's pedigree; i don't necessarily doubt that he listens to shit that isn't rock but i do think that left to his own devices he'd prob make a fairly homogenous list that was almost entirely boomer rock plus maybe some metal and 90s indie-slacker shit
― slothroprhymes, Tuesday, 18 August 2015 21:46 (nine years ago) link
what about the bitch that got shot, cuck her
― Now Dom Go Suggbanizer Way (Why?) (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 18 August 2015 22:14 (nine years ago) link
that reads like a fantasy football article and/or bill simmons 2.0
ie *shoots self in face*
― difficult-difficult lemon-difficult (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 18 August 2015 23:32 (nine years ago) link
lists lists lists ugh
The main problem I have with Hyden is that the Bill Simmons style just does not work when discussing music.
― thom yorke state of mind (voodoo chili), Wednesday, 19 August 2015 00:44 (nine years ago) link
exactly
― difficult-difficult lemon-difficult (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 19 August 2015 00:58 (nine years ago) link
Frederik … No. Not least because you can't cuckold a woman. You cuckold her husband. A cuckold is one whose wife has had sex with another man. Also, no particular practices are associated with cuckolding. It's just having sex.
― Roaming gang of aggressive circlepits (ithappens), Wednesday, 19 August 2015 08:50 (nine years ago) link
But he says that Eazy wants to cuckold the sister? So is she in a same sex relationship, would that work?
― Frederik B, Wednesday, 19 August 2015 09:54 (nine years ago) link
"The lyrics are about the tension of desire, but the mise en scene is power."
Ah yes, of course, the mise en scene of power... (???)
http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/20985-m3ll155x/
― MikoMcha, Wednesday, 19 August 2015 10:21 (nine years ago) link
Sorry, probably doesn't belong in the "worst" thread, but this still annoys me.
― MikoMcha, Wednesday, 19 August 2015 10:23 (nine years ago) link
You'll have to take that up with him, not me, Frederik. It's possible he did not fully understanding the correct meaning of "cuckold".
― Roaming gang of aggressive circlepits (ithappens), Wednesday, 19 August 2015 13:21 (nine years ago) link
left to his own devices he'd prob make a fairly homogenous list that was almost entirely boomer rock plus maybe some metal and 90s indie-slacker shit
the rockist swine
― Wimmels, Wednesday, 19 August 2015 13:28 (nine years ago) link
xpost The line he's referring to "...and make your sister think I love her" doesn't have anything to do with cuckoldry afaict
― Why because she True and Interesting (President Keyes), Wednesday, 19 August 2015 13:54 (nine years ago) link
maybe he used it in the 4chan meme sense
― for sale: baby shoes, never worn your ass (katherine), Wednesday, 19 August 2015 14:50 (nine years ago) link
hopefully Rap Genius has answers
― Why because she True and Interesting (President Keyes), Wednesday, 19 August 2015 15:07 (nine years ago) link
pop criticism in 2015: you are either an uncritical memeleader, or you are this: http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2015/10/hit-charade/403192/?utm_source=SFFB
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Tuesday, 15 September 2015 18:31 (nine years ago) link
Where is the artistry when a producer digitally stitches together a vocal track, syllable by syllable, from dozens of takes? Or modifies a bar and calls it a new song?
Great question. Let's ask Teo Macero.
― I might like you better if we Yelped together (Phil D.), Tuesday, 15 September 2015 18:41 (nine years ago) link
it's more than a bit of a stretch to say that's what teo macero did
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 03:21 (nine years ago) link
where is the artistry when a poster digitally stretches together a comparison
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 03:29 (nine years ago) link
maybe you should stop doing criticism, think abt it
― mattresslessness, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 03:35 (nine years ago) link
ignore me if you havent already, i promised myself I wouldn't say anything about this dumb article again and that was super lame.
― mattresslessness, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 03:40 (nine years ago) link
well now that's confusing
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 04:39 (nine years ago) link
katherine,
dont stop doing music crit
thnx
― mods = chickenshit idiots (D-40), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 05:09 (nine years ago) link
lol most of the ppl who buy enough into popstar fandom to call themselves 'swifties' or 'katycats' understand the machinations of the industry far more deeply than this dork and are well aware of these writers and producers and their writing camps that he seems to think are obscure secrets that the industry guards with care.
the book he is kinda-sorta reviewing must be hella basic if some of the tantalizing factoids he mentions from it are things as well-known as the existence of lou pearlman/denniz pop and tlc having turned down "baby one more time" etc.
also wtf, the "already gone"/"halo" soundalike controversy was not shrugged off or unnoticed by pop fans at all; it arguably was the foundation of most of the former song's publicity, especially b/c (the surely input-free, manufactured) kelly clarkson spoke out about it herself
― dyl, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 06:16 (nine years ago) link
you're a bag of shit
― hunangarage, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 06:27 (nine years ago) link
― dyl, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 06:43 (nine years ago) link
that's a really good article, I learned a lot from it
― schlep and back trio (anagram), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 08:17 (nine years ago) link
two posts on the bounce that confirm dyl's point
― bellendery hooks (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 10:12 (nine years ago) link
I don't necessarily agree with the entire tone of the piece, and I think it's a little lightweight, but I found it interesting it taught me some new things and clarified some old things. This is all from the POV of a Britisher who's slightly divorced from mega-pop, by and large.
― Hey Bob (Scik Mouthy), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 11:14 (nine years ago) link
very grateful to that article for clarifying for me (via thesaurus-speak) that lou pearlman is a sweaty fat dude. i needed to know that.
― rushomancy, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 11:28 (nine years ago) link
As a bald of Norwegian decent I find that subhead to be offensive
― Ma$e-en-scène (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 11:49 (nine years ago) link
seriously, though, i'm kind of conflicted re: the pop oligarchy. like, for some reason that's the only area of music where the economics apparently work out, though i confess that i'm mystified as to how. and as much as i'd like to say that the institutional oligarchy of pop music has degraded its aesthetic qualities, i don't believe that to be true. max martin works hard, does excellent work, and deserves to be rich. i'm not at all against oligarchs, i just wish there weren't so few of them!
― rushomancy, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 11:52 (nine years ago) link
Male-pattern hair loss in Norwegian men: a community-based study:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10828630
― soref, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 11:53 (nine years ago) link
^require reading for anyone wanting to understand US pop music of the 2010s
― soref, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 11:57 (nine years ago) link
any critic speculating on the nature of "Max Martin" as signifier of assembly line pop productions doesn't give a damn about the degree to which Martin's productions have changed. His Britney stuff in 1999 sounds nothing like his work with Taylor Swift.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 13:10 (nine years ago) link
also wtf, the "already gone"/"halo" soundalike controversy was not shrugged off or unnoticed by pop fans at all
the Maps/Since You've Been Gone connection hardly went unnoticed either, for that matter
― the naive cockney chorus (Simon H.), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 13:19 (nine years ago) link
http://www.youtube.com/watch?t=1&v=DBr5FPIL8UU
― The New Gay Sadness (cryptosicko), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 13:21 (nine years ago) link
yeah, not to be captain save-a-max but the book review made the book in question seem shallow and unresearched, which is pretty much the opposite of a book review's job. (a point made elsewhere: how do you write a piece about the exploitative pop machine and mention dr. luke and lou pearlman by name and with mention of lawsuits, and not mention that they both have sexual assault allegations against them?)
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 14:17 (nine years ago) link
i thought that was a good article
― welltris (crüt), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 14:53 (nine years ago) link
this isn't really a bad piece of music writing per se, but what is with people incorrectly claiming that modern pop sounds like "the 1980s" http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/music_box/2015/09/the_weeknd_carly_rae_jepsen_taylor_swift_why_the_sound_of_the_1980s_became.html
― welltris (crüt), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 14:56 (nine years ago) link
when i first heard can't feel my face in the car it was just an immediate: *oh man smash hit that i will hear EVERYWHERE for months on end*. and i had no idea who wrote it or performed it. it's just BAM. 50 zillion people making music would KILL to come up with something like that. dude is unstoppable.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:02 (nine years ago) link
Max Martin is def unstoppable
― abcfsk, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:05 (nine years ago) link
how is that ugly-ass image in the op not deadlinked yet
― marcos, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:11 (nine years ago) link
that is what i think of every time i open this thread
Obviously it's silly to say that digitally stitching things together doesn't involve "artistry." I do sometimes feel a little creeped out by just how down to a science catchy pop song writing/production has become though, the way it almost doesn't matter if I "like" or "hate" some songs, they just WILL get stuck in my head after hearing them maybe 2-3 times, the way I can hear the formula so clearly but am unable to resist it.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:11 (nine years ago) link
it's very scientific.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:17 (nine years ago) link
http://randomnerds.com/fck-dr-dre-and-fck-straight-outta-compton-tooin which the author assigns blame for institutionalized racism, misogyny in hip hop, puberty and Borgore to NWA Exquisitely atrocious sentence structure
There was “Automobile” as well, the sing-a-long date rape song that made “My Dingaling” — a song covered by Chuck Berry in 1972 that was my introduction to tongue-in-cheek songs about the joys of having women interacting with penises — sound like learning addition when calculus was on the chalkboard.
In a manifestation of deep seeded white-hot white-girl lust that was lost in a pavilion at summer camp as a blue-eyed Becky in black jeans and white Keds busted a cap in my dreams of bad intentions for her body, one of my favorite songs in recent memory was “Decisions.”
As well, I definitely needed a great number of white women, who in my clearly quite afflicted mind were sexually uninhibited and had likely never seen a black person before. Deep down, I felt like college — more than any other place — would allow me the opportunity to make good on my N.W.A.-aided summer camp goals.
― Meta Forksclove-Liebeskind (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:17 (nine years ago) link
akin to the professional mouth feel technicians who come up with the perfect potato chip.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:18 (nine years ago) link
yeah exactly, the metaphor that came to my mind was "taste enhancers" in food
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:19 (nine years ago) link
In fact it's a very similar sensation to when I eat a Dorito -- "Is this good? Do I like this? I want more of this. It's not delicious, but I want more."
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:20 (nine years ago) link
also akin to the video game makers who know how to make games that have the most addictive play/feel/etc. definitely a science. the people who are good at it are SO good at it. too bad these people don't work for NASA. we'd be on Mars by now.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:21 (nine years ago) link
Obviously it's silly to say that digitally stitching things together doesn't involve "artistry."
that's not what the article says tbf
― welltris (crüt), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:22 (nine years ago) link
"In a manifestation of deep seeded..."
you get a prize when you do this.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:24 (nine years ago) link
uh, no, this is what the article says:
"Where is the artistry when a producer digitally stitches together a vocal track, syllable by syllable, from dozens of takes?"
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:25 (nine years ago) link
kinda think there should be a ban on sites like whatever the hell randomnerd is though. on this thread. i doubt they have editors. or standards. or whatever.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:27 (nine years ago) link
i agree and i hesitated tbh. It showed up in factcheckingcuz's music eblog though so i read it more or less accidentally and felt the need to inflict further.
― Meta Forksclove-Liebeskind (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:30 (nine years ago) link
the writer is talking about the performer's artistry:
In the music industry, the performers are called artists, while the people who write the songs remain largely anonymous outside the pages of trade publications. But can a performer be said to have any artistry if, as in the case of Rihanna, her label convenes week-long “writer camps,” attended by dozens of producers and writers (but not necessarily Rihanna), to manufacture her next hit? Where is the artistry when a producer digitally stitches together a vocal track, syllable by syllable, from dozens of takes? Or modifies a bar and calls it a new song?
can a performer be said to have any artistry
― welltris (crüt), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:30 (nine years ago) link
sorry bbcode
cool sentence diagramming, really enjoying those sixth-grade flashbacks, but given that the next sentence talks about modifying a bar, something that producers do (and something the writer calls out Luke for elsewhere), it's fair to say that refers to the producer
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:33 (nine years ago) link
god, this is overly pedantic even for me
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:34 (nine years ago) link
sorry
― welltris (crüt), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:34 (nine years ago) link
was referring to myself
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:35 (nine years ago) link
also max martin's not bald tbf
― marcos, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:39 (nine years ago) link
it's ambiguous to me -- in context it seems more likely that it refers to the singer than the producer, but at the same time it's not hard to believe that the author of the piece also thinks that about the producer.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:48 (nine years ago) link
it is not a bad piece but i also don't it is very good. it has this "let me blow your mind" tone that is kind of lame esp since these conversations about corporate pop machinery have been happening for a long time. the piece also ended much much sooner than i thought it would and i left thinking "that's it?"
he also doesn't go into any detail about why some stars are more successful than others, why someone like rihanna has been able to cultivate an individual presence as an artist while other stars fail despite both relying on similar teams of songwriters/producers
it is also not hard to extrapolate from the piece the hackneyed judgement that an artist writing & performing their own songs is somehow superior or more "authentic" than an "artist" relying on max martin and other producers
― marcos, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 15:55 (nine years ago) link
It's more abo
― welltris (crüt), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 16:03 (nine years ago) link
I decided not to post what I was going to post so let "it's more abo" be the whole of my opinion
― welltris (crüt), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 16:04 (nine years ago) link
it is not a bad piece but i also don't *think* it is very good.
typo sorry
― marcos, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 16:09 (nine years ago) link
but maybe he is... ARTISTICALLY BALD
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 16:15 (nine years ago) link
― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 16:47 (nine years ago) link
re: carl's piece, which is fine, but
And both Tesfaye and Jepsen also collaborated with another Swede, Peter Svensson, formerly of the band the Cardigans, who were already somewhat of an ’80s throwback in the ’90s.
this links to a video that's been deleted, so i really have no idea what he's talking about
― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 17:00 (nine years ago) link
you guys need a good laugh.
"Before Dead Boys and Pere Ubu was Rocket from the Tombs, the Cleveland protopunk favorites Rocket from the Tombs raged through tracks that would eventually become “Sonic Reducer,” “Final Solution,” and others, changing the course for music as we know it."
http://noisey.vice.com/blog/rocket-from-the-tombs-coopy-video
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 17:14 (nine years ago) link
oh noiseybot 3000, you never fail us....
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 17:15 (nine years ago) link
In the music industry, the performers are called artists, while the people who write the songs remain largely anonymous outside the pages of trade publications.
this is like exactly how it was in the 50s and 60s during the heyday of tin pan alley and the Wrecking Crew and all that
― Ma$e-en-scène (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 17:27 (nine years ago) link
yea i thought about that too
― marcos, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 17:28 (nine years ago) link
the world is as it is
― Adam J Duncan, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 17:29 (nine years ago) link
Travis Blanchard • 2 hours agoAnd this is why almost every pop song for the last 15 years has been complete crap. Today's music is in a sad state. Pop stars are not musicians, they are barely performers. They are figureheads used by record execs to make money. Unfortunately, the way the music industry is today has contributed to the overall decline of the quality of music. Very little good music across any genre has been made in the past decade.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 17:49 (nine years ago) link
Fabian to critics: Drop Dead!
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/38/1959_Fabian_Forte.jpg
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 18:07 (nine years ago) link
Pop stars are not musicians, they are barely performers. They are figureheads used by record execs to make money. Also, that's not even Michael Nesmith's real hat.http://t4.kn3.net/taringa/0/6/2/9/1/4/Uter_Zorker/39C.jpg
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 18:08 (nine years ago) link
#whoa #wow
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 18:19 (nine years ago) link
Where is the artistry when a producer digitally stitches together a vocal track, syllable by syllable, from dozens of takes?
I don't really see what the difference is between a producer digitally stitching together a vocal track from dozens of takes and a producer manually cutting together a vocal track on tape from dozens of takes. Vocal comping has been happening for decades and has been a bog-standard studio technique for decades... are there really people out there who think that every vocal on every "classic" song/production ever was sung live in one take? Idiots.
― Turrican, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 18:27 (nine years ago) link
you take that back about michael nesmith's hat
― Ma$e-en-scène (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 18:37 (nine years ago) link
― Ma$e-en-scène (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, September 16, 2015 12:27 PM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
This came to my mind too. In fact didn't Phil Spector basically believe that he was the *real* artist and the girl groups he used were just kind of disposable instruments in his hands?
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 20:10 (nine years ago) link
Although to clarify, the heyday of tin pan alley was most certainly not in the 50's and 60's. Maybe you mean Brill Building?
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 20:12 (nine years ago) link
OTOH I wouldn't take that comparison too far, because I think that there were well-known songwriters in the era before most artists *wrote their own songs.* I mean I think Tin Pan Alley composers, for example, were pretty well-known. People bought a lot more sheet music back in those days, and the sheet music credited the songwriters.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 20:15 (nine years ago) link
yah brill building i meant
― Ma$e-en-scène (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 20:25 (nine years ago) link
still i bet there were a shitload of teenagers who didn't give a fuck who doc pomus or hal blaine were
― Ma$e-en-scène (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 20:26 (nine years ago) link
yeah the backing musicians seem like another story, I think it really wasn't well known who those people were. They weren't even credited most of the time. According to the doc it sounds like a lot of said teenagers probably really believed that it was the Beach Boys or the Association or whoever playing on their own records.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 20:28 (nine years ago) link
also, in a lot of cases, the "artistes" who wrote their own stuff back then were just as produced and arranged and micromanaged by a hundred people as anyone else.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 20:33 (nine years ago) link
When one of my bands had a brief affair with Big Deal Music Industry Manager, he asked us pretty early on how we'd feel about having someone else "work on our songs" with us, or something to that effect. I almost wish we had gotten to that point because I was curious to find out whether said *someone* was just going to lightly edit them or completely reshape them into country-pop hits or something.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 20:40 (nine years ago) link
His Atlantic magazine editor didn't seem to question the lack of clarity on music history.This paragraph, where he acknowledges the existence of earlier hired tunesmiths, seems a little questionable too, both on its own and in the manner that it does not quite fit in with his later arguments:
The music has evolved in step with these changes. A short-attention-span culture demands short-attention-span songs. The writers of Tin Pan Alley and Motown had to write only one killer hook to get a hit. Now you need a new high every seven seconds—the average length of time a listener will give a radio station before changing the channel. “It’s not enough to have one hook anymore,” Jay Brown, a co-founder of Jay Z’s Roc Nation label, tells Seabrook. “You’ve got to have a hook in the intro, a hook in the pre, a hook in the chorus, and a hook in the bridge, too.”
― curmudgeon, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 20:42 (nine years ago) link
That doesn't even sound internally consistent, unless intros, pres, choruses, and bridges each last no more than seven seconds.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 20:46 (nine years ago) link
If super-hooky grindcore became the new thing, I would totally start listening to the radio.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 20:49 (nine years ago) link
Motown songs only needed one hook?!? Has he heard any Motown songs? A lot of the time the intro's a hook before the singer's even turned up.
― impossible raver (Re-Make/Re-Model), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 20:49 (nine years ago) link
I like Nathaniel Rich btw but he wouldn't be the first smart, talented writer to say dumb things about pop music.
― impossible raver (Re-Make/Re-Model), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 20:51 (nine years ago) link
WTF does he think the Be My Baby drum intro is?
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 20:53 (nine years ago) link
The first movement of Beethoven's 5th Symphony is pretty much one hook after another, for that matter, just relentless hooks.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 20:54 (nine years ago) link
"You’ve got to have a hook in the intro, a hook in the pre, a hook in the chorus, and a hook in the bridge, too.”
Sounds great. More memorable melodies. Thanks, short attention spans.
― impossible raver (Re-Make/Re-Model), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 20:57 (nine years ago) link
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, September 16, 2015 4:49 PM (7 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Can't say we didn't try...
https://open.spotify.com/album/3yByFtADzRS96I3j4l5v9s
― posts baloney - whine iverson (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 20:58 (nine years ago) link
I wish songs had more boring, meandery, unmemorable sections
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 20:59 (nine years ago) link
boring meandering music kinda rules tbh
― Ma$e-en-scène (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 21:06 (nine years ago) link
that quote previously appeared in Seabrook's New Yorker article, it isn't new.
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 21:25 (nine years ago) link
as does the "seven seconds" thing -- the new yorker piece is paywalled now but the relevant part is here: http://wsdg.com/the-new-yorker-the-song-machine/
as for the source of that, as far as I can tell it seems to be an advertising rule-of-thumb.
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 21:31 (nine years ago) link
beethoven didn't just write hook after hook after hook, he wrote one hook, maybe two, and then beat it with a thresher into as many different shapes as he could. that's why he's cool.
― rushomancy, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 21:34 (nine years ago) link
yeah but how many takes of Eroica did Teo Macero splice together
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 21:47 (nine years ago) link
All that modulation shit was done on a fairlight
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 21:50 (nine years ago) link
can we stop having a pendantic nerd slapfight in here and get back to sonning lames
― posts baloney - whine iverson (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 16 September 2015 22:20 (nine years ago) link
― called a 'Star' by the Compliance Unit (Bananaman Begins), Thursday, 17 September 2015 11:25 (nine years ago) link
but i want to talk about glenn gould. :(
― rushomancy, Thursday, 17 September 2015 11:47 (nine years ago) link
― Turrican, Wednesday, September 16, 2015 2:27 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
yeah this is one of those hilarious dumb ideas in the article that shows how naive the guy calling everyone else naive is. i've laid down instrumental tracks in one full take with no edits or corrections needed, it's at least an attainable thing to try to do, but vocal comping is how pretty much everybody makes records, at least everybody who cares about the quality of the vocal.
― some dude, Thursday, 17 September 2015 12:49 (nine years ago) link
among the many dumb ideas is the sense that it's got "harder" to make pop music but somehow it's also "worse" as a result.
A short-attention-span culture demands short-attention-span songs
wtf does this even mean? like "hooks", which apparently can be defined now, are bad by nature. it's the same ancient argument copied from like critiques of fast food or whatever. as if hooks are salt or something compared to the veggies of previous eras.
― doing my Objectives, handling some intense stuff (LocalGarda), Thursday, 17 September 2015 13:06 (nine years ago) link
are there really people out there who think that every vocal on every "classic" song/production ever was sung live in one take? Idiots.
This is what happens when people listen to that Stooges Fun House Sessions box too many times - they start to think everyone used to do it like that, or should have done.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Thursday, 17 September 2015 13:08 (nine years ago) link
one thing that has been made evident by ilm squabblings is that people often identify different things as hooks. there is no hook consensus. the term isn't meaningless, it's just something quotable, and people differ both in what they pick out as quotable and their overall propensity to quote. speaking of which, some pertinent grumbling from adorno:
there exists today a tendency to listen to Beethoven's Fifth as if it were a set of quotations from Beethoven's Fifth
today being 1945, which makes me think we shouldn't worry too much.
― ogmor, Thursday, 17 September 2015 13:08 (nine years ago) link
"they start to think everyone used to do it like that, or should have done."
well, there WERE a ton of records that were made in a period of hours. especially in jazz. labels would set up entire orchestras and cut a record in 3 hours so they didn't have to pay union overtime. and, to be fair, a lot of those records sound competely friggin' amazing. an album in a day was very doable in the 50's and 60's. and on the street in weeks.
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 September 2015 15:44 (nine years ago) link
There are always practical/economic reasons why it's good to get a song recorded in one take or as few takes as possible -- that's why producers call certain singers/musicians "professionals" with a glint in their eye. But it's not the only way to get a good final product, for sure.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Thursday, 17 September 2015 15:47 (nine years ago) link
that is true scott but i expect they practised a lot before going in
― Cosmic Slop, Thursday, 17 September 2015 15:50 (nine years ago) link
Wrecking Crew supposedly did not -- they were sightreading all that stuff.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Thursday, 17 September 2015 15:51 (nine years ago) link
they were really good at doing stuff fast. people couldn't do that now. unless they just hit record and a band started playing with minimal fuss. but even that would probably take a long time now.
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 September 2015 15:55 (nine years ago) link
yeah, wrecking crew people often had no idea what they would be playing from one job to the next.
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 September 2015 15:56 (nine years ago) link
Funk Brothers, too -- and what wasn't sight-read was arranged on the spot by the musicians.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Thursday, 17 September 2015 15:58 (nine years ago) link
i am not an advocate of one way or another. but hanging out at rudy van gelder's house for the day often yielded amazing music that people still listen to today and i am glad that that happened. even if i also wish that a lot of jazz artists actually had the time back then to make something in a way that they really wanted to make it. they usually didn't have a choice.
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 September 2015 15:59 (nine years ago) link
just the fact that there were VERY complicated pieces of music with many moving parts created in such a short amount of time is staggering. symphonies!
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:00 (nine years ago) link
Yeah I assume the expected sales numbers for most jazz records also just didn't justify spending more than a day recording.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:01 (nine years ago) link
which is also why a lot of orchestras don't even bother recording today. it would take too long and cost too much.
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:01 (nine years ago) link
the labels put out so much product. even the tiny labels. every week new records or singles. there was no time to take your time. that goes for pop, rock, r&b, etc.
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:03 (nine years ago) link
scroll down to the list of recording dates on this page. these are entire albums:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Van_Gelder_Studio
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:06 (nine years ago) link
i think a somewhat reasonable contemporary analogy to the workload of those bands would be the roots on the tonight show (and, more immediately, batiste and stay human with colbert)
― Meta Forksclove-Liebeskind (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:06 (nine years ago) link
Well yes, there certainly are a number of examples of songs or albums being cut in a matter of hours or days, and there are certainly a number of examples of where a singer has gone into the studio, sung the song live in one take and managed to nail a really great vocal. However, the impression is got from the article that the author feels that things like comping vocals is a trend that has only begun to happen in modern pop music, which is bollocks. I don't think anyone would argue that Simon & Garfunkel were great singers, but even they comped their vocals, even down to the syllable - they were striving for perfection on the likes of the Bookends album... I'll bet though, that the author would hear those Simon & Garfunkel records as being more "authentic" than a Rhianna record.
Basically, what it boils down to is the age-old "authenticity" argument, that some recording approaches and musical forms are more "authentic" than others. However, I'd argue that whether a track or an album is recorded in one take or meticulously pieced together by editing together multiple takes of drum tracks or vocal tracks or whatever, that all recorded music is an illusion.
― Turrican, Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:06 (nine years ago) link
i think everything max martin does is 100% authentic for now!
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:10 (nine years ago) link
i don't know who the first person was to splice different takes together to create a track but it happened long before any of us were born.
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:11 (nine years ago) link
les paul and mary ford, no?
― Meta Forksclove-Liebeskind (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:16 (nine years ago) link
― Cosmic Slop, Thursday, September 17, 2015 10:50 AM (25 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Thursday, September 17, 2015 10:51 AM (24 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
the key to making great pop records is getting slumming frustrated jazz musicians who think rock n' roll is baby music to play it
― Ma$e-en-scène (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:18 (nine years ago) link
Lennie Tristano apparently experimented with tape manipulation on tracks like Line-Up, although I've never been able to find a good, detailed explanation of what exactly was done, and I'd love to know.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:18 (nine years ago) link
on the flip, i enjoyed this interview:
http://www.npr.org/sections/therecord/2015/09/15/440363012/a-rational-conversation-do-we-need-new-old-soul-music
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:21 (nine years ago) link
Not to mention the artistry of the actual art world using found objects and mixed media, collages, appropriation.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:22 (nine years ago) link
xxxp matt, your comment on the doors thread about how there are a hundred underrated 60's/70's jazz musicians for every "prog genius" applies there as well
― Meta Forksclove-Liebeskind (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:22 (nine years ago) link
Yeah, splicing different takes together has been going on for decades and decades - I'm unsure who did it first, though.
― Turrican, Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:24 (nine years ago) link
as far as wrecking crew goes, i am really happy they did what they did. they were amazing. and i would actually love to see more indie people who can't play go into the studio with pros and veterans. often now i hear indie rock/pop that ALMOST sounds professional, so why not go all the way? if you have the money that is.
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:24 (nine years ago) link
xp which thread forks?
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:25 (nine years ago) link
xxp:
Even on the early Beatles stuff there are different takes knitted together or a middle 8 from a different take cut in.
― Turrican, Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:25 (nine years ago) link
xxp i second that NPR's piece description of the muscle shoals doc as "weird" would add "bordering on racist" and "confusingly hagiographic"
― Meta Forksclove-Liebeskind (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:26 (nine years ago) link
xp to man alive: marissa's "doors are a PROG BAND" extravaganza, nb i may be misquoting
― Meta Forksclove-Liebeskind (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:27 (nine years ago) link
what would the beatles have sounded like without all their hired help? uh, i have no idea, but not like what they ended up sounding like at all. they were really young. not really the greatest musicians in the world. they had their hands held from an early age.
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:29 (nine years ago) link
all recorded music is an illusion.
― Turrican, Thursday, September 17, 2015 11:06 AM (22 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
believing this has saved me a lot of anguish
― Ys Man a.k.a. Have One on G (geoffreyess), Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:30 (nine years ago) link
as far as the immediacy thing goes, i love that people go into a studio with no song and just make something up (all those stories of people scribbling down lyics in the corner while the rest of the band waits around...) and people end up loving it and singing it for decades. that to me is the essence of magic. people do that now. people did it in the past.
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:39 (nine years ago) link
i don't think black sabbath had any songs ready when they went in to make their second album. or very few. they had just put out their first album! just made stuff up. now we all sing paranoid together.
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:40 (nine years ago) link
― Turrican, Thursday, September 17, 2015 12:25 PM (19 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
This isn't the case with their earliest EMI recordings. Each song on Please Please Me is from one take (though there were surely other takes, false starts and breakdowns).
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:47 (nine years ago) link
is this thread where the most substantive discussion of the song machine book has been? has anyone read it?
― veronica moser, Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:49 (nine years ago) link
One thing I think it's always important to keep in mind is how much insipid, throwaway pop music there has been in every decade -- this sort of helps me keep a mediocre Demi Lovato song in perspective.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:54 (nine years ago) link
x-post to Scott and others re that NPR soul article that makes some good points re retro soul...
But sadly that NPR soul article never mentions the over age 50 raunchy soul with synthesizers music that is coming out now, but is not marketed to the NPR world-- from Miss Jody on Ecko to the glossy sounds of Sir Charles Jones to the bluesey stylings of Otis Rush, to the recently deceased Mel Waiters, and countless others mentioned on the Chitlin Circuit soul thread and on websites like http://www.southernsoulrnb.com/
― curmudgeon, Thursday, 17 September 2015 16:59 (nine years ago) link
man alive otm. Lousy pop of the 70s or 80s is just as bad as the new stuff imo.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Thursday, 17 September 2015 17:01 (nine years ago) link
"and countless others mentioned on the Chitlin Circuit soul thread and on websites like http://www.southernsoulrnb.com/"
kinda understandable though, don't you think? that's a niche that has existed for decades.
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 September 2015 17:07 (nine years ago) link
Even on the early Beatles stuff there are different takes knitted together or a middle 8 from a different take cut in.― Turrican, Thursday, September 17, 2015 12:25 PM (19 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post PermalinkThis isn't the case with their earliest EMI recordings. Each song on Please Please Me is from one take (though there were surely other takes, false starts and breakdowns).― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Thursday, September 17, 2015 4:47 PM (19 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Thursday, September 17, 2015 4:47 PM (19 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
The count-in on 'I Saw Her Standing There' is from a different take to the rest of the song - a minor edit, but still an edit.
― Turrican, Thursday, 17 September 2015 17:12 (nine years ago) link
i dunno, the neo-soul/nu-soul thing is interesting, but also kind of a historical commonplace. dixieland was big in the 50's. the 50's was big in the 70's. the 60's were big in the 80's. the 30's were big in the 60's! it goes on and on. more interesting politically probably. why go back? back not good! forward good! the carolina chocolate drops are VERY popular around my white way and there is probably some sorta academic paper to be written about the significance of that.
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 September 2015 17:13 (nine years ago) link
all recorded music is an illusion.― Turrican, Thursday, September 17, 2015 11:06 AM (22 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalinkbelieving this has saved me a lot of anguish― Ys Man a.k.a. Have One on G (geoffreyess), Thursday, September 17, 2015 4:30 PM (42 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Ys Man a.k.a. Have One on G (geoffreyess), Thursday, September 17, 2015 4:30 PM (42 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Yup, me too!
― Turrican, Thursday, 17 September 2015 17:13 (nine years ago) link
(also re: the chitlin non-mention, it would be like talking about pop country stars going back to the 70's for their sound and not mentioning all the people who play Branson who never left the 70's...)
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 September 2015 17:15 (nine years ago) link
Millions of Swifties and KatyCats—as well as Beliebers, Barbz, and Selenators, and the Rihanna Navy—would be stunned by the revelation that a handful of people, a crazily high percentage of them middle-aged Scandinavian men, write most of America’s pop hits. It is an open yet closely guarded secret, protected jealously by the labels and the performers themselves, whose identities are as carefully constructed as their songs and dances.
Just getting around to reading this Atlantic thing, and I cannot believe the bolded section got through an editor and a fact checker. Has this guyever looked at liner notes, or like, a wikipedia page for an album?
OTOH, I was excited to learn that Rihanna fan communities refer to themselves at the Rihanna Navy. That's awesome and I didn't know that!
― intheblanks, Thursday, 17 September 2015 19:56 (nine years ago) link
christ, this article keeps revealing new onionesque levels of stupid
carefully constructed dances, you say? that's kind of wordy, you might want to use just one word, one like "choreographed"
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Thursday, 17 September 2015 19:59 (nine years ago) link
Nah, can't really describe an identity as "choreographed" IMO. Reads awkwardly. Should have scrapped that whole clause.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Thursday, 17 September 2015 20:03 (nine years ago) link
I guess "It is an open yet closely guarded secret" was his way of saying that it is in the liner notes but everyone is careful not to draw attention to it.
― Evan, Thursday, 17 September 2015 20:07 (nine years ago) link
"open yet closely guarded secret" is nonsensical
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Thursday, 17 September 2015 20:08 (nine years ago) link
Agreed just doing my best to interpret.
― Evan, Thursday, 17 September 2015 21:01 (nine years ago) link
not really my point, my point is that using "carefully constructed dances" as a pejorative is hilarious, because that describes the entire practice of choreography, indeed, dance in general
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Thursday, 17 September 2015 21:02 (nine years ago) link
what do you have against the pop star improvised interpretive dances of yore?
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Thursday, 17 September 2015 21:06 (nine years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mcrZIK3gqbU
― Meta Forksclove-Liebeskind (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 17 September 2015 21:49 (nine years ago) link
― scott seward, Thursday, September 17, 2015 12:40 PM (5 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
actually they went in to record in june of 1970... by that time they had already at least written paranoid, iron man, fairies wear boots, and walpurgis (which they wound up redoing the lyrics to and turning into "war pigs"), because there are live recordings of all those songs from before june of '70. sorry for the nitpick, but i've been into sabbath since that '69 show the guys from iron claw taped leaked last week.
― rushomancy, Thursday, 17 September 2015 22:17 (nine years ago) link
a good contemporary analogy to that is any orchestral hollywood score. it's all on-the-spot sight-reading, and everything is done in two or three takes. and that's with a full orchestra playing together.
which is to say, LA is crawling with musicians who could do that now on any pop record if anyone making pop records had (a) the money to hire them and (b) the skills and/or money to write all those parts out.
― fact checking cuz, Thursday, 17 September 2015 22:29 (nine years ago) link
"sorry for the nitpick, but i've been into sabbath since that '69 show the guys from iron claw taped leaked last week."
nitpicking is fine. i just remembered reading that they rushed them in and they had to write stuff on the fly. but it makes sense that they had already worked on stuff live and in rehearsal.
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 September 2015 23:43 (nine years ago) link
Many xps, but presumably -- or not! -- the writer understands that pop star identities have ALWAYS been "carefully constructed?" Like, going back to Rudy Vallee at least?
― I might like you better if we Yelped together (Phil D.), Friday, 18 September 2015 01:47 (nine years ago) link
Wait until he finds out The Beatles were not just four lovable aw-shucks mop tops from Liverpooll!
― I might like you better if we Yelped together (Phil D.), Friday, 18 September 2015 01:48 (nine years ago) link
not sure why that npr retro soul piece is in "worst music writing" thread because it was very interesting and not bad writing. but anyways since we are talking about it here i generally agreed w/ emily lordi but i also thought she was perhaps a little too harsh on leon bridges? i mean i agree that complete devotion to replicating a retro sound is not particularly interesting but it did seem like she dumped a lot of criticism specifically on bridges himself and perhaps less so on the general phenomenon of white audiences feeling particularly pulled toward this purely retro sound.
― marcos, Friday, 18 September 2015 14:01 (nine years ago) link
unless i'm mistaken, i think it was just here for reference and not as pertains to thread title
― Meta Forksclove-Liebeskind (forksclovetofu), Friday, 18 September 2015 14:14 (nine years ago) link
ah ok
― marcos, Friday, 18 September 2015 14:17 (nine years ago) link
http://crackmagazine.net/article/music/battles-through-limbs-and-wires/
― called a 'Star' by the Compliance Unit (Bananaman Begins), Friday, 18 September 2015 16:43 (nine years ago) link
yeah, i posted that NPR thing because of the talk about "the good old days" on here. and how that relates to the pop producer article. the backlash against disposable digi-pop, etc. it's a good interview.
― scott seward, Friday, 18 September 2015 16:55 (nine years ago) link
i'm not reading that Battles thing but it's nice that Tom still has some time in his busy schedule
― bellendery hooks (Noodle Vague), Friday, 18 September 2015 16:58 (nine years ago) link
the summer music festival in town here is FILLED with examples of updated retro from a surprisingly wide range of genres. or older artists who still perform in bygone styles. it's a wildly successful fest supported by the local radio station here that plays all that stuff. and the festival itself was bought by the successful label/recording studio that also loves all that stuff. western mass kinda ground zero for fans of nu-western swing, nu-gypsy, nu-latin, nu-folk, nu-blues. it's deep starbucks/npr/big chill gen stuff. and people are very serious about it.
http://www.signaturesounds.com/
― scott seward, Friday, 18 September 2015 17:02 (nine years ago) link
alabama shakes kinda the dream band of the local station. old r&b + wilco? is that a fair assessment of alabama shakes? anyway, they are kinda the house band of the station. they play mostly boomer 60's soul when they play soul though.
http://wrsi.com/playlist/
― scott seward, Friday, 18 September 2015 17:09 (nine years ago) link
noodlevague never forgave Tom for unleashing Drenge
― Cosmic Slop, Friday, 18 September 2015 17:31 (nine years ago) link
I like how the writer of the Battles piece spells John Stanier's last name wrong twice in the first paragraph, then just gets on a first-name basis with them for the rest of the piece. And honestly, he's gotten a little better - he only did the that's-almost-the-adjective-you-want thing a few times, as opposed to doing it in every sentence like he used to.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Friday, 18 September 2015 17:35 (nine years ago) link
alabama shakes, fairly or unfairly, strikes me like the aughties version of Hootie
― Meta Forksclove-Liebeskind (forksclovetofu), Friday, 18 September 2015 17:42 (nine years ago) link
they need to have at least one hit single first to earn that comparison
― da croupier, Friday, 18 September 2015 18:43 (nine years ago) link
imo they're more the '10s Lone Justice
― da croupier, Friday, 18 September 2015 18:45 (nine years ago) link
I feel like this is verging on needing a separate thread, but it was interesting to me to read the contrast between that NPR interview and the comments thereon -- perhaps not surprisingly, a lot of NPR listeners (and probably a lot of music fans in general) really resist political readings of any popular music or the placing of music in a political context.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Friday, 18 September 2015 18:47 (nine years ago) link
a josh ritter/alabama shakes/carolina chocolate drops show around here would be pandemonium. latte in the streets...
― scott seward, Friday, 18 September 2015 18:50 (nine years ago) link
"resist political readings of any popular music or the placing of music in a political context."
they really like things comfy casual.
― scott seward, Friday, 18 September 2015 18:51 (nine years ago) link
the choc drops stuff is really explicitly socially political and explores historical ideas about race and appropriation in a way that very few bands were doingof course, that's not quite what got them on the national radar and they've basically atomized these days into new projects anyway
― Meta Forksclove-Liebeskind (forksclovetofu), Friday, 18 September 2015 18:55 (nine years ago) link
there is a thread for that too:
Can we agree on a definition - "NPR Rock" ??
― scott seward, Friday, 18 September 2015 18:56 (nine years ago) link
from the first post on that thread:
"Comfy, Acoustic, Literate, Upscale, Non-Threatening......... what else???? (white?)"
― scott seward, Friday, 18 September 2015 18:57 (nine years ago) link
non-threatening is good. i would add toothless. just because.
to be fair, those listeners are the only people who never forgot tracy chapman.
― scott seward, Friday, 18 September 2015 19:00 (nine years ago) link
to be fair, those listeners are the only people who never forgot tracy chapman. --scott seward
Pitchfork 80s list stans for Tracy Chapman
― posts baloney - whine iverson (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 18 September 2015 21:47 (nine years ago) link
"Fast Car" is one of the greatest songs ever written
― Ma$e-en-scène (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 19 September 2015 02:05 (nine years ago) link
I got a plan to get us outta this thread
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 19 September 2015 02:11 (nine years ago) link
Be someoneBe someone
;_;
― Ma$e-en-scène (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 19 September 2015 02:15 (nine years ago) link
i will stan for tracy chapman any day. she remains a bucket list concert.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jakwsneGokg
― Meta Forksclove-Liebeskind (forksclovetofu), Saturday, 19 September 2015 06:09 (nine years ago) link
I don't really read many music sites so I'm a bit nonplussed at the word count and approx reading time in the Battles piece... is that normal practice these days or am I right in finding that kind of weird?
― ultros ultros-ghali, Saturday, 19 September 2015 13:56 (nine years ago) link
That was the first thing I noticed as well. Was going to make fun of it but then realized that I'm not sure whether it's normal, either.
― Evan, Saturday, 19 September 2015 14:29 (nine years ago) link
A fair amount of big-name sites (Slate, Vox, etc.) do that now. It's the New Thing.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Saturday, 19 September 2015 15:19 (nine years ago) link
yeah approximate reading time is the norm now
― balls, Saturday, 19 September 2015 16:27 (nine years ago) link
I'm a very busy man so i appreciate this information. I just wish they gave a range, from the time it would take to scroll for key info to the time it would take to savor each phrase like fine wine
― da croupier, Saturday, 19 September 2015 16:35 (nine years ago) link
this is a weird way to open a review of a roland young compilation (it's quite a poorly-written review in general:
Lines can and should be drawn between the notion of the working musician and that of the charlatan. The working musician applies their skill as a trade and makes decisions on how to do so based on merit and need; the charlatan does not treat their skill as such, and applies it however strikes their fancy. It might be fun for a charlatan to be in a band as a way to meet people and gain access to parties, drugs, and discounted alcohol. The working musician sees each gig as a way to make next month’s rent. They may have a side job as a baseline of financial stability (if that) but the idea of playing, of being artists, of expressing themselves, drives them to keep going.
So, let no one ever refer to Roland Young as a charlatan.
― the siteban for the hilarious 'lbzc' dom ips (wins), Saturday, 19 September 2015 16:37 (nine years ago) link
Fred? He's a charlatan, and we should kick him out of the band.
― da croupier, Saturday, 19 September 2015 17:18 (nine years ago) link
No place for charlatans in a business built around getting on a stage in front of people and performing an act for them.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Saturday, 19 September 2015 19:56 (nine years ago) link
No surprise Lefsetz in a recent email/blog postingis all excited about that Seabrook book quoted in that Atlantic book review above, and not questioning much
And if there aren't enough hooks in the track, they start all over. They're in the business of hit singles, not album dreck. And they know one hook is not enough, that you've got to grab the public instantly and continue to thrill them.
And this formula is working.
I'm not judging it, just telling you how it is.
― curmudgeon, Sunday, 20 September 2015 14:37 (nine years ago) link
gadzooks
― the siteban for the hilarious 'lbzc' dom ips (wins), Sunday, 20 September 2015 14:39 (nine years ago) link
"And they know one hook is not enough, that you've got to grab the public instantly and continue to thrill them."
"And this formula is working."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_CI-0E_jses
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fhyhP_5VfKM
― scott seward, Sunday, 20 September 2015 14:50 (nine years ago) link
Need to get back to the days of artistically pure dreck, IMO.
― hardcore dilettante, Sunday, 20 September 2015 20:48 (nine years ago) link
http://www.maxlandiswrites.com/macklemore-white-eminem/
― maura, Monday, 21 September 2015 21:24 (nine years ago) link
should I click, maura
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 21 September 2015 21:26 (nine years ago) link
HOT TURDAKES
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Monday, 21 September 2015 21:29 (nine years ago) link
"should I click, maura"
don't do it.
― scott seward, Monday, 21 September 2015 21:38 (nine years ago) link
Is that the same Max Landis famous for 'scripts' for Ghostbusters III, Super Mario Bros. The Movie, and other fanart things that every kid of that generation made up w their friends on the bus to school?
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 21 September 2015 21:43 (nine years ago) link
In the 2010s, the era of Macklemore, mainstream top 40 rap, with a few notable exceptions some of whom I’ve already mentioned, is getting…What’s the word…Stupider. Not in a bad way, but the rise of artists like Young Thug, a man who raps like a homeless man yelling, Pitbull, a fun raconteur whose every song seems to be a rearranged grouping of a limited number of catchphrases, and Tyga, whose songs about excess and irresponsibility are so simplistically worded that they border on accidental self parody, the art form is folding in on itself. Standing amongst this wreckage on the pop charts is a seemingly perpetually calm man with an interesting haircut rapping quietly to you about gay marriage, how nice it is to hang out with your friends, and the perks of owning a moped; he’s wearing your grandpa’s clothes, and he looks incredible.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Monday, 21 September 2015 21:47 (nine years ago) link
BLACK BAD WHITE GOOD
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Monday, 21 September 2015 21:48 (nine years ago) link
finally a stoic rapper in neat clothes and an interesting haircut, enjoying camaraderie and owning novel modes of transportation
― da croupier, Monday, 21 September 2015 21:53 (nine years ago) link
Pitbull, a fun raconteur
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 21 September 2015 22:02 (nine years ago) link
Young Thug, a man who raps like a homeless man yelling
― Meta Forksclove-Liebeskind (forksclovetofu), Monday, 21 September 2015 22:07 (nine years ago) link
Macklemore IS happy, he’s stylish, he’s upbeat and occasionally is going to fuck a fat girl.
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Tuesday, 22 September 2015 02:03 (nine years ago) link
well he does ride mopeds
― balls, Tuesday, 22 September 2015 02:17 (nine years ago) link
http://www.strangecosmos.com/images/content/181357.gif
― posts baloney - whine iverson (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 22 September 2015 02:25 (nine years ago) link
matos on the case...
http://theconcourse.deadspin.com/john-seabrooks-pop-music-treatise-the-song-machine-is-h-1736113168
― scott seward, Tuesday, 13 October 2015 21:21 (nine years ago) link
we were talking about some seabrook thing here, weren't we?
― scott seward, Tuesday, 13 October 2015 21:22 (nine years ago) link
Good candidate for it, yup.
― Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 13 October 2015 21:34 (nine years ago) link
Ted Gioia is back, you guys:http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/10/11/is-artisanal-music-the-next-new-thing.html
― jaymc, Tuesday, 13 October 2015 22:07 (nine years ago) link
this is it
this is the nopegularity
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Tuesday, 13 October 2015 22:21 (nine years ago) link
wowwwwwwwww "artisanal music" I can't believe someone actually went there lol
― marcos, Wednesday, 14 October 2015 00:30 (nine years ago) link
I am offended on so many levels.
― austinato (Austin), Wednesday, 14 October 2015 00:39 (nine years ago) link
"But check out Ms. Lauryn Hill channeling Nina Simone on her latest album. "
wut
― based grandpa (noz), Wednesday, 14 October 2015 01:59 (nine years ago) link
"Nimble young labels such as New Amsterdam, Brainfeeder, Innova, ANTI-, Sunnyside, Acony, Tzadik, Third Man, XL Recordings, Motéma, Mack Avenue, FatCat,"
― based grandpa (noz), Wednesday, 14 October 2015 02:05 (nine years ago) link
sexy young labels that know how to plz a man where it counts
― balls, Wednesday, 14 October 2015 02:14 (nine years ago) link
need to check out that new lauryn hill album
seems a long way to go just to not say millennial malesembrace it
― a literal scarecrow on a quaint porch (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 14 October 2015 03:10 (nine years ago) link
"You don’t want to be a musical Monsanto in this brave new world!"
What an astounding article. It's like an onion of wrong - layers within layers.
― impossible raver (Re-Make/Re-Model), Wednesday, 14 October 2015 08:47 (nine years ago) link
Really want a Gioia/Lefsetz co-headlining lecture/debate tour now.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 14 October 2015 09:41 (nine years ago) link
you joke but that is a real possibility
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 14 October 2015 12:58 (nine years ago) link
Haha is there a label on that list less than 20 years old?
― Comme Si, Kamasi (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 14 October 2015 13:06 (nine years ago) link
That article is truly terrible, but I thought the guy's jazz books were meant to be pretty good?
― sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Wednesday, 14 October 2015 13:08 (nine years ago) link
ilxOr roXor:
http://tomewing.tumblr.com/post/131149722106/is-artisanal-music-the-next-new-thing
― scott seward, Wednesday, 14 October 2015 14:43 (nine years ago) link
I thought the guy's jazz books were meant to be pretty good?i think his history of jazz and jazz standards books are really useful and insightful. but these daily beast pieces are ridiculous.
― tylerw, Wednesday, 14 October 2015 14:46 (nine years ago) link
michael jordan's really good at this basketball stuff, let's put him on a baseball team
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 14 October 2015 15:04 (nine years ago) link
matos under the skin...
https://twitter.com/jmseabrook/status/654368343143530496
― scott seward, Wednesday, 14 October 2015 20:18 (nine years ago) link
so many things wrong with this 'review' https://www.xlr8r.com/reviews/2015/10/event-review-matrixxman-gunnar-haslam-at-fine-time/
― one time gaffled 'em up (one time), Thursday, 15 October 2015 06:34 (nine years ago) link
That Seabrook tweet made me think he's confusing hip-hop with... some other form of music entirely?
― byebyepride, Thursday, 15 October 2015 07:31 (nine years ago) link
That XLR8R thing is awful as an attempt at PR, never mind clearly failing as any kind of review.
― boxedjoy, Thursday, 15 October 2015 07:42 (nine years ago) link
If anyone actually manages to get to the end of this please tell me if it improves:
http://www.femmecult.com/news/fascism-in-ambient-music/
― めんどくさかった (Matt #2), Saturday, 24 October 2015 01:46 (nine years ago) link
How does wellness, neo-paganism, techno, and Hitler all tie together?
well, how does they?
― Why because she True and Interesting (President Keyes), Saturday, 24 October 2015 02:00 (nine years ago) link
hah was gonna post that here earlier. General feeling on facebook is it is a terrible badly researched article but most dont get to the end.
― Cosmic Slop, Saturday, 24 October 2015 02:06 (nine years ago) link
i got to the end. it does not get better. :(
― one time gaffled 'em up (one time), Saturday, 24 October 2015 03:12 (nine years ago) link
Ugh, just seems like the worst kind of Americanism: finding the most awful, trivial shit to get fundamentalist about.
― hardcore dilettante, Saturday, 24 October 2015 06:22 (nine years ago) link
the bit near the end about hostility exhibited in the musical structures is just... it's possible the precise point being made may have eluded me because the writing is completely hideous but it reads like some diabolus in musica type shit
― these are my pincers and if you don't like them I have udders (DJ Mencap), Saturday, 24 October 2015 10:03 (nine years ago) link
you know who else liked to pay homage to atonal sound design sets and installations that play for several unruly hours?
― soref, Saturday, 24 October 2015 11:40 (nine years ago) link
“Without the loudspeaker” writes Jacques Attali, “Hitler would have never conquered Germany” (Noise 87). The loudspeaker/radio/TV/iPhone
lol umm if you're gonna try a move like this maybe put some other flim-flam between the two sentences so people don't notice that you conflated "loudspeaker" with "anything that makes sound, whether privately or publicly"
― tremendous crime wave and killing wave (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Saturday, 24 October 2015 12:09 (nine years ago) link
The Fragile Ears Of Men
A defense of Joanna Newsom, at least that's how it seems to have been intended.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 20:17 (nine years ago) link
i didn't read past the lede
someone should invent an app that writes these thinkpieces without human intervention, it wouldn't be very hard to do. in fact i'm not entirely sure that's not how this piece was generated.
― wizzz! (amateurist), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 20:21 (nine years ago) link
i am completely in the favor of the thesis of that piece but it relies on a lot of contorted and bad faith readings of criticism (for instance when she assumes that when a male critic compares newsom favorably to other male artists, he must like those artists better than her?)
― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 20:22 (nine years ago) link
honestly everyone who writes thinkpieces like that, reads them, or responds to them should probably be tied to a polaris missile and sent into the heart of the sun (myself included)
― wizzz! (amateurist), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 20:23 (nine years ago) link
and Mike Powell loves Joanna Newsom
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 20:23 (nine years ago) link
http://i.huffpost.com/gen/699643/thumbs/r-SUPERMAN-IV-large570.jpg?4
― wizzz! (amateurist), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 20:24 (nine years ago) link
Newsom, who is known for her acrobatic singing voice, operatic albums, and magisterial lyricism
what?
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 20:25 (nine years ago) link
It was eminent that she was a genius and I promptly bought all her records and listened to them for two years straight.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 20:26 (nine years ago) link
what i found more striking was that i think i've read five profiles of newsom from this album cycle, all of them by men, and all of them identical (1. something about unicorns 2. her songs are complicated 3. she was in inherent vice)
― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 20:27 (nine years ago) link
as usual a piece critical of music critics by a non-music writer tends to reveal the author as a bad music writer
― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 20:29 (nine years ago) link
It would seem reasonable that Newsom would be considered among the greatest living musicians.
― hunangarage, Tuesday, 27 October 2015 20:30 (nine years ago) link
There's maybe like 30% insight in there and 70% butthurt that not everyone likes my favorite singer who is obviously a genius.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 20:30 (nine years ago) link
meant evident, said eminent, yes?
― a llove spat over a llama-keeper (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:12 (nine years ago) link
i think that piece is v funny and good except the last graf
― bricc baby hitlo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:13 (nine years ago) link
you must not value your time highly
― wizzz! (amateurist), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:17 (nine years ago) link
i post here, don't I?
― bricc baby hitlo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:17 (nine years ago) link
but yeah, lol, at the bad men eating popcorn so loud she couldn't enjoy an advertisement
― bricc baby hitlo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:18 (nine years ago) link
it's kinda hard for me to criticize a piece from a female writer discussing the ways in which male writers talk about female artists, i mean i can't defend some of the ways male critics write abt newsom or a lot of other female musicians who have been dismissed or condescended to even in mere descriptions.
― nomar, Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:18 (nine years ago) link
i didn't find the piece too terrible i guess idk. i think it goes beyond being annoyed that people don't like newsom.
― nomar, Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:19 (nine years ago) link
yeah, I mean she is right that the clichéd female-artist-to-female-artist comparisons border on dismissive/insulting, for example. But her piece was also kind of just bad, much like Joanna Newsom's "Have One On Me".
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:20 (nine years ago) link
xpost, yeah, i mean the piece is basically just pwning music writers, which I'm always 100% in favor of
― bricc baby hitlo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:21 (nine years ago) link
remember devendra banhart?
― hunangarage, Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:27 (nine years ago) link
xpost, yeah, i mean the piece is basically just pwning music writers, which I'm always 100% in favor of― bricc baby hitlo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, October 27, 2015 4:21 PM (6 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― bricc baby hitlo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, October 27, 2015 4:21 PM (6 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
you'd prefer "music journalists"?
srsly barf a million times @ endless thinkpieces parsing the critical reaction to album x
― wizzz! (amateurist), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:28 (nine years ago) link
someone needs a nap
― mattresslessness, Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:31 (nine years ago) link
i mean i am too but this one uses really shitty reasoning to get there
― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:35 (nine years ago) link
I mean, also, it's hilarious that she's like going in on Taylor Swift and Beyonce being the only model for feminist musician that male writers get behind when A) Just 10 years ago, you would have been more likely to see critical acclaim for Joanna Newsom than Ciara and B) There was like 9 bazillion Carrie Brownstein interviews posted this week
― bricc baby hitlo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:38 (nine years ago) link
lol at anybody who reads past this:
The mainstream press has remained leery of the multitalented harpist Joanna Newsom since her much-touted 2004 debut, despite consistent favorable reviews.
in what outlet are these reviews printed? in the...press, you say? I see, I see
― tremendous crime wave and killing wave (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:39 (nine years ago) link
― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:41 (nine years ago) link
The mainstream press has remained leery of the multitalented harpist Joanna Newsom in the many gushing reviews of literally everything she has released
― bricc baby hitlo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:42 (nine years ago) link
in outlets are they touted?
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:42 (nine years ago) link
Mainstream Press is a great hip-hop group from Oakland, though.
― wizzz! (amateurist), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:44 (nine years ago) link
Entire pieces have been written about the voices of Bob Dylan and Tom Waits, so American and vital and wise in their manly scratchiness, like unshaved bristle and whiskey and dirt. Man voice make music good.
― a llove spat over a llama-keeper (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:46 (nine years ago) link
i agree with her that sexism is a factor in the way music is reviewed.
― a llove spat over a llama-keeper (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:47 (nine years ago) link
but that seems sorta self evident and presenting it here as if it were a revelation is a tetch self serving in preservation of newsom as the greatest voice of her generation, why because i like her
― a llove spat over a llama-keeper (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:49 (nine years ago) link
yeah this sucked as an experience of reading prose and is tendentious and bad as a description of newsom's appeal but . . . .
it's on point that many male journalists infantilize and condescend to women in pop/rock who are scarily talented
(see the critical history of kate bush, bjork for starters there)
I'm guessing this probably doesn't happen to, say, martha argerich or someone on that level
― the tune was space, Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:50 (nine years ago) link
pretty much all music "opinion" writing these days is presenting totally obvious, self-evident things as "revelations" because social justice
― bricc baby hitlo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:54 (nine years ago) link
and that is bad and awful
― you too could be called a 'Star' by the Compliance Unit (jim in glasgow), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:56 (nine years ago) link
the only way to enact real change is to eat up real estate with constant, condescending, redundant explanations of things that everyone already knows
― bricc baby hitlo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:56 (nine years ago) link
like how many articles can I read and share on social media in one day that reinforce the worldview of my peers and i
― you too could be called a 'Star' by the Compliance Unit (jim in glasgow), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:57 (nine years ago) link
I wouldn't want the outcome to be "if you don't love newsom as much as I do, then you're a sexist piece of shit"
but you're saying maybe that is the arm-twisting politics-as-ethics logic here?
that's a bummer, if it's true
― the tune was space, Tuesday, 27 October 2015 21:57 (nine years ago) link
I haven't read the piece and only skim-read the conversation here but I already feel better about having been on-record as someone more than willing to make fun of both Bob Dylan and Joanna Newsom
― I Am Curious (Dolezal) (DJP), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 22:02 (nine years ago) link
Man voice make ILM good.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 22:09 (nine years ago) link
blown display name opp
― bricc baby hitlo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 22:14 (nine years ago) link
Man troll gas beany jim-jam
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Tuesday, 27 October 2015 22:22 (nine years ago) link
this is one of my favorite voices ever. starts at 3:22 right after the witch is hanged.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDxMnjRZT7M
― scott seward, Tuesday, 27 October 2015 22:37 (nine years ago) link
where are you, Trella Hart! i could listen to that song all day long.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 27 October 2015 22:38 (nine years ago) link
blaaack lucky hammerhead...
― scott seward, Tuesday, 27 October 2015 22:41 (nine years ago) link
Mark Of The Witch written by two women, fyi...
"now i wonder...if anybody'd miss me if i died..."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dqq8vMt2I9E
― scott seward, Tuesday, 27 October 2015 22:45 (nine years ago) link
not the same as her mark of the witch jam, but pretty cool and depressing.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 27 October 2015 22:47 (nine years ago) link
this song is amazing though. luckily a family member posted it along with family photos.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q6q1w0RPhBU
― scott seward, Tuesday, 27 October 2015 22:49 (nine years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rENJbKqS9ns
Here is PAMS' Swiszle package, Series 32 for WKLO. Trella Hart is the captivating lady with the amazing voice singing lead on many of the cuts. Trella's voice had a fascinating, (even sexy) "smokey" sort of quality. She was paired on many cuts with PAMS's answer to the Four Freshmen, here called the Good Timers.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 27 October 2015 22:53 (nine years ago) link
you've sold me scott
― a llove spat over a llama-keeper (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 28 October 2015 01:55 (nine years ago) link
this is her only spotify track and i diggithttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pg6cpbzJez4
― a llove spat over a llama-keeper (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 28 October 2015 01:57 (nine years ago) link
yeah the number of "if you don't like this / do like this, your politics are wrong" articles is really depressing but since the default mode of writing about music is now "this is how I felt as I listened," it's natural that this is what we'd get
― tremendous crime wave and killing wave (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Wednesday, 28 October 2015 02:23 (nine years ago) link
it's definitely what you get when blogging = journalism.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 28 October 2015 02:26 (nine years ago) link
or "journalism".
― scott seward, Wednesday, 28 October 2015 02:27 (nine years ago) link
i don't really know what you call the awl. awl-ful!
webblogzine or whatever.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 28 October 2015 02:28 (nine years ago) link
what i found more striking was that i think i've read five profiles of newsom from this album cycle, all of them by men, and all of them identical (1. something about unicorns 2. her songs are complicated 3. she was in inherent vice)― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Tuesday, October 27, 2015 8:27 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Tuesday, October 27, 2015 8:27 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
I spent €8 on Uncut to read a dreadful feature that went on about the 'constellation of birthmarks' (read: freckles) on her face, and hit all these other marks mentioned above.
― lamonti, Wednesday, 28 October 2015 12:07 (nine years ago) link
Apologies if an ILMer wrote this but shit like this make me pray for asteroids
http://thequietus.com/articles/19113-carly-rae-jepsen-emotion-best-record-2015-olafur-eliasson-drake
― ultros ultros-ghali, Friday, 30 October 2015 15:36 (nine years ago) link
― scott seward, Wednesday, 28 October 2015 02:28 (2 days ago) Permalink
For a while it seemed like they were trying to distinguish themselves as sort of "above the fray", not too clickbaity, perhaps a little more literate than most sites, but not with articles like that.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Friday, 30 October 2015 17:54 (nine years ago) link
all you really need to know right here about that carly ray review:
"As with the briefcase in Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction..."
― scott seward, Friday, 30 October 2015 17:58 (nine years ago) link
If an ILMer wrote that you should be even less apologetic
― twunty fifteen (imago), Friday, 30 October 2015 18:12 (nine years ago) link
Heh, probably.
The Quietus are usually pretty good generally though which is why it's always a bit odd when they drop the ball so heavily
― ultros ultros-ghali, Friday, 30 October 2015 19:18 (nine years ago) link
New winner.
http://www.nme.com/blogs/nme-blogs/10-of-the-best-debut-albums-of-2015
― Roaming gang of aggressive circlepits (ithappens), Thursday, 5 November 2015 14:18 (nine years ago) link
painful stuff.makes the bojack horseman takeover issue look like a masterclass in subtlety.
― mark e, Thursday, 5 November 2015 14:52 (nine years ago) link
It didn't have "sponsored post" on it at first. It had a byline. Of a writer who took to Twitter to angrily deny he had anything to do with it.
― Roaming gang of aggressive circlepits (ithappens), Thursday, 5 November 2015 14:55 (nine years ago) link
Viet Cong is not a noise band
― Comme Si, Kamasi (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 5 November 2015 15:13 (nine years ago) link
Clearly that's the issue here.
― Matt DC, Thursday, 5 November 2015 15:37 (nine years ago) link
tbh i'd rather have my advertorial hilariously clunky like that than anything more insidious (or worse journalists repping brands in non-advertorial copy)
― lex pretend, Thursday, 5 November 2015 15:40 (nine years ago) link
found out about the late of the pier frontman's record from this. the system works! listening to it now, though - perhaps it doesn't
― twunty fifteen (imago), Thursday, 5 November 2015 15:42 (nine years ago) link
ha, that is only one article from a four part series
You’d think we’d run out of battery or grind to a halt. But two hours in and we were still at 71%. The system is designed to handle multi-tasking by balancing memory and processor resources efficiently. So we carried on, gliding from tab to tab like Sleaford Mods on a pub crawl. Juiced up and eager to keep the party going.
http://www.nme.com/blogs/nme-blogs/the-5-best-collaborations-of-2015
― soref, Thursday, 5 November 2015 15:59 (nine years ago) link
this is surely someone who has been lumbered with an unenviable writing assignment and intentionally making it as corny as possible to maintain some personal dignity?
― soref, Thursday, 5 November 2015 16:00 (nine years ago) link
Amazing.
― Hey Bob (Scik Mouthy), Thursday, 5 November 2015 16:02 (nine years ago) link
"Getting a job done has never been so lolz."
― jmm, Thursday, 5 November 2015 16:03 (nine years ago) link
I was just coming to post that.
― suffeeciant attreebution (aldo), Thursday, 5 November 2015 16:03 (nine years ago) link
Hefty.
― soref, Thursday, 5 November 2015 16:06 (nine years ago) link
is it a joke? a conceptual prank of some kind? institutional critique about the advertorial fate of journalism today?
― the tune was space, Thursday, 5 November 2015 16:17 (nine years ago) link
this has the same earnest tone as the clean bandit cortana adverts, which were not done in jest
― twunty fifteen (imago), Thursday, 5 November 2015 16:19 (nine years ago) link
it has the feel of something which has been rewritten in spite after a request for amendments
― ogmor, Thursday, 5 November 2015 16:47 (nine years ago) link
Canadian trio Badbadnotgood bring their intricate jazz flex to the philosophical whims of Wu-Tang wordsmith Ghostface Killah
― Matt DC, Thursday, 5 November 2015 17:06 (nine years ago) link
Kind of wondering if these pieces were even written by anyone internally at all, they have the feeling of being at the very least heavily rewritten by some Microsoft marketing hack.
― Matt DC, Thursday, 5 November 2015 17:26 (nine years ago) link
Exactly what I thought Matt
― Cosmic Slop, Thursday, 5 November 2015 17:41 (nine years ago) link
http://38.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m7vsmmztyf1rvjt2vo1_500.gif
― Turrican, Thursday, 5 November 2015 18:41 (nine years ago) link
http://thenewswheel.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/tumblr_m7vsmmztyf1rvjt2vo2_500.gif
― Turrican, Thursday, 5 November 2015 18:45 (nine years ago) link
https://thump.vice.com/en_us/article/an-in-depth-textual-analysis-of-cajmeres-percolator
― bricc baby hitlo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 7 November 2015 17:35 (nine years ago) link
http://thetalkhouse.com/music/talks/will-butler-arcade-fire-talks-grimes-art-angels/
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 12 November 2015 18:32 (nine years ago) link
I just keep wondering if the funkiness is justified.
vs.
It’s like Grimes herself sings — I think — on “Flesh Without Blood”: “I have heard the mermaids singing, each to each/I do not think that they will sing to me/We have lingered in the chambers of the sea/By sea-girls wreathed with seaweed red and brown / Till human voices wake us, and we drown.”
― jmm, Thursday, 12 November 2015 18:54 (nine years ago) link
i feel like music writing hits new lows every few days lately
― wizzz! (amateurist), Thursday, 12 November 2015 19:18 (nine years ago) link
Nah. It's like Grimes herself sings, "Your Highness, no ; things there are bad as ever ; Men pass their time in so much wretchedness, That I, in sooth, have not the heart to plague them."
― flyingtrain (sbahnhof), Thursday, 12 November 2015 22:05 (nine years ago) link
Wow I didn't even realize it was the Arcade Fire guy.
Prince is obviously a fine touchstone for talking about Grimes. “Can’t you see the enemy just isn’t me tonight?” she sings on “Butterfly,” and then sings about butterflies, possibly as a metaphor, though possibly as literally about butterflies. Classic Prince move — talking about himself, and the public view of him, but also just making freakin’ dance music, and also speaking his own religious language, and also talking about, I don’t know, gun violence? And trying to get in your pants if you want, baby, but is that really me uhh, oh reality is a, mmm, tikky tikky tikky tikky burntz burntz burntz.
^ ???
hustlebonescominoutmy says "Hey Will. Everyone on the internet is mocking this review"
― flyingtrain (sbahnhof), Thursday, 12 November 2015 22:20 (nine years ago) link
With Bob Marley, it was listening to the Congos in my twenties that made me realize what a crazy, beautiful world I was missing out on in reggae.
― avant-garde, sissy bounce, zombie rave, aquacrunk, warlock, oceangrunge, (imago), Thursday, 12 November 2015 22:38 (nine years ago) link
every sentence is embarrassing
― Οὖτις, Thursday, 12 November 2015 22:46 (nine years ago) link
I did not realise until today that Win and Will Butler were two different people. Anyway, whoever wrote this, it's shit.
― Eyeball Kicks, Friday, 13 November 2015 12:47 (nine years ago) link
i dunno, I feel like I don't see enough whining from rock bores about how they're trying their hardest to like pop music, dammit
― John Dope Assos (Noodle Vague), Friday, 13 November 2015 13:26 (nine years ago) link
they won a grammy hence what do they know about music anyways
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 13 November 2015 16:32 (nine years ago) link
http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-34801885
The good news is that, in their hearts, people are aware of this. All who have had the experience of teaching music appreciation know it to be so. The first step is to introduce the precious commodity of silence, so that your students are listening with open ears to the cosmos, and are beginning to forget their addictive pleasures. Then you play to them the things that you love. They will be bewildered at first. After all, how can this old geezer sit still for 50 minutes listening to something that hasn't got a beat or a tune? Then you discuss the things that they love. Had they noticed, for example, that Lady Gaga in "Poker Face" stays for most of the tune on one note? Is that real melody? After a while they will see that they have in fact been making judgments all along - it is just that they were making the wrong ones. When Metallica appeared at the 2014 Glastonbury festival there was a wake-up moment of this kind - the recognition that these guys, unlike so many who had performed there, actually had something to say. Yes, there are distinctions of quality, even in the realm of pop.
― scarlett bohansson (unregistered), Monday, 16 November 2015 21:33 (nine years ago) link
Roger Scruton is a famous buffoon tbf
― John Dope Assos (Noodle Vague), Monday, 16 November 2015 21:43 (nine years ago) link
I'm assuming that the dude who wrote that is ignorant of a lot of contemporary vocal music that is built upon man-made sound-effects and drones.
― I Am Curious (Dolezal) (DJP), Monday, 16 November 2015 21:49 (nine years ago) link
In 2009, Scruton wrote and presented the BBC2 documentary Why Beauty Matters,[17] in which he argued that beauty should be restored to its traditional position in art, architecture and music. In an article for The American Spectator subsequent to the programme's broadcast, Scruton claimed he had received "more than 500 e-mails from viewers, all but one saying, 'Thank Heavens someone is saying what needs to be said'".[18] In an Intelligence Squared debate in March 2009,[19] held at the Royal Geographical Society, Scruton (seconding historian David Starkey) proposed the motion: "Britain has become indifferent to beauty" by holding an image of Botticelli's The Birth of Venus next to an image of the British supermodel Kate Moss, to demonstrate how British perceptions of beauty had declined to the "level of our crudest appetites and our basest needs".[20]
― John Dope Assos (Noodle Vague), Monday, 16 November 2015 22:16 (nine years ago) link
ah I see, he's a knob
― I Am Curious (Dolezal) (DJP), Monday, 16 November 2015 22:17 (nine years ago) link
― John Dope Assos (Noodle Vague), Monday, 16 November 2015 22:17 (nine years ago) link
finally someone to defend the value of metallica
― j., Monday, 16 November 2015 22:20 (nine years ago) link
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/573718.stm
― sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Monday, 16 November 2015 22:21 (nine years ago) link
The next step is to introduce the idea of judgment. The belief that there is a difference between good and bad, meaningful and meaningless, profound and vapid, exciting and banal - this belief was once fundamental to musical education. But it offends against political correctness. Today there is only my taste and yours. The suggestion that my taste is better than yours is elitist, an offence against equality. But unless we teach children to judge, to discriminate, to recognise the difference between music of lasting value and mere ephemera, we give up on the task of education.
when somebody like Scruton makes an argument like this they have to neatly side-step the very real likelihood of being confronted by somebody equally as qualified and discriminating as themselves who profoundly disagrees with them about what constitutes "lasting value"
― John Dope Assos (Noodle Vague), Monday, 16 November 2015 22:22 (nine years ago) link
is all of this happening now because kids called him Scrotum in school
― I Am Curious (Dolezal) (DJP), Monday, 16 November 2015 22:27 (nine years ago) link
― I Am Curious (Dolezal) (DJP), Monday, November 16, 2015 4:49 PM (39 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
I'm assuming that this dude doesn't sing bass
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Monday, 16 November 2015 22:29 (nine years ago) link
When Metallica appeared at the 2014 Glastonbury festival there was a wake-up moment of this kind - the recognition that these guys, unlike so many who had performed there, actually had something to say. Which is why I, Roger Scruton, spent the entire day doing beer bongs and screaming METAL UP YOUR ASS at everyone who walked past my tent.
― a moment on the streets, a lifetime in the sheets (DJ Mencap), Monday, 16 November 2015 22:42 (nine years ago) link
Oh dear god, I heard this fucker on R4 the other day. What a clueless twat. I was waiting for it to filter onto here. He has obviously never taken acid before or had a house music epiphany. I am not saying that is the be all and end all, but he is fatally full of shit. ALL his opinions on music are absolutely fucking ridiculous and completely unsupportable.
― xelab, Monday, 16 November 2015 23:35 (nine years ago) link
ALL his opinions on music are absolutely fucking ridiculous and completely unsupportable.
― un-ironic, earnest racist manning remains to be rehabilitated (Bananaman Begins), Tuesday, 17 November 2015 16:13 (nine years ago) link
at one point he mentions muzak and then starts complaining about its booming bass notes and having to shout over the top of it in a pub. huh?
― NickB, Tuesday, 17 November 2015 16:27 (nine years ago) link
someone introduce him to saer
― ogmor, Tuesday, 17 November 2015 16:52 (nine years ago) link
I have or had a book of his on aesthetics, I got it for the lols i guess since I knew he was a buffoon. He analyses Losing My Religion and judges it wanting as it doesn't have any inverted triads.
― ledge, Tuesday, 17 November 2015 18:19 (nine years ago) link
buffoon with arbitrary rules about what constitutes being melodic hmmmm
― John Dope Assos (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 17 November 2015 18:27 (nine years ago) link
rogeir scruton
― NickB, Tuesday, 17 November 2015 18:59 (nine years ago) link
This sounds like the shittiest book.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/3/3f/Sexual_Desire_%28first_edition%29.jpg
― jmm, Tuesday, 17 November 2015 19:19 (nine years ago) link
He always makes me think of Popeye Scruton, the headmaster in the early Adrian Mole books.
― please don't shampoo your eyes (stevie), Wednesday, 18 November 2015 09:26 (nine years ago) link
Is Scruton a member of UKIP?
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 18 November 2015 09:51 (nine years ago) link
Wow what a truly barmy comment on Metallica, and then ending with the 'clear the noise' comment - so want Scruton to review their back-catalogue.
― xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 18 November 2015 10:24 (nine years ago) link
xxp stevie, pretty sure that was deliberate by Sue Townsend.
― Agents, show the general out. (Bananaman Begins), Wednesday, 18 November 2015 11:10 (nine years ago) link
hahaha awesome. mission accomplished, sue!
― please don't shampoo your eyes (stevie), Wednesday, 18 November 2015 11:25 (nine years ago) link
This is not technically written but this video is just:
I Just Don’t Like Animal Collective by Sami Jarroushhttp://consequenceofsound.net/video/i-just-dont-like-animal-collective/
― Badmotorfinger Debate Club (MFB), Wednesday, 18 November 2015 20:29 (nine years ago) link
that entire video series is real garbage
― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Wednesday, 18 November 2015 20:52 (nine years ago) link
How NOT To Perform A Cover Song
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 18 November 2015 20:53 (nine years ago) link
this takes the cake http://observer.com/2015/11/cancelling-paris-concerts-after-attacks-was-the-biggest-mistake-of-u2s-career/
― an emotionally withholding exterminator (m coleman), Thursday, 19 November 2015 11:59 (nine years ago) link
As an A&R representative, Sommer was integrally involved with the success of Hootie & The Blowfish
― Caput Johannis in Disco (Tom D.), Thursday, 19 November 2015 12:51 (nine years ago) link
In any case, U2 weren't the ones who cancelled the gig, were they? They were told they couldn't play.
― Eyeball Kicks, Thursday, 19 November 2015 13:06 (nine years ago) link
Yeah but they could have just played in a small venue or busked on the street right? That certainly would have made the terrorists think twice.
― ledge, Thursday, 19 November 2015 13:09 (nine years ago) link
haven't read that piece yet but wow, is that the guy from ♥♥♥ hugo largo ♥♥♥ who wrote that?
― coombe gaz you are (NickB), Thursday, 19 November 2015 13:15 (nine years ago) link
There is a name I haven't heard in decades. I remember buying Mettle when I was like 15 or something...
― xelab, Thursday, 19 November 2015 13:23 (nine years ago) link
Yes he went on to be an MTV VJ for awhileThen found Hootie
― Amira, Queen of Creativity (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 19 November 2015 13:53 (nine years ago) link
did he sign Gay Dad too?
― scott seward, Thursday, 19 November 2015 14:20 (nine years ago) link
some interesting nugs in his wiki
As an A&R representative, Sommer was integrally involved with the success of Hootie & The Blowfish, and also worked with The Gits, 7 Year Bitch, Michael Crawford, Duncan Sheik, and Scott Weiland. He was also involved in the very early careers of both the Beastie Boys and Kara's Flowers, producing three tracks for Kara's Flowers in the summer of 2000, shortly before the group changed their name to Maroon 5. These tracks remain unreleased. More recently, Sommer has produced New York City-based rock band The Indecent, and in collaboration with Stuart Chatwood (formerly of The Tea Party), is working on his own project titled Uncommon Folk, which features electric slocore interpretations of traditional American folk songs, and features guest vocals by Glen Campbell, Mavis Staples, Blind Boys of Alabama, Jakob Dylan, and Robin Zander.
also not many can say they signed 7 Year Bitch and Hootie and the Blowfish
― Amira, Queen of Creativity (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 19 November 2015 14:57 (nine years ago) link
He does a regular column for Big Takeover that's usually pretty good. Reminiscences of NYC hardcore in the '80s and that kind of thing.
― Ys Man a.k.a. Have One on G (geoffreyess), Thursday, 19 November 2015 22:13 (nine years ago) link
he was in Even Worse. he's totes got cred from the olden days. he also produced Hetch Hetchy and Hetch Hetchy were waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay better than Hugo Largo. the A&R stuff is just LOL 90's time to get paid stuff.
― scott seward, Friday, 20 November 2015 02:09 (nine years ago) link
Why I Will Not Buy Adele’s New Album 25
― Badmotorfinger Debate Club (MFB), Monday, 23 November 2015 19:44 (nine years ago) link
I'm not much of a writer, but I'm certain I could write a much shorter article about why I'm not buying the new Adele album
― too young for seapunk (Moodles), Monday, 23 November 2015 19:50 (nine years ago) link
It was March 10th, 2011. It was one of those songs that just stopped you in your tracks. Something so different from everything else on the radio at the time that I instantly fell in love. I drove straight to the nearest Target, bought the CD and popped it in my car’s CD player. I can’t say I’ve called many things, but, hell, I called this. Mind you, this was long before the world knew Adele. “Rolling” was still just starting to get played on AAA radio and hadn’t cracked top 40 yet. Go me.
The album was certified as gold in February 2009 by the RIAA. By July 2009, the album had sold 2.2 million copies worldwide. At the 51st Annual Grammy Awards in February 2009, Adele received the award for Best New Artist, in addition to the award for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance for "Chasing Pavements", which was also nominated for Record of the Year and Song of the Year.
― Eugene Goostman (forksclovetofu), Monday, 23 November 2015 19:57 (nine years ago) link
hahahaha so he's patting himself on the back for hearing a song on FM radio and buying a CD at Target, fuckin hipsters man
― Amira, Queen of Creativity (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 23 November 2015 20:01 (nine years ago) link
you know who's gonna be big is this drake kid, i keep hearing about him
― Eugene Goostman (forksclovetofu), Monday, 23 November 2015 20:02 (nine years ago) link
oh yeah, i hear he's the next Travi$ $cott
― Amira, Queen of Creativity (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 23 November 2015 21:12 (nine years ago) link
the guy who wrote that article performed at my school and i ended up at his show for some awful reason. anyway here is the kind of music he makes
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xJWi2qJIfds
― global tetrahedron, Monday, 23 November 2015 22:05 (nine years ago) link
wait watch this one instead. it's even worse
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vaYaTnqsKg
― global tetrahedron, Monday, 23 November 2015 22:06 (nine years ago) link
i always forget now if i had him in a class i taught once or if he just had so many signs up around campus that his name was imprinted on my mind
― j., Monday, 23 November 2015 22:09 (nine years ago) link
Ari Herstand Will Teach You Guitar
― Eugene Goostman (forksclovetofu), Monday, 23 November 2015 22:10 (nine years ago) link
i always forget now if i had him in a class i taught once or if he just had so many signs up around campus that his name was imprinted on my mind― j., Monday, November 23, 2015 4:09 PM (49 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
i'm sure he just played there a ton. his music is like ready-made for suburban college kids 'going to their first concert'
― global tetrahedron, Monday, 23 November 2015 23:00 (nine years ago) link
no really i think he was a student
i also think he never showed up and dropped
― j., Monday, 23 November 2015 23:07 (nine years ago) link
found his blog
"I became a force on the University of Minnesota campus. From around the time of my CD release to more or less Fall 2009, I was the most popular musician/band on campus. The U has about 40,000 undergraduate students so it wasn't a bad market to start with. My presence on campus was so undeniable that the music editor for the Minnesota Daily felt the need to write three hate pieces on me in one semester. He despised my presence so much that in the Fall of 2008 he included me in the "Freshman Survival Guide" handed out to all incoming freshman and listed me as the #1 of the top 3 worst bands in Minneapolis (the top 3 best bands in his piece are all now virtually defunct). He then wrote a scathing album review of my 2008 release which garnered some of the most comments of any MN Daily piece on the website and finally, I made the cover of the December joke edition next to Lindsay Lohan and the president of the University of Minnesota. My headline? "Surgeons Attempt To Reattach Local Musician's Balls Fails."As these articles were pouring out from the desk of a writer who will go unnamed, I was filling the 800 person capacity Varsity Theater, had just opened for Ben Folds in front of 3,200 people and had begun my massive college tour making obscene amounts of money. I had received about 30 other positive music reviews/previews that year in papers around the country, but of course, I can pretty much recite the MN Daily's hate pieces word for word."
― global tetrahedron, Tuesday, 24 November 2015 00:20 (nine years ago) link
had begun my massive college tour making obscene amounts of money. I had received about 30 other positive music reviews/previews that year in papers around the country, but of course, I can pretty much recite the MN Daily's hate pieces word for word.
Y'all are the reason that Dre ain't been getting no sleep
― global tetrahedron, Tuesday, 24 November 2015 00:23 (nine years ago) link
As these articles were pouring out from the desk of a writer who will go unnamed
it was you, right????
― j., Tuesday, 24 November 2015 01:59 (nine years ago) link
hahaha that name is vaguely familiar but he's from that like parallel but secretly more popular Mpls music scene of like uh the fine line and the pourhouse and pickle park and playing at u of m frat house spring fling bullshit
― Amira, Queen of Creativity (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 24 November 2015 02:15 (nine years ago) link
wait so that means the AAA radio station he first heard Adele on would have been pre-format change Cities 97.
hmmm...wonder which Target he bought it at? My money's on the Quarry one. Not hardcore like the Lake Street Target but still close enough to Northeast to feel "hip"
― Amira, Queen of Creativity (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 24 November 2015 02:16 (nine years ago) link
oh god listen Carnage the Executioner is a god live performer but sometimes I wish he never would have beatboxed into a loop pedal
― Amira, Queen of Creativity (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 24 November 2015 02:17 (nine years ago) link
― Amira, Queen of Creativity (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, November 23, 2015 8:15 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
too real
― goole, Tuesday, 24 November 2015 17:26 (nine years ago) link
"secretly more popular" is such a crucial phenomenon
http://www.npr.org/2015/11/23/457081463/review-adele-25
― I Am Curious (Dolezal) (DJP), Tuesday, 24 November 2015 17:52 (nine years ago) link
lol I think I found the operative sentence there
― avant-garde, sissy bounce, zombie rave, aquacrunk, warlock, oceangrunge, (imago), Tuesday, 24 November 2015 18:00 (nine years ago) link
― goole, Tuesday, November 24, 2015 11:26 AM (59 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
forgot O'Gara's too!
but yeah I remember walking to my car after playing a Maps of Norway show at The Kitty Cat Club and walking by that fake Irish bar in Dinkytown that used to be BW3s and the windows were open and like 150 kids were jumping up and down while some band of dudes covered "Beverly Hills" by Weezer
― Amira, Queen of Creativity (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 24 November 2015 18:28 (nine years ago) link
Ironically when it was still a Buffalo Wild Wings, I somehow saw a show by the legendary chiptune/Game Boy weirdo Fuckstorm who made horrible noises while a video of Mr. Quintron played on a projection screen.
― Amira, Queen of Creativity (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 24 November 2015 18:29 (nine years ago) link
http://www.inc.com/john-brandon/10-best-albums-of-2015-to-play-in-the-office.html
― Badmotorfinger Debate Club (MFB), Tuesday, 24 November 2015 19:06 (nine years ago) link
it's like Talking Heads' "Don't Worry About the Government" in prose form.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 24 November 2015 19:22 (nine years ago) link
its the hand gestures white indie artists adopt when beat-boxing that I can't stand
― I don't have the time or energy to make a counterargument (stevie), Wednesday, 25 November 2015 09:45 (nine years ago) link
like, "oh, it seems i have discovered a sole funky limb, let me show it to you"
Lol
― Amira, Queen of Creativity (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 25 November 2015 12:39 (nine years ago) link
hack journo, how the sausage is made
http://news.yahoo.com/rihanna-anti-album-complete-lyrics-191135829.html?soc_src=mediacontentstory&soc_trk=tw
screensnaps in case they fix it:
http://imgur.com/a/vLyY5
― big WHOIS aka the nameserver (s.clover), Friday, 27 November 2015 01:34 (nine years ago) link
The album's release comes just a few days after the "Bitch Better Have My Money" singer announced her Anti 2016 world tour with fellow artists Travis Scott, Big Sean and The Weeknd. Anti is [DELETE ONE OF THESE ENDINGS TO THE SENTENCE AND KEEP THE OTHER BASED ON FACTS: streaming exclusively on Tidal before it makes its way over to iTunes and other streaming services OR streaming on Apple Music, Spotify, Tidal and can be purchased on iTunes].The 27-year-old performer's latest album has [NUMBER OF TRACKS] and its lyrics [HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS] continue the "BBHMM" storyline of an even edgier, freer Rihanna than fans were introduced to in her last album three years ago, Unapologetic. Rihanna especially pushes the edge in [NAME RELEVANT SONG FROM ANTI THAT MATCHES DESCRIPTION], where she sings: [ LYRICS ]
The 27-year-old performer's latest album has [NUMBER OF TRACKS] and its lyrics [HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS] continue the "BBHMM" storyline of an even edgier, freer Rihanna than fans were introduced to in her last album three years ago, Unapologetic. Rihanna especially pushes the edge in [NAME RELEVANT SONG FROM ANTI THAT MATCHES DESCRIPTION], where she sings:
[ LYRICS ]
― big WHOIS aka the nameserver (s.clover), Friday, 27 November 2015 01:35 (nine years ago) link
Ha, was just coming to post that.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Friday, 27 November 2015 01:37 (nine years ago) link
it is a shame square brackets cannot be put in display names
― avant-garde, sissy bounce, zombie rave, aquacrunk, warlock, oceangrunge, (imago), Friday, 27 November 2015 01:37 (nine years ago) link
lmfaooooooooo
― dyl, Friday, 27 November 2015 03:53 (nine years ago) link
Damn, seems to be down. Eight hours ws a p good run tho
― albvivertine, Friday, 27 November 2015 04:11 (nine years ago) link
at least they were planning on basing it on facts
― j., Friday, 27 November 2015 04:13 (nine years ago) link
Dude who wrote it works at Mic, where it was originally posted, as well as freelances at a couple of other spots. Still hasn't mentioned it at all on FB/Twitter, yet.
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 27 November 2015 05:29 (nine years ago) link
agreed, and yet
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Friday, 27 November 2015 05:43 (nine years ago) link
omg
― Number None, Friday, 27 November 2015 07:39 (nine years ago) link
big fan of this kind of thing in general, local newspapers printing "[DROP IN QUOTE FROM THIS BORING BASTARD]" or something
― a moment on the streets, a lifetime in the sheets (DJ Mencap), Friday, 27 November 2015 08:34 (nine years ago) link
years and years ago I wrote copy for an award ceremony brochure (I think) and put [CHECK THIS!] next to some assertion or other which ended up getting printed, it looked like I was being my own hypeman
― a moment on the streets, a lifetime in the sheets (DJ Mencap), Friday, 27 November 2015 08:35 (nine years ago) link
[DELETE ONE OF THESE ENDINGS TO THE SENTENCE AND KEEP THE OTHER BASED ON FACTS]
― lex pretend, Friday, 27 November 2015 11:45 (nine years ago) link
idgi is this guy leaving messages in square brackets to himself, to check before he submits, or does he actually expect sub-editor to do all this work for him?
― I don't have the time or energy to make a counterargument (stevie), Friday, 27 November 2015 12:02 (nine years ago) link
I dunno, one the one hand it's embarrassing, but not too terribly damning for the writer. As j says, at least it reveals responsible (if p basic) fact-checking stuff, not something like [remember to actually listen to album, find out who this mysterious "Rihanna" is, etc]. In other words, let s/he who has never riddled a draft with "notes to self" cast the first stone. Now, actually publishing it like that, well that, that I cannot defend.
Of course, I can see how it happened: writer accidentally sent an earlier (I hope MUCH earlier) draft, editor didn't bother to read it, voila. I'd be mortified.
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Friday, 27 November 2015 12:13 (nine years ago) link
So wait this was a real fuckup? Not a sarcastic commentary on the state of music journalism?
― moans and feedback (Dinsdale), Friday, 27 November 2015 12:47 (nine years ago) link
not sure that's really Yahoo News' stock in trade
― a moment on the streets, a lifetime in the sheets (DJ Mencap), Friday, 27 November 2015 13:20 (nine years ago) link
Amazing
― Amira, Queen of Creativity (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 27 November 2015 17:23 (nine years ago) link
great review
― welltris (crüt), Friday, 27 November 2015 17:43 (nine years ago) link
NAME RELEVANT SONG FROM ANTI THAT MATCHES DESCRIPTION
'pushes the edge'
it's like an sql query
― j., Friday, 27 November 2015 17:54 (nine years ago) link
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Friday, November 27, 2015 7:13 AM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Nah, disagree. Its not the half-finished state, its that there's already a hack-judgment on the music of the album, unheard, just waiting for relevant fill-in-the-blank quotes to validate the already existing narrative.
Also that it pretty clearly shows that articles aren't about covering new info but assembling enough keywords to be first-past-the-post in googlejuice when people are searching for the thing the article _links_ to.
― big WHOIS aka the nameserver (s.clover), Friday, 27 November 2015 19:12 (nine years ago) link
"service journalism"
its that there's already a hack-judgment on the music of the album, unheard, just waiting for relevant fill-in-the-blank quotes to validate the already existing narrative.
yeah but what's the probability the album won't fit the narrative? they may rewrite if the album comes out and it's less edgy and free than Unapologetic, and are just betting that the content will reflect the promo materials
― flopson, Friday, 27 November 2015 19:29 (nine years ago) link
like if i wrote the draft of a financial report before getting official results but with some prior expectation of record setting growth, i may write
This was a record year for the company. Earnings before depreciation and taxes grew by [PERCENTAGE], making this quarter our best since [YEAR].
― flopson, Friday, 27 November 2015 19:31 (nine years ago) link
true lol
i guess the "shock" of reading this draft is seeing that music writing is just as perfunctory as any other kind of writing?
didn't everyone already know this
― flopson, Friday, 27 November 2015 19:33 (nine years ago) link
not to blow your mind but most reviews aren't written before the reviewer has heard the album
― I don't have the time or energy to make a counterargument (stevie), Friday, 27 November 2015 19:46 (nine years ago) link
and if they are, well, they generally deserve to be included within the annals of this thread
― I don't have the time or energy to make a counterargument (stevie), Friday, 27 November 2015 19:47 (nine years ago) link
oh it's an actual album review? i thought it was just a little news blurb on some aggregator site for when the album drops
― flopson, Friday, 27 November 2015 19:54 (nine years ago) link
no, hang on, you're right - it's nominally a news piece, though again, the writer doesn't seem to know the album well enough to express the shards of opinion without leaving the note to find a song that supports his suppositions later.
― I don't have the time or energy to make a counterargument (stevie), Friday, 27 November 2015 20:00 (nine years ago) link
I guess this is a common risk with web writing though - did you save the rough first take of a piece on the CMS as a draft as you meant to, or did you actually go through with publishing the thing?
― I don't have the time or energy to make a counterargument (stevie), Friday, 27 November 2015 20:01 (nine years ago) link
rest in peace, mac mccormick...
"In great measure Lightnin' and his songs reflect the mistreatment which has been and, in lesser degree, is the condition of Negro life. But while reflecting it, Lightnin' is not in any real sense subject to it in the way his neighbors are. Pursued by women of two races, earning upwards of $15,000 a year, and free to exercise all but a fraction of the rights of first class citizenship, his position is hardly comparable to those who stand in a condition of fear and elemental want."
https://scontent-lga3-1.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xaf1/v/t1.0-9/12274467_10154362120527137_7640918093203148569_n.jpg?oh=2e695b80d119bed0cc77a68e6e17d523&oe=56ADC6B3
― scott seward, Saturday, 28 November 2015 00:32 (nine years ago) link
wow, is that in the liners?
― Eugene Goostman (forksclovetofu), Saturday, 28 November 2015 05:57 (nine years ago) link
yeah. and it gets worse after that.
― scott seward, Saturday, 28 November 2015 06:08 (nine years ago) link
"As this tribute illustrates, the one single thing which Lightnin' can give is music. Otherwise he has nothing to offer."
― scott seward, Saturday, 28 November 2015 06:09 (nine years ago) link
"Not to be confused with the great bluesmen who expressed a deeper, universal sorrow..."
he compares him to a clown. and then just rakes him over the coals forever. describes at length the ways in which Lightnin' wouldn't help various family members who needed money. it's brutal.
― scott seward, Saturday, 28 November 2015 06:10 (nine years ago) link
What a charmer
― Eugene Goostman (forksclovetofu), Saturday, 28 November 2015 06:30 (nine years ago) link
hopkins was a notoriously layabout and womanizer and was widely considered to lack elementary loyalty, but... jeez.
mccormick sounds a bit like that stephen calt guy. who is also dead. coincidence?
― wizzz! (amateurist), Saturday, 28 November 2015 08:48 (nine years ago) link
Calt's a bastard but at least he writes in a way that suggests an education beyond the fifth grade
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Saturday, 28 November 2015 15:26 (nine years ago) link
This is decent from a grammatical/syntactical perspective, but it rivals the Goddess In The Doorway album review for the title of "Most Rolling Stone Article Ever."
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Saturday, 28 November 2015 15:36 (nine years ago) link
i like how immediately after gioia went off on music people really wanting to be in the movie business he referred to what 'jack black' was doing with third man records
― maura, Saturday, 28 November 2015 18:17 (nine years ago) link
research!
― maura, Saturday, 28 November 2015 18:18 (nine years ago) link
oh whoops wrong thread i'm talking about these videos
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4NT-fbu4b40https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5xOK9ETlhRs
― maura, Saturday, 28 November 2015 18:21 (nine years ago) link
maura, it was nice to see you write about Palm in RS. they played a great show at my store this year.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QaDnnPLdu4I
― scott seward, Saturday, 28 November 2015 18:22 (nine years ago) link
yeah!! i love them. they're playing here tomorrow!
― maura, Saturday, 28 November 2015 18:31 (nine years ago) link
also, shout out to whiney for accepting my pitch on them :)
― maura, Saturday, 28 November 2015 18:35 (nine years ago) link
good job, whiney!
― scott seward, Saturday, 28 November 2015 18:55 (nine years ago) link
http://www.newyorker.com/culture/culture-desk/who-is-really-paying-for-adele
― Cosmic Slop, Sunday, 29 November 2015 11:01 (nine years ago) link
Idiotic.
― Hey Bob (Scik Mouthy), Sunday, 29 November 2015 12:40 (nine years ago) link
the previous and seemingly unassailable record, 2.4 million, set by ’N Sync, in 2000,
her label, Columbia, and its parent, Sony
can't get past the commas
― Ys Man a.k.a. Have One on G (geoffreyess), Sunday, 29 November 2015 15:44 (nine years ago) link
maybe one superfluous comma there?
― a hastily-observed cruet (seandalai), Sunday, 29 November 2015 15:51 (nine years ago) link
I'd say two: after 'N Sync and after parent.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Sunday, 29 November 2015 15:56 (nine years ago) link
the general tone of the average "WHY ISN'T ADELE ON SPOTIFY" article, this one included, makes it sound as if she was withholding bread from childrendear entitled jagoff: you can still get this album free in a dozen different ways like, i dunno, youtube if you don't want to support the radical belief that an artist has the right to sell her own work how she'd likedear "industry insider": the current trend is for blockbuster artists to roll out a concrete album release and then a quieter exclusive or multiplatform streaming release months later and sales seem to undeniably suggest that's the smartest way to do it; if you have some sort of insight as to why that's not the case, maybe voice that argument instead of nonsensically flailing about with false "the industry has EVOLVED" platitudes
― Eugene Goostman (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 29 November 2015 16:18 (nine years ago) link
Stupid article but wrt the bit at the end that goes "Why not make “25” available to the premium subscribers on streaming services?": iirc TS offered this to Spotify for 1989 but Spotify refused because they don't want to have premium-only material.
Best thing about the article was the suggested link to http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/04/27/the-man-who-broke-the-music-business which is an interesting read
― a hastily-observed cruet (seandalai), Sunday, 29 November 2015 16:25 (nine years ago) link
The whole thing is stupid but this but took the biscuit considering Adele is already on record moaning about paying tax so why would she want to not make as much money to help other artists?
In this scenario, maybe Adele doesn’t get the record for albums sold, but she would have significantly increased streaming subscriptions, which would benefit many artists. The way things are going now, only Adele wins.
Of course she does! that's her whole reason for doing it!
― Cosmic Slop, Sunday, 29 November 2015 16:49 (nine years ago) link
This article is so fucking stupid that it's practically ruining my weekend
― bricc baby hitlo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Sunday, 29 November 2015 18:57 (nine years ago) link
If you are an Apple or a Spotify subscriber (I am both), you are faced with a quandary over what to do about “25.”
Even if I were -- which I'm not -- I would not be faced with a quandary, because I don't care about the new Adele album. But to take an example that actually applies to me, I do subscribe to both Netflix and Hulu. And this weekend, my kids wanted to watch Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, because we recently finished the book. Guess what? No Harry Potter on Netflix or Hulu. Did I scream and yell because the services I subscribe to at a grand total of about $16 a month don't have every movie ever made (or, for that matter, most of them)? No. I paid the $3.99 for the HD stream from Amazon, because 4 bucks is still pretty cheap for an afternoon of family entertainment. (We did check the public library first, but it was checked out.) There are so many fallacies in such a short space that it's hard to even know what to say. I'm not even sure who he's worried about. The industry? The consumer? Both of those seem to be doing fine, at least as far as the Adele album goes. It's like he's gotten 100 percent on board the streaming train, and he's just mad that the whole world isn't there with him. The frustrated rage of the early adopter.
― something totally new, it’s the AOR of the twenty first century (tipsy mothra), Sunday, 29 November 2015 19:39 (nine years ago) link
reminds me of the guys who think people should only listen to the format of their choice who post on facebook how much they hate cds/vinyl/mp3s whatever.But they dont get paid for it and no more than 10 people probably read it
― Cosmic Slop, Sunday, 29 November 2015 20:05 (nine years ago) link
The whole thrust of his argument is "Look, lady, I already spent $20 on music this month, and now you expect me to spend another $10?!"
― bricc baby hitlo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Sunday, 29 November 2015 20:09 (nine years ago) link
And this weekend, my kids wanted to watch Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, because we recently finished the book. Guess what? No Harry Potter on Netflix or Hulu. Did I scream and yell because the services I subscribe to at a grand total of about $16 a month don't have every movie ever made (or, for that matter, most of them)? No. I paid the $3.99 for the HD stream from Amazon, because 4 bucks is still pretty cheap for an afternoon of family entertainment. (We did check the public library first, but it was checked out.) There are so many fallacies in such a short space that it's hard to even know what to say. I'm not even sure who he's worried about. The industry? The consumer? Both of those seem to be doing fine, at least as far as the Adele album goes. It's like he's gotten 100 percent on board the streaming train, and he's just mad that the whole world isn't there with him. The frustrated rage of the early adopter.
The number of times in the last two years I've seen people blink several times when I say, "I checked X out of the library" has been astonishing. It's like, if the library's not part of your life, the library will never be in your life.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 29 November 2015 20:12 (nine years ago) link
i was mad for years that there was no high quality version of the "like dust" video by the passion puppets on youtube. livid! finally, this year, my prayers were answered.
― scott seward, Sunday, 29 November 2015 20:56 (nine years ago) link
oh no this massively successful album may not sell as many copies as it could have. the writer of "shake it off" will only be able to afford two summer homes this year.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Sunday, 29 November 2015 22:18 (nine years ago) link
let's not stop until culture is 100% saturated in adele
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Sunday, 29 November 2015 22:19 (nine years ago) link
Who's Adele? [/satire]
I finally realized what the Yahoo Rihanna stuff-up reminded me of – this, from the movie Chicago
http://s12.postimg.org/a3n9ytq8d/Chicago_newspaper_Guilty_Innocent.png
Fairly inefficient journalism imo. Half of these papers will have to go in the bin, and the other half won't really be "news". Money-saving tip: just glance at the headline, then wait a few hours and buy a better newspaper. But even this fictional rubbish newspaper accepts that there are two possible versions of reality. Yahoo isn't quite there yet. (Apparently Chicago nicked that idea)
― flyingtrain (sbahnhof), Monday, 30 November 2015 07:56 (nine years ago) link
http://www.magnetmagazine.com/2015/11/13/ezra-furman-the-outsider/
Ezra Furman is the kind of artist who comes along every now and then to reduce jaded music hacks to gibbering, simpering wrecks. All cynicism evaporates, all objectivity is thrown out of the window, and terms like “life-changing” are tossed around with giddy, reckless abandon. And it’s not just the press. Witness Furman’s new label boss, Bella Union supremo (and erstwhile Cocteau Twin) Simon Raymonde. After catching a particularly riotous gig at London’s Lexington earlier this year, Raymonde took to Instagram and became very, very excited indeed. As in, capslock excited:“EVERYTHING. ALL THINGS. LIFE. THE BEGINNINGS. THE STRUGGLE. EVERYDAY. OUTSIDE. TEARS. HEARTBREAK. UNBRIDLED JOY. NOTHING ELSE MATTERS BEFORE OR AFTER. JUST THIS MOMENT. LIVING. SHARING. LOVE. WHY WE BOTHER. THE MOST IMPORTANT. DON’T USE THE WORD VISCERAL UNLESS IT REALLY WAS. NEVER TO BE FORGOTTEN.”Quite. And it’s not just Raymonde. The rest of the U.K., it would seem, has fallen head over heels in love with Furman. He’s received across-the-board fi ve-star reviews, BBC 6 Music has practically adopted him, he sells out shows in minutes, and in one of the summer’s more surreal musical/media meet-ups, he appeared in a suitably somber interview on Channel 4’s evening news. Not bad for a selfconfessed misfi t, a cross-dressing, bisexual, observant Jew with a history of depression. Even more impressive when you consider that, as recently as three years ago, he was pleading for money on Kickstarter to fund his first solo album, The Year Of No Returning. Not that he seems particularly fazed when MAGNET calls him to talk about this sudden burst of fame.
“EVERYTHING. ALL THINGS. LIFE. THE BEGINNINGS. THE STRUGGLE. EVERYDAY. OUTSIDE. TEARS. HEARTBREAK. UNBRIDLED JOY. NOTHING ELSE MATTERS BEFORE OR AFTER. JUST THIS MOMENT. LIVING. SHARING. LOVE. WHY WE BOTHER. THE MOST IMPORTANT. DON’T USE THE WORD VISCERAL UNLESS IT REALLY WAS. NEVER TO BE FORGOTTEN.”
Quite. And it’s not just Raymonde. The rest of the U.K., it would seem, has fallen head over heels in love with Furman. He’s received across-the-board fi ve-star reviews, BBC 6 Music has practically adopted him, he sells out shows in minutes, and in one of the summer’s more surreal musical/media meet-ups, he appeared in a suitably somber interview on Channel 4’s evening news. Not bad for a selfconfessed misfi t, a cross-dressing, bisexual, observant Jew with a history of depression. Even more impressive when you consider that, as recently as three years ago, he was pleading for money on Kickstarter to fund his first solo album, The Year Of No Returning. Not that he seems particularly fazed when MAGNET calls him to talk about this sudden burst of fame.
Oh, and "his latest album, Perpetual Motion People, is far and away one of this year’s most sublime efforts...a giddily splenetic, high-octane record, packed full of a dizzying array of influences—the Violent Femmes, Lou Reed, ’50s doo-wop, Bowie, Jonathan Richman"...I admit to feeling a little dizzy, but it may just be nausea.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Monday, 30 November 2015 13:32 (nine years ago) link
What's the US version of landfill indie? Because this guy is that.
― The Male Gaz Coombes (Neil S), Monday, 30 November 2015 14:14 (nine years ago) link
Ezra Furman is the kind of artist who comes along every now and then to reduce jaded music hacks to gibbering, simpering wrecks.
mission accomplished
http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/01112/mission_accomplish_1112950c.jpg
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 30 November 2015 14:21 (nine years ago) link
I know some people who tell stories like that too, where they try to make shrug-worthy things or events sound interesting by applying melodrama. It's either desperate or delusional.
― Evan, Monday, 30 November 2015 14:45 (nine years ago) link
― scott seward, Saturday, November 28, 2015 1:22 PM (2 days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
i love this band. weezer back!
― flopson, Monday, 30 November 2015 14:48 (nine years ago) link
people have been writing music for other people forever. what's the difference this time?
uhhhh...sweden?
dimbulb seabrook interview.
https://recode.net/2015/11/30/adele-owned-last-week-but-a-guy-youve-never-heard-of-owns-pop-music-heres-how-he-did-it/
― scott seward, Monday, 30 November 2015 17:24 (nine years ago) link
"It’s also interesting that the [song-producing] technology was [initially] not used by the mainstream songwriting people, but it sort of came from the margins — from hip-hop people, that didn’t have access to the studios."
marginal hip-hop basement tech. until the swedes arrived...
― scott seward, Monday, 30 November 2015 17:27 (nine years ago) link
is he talking drum machines
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 30 November 2015 17:31 (nine years ago) link
i have no idea.
― scott seward, Monday, 30 November 2015 17:34 (nine years ago) link
apparently, if i'm reading the interview correctly, pop music was two guys banging away on a piano writing songs until the studio-less hip-hoppers showed the swedes how to do things quicker.
― scott seward, Monday, 30 November 2015 17:38 (nine years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7CwwCbMq320
― how's life, Monday, 30 November 2015 17:41 (nine years ago) link
so how many times do I have to read about max martin before I've heard of him
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Monday, 30 November 2015 17:50 (nine years ago) link
until an old white guy lets him produce an album, he is only a myth carried on the wind by sylvan messengers
― Eugene Goostman (forksclovetofu), Monday, 30 November 2015 17:55 (nine years ago) link
he's your little swedish secret that you keep in your pocket when you want money. shhhhhhh.........
― scott seward, Monday, 30 November 2015 18:00 (nine years ago) link
that sort of thing ain't my bag
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Monday, 30 November 2015 18:03 (nine years ago) link
used to be just 2 people sitting at a piano. now its a rapper and a producer sitting at a keyboard. TOTALLY different.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 30 November 2015 18:05 (nine years ago) link
gimme a C, a bouncy C!
http://www.abbatimeline.com/media/img/RNfWQH_53305407d910a.jpg
― scott seward, Monday, 30 November 2015 18:09 (nine years ago) link
wake me up when robots are writing our songs please!
― scott seward, Monday, 30 November 2015 18:11 (nine years ago) link
here gohttp://francoispachet.fr/http://francoispachet.fr/markovconstraints/audio/boulez_blues.mp3
― Eugene Goostman (forksclovetofu), Monday, 30 November 2015 18:42 (nine years ago) link
It's not really about music. It's barely writing. But.http://www.nme.com/blogs/nme-blogs/does-jermaine-jackson-have-a-jacket-potato-in-his-trousers-or-something-more-sinister
― I don't have the time or energy to make a counterargument (stevie), Friday, 11 December 2015 13:13 (nine years ago) link
Still, makes you think, doesn't it?
― niels, Friday, 11 December 2015 13:43 (nine years ago) link
wtf
― you're breaking the NAP (DJP), Friday, 11 December 2015 14:28 (nine years ago) link
Haha. Poor NME.
― Eyeball Kicks, Friday, 11 December 2015 14:36 (nine years ago) link
how the fuck can you have jermaine jackson and an alleged potato in the same article and yet not ask the question, can you peel it?
― ghosted monk: new gaz in the 'combs (NickB), Friday, 11 December 2015 14:54 (nine years ago) link
― ghosted monk: new gaz in the 'combs (NickB), Friday, 11 December 2015 14:55 (nine years ago) link
peel potato and see
― Check Yr Scrobbles (Moodles), Friday, 11 December 2015 14:57 (nine years ago) link
not know potato
― I don't have the time or energy to make a counterargument (stevie), Friday, 11 December 2015 15:41 (nine years ago) link
lol stevie
― you're breaking the NAP (DJP), Friday, 11 December 2015 15:44 (nine years ago) link
"jacket potato"?
― Does that make you mutter, under your breath, “Damn”? (forksclovetofu), Friday, 11 December 2015 16:30 (nine years ago) link
I mean first off it's clearly a trouser potato
― you're breaking the NAP (DJP), Friday, 11 December 2015 16:35 (nine years ago) link
tell me i'm not dreaming (of an era where pageviews mean nothing)
― maura, Friday, 11 December 2015 16:55 (nine years ago) link
take off your pants and jacket potato
― poorzingis (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 11 December 2015 22:14 (nine years ago) link
this is the last one like this forever. promise!
https://www.vice.com/read/hw-the-definitive-guide-to-hipster-music-genres-hipster-week
― scott seward, Tuesday, 15 December 2015 14:30 (nine years ago) link
i don't actually think its the worst or whatever. just a whatever nevermind kinda thing.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 15 December 2015 14:31 (nine years ago) link
i mean it's almost 2016...
http://www.villagevoice.com/music/the-decade-in-music-genre-hype-6393275
― poorzingis (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 15 December 2015 15:36 (nine years ago) link
our own lil' trailblazer. god bless.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 15 December 2015 16:15 (nine years ago) link
but also yeah that's what i'm talking about. and also you should get a lawyer! jeez.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 15 December 2015 16:17 (nine years ago) link
you put dubstep in the microtrend graveyard. who knew?
"Ghettotech, microhouse, folktronica, New Weird America, schaffel, crunk, trap-rap, post-metal, screw, baile, Baltimore club, snap, nu-balearic, moan-wave, grindie, deathcore, nu-rave, juke, wonky, skweee, dubstep, kuduro, jerk, hypnagogic pop, crabcore."
― scott seward, Tuesday, 15 December 2015 16:19 (nine years ago) link
microhouse still HUGE at my house by the way. i just never stopped listening. now i want some baile funk crabcore to listen to.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 15 December 2015 16:20 (nine years ago) link
even mentioning psych horseshit in that vice thing is grounds for a lawsuit. who mentions them in 2015?
― scott seward, Tuesday, 15 December 2015 16:21 (nine years ago) link
― scott seward, Tuesday, December 15, 2015 11:19 AM (6 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Also trap-rap!
― poorzingis (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 15 December 2015 16:27 (nine years ago) link
I'm not clicking on Vice unless it's by accident; has anyone linked Whiney's piece in the comments yet?
― you're breaking the NAP (DJP), Tuesday, 15 December 2015 16:28 (nine years ago) link
okay i just did.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 15 December 2015 16:51 (nine years ago) link
I knew I'd read that one before...
― niels, Tuesday, 15 December 2015 22:02 (nine years ago) link
i actually liked that Vice piece.
― Gaz Khan (sarahell), Tuesday, 15 December 2015 22:06 (nine years ago) link
i feel like they weren't even trying, instead of talking about actual 'hipster' genres they just put 'acceptable' (or some other euphemism for 'hipster') in front of the name of some super broad genre that's existed for decades.
― Shkreli, Martin & Wu (some dude), Wednesday, 16 December 2015 00:03 (nine years ago) link
it's more accurate
― Gaz Khan (sarahell), Wednesday, 16 December 2015 00:13 (nine years ago) link
it is! but in a way that undermines the point/structure of the piece
― Shkreli, Martin & Wu (some dude), Wednesday, 16 December 2015 01:01 (nine years ago) link
which is?
― Gaz Khan (sarahell), Wednesday, 16 December 2015 01:11 (nine years ago) link
ok, you got me!
― Shkreli, Martin & Wu (some dude), Wednesday, 16 December 2015 01:17 (nine years ago) link
http://www.independent.co.uk/student/istudents/grime-isn-t-just-music-it-s-about-working-class-struggle-and-its-new-middle-class-fans-need-to-a6777256.html
new contender here
― beatgeneration, Tuesday, 22 December 2015 13:36 (nine years ago) link
She seems to be a student and has deleted her Twitter account after getting a lot of stick online. You'd have to be under 19 to think that there's anything new in middle-class ppl getting into grime. It kind of looks like another throw-the-intern-to-the-wolves thing.
― On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Tuesday, 22 December 2015 13:44 (nine years ago) link
Yeah after posting I've just gone on and read all that and realised - feel a bit bad now.
― beatgeneration, Tuesday, 22 December 2015 13:50 (nine years ago) link
fuckwit doesn't mention JME or Lady Leshurr
― roughest.contoured.silks (imago), Tuesday, 22 December 2015 13:53 (nine years ago) link
SV otm, the editorial ppl who keep waving this stuff through when they know it's bad and going to result in fullscale monstering are fucking trash and deserve to be kept awake every night with gnawing self-hatred
― a moment on the streets, a lifetime in the sheets (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 22 December 2015 15:19 (nine years ago) link
If you're not working for a small, specialist publication, can you get people to read/discuss abut music without going down the intern -> wolves route? Not saying it's right, just not all that surprising.
― Position Position, Tuesday, 22 December 2015 15:36 (nine years ago) link
hard to believe the Independent are super invested in getting ppl to read/discuss music articles tbh. if they were perhaps I would remember anything in that section they've published in idk the last few years for any reason other than it being shit
― a moment on the streets, a lifetime in the sheets (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 22 December 2015 15:54 (nine years ago) link
but yeah, not surprising per se but it has no meaningful net benefits that I can figure out and I wd like more editorial types to reach this conclusion also
― a moment on the streets, a lifetime in the sheets (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 22 December 2015 15:57 (nine years ago) link
My reaction to the Indy piece was exactly that: irritation with the piece > realisation that the writer is young and unedited > anger at the editors who know that pieces like this will inspire a backlash and don't care enough about their writers to do anything about it.
― impossible raver (Re-Make/Re-Model), Tuesday, 22 December 2015 16:06 (nine years ago) link
it has no meaningful net benefits that I can figure out
Clicks generated by people reading/discussing on social media and forums like this one are meaningful benefits to the publication, no?
― Position Position, Tuesday, 22 December 2015 16:37 (nine years ago) link
'net' being the operative word there. feel like I'm arguing a minority position with this one but the apparently widespread belief that 'being talked about' is all that matters w/ web content like this is fallacious and dense imo. daresay this'll be p much forgotten about in a minute but the gradual accumulation of scorn seems to outweigh the short term benefits of this pish
― a moment on the streets, a lifetime in the sheets (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 22 December 2015 17:16 (nine years ago) link
hey i'm sure the Indie wants nothing more than a slice of that sweet Buzzfeed cred
― where are the rock bands? (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 22 December 2015 17:18 (nine years ago) link
the gradual accumulation of scorn seems to outweigh the short term benefits
Yeah, maybe, but is that measurable in any way? Or are there many examples of sites/pubs that went too far with this shit and are now out of business?
― Position Position, Tuesday, 22 December 2015 17:24 (nine years ago) link
http://flavorwire.com/553256/stereotyping-you-by-your-favorite-album-of-2015belongs here, yea or nay?
― Does that make you mutter, under your breath, “Damn”? (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 24 December 2015 17:32 (nine years ago) link
yea
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Thursday, 24 December 2015 17:34 (nine years ago) link
Genuinely surprised the Kamasi Washington album wasn't on that list. Seemed ripe for exactly that kind of cheap joke.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Thursday, 24 December 2015 17:38 (nine years ago) link
lol it's ok
the neon indian one should be 2007
― probably.tasteful.forever (imago), Thursday, 24 December 2015 17:38 (nine years ago) link
oh ffs: http://thenewinquiry.com/essays/hello-from-the-same-side/
― self-clowning oven (Murgatroid), Monday, 28 December 2015 18:40 (nine years ago) link
That is one for the ages
― big WHOIS aka the nameserver (s.clover), Monday, 28 December 2015 18:43 (nine years ago) link
wow.
― Does that make you mutter, under your breath, “Damn”? (forksclovetofu), Monday, 28 December 2015 19:01 (nine years ago) link
Ooh, but it sounds so smart!
― self-clowning oven (Murgatroid), Monday, 28 December 2015 19:02 (nine years ago) link
Here, identity is a secondary, implicit factor that affects performance, but not the primary, overt criterion for in/exclusion, so “Hello” liberalism can pass as nondiscriminatory and quintessentially liberal. However, the parallels in reception of Trump and “Hello” show that liberal “Hello” fans who overtly disidentify and disagree with Trump’s politics want to experience the same feeling of white privilege in terms more palatable to liberal tastes. This strain of “Hello” fandom is the (neo)liberal version of the same white supremacy that Trump expresses in more traditional terms.
― i got a really big steen, and they need some really big zings (some dude), Monday, 28 December 2015 19:12 (nine years ago) link
i think i just pulled something
― j., Monday, 28 December 2015 19:13 (nine years ago) link
Given the general trend in pop-culture writing in 2015, I'm genuinely surprised at the universal ridicule that piece - which, make no mistake - is a mountain of rotting garbage - is getting. It's only the next point on a line other writers have been marking out all year long.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Monday, 28 December 2015 19:13 (nine years ago) link
what we get is a completely standard rock beat, with nary an Amen, breakbeat, 808, or trap hi-hat anywhere in the song.
the gift that keeps giving
― big WHOIS aka the nameserver (s.clover), Monday, 28 December 2015 19:14 (nine years ago) link
yeah this thing is just a perfect storm of bad writing trends, it's the season finale of Thinkpiece Island
― i got a really big steen, and they need some really big zings (some dude), Monday, 28 December 2015 19:22 (nine years ago) link
xxp honestly it just read as overreaching academic hackwork to me, the kind of theory-kit quick-read that you can get on any academic's blog or in a thrown-together conference presentation. but then i read the author preening about criticism of the piece only confirming her point, which is supremely irritating. i've seen other work of hers that seemed good (with allowances for different academic / pop crit competencies) but i find it deplorable that there are actual working critics out there who could far outstrip her own 'read' on her topic yet lack the prestige of third-gen frankfurt school allusions that would help them mount bad faith defenses of bad thinking like 'u must be butthurt bc my critique implicates u'. oh so trap has funny hi-hat programming wow lotta first-rate knowledge at the forefront of culture you're flashing there no chance an actual critic could ever compare.
― j., Monday, 28 December 2015 19:24 (nine years ago) link
http://i.imgur.com/XVz51n2.jpg
ah yes, what if we are the ones who are actually the...what
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Monday, 28 December 2015 19:52 (nine years ago) link
also reaching for the "trump" card is like one step away from godwin's law here -- really want to read the marshall hatford take on adele.
― big WHOIS aka the nameserver (s.clover), Monday, 28 December 2015 20:12 (nine years ago) link
fuckin kylo ren there
― nomar, Monday, 28 December 2015 20:12 (nine years ago) link
the comparison of an inoffensive song you don't dig to actual physical racial violence is outlandish. and the fact that adele by all accounts is slotted as a "soul" singer of some sort goes completely unremarked, which makes the piece sort of astonishingly and proudly ignorant in terms of its treatment of race.
― big WHOIS aka the nameserver (s.clover), Monday, 28 December 2015 20:19 (nine years ago) link
skrrrrt
― j., Monday, 28 December 2015 20:23 (nine years ago) link
not to mention the consistent idea that "naturalness" is a "white" thing, which completely eclipses an entire tradition of neo-soul, roots hip-hop, etc. etc. not to mention which a "natural" as a hairstyle is well... like somebody get this author an Erykah Badu album stat
― big WHOIS aka the nameserver (s.clover), Monday, 28 December 2015 20:31 (nine years ago) link
spite some kind of modern virtue
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 28 December 2015 20:46 (nine years ago) link
From the Quietus best albums thing, just one sentence
"The RSS B0ys are a quick fuck on a dirty gas station-toilet with some anonymous stranger." Sonja Matuszczyk
Uhh huhhhhhhhh
― stupid children forever (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Tuesday, 29 December 2015 09:45 (nine years ago) link
http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/how-lemmy-and-motorhead-gave-metal-its-umlaut-20151229
this is pretty bad. i'm not sure which is worse on this, the writing or the editorial. on the editorial side, we have a headline about the importance of the umlaut to motorhead which omits the umlaut. on the article side, we have an article about how motorhead brought the umlaut to metal which openly acknowledges that motorhead did not bring the umlaut to metal, but got it from blue oyster cult. also there's this bizarre tangent about amon duul. i'm not sure if browne is actually unaware that umlauts are a standard part of the german language or knows but doesn't care.
― new zingland (rushomancy), Wednesday, 30 December 2015 12:42 (nine years ago) link
Just dropped in to see if that garbage New Inquiry piece had made it. This thread never lets me down.
― impossible raver (Re-Make/Re-Model), Wednesday, 30 December 2015 16:17 (nine years ago) link
(Lemmy, a collector of Nazi memorabilia, rarely if ever commented on any connection between that umlaut and Nazi-era use of the dots in say, "Führer.") For Lemmy, the umlaut, like the music and lifestyle he lived until his body couldn't take it anymore, spoke — or pronounced — volumes.
― niels, Wednesday, 30 December 2015 16:20 (nine years ago) link
yeah, i got rooked into promulgating the umlaut piece myself... people want more lemmy content right now! A piece on the pictographic history of his mole would likely have tremendous click-through.
― Does that make you mutter, under your breath, “Damn”? (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 30 December 2015 16:56 (nine years ago) link
that's more of a right-hand-side-of-the-browser affiliate program link
― j., Wednesday, 30 December 2015 17:23 (nine years ago) link
i stand corrected
― Does that make you mutter, under your breath, “Damn”? (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 30 December 2015 17:23 (nine years ago) link
nazi-era use of the dots
― lem kip öbit (wins), Wednesday, 30 December 2015 17:26 (nine years ago) link
of course after ww2 the decision was made to remove the dots from the word Führer
― lem kip öbit (wins), Wednesday, 30 December 2015 17:28 (nine years ago) link
for a fairer Germany
― Coombesbat 18 (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 30 December 2015 17:44 (nine years ago) link
as someone who has sub-edited not one but two Motorhead-dedicated magazine specials in recent years, the umlaut is the bane of my life.
― Less surprised by the total lack of surprises (stevie), Thursday, 31 December 2015 12:32 (nine years ago) link
Let’s be clear on one thing about this record. It isn’t a rap album your average fair-weather hip-hop fan who only listens to what BET and Hot 97 feed them will ever begin to comprehend. In order to fully cognate the textural and lyrical parameters on display, you will have to go back to the likes of Funkadelic’s America Eats Its Young or Brer Soul by Melvin Van Peebles or even Public Enemy’s Fear of a Black Planet to comprehend where this talented young man is coming from. Just as with D’Angelo’s The Black Messiah, To Pimp A Butterfly is exactly the kind of challenging, confrontational truth many Americans been waiting to hear from the black community.
― Does that make you mutter, under your breath, “Damn”? (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 5 January 2016 08:31 (nine years ago) link
just like The Black Messiah
― niels, Tuesday, 5 January 2016 11:38 (nine years ago) link
*just as with The Black Messiah
― Ys Man a.k.a. Have One on G (geoffreyess), Tuesday, 5 January 2016 12:50 (nine years ago) link
Offered without comment.
http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/life-ruined-says-Daniel-O-Donnell-superfan/story-28465949-detail/story.html
― Hey Bob (Scik Mouthy), Wednesday, 6 January 2016 10:50 (nine years ago) link
the photographer should have cajoled him into smashing all his memorabilia up for the camera imo
― a moment on the streets, a lifetime in the sheets (DJ Mencap), Wednesday, 6 January 2016 10:54 (nine years ago) link
That would have added a frisson of psychopathy which would make the whole thing more believable.
― Hey Bob (Scik Mouthy), Wednesday, 6 January 2016 10:56 (nine years ago) link
http://consequenceofsound.net/2016/01/what-past-coachella-lineups-would-look-like-today/
― poorzingis (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 6 January 2016 20:24 (nine years ago) link
i have no idea what that is for
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Wednesday, 6 January 2016 20:46 (nine years ago) link
http://www.digitalthirdcoast.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/fewer-clicks1.png
― Copy rights, pleasing all star wars fans, hiring professionals. (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 6 January 2016 20:50 (nine years ago) link
tried reading that on mobile and got one of those full-page 'download this app to proceed' roadblocks. hisssss
― maura, Wednesday, 6 January 2016 23:40 (nine years ago) link
In order to fully cognate the textural and lyrical parameters on displayhttps://images.duckduckgo.com/iu/?u=http%3A%2F%2Fs3-ec.buzzfed.com%2Fstatic%2Fenhanced%2Fwebdr05%2F2013%2F7%2F9%2F19%2Fenhanced-buzz-2038-1373414176-0.jpg&f=1
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 6 January 2016 23:49 (nine years ago) link
good lord what is the fucking point of that Coachella poster piece
― alpine static, Thursday, 7 January 2016 00:05 (nine years ago) link
^^^ btw I've clicked through four pages of it so far :(
― alpine static, Thursday, 7 January 2016 00:14 (nine years ago) link
You might as well be asking what is the point of Consequence of Sound. There appears to be none.
― Position Position, Thursday, 7 January 2016 01:08 (nine years ago) link
omg that coachella piece is amazing. the headliners are basically the same. this is like clickhole quality "here's what famous stars would look like if we photoshopped a hat onto them" stuff.
― big WHOIS aka the nameserver (s.clover), Thursday, 7 January 2016 23:14 (nine years ago) link
Writer learned who Bowie was via Snapchat a few minutes before getting the assignment
http://www.thefader.com/2016/01/11/david-bowie-obituary-essay
― Frozen CD, Tuesday, 12 January 2016 01:17 (nine years ago) link
idk if i'm going to regret engaging but: where is the evidence of that
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 01:44 (nine years ago) link
doubt someone who'd just heard of Bowie could have turned his bio into such bizarre prose so quickly
― Ys Man a.k.a. Have One on G (geoffreyess), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 05:29 (nine years ago) link
Let's commit to transcendent human specificity
― Copy rights, pleasing all star wars fans, hiring professionals. (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 05:44 (nine years ago) link
can't decide whether that or the SFJ thing is worse
― the naive cockney chorus (Simon H.), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 05:50 (nine years ago) link
Keeping this out of the lovely Bowie R.I.P. thread but I found this take by Owen Pallett to be so far off the mark and basically insulting, like he was just waiting to drop his edgy, contrarian hot take that makes no sense whether you love weird Bowie or pop Bowie or whatever.
It’s difficult for me to articulate my love of Bowie’s music without coming off as a hater. My engagement with his music began very young, and through my teens I purchased everyone of his albums, read every book on him, including the song-by-song commentaries, the problematic Angie Bowie autobiographies, and more recently, every single post on the Bowie Songs blog.
What I want to say about Bowie is that he was, essentially, a non-musician. He couldn’t play guitar, couldn’t play piano. He was a fair sax player, but I don’t think anybody learned to play the sax because of Diamond Dogs. He was a grating, irritating singer. In the 80s and 90s, when he mellowed out his voice, he became, essentially, a Scott Walker impersonator. He had no talent for writing couplets, his songs were inconsistent and never really fit on the radio. He didn’t write hooks, he wrote only a handful of highly memorable melodies.
So why is he, along with Ornette Coleman, John Cage, and Missy Elliott, my favourite musician of the 20th century? Is he even a musician? His talent was his charisma, his curatorial skills. He was an extremely talented actor and mime. His greatest ever achievement was convincing the world that his work was worthwhile through sheer force of will and panache.
People often debate “what is the best Bowie song”… objectively speaking, Bowie has lots of great songs. “Heroes”, “Rebel Rebel”, “Fame”, “Let’s Dance”. These "good" songs are, in fact, his worst songs. These are the songs that are functional and that you might hear on the radio.
Bowie at his best is when he’s at his most flawed, his most paranoid, his most messed up. The hippie campfire guitar interlude on “Space Oddity”. The opening track on “The Man Who Sold The World”, which was an investigation into Bowie’s own queerness, and its title, “The Width Of A Circle”, referred to the diametrical differences between a vagina and an anus. The ten-minute title track of “Station To Station”, with its paranoid, xenophobic yelps, and his most messed-up lyric ever: “It’s not the side-effects of the cocaine / I’m thinking that it must be love”. Or his second most messed-up lyric, from “Breaking Glass”: “Don’t look at the carpet / I drew something awful on it.” It’s his most incandescent vocal performance, on “It’s No Game”, where he screams his way through a duet with a Japanese woman doing spoken word. His best moments are challenging, and confound you.
Bowie was the fly in the ointment. All his greatest musical achievements belong to his collaborators, Mick Ronson, Tony Visconti, Mike Garson, Brian Eno, Nile Rodgers, Erdal Kizilcay, Gail Ann Dorsey, Reeves Gabrels, Zach Alford. Bowie was the charisma, the icon, the ego that took their contributions and destroyed them. He turned a lack of musical ability into an asset, he made “musical talent” a liability, he made a stab in the dark beautiful. He was not a creator, he was a destroyer. And he was the best destroyer that ever lived.
― Badmotorfinger Debate Club (MFB), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 09:17 (nine years ago) link
Is there a source for that beautiful turd, sir?
― human and working on getting beer (longneck), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 10:06 (nine years ago) link
An ilxor posted that on fb. Definitely doesn't belong on this thread.
― starkiller based god (Treeship), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 10:21 (nine years ago) link
oh right
― human and working on getting beer (longneck), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 10:25 (nine years ago) link
. He couldn’t play guitar, couldn’t play piano. He was a fair sax player,
All three of these statements are wrong, he was a shit sax player for a start.
― Narayan Superman (Tom D.), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 10:25 (nine years ago) link
Oh it was already attributed.
I think Bowie would be the first to tell you that he needed his collaborators to execute his vision. That's one of the coolest, most modern things about him. Also, as much as he benefitted from the help of others, he was generous with his own talent and celebrity.
― starkiller based god (Treeship), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 10:26 (nine years ago) link
lol wtf y'all
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 12:15 (nine years ago) link
Hey this isn't the thread for moaning about other people's opinions
― Noodle Vague, Tuesday, 12 January 2016 12:19 (nine years ago) link
That is a good post and MFB is bad at reading
― glandular lansbury (sic), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 12:25 (nine years ago) link
also it's not published music writing!
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 12:35 (nine years ago) link
sic otm
― starkiller based god (Treeship), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 12:36 (nine years ago) link
I read that OP tribute on FB and thought it was great.That said, I always thought Bowie could play guitar.
― canoon fooder (dog latin), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 12:38 (nine years ago) link
I thought the OP post on Facebook was wonderful, and it summed-up an awful lot about Bowie. He's not a musician, not the way Hendrix or someone else like that is. But that's not the point.
― Hey Bob (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 12:48 (nine years ago) link
He's not a musician, not the way Hendrix or someone else like that is.
Not too many musicians in the world then.
― Narayan Superman (Tom D.), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 12:49 (nine years ago) link
That's an extreme example, obviously. But he doesn't strike me as being a musician the way McCartney is, or Kate Bush, for instance. And I'm talking from a place of complete ignorance because I don't play a note on anything, but his music is often really awkward; his melodies don't seem to flow like (some) other people's do. You see The Beatles being compared to Schubert or whoever for harmonic reasons, but I've never seen anyone talk about Bowie quite like that. It's not that him being a 'non-musician' is a bad thing, or a pejorative, or a criticism, it's yet another part of what made him who he was, and brilliant.
― Hey Bob (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 12:52 (nine years ago) link
Like Lennon or Dylan maybe? I know what you mean and I know what OP meant but, as I said, he actually could play guitar and piano, and better than he could play sax!
― Narayan Superman (Tom D.), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 12:55 (nine years ago) link
Yeah, Lennon and Dylan I guess, but also Lou Reed, or Iggy Pop, or Mark Hollis, or PJ Harvey; it's a punk thing, isn't it? Anyone can be a pop star, you don't need to be a musician.
And I assumed OP was exaggerating for effect, because, you know, it's emotive prose about a relationship with a hero, not an essay for citation in a journal.
― Hey Bob (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 12:57 (nine years ago) link
idk i really like bowie's sax playing on black tie white noise
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 13:37 (nine years ago) link
I took him to mean that Bowie's no virtuoso, but idk we knew that already? Plus, NLMD excepted the records on which he plays the most instruments and jams with the band are often his best records.
Also: I love his lead guitar on DD and The Idiot.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 13:55 (nine years ago) link
his music is often really awkward; his melodies don't seem to flow like (some) other people's do.
Yep. This is a point that the Bowie blog makes often: his incongruous wtf chord progressions.
as much as this makes me the person pissing on everyone's piss parade I doubt obituaries, unless they're obviously ill-intentioned ("bowie sucked and you suck YEAH I SAID IT COME AT ME BRO") are the best target for this sort of thing
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 14:08 (nine years ago) link
Personal facebook posts are definitely not.
― glandular lansbury (sic), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 14:14 (nine years ago) link
his music is often really awkward; his melodies don't seem to flow like (some) other people's do.Yep. This is a point that the Bowie blog makes often: his incongruous wtf chord progressions.
― willem, Tuesday, 12 January 2016 14:34 (nine years ago) link
i thought owen's post got at something really essential in bowie's music
― goole, Tuesday, 12 January 2016 16:11 (nine years ago) link
Scuse me a sec I just need to go click "like" on something
― I'm melanomically challenged btw (wins), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 16:16 (nine years ago) link
hmmhttp://consequenceofsound.net/2016/01/david-bowie-lives-the-cunning-exit/
― Frozen CD, Tuesday, 12 January 2016 16:18 (nine years ago) link
ditto. i wasn't phased at all in reading it by the fact that i could summon up caveats and counter-examples (inevitable in most any Bowie music-related assertion, after all).
― never have i been a blue calm sea (collardio gelatinous), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 16:37 (nine years ago) link
Eno is an odd one as he is known for what OP is describing - also known as a non-musician. Its like OP is making an argument for Eno rather than Bowie as a specific kind of pop artist.
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 12 January 2016 16:50 (nine years ago) link
Eno was really the guy that couldn't play anything, was a lot more conceptual in his thinking etc., borrowed from a possibly wider range of sources.
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 12 January 2016 16:52 (nine years ago) link
Um, was 0w3n's post public on facebook or private? Because that might need a moderator redaction if private.
― emil.y, Tuesday, 12 January 2016 16:59 (nine years ago) link
And tbh a ban also.
arguing that Bowie couldn't play guitar or piano is ridiculous, dude thoroughly knew his away around chord structures on each
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 12 January 2016 17:07 (nine years ago) link
that being said I don't think Owen is entirely wrong in general about Bowie's virtues
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 12 January 2016 17:08 (nine years ago) link
the whole "extremely talented musical artist was no virtuoso" angle in general is tiresome and not very interesting imo, as a lead-in to larger points sure i guess it can work and pallett's piece is fine but usually that angle makes me think of fucking stephen stills saying dylan is "no musician" after he played all the blood on the tracks songs in front of him
― marcos, Tuesday, 12 January 2016 17:26 (nine years ago) link
lol yes
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 12 January 2016 17:51 (nine years ago) link
Page Hamilton on Bowie
What is Bowie like?Great. He was probably the most intelligent person, along with Elliot Goldenthal, that I’ve ever been around. You just knew and felt that you were in the presence of greatness. Like, ‘OK, he’s not like me.’Really?He’s smart, he’s just… Well, first of all, he opens his mouth and that voice is going into your ears, and you’re like, ‘OK, that is not normal.’ That’s an incredible instrument. And I know the records, I know the songs, I know the lines, lyrics… I remember saying to him, ‘Quicksand, OK, what were you thinking? The descending progression with the diminished chords, and then this incredible melody over the top of it -- what were you thinking?!’ He said, ‘Oh, I just thought I was so clever.’Ha!It’s like, ‘Fuck off,’ you know? Are you fucking kidding me? How’d you come up with a thing like that?! I mean, that’s some heavy jazz harmony going on in there. He was amazing.
Great. He was probably the most intelligent person, along with Elliot Goldenthal, that I’ve ever been around. You just knew and felt that you were in the presence of greatness. Like, ‘OK, he’s not like me.’
Really?
He’s smart, he’s just… Well, first of all, he opens his mouth and that voice is going into your ears, and you’re like, ‘OK, that is not normal.’ That’s an incredible instrument. And I know the records, I know the songs, I know the lines, lyrics… I remember saying to him, ‘Quicksand, OK, what were you thinking? The descending progression with the diminished chords, and then this incredible melody over the top of it -- what were you thinking?!’ He said, ‘Oh, I just thought I was so clever.’
Ha!
It’s like, ‘Fuck off,’ you know? Are you fucking kidding me? How’d you come up with a thing like that?! I mean, that’s some heavy jazz harmony going on in there. He was amazing.
― cock chirea, Tuesday, 12 January 2016 18:22 (nine years ago) link
Bowie was the fly in the ointment.
so David Bowie is John McClane?
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 18:54 (nine years ago) link
OP is a shit stain btw. lol him speaking about musical talent.
must be all that John Cage he listens to constantly
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 18:55 (nine years ago) link
TIL "Heroes" is a bad song, because it is on the radio. thanks!
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 18:56 (nine years ago) link
he made a stab in the dark beautiful
OP stfu
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 18:57 (nine years ago) link
He had no talent for writing couplets
It's a God-awful small affairTo the girl with the mousy hair
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 19:03 (nine years ago) link
I don't know if public linkedin posts count as "published" but guh
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/chief-disruption-officer-david-bowie-1947-2016-digital-fluency-coach?articleId=6092309950539796480#comments-6092309950539796480&trk=prof-post
"David Bowie as Ziggy Stardust. He painted a lightning bolt on his face, sported a mullet hairstyle dyed crimson red, and introduced us to a bisexual rock star alien who acted as a messenger for extra-terrestrial beings. Wearing a multi-coloured Lycra jumpsuit, Bowie’s androgynous alter ego redefined an entire era of rock’n’roll. In this age of constant, unending digital disruption, we have to work like we're going to transform entire industries, because if we don't they will transform without us and leave us behind. I'm not saying you need to paint a lightning bolt on your face and wear Lycra to work, but if you did, imagine the creative output you'd offer the world by the end of the day!"
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 19:03 (nine years ago) link
<3 A+
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 19:06 (nine years ago) link
yo adam calm down
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 19:08 (nine years ago) link
Ya my point, for the people-who-read-too-fast, is that Bowie as a pop star rendered traditional notions of "musical talent" unnecessary and antiquated, and even a liability. He would've agreed. He said in his Proust Questionnaire from 1998: "Q: What do you deplore most in others? A: Talent." When he met Nina Simone, Nina said "He looked just like Charlie Chaplin, a clown suit, a big black hat,” said Simone. “He told me that he was not a gifted singer and he knew it. He said, ‘What’s wrong with you is you were gifted—you have to play. Your genius overshadows the money, and you don’t know what to do to get your money, whereas I wasn’t a genius, but I planned, I wanted to be a rock-and-roll singer and I just got the right formula.’” I wrote that Facebook post after years of him being my favourite musician, and being asked "how does he influence your music?" so many times, and having to basically bullshit for years until eventually I had to say, "not at all". He influenced Madonna, Kanye, any musician whose creative method is ecumenical rather than ascetic. The rest of us just have our scales and technical manuals.
Facebook post was public, thank you for discussing here etc. etc.
― got a long list of ilxors (fgti), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 19:20 (nine years ago) link
"he's not a creator he's a destroyer" might sound like it is deep, but does it mean anything? he destroyed his collaborators? what does that mean? "his ego destroyed them"? huh? last i checked Brian Eno was still around and his contributions to the Berlin albums are well respected. nobody looks at them like "Bowie claimed all the credit for himself, too bad Eno's influence was buried under Bowie's massive ego".
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 19:21 (nine years ago) link
I meant "destroyer" in the more philosophical sense, as in one who brings transition, creates transgressive work, upsets the establishment, ch-changes, and so on
― got a long list of ilxors (fgti), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 19:25 (nine years ago) link
Thanks for clarifying. Think it's still a dick move to have posted it here but not actionable.
― emil.y, Tuesday, 12 January 2016 19:25 (nine years ago) link
oh is that by you? sorry for going off then.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 19:27 (nine years ago) link
i had a bad experience with some Bowie trolls earlier today.
also once it ends up in this thread i feel its fair game. my bad there.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 19:28 (nine years ago) link
no harm no foul, shit-stain is my middle name
― got a long list of ilxors (fgti), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 19:28 (nine years ago) link
ehhhhhh... i'm sorry. i can be a jerk.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 19:30 (nine years ago) link
Good harmonica on "A New Career in a New Town"
Always wished Bowie was a technically skilled musician but sensed he wasn't, like that funny sketch with Eno creating Warszaw and Bowing adding scary cave gibberish vocals... but then again, intuition maybe matters more.
Can never figure out if Dylan is a good guitar player either
― niels, Tuesday, 12 January 2016 19:30 (nine years ago) link
He's more technically skilled than Eno ffs.
― Narayan Superman (Tom D.), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 20:00 (nine years ago) link
so I gather now, but that's not how the funny cartoon made it out
― niels, Tuesday, 12 January 2016 20:03 (nine years ago) link
Always so funny when the person you're shit-talking actually pops up.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 20:05 (nine years ago) link
Under The Pressure (Vocal only)
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 12 January 2016 20:45 (nine years ago) link
obits are hard to write and easy to screw up tonally depending on the audience, and except for that amazing linkedin post, i don't think any of the other examples really belong on this thread at all.
like the ceremony of the occasion calls on you to sort of swing a bit big, and that's the case even for good pieces. also the personal feelings of readers are stronger than usual, (as AB apparently can testify) and so everything that doesn't feel exactly right can seem like some sort of insult, when if those opinions were out in any other context, it would just be "a reasonable, if slightly off take".
― big WHOIS aka the nameserver (s.clover), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 21:45 (nine years ago) link
sorry posted that link wrongly - not trying to say everyone is under THE pressure to try and come up with good Bowie hot takes.
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 12 January 2016 21:58 (nine years ago) link
that "chief disruption officer" thing was on another level
― marcos, Tuesday, 12 January 2016 22:18 (nine years ago) link
Jamie Good - Digital Fluency Coach
Let's future-proof your career & business | Edupreneur,Speaker,Futurist
"oh shit, now that my weirdly in-depth excoriation of another human is to their face rather than behind their back I think I should apologize"
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 22:42 (nine years ago) link
― poorzingis (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 22:46 (nine years ago) link
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 23:18 (nine years ago) link
i thought this thread was about bashing music writing, and that was offered up, and yes i am super charged about Bowie right now. embarassingly, i also thought it was from the comedian Patton Oswalt, who I confused with Owen Pallet. so i read it as if it was a snarky comedian making fun of my dear departed hero. i am very sorry.
anyways, is this the first time an author has been in this thread while a piece of his was posted? it's not nearly as bad as the time i asked for torrent in the 33 1/3 thread while some authors were about...
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 12 January 2016 23:37 (nine years ago) link
mistaking owen for patton oswalt is the most jerkish thing in the thread tbh
(jk)
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 00:06 (nine years ago) link
If you mistook owen for patton oswalt why did you call him "OP"
― art baengels (monotony), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 00:10 (nine years ago) link
original patton
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 13 January 2016 00:12 (nine years ago) link
bc he was po'd
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 00:14 (nine years ago) link
is patton oswalt a known fan of john cage?
― Cuombas (jim in glasgow), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 00:14 (nine years ago) link
brutal thread
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Wednesday, 13 January 2016 00:53 (nine years ago) link
this got weird
― Copy rights, pleasing all star wars fans, hiring professionals. (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 02:02 (nine years ago) link
Prob shouldn't/don't need to chime in but literally zero hurt feelings in either being reposted here or being called names.
― got a long list of ilxors (fgti), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 03:10 (nine years ago) link
ok patton
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 03:11 (nine years ago) link
I had no idea mike patton posted here
― Copy rights, pleasing all star wars fans, hiring professionals. (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 03:33 (nine years ago) link
linkedin dude on bowie reminded me of coming across this, maybe the thing that links all of owen's favourite musicians is their profound influence on the corporate world
https://scontent-lhr3-1.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xaf1/v/t1.0-9/11760271_10205373688556395_8692794944301279535_n.jpg?oh=af4121d3528d85b80c9fd43b860247bf&oe=5749E3D8
― lazy rascals, spending their substance, and more, in riotous living (Merdeyeux), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 04:49 (nine years ago) link
I meant "destroyer" in the more philosophical sense, as in one who brings transition, creates transgressive work, upsets the establishment, ch-changes, and so on― got a long list of ilxors (fgti),
― got a long list of ilxors (fgti),
― Bewlay Brothers & Sister Ray (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 05:26 (nine years ago) link
Not about Bowie though, although it is fashion-related.
― Bewlay Brothers & Sister Ray (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 05:50 (nine years ago) link
not sure if putting tumblr posts on here is 'the done thing' but this is remarkably bad: http://powerevolution.tumblr.com/post/133543612986/why-are-so-many-millennials-so-uncool
― a moment on the streets, a lifetime in the sheets (DJ Mencap), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 11:34 (nine years ago) link
ok I can't put myself thru all that but a thousand times lol
― Noodle Vague, Wednesday, 13 January 2016 11:43 (nine years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6vWHNwmzf1o
― The Male Gaz Coombes (Neil S), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 11:44 (nine years ago) link
To be fair, millennials aren't cool. If they exist. I've never met one.
― Hey Bob (Scik Mouthy), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 12:02 (nine years ago) link
http://i.huffpost.com/gen/167291/WAYS-TO-BE-COOL.jpg
― niels, Wednesday, 13 January 2016 13:35 (nine years ago) link
"Nirvana rehearsed ten hours a day before recording 'Nevermind' because their house was so freezing they tried to stay away from it as much as possible."
Literally cool. Not enough modern artists are freezing.
― Evan, Wednesday, 13 January 2016 15:08 (nine years ago) link
they have those smart thermostats now
― j., Wednesday, 13 January 2016 16:16 (nine years ago) link
if only... if only Kurt could make smart DECISIONS...
― Copy rights, pleasing all star wars fans, hiring professionals. (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 16:19 (nine years ago) link
brb, gonna write something for Medium
― Copy rights, pleasing all star wars fans, hiring professionals. (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 16:20 (nine years ago) link
Confusing Owen Pallett with Patton Oswalt is the new best thing in this thread.
― impossible raver (Re-Make/Re-Model), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 16:53 (nine years ago) link
tbf humans have a natural tendency to see pattons that aren't there
― I'm melanomically challenged btw (wins), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 16:57 (nine years ago) link
wouldn't you like to be a patton too
― Copy rights, pleasing all star wars fans, hiring professionals. (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 17:00 (nine years ago) link
Why Pattons?
― i have measured out my life in Goffey, Coombes (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 13 January 2016 18:05 (nine years ago) link
http://stream1.gifsoup.com/view1/1435294/patton-slap-o.gif
― salthigh, Wednesday, 13 January 2016 18:08 (nine years ago) link
Not really music writing, but this Bowie tribute deserves to be here …
http://blogs.news.com.au/images/uploads/timaru_thumb.png
― Roaming gang of aggressive circlepits (ithappens), Friday, 15 January 2016 10:29 (nine years ago) link
that's fantastic
― ogmor, Friday, 15 January 2016 11:02 (nine years ago) link
wrong thread
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Friday, 15 January 2016 14:51 (nine years ago) link
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Friday, 15 January 2016 14:57 (nine years ago) link
things that should be clickhole articles but aren't
― lettered and hapful (symsymsym), Friday, 15 January 2016 17:38 (nine years ago) link
http://www.clickhole.com/article/7-musicians-talk-about-how-david-bowie-impacted-th-3816
― scott seward, Friday, 15 January 2016 18:32 (nine years ago) link
Fighting the good fight
http://www.futuresymphony.org/why-musicians-need-philosophy/
― Check Yr Scrobbles (Moodles), Sunday, 17 January 2016 05:46 (nine years ago) link
this is straight trolling but even sohttp://takimag.com/article/not_a_fan_theodore_dalrymple/
― Copy rights, pleasing all star wars fans, hiring professionals. (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 17 January 2016 20:54 (nine years ago) link
ugh why would you link that garbage site
― maura, Sunday, 17 January 2016 21:01 (nine years ago) link
the dude who it's named after is like m1l0 y1ann0p0l0u5 levels of bad
― maura, Sunday, 17 January 2016 21:02 (nine years ago) link
i clicked on the top rated article on that site..... woah.... scary stuff
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Sunday, 17 January 2016 21:03 (nine years ago) link
though he did accurately capture how every Bowie fan subsumed their personalities becoming mindless Hitler drones.
Golly! This is the kind of abjection that Hitler was once offered. One is tempted to say that they are the words of natural, or at least willing, slaves who seek to dissolve their selves and forego their will for that of some other person.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Sunday, 17 January 2016 21:04 (nine years ago) link
xp so you agree this meets the thread requirements
― Copy rights, pleasing all star wars fans, hiring professionals. (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 17 January 2016 21:08 (nine years ago) link
pretty sure this is my first time seeing that garbage site btw... "cuckmercials"!
― Copy rights, pleasing all star wars fans, hiring professionals. (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 17 January 2016 21:10 (nine years ago) link
I have vivid memories of seeing this book cover on mid '00s trips to Waterstones, some kind of masterpiece of 'society is in the gutter' self-parody
http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1348651199l/117159.jpg
― soref, Sunday, 17 January 2016 21:17 (nine years ago) link
i mean i just think that we should completely ignore the gross right-wing grime-lickers of the world, even when looking for stuff that is Bad
― maura, Sunday, 17 January 2016 21:37 (nine years ago) link
they thrive on their #trollgaze shitty opinions eventually luring in disaffected members of the Privileged Class
― maura, Sunday, 17 January 2016 21:38 (nine years ago) link
it's a play on online hashtag-irony that works in a horrifying way
― maura, Sunday, 17 January 2016 21:39 (nine years ago) link
Yeah, people who disagree with Us politically should definitely be ignored. That's never backfired.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Sunday, 17 January 2016 21:44 (nine years ago) link
no, that's not what i'm saying. there's a certain strain of discourse that codes as right wing right now, but that exists mainly to fuck shit up. it's apolitical if anything; its only aims are to elevate the profiles of its figureheads, who cultivate cults of personality made up of the easily charmed. but a closer look reveals that its arguments are incoherent, its convictions based in little more than sticking wet fingers into the air.
― maura, Sunday, 17 January 2016 21:50 (nine years ago) link
engagement with them is futile because they exist to exhaust their opposition with bad-faith debates and siccing their hordes on people.
― maura, Sunday, 17 January 2016 21:52 (nine years ago) link
these men are nihilists
http://www.knowitallfootball.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/nil.jpg
― j., Sunday, 17 January 2016 22:03 (nine years ago) link
say what you want about clickbait, at least it's an ethos
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Sunday, 17 January 2016 22:21 (nine years ago) link
Mark it a zero, Smokey.
― Blackstar Linus Must Change (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 17 January 2016 22:29 (nine years ago) link
people should have to get this post tattooed on the backs of their hands to stop them from sharing this shit on FB. it's just garbage of no consequence. instead my social justice friends write thinkpieces about "don't tell me not to respond to this inconsequential garbage that moves no needles anywhere and would get no traction outside of its own cesspool if I weren't inflating it with helium"
― tremendous crime wave and killing wave (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Sunday, 17 January 2016 22:37 (nine years ago) link
but this sort of thing does get traction. as many people hate-share this shit they're usually a drop in the bucket compared to those who earnestly share it
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Sunday, 17 January 2016 23:15 (nine years ago) link
awareness is a Good Thing, but actually attempting to argue with populist fascists doesn't ever seem to be an effective strategy.
― diana krallice (rushomancy), Sunday, 17 January 2016 23:59 (nine years ago) link
that site is not even breitbart level trash. its essentially one step away from an actual nazi site, the difference being that these ppl think skinheads are too low class or some shit
― Option ARMs and de Man (s.clover), Monday, 18 January 2016 01:40 (nine years ago) link
For a while I would get "Taki" and "Tavi" mixed up in my head, which would always be funny when I'd land on something there
― ♫ as we get older and stop making threads ♫ (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 18 January 2016 03:50 (nine years ago) link
I am a grown up adult man and I believe the fact that I don't like a particular musician who died is worthy of a published article.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Monday, 18 January 2016 04:02 (nine years ago) link
So grown and adult, way too grown and adult for David Bowie who I haven't really tried but I know I don't like.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Monday, 18 January 2016 04:09 (nine years ago) link
taki I-can't-be-bothered-to-spell-his-name-right is a loathsome, proudly racist aristocrat who most "respectable" conservatives shunned after I think the late 80s. Pat Buchanan stuck by him, probly because Taki dislikes Israel i.e. Jews. Russ Smith, the troglodytic editor/owner of the NY Press (who was too cowardly to put his own name on his Mugger column, but you could say the same about me) gave Taki a semi regular insert in the press, and he would present not only his demented views but that of many of his lunatic fellow travelers. that was probly a nascent version of the site mentioned above.
― veronica moser, Monday, 18 January 2016 04:17 (nine years ago) link
Steve Sutherland on David Bowie
― nate woolls, Saturday, 23 January 2016 10:55 (nine years ago) link
Now, knowing his reputation as a magpie, scarfing up other people’s ideas, sprinkling some fairy dust on them and then successfully representing them as his own, I figured Dave might benefit from an earful of some new stuff, so duly made him a cassette.
The tracklisting went something like Lush, Moose, Chapterhouse, Adorable , Slowdive, The Jesus and Mary Chain, My Bloody Valentine, Telescopes, Ride — a veritable who’s who of shoegazers making a name for themselves at the time and a line-up I felt sure would top-up Dave’s creative juices.
Just goes to show how wrong you can be! A few weeks after I sent him said tape, I received a very nicely wrapped package which contained a small broken-up jigsaw of Michelangelo’s David. When the pieces were all put in place, there was a message handwritten on the back in, if I recall correctly, green ink, the gist of which went something like, “Thanks for the lovely tape. Not really my cup of tea. Try this instead.” The “this” was a cassette tape of Different Trains, an interminable modern classical piece by avant-garde composer Steve Reich performed by the dreaded Kronos Quartet. Shudder.
solid win for Bowie there
― Jute Gazte (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 23 January 2016 11:02 (nine years ago) link
haha seriously
― white privilege 2: the legend of clumsy scold (wins), Saturday, 23 January 2016 11:04 (nine years ago) link
Adorable.
― Doran, Saturday, 23 January 2016 11:15 (nine years ago) link
came here to post this but expected to have been gazumped
― Skaciety (pronounced the way you'd pronounce society) (DJ Mencap), Saturday, 23 January 2016 11:26 (nine years ago) link
i am going to be using the phrase "the dreaded Kronos Quartet" for a long while i suspect
― Jute Gazte (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 23 January 2016 14:55 (nine years ago) link
we've got nine months to prepare our group halloween costume
― lazy rascals, spending their substance, and more, in riotous living (Merdeyeux), Saturday, 23 January 2016 15:18 (nine years ago) link
http://www.punchland.com/music/interview-james-lockhart-and-matthew-heckmann-of-brother-moses/
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Sunday, 28 February 2016 22:10 (eight years ago) link
fed up of this thread scoring cheap easy laughs from non-native English speakers
― Szechuan TV (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 28 February 2016 22:17 (eight years ago) link
http://flavorwire.com/563477/oscar-winner-dustin-lance-black-tells-oblivious-sam-smith-to-stop-texting-his-fiance
― ulysses, Tuesday, 1 March 2016 16:46 (eight years ago) link
I'm missing the "worst" here
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Tuesday, 1 March 2016 17:05 (eight years ago) link
"I wonder what he could be texting him? Maybe song lyrics? Probably song lyrics. Unfortunately, none of the other gay Oscar winners seem to care to participate in Twitter culture, so no further shade was found. And oh, what shade there could have been."
― ulysses, Tuesday, 1 March 2016 17:07 (eight years ago) link
you might want to avoid the following list of music sites: all of them
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Tuesday, 1 March 2016 17:11 (eight years ago) link
no comment
― ulysses, Tuesday, 1 March 2016 17:14 (eight years ago) link
loooool katherine
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 1 March 2016 17:55 (eight years ago) link
you might want to avoid the following list of music sites: all of them Real lolz.
― hardcore dilettante, Tuesday, 1 March 2016 20:47 (eight years ago) link
This really needs to be preserved. I actually like this album, and this review makes me hate it.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Cc31Gu5W8AAKelL.jpg
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Sunday, 6 March 2016 15:41 (eight years ago) link
this reminds me of exercises in like high school English where they challenge you to write sentences with multiple descriptive adjectives.
God that is painful.
― Neanderthal, Sunday, 6 March 2016 15:47 (eight years ago) link
reads a bit like one of Pushead's reviews from Maximum Rocknroll in the 1980s, but way more po-faced
― drive me to a girly rave (DJ Mencap), Sunday, 6 March 2016 17:10 (eight years ago) link
I know someone who writes exactly like that, all the time. Facebook posts... Probably shopping lists, too.
― hardcore dilettante, Sunday, 6 March 2016 17:28 (eight years ago) link
kinda reminds me of how i wrote all the time in college
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Sunday, 6 March 2016 17:30 (eight years ago) link
Not one of yours mencap? ;)
― Cosmic Slop, Sunday, 6 March 2016 17:31 (eight years ago) link
I know a writer who does something similar when writing about jazz. He's also a big fan of (at least this is what I guess is his method) writing a sentence with normal/appropriate nouns and adjectives, then busting out the thesaurus and replacing each one with something two steps removed. The result is that his reviews read like they were written by a self-educated extraterrestrial who thinks he's really, really smart.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Sunday, 6 March 2016 18:09 (eight years ago) link
that kind of writing always makes me think of "the eye of argon", which in turn always makes me smile.
we should have a thread for good writing screwed by shitty clickbait-driven editorial. for instance, this is actually a splendid obit, but oh god that headline is awful:
http://www.mtv.com/news/2750555/nikolaus-harnoncourt-was-classical-musics-punk-genius/
― diana krallice (rushomancy), Thursday, 10 March 2016 12:21 (eight years ago) link
that was actually one of the most interesting music things i've read in awhile
― robbie ca$hflo (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 10 March 2016 16:01 (eight years ago) link
Rotting Christ review is the new winner of the thread, if only because this writer uses (and invents) figures of speech without bothering to picture what the hell he is actually saying:
"majesty" cannot be "brimstone-scorched"
guitar distortion cannot be "velvet thick"
a "choral blast" cannot be "grave-scented" (new board description here?)
a backbone cannot be "thickly distorted" (can anything be "thickly distorted?")
a "trapping," almost by definition, cannot be "instantly recognizable"
flutes cannot be "sun scorched" (maybe they can, but how much would that affect the sound of the flute and how many readers would know this?)
Sorry, this sort of writing drives me up the fucking wall.
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Thursday, 10 March 2016 16:40 (eight years ago) link
"Thickly distorted" seems like a needless way to reword "heavily distorted", and "sun scorched" is more of a description of the feeling the flutes provide to the piece, not the sound of flutes that were left on the dash on a sunny day. Overall I agree, it's too much.
― Evan, Thursday, 10 March 2016 17:59 (eight years ago) link
The saddest part is that you guys are clearly not on metal promo lists, because I get press releases written almost this badly pretty much every day.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Thursday, 10 March 2016 18:01 (eight years ago) link
actually i'm pretty happy about not being on metal promo lists, all things considered
― diana krallice (rushomancy), Thursday, 10 March 2016 18:03 (eight years ago) link
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Thursday, March 10, 2016 11:40 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
all of these are perfectly fine metaphors, your problem is interpreting them literally
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Thursday, 10 March 2016 18:20 (eight years ago) link
i would feel cheated if i read a review of a band called Rotting Christ and it didn't refer to brimstone
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Thursday, 10 March 2016 18:23 (eight years ago) link
jimmywine dyspeptic describes things as they are
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Thursday, 10 March 2016 18:34 (eight years ago) link
(i've gotten a lot of comments over the years that are like "how can x.... be y??!?!?!??!!" and tbh they don't get old)
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Thursday, 10 March 2016 18:35 (eight years ago) link
Most of the imagery I thought sucked in that piece wasn't what Jimmy listed but the main problem is just too fucking much of it
― Szechuan TV (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 10 March 2016 18:49 (eight years ago) link
You could put flutes on a rocket and shoot it into the sun, just brainstorming
― robbie ca$hflo (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 10 March 2016 18:50 (eight years ago) link
I actually listened to the Rotting Christ album because of this thread and it's pretty good!
― robbie ca$hflo (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 10 March 2016 18:51 (eight years ago) link
i know what jimmywine is saying, but i kinda like "scorched." one of those words you only read in music reviews! or maybe in like grilling cookbooks.
― tylerw, Thursday, 10 March 2016 18:55 (eight years ago) link
brb, putting flutes on a rocket
― ulysses, Thursday, 10 March 2016 19:03 (eight years ago) link
eh it's been donehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=POMhSZLXR4I
― tylerw, Thursday, 10 March 2016 19:04 (eight years ago) link
holy crap playing flute in a spaceship that is amazing!
<3<3<3<3<3 Cady Coleman you rule! just chilling in space with Jethro Tull's flute
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Thursday, 10 March 2016 19:10 (eight years ago) link
Academic goes all "jumpers for goalposts" about music reviews, referencing that time, 37 years ago, that a music critic audaciously reviewed an old record. Hard to believe that someone who teaches music crit at a University never read MOJO.
http://www.newyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/the-music-critic-in-the-age-of-the-insta-release
― everything, Thursday, 10 March 2016 19:13 (eight years ago) link
I dunno; I think she's had some good pieces lately.
― dc, Thursday, 10 March 2016 19:15 (eight years ago) link
yeah, i think she's good. people in general get all atwitter about how fast our hurly burly world is. they've been doing that since forever. it's a natural impulse, i think. to say hey slow down there, pardner. people can still obviously wait and write about things decades later. the internet waits for no man, though.
― scott seward, Thursday, 10 March 2016 19:25 (eight years ago) link
I don't like Petrusich's writing much, but I don't like anybody's writing about music much lately. I hate that thing that went up on the New York Times website today, for example. I think it's probably me.
That said, I have never understood critics' need to be "part of the conversation" as demonstrated by jumping in headfirst to review something as fast as possible so you can tweet about it with all the other music critics you follow, and who follow you. Especially since none of you are going to dare write something negative. Look at the latest Kanye album - the mad rush was all to see who could be first to declare it a work of genius. It wasn't until what, two weeks later that Lex's negative review went up. You should never review art from the perspective of a kid tearing open a present on Christmas morning. You should let an album sit until you're bored with it, then write about the parts that still stick with you.
(Though I once wrote a review of a Derek Bailey album in which I said that since it was improvised music that had only been played once, I was reviewing it after only listening to it once.)
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Thursday, 10 March 2016 19:36 (eight years ago) link
That said, I have never understood critics' need to be "part of the conversation" as demonstrated by jumping in headfirst to review something as fast as possible so you can tweet about it with all the other music critics you follow, and who follow you
i mean simply it is 1) wow i need to get paid 2) how do i get paid 3) oh someone wants me to turn around a review about a surprise release in less than 10 hours 4) guess i'll do that
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Thursday, 10 March 2016 19:46 (eight years ago) link
^^ bingoi don't really want to be "part of the conversation" either, but it happens, and i can see why people *do* want to be part of the converstaion
― tylerw, Thursday, 10 March 2016 19:50 (eight years ago) link
Yeah, I just don't get that impulse at all. (I guess that's demonstrated by the shit I do write about, and who I write about it for.)
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Thursday, 10 March 2016 19:54 (eight years ago) link
can we go back to cady coleman and paddy maloney's tin whistle in space? what a rad astronaut.
― ulysses, Thursday, 10 March 2016 19:58 (eight years ago) link
You don't get the impulse to pay your rent?
― i like to trump and i am crazy (DJP), Thursday, 10 March 2016 20:00 (eight years ago) link
I pay my rent by other means. As all sensible writers should.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Thursday, 10 March 2016 20:04 (eight years ago) link
You Ott to know not to open that can of worms.
― Evan, Thursday, 10 March 2016 20:09 (eight years ago) link
that new ben ratliff book is all about the anxiety of everything. and the fastness and the toomuchness and the flavin and the heyladyyyyyyy....
― scott seward, Thursday, 10 March 2016 20:10 (eight years ago) link
check out Thy Mighty Contract. totally great band.
― tremendous crime wave and killing wave (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Thursday, 10 March 2016 20:16 (eight years ago) link
I just dl'd it for listening on my commute home. Will report back about the flutes.
― how's life, Thursday, 10 March 2016 20:16 (eight years ago) link
I hate that thing that went up on the New York Times website today, for example.
Yeah. The huge circle jerk things like that trigger among music writers on social media is really ugly to me. I enjoyed reading music writing a lot more when I didn't know who the writers behind it were. Maybe you could say that about any form of writing now, I dunno.
― Position Position, Thursday, 10 March 2016 20:25 (eight years ago) link
And by "know" them, I mean knowing their social media personalities.
― Position Position, Thursday, 10 March 2016 20:26 (eight years ago) link
i've been reading old francis davis and whitney balliett. been enjoying them a lot. francis davis said that Kind Of Blue was the sound of one finger snapping. wish i had thought of that.
― scott seward, Thursday, 10 March 2016 20:31 (eight years ago) link
Davis was really good. I miss Gary Giddins' writing, too.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Thursday, 10 March 2016 20:34 (eight years ago) link
in the davis book i'm reading he turned me on to this and i am eternally grateful. have listened to it about 50 times.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p9zK4YtQeUI
― scott seward, Thursday, 10 March 2016 20:43 (eight years ago) link
yeah that is straight dope
― ulysses, Thursday, 10 March 2016 20:46 (eight years ago) link
lol tyler did you google "space flute"?
― robbie ca$hflo (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 10 March 2016 21:03 (eight years ago) link
francis davis deserved better from the voice bosses, that's for sure
― maura, Thursday, 10 March 2016 22:31 (eight years ago) link
xp haha, well i had seen that before, but yeah i did google "space flute" to find it ...
― tylerw, Thursday, 10 March 2016 22:38 (eight years ago) link
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Thursday, March 10, 2016 11:40 AM (5 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Also not sure you can have a "smattering of years"
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Thursday, 10 March 2016 22:40 (eight years ago) link
That said, I have never understood critics' need to be "part of the conversation" as demonstrated by jumping in headfirst to review something as fast as possible so you can tweet about it with all the other music critics you follow, and who follow you.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Thursday, March 10, 2016 2:36 PM (4 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
does the phrase "publish or perish" ring any bells
signed, someone who perished four years ago
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Thursday, 10 March 2016 23:44 (eight years ago) link
like, even if you're not being paid for that particular album and you're just shitting out quick opinions on twitter, if you are not part of the conversation you and by extension your future and your career (which involves money, and which most people probably have to find some way to keep going for 30+ years) do not exist.
and given that people routinely use the last time someone wrote something as a way to insult them, that the fucking lead singer of chvrches still gets referred to in articles about her very successful band as a "failed music journalist," I would hope you understand how most people would want to avoid these things happening to them.
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Thursday, 10 March 2016 23:50 (eight years ago) link
"failed" cannot be applied to "music journalist", really, as anybody who stops doing it has succeeded
― got a long list of ILXors (fgti), Friday, 11 March 2016 00:03 (eight years ago) link
just splitting hairs? idk
genuinely surprised that anyone could make it to the end of that New Yorker article without skimming
"It is a valuation, passed on as a gift" - uh ok
Even the bangs quotes are boring
― Chuck_Tatum, Friday, 11 March 2016 00:14 (eight years ago) link
it appears I misquoted, the actual quote is "the double indignity of a law degree and a failed career in music journalism." She was 26.
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Friday, 11 March 2016 00:21 (eight years ago) link
Well, if I was at risk of consuming art made by a fucking lawyer, I'd want advance warning, so that's a valuable description.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Friday, 11 March 2016 00:24 (eight years ago) link
More seriously, I understand the fear that if you're not constantly "on" you'll disappear - I used to feel that way. But you know, I managed to carve out a 20 year "career" without writing about any big pop records, so when I see people who only seem to do that, and then worry about falling out of "the conversation," I feel like it shows a lack of imagination on their part. There's a whole world of music out there, and it's my belief that it's actually a better strategy to be the only person pitching the story you're pitching than to be one of 1000 writers pitching an insta-review of the album "everyone" is talking about that week.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Friday, 11 March 2016 00:44 (eight years ago) link
being in "the conversation" isn't even a necessary condition of being a functional journalist, never mind a functional writer
― Szechuan TV (Noodle Vague), Friday, 11 March 2016 01:17 (eight years ago) link
"More seriously, I understand the fear that if you're not constantly "on" you'll disappear - I used to feel that way. But you know, I managed to carve out a 20 year "career" without writing about any big pop records, so when I see people who only seem to do that, and then worry about falling out of "the conversation," I feel like it shows a lack of imagination on their part. There's a whole world of music out there, and it's my belief that it's actually a better strategy to be the only person pitching the story you're pitching than to be one of 1000 writers pitching an insta-review of the album "everyone" is talking about that week.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Thursday, March 10, 2016 7:44 PM (38 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
sure, if it's 20 years ago
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Friday, 11 March 2016 01:22 (eight years ago) link
I think in the current environment katherine's right - you are unlikely to get read at all if you're not established and your beat is anything other than what everybody else is talking about
― tremendous crime wave and killing wave (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Friday, 11 March 2016 01:46 (eight years ago) link
I still do it! It can still be done! I did it in 2015, for editors I'd never written for before!
I'd feel really sad if I thought you two were right—but that's mostly because I don't think of myself as "established." I think of myself as "old." Which actually puts me at a disadvantage in the market. There are writers I think of as established—Chuck Eddy, Rob Harvilla, Maura, Weingarten, Julianne Escobedo Shepherd, Jessica Hopper, plenty of others—but I definitely don't count myself among them.
And here's the other thing: If you're writing about the exact same thing everybody else is writing about (worst of all if you're one voice in a "critical roundtable" convened for the purpose of saying "Wow, Beyoncé's awesome!" six different ways), nobody's reading you for you—they're reading you because yours is the first link they came across covering the subject they're interested in. And that's not a path to getting "established"; that's a way to make sure you're 100% replaceable. It's like having no voice at all. Which makes me wonder, why do it? Do you have so little pride, as a writer, that you're willing to just anonymously fill a content hole? For $20, or $50, or whatever people are paying for blog posts now?
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Friday, 11 March 2016 02:00 (eight years ago) link
I would not necessarily say that's true but I do think the idea of "reading you for you" and "having a voice" is different than what you're saying. plenty of writers have people who read them for them, but largely on the strength of their online brand; what they write is secondary. in a way this is great, but not every voice is easily translatable to a demographically targeted brand, nor every person good at this sort of self-promotion
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Friday, 11 March 2016 02:40 (eight years ago) link
also, it's a little strange to say people are only writing about pop music because that's where the conversation is. those people do exist, but they're generally very easy to tell by their tone of barely concealed disdain (which isn't criticism) and faulty assumptions
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Friday, 11 March 2016 02:42 (eight years ago) link
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Thursday, March 10, 2016 1:34 PM (7 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Sorry, been away all day, just wanted to briefly address this: I will admit that I retain some pretty traditional, Strunk & White-y ideas about grammar, but I remember being taught that it is important to understand the literal definition of (metaphor) words before using them in a sentence. This helps to avoid nonsense like "grave-scented choral blast." If the writer had thought about it for even a second, he'd remember that sounds do not have an odor.
My problem is not with figurative speech. Obviously, when you write that a person "threw the gauntlet" (and my using this example should by no means suggest that I approve of this phrase), you aren't actually imagining someone throwing an armored glove at someone's feet, but it helps to recognize that a "gauntlet" is, in fact, something that can be "thrown." That's all I was trying to say. The above review is, to me, a perfect example of thoughtless writing.
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Friday, 11 March 2016 03:01 (eight years ago) link
Totally agree with Jimmywine on this.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Friday, 11 March 2016 03:04 (eight years ago) link
the literal definition of "blast" is a strong breath or gust of air, though
― 1staethyr, Friday, 11 March 2016 03:10 (eight years ago) link
A choral gust of air? That smells like a grave? I guess that could describe a scene from Evil Dead 2 or something!
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Friday, 11 March 2016 03:12 (eight years ago) link
also, it's a little strange to say people are only writing about pop music because that's where the conversation is. ― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Thursday, March 10, 2016 9:42 PM (19 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
What's strange about this? The writers who used to make money writing about Robert Pollard and Sebadoh are, for better or worse, no longer able to do that, so they either adapt (become poptimists, write about Lana Del Rey and hip hop mixtapes) or they quit writing about music professionally. If you want proof, email NPR tomorrow and pitch an interview with the Bottle Rockets. I'm not saying you can't make a good living writing for, I don't know, Downbeat or something, but I don't think that would make you part of the "conversation" as we are defining it.
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Friday, 11 March 2016 03:20 (eight years ago) link
even ignoring the obvious connection between "choral" and the concept of breath, english idiomatic and metaphorical language regularly uses the idea of scent to mean "reminiscent of" even w/ things that couldn't possibly smell like anything as in phrases like "conformity has a whiff of the inhuman about it". would take a million bad metaphors over ppl performatively missing the point about language
― 1staethyr, Friday, 11 March 2016 03:41 (eight years ago) link
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Thursday, March 10, 2016 10:20 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
it's strange because there are just as many people who are genuinely interested in pop music and want to write things about it, conversation or no. these people can also listen to robert pollard or sebadoh! it's not impossible!
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Friday, 11 March 2016 06:10 (eight years ago) link
i write about rap and rap mixtapes & pop music, yet only occasionally does the Conversation reflect the scope of what's happening w/in the genre, there's no way to really be on top of the conversation except by chasing it which leads mainly to dispassionate or fake-passionate writing ime
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Friday, 11 March 2016 06:24 (eight years ago) link
like, the conversation is more driven by memes and vines and what ian connor reblogged on his soundcloud account and what the few publications with $ at a given time think they should care about than it is the actual fundamentals of what is happening in music
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Friday, 11 March 2016 06:25 (eight years ago) link
Though I once wrote a review of a Derek Bailey album in which I said that since it was improvised music that had only been played once, I was reviewing it after only listening to it once.
conceptually sound.
― Mr. Magic's Rap Attack (m coleman), Friday, 11 March 2016 11:14 (eight years ago) link
Yeah. The huge circle jerk things like that trigger among music writers on social media is really ugly to me. I enjoyed reading music writing a lot more when I didn't know who the writers behind it were.
seeing that Nabisco-curated symposium at NYT reminded me of all his old "OTM" posts that I only skimmed or skipped outright ;)
― Mr. Magic's Rap Attack (m coleman), Friday, 11 March 2016 11:24 (eight years ago) link
become poptimists, write about Lana Del Rey and hip hop mixtapes
whoa I've been doing this all wrong
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Friday, 11 March 2016 11:38 (eight years ago) link
if you are not part of the conversation you and by extension your future and your career (which involves money, and which most people probably have to find some way to keep going for 30+ years) do not exist.
A different point I know, but is "the conversation" ultimately helping to produce good music writing? I feel like it's causing what was already a greatly diminished art to eat itself into redundancy.
― Position Position, Friday, 11 March 2016 12:12 (eight years ago) link
I listened to quite a bit of that Rotting Christ album and didn't hear flute #1.
― how's life, Friday, 11 March 2016 12:15 (eight years ago) link
all this "part of the conversation" talk is giving me flashbacks to my first days at art school when the teacher was challenging us to "be socially conscious" with our art and "start a dialog" and i just wanted to paint some cool stuff.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 11 March 2016 13:42 (eight years ago) link
A different point I know, but is "the conversation" ultimately helping to produce good music writing?
i would argue 'sometimes,' although imo those occasions are becoming rarer and rarer as every angle has to have one of the top ten whatever shoehorned into it. especially since those top 10 are not always entirely reflective of what music people outside of the conversation are consuming. (katherine's points made elsewhere about the lack of critical writing on rachel platten, who had one of the biggest songs of last year, are salient here.)
but more importantly it's pushing other writing that might not fit its contours (and be written by its most prominent participants) even further to the sidelines, which is a net negative
― maura, Friday, 11 March 2016 14:12 (eight years ago) link
see: Pitchfork getting rid of The Out Door
― Wimmels, Friday, 11 March 2016 14:48 (eight years ago) link
maura otm but what I'm trying to say also is that it's also reshaping those genres which are ostensibly in the center of the conversation by warping what is valued w/in them. this isn't like pre-poptimism where we bemoan that popular stuff is popular or that our tastes are so different from the mainstream; it's more that the Conversation is driven by memes, not music; that what is shared isn't necessarily even what the general public likes as music but what it likes to share and to participate in as a part of this social media 'culture'
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Friday, 11 March 2016 15:06 (eight years ago) link
i guess people said that about pop stars n stuff like 'why do you care about costumes n music videos shouldn't it be about the music man' but imo that stuff is Cool but a meme saying LOL Norm Says Drake Killed Meek Mill is not cool its goofy
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Friday, 11 March 2016 15:08 (eight years ago) link
oh and music writing is forced to reflect this online "culture" rather than music or the culture of music
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Friday, 11 March 2016 15:09 (eight years ago) link
yes totally
― maura, Friday, 11 March 2016 15:13 (eight years ago) link
happy fifth anniversary of 'friday' btw
it's a weird echo chamber that's only serving to disenfranchise itself
d-40 otm
― cher guevara (lex pretend), Friday, 11 March 2016 15:20 (eight years ago) link
it also contributes to ageism, where "ageism" is defined on the hollywood scale.
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Friday, 11 March 2016 16:18 (eight years ago) link
that said I wouldn't necessarily say it has much to do with the top 10 -- "fight song" was itself top 10! (#6, to be exact.) if you look at the exact top 10 right now it only resembles The Conversation in passing. sure you have bieber and rihanna in there, but also twenty-one pilots (the NYT piece was a bit of an outlier here, as otherwise the only people talking about them are to crack yuks), flo rida, g-eazy/bebe rexha, kelly clarkson and GOOD GRIEF WHEN DID LUKAS "STRIP NO MORE" GRAHAM GET IN THERE.
and sure, the hot 100 has a lot of problems with accurately representing reality (it's near-devoid of non-rihanna hip-hop and r&b, for instance), but it does show the extent to which The Conversation doesn't track exactly to what people actually listen to.
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Friday, 11 March 2016 16:24 (eight years ago) link
also, in almost all these cases, The Conversation could be replaced, "hastily installed chrome extension"-style, with "the twenty or so people I followed on twitter two ears ago"
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Friday, 11 March 2016 16:25 (eight years ago) link
tbf there is only so much one can write about 21 pilots, flo rida and lukas graham before temping front desk work at a hedge fund starts to look pretty good
― ulysses, Friday, 11 March 2016 16:28 (eight years ago) link
and are hedge funds even looking good these days #thanksObama
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 11 March 2016 16:30 (eight years ago) link
katherine the 'top 10' i was referring to wasn't the charts necessarily, but the list of 10 artists who get shoehorned into every headline. who often don't have anything on pop radio! (in part because pop radio has become so depressingly white)
― maura, Friday, 11 March 2016 16:31 (eight years ago) link
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Friday, March 11, 2016 10:24 AM (5 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― ulysses, Friday, March 11, 2016 10:28 AM (2 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
both true facts but you can look more closely at the more widely-considered-listenable artists: the 1975 just doubled the sales of macklemore and kendrick lamar but you wouldn't know it by the press response to either. Of course, macklemore did this (intentionally?) by tapping into a conversation subject that is understandably at the forefront of everyone's minds in the current moment (white priv)
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Friday, 11 March 2016 16:33 (eight years ago) link
lol i didn't mean kendrick lamar! i meant to write ryan lewis! weirdest brain fart ever
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Friday, 11 March 2016 16:34 (eight years ago) link
fair enough!
(bieber is a good example, because it's easy to simultaneously get caught in the "HOW CAN YOU NOT LIKE BIEBER" rhetoric-blast from writers and "HOW CAN YOU NOT INSTANTLY DISMISS BIEBER" from about 60% of the other people you encounter in the world and the mental effect is a little bit like having two people stand on either side of you and punch you)
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Friday, 11 March 2016 16:36 (eight years ago) link
also I'm not sure the 1975 is the best example here because a) there's a fuckton of writing on them lately and b) at least some portion of their popularity was from siphoned-away (well, not *away* but still) taylor swift fans
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Friday, 11 March 2016 16:40 (eight years ago) link
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Friday, March 11, 2016 9:06 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Friday, March 11, 2016 9:08 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Friday, March 11, 2016 9:09 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
i'd like to point out that d-40 has been otm in this thread
i think the amount of e-ink spilled on the life of pablo and kanye's weeklong twitter hissyfit and weird release of it is another example of an album that got wrote about more than people actually want to listen to it even now like 2 weeks later
― robbie ca$hflo (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 11 March 2016 16:43 (eight years ago) link
at least some portion of their popularity was from siphoned-away (well, not *away* but still) taylor swift fans
Interested to know more about this. I reviewed the 1975's debut for Alternative Press; have they gotten Taylor Swift's blessing in some way since?
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Friday, 11 March 2016 16:44 (eight years ago) link
if it bleeds it leads yo
― ulysses, Friday, 11 March 2016 16:45 (eight years ago) link
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Friday, March 11, 2016 10:40 AM (5 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
feel like most of this came out after they went no. 1. critics on the edge paid attention but the only publication in the states that gave them a real feature prior was Spin, right? lol
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Friday, 11 March 2016 16:47 (eight years ago) link
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Friday, March 11, 2016 11:44 AM (3 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
in the tabloid sense, which in music may as well be the same thing
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Friday, 11 March 2016 16:48 (eight years ago) link
"Even 誤訳侮辱 likes them!" might be a good marketing strategy.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 11 March 2016 16:50 (eight years ago) link
i know someone who was writing about the 1975 in 2013
http://mauramagazine.com/article/554a86c9ada6e2283e75618f/hold_you_tight
― maura, Friday, 11 March 2016 16:57 (eight years ago) link
who gave you access to my diary??
― robbie ca$hflo (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 11 March 2016 16:58 (eight years ago) link
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Friday, 11 March 2016 17:02 (eight years ago) link
I just don't understand how it can be possible to be so *on* all the time. I work 38 hrs a week in a day job (and I don't have the luxury of being able to select music or use headphones at a desk, lol retail), I have friends and family I spend time with around that, and then it's a struggle to find time to catch-up on what The Conversation suggests I should be listening to, as well as all the stuff I want to listen to outside it, then form opinions on it and write/blog about it. If I wanted to establish myself as a critical writer, I'd need to throw myself into Twitter culture and it feels overwhelming and exhausting on top of real life. And its easy to say "don't chase the same rainbow, establish your own niche" but there's still bills to pay.
― boxedjoy, Saturday, 12 March 2016 14:07 (eight years ago) link
Also I think pop music writing is so big now because it traditionally hasn't been seen as "worthy" due to rockism and patriarchy etc - thanks to the rise of social media, Tumblr, etc, people are finally taking audiences outside of old white men seriously. Like, if Taylor Swift/The 1975 had been around twenty years ago there would have been just as much writing due to the scope of their celebrity, but the tone, style, attitude etc would be very different.
― boxedjoy, Saturday, 12 March 2016 14:13 (eight years ago) link
Well, I don't know I feel like artists like Madonna and Prince were written about pretty extensively and seriously at their Peaks. Or Michael Jackson or Janet Jackson, the original "popist" movement of writers were basically UK writers who are now old white men... And people like Kogan, Eddy etc... Hip hop was taken as an important movement pretty much from jump
― robbie ca$hflo (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 12 March 2016 15:25 (eight years ago) link
Jonny Garrett is now assistant editor of jamieoliver.com and reviews craft beers on youtube
― soref, Saturday, 12 March 2016 18:19 (eight years ago) link
it pains me to say this, but I'm not sure those audiences are being taken seriously. I think there's a lot of condescension toward those audiences, which is not the same thing
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Saturday, 12 March 2016 18:37 (eight years ago) link
Condescension from whom? I know the shorthand is that Rolling Stone and Mojo and Q (is Q even still around?) sneer at pop and champion past-it old man bands, but is that even true? RS seems to do both with equal fervor - put this month's young sensation on the cover, then turn around and release a "Special Edition" tribute to Keith Richards or whoever. Mojo is Mojo, yeah, but they're no less of a niche publication than The Wire and they know it. It seems to me that the dominant mode of pop music writing - and I don't just mean dominant as in "this is what everyone's doing," but dominant as in "this is everywhere" - is about whoever's at the top of the charts, and it's either blanket celebration or (in the case of Beyoncé and to a lesser degree Rihanna) an attempt to show why buying the same album - or watching the same YouTube video - as ten million other people is somehow a politically insurgent gesture. I mean, if you want to find condescension toward pop audiences, you're pretty much stuck going to ultimateclassicrock.com or someplace, which at that point aren't you basically actively seeking out the thing you dislike, so you can complain that it still exists at all?
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Saturday, 12 March 2016 19:08 (eight years ago) link
*searches for beyoncé on the charts*
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Saturday, 12 March 2016 19:14 (eight years ago) link
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Saturday, March 12, 2016 2:08 PM (6 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
condescension from editors, whether it's "these kids will click on anything" or "they won't care if it's good or not."
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Saturday, 12 March 2016 19:17 (eight years ago) link
(and yes, I have heard both these statements and/or variations on them, it's not my reading anything in)
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Saturday, 12 March 2016 19:19 (eight years ago) link
Since I'm mostly out of the field at this point (I don't even write for Alternative Press anymore - an outlet that I think really does respect its largely teenage, largely female readership - I'm mostly covering jazz now) I genuinely don't know whether the low quality of current music journalism is attributable to condescension-toward-audiences-presumed-dumb or to the writers and editors themselves being kinda dumb. (There are a lot of currently prominent music journalists and editors who I think are very bad at both thinking and writing.)
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Saturday, 12 March 2016 19:21 (eight years ago) link
It's probably fair to say that if The Conversation involves The 1975, you're probably better off walking away and looking for a different conversation.
― // 166,000 W A N K E R S // LOVE (Turrican), Saturday, 12 March 2016 19:48 (eight years ago) link
you never have!
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Saturday, 12 March 2016 20:30 (eight years ago) link
i don't think i would know the 1975 if they shook a stick at me. maybe i know them from the radio without knowing it.
― scott seward, Saturday, 12 March 2016 20:54 (eight years ago) link
#10 song in the nation right now. never heard of it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vWaRiD5ym74
― scott seward, Saturday, 12 March 2016 20:56 (eight years ago) link
okay, i have to hear these people:
DJ Snake Featuring Bipolar Sunshine
― scott seward, Saturday, 12 March 2016 20:58 (eight years ago) link
wait, i lied, that dnce song was on the hot 100 which isn't the same as the top ten i don't think.
― scott seward, Saturday, 12 March 2016 20:59 (eight years ago) link
maybe i'll write something about the hot 100. i've been looking for something to do.
― scott seward, Saturday, 12 March 2016 21:01 (eight years ago) link
the Hot 100 is the main singles chart, being on the top ten of that means "top ten in the nation" etc.
― ODD FUTURE WOLFGANG VAN HALEN ON BASS (some dude), Saturday, 12 March 2016 21:36 (eight years ago) link
i propose that "the conversation" be renamed to "the people punching each other in the face".
― diana krallice (rushomancy), Saturday, 12 March 2016 21:47 (eight years ago) link
that DNCE song is awesome btw
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Sunday, 13 March 2016 00:06 (eight years ago) link
its like basement jaxx finally crosses over 20 years late
yeesh that times thing is embarrassing
― balls, Sunday, 13 March 2016 17:40 (eight years ago) link
that DNCE song is shitty btw and something like six months old
― ulysses, Monday, 14 March 2016 14:01 (eight years ago) link
I just don't understand how it can be possible to be so *on* all the time.
it's called 'faking it until you make it' (where the second 'it' in this case is word count)
― maura, Monday, 14 March 2016 14:53 (eight years ago) link
the dnce song is this year's hot chelle rae i.e. catchy but rather bad song that one imagines is only a hit b/c radio is desperate for something resembling a new artist even tho said artist will surely never have a hit again. i almost miss metro station.
― dyl, Monday, 14 March 2016 15:20 (eight years ago) link
"new" "artist"
one imagines it's only a hit because someone somewhere is invested in giving joe jonas a third(?) chance
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Monday, 14 March 2016 16:20 (eight years ago) link
that band floundered for months
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 14 March 2016 16:27 (eight years ago) link
would read
― a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Monday, 14 March 2016 16:31 (eight years ago) link
basement jaxx now is about 100x better than DNCEhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aPLE2Bo3T6M
― ulysses, Monday, 14 March 2016 16:39 (eight years ago) link
― a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Monday, March 14, 2016 11:31 AM (22 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Second
― thom yorke state of mind (voodoo chili), Monday, 14 March 2016 16:56 (eight years ago) link
xp Q doesn't sneer at pop fwiw. A lot of the key writers were and are ex-Smash Hits so the vibe has always been pro-pop as well as pro-old-man-bands. The current issue has The 1975 on the cover.
― impossible raver (Re-Make/Re-Model), Monday, 14 March 2016 18:29 (eight years ago) link
I'm well aware of how old the dnce song is and that it's a joe Jonas vehicle and that it's naff and shameless/tasteless and yet....it is great
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Monday, 14 March 2016 19:01 (eight years ago) link
on the emo tip, I actually, authentically, non-sarcastically appreciated seeing my name in this list considering not all that long a Ph1l didn't consider me established or w/e enough to be a part of the Marooned book
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 14 March 2016 19:23 (eight years ago) link
awww, emo puppy! let's all hug. you and phil are both nuts but you are OUR nuts.
― scott seward, Monday, 14 March 2016 19:42 (eight years ago) link
define...."thrilling"...
"For decades, indie rock bands like Built to Spill, Pavement, and Sonic Youth won critical and fan praise with their clever lyrics and distorted guitars. Those bands and their peers moved into thrilling new styles throughout the 1990s;"
http://www.mtv.com/news/2793656/rip-indie-rock/
― scott seward, Monday, 14 March 2016 21:23 (eight years ago) link
also, r.i.p. indie rock.
― scott seward, Monday, 14 March 2016 21:24 (eight years ago) link
also that quote makes it sound like those bands were around for decades and then got thrilling in the 90's. but maybe i can't read right.
"throughout" kind of fixes that misread, but yeah.
― Evan, Monday, 14 March 2016 21:26 (eight years ago) link
that thing also doesn't have anything to do with being white until the last paragraph. which makes the title weird. i read the whole thing! i really gotta go home...
― scott seward, Monday, 14 March 2016 21:31 (eight years ago) link
Title is just clickbait I suspect.
― Evan, Monday, 14 March 2016 21:35 (eight years ago) link
pop music is tackling sexism and racism in profound ways? cool i guess i'll have to take your word on that, since you've provided literally no examples!
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 14 March 2016 21:47 (eight years ago) link
also kind of funny how an article on male supremacy in indie rock only offers one lyric from a female musician and it is “You’re less than me / I am nothing”
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 14 March 2016 21:48 (eight years ago) link
define..."new styles"...
― fact checking cuz, Monday, 14 March 2016 21:53 (eight years ago) link
Damn we had so much riding on the new Diiv and Porches albums
― robbie ca$hflo (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 14 March 2016 22:21 (eight years ago) link
is there really a band called porches?
― tylerw, Monday, 14 March 2016 22:37 (eight years ago) link
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, March 14, 2016 9:27 AM (6 hours ago)
this is how long it takes for unestablished acts to climb pop radio playlists in today's age of ridiculously tight playlists. before long it'll be like country radio where it routinely takes over 6 months for a newer artist's single to rise to the level of exposure where ppl who only listen to radio on the drive home will hear it. w/ a song like "cake by the ocean" i wouldn't be surprised if they were expecting it to take until summer to break.
― dyl, Monday, 14 March 2016 22:43 (eight years ago) link
the torches of porches
― denies the existence of dark matter (difficult listening hour), Monday, 14 March 2016 22:46 (eight years ago) link
The porches of the mystics
― robbie ca$hflo (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 14 March 2016 22:53 (eight years ago) link
now that's a good band name
― tylerw, Monday, 14 March 2016 22:55 (eight years ago) link
Chill, Jack Johnson style Sun City Girls cover band
― robbie ca$hflo (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 14 March 2016 23:14 (eight years ago) link
mtv finally takes a real stand on the music they only played at midnight on sundays because there was too many swv and brandy videos to play during the day
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 15 March 2016 01:49 (eight years ago) link
But the key factor driving this concern isn’t, say, Spoon or Vampire Weekend crossing over to cultural ubiquity a few years ago
Most people in America have zero idea who these bands are
― robbie ca$hflo (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 15 March 2016 03:51 (eight years ago) link
i wish swv and brandy were here
― ulysses, Tuesday, 15 March 2016 04:10 (eight years ago) link
Didn't Brandi have an album a couple years ago?
― robbie ca$hflo (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 15 March 2016 12:04 (eight years ago) link
"It may be hard to remember now, but MTV started a national conversation on indie rock."
― Chris L, Tuesday, 15 March 2016 13:13 (eight years ago) link
I think there's a lot to like in that piece, actually, but that the headline (and the author's cosigning of same on Twitter) is pretty sad. like, you can't get anybody to read your piece unless you present it as DID HE REALLY SAY THAT? HE WENT THERE! etc
also, is there any safer piece to write than "the mainstream indie that you hear on NPR? I'm here to tell you it's not actually paradigm-shifting innovative music!"
― tremendous crime wave and killing wave (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Tuesday, 15 March 2016 13:31 (eight years ago) link
^^ this was my reaction. we're hanging the death of indie rock on a DIIV album and a Porches album?
― alpine static, Tuesday, 15 March 2016 13:51 (eight years ago) link
though I disagree that there's a lot to like in that piece. i don't think there's a lot of anything in that piece. it feels very thin. which ... whatever. get paid, sir.
― alpine static, Tuesday, 15 March 2016 13:52 (eight years ago) link
yeah i don't think the piece is bad, but i do feel like it could've been written in 2004, 1994 ... maybe even 1984. whenever i start bemoaning the "death of a genre" i just try to remember that there are probably kids who feel the same way about Diiv that i felt about, say, pavement. And back then, there were probably older dudes who thought pavement was super lame / unoriginal / uninspired compared to dino jr and the replacements. and so on...
― tylerw, Tuesday, 15 March 2016 14:46 (eight years ago) link
pavement was always super lame
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 15 March 2016 14:51 (eight years ago) link
thanks, older dude
― tylerw, Tuesday, 15 March 2016 14:53 (eight years ago) link
some older dude
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 15 March 2016 15:08 (eight years ago) link
all the older dudescome with the 'tudes...
― ulysses, Tuesday, 15 March 2016 15:13 (eight years ago) link
i love pavement and i hate the 90's! though i was actually kinda happy to see the retro-90's/matador sound make a comeback in the last few years just cuz i like guitars and all the lame young people who were doing really bad DIY synth/electronic/faux horrormovie/goth/chillwave stuff were terrible at it and even terrible guitar playing can sound cool if you are loud enough. built to spill on the other hand were mega-lame. and i can't listen to 90's sonic youth.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 15 March 2016 15:23 (eight years ago) link
I saw some buzz about that MTV indie piece but there's nothing there really. He finds a couple of indie records boring. He likes some other ones. He makes a vague call for more political engagement in the final paragraph. I don't know why people are getting excited about such a safe, bland piece nine years after SFJ's A Paler Shade of White. There's nothing less controversial than saying that indie-rock is too homogenous and cosy in 2016.
― impossible raver (Re-Make/Re-Model), Tuesday, 15 March 2016 16:32 (eight years ago) link
i mean.. the complaint that bands (as a whole? i guess?) are making music that you don't find exciting because the like "corporations" want them to or something is...?
(well is played, for one)
― ive seen enough Good Wife episodes (s.clover), Tuesday, 15 March 2016 16:53 (eight years ago) link
― scott seward, Monday, March 14, 2016 4:23 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
This quote is a good reminder of the reducing and flattening power of time. It's like how in 500 years, most people will just picture the faces on Mt. Rushmore as a summary of American history.
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive), Tuesday, 15 March 2016 17:14 (eight years ago) link
you've also apparently just described the concept of Chuck Klosterman's new book (just saw the synopsis on Amazon).
― evol j, Tuesday, 15 March 2016 20:55 (eight years ago) link
something is bothering me about this whole pile-on by fellow music writers and I think it's this: when I was 23 almost everything "longform" I wrote was garbage or approaching thus. (I've already corrected for the fact that I dislike all my own work; it just genuinely was not good.) Yet my work somehow never became the target of such a mass pile-on, and I don't think it had anything to do with the quality of my work nor much to do with its platform. I suspect it's more because people praise or criticize a piece based on media politics and increasingly politics-politics, which grants certain writers immunity and makes certain writers targets before they ever put a word into a CMS. It was ever thus, but I suspect in whatever "golden age of literary feuds" people might cite to make that point the journalism climate was healthy enough to be less circumspect.
And, like, sure, I understand that people in the field might not want to put themselves in the position of criticizing the broader editorial strategy of a publication that just went on a huge hiring spree, but surely there are better ways to sublimate that urge than to two minutes' subtweet someone far younger than you?
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Tuesday, 15 March 2016 21:22 (eight years ago) link
nobody ever criticizes the people they hope to get hired by
― james brooks, Tuesday, 15 March 2016 23:40 (eight years ago) link
Won't somebody think of the children?
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 15 March 2016 23:58 (eight years ago) link
when i was 23 i didn't give a shit what cranky old burnouts thought of my writing.
― diana krallice (rushomancy), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 00:04 (eight years ago) link
it is very peculiar to me in the first place that MTV.com chose to become grantland redux. My understanding is that some Grantland bigwig is there now and brought along Molly L., pappademus and maybe others whose names I don't know alongside J. Hopper etc, but… longform thumbsuckers from MTV? Yet I don't know what more suitable role for MTV's innuhnet strategy might currently be.
I also have no awareness of their TV programming presently. I worked for MTV.com/ MTV news in 2000/2001, when it still had stranglehold on the youngs TV-wise and were positioning their sites as such, as well as MTV.com, VH1.com being positioned the music sites of record. by that time, Viacom had counted on inexpensive or free labor w/r/t to working at MTV being so desirable for about 15 years. While I do not remember an MTV show making a stir past Jersey Shore —I guess they have Teen mom marathons a lot, and VH1 has the Real Wives shit— the "oh working at MTV is so great that mom and dad can help me with $$$" thing has been over a long time ago. Vice has had that shit for a while.
― veronica moser, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 00:07 (eight years ago) link
youth is not a magic shield. you write for the general public, you get a response regardless of your age, people don't avert their eyes and go "well, if they keep writing things i don't like when they're 28, then i'll say something."
― ODD FUTURE WOLFGANG VAN HALEN ON BASS (some dude), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 00:25 (eight years ago) link
katherine has a good point, but it's probably more a problem of the increasing profile and platform and Y A S S S K W E E N importance that major publications are giving young people than sharky, doughy near-40 ilx nerds approaching ready to dive on all young blood
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 00:34 (eight years ago) link
hopper even said to the Huffington Post
MTV has a unique opportunity to build a diverse staff that includes up-and-coming writers, veteran critics and journalists from outside the music space, she said, and bringing in young voices like 20-year-old Hazel Cills challenges "very fixed historic ideas of music criticism."
Well, it's either A) Old fart ILX dingleberry-picking Single Jukebox dads need to fix their historic ideas of music criticism and mow their lawns instead flapping their snackholes on the internet
or B) Maybe twentysomethings actually need editors
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 00:38 (eight years ago) link
And, just because i said that snarkily, doesn't mean that that answer isn't A
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 00:39 (eight years ago) link
B) Maybe twentysomethings actually need editors
Good thing Hopper did such a bang-up fuckin' job of editing these kids' crap at The Pitch. Bodes real, real well for MTV.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 00:43 (eight years ago) link
Old fart ILX dingleberry-picking Single Jukebox dads need to fix their historic ideas of music criticism and mow their lawns instead flapping their snackholes on the internet
how does this expert-texpert-choking-smokers stuff even work as verse
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 00:45 (eight years ago) link
when i was 23 and getting into music writing ilxors clowned my opinions and i either learned from what they were talking about or learned that they could be stupid, depending
if anything serious humans are way more kids gloves-ish with young writers today, because social media means the weird ass people who do attack these writers are often doing so at a whole nother level of shitheadedness that goes well past whatever abuse i suffered here....i.e. sexist creeps & racists going on about cucks, etc. ... i wish there was more constructive criticism tbh
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 00:50 (eight years ago) link
i don't know how old anyone is! if it were on someone's blog i wouldn't have picked on it. it's on a legit site. and i don't think it's the worst or anything. it's just kinda lazy or vague or whatever/nevermind. i just read it and put it here because nobody goes on any other crit thread.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 00:55 (eight years ago) link
yeah i feel like ILM is badly in need of a rolling discussion thread for recent music writing that isn't framed around WORST EVERRRR hyperbole
― ODD FUTURE WOLFGANG VAN HALEN ON BASS (some dude), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 01:16 (eight years ago) link
i've started GOOD music writing threads before. and on those the crickets hang themselves with nooses they make out of the tumbleweeds drifting by.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 01:19 (eight years ago) link
but there have been decent rolling threads in the past.
fwiw, the piling on here is really very mild compared to the parade of "yeah, man, this guy really nailed how I feel" i observed on twitter yesterday.
i came here to whine about the piece because Music Twitter seemed solidly supportive of it, tbh
― alpine static, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 01:27 (eight years ago) link
it would be overstating the case to say "there isn't any," but there's so little that I feel a thread would probably be too much. the age of instant takes has not made for good music writing.
― tremendous crime wave and killing wave (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 03:03 (eight years ago) link
I tend to praise stuff in band/act threads.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 03:05 (eight years ago) link
tell us more what you've learned in the intervening years
― bamcquern, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 03:58 (eight years ago) link
mtv news piece could've stood an edit where the writer got deeper into why x works and y doesn't beyond "[lyric quote]," as it is it feels v anecdotal and relies on a lot of assumed rubrics
prob lost five potential jobs typing that sentence
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 03:59 (eight years ago) link
none of the ideas in that piece hold up to any inspection, and yeah i posted something here because i was surprised how positive people were on it elsewhere and wanted to commiserate in a place where i feel i don't need to pedantically and tediously unpack all the ways it doesn't make sense coupled with sensitively trying to understand where the author is coming from, why they might be pushing their anxieties onto bands that just flitted across their radar, and what real ideas might be hiding in there etc.
and i don't see any percentage in arguing that people shouldn't pick on a piece that's so casually nasty to decent bands -- if you're writing something like that you're begging for pushback, you're clawing your way into the center of the conversation, and you want an expect people to disagree because that's the point. the failure is people aren't disagreeing with the thesis, they're just sort of disassembling the entire edifice of hot take pretending to say something big, so they're not disagreeing on the terms the piece might like. (and i think the people that are agreeing with the piece can't be agreeing with what it actually says, because it just doesn't hold water, but instead they're agreeing with the side of the conversation its staking out, because i mean, is there really a place in the world where you would say "all day every day, its diiv and porches, what is going on where are we going as a society" because those particular bands are so very saturated?)
but yeah, maybe we should have a thread with a more modest title like "rolling picking on other people's writing"
― ive seen enough Good Wife episodes (s.clover), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 04:29 (eight years ago) link
so just as the author of that piece might say "its not those bands, its that they're emblematic of a wave of bands" i'd say "its not this piece, its that its emblematic of a wave of pieces" and i think i'd be on more solid ground tbqh.
― ive seen enough Good Wife episodes (s.clover), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 04:30 (eight years ago) link
On top of everything, Porches are right up there with Hinds as far as the most shitty buzz band music I've heard all year
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 04:34 (eight years ago) link
i saw them live once and felt like the songs were deliberately receding from what could've been hooks and idk i have no time for that in indie rock
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 04:57 (eight years ago) link
it's a lousy piece. i can't tell what it is about.
the title purports to be an expose on wm supremacy in indie rock, yet most of the piece is comparing about a handful of wm indie rock bands.
twice it talks about the successes of pop music in saying important things about issues. it seems like a setup to maybe going into detail on some non-traditionally covered acts. nope.
at one point he starts to talk about women musicians. out of three, two of them are noted for their connections to the wm indie rock bands he was decrying at the start.
so i am left w a piece that complains about the very thing that it is contributing to.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 05:07 (eight years ago) link
twice it talks about the successes of pop music in saying important things about issues
by this, i mean he literally says "pop music has important things to say" and provides zero examples. yet we hear all about Animal Collective not being as good as Built to Spill
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 05:09 (eight years ago) link
a) if you post in a thread called "OK, is this the worst piece of music writing ever?" you are also inviting pushback, especially considering the title is a direct question and allb) I don't know if "lost five potential jobs writing that sentence" is supposed to be sarcasm or not but I'm already on every possible shit list so ¯\_(ツ)_/¯c) my point isn't and never was "don't pick on the young writers!" but that basically no one is able or willing to acknowledge that said picking-on (and praise) of writers selective, how it's selective or why. the only reason I have not ended up in this thread dozens of times is that in some point in my twitch plays writer of a career I said or did the right thing, probably inadvertently.
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 05:14 (eight years ago) link
b) I don't know if "lost five potential jobs writing that sentence" is supposed to be sarcasm or not but I'm already on every possible shit list so ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
it's totally not sarcasm, just a lot of accumulate frustration
the only reason I have not ended up in this thread dozens of times is that in some point in my twitch plays writer of a career I said or did the right thing, probably inadvertently.
lol i feel this way all the time, or at least am still patiently waiting for this thread to be bumped with something i wrote
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 05:59 (eight years ago) link
anyway did we ever figure out what the worst piece of music writing is
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 06:30 (eight years ago) link
i'm working on it now
― denies the existence of dark matter (difficult listening hour), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 06:32 (eight years ago) link
rolling really good music reviews (not necessarily positive)
― niels, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 11:31 (eight years ago) link
there is still time to reach this goal on that thread:
five responses by 2017
― on entre O.K. on sort K.O. (man alive)
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 13:10 (eight years ago) link
― bamcquern, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 03:58 (11 hours ago) Permalink
If you were curious yes you're one of the people whose opinions I've spent a decade plus ignoring
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 15:41 (eight years ago) link
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/2/27/Morton_Umbrella_Girl.png
― ulysses, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 15:43 (eight years ago) link
fwiw when I was 23 I was constantly worried about colleagues' opinions, and given where I am now arguably I should have been more worried
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 17:29 (eight years ago) link
23 is young. it's like 12 in human years now. people get better at stuff later now.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 17:39 (eight years ago) link
I never really cared what other writers thought. Half the time, I didn't even read the other stuff in the magazines that published me. I always cared a lot about what my editors thought, though. As long as I could keep them thinking "this guy's copy arrives clean and on time" I had work. I didn't start getting paid to write until I was 25, though, and I was doing it at night and on weekends after working in an auto parts warehouse all day.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 17:42 (eight years ago) link
i didn't start writing about music until i was 30. the first music writing i ever EVER wrote in my entire life was a long lead review in the village voice. no pressure. it sucked. but i got better at it. i tried really hard. by the time i was 32 i didn't feel so embarrassed to be in the same section as greg tate and ta-nehisi coates.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 17:44 (eight years ago) link
the thing is, in writer years 23 is not young at all
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 17:46 (eight years ago) link
Sure it is. Plenty of first-time authors are in their 30s and 40s. And most people under 30 should be encouraged to shut the fuck up anyway.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 17:51 (eight years ago) link
that voice section spurred me on too. to get better. i remember reading something by keith harris and going fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuck....it was so good and clear and FUNNY. it made me try harder. don't know if internet writers have this same sort of inspiration. the blog-centric view is kind of a lonely one. the interweb vacuum.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 18:02 (eight years ago) link
no offense but things are very different now than when either of you were writing regularly
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 18:15 (eight years ago) link
What's "regularly" in your mind? I only stopped actively pitching new outlets last year. I may not be competing to crank out listicles for Gawker blogs, but I publish every single month. Are you gonna throw the p-word at me now?
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 18:21 (eight years ago) link
I have no idea what the "p-word" is and "writing regularly" was a bad choice of phrase (I still have no idea who you are), but as it stands, in the current music writing ecosystem if you (general plural "you") are not on track to be regularly poached by age 24 the fact that you are not dead is a systemic oversight.
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 18:25 (eight years ago) link
I still have no idea who you are
Me, me, me
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 18:33 (eight years ago) link
i'd expand katherine's point to the general writing ecosystem and add to "poached" "getting carried by established editors from place to place"
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 18:34 (eight years ago) link
i mean i'm certain it sounds dismal to most but it's true to my experiences over the past five years
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 18:36 (eight years ago) link
my stuff has been almost excusively print-based. so, yeah, i was out of whatever picture i was in a long time ago. i don't even want to know what the fast-paced world of internet music writing is like. the majority of it sucks so bad. or its just boring and barely there. or just a buyer's guide.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 18:36 (eight years ago) link
katherine and Brad, here's a reassuring thought from an old head:
Young, poachable social media-enabled media stars are very much a MUST HAVE when, like companies wanna throw money at things — I remember when me and @maura had our little turn in the sun around 2009; but the real players in the game are the long distance runners who quietly turn in pieces clean and on time and will always get work when an editor asks another editor "hey, who is good," which is the stuff the industry is actually run on
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DI_rkZIuHzw
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 18:37 (eight years ago) link
"everything i say should be a hip-hop poachable"
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 18:40 (eight years ago) link
speaking from both sides of the proverbial table, whiney is right
― maura, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 18:44 (eight years ago) link
also, social media heat very rarely runs exactly equivalent to wider cultural impact. so what if all these didion wannabes who are younger than you are dazzling editors with their ability to implicitly flatter their own rapidly advancing ages. ask any former 20something-ingenue-of-the-moment how it all worked out in their 30s and beyond.
― maura, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 18:46 (eight years ago) link
(i find the didion wannabe army sorta boring tbh. big deal, you grew up well-off and had big dreams that have to be retrofitted into a beyoncé-shaped box.)
― maura, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 18:47 (eight years ago) link
being "the stuff the industry is run on" is cool and all unless you have ambitions or want to ever make a living wage or have money for retirement
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 18:55 (eight years ago) link
being "the stuff the industry is run on" a writer is cool and all unless you have ambitions or want to ever make a living wage or have money for retirement
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 18:57 (eight years ago) link
it works for some people. at any rate this thread has been derailed, mostly by me, so apologies, not that what it was derailed from was much better
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 18:58 (eight years ago) link
I'm saying, k, this is a surer and clearer path to alla that
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 18:58 (eight years ago) link
B)
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 18:59 (eight years ago) link
"not that what it was derailed from was much better"
everyone's a critic...
― scott seward, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 19:45 (eight years ago) link
Especially the critics
― Evan, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 20:02 (eight years ago) link
Now I feel bad for piling onto a young writer who's streets ahead of most of the pieces that end up in this thread but he got plenty of praise on Twitter & FB so as long as he doesn't visit ILX he'll be just fine. Tbh all of the fairly mild criticisms made here should have made by his editor before the piece appeared.
― impossible raver (Re-Make/Re-Model), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 20:23 (eight years ago) link
a good editor is hard to find
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 20:29 (eight years ago) link
meanwhile this is very much in my wheelhouse in terms of the music being covered and i think this is the most irritating example of "noisey voice" i've encountered
In hindsight it's no coincidence that Panic Stations contains a song called "Over It Now." At this point they were also over you, the person who thought they were too cool to listen to anything that wasn't approved by Pitchfork.
http://noisey.vice.com/blog/motion-city-soundtrack-in-memoriam
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 20:39 (eight years ago) link
xp I know, and it's a shame for a lot of good young writers who just need a bit of help to get better. Really basic stuff like: This needs examples. This generalisation is weak. This transition doesn't make sense. Opinion pieces particularly need that attention because they're much harder than interviews or album reviews.
― impossible raver (Re-Make/Re-Model), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 20:43 (eight years ago) link
gotta say it is weird being in the position of being the one in this thread to tell everyone to be less optimistic. also I'm aware a lot of my posts are pretty much the worldview equivalent of straining to avoid any personal responsibility. (also "big deal, you grew up well-off and had big dreams that have to be retrofitted into a beyoncé-shaped box" could very, very well be applied to those and/or me, see "immunity")
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 16 March 2016 20:45 (eight years ago) link
katherine but you don't condescend to the realities of the present day while trying to make yourself seem 'smart,' which is a lot of my objection to the nu-didion brigade
― maura, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 20:54 (eight years ago) link
http://www.mtv.com/news/2794813/vanderpump-rules-tegan-sara
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 21:30 (eight years ago) link
maura otm
― ulysses, Wednesday, 16 March 2016 23:00 (eight years ago) link
anyway this essay is quite well written and not about music but belongs in the conversation as it speaks grimly to a number of your concerns Kat:http://thebaffler.com/salvos/rest-advertising
the glazed ham of $4 a word is spoiled more than a bit by these ghosts of christmas future:
I began to wonder if, like me, this veteran editor was just trying to earn his fee. How much was he making, I wondered? How much does an editor who presided over an industry’s golden age receive to consult for the same industry during its hospice years? Did he hate himself too, at least a little bit, for using his decades of expertise to gin up propaganda for corporations that, were he to approach them as a journalist, would shoo him away with a curt “no comment”?My questions became nagging anxieties and then, over the next few nights, a full-blown existential crisis. I was a month away from the release of my first book, a critical treatment of the big tech companies and the world they’ve made for us, and here I was sweating over an assignment glorifying some of those same companies. And I couldn’t even figure out how to do it properly! I had the impression, common to many anxiety sufferers, that my problems were self-made but also eminently real. This sentiment merged with a number of other ugly feelings—my disgust toward the media establishment, my distaste for advertising, my profound frustration with the older editor, my fear that I would be grinding out bullshit work like this for the rest of my days—until I thought that I just couldn’t do it. I began to wonder how I would explain to my spouse that, because I couldn’t finish this assignment, we would have to change our names and move to a foreign country. It all made a kind of sense.
My questions became nagging anxieties and then, over the next few nights, a full-blown existential crisis. I was a month away from the release of my first book, a critical treatment of the big tech companies and the world they’ve made for us, and here I was sweating over an assignment glorifying some of those same companies. And I couldn’t even figure out how to do it properly! I had the impression, common to many anxiety sufferers, that my problems were self-made but also eminently real. This sentiment merged with a number of other ugly feelings—my disgust toward the media establishment, my distaste for advertising, my profound frustration with the older editor, my fear that I would be grinding out bullshit work like this for the rest of my days—until I thought that I just couldn’t do it. I began to wonder how I would explain to my spouse that, because I couldn’t finish this assignment, we would have to change our names and move to a foreign country. It all made a kind of sense.
Because it’s a venture-capital-funded company, valuing growth above profit, Casper can afford to spend lavishly on product sample giveaways for potentially influential fans, whether they’re magazine journalists or Kylie Jenner, who once Instagrammed a photo of her Casper mattress. My Maxim source mentioned that colleagues at BuzzFeed also received free mattresses last year—and in February, BuzzFeed published a sponsored post authored by Casper, followed in March and June by glowing reports about the company, one written by a freelancer, the other by a BuzzFeed staffer. As the staffer’s article noted, BuzzFeed and Casper “share some investors.”In the case of Maxim, Casper naturally hoped for something in return for its largesse. After the mattresses went mostly unreturned (one of the company’s selling points is that you can send back a mattress you don’t like), a PR rep began probing Maxim, asking where the coverage was. The site’s editorial director asked a gathering of staffers if any of them had accepted the free mattresses. About ten hands went up, representing nearly $10,000 in gifts. That was too much, the editorial director decided. They would have to write an article. Eventually, the site published a Q&A with one of Casper’s founders.On the face of it, this is a familiar tale: wherever free product samples appear, positive coverage is not far behind. But there’s an added twist. In addition to its giveaway initiative, Casper had a little something going on the side. After the mattress haul, three Maxim staffers were approached by the same PR firm to find out if they wanted to interview for positions at Van Winkle’s, a new website dedicated to “smarter sleep and wakefulness.” In May, Matt Berical, a Maxim editor, decided to jump ship for the new venture.[*] It is not immediately clear who sponsors VanWinkle.com, but if you poke around, you’ll land on a familiar name: “Van Winkle’s is published,” says the site’s About page, “by Casper Sleep, Inc.”
In the case of Maxim, Casper naturally hoped for something in return for its largesse. After the mattresses went mostly unreturned (one of the company’s selling points is that you can send back a mattress you don’t like), a PR rep began probing Maxim, asking where the coverage was. The site’s editorial director asked a gathering of staffers if any of them had accepted the free mattresses. About ten hands went up, representing nearly $10,000 in gifts. That was too much, the editorial director decided. They would have to write an article. Eventually, the site published a Q&A with one of Casper’s founders.
On the face of it, this is a familiar tale: wherever free product samples appear, positive coverage is not far behind. But there’s an added twist. In addition to its giveaway initiative, Casper had a little something going on the side. After the mattress haul, three Maxim staffers were approached by the same PR firm to find out if they wanted to interview for positions at Van Winkle’s, a new website dedicated to “smarter sleep and wakefulness.” In May, Matt Berical, a Maxim editor, decided to jump ship for the new venture.[*] It is not immediately clear who sponsors VanWinkle.com, but if you poke around, you’ll land on a familiar name: “Van Winkle’s is published,” says the site’s About page, “by Casper Sleep, Inc.”
― ulysses, Thursday, 17 March 2016 14:27 (eight years ago) link
Getting steady requests from good editors and earning money for nice food + air fare are all I hope for in the market.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 17 March 2016 14:34 (eight years ago) link
read it, but getting those $4-a-word gigs, however dismal, is also a door closed to me
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Thursday, 17 March 2016 16:14 (eight years ago) link
feel like a broken record at this point but I'm pretty sure the latest noisey kanye piece is the worst music writing ever
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Thursday, 17 March 2016 16:19 (eight years ago) link
Even by the standards of "a Noisey thinkpiece about Kanye West," that was fucking horrible.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Thursday, 17 March 2016 16:34 (eight years ago) link
― impossible raver (Re-Make/Re-Model), Wednesday, March 16, 2016 8:43 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
not that i've ever had much in the way of any sort of advice, but i wish as a young writer i'd received ~career advice - like, how to navigate and progress through this industry if you want it to be long-term. the writing stuff you figure out on your own, most good writers i know agonise over the minutiae like that anyway (if anything being more relaxed about your writing might be better advice for certain personality types). but the career stuff, how to figure out where the next step up the ladder should be when you're not in a defined workplace, how to get different types of work and maybe even a slightly better income, all of that i'm still at a loss about. but then "how to think in long-term career terms" is apparently not such a problem for others
― cher guevara (lex pretend), Thursday, 17 March 2016 16:35 (eight years ago) link
Holy shit, the Casper press page just goes on forever:
https://casper.com/press/
Is there a writer out there not sleeping on one of these things?
― Position Position, Thursday, 17 March 2016 16:36 (eight years ago) link
from that link, disappointing 404s of our time: http://stylecaster.com/how-i-got-rid-of-my-boyfriends-ghosts-of-girlfriends-past/
― drive me to a girly rave (DJ Mencap), Thursday, 17 March 2016 16:39 (eight years ago) link
i am ikea and proud
― maura, Thursday, 17 March 2016 19:51 (eight years ago) link
i am ikea and not proud
― ulysses, Thursday, 17 March 2016 20:12 (eight years ago) link
who says freelancers sleep?
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 17 March 2016 20:15 (eight years ago) link
xp Career advice is hard — I've hardly received any — because so little is universally applicable. I could write it in a postcard:
1. Write well and relatively fast.2. Be well organised3. File clean copy on time and never let an editor down.4. Be pleasant to deal with even when you disagree with your editor.5. Say yes more often than no.6. Write for a range of titles (if you can) in case one goes out of business.7. Write about a range of subjects in a range of formats (if you can). Everyone gets pigeonholed but make your pigeonhole as broad as possible.
The rest is luck.
― impossible raver (Re-Make/Re-Model), Thursday, 17 March 2016 20:27 (eight years ago) link
And don't tell an editor after they've made you rewrite something a bunch to take your name off of the review and change it to the name Rick Rockrite. They hate that.
― scott seward, Thursday, 17 March 2016 20:36 (eight years ago) link
Write well and relatively fast
N.B.: Writing fast and relatively well is not an acceptable substitute.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Thursday, 17 March 2016 20:45 (eight years ago) link
shorter postcard:
1. don't fuck up2. don't be a fuckup3. if you're worried about whether you are, in a field that demands 24/7 sociability and a bottomless chalice of self-confidence in the face of all evidence, you are probably a fuckup
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Thursday, 17 March 2016 21:02 (eight years ago) link
How many times can #1 happen before I move into phase 2?
― Evan, Thursday, 17 March 2016 21:03 (eight years ago) link
in all seriousness though I actually have had quite a few high school or college students email me for advice (why they emailed *me*, instead of any number of other writers, suggests they probably genuinely do need the advice) and I've never known what to say, because I don't have any pat palatable advice that I can endorse with a clear conscience
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Thursday, 17 March 2016 21:05 (eight years ago) link
Then tell them what it's like and how things generally work rather than what they should do.
― Evan, Thursday, 17 March 2016 21:31 (eight years ago) link
Tell them to post on ILX and one day their job can be tasting pineapples and fig newtons on Gawker
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Thursday, 17 March 2016 21:38 (eight years ago) link
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Thursday, March 17, 2016 5:05 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Man hands on misery to man.It deepens like a coastal shelf.Get out as early as you can,And don't write any crit yourself.
― ive seen enough Good Wife episodes (s.clover), Thursday, 17 March 2016 21:45 (eight years ago) link
this old anvil laughs at many broken hammersthere are men who can't be boughtthe fireborn are at home in fire.the stars make no noise,you can't hinder the wind from blowing.time is a great teacher.who can live without hope?
― Mordy, Thursday, 17 March 2016 21:53 (eight years ago) link
Carl Sandberg in a music thread has to be a tribute to something or other.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 17 March 2016 21:56 (eight years ago) link
Didn't think this week could gobble it;'s own dick any more, but Stereogum is straight up running WON'T SOMEONE THINK OF THE WHITE MEN stormfront propaganda
http://www.stereogum.com/1866209/sorority-noise-and-pinegrove-save-indie-rock-at-sxsw/franchises/sounding-board/
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Friday, 18 March 2016 19:32 (eight years ago) link
Emo has become the best refuge for those turned off by indie’s longstanding flight from guitar-driven rock music toward synthesized pop.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 18 March 2016 19:35 (eight years ago) link
On a purely musical level, the way they fused DIY and arena rock elements was glorious; they wielded power chords and vocal harmonies and cleverly self-deprecating lyrics with such profound force that for the first time in 15 years it didn’t matter that Weezer fell off.
― ulysses, Friday, 18 March 2016 19:36 (eight years ago) link
indie rock saved at brooklyn vegan afterparty presented by gretsch
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Friday, 18 March 2016 19:39 (eight years ago) link
i love a lot of the music he describes, what an awful way to frame it
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Friday, 18 March 2016 19:42 (eight years ago) link
Emo, country, mid-’90s VH1 pop-rock: I realize none of these are particularly reputable styles among an indie rock audience
lol this sentence appears right after 9 paragraphs talking about "emo’s creative renaissance" and right before comparing the band to Wilco
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 18 March 2016 19:43 (eight years ago) link
also I've played Cheer Up Charlies indoor stage it does not hold "more than a couple hundred people" it's about the size of a Dunkin' Donuts.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 18 March 2016 19:46 (eight years ago) link
possibly i have "emo is back!!!! in pog form" thinkpiece fatigue
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Friday, 18 March 2016 19:51 (eight years ago) link
Like Sorority Noise’s Boucher, Evan Stephens Hall is one of the great lyricists of our time
obviously
― Wimmels, Friday, 18 March 2016 19:52 (eight years ago) link
too bad this wasn't the time or place to ask an all-male band about why they named themselves Sorority Noise. it's not like a context for that discussion was set up in the first paragraph
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 18 March 2016 19:53 (eight years ago) link
i've never listened to them for that reason lol
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Friday, 18 March 2016 19:55 (eight years ago) link
This was a party, a religious experience, and a workout routine all at once.
ok i mean i hate to pile on but can we end live reviews now
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Friday, 18 March 2016 20:02 (eight years ago) link
I honestly find Sorority Noise a less offensive name than A Great Big Pile Of Leaves. Whoever came up with that should be force-fed leaves until they fucking die.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Friday, 18 March 2016 20:03 (eight years ago) link
hahahahaha
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Friday, 18 March 2016 20:06 (eight years ago) link
i'm enjoying this new snark-free whiney persona
― k3vin k., Friday, 18 March 2016 20:11 (eight years ago) link
has he given up Subway?
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 18 March 2016 20:17 (eight years ago) link
― k3vin k., Friday, March 18, 2016 4:11 PM (46 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Swore off it on Twitter, never said anything about ILX
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Friday, 18 March 2016 20:58 (eight years ago) link
lol fair
― k3vin k., Friday, 18 March 2016 21:00 (eight years ago) link
zing fresh my friends
― ulysses, Friday, 18 March 2016 21:48 (eight years ago) link
http://consequenceofsound.net/2016/03/justin-bieber-continues-his-assault-on-kurt-cobains-legacy-by-performing-inside-a-heart-shaped-box/
― Frozen CD, Sunday, 20 March 2016 01:12 (eight years ago) link
The name "Sorority Noise" is good cause to once again trot out this Ian Svenonius quote:
The powerful associative effect of names is often misunderstood. While fondly thought of, mammalian names are a mistake--unless one chooses a mythical beast. A wild animal is a graceful creature that needs no clothes or grooming to look spectacular, and your onlookers--their expectations heightened--will inevitably be disappointed by the oafish onstage display of whatever crew of humanoids you've managed to muster. "Oh dear," they will say, "they are nothing like wolves/foxes/etc." If one hangs sucha name on one's group, one is raising the bar too high.
Male groups with "Girls" in their name have a similar problem. In literature and film, the "girl" represents the reader's/viewer's pure self-image. The audience is supposed to identify with the "girl," who is innocent, brave, artless, attractive, and clever (e.g., Chihiro of Spirited Away, Pippi Longstocking, and Dorothy Gale from The Wizard of Oz). Film noir is predicated on the opposite idea--that audiences like to identify with cynical, morally bankrupt, been-there done-thats. These roles are typically played by middle-aged men with five o'clock shadows (Humphry Bogart, Glenn Ford, Robert Mitchum). Most groups now resemble the stars of the noir genre, physically if not sartorially. Bands with "Girl" in their name are almost invariably these kinds of hairy and less attractive men. As a rule, then, males should avoid group names with "Girl."
― human life won't become a cat (man alive), Sunday, 20 March 2016 01:41 (eight years ago) link
> As a rule, then, males should avoid group names with "Girl."
attn https://soundcloud.com/girlband
― Frozen CD, Sunday, 20 March 2016 17:46 (eight years ago) link
Girl Band are so completely fucking awesome I barely even consider their name, but fair point Ian.
― someone who just gets annoyed at bad tweets (stevie), Monday, 21 March 2016 00:31 (eight years ago) link
assumed 'Girl Band' as a name was a commentary of sorts on the vapidity of the term 'girl band' as used in rock writing or w/e, which is a little different to what Svenonius is talking about there I guess
― drive me to a girly rave (DJ Mencap), Monday, 21 March 2016 08:04 (eight years ago) link
Really giving four white guys who cover techno songs a lot of credit there
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 21 March 2016 13:09 (eight years ago) link
don't feel strongly about their music either way but they seem bright enough guys
if you're implying that covering a Blawan track is racially problematic I'd suggest that's a bit of a reach
― drive me to a girly rave (DJ Mencap), Monday, 21 March 2016 13:21 (eight years ago) link
I was just saying they're dorks
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 21 March 2016 13:22 (eight years ago) link
Sun City Girls >>>> most bands
― Wimmels, Monday, 21 March 2016 13:23 (eight years ago) link
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, March 21, 2016 1:22 PM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
pvmic
― someone who just gets annoyed at bad tweets (stevie), Monday, 21 March 2016 14:53 (eight years ago) link
xp did you know there is an all-girl Sun City Girls cover band
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xcJuLm9CJiQ
― drive me to a girly rave (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 22 March 2016 19:54 (eight years ago) link
that svenonius argument about male bands not calling themselves "girls" is such bullshit! it boils down to "girls are pretty and boys are hairy and can never live up to the sexy implications of femininity"
obviously male bands should still not call themselves "girls" for plenty of other reasons
― cher guevara (lex pretend), Wednesday, 23 March 2016 12:19 (eight years ago) link
To be fair, a band name that includes the word girls doesn't necessarily mean they're calling "themselves" girls if that makes any sense. Splitting hairs a bit but still.
― Evan, Wednesday, 23 March 2016 14:15 (eight years ago) link
no need to "be fair" with misappropriated yoni power imo
― La Lechuza (La Lechera), Wednesday, 23 March 2016 14:18 (eight years ago) link
Sorry, just meant "in some cases, perhaps" and worded badly.
― Evan, Wednesday, 23 March 2016 14:22 (eight years ago) link
there are enough words and/or morphemes to choose from that a choice of "girls" (or "women") is a deliberate and stupid one imoand yes, svenonius' reasoning is lame
― La Lechuza (La Lechera), Wednesday, 23 March 2016 14:26 (eight years ago) link
imo
what about if the band is called "Urgh, Girls"??
― Szechuan TV (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 23 March 2016 14:29 (eight years ago) link
lame
― La Lechuza (La Lechera), Wednesday, 23 March 2016 14:29 (eight years ago) link
― Szechuan TV (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 23 March 2016 14:36 (eight years ago) link
can't read that svevnonius paragraph in anything but his voice, which is very sardonic
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Wednesday, 23 March 2016 15:01 (eight years ago) link
how about "Girl Germs"?
― hardcore dilettante, Wednesday, 23 March 2016 23:14 (eight years ago) link
lol @ this reaction to Svenonius btw
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 23 March 2016 23:17 (eight years ago) link
like have you never encountered his schtick before
Does this apply to all female-identified band names?
The Sisters of MercyLeather NunThe Lazy CowgirlsLittle WomenBaronessQueen
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Thursday, 24 March 2016 01:03 (eight years ago) link
not music writing but this guy is dumber than the band he is supposedly taking down:
The A.V. Club: What do you hate about “Ants Marching”?Julian McCullough: The first thing I hate about “Ants Marching” is that it starts with the horn section, and I hate horn sections in rock music. They drive me fucking crazy. So I already don’t like you when your riff is a horn.http://www.avclub.com/article/comedian-julian-mccullough-hates-dmbs-condescendin-233484
Julian McCullough: The first thing I hate about “Ants Marching” is that it starts with the horn section, and I hate horn sections in rock music. They drive me fucking crazy. So I already don’t like you when your riff is a horn.
http://www.avclub.com/article/comedian-julian-mccullough-hates-dmbs-condescendin-233484
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Sunday, 27 March 2016 15:07 (eight years ago) link
I would say that if you are forming a band now, and you are all men, a) where are your female musician friends, and b) you should definitely consider whether your band name might help perpetuate a historical imbalance where women don't even own the right to naming themselves as women (there are fairly few all-female bands who have taken 'boys' or 'men' names, because the men have already taken them too, I can think of a couple but they are outliers). Obviously a fair amount of the time band names are not "we are this" but "we are referring to this", but you should still be thinking about what you are implying.
― emil.y, Sunday, 27 March 2016 15:42 (eight years ago) link
Obviously a fair amount of the time band names are not "we are this" but "we are referring to this", but you should still be thinking about what you are implying.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Young_Black_Teenagers
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Sunday, 27 March 2016 15:50 (eight years ago) link
oh god i was on an episode of the mark hoppus show with that comedian dude. so unfunny, fuck 'comedy' right now imo
― maura, Sunday, 27 March 2016 19:33 (eight years ago) link
I am glad for this conversation, I'd been feeling kind of churlish for being mildly bothered that a local band here (one of the better ones) is called Girl Power and is three dudes
― a passing spacecadet, Sunday, 27 March 2016 20:44 (eight years ago) link
http://www.popmatters.com/feature/all-talk-and-no-stick/
2. Cindy Blackmon
It is important to note that women seem to be unfairly underrepresented in the world of rock drumming. I don’t know why this is, but the reason certainly isn’t physiological. It’s established that women tend to have slightly more body fat and slightly less muscle mass, but so what? The rock drummer who probably had the fastest hands ever (Ginger Baker) had arms like twigs at the height of his powers, and the best drummer of all time (Buddy Rich) got to be a chubby bastard toward the end with no discernable effect on his playing.
So it’s maybe cool if Cindy Blackmon, Lenny Kravitz’s enthusiastic, sometimes-afroed drummer, gives girls the courage to pick up the sticks and give it a shot, but that’s about the only good thing I can think to say. The drummer for Lenny Kravitz should be a lot better.
Blackmon is a textbook case of a middling player holding a better artist back. True, she may have been hired for her looks and not her playing; the fault there lies with Lenny for hasty overpromotion. Still, one can’t shake the fact that Lenny himself is a better drummer than Cindy. You can hear it on songs like “Let Love Rule,” on which he plays with remarkable heart.
Cindy, on the other hand, is singularly uncreative and mechanical in her rock beats. In a review of her work with Kravitz, Jon Pareles of The New York Times wrote, “Cindy Blackmon on drums could switch from the splashy, sludgy style of the Jimi Hendrix Experience’s Mitch Mitchell to the casual economy of Ringo Starr.” Just like Ringo, you say? Oh goody.
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 29 March 2016 17:05 (eight years ago) link
Also her name is spelled wrong throughout
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 29 March 2016 17:06 (eight years ago) link
The drummer for Lenny Kravitz should be a lot better.lol is there some kind of Lenny Kravitz rule for how good his drummer should be?
― tylerw, Tuesday, 29 March 2016 17:10 (eight years ago) link
5. Carter Beauford The Dave Matthews Band’s drummer is on both of my lists.
christ
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Tuesday, 29 March 2016 17:13 (eight years ago) link
The physically diminutive, poorly-spoken, heroin-addicted drummer for the Clash
― nomar, Tuesday, 29 March 2016 17:15 (eight years ago) link
― Szechuan TV (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, March 23, 2016 9:29 AM (6 days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
"Urgh! A Music Girl"
― rockpalast '82 (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 29 March 2016 17:18 (eight years ago) link
Ha I thought was a game of "what if we described male musicians in the same "<physical attribute> <vague putdown> <tabloidy autobiographical detail>" way as this dude used for Cindy Blackman* and horrible local paper reviewers everywhere use for all female musicians, but no, this actually appears in the article
amazing
* not, alas, related to Larry Blackmon as the author's misspelling had got me hoping
― a passing spacecadet, Tuesday, 29 March 2016 17:42 (eight years ago) link
Hahahahahahaha fuckin' Popmatters!!!
― Mr. Snrub, Tuesday, 29 March 2016 19:27 (eight years ago) link
But really, the most damning indictment of his playing is the exceptional solo work David Byrne has produced since leaving the rhythmically handicapped Talking Heads.
― rockpalast '82 (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 29 March 2016 19:30 (eight years ago) link
Talking Heads are but a minor footnote to/warmup for the monumentally epoch-shattering work of Byrne's solo career.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Tuesday, 29 March 2016 20:17 (eight years ago) link
And today I learned that a single percussionist is known as a "slew."
the rhythm section that created "Once in a Lifetime" called rhythmically handicapped. Still, I suppose Tina Weymouth is, y'know, a woman.
― Gaz upon my works ye mighty, and despair (Neil S), Tuesday, 29 March 2016 20:27 (eight years ago) link
i like neil peart as much as the next guy, but that doesn't mean he should be in every band.
― tylerw, Tuesday, 29 March 2016 20:32 (eight years ago) link
Yeah, he shits on Ringo for "struggling to fill the space." Because the only good drummers are those who FILL EVERY SPACE WITH DRUMS AT ALL TIMES.
Which pretty much explains this:
the best drummer of all time (Buddy Rich)
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Tuesday, 29 March 2016 20:36 (eight years ago) link
― tylerw, Tuesday, 29 March 2016 20:40 (eight years ago) link
thats cindy "blackmon" thing is pissing me the fuck off fuck music writing fuck men fuck everything jesus fucking christ!>@!@!?#!@>#!>
― kurt schwitterz, Tuesday, 29 March 2016 20:42 (eight years ago) link
he brilliant South American grooves on Bryne’s solo efforts
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 29 March 2016 20:45 (eight years ago) link
Here's an example of some drumming by the writer of that piece:https://youtu.be/orJtr738Zpc
Sorry, but when your playing is so, let's say, uncreative, you're not in a position to say shit about fuck.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Tuesday, 29 March 2016 20:52 (eight years ago) link
a/b that shit with this
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xsfg9SRgwEw
― kurt schwitterz, Tuesday, 29 March 2016 22:35 (eight years ago) link
That guy's a shitty writer and his opinions about music, at least based on that one piece, are almost completely wrongheaded (not gonna get into the Ringo thing 'cause I fucking hate the Beatles, but the other bands he talks about, he's basically 180 degrees from reality). That said, I'm not a big fan of Blackman's myself. I saw her at a traditional jazz gig years ago, backing Pharoah Sanders, and she got completely lost when her solo came around, had to basically claw her way back into the tune - it was almost painful to watch/hear. And in recent years, I think she's tried way too hard to be Tony Williams, without coming anywhere close to his precision and timing.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 29 March 2016 23:41 (eight years ago) link
Cindy gets a lifetime pass for "Are You Gonna Go My Way"
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 30 March 2016 00:01 (eight years ago) link
Not being Tony Williams is a bar that like 99% of drummers won't clear
― rockpalast '82 (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 30 March 2016 01:14 (eight years ago) link
why is whiney making us read poopmatters from 2007???
― scott seward, Wednesday, 30 March 2016 01:21 (eight years ago) link
does a whiney still play drums? he was pretty rockin'!
― scott seward, Wednesday, 30 March 2016 01:22 (eight years ago) link
For miming in the video?
― glandular lansbury (sic), Wednesday, 30 March 2016 03:46 (eight years ago) link
Whoa, it was Lenny all along :O
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 30 March 2016 04:11 (eight years ago) link
she's Rick James niece bitches
― Mr. Magic's Rap Attack (m coleman), Wednesday, 30 March 2016 10:48 (eight years ago) link
That moment when you wake up in a tunnel of yourself and then all things lost are either adult or millennial. But not one or another. Silence in spurts of manic fervor. Sort by oldest. Thus, hours of pornography will find a new depression for your skull’s cavity. (Tiny Mix Tapes review of Prurient's Cocaine Daughter)
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Thursday, 31 March 2016 12:16 (eight years ago) link
tiny mix tapes is a reliable dealer
― Keks + Nuss (contenderizer), Thursday, 31 March 2016 12:22 (eight years ago) link
haha, that is kinda the best bad review though. i read the whole thing anyway. at the bottom of the page i read "Yes, they're Dockers." and i actually thought that was the last line of the review. it should have been.
― scott seward, Thursday, 31 March 2016 12:24 (eight years ago) link
half want to poll it
― Keks + Nuss (contenderizer), Thursday, 31 March 2016 12:42 (eight years ago) link
i will miss those sorts of reviews when they die out
― ogmor, Thursday, 31 March 2016 13:08 (eight years ago) link
NOW i know why whiney posted that old thing.
http://www.rollingstone.com/music/lists/100-greatest-drummers-of-all-time-20160331
― scott seward, Thursday, 31 March 2016 19:06 (eight years ago) link
Ugh, fucking Buddy Rich again.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Thursday, 31 March 2016 19:08 (eight years ago) link
I can attest that whiney is good for the job when it's time to lay down fifteen minutes of sick ass improv
― tremendous crime wave and killing wave (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Thursday, 31 March 2016 19:12 (eight years ago) link
on that rolling stone list my picks would be: helmet guy, dave lombardo, drumbo, bill ward. can live without the rest.
― scott seward, Thursday, 31 March 2016 19:13 (eight years ago) link
i really wish you guys could see ILX's own Tarfumes behind the kit. he does the sickest shit.
― scott seward, Thursday, 31 March 2016 19:14 (eight years ago) link
Oh Tarfumes is Taylor Hawkins? Cool
― rockpalast '82 (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 31 March 2016 19:19 (eight years ago) link
I was really hoping to see Vic Firth's name on that list
― i like to trump and i am crazy (DJP), Thursday, 31 March 2016 19:19 (eight years ago) link
there is great recent footage of tarfumes playing some sort of matmos salon type thing in baltimore. i watched it twice. don't want to embarrass him and post it though.
― scott seward, Thursday, 31 March 2016 19:20 (eight years ago) link
thank you, scott
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Thursday, 31 March 2016 19:29 (eight years ago) link
before ilx turns into pseuds corner, let's take a look where we're headed
http://crackmagazine.net/article/music/kaitlyn-aurelia-smith-ears/
― And the cry rang out all o'er the town / Good Heavens! Tay is down (imago), Monday, 4 April 2016 20:12 (eight years ago) link
not sure what distinguishes that from the 100 or so sophomoric reviews just like it that are uploaded each day
― reader, if you love him so much why don't you marry him? (DJ Mencap), Monday, 4 April 2016 20:22 (eight years ago) link
it's about a record that ilx is in danger of overrating beyond anything i've seen :D
*runs*
― And the cry rang out all o'er the town / Good Heavens! Tay is down (imago), Monday, 4 April 2016 20:26 (eight years ago) link
^ FP
― Check Yr Scrobbles (Moodles), Monday, 4 April 2016 20:56 (eight years ago) link
in danger of overrating beyond anything i've seen :D
there only like 30 posts on that thread you dork
― marcos, Monday, 4 April 2016 21:10 (eight years ago) link
aside from a few unneeded adverbs there is absolutely nothing wrong with that review
(I thought the album was fine, reminded me in places of laura j martin and/or the creatures soundtrack)
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Monday, 4 April 2016 22:40 (eight years ago) link
https://thump.vice.com/en_uk/article/hunting-for-the-cast-of-the-sexiest-music-video-of-all-time
I have nobody to blame but myself for clicking on a Thump link but this is woeful.
― boxedjoy, Tuesday, 5 April 2016 09:50 (eight years ago) link
overrating things is good. if you accept the existentialist premise that we make the meaning we find in the world, overrating things is what makes life bearable.
― Treeship, Tuesday, 5 April 2016 15:55 (eight years ago) link
that last message was an xp to LJ
also, lol boxedjoy. that is the worst premise for an article.
― Treeship, Tuesday, 5 April 2016 15:59 (eight years ago) link
lol god forbid people actually love some music on ILM
― Just noise and screaming and no musical value at all. (Colonel Poo), Tuesday, 5 April 2016 16:03 (eight years ago) link
lj is probably just annoyed it isn't more "challenging"
― Mordy, Tuesday, 5 April 2016 16:04 (eight years ago) link
contrarianism can also give life meaning, to be fair
― Treeship, Tuesday, 5 April 2016 16:17 (eight years ago) link
The album is good, but people are being really embarrassing on that thread
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 5 April 2016 16:19 (eight years ago) link
what's embarrassing about the posts on that thread? i just read it, everyone just goes "yeah wow this album is good"
― de l'asshole (flopson), Tuesday, 5 April 2016 16:22 (eight years ago) link
whiney himself said the album was good on that thread
― k3vin k., Tuesday, 5 April 2016 16:23 (eight years ago) link
is it Destroyer-level fawning? cuz that is scary stuff. regular fandom and WOW! shouldn't be a problem. i'm gonna go check it out! BrB.............
― scott seward, Tuesday, 5 April 2016 16:24 (eight years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WcSXbvzW91U
― Treeship, Tuesday, 5 April 2016 16:26 (eight years ago) link
― de l'asshole (flopson), Tuesday, April 5, 2016 12:22 PM (7 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Most embarrassing overpraise of the just released 'Ears' album on Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith thread
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 5 April 2016 16:30 (eight years ago) link
Lol, oh god
― de l'asshole (flopson), Tuesday, 5 April 2016 16:33 (eight years ago) link
well at least whiney didn't poll the king thread
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Tuesday, 5 April 2016 16:46 (eight years ago) link
oh i see matt also made that joke
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Tuesday, 5 April 2016 16:48 (eight years ago) link
the difference is that the KING album is an actual masterpiece ;)
― And the cry rang out all o'er the town / Good Heavens! Tay is down (imago), Tuesday, 5 April 2016 16:49 (eight years ago) link
wait wtf is thump? how many verticals can vice possibly need
― qualx, Thursday, 7 April 2016 07:36 (eight years ago) link
I would not necessarily call this "worst ever" but I do think it just ignores/glosses over the fact that female pop-punk artists exist (it mentions Paramore but seems to have... somehow... missed the fact that Hayley is the frontwoman?) as well as female pop-punk *fans* (5SOS's fanbase is mostly women), who probably don't have much truck with the "dominant dude-bro ideology"
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Monday, 11 April 2016 18:06 (eight years ago) link
shit sorry forgot the link
(pause, question priorities where one apologies for forgetting a link but not for criticizing an article)
http://www.last.fm/features/post/2259045:feature:9e81d3e2-6fac-4c64-a867-c244c2115757
Not sure if this is the right place to bemoan something like this but I'm gonna bemoan this here: http://coolmaterial.com/media/best-vinyl-records/?utm_source=Cool+Material&utm_campaign=605458e35e-RSS_EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_DAILY&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_f248e7d25b-605458e35e-297496053&mc_cid=605458e35e&mc_eid=6128f9e24d
Usually click bait like this isn't even worth the bandwidth but the writing and editing here is woefully bad and shallow and bad
My favorite gem, talking about Kid A: "an album that blipped, beeped, and floated effortlessly in the background when you played it."
(PS should there be a thread called something like "Shitty web links your dad sends you because he knows you're into records"?)
― MrExplorer, Saturday, 16 April 2016 02:37 (eight years ago) link
disappointed that they didn't throw a 'blooped' in there as well.
the inclusion of Joe Jackson's Body and Soul means I can't hate that article, though
― soref, Saturday, 16 April 2016 13:00 (eight years ago) link
Vinyl is back. And with the best year in terms of sales since 1988, it doesn’t seem like vinyl is going anywhere.
It's true. Astonishing numbers.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CgJuCq5XEAA3hoG.jpg
― punnerist spoon here (onimo), Saturday, 16 April 2016 19:28 (eight years ago) link
I didn't know vinyl sales were on the decline a good three-to-four years before CDs came out in 1984. What were people buying in the early 80s? Cassettes?
― Mr. Snrub, Sunday, 17 April 2016 16:29 (eight years ago) link
Yes. The Walkman changed everything.
― EZ Snappin, Sunday, 17 April 2016 16:38 (eight years ago) link
I was. And like lots of people I didn't start buying CDs until well after 1984 -- 1992, maybe?
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Sunday, 17 April 2016 16:39 (eight years ago) link
They didn't fit in the Walkman, was the thing.
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Sunday, 17 April 2016 16:40 (eight years ago) link
I switched in '92 as well. Went from walkman to discman.
― EZ Snappin, Sunday, 17 April 2016 16:42 (eight years ago) link
What is the source of that graphic above?
― Wimmels, Sunday, 17 April 2016 22:43 (eight years ago) link
Home taping is killing the music industry.
― campreverb, Monday, 18 April 2016 01:54 (eight years ago) link
We got a CD player in... 1985? 1986? I know I did the Columbia House thing in 1987 to jumpstart my collection and taped them to play in my Walkman (one perk of my dad working for 3M was piles and piles and piles of cheap blank cassettes basically any time I wanted them)
― i like to trump and i am crazy (DJP), Monday, 18 April 2016 15:38 (eight years ago) link
never would have guessed that 45 single sales outstripped LPs consistently like that
― Οὖτις, Monday, 18 April 2016 15:44 (eight years ago) link
i think that graph was first published on digitalmusicnews.com, which claims the figures are from the riaa
― dyl, Monday, 18 April 2016 16:44 (eight years ago) link
taped them to play in my Walkman
Me, too. That was the first time I started being interested in sound quality as a thing, was when I noticed how much better tapes recorded from CDs sounded than tapes recorded from vinyl.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Monday, 18 April 2016 16:49 (eight years ago) link
Maybe I'm being picky. because it's not the content that's bad here, but the writing is...ugh.
http://flavorwire.com/571669/grimes-reveals-that-numerous-male-producers-have-demanded-sex-from-her?utm_campaign=FlavorwireSocial&utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=socialflow
― husked, tonal wails (irrational), Monday, 18 April 2016 18:31 (eight years ago) link
That second paragraph is a killer.
"So it’s no surprise that Grimes, who, as a completely autonomous artist — Claire Boucher writes, records, produces, mixes, and masters everything that she attaches the “Grimes” label to — has routinely criticized both the music industry and the media at large for misrepresenting her as simply a muse, a singer that attaches her voice to other people’s (note: male’s) productions, would eventually have to speak on the subject."
or is it just me? Maybe I'm having a morning.
― husked, tonal wails (irrational), Monday, 18 April 2016 18:32 (eight years ago) link
"So apparently Dr. Luke isn’t the only male producer in the industry who might be awful."
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 18 April 2016 18:33 (eight years ago) link
― Οὖτις, Monday, April 18, 2016 11:44 AM (2 hours ago)
hard to tell if the light green + dark green are supposed to be = total vinyl sales, in which case LPs outsold 45s except for like a 10-year stretch in the 90s. not sure what the explanation of that would be
― k3vin k., Monday, 18 April 2016 18:36 (eight years ago) link
yeah, when compared to this chart, also produced by the riaa, it becomes clear that the amounts sold are stacked. so, LPs were outselling singles for most of the period in question here. makes sense, aor heyday.
― Keks + Nuss (contenderizer), Monday, 18 April 2016 18:59 (eight years ago) link
^ shows that vinyl sales are still a tiny portion of the total, with CDs and downloads making up the bulk. also, perhaps suggests that CD sales and downloads are both establishing a plateau?
― Keks + Nuss (contenderizer), Monday, 18 April 2016 19:04 (eight years ago) link
Grimes’ outspokenness is an important step to guaranteeing that accusations such as Kesha’s are treated with the respect they deserve, rather than as the complaints of someone who is simply unhappy in a recording contract.
jesus christ
― rockpalast '82 (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 18 April 2016 20:23 (eight years ago) link
So apparently Dr. Luke isn’t the only male producer in the industry who might be awful.
you don't say
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Monday, 18 April 2016 20:31 (eight years ago) link
"You know what I really want? I want to watch the Beyonce videos." (googles)
"Long Live Queen Bey, for she has graced us with an unparalleled release event combining music, video, and everything that we already love about Beyoncé. Building on everything that she promised when she debuted the video for "Formation" the weekend of the Super Bowl, Beyoncé's Lemonade HBO premiere event took an equally important television slot (the Game of Thrones premiere weekend), and made it entirely her own. Now that everyone has taken the time to fully absorb all of Beyoncé's new music that has just been unleashed onto the world (although if you need more time, that's understandable), the first step is to figure out how to watch all of that goodness again. So where can you stream the Lemonade music videos? Like a real glass of lemonade, Beyonce's Lemonade special was a sweet, refreshing treat and I would like more of it ASAP. With the HBO special also comes a new album of Beyoncé material ready to be listened to over and over again. And much like how Beyoncé's last release Beyoncé featured a video for every single song, it seems as though Lemonade is doing something similar. Beyonce's latest visual album has set the internet on absolute fire, spawning analysis of the images and lyrics that comprise Lemonade. Beyoncé fans hoping to revisit the dense project can find the project available for streaming on HBOGo, as well as on Tidal alongside the album itself. The film lends a power to the words that is lost when listening only to the album, so be sure to revisit Lemonade as it was intended to be consumed, as a visual album."
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Sunday, 24 April 2016 03:45 (eight years ago) link
Like a real glass of lemonade, Beyonce's Lemonade special was a sweet, refreshing treat and I would like more of it ASAP.
― JWoww Gilberto (man alive), Sunday, 24 April 2016 03:50 (eight years ago) link
popular drink iirc
― glandular lansbury (sic), Sunday, 24 April 2016 04:11 (eight years ago) link
the best part is how half the time it says Beyoncé and half the time it just says Beyonce
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Sunday, 24 April 2016 04:13 (eight years ago) link
(also, I promised myself I'd spend less time criticizing other people's writing, but this is so cynical and empty and blatant an attempt to waste readers' time and divert them away from good artistry that it's infuriating. at least What Time Is The Super Bowl told you what time the goddamn Super Bowl was!)
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Sunday, 24 April 2016 04:15 (eight years ago) link
The answer to that question is a little difficult for many fans to answer because, well, neither Jay Z or Beyoncé seem to know a Becky. Neither of them have mentioned one in a song before, nor have they ever been connected to a person named Becky. The only celebrity who has been connected with a Becky in any big way in the news would be Taylor Swift, i.e. in 2014 when she wore that no its Becky shirt in response to that famous internet meme in which someone purposefully confused a picture of her with that of their friend Becky. Of course, the chances of Taylor Swift being "Becky with the good hair" is pretty slim to none. She does have good hair, but she doesn't spend much time hanging out with Beyoncé or Jay Z.
― HYPERLINK TO RAP GENIUS (BradNelson), Sunday, 24 April 2016 15:44 (eight years ago) link
obligatory youtube herehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JcKG4EJ6rsQ
― ulysses, Sunday, 24 April 2016 17:35 (eight years ago) link
Brad that quote made my brain bleed.
― husked, tonal wails (irrational), Monday, 25 April 2016 14:46 (eight years ago) link
classic becky
― mandatory sex webinar (contenderizer), Monday, 25 April 2016 15:25 (eight years ago) link
this just seems like someone straight up trolling certain ilm posters
http://metro.co.uk/2016/04/24/people-think-james-blake-is-the-true-star-of-beyonces-lemonade-5837280/
― soref, Monday, 25 April 2016 15:38 (eight years ago) link
Not a piece of writing, but I thought this exchange was worth preserving:
@leahfinnegan: nyt really needs a female music critic@alexrossmusic: Is classical music "music"? If so, meet @CorinnadFW and @VivSchweitzer@leahfinnegan: @alexrossmusic @CorinnadFW @VivSchweitzer point missed but thanks@alexrossmusic: @leahfinnegan @CorinnadFW @VivSchweitzer I see your point, and am making another.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Monday, 25 April 2016 15:44 (eight years ago) link
http://www.npr.org/2016/04/25/475288644/songs-we-love-nite-jewel-kiss-the-screen
there's some OK stuff in this piece, but there are also a bunch of sentences that make me think the author does not know what words mean.
e.g.
...performed her Nite Jewel alias as an equalizer between herself and the listener rather than a salable object of desire....They're fascinating, headspace-oriented compositions with poptimist touch tones for hooks, and the freedom Gonzalez found to mix and record as she saw fit permeates the songs' breezy production.... The liberty to move and work comfortably gave Gonzalez a way to construct a dubious, vaporous record that sits outside of the facile labels that circulate the music industry....
They're fascinating, headspace-oriented compositions with poptimist touch tones for hooks, and the freedom Gonzalez found to mix and record as she saw fit permeates the songs' breezy production....
The liberty to move and work comfortably gave Gonzalez a way to construct a dubious, vaporous record that sits outside of the facile labels that circulate the music industry....
The final graf doesn't have any obvious howlers but advances an argument that doesn't really make any sense to me.
― wizzz! (amateurist), Tuesday, 26 April 2016 01:38 (eight years ago) link
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2016/04/merle-haggard-country-music-reagan/
Haggard always sang with a furrowed brow and lolling eyes. As a young man this habit seemed flirtatious, but as he aged it made him look paranoid and sad, perpetually puppy-dogging at every camera he encountered. For some, he seemed an end-times prophet of the waning era of American prosperity, talking straight and offering potent warnings of decline.
But in reality, he was just a run-of-the-mill conservative — for Merle, the keepers of the status quo were under constant attack, and he was a fierce defender of their privilege.
He was also a hypocrite, or maybe just confused.
fuck u commie rag
― Blowout Coombes (President Keyes), Tuesday, 26 April 2016 17:42 (eight years ago) link
a fairly lengthy takedown of that: http://www.lawyersgunsmoneyblog.com/2016/04/jacobin-walking-on-the-fighting-side-of-me
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Tuesday, 26 April 2016 17:57 (eight years ago) link
Looks like Haggard's death has spawned quite a bit of poorly-composed vitriol. The response to the Jacobin piece is pretty spectacular, though.
Meanwhile, here's this one, which is indefensible from the get-go...
― jon_oh, Tuesday, 26 April 2016 19:48 (eight years ago) link
Jacobin is a joke.
― -_- (jim in glasgow), Tuesday, 26 April 2016 20:20 (eight years ago) link
it's nice when jacobin hands me another reason to ignore them
― wizzz! (amateurist), Tuesday, 26 April 2016 22:28 (eight years ago) link
NIce to see Haggard used as a pivot point for completely opposed ideological factions.
― hardcore dilettante, Friday, 29 April 2016 04:58 (eight years ago) link
"Long before “Netflix & Chill” was synonymous with sloppy Tinder finger-banging on a loveseat gifted from a family friend, Netflix was actually a different frontier altogether."
A DIFFERENT ONE ALTOGETHER!
https://medium.com/swlh/choice-the-new-democracy-of-music-c2b9fa83f72e#.2jolch89p
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Sunday, 8 May 2016 18:32 (eight years ago) link
going by that quoted line I was surprised that wasn't av club tbh
― Elvis Santana (stevie), Sunday, 8 May 2016 20:14 (eight years ago) link
it's true, though, netflix was indeed a different frontier. for instance, it was once a weed-smoking elmo avatar named qwikster
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Sunday, 8 May 2016 22:07 (eight years ago) link
Do we have a thread for awful interviews?
https://itunes.apple.com/us/post/idsa.88faafb5-1c3a-11e6-8352-477931e7a37d
Who needs to do research when you have that Apple cash I guess.
― maura, Wednesday, 18 May 2016 11:42 (eight years ago) link
awful interviews have been Ebro's niche for a long time
― a goon shaped tool (some dude), Wednesday, 18 May 2016 12:46 (eight years ago) link
I mean its Interview magazine so maybe it doesn't count but
TINA WEYMOUTH: Yeah, there is a very mature approach in Dreamland, where Natalie sings, "there's no use crying." I thought, "Wow, if only our Middle Eastern brethren knew that," that the wailing and the smashing of teeth is not the way to go, but rather dreaming, and out of dreams comes a much better reality.
http://www.interviewmagazine.com/music/wild-belle-dreamland#_
― it's getting ott in here / so take off all your clothes (stevie), Monday, 23 May 2016 14:40 (eight years ago) link
hmm http://www.alternativenation.net/the-importance-of-music-in-entertainment/
― Frozen CD, Wednesday, 25 May 2016 18:38 (eight years ago) link
We are all the NPR intern now:www.mtv.com/news/2888213/de-la-soul-listening/
― queen elseq of ærendelle (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 3 June 2016 17:31 (eight years ago) link
http://www.mtv.com/news/2888213/de-la-soul-listening/
oh man whiney i totally made myself stop and not post that...
― scott seward, Friday, 3 June 2016 17:32 (eight years ago) link
it just seemed like a shooting fish in an internet barrel kinda thing. like with those old pitch things on pitchfork. and then people would tell me that the person who wrote it is only 15 and has started a non-profit meals on wheels group and isn't a real music writer or something and that i'm mean.
but it does totally suck.
― scott seward, Friday, 3 June 2016 17:35 (eight years ago) link
I can be pretty hard to please with certain musical aesthetics, and rap music prior to ‘92 — the year I was born, of course — is something I’ve struggled with a lot in my life.
Never has a sentence so disqualified a music writer from deserving my attention
― Blowout Coombes (President Keyes), Friday, 3 June 2016 17:38 (eight years ago) link
jesus fucking christ there are timestamps?
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Friday, 3 June 2016 17:42 (eight years ago) link
that is fucking dire
― ulysses, Friday, 3 June 2016 17:45 (eight years ago) link
Perhaps I’ll give De La Soul another listen someday. I can feel the roots of music I should enjoy, but it just didn’t connect today. Right now, I’m gonna go listen to ATC’s eurodance classic “Around the World” and keep praying for the weekend.
― ulysses, Friday, 3 June 2016 17:46 (eight years ago) link
i think i'm gonna listen to 3 feet high just in solidarity and time stamp my own responses with bagels
― ulysses, Friday, 3 June 2016 17:47 (eight years ago) link
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Friday, June 3, 2016 1:42 PM (4 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Of course there are; how else would we be able to pinpoint exactly where the bagel is in his digestive tract?
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Friday, 3 June 2016 17:47 (eight years ago) link
same author
http://www.mtv.com/news/2879987/why-ill-never-leave-drake/
― nomar, Friday, 3 June 2016 17:50 (eight years ago) link
I feel like we've reached un-peak music writing. Who is good that's left in the game?
― Position Position, Friday, 3 June 2016 17:50 (eight years ago) link
finally found a DN i'm willing to wear
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Friday, 3 June 2016 17:53 (eight years ago) link
poor guy is gonna get older and better (i hope) and this is gonna be very embarrassing for him.
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Friday, 3 June 2016 17:54 (eight years ago) link
you guys, it's TOO easy.
― scott seward, Friday, 3 June 2016 17:56 (eight years ago) link
it's like picking up a high school newspaper and saying get a load of THIS guy...
― scott seward, Friday, 3 June 2016 17:59 (eight years ago) link
Counterpoint: you guys are old and weird and that piece is more or less on the money
― yolo mostly (sleepingbag), Friday, 3 June 2016 17:59 (eight years ago) link
yes it really engages with the album and has interesting things to say about generational displacement
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:01 (eight years ago) link
He engages with the album by saying it's a chore to listen to in 2016, which it is
― yolo mostly (sleepingbag), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:01 (eight years ago) link
Yeah, but it's also like if RS or somesuch published a piece in 1969 along the lines of "Count Basie?! Whadda cornball! His trumpets sound like ducks!"
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:03 (eight years ago) link
i hear you scott but it's MTV News... and we heard it first.
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:04 (eight years ago) link
it is absolutely more of a chore than views, i think we're saying the same thing. see you at loud yoga
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:04 (eight years ago) link
counterpoint to your counterpoint: i'm listening to it now and 3 feet high and rising sounds fucking fresh in the new millennium
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:05 (eight years ago) link
prince paul rules, next gen media drools
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:06 (eight years ago) link
wow i can't believe this young person likes young people music and not old fogey music
― ejemplo (crüt), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:06 (eight years ago) link
The J0rdan S. listening club
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:07 (eight years ago) link
still waiting on his Spawn OST liveblog :(
― ejemplo (crüt), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:09 (eight years ago) link
it is absolutely more of a chore than views,
wait what?
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:10 (eight years ago) link
he should really take my six-week course in generational disingenuous music writing is what he should do. a hundred bucks a week and the first week is free!
― scott seward, Friday, 3 June 2016 18:11 (eight years ago) link
TAKE TAKE TAKE TAKE IT OFF TAKE IT OFF
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:12 (eight years ago) link
*winks*
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:12 (eight years ago) link
first lesson is free right here: pretend like you've never even HEARD of de la soul! and duh make fun of their names.
the rest you'll have to pay for.
― scott seward, Friday, 3 June 2016 18:13 (eight years ago) link
lol david turner gets so much shit itt
― dyl, Friday, 3 June 2016 18:13 (eight years ago) link
atc's "all around the world" is a classic tho
― dyl, Friday, 3 June 2016 18:15 (eight years ago) link
Hey everyone, don't ignore this one either. Tim Sommer defends Mike Love's honor.
http://observer.com/2016/06/for-the-love-of-mike-love-its-time-to-destroy-the-legend-of-brian-wilson/
I barely give a fuck who Mike Love has his picture taken with, or what political candidates he supports, or how he may stumble in public speeches; he is a gentle and kind man whose heart is in the right damn place, and he supports many worthwhile causes related to the environment, conservation, and spiritual enlightenment. Have any of you ever met Ric Ocasek or Todd Rundgren, or even, for that matter, the great Lou Reed? Have you ever talked to a waitress or stewardess who had to deal with Paul Simon?I have met a pile of so-called pop stars, and in terms of being a decent man with a decent heart, Mike Love is pretty goddamn high on the “good guy” list. Most of you just hate him because he’s in a band called the Beach Boys without Brian Wilson. You think that the fact that he keeps the Beach Boys going is somehow denigrating of or defiant of the great achievements of that band, but it’s just the opposite; Mike Love has kept the Beach Boys, a vital American institution, alive and working in the face of great odds and even greater derision.Go see the current touring version of the Beach Boys.
I have met a pile of so-called pop stars, and in terms of being a decent man with a decent heart, Mike Love is pretty goddamn high on the “good guy” list. Most of you just hate him because he’s in a band called the Beach Boys without Brian Wilson. You think that the fact that he keeps the Beach Boys going is somehow denigrating of or defiant of the great achievements of that band, but it’s just the opposite; Mike Love has kept the Beach Boys, a vital American institution, alive and working in the face of great odds and even greater derision.
Go see the current touring version of the Beach Boys.
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 3 June 2016 18:15 (eight years ago) link
not to taste-shame but i am not much older than the author and i can think of few lighter, more enjoyable listens than 3 feet high. i know rap has mutated way away from the space this record occupies but i think it deserves a way less disingenuous and distracted approach, especially from someone who like...writes criticism, and who already likes tribe?????
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:16 (eight years ago) link
ofc i blame the editors as much if not more
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:18 (eight years ago) link
otoh I've heard more than once from students who don't get "old school rap."
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:19 (eight years ago) link
who was it that shared the anecdote about students cracking up at "Fuck Tha Police"??
― ejemplo (crüt), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:21 (eight years ago) link
hey there were plenty of people in the late 80's who couldn't listen to any pre-1986 rap. it was dinosaur music.
― scott seward, Friday, 3 June 2016 18:22 (eight years ago) link
i mean took me forever to wrap my head about enter the wu tang in college but i did and i managed to never write a piece about it
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:22 (eight years ago) link
the editors are basically holding this guy up as a pinata for potential clicks, it's more than a bit shamefulhttps://twitter.com/MTVNews/status/738743779734228992^ he retweeted this!
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:22 (eight years ago) link
"Fuck Tha Police" is hilarious though
― queen elseq of ærendelle (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:23 (eight years ago) link
spoonie gee would be like a young louis armstrong. de la would be like webster/blanton-era duke. the kids want ornette now. or maybe they want wynton, i dunno...
― scott seward, Friday, 3 June 2016 18:26 (eight years ago) link
― dyl, Friday, June 3, 2016 2:15 PM (20 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
YES. Now That's What I Call Music Vol. 2
― flappy bird, Friday, 3 June 2016 18:37 (eight years ago) link
if this piece wanted to accomplish making people mad then it succeeded but if it was an earnest attempt to examine expectations we have of critics and fans and the way canons can change then..... i would say they went about it the wrong way
― J0rdan S., Friday, 3 June 2016 18:37 (eight years ago) link
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson
They get the Wu; it's pre-Chronic (LL, PE, Kool Moe Dee, Run-DMC) that for them is like reading Chaucer.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:48 (eight years ago) link
LOL-ing at Ned's link.
OH, WAIT. THAT DIDN’T HAPPEN. Floyd let go of Syd Barrett and his substantial ghost, they reassembled around their extraordinary core and they went on to make some of history’s most lasting music.
CITATION NEEDED
― a 47-year-old chainsaw artist from South Carolina (Phil D.), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:49 (eight years ago) link
... even pe? whoa
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:52 (eight years ago) link
Well daddy don't you know that things go in cycles, the way that Bobby Brown is just amping of which vertu engendred is the flour
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Friday, 3 June 2016 18:55 (eight years ago) link
i don't think anyone listens to public enemy anymore. maybe british people.
― scott seward, Friday, 3 June 2016 19:14 (eight years ago) link
what did you all think of the piece from however many years back where a new/young critic listened to public enemy and was like "meh i like drake better"
― dyl, Friday, 3 June 2016 19:15 (eight years ago) link
the list of rap artists that not a lot of people listen to anymore is really really long though. when was the last time someone here listened to a notorious b.i.g. album? EXACTLY.
illmatic is 4ever though.
― scott seward, Friday, 3 June 2016 19:16 (eight years ago) link
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson)
yeah i mean pe basically sounds like "volunteers" these days.
― Sgt. Coldy Bimore (rushomancy), Friday, 3 June 2016 19:23 (eight years ago) link
literally just had an argument with a friend who's a year old than me bc he said "illmatic is boring. it was written forever" but also he's not a critic
idk i'm all for destabilizing canon and upsetting calcified orders but with actual care and context and fewer timestamps and vegan hot dogs. the headline also frames dude as a critic so he's not like...a student, or just a contemporary audience
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Friday, 3 June 2016 19:26 (eight years ago) link
anyway yeah this is content generated to make people angry
i like david but i dunno who that piece was for. this one just happened a few years ago!
http://www.npr.org/sections/allsongs/2012/07/05/156327372/youve-never-heard-public-enemys-it-takes-a-nation-of-millions-to-hold-us-back
― some dude, Friday, 3 June 2016 19:31 (eight years ago) link
I will say that I would rather read this piece than a fawning appreciation of a critically acclaimed album (or whatever) that the writer has clearly never heard but knows is good via received wisdom
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Friday, 3 June 2016 19:32 (eight years ago) link
i would rather not read either
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Friday, 3 June 2016 19:33 (eight years ago) link
also lol i immediately remembered that npr series
iirc it was extremely well received and runs to this day
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Friday, 3 June 2016 19:34 (eight years ago) link
What gets more clicks, offensively bad articles or good articles?
― Evan, Friday, 3 June 2016 19:36 (eight years ago) link
i just can't imagine when i was his age writing like this about an album from the early '80s as if it was an ancient artifact i couldn't understand. i was devouring the catalogs of a lot of '70s acts by then. how do you write about music professionally with a snooty attitude towards the past!?
― some dude, Friday, 3 June 2016 19:36 (eight years ago) link
I dunno, I find the use of sampling far more creative on 3 Feet High... compared to many so-called "nu-school" rap/hip-hop albums. I generally find the productions on old school rap records more charming - less slick, more raw, and as a result, more exciting.
― Turrican, Friday, 3 June 2016 19:50 (eight years ago) link
Ultimately, I have no regrets leaving It Takes A Nation on what is now an entirely metaphorical shelf. I'll gladly say thank-you, but given the choice, I'm going to blast Drake's infectiously triumphant mp3s every time.
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Friday, 3 June 2016 19:53 (eight years ago) link
..I loved The Chronic and Doggy Style (and Uncle Sam's Curse what year was that?) but the element of rap that was like mindblowing sheer sonics gave way to what were essentially rock records structurally - same rules as rock in terms of how you get to the vibe/effect. whereas that late 80s stuff was so Structures In Sound - but then again, Wu Tang is fully up on that when they come around, and they weren't "throwback" to me at that point, they were taking that vision to where it would have gone next if it had remained the dominant discourse, which it didn't.
not that all rap had been dense layers of Bomb Squad & not that there isn't plenty of trad song structure at play in Nation of Millions and shit but that's how I break it down to an extent, rap becoming more a new approach to songcraft than a new approach to sound.
― unlistenable in philly (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Sunday, January 8, 2012 10:18 PM
― scott seward, Friday, 3 June 2016 20:00 (eight years ago) link
― some dude, Friday, June 3, 2016 3:36 PM (31 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Pretending like you knew what you're talking about is a Gen X tic (see the first nine years of p4k), performatively writing about all the things you don't know is a millennial tic (see, like, everything now)
― queen elseq of ærendelle (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 3 June 2016 20:10 (eight years ago) link
i don't care whether or not some young person likes 3 ft high*, but i'm half annoyed that he turned this in and his editors published it. dude has nothing to say about the album that couldn't be communicated in a sentence or two. why publish his catalog of tepid diet & exercise complaints?
― like $500 billion in stuffed fart sales and I have an idea (contenderizer), Friday, 3 June 2016 20:14 (eight years ago) link
tho whiney otm, that too is a millennial tic
It's interesting to explore the idea that 3 ft High has aged kind of poorly; you could probably make an argument that it has (when was the last time anybody itt listened to it in its entirety? I probably never will again to be honest.)
But yeah my problem with the piece is its predetermined outcome and refusal to engage with the music. There was no way the piece was going to run as "I Listened To 3 Feet High For The First Time and Really Loved It."
― Evan R, Friday, 3 June 2016 20:35 (eight years ago) link
Also 3 Ft High seems like an odd target? Doesn't seem like the album is the sacred entity it was 10 or 20 years ago. This feels like a missed opportunity to explore why the LP isn't being passed down the way it used to be.
― Evan R, Friday, 3 June 2016 20:37 (eight years ago) link
Well, I last listened to it about a year ago.
― Turrican, Friday, 3 June 2016 20:38 (eight years ago) link
tbf there was a fair amount of performative garbage among gen x'ers too. (see: the first nine years of pitchfork.) but i never thought the "i'm a special snowflake and all my personal thoughts and feelings are valuable to share" style of performance would make me vague wistful for the "album review written as open letter to deceased president william howard taft" style of performance.
― a basset hound (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Friday, 3 June 2016 20:47 (eight years ago) link
― queen elseq of ærendelle (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, June 3, 2016 4:10 PM (38 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Ths is true i think
― Treeship, Friday, 3 June 2016 20:50 (eight years ago) link
infectiously triumphant
terrible adverb-adjective combinations is a bad writer's tic
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 June 2016 20:58 (eight years ago) link
I also would quibble that for most in the long term De La Soul is Dead became the "canonical" album...or I would have even been more curious to see what he thought of a relatively more modern one like Stakes is High or one of the AOI albums....or hell even the really weird one Buhloone Mindstate
― rockpalast '82 (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 3 June 2016 21:01 (eight years ago) link
BM is actually my favorite
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 June 2016 21:03 (eight years ago) link
I bet dude would like plenty of Mosaic Thump and Bionix
― Spottie, Friday, 3 June 2016 21:05 (eight years ago) link
this is a good troll in theory because a lot of 80s hip hop sounds dumb as hell and it's a sacred cow to people who were young then and still refer to it like it was the mindblowingest shit to hear someone rap RIDIN ME LIKE A PONY/NO PHONY/I'M THE REAL MACARONI. but they fucked it up because 3 feet still holds up
― de l'asshole (flopson), Friday, 3 June 2016 21:06 (eight years ago) link
yeah -- curiosity about the past isn't obeisance to the past.
btw it's always hip hop who gets reevaluated. The kids aren't going around saying, "Zep with those loud guitars and screaming and shit lol."
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 June 2016 21:09 (eight years ago) link
cos rock music hasn't changed in 30 years
― Noodle Vague, Friday, 3 June 2016 21:10 (eight years ago) link
Yeah, and rock fans are too easy/tired of a target to troll.
Buhloone Mindstate is a masterpiece and holds up amazingly btw. It's paced much more like an Internet-age rap album, too. That's the one I'd be most excited to see writers revisit, especially in the wake of Chance and Kendrick's last few LPs
― Evan R, Friday, 3 June 2016 21:11 (eight years ago) link
Zep is a bad example cause their lyrics are nerd fantasy shit and a general whimsical vibe, and lots of kids since have found it corny
― de l'asshole (flopson), Friday, 3 June 2016 21:13 (eight years ago) link
that goes for many rap lyrics!
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 June 2016 21:14 (eight years ago) link
Stakes is High holds up best in my mind but this is saying more about our individual tastes than it is the music i imagine.
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Friday, 3 June 2016 21:18 (eight years ago) link
and anyways 3 feet high is spectacular, was spectacular, will be spectacular and if you don't feel it you are welcome to have ALL the drake, be my guest
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Friday, 3 June 2016 21:19 (eight years ago) link
kids still love led zep. it's pathetic. get a life already.
― scott seward, Friday, 3 June 2016 21:27 (eight years ago) link
i still can't believe that the violent femmes first album became the soundtrack to...how many generations now? my 13 year old totally digs it. masturbation never gets old.
― scott seward, Friday, 3 June 2016 21:28 (eight years ago) link
that's the spirit
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 June 2016 21:29 (eight years ago) link
haha, a young guy just came in the store and he bought that dj premier Prhyme CD and then he asked me if i had any led zeppelin CDs! you can't make this stuff up...
first he asked me if i had any mf doom...
― scott seward, Friday, 3 June 2016 21:48 (eight years ago) link
he was early 20's.
― scott seward, Friday, 3 June 2016 21:49 (eight years ago) link
The Violent Femmes first LP is more of an American indie thing though. That band/album didn't really do much here, and never crossed over like R.E.M. did. I didn't even know the Violent Femmes were a thing until I read Americans talking about it online. I don't think I ever read about the Violent Femmes once in a UK music magazine. Seriously.
― Turrican, Friday, 3 June 2016 21:55 (eight years ago) link
Even 'Blister In The Sun', their most well-known song here, was kinda obscure until it appeared on an advert or something.
― Turrican, Friday, 3 June 2016 21:59 (eight years ago) link
yeah, okay, american teens. white ones. mostly. probably. i can't speak for the Latino community.
― scott seward, Friday, 3 June 2016 22:00 (eight years ago) link
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, June 3, 2016 10:03 PM (53 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
thirded. total masterpiece. but I still listen to 3ft a lot and still feel the same about it as I did bitd - its masterful pop genius far outweighs the skittishness and the bittiness.
What I found depressing about this piece was the way he seemed to see listening to music he'd not heard as a chore. I really can't identify with that, and never have been able to.
― it's getting ott in here / so take off all your clothes (stevie), Friday, 3 June 2016 22:00 (eight years ago) link
I had a friend at uni in the mid-90s who was really into the first Violent Femmes album so I heard it a lot and really liked it but thought of it as pretty much an obscurity until I got the internet and found out they were huge in the US.
― Just noise and screaming and no musical value at all. (Colonel Poo), Friday, 3 June 2016 22:03 (eight years ago) link
FWIW, Whiney and David have established peace via bagels.
https://twitter.com/_davidturner_/status/738849336218550273
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 3 June 2016 22:08 (eight years ago) link
"What I found depressing about this piece was the way he seemed to see listening to music he'd not heard as a chore."
this was totally my least favorite part of the thing. it really made me cringe. well i guess i HAVE to listen to it. which might have been an attempt at humor but....
― scott seward, Friday, 3 June 2016 22:13 (eight years ago) link
this was the bit:
I can be pretty hard to please with certain musical aesthetics, and rap music prior to ‘92 — the year I was born, of course — is something I’ve struggled with a lot in my life. Too often, going that far back can feel like a chore.
I've been a music writer long enough to know enough music writers to know it's not a rare opinion but I still just cannot grok it.
― it's getting ott in here / so take off all your clothes (stevie), Friday, 3 June 2016 22:16 (eight years ago) link
also re tweet abt bagels, did this guy write trolly thing and then scour twitter to find people bitching about it without mentioning his twitter name? because that's p depressing to me too.
― it's getting ott in here / so take off all your clothes (stevie), Friday, 3 June 2016 22:19 (eight years ago) link
Not even remotely true, they were pretty popular over here.
― Larry 'Leg' Smith (Tom D.), Friday, 3 June 2016 22:26 (eight years ago) link
... I'm talking about at the time, not 10 or 20 year later ffs.
― Larry 'Leg' Smith (Tom D.), Friday, 3 June 2016 22:28 (eight years ago) link
Was gonna say I think they were known at the time (saw a video of them playing the Hacienda I think back in the mid-80s) but by the 90s my impression was they were mostly forgotten apart from the odd music nerd, relatively speaking.
― Just noise and screaming and no musical value at all. (Colonel Poo), Friday, 3 June 2016 22:36 (eight years ago) link
The Pixies killed them off tbh
― Larry 'Leg' Smith (Tom D.), Friday, 3 June 2016 22:38 (eight years ago) link
the first album never went away here though. trust me on that.
― scott seward, Friday, 3 June 2016 22:45 (eight years ago) link
xxpost:
No they weren't, if they were popular here it was with a painfully tiny percentage of music nerds. The Violent Femmes were nothing here.
― Turrican, Friday, 3 June 2016 23:09 (eight years ago) link
Pixies were far, far bigger in the UK than Violent Femmes ever were.
― Turrican, Friday, 3 June 2016 23:10 (eight years ago) link
tbf the Pixies did have 2 top 40 singles in the UK so yeah
― Just noise and screaming and no musical value at all. (Colonel Poo), Friday, 3 June 2016 23:14 (eight years ago) link
You were there at the time, were you? LOL a painfully tiny percentage of music nerds, that's indie bands for you.
― Larry 'Leg' Smith (Tom D.), Friday, 3 June 2016 23:32 (eight years ago) link
First prize to the eminent Historian of US Indie Rock Trends in the United Kingdom (1983-1993).
― Larry 'Leg' Smith (Tom D.), Friday, 3 June 2016 23:35 (eight years ago) link
So you agree with me that in the big scheme of things they were nothing. Okay then, that's that sorted.
― Turrican, Friday, 3 June 2016 23:46 (eight years ago) link
That sort of depends on the criteria for being Something in the Big Scheme of Things. But eye bow 2 the superior knowledge U have of music of all ages and all nations.
― Larry 'Leg' Smith (Tom D.), Friday, 3 June 2016 23:50 (eight years ago) link
Thank U.
― Turrican, Friday, 3 June 2016 23:54 (eight years ago) link
I didn't realise this was such a contentious issue tbh
― Just noise and screaming and no musical value at all. (Colonel Poo), Saturday, 4 June 2016 00:01 (eight years ago) link
Neither did I, fwiw!
― Turrican, Saturday, 4 June 2016 00:10 (eight years ago) link
Violent Femmes first album stayed big with generations of Australian young teens too, and rightly so, as it's one of the best / most teenage albums ever.
speaking of young teens, I bought a leather De La Soul medallion from an import record shop in 1989, and Illmatic is really boring
― glandular lansbury (sic), Saturday, 4 June 2016 00:14 (eight years ago) link
whiney was utterly otm on twitter
― mookieproof, Saturday, 4 June 2016 00:25 (eight years ago) link
about bagels?
― glandular lansbury (sic), Saturday, 4 June 2016 00:35 (eight years ago) link
yeah whiney thank you for all of that
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Saturday, 4 June 2016 00:37 (eight years ago) link
iirc he didn't mention montreal bagels, so no
― mookieproof, Saturday, 4 June 2016 00:37 (eight years ago) link
This is pretty bad CONSIDERING IT'S NOT EVEN A DEATH GRIPS SONG
http://i67.tinypic.com/24euirc.jpg
― Frozen CD, Saturday, 4 June 2016 01:14 (eight years ago) link
I thought Violent Femmes were Australian when I first heard them, which was on a mixtape sent to me by a Melbourne pen pal.
― maura, Sunday, 5 June 2016 00:08 (eight years ago) link
They were really popular in the UK for their first couple of albums! Big venues. Full concert on the TV. Lots of radio play. Continually played in the prefects common room at my high school. This was 83-84 so up there with the Cramps, Ramones etc. Sorry no idea why you guys are debating this but they were. After the third album they broke up and disappeared and the non-chart music scene changed so they got sidelined permanently. Things moved faster then. Add It Up, Gone Daddy Gone, Ugly, Blister in the Sun etc were mainstays of student discos till the end of the 80s though.
― everything, Sunday, 5 June 2016 01:36 (eight years ago) link
i apologize for inadvertently starting a blighty kerfuffle.
― scott seward, Sunday, 5 June 2016 02:39 (eight years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YUbFtHr3vCE
― scott seward, Sunday, 5 June 2016 02:41 (eight years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JJXDEynfgR0
― scott seward, Sunday, 5 June 2016 02:47 (eight years ago) link
^ remember it well!
― everything, Sunday, 5 June 2016 05:40 (eight years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gproa6vzgws
this song is so great. i imagine it sounded very refreshing in 1983. probably went to #1 i'm assuming.
― Treeship, Sunday, 5 June 2016 06:01 (eight years ago) link
Sorry no idea why you guys are debating this but they were
One guy.
― glandular lansbury (sic), Sunday, 5 June 2016 07:39 (eight years ago) link
Thank you, everything! (xps)
― Larry 'Leg' Smith (Tom D.), Sunday, 5 June 2016 11:35 (eight years ago) link
i was sure that was right but i didn't start going to lolternative clubs until the late 80s so could only vouch for "Add It Up" getting played every week then. oh and knowing a bunch of peeps who had those albums.
― Noodle Vague, Sunday, 5 June 2016 11:46 (eight years ago) link
The Violent Femmes were huge among teens in Oslo circa late eighties. They played festivals here and I heard drunk people singing their songs well into the late nineties.
― human and working on getting beer (longneck), Sunday, 5 June 2016 11:50 (eight years ago) link
i came of age in the early 90s and remember the 4 big songs from the first Violent Femmes album being in WHFS rotation for the entire decade (plus "American Music" and "Breakin' Up" were pretty big).
― some dude, Sunday, 5 June 2016 12:48 (eight years ago) link
in fact i remember it being big news in the early 90s that the first VF album finally went platinum, nearly a decade after its release.
― some dude, Sunday, 5 June 2016 12:49 (eight years ago) link
in high school in the early '90s "Blister in the Sun" was like "Rock Lobster" -- slotted with whatever big pop/dance hits got played at parties.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 5 June 2016 12:51 (eight years ago) link
oh god I just remembered they covered "Do You Really Want to Hurt Me"
It was supposed to be funny, right? ugh. violent femmes near the top of my (very) short list of surly, smug, uncooperative interview subjects
― indie fresh (m coleman), Sunday, 5 June 2016 14:08 (eight years ago) link
I don't think it was meant to be funny.
― glandular lansbury (sic), Sunday, 5 June 2016 14:20 (eight years ago) link
One of the violent femmes has become an honorary Australian, owns a tea shop in Tasmania and plays improvised lute jams in it or something like that
― badg, Sunday, 5 June 2016 15:01 (eight years ago) link
Flute! http://www.fastcompany.com/1682132/brian-ritchie-violent-femmes-bassist-turned-tasmanian-tea-slinger-japanese-bamboo-flutist
― badg, Sunday, 5 June 2016 15:03 (eight years ago) link
He always dressed like an Antipodean tea shop owner anyway.
― everything, Sunday, 5 June 2016 21:06 (eight years ago) link
Brian Ritchie is a really nice guy who is very into using his band as a way to deliver avant-garde stylings to unsuspecting audiences. saw the Femmes in the late 90's with their anarchistic horn section "Horns Of Dilemma" and although they were past their commercial peak (which, echoing other posts, was HUGE in the 80's), they totally killed it. I mean, they had a dude from Boy Dirt Car playing trumpet! I remember a well-dressed college gal holding her hands to her ears during one of their mid-song free jazz freakouts, but she was still staring, fascinated, at the stage.
― the 'major tom guy' (sleeve), Monday, 6 June 2016 00:25 (eight years ago) link
(sorry for continued derail)
i'm learning a lot about the femmes here.
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Monday, 6 June 2016 00:53 (eight years ago) link
owns a tea shop in Tasmania and plays improvised lute jams in it or something like that
he used to own a second one in Sydney - back before the Femmes split up the second time, their website's list of tour dates and ticketing links would be like nine weeks of European clubs, three folk festivals in the US, one shakuhachi recital by Brian in his Surry Hills tea shop, five weeks of US clubs.
as a (non-honorary) Australian, he's also in an instrumental surf band with the Australian musicians of Midnight Oil, and curates this music and arts festival for an art museum, MONA, every year
― glandular lansbury (sic), Monday, 6 June 2016 04:34 (eight years ago) link
the reason the guy from the Dresden Dolls has now Spinal Tapped into the re-re-formed* Violent Femmes' drum stool is that someone dropped out of the festival, and on three days notice the Dresden Dolls, Ritchie, Mick Harvey and John Parish covered the Femmes first album as a fill-in act *they split a second time after Brian sued Gordon, in the middle of a nine-month-or-so tour, for selling Blister In The Sun for a commercial. possibly the one that was the only time anyone had ever heard of them in any country in the world, 26 years after it was released. the next reunion, six years later, lasted three shows before the original drummer - who'd first left c. 1985 - quit due to being screwed over money by the other two.
― glandular lansbury (sic), Monday, 6 June 2016 04:52 (eight years ago) link
sorry, update: dude from Dresden Dolls quit this year because it's too hard being in a trio with two guys who hate each other and literally won't speak to each other
(this is probably the reason that m coleman found them near the top of my (very) short list of surly, smug, uncooperative interview subjects)
― glandular lansbury (sic), Monday, 6 June 2016 05:00 (eight years ago) link
I'm finding the repeated assertion that Violent Femmes were a big band in the UK hilarious at this point, quite frankly. I don't care if you knew 2 people that owned the record - more cold, hard numbers as opposed to anecdotal evidence and maybe I'll begin to be convinced.
― Turrican, Monday, 6 June 2016 10:37 (eight years ago) link
Who are you, the President of the Anti-Violent Femmes League?
― Larry 'Leg' Smith (Tom D.), Monday, 6 June 2016 10:45 (eight years ago) link
x-post:
But yeah, I'm aware that they were a thing in Aus.
― Turrican, Monday, 6 June 2016 10:51 (eight years ago) link
first album was absolutely massive in the US iyrc
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Monday, 6 June 2016 12:33 (eight years ago) link
I still like them a lot. III is really underrated as coked-out weirdo pop record. Also you can still hear their influence in lots of herky-jerky, neurotic-sounding, nasally-voiced songwriters (like, say, Ezra Furman, who I don't think was alive when the s/t Femmes album was released)
― Wimmels, Monday, 6 June 2016 12:59 (eight years ago) link
i heard the 2nd album first. college radio station i listened to played country death song a lot. i played that album a ton in 1984. quickly bought the first album after that. played that a ton. then never really listened to them again.
― scott seward, Monday, 6 June 2016 14:44 (eight years ago) link
they were a band
― the world over the crotch. (contenderizer), Monday, 6 June 2016 14:45 (eight years ago) link
https://medium.com/@sfj/why-i-liked-david-turners-de-la-soul-piece-9d69360ee66e#.3n70h3fu2
― tylerw, Monday, 6 June 2016 14:49 (eight years ago) link
wtf is this horseshit
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Monday, 6 June 2016 15:03 (eight years ago) link
is this piece what was in those trucks
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Monday, 6 June 2016 15:04 (eight years ago) link
recent events aside, strip-fiend jones is basically right, there's more than a little "you will agree with critical consensus or SHUT THE FUCK UP FOREVER" to this protracted-beyond-its-hours discussion, and if an editor forced me to listen to, I don't know, [insert critically acclaimed canonical rock record that I hate] then I would likely react the same way.
which is something that shouldn't happen, because the role of an editor is in part to make their writers' (and publication's) prose look as good as possible -- and is something that won't happen, because it's me and I have no #personal #brand to #leverage, and no one's invested in the bag of sweet potato chips on my desk ("desk") right now -- but something that happens.
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Monday, 6 June 2016 15:07 (eight years ago) link
Really liked the SFJ piece tbh
― it's getting ott in here / so take off all your clothes (stevie), Monday, 6 June 2016 15:12 (eight years ago) link
he's right that people reacting negatively to this piece bc "it's a classic record!" are wrong but idk that seems an obvious point that is now a 10 minute read
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Monday, 6 June 2016 15:13 (eight years ago) link
as opposed to the 60-minute read of the past week in this thread
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Monday, 6 June 2016 15:13 (eight years ago) link
I enjoyed those 10 minutes?
― it's getting ott in here / so take off all your clothes (stevie), Monday, 6 June 2016 15:14 (eight years ago) link
well my issues were about the form it took rather than dude's opinion on the record
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Monday, 6 June 2016 15:15 (eight years ago) link
but i really enjoyed the violent femmes tangent
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Monday, 6 June 2016 15:16 (eight years ago) link
Each of those 60 minutes started a band.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Monday, 6 June 2016 15:17 (eight years ago) link
sfj's prose style has evolved into rock critic mark kozelek lately and it especially bugs me here
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Monday, 6 June 2016 15:18 (eight years ago) link
I genuinely don't understand why editors don't routinely ask themselves, if not during line edits then during commissioning, "will this piece make my writer and/or publication look bad unnecessarily? if so, what can I do to prevent or at least mitigate that?"
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Monday, 6 June 2016 15:21 (eight years ago) link
feel like it's more that editors are routinely asking themselves "will this piece get people all riled up?" and if the answer is yes, hit publish!
― tylerw, Monday, 6 June 2016 15:23 (eight years ago) link
so much of that piece seemed intended to make people cry millennial
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Monday, 6 June 2016 15:24 (eight years ago) link
There's a short-termism at work at bad outlets, where "will we look bad?" is subservient to "will this get lots of clicks and go viral?". Also this piece is not really going to hurt MTV's brand. Also there is no real investment beyond time when clicking on a weblink - it's not like someone's goung to say, "I got burned there, never going to pay to read something like that again". xps
― it's getting ott in here / so take off all your clothes (stevie), Monday, 6 June 2016 15:25 (eight years ago) link
I understand how it works. What I don't understand is how little cognitive dissonance people register in simultaneously thinking "I want to support/promote/mentor this writer so they can be successful" and "I am either actively undermining this writer or undermining them via inaction."
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Monday, 6 June 2016 15:41 (eight years ago) link
I am guessing those undertaking the latter either aren't really interested in the former or are kind of dense.
― it's getting ott in here / so take off all your clothes (stevie), Monday, 6 June 2016 15:42 (eight years ago) link
when MTV publishes a "scathing" takedown of an artist that it'll need to curry favor with come vma booking time then maybe it'll have a point beyond "lol we got the olds to rageclick on a piece about another bunch of olds, guess that saved us from the traffic ax for another month"
(note that two weeks ago all the salty tweets that an MTV account posted about Ciara were deleted once she complained. Ciara doesn't exactly have Beyoncé-level power on an individual level but pissing her off could have wider reverberations. and those were tweets, ffs!)
― maura, Monday, 6 June 2016 15:54 (eight years ago) link
I think the first Violent Femmes lp was pretty popular over here. certainly seemed to be something taht a lot of people on the camp 5 years ago could agree on. I think that included a lot of Brits too. JUst think it was a bit of a slightly alternative lp that wasn't overly dangerous so appealed to a wide amount of people. I don't remember too much free jazz in the sound yet, do think that hearing the Modern lovers after them I could hear a lot of ML influence. & VF always reminded me of the MLs once I'd heard them.
Slightly surprised to hear that Mick harvey was familiar enough with their work to do impromptu sets of their songs though.
― Stevolende, Monday, 6 June 2016 16:59 (eight years ago) link
The editor who commissioned the De La piece was bad at her last job, and based on this evidence, she hasn't gotten any better now that she's transitioned to MTV. (Basically, if you're good already, she won't make your piece any worse, but if you're a writer who needs help, you're out of luck.) There might at least be an additional layer of copy editing at MTV, though, because while the De La piece was poorly reasoned and poorly written, it was at least missing the spelling and punctuation errors that were such a hallmark of The Pitch.
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Monday, 6 June 2016 17:19 (eight years ago) link
Obviously a lot has likely changed since then but back when MTV Hive was active there was definitely both line and copy editing in place.
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Monday, 6 June 2016 18:38 (eight years ago) link
Music and cultural "taste" is backed up with correct arguments and facts, not "digging".
― Banaka™ (banaka)
― ejemplo (crüt), Monday, 6 June 2016 18:38 (eight years ago) link
"feel like it's more that editors are routinely asking themselves "will this piece get people all riled up?" and if the answer is yes, hit publish!"
wait, this is just dawning on you...
― scott seward, Monday, 6 June 2016 18:48 (eight years ago) link
it just seems, on the balance, bad that every time a piece critical of an artist or album comes out, it's likely to provoke a huge cross-media shitstorm.
(much of the non-music-critic response to this piece wasn't about the writing or the editing, it was about the scandal and outrage that a person could dislike an album not designated for dislike.)
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Monday, 6 June 2016 18:53 (eight years ago) link
No
― tylerw, Monday, 6 June 2016 18:56 (eight years ago) link
― tylerw, Monday, 6 June 2016 18:57 (eight years ago) link
k
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Monday, 6 June 2016 18:57 (eight years ago) link
ha, was responding to scott's delightful "this is just now dawning on you" comment.
― tylerw, Monday, 6 June 2016 18:59 (eight years ago) link
"We were years away from hip-hop authenticity wars."
dude lived in new york. in the 80's.
"Rap fans were still trying to get people to stop making fun of rap,"
in new york. in the 80's!
"I was generally in favor of rap becoming as user-unfriendly as the work of downtown types like Christian Marclay, who seemed to be referenced every time somebody had to write about rap."
it's true, every time you read about rap in the 80's you had to read about christian marclay. ??????????????????
"Everything rap or hip-hop (the name was still a toss-up at stores) was of interest to me."
It's true, I was there too. Nobody knew what to call rap in record stores in new york. some people called it the wicketty diggity doo.
― scott seward, Monday, 6 June 2016 19:00 (eight years ago) link
i don't remember anyone thinking de la soul were weird or fucked up back then. teenagers loved them. and not because they were fucked up.
― scott seward, Monday, 6 June 2016 19:04 (eight years ago) link
this
― fact checking cuz, Monday, 6 June 2016 19:04 (eight years ago) link
its like lame writing gave birth to even more lame writing. thanks, MTV! and thanks for the endless coverage of the madchester scene on 120 minutes. we had to go directly from the mission u.k. years to the ned's atomic dust bin years? sheesh....
― scott seward, Monday, 6 June 2016 19:06 (eight years ago) link
De La were interviewed about the piece and gave some good answers (they're less riled up about it than everybody else). Also the interview touches on the Kendrick/Chance comparisons mentioned upthread. Good read
http://observer.com/2016/06/buffoon-mind-state-de-la-soul-and-the-killing-of-sacred-cows/
― Evan R, Monday, 6 June 2016 19:14 (eight years ago) link
First album since 2004, of course they'd be circumspect
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 6 June 2016 19:34 (eight years ago) link
we had to go directly from the mission u.k. years to the ned's atomic dust bin years?
Admittedly I am biased.
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 6 June 2016 19:50 (eight years ago) link
one of the cool things about living in the (daisy age) future is that the observer response piece includes a youtube of the whole 3 feet high album so who gives a fuck about bad or badly written reviews as long as they link your name right.
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Monday, 6 June 2016 19:55 (eight years ago) link
you had a big poster of dave kendall on your wall when you were studying maths at uni, admit it, ned.
― scott seward, Monday, 6 June 2016 19:56 (eight years ago) link
Horrible thought, what do you take me for. 'Studying maths' indeed.
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 6 June 2016 20:08 (eight years ago) link
my number one piece of advice for aspiring music writers is probably "take calculus, you'll regret not doing so"
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Monday, 6 June 2016 20:18 (eight years ago) link
*2gether voice* I know my calculus
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Monday, 6 June 2016 20:25 (eight years ago) link
i feel like all the cultural baggage being dredged up over this piece is secondary to the main lesson, which is that if you write with contempt for your audience and your subject, you're probably gonna get that contempt returned back in your direction by one or the other. if david was naive about anything, it's his weird surprise about this piece causing such a predictable shitstorm.
― Dierks Bentley's Holistic Detective Agency (some dude), Monday, 6 June 2016 20:59 (eight years ago) link
agreed.
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Monday, 6 June 2016 21:03 (eight years ago) link
i think 95% of the racial, generational, musical and critical arguments are all distractions from the basic fact that jessica didn't do her job and now one of her writers is getting eaten alive on the internet
― queen elseq of ærendelle (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 6 June 2016 21:04 (eight years ago) link
― Dierks Bentley's Holistic Detective Agency (some dude), Monday, 6 June 2016 21:08 (eight years ago) link
Pretty funny to watch the writer do the "lol, fuck you old white people" dance on Twitter, meanwhile the editor who threw him to the wolves is a middle-aged white mom.
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Monday, 6 June 2016 21:27 (eight years ago) link
Again, those distinctions are all distractions from the actual point tho
― queen elseq of ærendelle (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 6 June 2016 21:35 (eight years ago) link
Well, some of us have been pointing out her incompetence for fucking years.
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Monday, 6 June 2016 21:37 (eight years ago) link
the basic fact that jessica didn't do her job
A MUSIC CRITIC IN 2016 LISTENS TO DE LA SOUL’S CLASSIC 1989 DEBUT ALBUM FOR THE FIRST TIME. HE'S REALLY WRONG
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Monday, 6 June 2016 21:37 (eight years ago) link
Well, some of us have been pointing out her incompetence for fucking years. --Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱)
Come on, fam.
Jessica is still hands down one of the best music writers of our generation,I just don't particularly agree with her editing strategy
― queen elseq of ærendelle (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 6 June 2016 21:50 (eight years ago) link
oh wait, we're talking about jessica hopper here? yeah, in that case i'll take whiney's side.
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Monday, 6 June 2016 21:54 (eight years ago) link
the editor who threw him to the wolves is a middle-aged white mom
so what? what does that have to do with anything?
― fact checking cuz, Monday, 6 June 2016 22:01 (eight years ago) link
last week i watched MTV for the first time in years. it was nothing but ghost reality shows.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 6 June 2016 22:10 (eight years ago) link
I've never liked her writing. I do admire her groundbreaking work on the "I'm a publicist and a journalist!" hustle, which has paid big dividends for a bunch of other folks since.
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Monday, 6 June 2016 22:16 (eight years ago) link
Jessica is still hands down one of the best music writers of our generation
ROFL you're joking
― Wimmels, Tuesday, 7 June 2016 01:11 (eight years ago) link
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Monday, June 6, 2016 5:10 PM (3 days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
it would be cool if there were only 2 shows, one about ghost b.c. and one about the japanese prog band
― rockpalast '82 (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 9 June 2016 20:27 (eight years ago) link
listening to ned's atomic dustbin right now, this still sound aight!
so weird when english bands seem american like these guys and swervedriver, so used to the reverse
I'm certain there's nothing technically wrong with this review and it's churlish and mean-spirited of me to post it here, and yet...
http://louderthanwar.com/stone-roses-halifax-live-review/
― STOP KILLING ANIMALS, THEY'RE MINT (DJP), Thursday, 9 June 2016 20:29 (eight years ago) link
Some have maligned new single All for One, but live it was perfect. As Brown sang, we did indeed join hands and make a wall.
*tear*
― ejemplo (crüt), Thursday, 9 June 2016 20:32 (eight years ago) link
yeah yeah.ya bastards.
― mark e, Thursday, 9 June 2016 20:33 (eight years ago) link
I got some context behind this piece and it doesn't really belong here. Sorry everyone.
― STOP KILLING ANIMALS, THEY'RE MINT (DJP), Thursday, 9 June 2016 21:15 (eight years ago) link
yeah guys mocking 12 year-olds is not cool
― The Brexit Club (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 9 June 2016 21:27 (eight years ago) link
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/music/what-to-listen-to/zoe-rahman-a-musical-furnace-in-need-of-a-little-cooling---revie/
With her long hair and delicate frame you’d expect something flowing and lyrical to emerge from under those slender fingers.
― my concern would only be that you don't have serenity. (stevie), Friday, 10 June 2016 08:16 (eight years ago) link
Air’s vast 20-year retrospective will put your head in the clouds
For two decades, the French duo of Nicolas Godin and Jean-Benoît Dunckel have been devoted in their focus to suspend focus via series after series of downtempo synths and treated, blissful vocals—so much so that it seems out of character for them to celebrate their legacy with a high-gloss deluxe anthology. It’s damn near ostentatious for Air anyway. It does, however, help knowing that they were the ones to actually construct Twentyears in all of its grandeur. It is certainly fucking grand: First comes a 17-track album of cuts accompanied by 14 more tracks of rarities and unreleased material, all to be followed in late July by an add-on of remixes of David Bowie, Depeche Mode, Beck, Neneh Cherry, and MGMT. Boy, oh boy, that’s a lot of Moog.
"Air have released a best-of with a bonus disc."
― glandular lansbury (sic), Friday, 10 June 2016 09:09 (eight years ago) link
" have been devoted in their focus to suspend focus" That's an awkward way to state this, though I'm not sure even what they are trying to state.
― husked, tonal wails (irrational), Friday, 10 June 2016 14:03 (eight years ago) link
Good lord
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/flumes-skin-is-the-audio-equivalent-of-ecstasy-a7073486.html
― Poor.Old.Tired.Horse. (Stew), Tuesday, 14 June 2016 15:25 (eight years ago) link
o no :(
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 14 June 2016 15:28 (eight years ago) link
just came to post that. what... is it
― lazy rascals, spending their substance, and more, in riotous living (Merdeyeux), Tuesday, 14 June 2016 15:40 (eight years ago) link
To be frank, this is the type of shit that fuels interracial relationships
― Oh baby, if only you knew / Gabnebb hit a hundred-and-two (stevie), Tuesday, 14 June 2016 15:49 (eight years ago) link
shit b
― contenderizer, Tuesday, 14 June 2016 15:49 (eight years ago) link
being cornered at a bar by a half ass hipster runoff carles character who is aggressively gushing about an unspectacular record
― Evan, Tuesday, 14 June 2016 15:52 (eight years ago) link
"He’s previously worked as an editor at Ashton Kutcher’s A Plus and as a staff writer at BuzzFeed."
― maura, Tuesday, 14 June 2016 15:56 (eight years ago) link
we all said we wanted the Pitchfork '00-style review to make a comeback but I don't think we really thought the implications through
― volumetric god rays (DJP), Tuesday, 14 June 2016 17:14 (eight years ago) link
exclusive pic of the Independent editors keeping the vessel afloat
http://i.imgur.com/l6fCM96.png
― reader, if you love him so much why don't you marry him? (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 14 June 2016 17:57 (eight years ago) link
Oh my god, what the fuck did I just read!?!
― the hair - it's lost its energy (Turrican), Tuesday, 14 June 2016 19:37 (eight years ago) link
― volumetric god rays (DJP), Tuesday, June 14, 2016 1:14 PM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
who said this and how soon can we start rounding them up
― if young slothrop don't trust ya i'm gon' rhyme ya (slothroprhymes), Tuesday, 14 June 2016 19:51 (eight years ago) link
http://www.monologuedb.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/Claude-Rains-Captain-Louis-Renault-Casablanca.jpg
― Cry for a Shadow Blaster (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 14 June 2016 19:56 (eight years ago) link
lol this feels like it's been written by 17 different writers. all teenagers.
― Ludo, Tuesday, 14 June 2016 19:57 (eight years ago) link
I'm telling you, this album is primetime vodka and molly music for summer 2016, my guy. This is not music for the Uber ride home by yourself at 3am, upset because you'll be alone for the rest of your life b. This is the shit you play before you make an ill-advised decision and cheat on the love of your life, or do some freaky shit with the person you forgot to formally break things off with. Essentially this record’s theme is all about embracing imperfections, saying fuck it, and getting down while you can. Okay, I hate myself for that sentence, but I have no idea who Toronto singer Kai is, and she sounds fucking perfect on “Never Be Like You.” Tell her people to hit up my people so we can do this joint interview with Streten on some behind-the-scenes shit. She might be the most slept on artist to date b.
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Tuesday, 14 June 2016 20:04 (eight years ago) link
can we get this guy on ilx pronto plz
oh wait, there's like a half dozen people who do this schtick already
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Tuesday, 14 June 2016 20:05 (eight years ago) link
Did none of you who are upset over this ever read a Vice album review from like 2007 (I'd understand if you didn't, I don't really cherish the time I spent reading those either)
― self-clowning oven (Murgatroid), Tuesday, 14 June 2016 20:30 (eight years ago) link
this reads like a style parody of big ghost, except without the funny parts
― a poon shaped mule (voodoo chili), Tuesday, 14 June 2016 20:37 (eight years ago) link
xp those at least had the decency to be brief
― reader, if you love him so much why don't you marry him? (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 14 June 2016 21:10 (eight years ago) link
Did none of you who are upset over this ever read a Vice album review from like 2007
no because it was on Vice and fuck Vice forever
― volumetric god rays (DJP), Tuesday, 14 June 2016 21:11 (eight years ago) link
the "b." sentence enders read like typos that result from him trying to hit the space bar twice and failing
― maura, Tuesday, 14 June 2016 21:37 (eight years ago) link
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Tuesday, June 14, 2016 3:05 PM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
there are?
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, 14 June 2016 22:34 (eight years ago) link
are there people on ILX who say "my guy" at the end of a sentence? just wondering, my guy.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 14 June 2016 22:37 (eight years ago) link
http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zuQK6t2Esng
― maura, Tuesday, 14 June 2016 22:38 (eight years ago) link
DORKS WHO SIGN THEIR POSTS LIKE IT'S A FREAKIN EMAIL
― De La Soul is no Major Lazer (ulysses), Tuesday, 14 June 2016 22:58 (eight years ago) link
guilty.
Ludo
― Ludo, Wednesday, 15 June 2016 09:46 (eight years ago) link
bring back Old Fart
― Cosmic Slop, Wednesday, 15 June 2016 10:53 (eight years ago) link
Both Sky and Madonna have similar breasts in both cup size and ability to cause a shitstorm. When Ferreira dropped her debut, Night Time, My Time, three years ago, the bare-breasted album cover nearly broke the internet. Misogynists claimed it was a desperate attempt to sell records; feminists saw it as the calculated move of a defiant young woman. A third unnamed group that included me couldn't help but reminisce on the past, on Madonna's defiantly atomic boobs — the two knockers that altered the course of human history.
http://www.laweekly.com/music/sky-ferreiras-sex-appeal-is-what-pop-music-needs-right-now-7027759
:(
― Evan R, Friday, 17 June 2016 19:31 (eight years ago) link
Even in the candid photo of her nude in the shower, soaking wet, she looks natural, like she's shooting a home video, rather than being photographed by a creeper. She looks like a more cherubic Sharon Stone, icy but also sweet, like a freshly licked lollipop.
― thrusted pelvis-first back (ulysses), Friday, 17 June 2016 19:34 (eight years ago) link
o_O
― Crazy Eddie & Jesus the Kid (Raymond Cummings), Friday, 17 June 2016 19:41 (eight years ago) link
..........what in the actual bloody fuck
― if young slothrop don't trust ya i'm gon' rhyme ya (slothroprhymes), Friday, 17 June 2016 19:44 (eight years ago) link
Welcome to "Art Tavana vs. the World," a monthly column in which L.A. Weekly's angriest (and nerdiest) music critic, Art Tavana, takes on his many nemeses in an ambitious quest to boldly go where no other critic has gone before.
this is the text equivalent of the jerk-off hand motion.
― a basset hound (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Friday, 17 June 2016 19:44 (eight years ago) link
a nerd edgy and ambitious enough to call robb stark a pussy
wow the la weekly ran something shitty, what a surprise
― maura, Friday, 17 June 2016 19:52 (eight years ago) link
i guess this guy had to stay erect after writing a cover story on sasha grey
― maura, Friday, 17 June 2016 19:53 (eight years ago) link
the thing is it's getting traffic and i know from experience that the paper's upper management only cares about clicks
so, you know. fuck it
Read that as:
the thing is it's getting traffic and i know from experience that the paper's upper management only cares about dicks
― Larry 'Leg' Smith (Tom D.), Friday, 17 June 2016 19:54 (eight years ago) link
six of one
― maura, Friday, 17 June 2016 20:02 (eight years ago) link
dickbait
― fact checking cuz, Friday, 17 June 2016 20:16 (eight years ago) link
right-dick to save image
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Friday, 17 June 2016 20:30 (eight years ago) link
the funny thing is when you realize that y'all are the only target audience for this stuff
― yolo mostly (sleepingbag), Friday, 17 June 2016 20:31 (eight years ago) link
You mean, we are the dicks?
― Larry 'Leg' Smith (Tom D.), Friday, 17 June 2016 20:33 (eight years ago) link
don't give them your rage-dicks!
― queen elseq of ærendelle (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 17 June 2016 20:36 (eight years ago) link
this guy's article history reminds me of all the things i hate about l.a.
― R.I.P. Haram-bae, the good posts goy (s.clover), Friday, 17 June 2016 20:41 (eight years ago) link
(also went to look at the independent article and looks like the editors took it down. was there a statement or something or did they just "whoops" away the thing because it was getting clowned?)
― R.I.P. Haram-bae, the good posts goy (s.clover), Friday, 17 June 2016 20:46 (eight years ago) link
Even in the candid photo of her nude in the shower, soaking wet, she looks natural like a terrified young woman about to be butchered by a man wearing a mask made of skin
― Wimmels, Friday, 17 June 2016 22:55 (eight years ago) link
Wait so was the guy in the Independent thing ending every other sentence with "b" because he was so street?
― On this timescale, all matter is liquid. (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Friday, 17 June 2016 23:29 (eight years ago) link
pfft
LA Weekly Music @LAWeeklyMusic 1h1 hour agoSeeing feedback to the @skyferreira story & tweet. We hear you. We truly didn't mean to offend & will address further in an upcoming post.
― nomar, Friday, 17 June 2016 23:40 (eight years ago) link
"like a freshly licked lollipop"
this has to be the worst five words ever written by anyone anywhere ever in human history
― alpine static, Saturday, 18 June 2016 00:04 (eight years ago) link
story is still up of course
― nomar, Saturday, 18 June 2016 00:05 (eight years ago) link
takes on his many nemeses in an ambitious quest to boldly go where no other critic has gone before.
We truly didn't mean to offend
does not add up.
― wizzz! (amateurist), Saturday, 18 June 2016 00:50 (eight years ago) link
i must have confined myself to a weird life/internet bubble for way too long, cuz i can't imagine anyone writing or publishing such a thing. it feels decades out of time.
― oculus lump (contenderizer), Saturday, 18 June 2016 02:14 (eight years ago) link
"Both Sky and Madonna have similar breasts in both cup size and ability to cause a shitstorm."
either this guy is also bad at metaphors or I just learned a lot about the sort of pornography this guy watches
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Saturday, 18 June 2016 02:42 (eight years ago) link
― oculus lump (contenderizer), Friday, June 17, 2016 10:14 PM (29 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
exactly this
― Wimmels, Saturday, 18 June 2016 02:44 (eight years ago) link
also it is indicative of 2016 that an article like this can contain both "she looks... sweet, like a freshly licked lollipop" and "I'm not trying to otherize this woman"
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Saturday, 18 June 2016 03:08 (eight years ago) link
Nothing matters in 2016 and there will be zero consequences for anyone involved, btw
― queen elseq of ærendelle (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 18 June 2016 04:03 (eight years ago) link
consequences = dude had to make his twitter private
― mookieproof, Saturday, 18 June 2016 04:06 (eight years ago) link
L.A. Weekly's angriest (and nerdiest) music critic
is this not f@ntano?
― dyl, Saturday, 18 June 2016 06:21 (eight years ago) link
Nothing matters in 2016 and there will be zero consequences for anyone involved, btw― queen elseq of ærendelle (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, June 18, 2016 5:03 AM (7 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― queen elseq of ærendelle (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, June 18, 2016 5:03 AM (7 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
tbomb
― Oh baby, if only you knew / Gabnebb hit a hundred-and-two (stevie), Saturday, 18 June 2016 11:42 (eight years ago) link
there's an apology piece on L.A. Weekly and the comments section, though it only has half a dozen comments, somehow became a bat signal for MRAs whining about SJWs. http://www.3danvil.com/emoticons/jerkoff.gif
― nomar, Sunday, 19 June 2016 00:39 (eight years ago) link
http://www.laweekly.com/music/about-that-sky-ferreira-piece-it-crossed-the-line-and-were-sorry-7043581
This comment though:
lol this "apology" is too much: within the first paragraph, they cite the one male response to a sexist, misogynist piece as "the most damning and cleverist" and they express amused shock that "even" Teen Vogue took them to task, and even Teen Vogue was right--even those silly little young women seem to have big ol' brains!
"My biggest regret, in all of this, is that WE *MAY* HAVE MADE PEOPLE *FEEL* like L.A. Weekly is a publication that doesn't take women or women's issues seriously."So classic, so elegant. The Little Black Dress of non-apologies.
― Frozen CD, Sunday, 19 June 2016 00:59 (eight years ago) link
it is depressing and sad to read the twitter replies on the L.A. Weekly Music account. somehow this piece and the backlash was picked up by the gamer gate crowd, and there are some vile opinions on there from some vile shitstains.
― nomar, Sunday, 19 June 2016 01:09 (eight years ago) link
oh god m1l0 picked it up. that dude...
― maura, Sunday, 19 June 2016 01:12 (eight years ago) link
Tavana's piece did cross the line. It was offensive, and on behalf of him and L.A. Weekly, I apologize for it.
I am not here to make excuses; instead, I will say that, in this line of work, we make judgment calls on what to say and how to say it all the time, and sometimes we get it wrong. This time, Tavana and I got it wrong.
struggling to see how this is a "non-apology" rather than an just an apology
― soref, Sunday, 19 June 2016 01:21 (eight years ago) link
ugh xxpost
― nomar, Sunday, 19 June 2016 01:58 (eight years ago) link
I will never read this terrible article but the controversy reminded me of sky ferreira. her most recent album is like a treasure trove of rad power pop
― Treeship, Sunday, 19 June 2016 03:01 (eight years ago) link
"Nobody asked me if i was ok" might be my favorite. I suspect a bunch of ppl think of it as a secret personal anthem - something to listen to when you reminisce over old grudges
― Treeship, Sunday, 19 June 2016 03:05 (eight years ago) link
yeah Night Time, My Time is amazing. Can't wait for the next one.
― flappy bird, Sunday, 19 June 2016 03:15 (eight years ago) link
Yeah. It was annoying to me at the time that the album was overshadowed by discussions of the cover art, which in any case I thought people misinterpreted. There was a lot to say about that collection of songs: the record struck an interesting balance between engaging/foiling audience expectations and just being its own thing, which is tough thing to pull off in a highly anticipated debut album that was pushed back a bunch of times. I hope the writer of the LA weekly piece chokes on a pretzel. Not lethally, but enough to give him a good scare and maybe embarass him a little.
― Treeship, Sunday, 19 June 2016 03:43 (eight years ago) link
"lost in my bedroom" is of course one of the great songs of the decade bc of the understated vocals.
― Treeship, Sunday, 19 June 2016 03:55 (eight years ago) link
Fwiw the tweet is refreshingly NOT the typical non apology
Our critics are right and we were wrong. The Sky Ferreira piece was offensive and sexist. We're sorry. https://t.co/aWXMyD5mR1
― Steve Gunn Mann-Dude (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Sunday, 19 June 2016 13:18 (eight years ago) link
What of Mr Tavana, is he even angrier (and nerdier) now?
― Larry 'Leg' Smith (Tom D.), Sunday, 19 June 2016 13:46 (eight years ago) link
the Sasha Grey piece he wrote was also crummy but I guess he successfully cloaked his gross misogyny.
― maura, Sunday, 19 June 2016 13:57 (eight years ago) link
Well, she's got smaller tits than Ferreira, so maybe he wasn't as committed to the assignment.
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Sunday, 19 June 2016 14:12 (eight years ago) link
lol boom!
― Larry 'Leg' Smith (Tom D.), Sunday, 19 June 2016 14:19 (eight years ago) link
coincidentally been listening to night time, my time a lot the past couple weeks; treeship otm re "nobody asked me" but i also go kind of embarrassingly crazy for "omanko".
maura nobly didn't link the sasha grey piece but i googled it anyway, indefensibly yielding a click, then tapped out after a single paragraph of aspiring magazine prose about what she was wearing when she arrived at the restaurant.
― le Histoire du Edgy Miley (difficult listening hour), Sunday, 19 June 2016 14:57 (eight years ago) link
What about how "heavy metal heart" reuses and transforms the main riff of "you're not the one," the track righy before it
― Treeship, Sunday, 19 June 2016 16:04 (eight years ago) link
Tbh the kind of meta-cultural commentary that piece was going for -- trying to "place things" or make claims about what something as large as pop music "needs today," as if cultural is just a self-correcting machine that moves in an eternal circle -- is annoying in itself, apart from the egregious sexism. As a lens it's incapable of registering anything that actually makes music enjoyable or meaningful.
― Treeship, Sunday, 19 June 2016 16:18 (eight years ago) link
http://decibelmagazine.com/blog/2016/6/20/does-the-underground-metal-scene-really-have-a-sjw-problem
Some really awful writing here and fuck Decibel for promoting this bullshit. Subscription cancelled.
― Cosmic Slop, Monday, 20 June 2016 19:09 (eight years ago) link
"self-described" "self-proclaimed" SJWs.
― evol j, Monday, 20 June 2016 19:48 (eight years ago) link
Indeed.
― Cosmic Slop, Monday, 20 June 2016 20:11 (eight years ago) link
hahahahahaha
― queen elseq of ærendelle (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 20 June 2016 20:24 (eight years ago) link
"Extreme metal is art. It is dangerous art and part of its very appeal is indeed that of peril and endangerment. In fact, at many shows, one might come face to face with an artist or two (or fan for that matter) who has spent significant in time in prison for offenses that range from assault to arson to murder. That is the reality of extreme metal."
http://67.media.tumblr.com/34e283f1aaf299a398db1fffa5f16c06/tumblr_nusitr4Rho1rocshso1_500.jpg
― scott seward, Monday, 20 June 2016 21:16 (eight years ago) link
gut-wrenchingly impactful
― le Histoire du Edgy Miley (difficult listening hour), Monday, 20 June 2016 21:21 (eight years ago) link
^^^ me if i don't drink my psyllium seed husks for a few days
― le Histoire du Edgy Miley (difficult listening hour), Monday, 20 June 2016 21:22 (eight years ago) link
― riverine (map), Monday, 20 June 2016 21:24 (eight years ago) link
ahahahaha christ
― imago, Monday, 20 June 2016 21:31 (eight years ago) link
"At an extreme metal show you may stand next to someone who has just played Fallout 4 for 23 straight hours with only minimal breaks for food or water. This is the dangerous reality of the art."
― scott seward, Monday, 20 June 2016 21:34 (eight years ago) link
extreme hydration
― thrusted pelvis-first back (ulysses), Monday, 20 June 2016 21:58 (eight years ago) link
I was kinda shocked to learn that this guy (who's barely capable of writing a sentence in English) actually is a professor. I assumed he made that part up, like when dudes on right-wing message boards claim to be Navy SEALs.
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Monday, 20 June 2016 22:07 (eight years ago) link
have you read the prose of tenured faculty?
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 20 June 2016 22:08 (eight years ago) link
Nope; I barely graduated high school and only did three semesters of community college.
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Monday, 20 June 2016 22:16 (eight years ago) link
I was kinda shocked to learn that this guy (who's barely capable of writing a sentence in English) actually is a professor.
yeah, that was my only reaction, though i was more depressed than shocked. shitty writing + shallow thinking + zero research = college professor teaching a course called "evil, death and dystopia".
― oculus lump (contenderizer), Monday, 20 June 2016 22:43 (eight years ago) link
http://www.fandm.edu/jeffrey-podoshen
― scott seward, Monday, 20 June 2016 22:48 (eight years ago) link
hot topic:
Podoshen, Jeffrey S. (2009), “Distressing Events and Future Purchase Decisions: Jewish Consumers and the Holocaust,” Journal of Consumer Marketing, 26 (4): 263-276.
― scott seward, Monday, 20 June 2016 22:49 (eight years ago) link
dark tourism a pretty catchy term:
Podoshen, Jeffrey S. (2016), “Trajectories in Holocaust Tourism,” Journal of Heritage Tourism (in press).
Podoshen, Jeffrey S., Vivek Venkatesh, Jason Wallin, Susan Andrzejewski and Zheng Jin (2015), “Dystopian Dark Tourism: An Exploratory Examination,” Tourism Management, 51 (December), 316-328.
Podoshen, Jeffrey S., Susan Andrzejewski, Vivek Venkatesh and Jason Wallin (2015), “New Approaches to Dark Tourism Inquiry: A Response to Isaac,” Tourism Management, 51 (December), 331-334.
― scott seward, Monday, 20 June 2016 22:50 (eight years ago) link
SRO:
BOS 200 - Strategies for Organizing
BOS 341 - Marketing
BOS 480 - Issues Facing Organizations in the 21st Century
Students Please Note: I use the system-generated waitlist for admission into all of my classes after intial registration has ended. I understand that waitlists for my classes are extensive and I wish I could accomodate all interested students in my classes. Unfortunately, this is not possible. Students wishing to find a space in my classes should add themselves to the waitlist in Banner. Banner will automatically add students on the waitlist if/when space becomes available.
― scott seward, Monday, 20 June 2016 22:51 (eight years ago) link
nothing says dangerous auth like business school
― riverine (map), Monday, 20 June 2016 22:55 (eight years ago) link
This article examines materialism, conspicuous consumption, race, and hip-hop subculture. Our study used survey data from over 1,200 individuals. Results show that African Americans scored higher in materialism and conspicuous consumption compared to non-African Americans. Additionally, those who prefer hip-hop music scored higher in materialism and conspicuous consumption than those who preferred to listen to music in other genres. Implications and historical context are discussed.
sounds like high-quality scholarship i am willing to listen to whatever this guy has to say about sjws
― lazy rascals, spending their substance, and more, in riotous living (Merdeyeux), Monday, 20 June 2016 23:16 (eight years ago) link
Cant get over Decibel actually publishing that article
― Cosmic Slop, Tuesday, 21 June 2016 13:45 (eight years ago) link
sky ferreira went off on the L.A. Weekly piece
http://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/pop/7415477/sky-ferreira-response-la-weekly-sexist-article-madonna
― nomar, Tuesday, 21 June 2016 19:13 (eight years ago) link
metalsucks went off on the decibel piece
http://www.metalsucks.net/2016/06/21/decibels-guest-column-sjws-destroying-extreme-music-disagree/
― fact checking cuz, Tuesday, 21 June 2016 20:06 (eight years ago) link
Nice x2! Some decent writing came from poor writing
― niels, Wednesday, 22 June 2016 19:13 (eight years ago) link
I mean the former is an aggregation of tweets
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 22 June 2016 20:24 (eight years ago) link
But what tweets
― niels, Wednesday, 22 June 2016 21:42 (eight years ago) link
More replieshttp://www.metalinsider.net/columns/headbangers-brawl/headbangers-brawl-is-there-really-an-sjw-problem-in-extreme-music
― Cosmic Slop, Wednesday, 22 June 2016 23:00 (eight years ago) link
I like how they let the dumbest person go first and let Bram bat cleanup.
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 22 June 2016 23:09 (eight years ago) link
bram's batting third. nick ("Corpsegrinder is a World of Warcraft-playing dork who spends one hour a day growling songs about murder") is in the cleanup spot.
― fact checking cuz, Wednesday, 22 June 2016 23:27 (eight years ago) link
(apologies, but as your fact checking cuz, i do feel kind of obligated)
― fact checking cuz, Wednesday, 22 June 2016 23:28 (eight years ago) link
What's craziest about that metal SJW piece is the implication that murder and arson are normal and natural, and part of the "appeal" of extreme metal. That might be true for some people, but it doesn't exactly amount to a convincing case against social justice in metal.
― jmm, Saturday, 25 June 2016 14:13 (eight years ago) link
What's craziest is no one outside of the like 100 people in metal media cares about any of this.
― queen elseq of ærendelle (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 25 June 2016 14:23 (eight years ago) link
So we should only post examples of bad music writing that the general public actually cares about? Good luck.
― Evan, Saturday, 25 June 2016 15:14 (eight years ago) link
Nah, piece def belonged here, I'm more talking about everyone writing responses
― queen elseq of ærendelle (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 25 June 2016 15:47 (eight years ago) link
murder and arson are normal and natural
Of course, just normal and natural to the EXTREME.
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 25 June 2016 15:54 (eight years ago) link
Personally, I'm waiting to hear the Obama press conference addressing this extreme metal controversy. He should invite the author and his critics out for beers.
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 25 June 2016 15:55 (eight years ago) link
are there ANY music articles that dont appeal to just 100 people in the media these days?
― Cosmic Slop, Saturday, 25 June 2016 16:09 (eight years ago) link
not really
― if young slothrop don't trust ya i'm gon' rhyme ya (slothroprhymes), Saturday, 25 June 2016 16:19 (eight years ago) link
― Cosmic Slop
yes, but they're by chuck klosterman
― hypnic jerk (rushomancy), Saturday, 25 June 2016 17:02 (eight years ago) link
*sobs*
― maura, Saturday, 25 June 2016 18:08 (eight years ago) link
so many people shared that de la soul thing. if you write sucky stuff about things you don't like lots of non-media people will read you.
― scott seward, Saturday, 25 June 2016 18:22 (eight years ago) link
The nihilism and violence of the second wave Norwegian scene was "interesting" insofar as it was a determinate negation of certain stupid tendencies within extreme music but it seems like a bad idea to argue that that sort of thing should be allowed to continue within the scene by people who should know better. The writer of that decibel piece seems like a bad person.
― Treeship, Saturday, 25 June 2016 18:50 (eight years ago) link
sorry but this is appalling https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/jul/04/1990s-spice-girls-celebrity-culture?CMP=fb_gu
― TARANTINO! (dog latin), Monday, 4 July 2016 17:10 (eight years ago) link
Twenty years on, the No 1 album is by Radiohead (from the 90s), our funniest TV show is Frasier (from the 90s), our most eagerly awaited new film is Absolutely Fabulous (from the 90s), the Stone Roses (from the 90s) are forever back-back-BACK
I love Frasier, but I'm confused by this reference to Frasier.
― soref, Monday, 4 July 2016 17:16 (eight years ago) link
Also aren't the Stone Roses from the '80s?
― emil.y, Monday, 4 July 2016 17:17 (eight years ago) link
http://i.imgur.com/8cNmsAq.jpg
shit just got hyperlocal
http://www.tinymixtapes.com/music-review/yg-still-brazy
― mookieproof, Monday, 4 July 2016 17:27 (eight years ago) link
I wondered about that too. Did Frasier win some best sitcom poll? Or is she referring to the daily repeats on C4?
Is anyone eagerly awaiting the Ab Fab movie? That dead horse has been flogged to homeopathic levels.
Sylvia Patterson can be a fantastic features writer, but she was never someone I went to for critical insight. I mean, she gave Kula Shaker's K 9/10 in the NME. This tossed off clickbait is beneath her.
― Poor.Old.Tired.Horse. (Stew), Monday, 4 July 2016 17:32 (eight years ago) link
That YG review is something special.
― husked, tonal wails (irrational), Monday, 4 July 2016 17:33 (eight years ago) link
I'm more disturbed that the writer considers Noel Gallagher a sage.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 4 July 2016 17:35 (eight years ago) link
in which the editor of a website that doesn't pay its writers complains that writers are actually losing money every time they review a record because record companies are too cheap to send them hard copies of the music and how terribly unfair that is:
http://blurtonline.com/2016/07/fred-mills-economics-rock-criticism/
― fact checking cuz, Monday, 4 July 2016 17:47 (eight years ago) link
new board description...
"Still Brazy is analogous to the very biosphere we inhabit, becoming oblique in the same instant we perceive it most lucidly."
― scott seward, Monday, 4 July 2016 18:14 (eight years ago) link
i can't read that fred mills thing. mostly it reminds me that magnet magazine never paid me 10 bucks for a review once and i was too embarrassed to ask them for ten bucks.
― scott seward, Monday, 4 July 2016 18:20 (eight years ago) link
nothing like a tiny mix tapes review to give me an enormous dose of perspective on my own overwriting
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Monday, 4 July 2016 18:27 (eight years ago) link
"Assume, as a base, that a reviewer spends 90 minutes listening to a 45-minute album twice before setting down to write. Then assume he/she puts in another 90 minutes’ minimum to write, proof, revise and finalize a review. Could be more, could be less, depending on the record."
this is not the amount of time it takes me to review a record
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Monday, 4 July 2016 18:32 (eight years ago) link
...I pullquoted way too soon didn't I
"if you actually want to keep the album, you’ll probably want to burn it to a CDR, print out some artwork or at least tracklisting, and insert both into a jewel case. That’s at least another buck for the disc, the printer paper, and the ink used printing it."
in what oblique biosphere are people still doing this in 2016? and why are they paying those prices?
― fact checking cuz, Monday, 4 July 2016 18:40 (eight years ago) link
I do, sometimes.
― Mark G, Monday, 4 July 2016 19:36 (eight years ago) link
I, also, wondered what that Frasier reference was about.
― kinder, Monday, 4 July 2016 20:34 (eight years ago) link
Twenty years on, the No 1 album is by Radiohead (from the 90s), our funniest TV show is Frasier (from the 90s), my favorite jeans are starting to get real worn these days (from the 90s), i subsist entirely on a diet from my storehouse of hungry man tv dinners (from the 90s), and my busted hip from a golfing mishap (from the 90s) is forever back back back
― R.I.P. Haram-bae, the good posts goy (s.clover), Monday, 4 July 2016 20:45 (eight years ago) link
I'm excited for the ABFAB movie!!
― maura, Monday, 4 July 2016 22:07 (eight years ago) link
Me too tho Im waiting for the dvd...
― Cosmic Slop, Monday, 4 July 2016 23:25 (eight years ago) link
God that Frasier reference.
― ♫ Corbyn's on fire / PLP is terrified ♫ (jim in glasgow), Monday, 4 July 2016 23:53 (eight years ago) link
God that YG review
― alpine static, Tuesday, 5 July 2016 07:05 (eight years ago) link
Also stating that the Spice Girls were the first example of a 'band as brand', even after comparing them directly to Take That.
Pretty much every 'it were better in them days' thinkpiece reads like this:
1. I know what you're thinking, but this isn't your typical 'it were better in them days' thinkpiece.2. Here are a bunch of highly-subjective and carefully-selected things that I think were better in them days3. Here are precisely zero examples of things that were worse in them days4. Here is just one tenuous example of a thing that sucks about today.5. Conclusion: 'it were better in them days'.
― TARANTINO! (dog latin), Tuesday, 5 July 2016 14:28 (eight years ago) link
Today we'll be serving a stark antiporous sonic aesthetic, braised in hyperlocalized zones, unfurled with viscous eraism. That's $34.
― thrusted pelvis-first back (ulysses), Thursday, 7 July 2016 17:18 (eight years ago) link
So that's what happened to Fred Mills, whom I remember from his '80s zine days. I want to challenge him to write an article without either a) using the first person or b) referring back to interviews he's done or rockstars he's met.
OK, he can do b) once an article, since I don't believe he's capable of not doing it.
― mike a, Thursday, 7 July 2016 18:13 (eight years ago) link
Perhaps Frasier reruns are popular in England right now? Similar things have happened.
Frasier is probably the most popular TV show on weird Twitter
― queen elseq of ærendelle (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 7 July 2016 18:16 (eight years ago) link
spongebob
― thrusted pelvis-first back (ulysses), Thursday, 7 July 2016 18:44 (eight years ago) link
Seinfeld is back! Ads for Seinfeld on Hulu with Seinfeld fans make me hate that show.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1frO8JjX3do
― scott seward, Thursday, 7 July 2016 20:12 (eight years ago) link
reading or thinking or god forbid watching seinfeld makes me hate that show
― thrusted pelvis-first back (ulysses), Thursday, 7 July 2016 21:03 (eight years ago) link
a little tangential- as terrible as that la weekly piece was, i'm heartened by the response. it's helped me to realize why i find the christine chubbuck fetishists so disturbing. it's not because she died on tv. we've seen lots of people die on tv since then. it's because after she died the wapo published that sally quinn piece that jizzed on her corpse. that's where today's chubbuck-fetishist underground really comes from.
― the event dynamics of power asynchrony (rushomancy), Sunday, 10 July 2016 13:03 (eight years ago) link
i had to google who that was. never heard of her! there was an LA Weekly story about her?
― scott seward, Sunday, 10 July 2016 13:53 (eight years ago) link
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2016/jul/10/robert-lang-photography-camden-town-london
― Odysseus, Sunday, 10 July 2016 14:32 (eight years ago) link
― scott seward
nah, la weekly wasn't even founded until 1978. it's just that some of the backlash against art tavana's piece has focused on contextualizing his the piece in the larger history of journalism, and quinn's 1974 story on chubbuck's suicide is the most horrifying example of that style of writing i've read.
― the event dynamics of power asynchrony (rushomancy), Sunday, 10 July 2016 15:51 (eight years ago) link
i just read the Quinn thing. never heard of any of it.
― scott seward, Sunday, 10 July 2016 16:00 (eight years ago) link
they're actually making i think two films about her. or a film and a play. not too sure. people magazine ran a story about her this february! back when i was young the only people who knew about chubbuck were people who read about her in "answer me!", you know, the standard "faces of death" enthusiasts, but the cult following keeps chugging along.
― the event dynamics of power asynchrony (rushomancy), Sunday, 10 July 2016 16:13 (eight years ago) link
see now i used to read answer me cover to cover and i don't remember the story. sadly, i'm guessing she's not more famous because there is no video.
and yeah two movies. that definitely ups the ante. the Quinn thing is definitely weirdly dated. mentioning that she was a virgin ten times for instance.
― scott seward, Sunday, 10 July 2016 16:18 (eight years ago) link
so weird that there is a total of like two pictures of her on the internet and they are both stills from an interview she gave on t.v.
― scott seward, Sunday, 10 July 2016 16:19 (eight years ago) link
(they got a much softer-looking person to play her in the movie, of course.)
― scott seward, Sunday, 10 July 2016 16:20 (eight years ago) link
i would argue that a lot of the reason she's famous is _because_ there's no video. i apologize here because this is getting super massively off thread topic, but when i was a kid people used to wax rhapsodic about this lost doctor who episode called "tomb of the cybermen", which was supposedly the greatest thing ever. and then they found a copy in hong kong, and it was badly made, racist crap.
if the actual video existed (which it assuredly does not), i don't think people would be as fascinated with her as they are, because no videotape could possibly match the rhapsodically pornographic prose quinn uses to describe chubbuck.
as for the lack of documentation of her life, it's less surprising than people think it is. people hear "news anchor" and they envision, like, katie couric blowing her head off on the nightly news. but she was nowhere near that important. the world's collective memory of her is based on mythology, a mythology created in a washington post article which needs to be understood as grossly inappropriate and offensive.
― the event dynamics of power asynchrony (rushomancy), Sunday, 10 July 2016 16:37 (eight years ago) link
I first found out about chubbock when I was browsing wikipedia and noticed a potentially interesting avenue among several
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/32863603/15236_10152626849962290_3524264623697388226_n.jpg
― O, Barack: flaws (wins), Sunday, 10 July 2016 16:43 (eight years ago) link
i don't find the sally quinn article "grossly inappropriate and offensive"
― oculus lump (contenderizer), Sunday, 10 July 2016 21:52 (eight years ago) link
From five years ago: Man gets furious at Foster The People because he didn't listen to lyrics before playing song to his wife
http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2011-10-03/entertainment/ct-ent-1004-foster-lyrics-20111004_1_school-shooting-pop-music-song
― Shakey δσς (sic), Sunday, 10 July 2016 23:03 (eight years ago) link
Making your venue inclusive now includes letting people in for free, apparently.
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 12 July 2016 20:13 (eight years ago) link
that was your takeaway from that article
― Immediate Follower (NA), Tuesday, 12 July 2016 20:28 (eight years ago) link
kudos
especially since it doesn't actually say that
― lazy rascals, spending their substance, and more, in riotous living (Merdeyeux), Tuesday, 12 July 2016 20:29 (eight years ago) link
I wonder if Noisey's multi-billion dollar parent company followed a PWYC policy when they bought up the space that was functioning DIY venue Death by Audio
― queen elseq of ærendelle (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 13 July 2016 00:35 (eight years ago) link
Also interesting how the idea of paying venue staff union wages never comes up.
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 13 July 2016 00:39 (eight years ago) link
this isn't actually any worse than usual, but man, the adjective abuse in this one.
http://www.avclub.com/review/new-lineup-cleans-heliotropes-act-forgettable-resu-239276
― the event dynamics of power asynchrony (rushomancy), Friday, 15 July 2016 10:58 (eight years ago) link
Waow, for a short review, it really gives the reader a lot of opportunities to nod off/check out.
― hardcore dilettante, Saturday, 16 July 2016 04:23 (eight years ago) link
i kind of want to give it some slack because obviously nobody involved cared at all. mostly i'm just amazed that there's still space in music reviewing for such obviously dgaf writing.
― the event dynamics of power asynchrony (rushomancy), Saturday, 16 July 2016 14:27 (eight years ago) link
um there are new examples posted in this thread like every day
― brimstead, Saturday, 16 July 2016 23:53 (eight years ago) link
idk i think most of the stuff in this thread is bad precisely because the people writing it _care deeply_ about the nauseating bullshit they're inflicting on the world. there's a place for that kind of writing, and it's crossover fanfiction.
― the event dynamics of power asynchrony (rushomancy), Sunday, 17 July 2016 01:36 (eight years ago) link
In response to an article about Speedy Ortiz's Forecastle performance: "please, writers & editors, can we do better out of the gate when we write about humans?"https://www.facebook.com/speedyortiz/posts/1225565654123066
― Frozen CD, Tuesday, 19 July 2016 22:58 (eight years ago) link
Just read that linked to from elsewhere - I'm assuming that you're saying "girls can rock too" articles are the worst journalism, rather than Sadie's piece? Because I think it's spot on.
― emil.y, Tuesday, 19 July 2016 23:03 (eight years ago) link
i assume the shot is at the dopey cos piece, sadie otm
― Twilight Sparkle from My Little Pony said (contenderizer), Wednesday, 20 July 2016 02:12 (eight years ago) link
> Just read that linked to from elsewhere - I'm assuming that you're saying "girls can rock too" articles are the worst journalism, rather than Sadie's piece? Because I think it's spot on.
Yes -- the "girls can rock too" piece was edited so wanted to point to the original version Sadie screengrabbed.
― Frozen CD, Wednesday, 20 July 2016 03:29 (eight years ago) link
Pitchfork's obit for producer Sandy Pearlman belongs here.
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 26 July 2016 21:53 (eight years ago) link
Heard a radio bit this morning about the band the Struts, and here's sort of the online version: http://www.npr.org/2016/07/27/487480437/dressed-to-dazzle-the-struts-want-to-make-rock-fun-again
I thought it was terrible, partly for lines like "The Struts have become a staple on rock radio, and they're selling out concerts," but mostly for constantly invoking Queen and then describing a band that I imagined was not unlike the Darkness and then constantly following up by playing clips of the group's music, which was unlistenable shit that sounded nothing like Bowie and Queen, let alone the Darkness
Here's essentially a similar variation on the same piece: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/features/the-struts-meet-englands-newest-glam-rock-heroes-20160311
Whatever hack is handling these losers deserves a raise.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 27 July 2016 16:30 (eight years ago) link
yeah that band is fucking garbage yuck
― Pull your head on out your hippy haze (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 27 July 2016 16:52 (eight years ago) link
You know they're glam 'cause their single has handclaps on it.
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 27 July 2016 16:59 (eight years ago) link
fwiw I am British and have never heard of this band
this line from the NPR piece jumped out as being especially clumsy
While American hip-hop swept England in the 1990s, Spiller, the son of a gospel musician, was getting hooked on glamorous '70s rock.
if this dude is 27 then depending on what year of the 1990s (any of which a case could be made for "American hip-hop sweeping England") they're referring to he was aged somewhere between one and 11
― aromantic cuck (DJ Mencap), Wednesday, 27 July 2016 20:36 (eight years ago) link
538 has really created this terrible brand of feature where a writer presents a ton of shallow "data points" in an overlong story about an incredibly banal topic...like basically dressing up some point that could be covered in 2 paragraphs with infographics etc
http://pitchfork.com/thepitch/1228-a-brief-history-of-famously-unstreamable-albums-that-ended-up-streaming-anyway/
― Pull your head on out your hippy haze (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 27 July 2016 20:44 (eight years ago) link
Boy that URL just screams not to be clicked
― Have you hugged your timeghoul today? (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Wednesday, 27 July 2016 21:38 (eight years ago) link
but what if there's a kidney stone joke somewhere in there
― map, Wednesday, 27 July 2016 21:41 (eight years ago) link
Hammer and Kerrang! both hot for the struts' chilli, tbf
― An artsy picture, but you know, she was a model. Really successful. (stevie), Thursday, 28 July 2016 11:00 (eight years ago) link
"As I sit at the counter waiting for her, downing refills of water and skimming a menu full of items that in no way can I afford, I consider how surreal it is that Shirley Manson, who is scheduled to make a national television appearance on Jimmy Kimmel later this evening, would take the time to voluntarily meet with some dumb writer. Music journalism is not a particularly glamorous field. In fact, for the last several years, I’ve had my parents under the impression that their only son is a middle manager at RadioShack. Not that that’s any better or worse of a career choice, but at least they understand what the gig entails. So for the life of me I couldn’t understand why she would want to waste a perfectly good evening hanging out with some word jockey."
here we go again
http://m.noisey.vice.com/blog/a-first-date-with-shirley-manson
― maura, Thursday, 28 July 2016 18:16 (eight years ago) link
hah, they look like a modern kerrang band, stevie. Not a good thing either :)
― Cosmic Slop, Thursday, 28 July 2016 18:21 (eight years ago) link
She instantly feels like someone I’ve known for years and accomplishes the impossible in getting me to drop my Ironic Guy facade for long enough to have a meaningful conversation. We crack into the subject of past relationships and dish about exes. I confess my “feelings” to her about breakups I've been through and she tells me I’m afraid of setting myself up to get hurt, which I realize is fully accurate. Suddenly I find myself telling her things that I’ve never admitted to anyone before, or maybe even admitted to myself. It was like she had been playing her own game of 21 Questions about me this whole time and had deduced enough information to solve the puzzle. I feel myself looking into unexplored corners of my dumb heart. Shirley Manson wields that power—to make a person to feel so comfortable, yet so vulnerable. If she likes them, that is.
― thrusted pelvis-first back (ulysses), Thursday, 28 July 2016 18:27 (eight years ago) link
― Have you hugged your timeghoul today? (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Wednesday, July 27, 2016 4:38 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
spoiler alert: there are some albums that weren't available on streaming services when they first came out but THEN.........they became available on streaming service...
the twist is, stay with me here, is that each of these albums was unavailable on streaming for a certain period of time and you can see infographics that compare how long that period was
also, the article points out that Radiohead's In Rainbow's did NOT come out on streaming services when it was first released....because streaming services did not exist at that time
― Pull your head on out your hippy haze (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 28 July 2016 18:31 (eight years ago) link
Dan Ozzi is a completely pedestrian writer with an entirely disagreeable way of putting his personality in his articles. it baffles me that he is getting a co-writing credit for the Laura Jane Grace autobiog as I see no reason why she couldn't do a better job on her own, or at least with a nameless editor
― aromantic cuck (DJ Mencap), Thursday, 28 July 2016 21:56 (eight years ago) link
http://www.wmagazine.com/story/how-rihanna-became-pop-s-many-faced-goddess
On her single “Work,” Rihanna sounds like Charlie Brown’s teacher or a duck trapped in your neighbor’s apartment. She doesn’t make sense as much as she makes noise, commuting a story not through words, but phonetic shapings that sound something like words left out in the rain, their definition bleeding out into each other until there is nothing but a string of guttural utterances set to a pulsating beat. It’s even more pronounced on other tracks on her album “Anti,” like “Desperado” and “Woo,” where one sound elides into the next and the listener has no idea what Rihanna is talking about. Is she too lazy to enunciate? Too emotionally bereft to elucidate? Or too far out that she’s speaking some sort of alien tongue that she’s making up as she goes along, like Björk or Khaleesi?
― fact checking cuz, Wednesday, 3 August 2016 22:01 (eight years ago) link
Dan Ozzi is a completely pedestrian writer with an entirely disagreeable way of putting his personality in his articles.
o t m
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Wednesday, 3 August 2016 22:04 (eight years ago) link
guttural utterances
Great name for a punk band.
― Austin, Wednesday, 3 August 2016 22:06 (eight years ago) link
ahaha so bret easton ellis' "epic rant" about "sjws" that's going around was a defense of that sky ferreira la weekly piece. which, since i just scrolled down to the bottom of it, namechecks a BEE novel.
― goole, Thursday, 4 August 2016 16:43 (eight years ago) link
two of them
― goole, Thursday, 4 August 2016 16:47 (eight years ago) link
that rihanna graf is pretty fucking low
― thrusted pelvis-first back (ulysses), Thursday, 4 August 2016 17:05 (eight years ago) link
"why is this pavarotti guy always yelling? and save the italian for your pizza parties"
― thrusted pelvis-first back (ulysses), Thursday, 4 August 2016 17:07 (eight years ago) link
brian moylan's hands should be cut off
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Thursday, 4 August 2016 17:10 (eight years ago) link
Imagine saying a black person was "post-verbal" and was making "guttural utterances" at literally any other job and see if you were still employed the next day
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Thursday, 4 August 2016 17:20 (eight years ago) link
Presidential nominee?
― Blowout Coombes (President Keyes), Thursday, 4 August 2016 17:31 (eight years ago) link
there's a new Britney album coming so this thread will probably be the gold rush for a while
― The bald Phil Collins impersonator cash grab (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Thursday, 4 August 2016 17:49 (eight years ago) link
christ every time bret easton ellis opens his mouth in 2016 it's like a present-day unironic music cue of "Oh Yeah"
― nomar, Thursday, 4 August 2016 18:11 (eight years ago) link
who is Brian Moylan and why does he get paid to write about stuff he clearly does not understand or know anything about
― Don't boo, vote (DJP), Thursday, 4 August 2016 18:23 (eight years ago) link
Writer for hire, @GuardianUS TV columnist, @Vulture Real Housewives anthropologist. Proud Mustached American.
― thrusted pelvis-first back (ulysses), Thursday, 4 August 2016 18:34 (eight years ago) link
xp to Whiney, you missed "too lazy to enunciate"
should have made that post verbal
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Thursday, 4 August 2016 18:45 (eight years ago) link
whoops http://www.nme.com/news/nme/95553
― Frozen CD, Tuesday, 9 August 2016 14:01 (eight years ago) link
10 White Things Frank Ocean Made His Own on Blondehttp://www.vulture.com/2016/08/on-oceans-blonde-whites-just-another-color.html
― Frozen CD, Monday, 22 August 2016 01:44 (eight years ago) link
"With its swinging rhythm and rich melodic bassline, “Pink + White” isn’t all that “white,” culturally speaking. But by choosing such a title for a song (as opposed to, say, the “black and yellow” also mentioned in the song), the artist is sending a signal. The word “white” featured twice on the tracklisting is as close as you’ll get to a clear indicator from Frank that whiteness is a prominent theme on the album — we probably wouldn’t have noticed otherwise."
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Monday, 22 August 2016 01:47 (eight years ago) link
Whether he’s the tragic warrior-hero of pre–Christian Germanic myth, one-half of a gay duo whose Las Vegas stage performances prominently featured white tigers and white lions, or a character who wields a sword as tall as himself in the fighting game series Soulcalibur (which Frank cited on Nostalgia, Ultra), there’s no doubt that Siegfried, as a name, is as white as it gets.
― thrusted pelvis-first back (ulysses), Monday, 22 August 2016 02:02 (eight years ago) link
'that's gotta mean somethin, right? right??'
― j., Monday, 22 August 2016 02:04 (eight years ago) link
just look at how tall ("white") that sword is
― thrusted pelvis-first back (ulysses), Monday, 22 August 2016 02:06 (eight years ago) link
This is probably just viral advertising for Reductionist Racial Semiotics Bingo, coming soon to Urban Outfitters
― Treeship, Monday, 22 August 2016 04:04 (eight years ago) link
no time even to actually bullshit anymore -- just grab all the signifiers you can find and sprint to press
― le Histoire du Edgy Miley (difficult listening hour), Monday, 22 August 2016 04:09 (eight years ago) link
Cheating because this is just something I found in the bowels of rateyourmusic, not professional, but
The Stooges - Fun HouseI hate it because I hate men. No, I hate it because I hate white men. No, I hate it because I hate masculinity, period. This record does indeed have balls but when did those ever do anyone any good?
Iggy is so violently HETEROSEXUAL and MANLY he literally makes me sick a bit in the pit of my stomach. I literally am filled with intense loathing every time I see him or hear his cocksure macho man caterwauling. This shit is as bad as the Brainbombs or any power electronics you can name for sheer male supremacist wank fantasy material, I don't even know why I single out the Stooges because rock 'n' roll itself is built upon white male supremacy but the Stooges may actually be rock 'n' roll incarnate and therefore make themselves such a huge target for all of hatred of that shit I have inside. IT SWAGGERS. I can't hear the opening riff without being terrified about someone being beaten or raped: this IS incredibly visceral music, but as someone who knows (second-hand, thank god) the violence and evil inherent in the heart of Man it isn't some fun boozy thrill ride, it's repugnant and soul-hurting and deeply fucked. Maybe I'm projecting my own issues with masculinity (heaven knows I have them!) on this record in order to exorcise my hatred by crucifying it in print, but I guess the point here is, again, everyone praising this record as a monolith of abject misanthropic and implicit violence is totally 100% correct and if they ENJOY it for that reason, then more power to them but it seems a microcosm of everything I hate about literally everything, an unwholesome fascist putrescence that crept from the underbelly of the biggest beast the human race has ever had to face.
I'm a hypocrite of course because I dig the Ol Dirty Bastard but w/e I'll talk about that in a thousand other reviews to come.
― punksishippies, Monday, 22 August 2016 05:31 (eight years ago) link
I don't even know why I single out the Stooges because rock 'n' roll itself is built upon white male supremacy but the Stooges may actually be rock 'n' roll incarnate
obviously hasn't been following this thread, Klosterman already predicted that the only rock n roll anyone will know about 100 years from now is Chuck Berry
― it's sort of a layered stunt (sheesh), Monday, 22 August 2016 06:07 (eight years ago) link
just a bunch of 10 yr olds playing "my dingaling" on recorder in music class probably
― it's sort of a layered stunt (sheesh), Monday, 22 August 2016 06:09 (eight years ago) link
I'll talk about that in a thousand other reviews to come.
PLEASE DON'T
― beer say hi to me (stevie), Monday, 22 August 2016 08:39 (eight years ago) link
I'm a hypocrite of course because I dig the Ol Dirty Bastard I'm a hypocrite of course because I dig the Ol Dirty Bastard I'm a hypocrite of course because I dig the Ol Dirty Bastard I'm a hypocrite of course because I dig the Ol Dirty Bastard I'm a hypocrite of course because I dig the Ol Dirty Bastard I'm a hypocrite of course because I dig the Ol Dirty Bastard I'm a hypocrite of course because I dig the Ol Dirty Bastard I'm a hypocrite of course because I dig the Ol Dirty Bastard I'm a hypocrite of course because I dig the Ol Dirty Bastard I'm a hypocrite of course because I dig the Ol Dirty Bastard
― Wimmels, Monday, 22 August 2016 15:03 (eight years ago) link
That's a good review
― imago, Monday, 22 August 2016 15:22 (eight years ago) link
Apart from calling rock and roll white, obv
yeah I'm charmed by its incoherence tbh, also the more the writer said they hated Fun House the less I believed them
― aromantic cuck (DJ Mencap), Monday, 22 August 2016 16:07 (eight years ago) link
What potentialities does this have? How can it most productively literally strive against its own literally reactionary marketing & literally outmoded* orthodoxies?
*They're literally outmoded. Deal.
― the enigma of dagmar krause (wins), Monday, 22 August 2016 16:09 (eight years ago) link
― imago, Monday, 22 August 2016 16:40 (eight years ago) link
"So it is that the Millennial Whoop evokes a kind of primordial sense that everything will be alright. You know these notes. You’ve heard this before. There’s nothing out of the ordinary or scary here. You don’t need to learn the words or know a particular language or think deeply about meaning. You’re safe. In the age of climate change and economic injustice and racial violence, you can take a few moments to forget everything and shout with exuberance at the top of your lungs. Just dance and feel how awesome it is to be alive right now. Wa-oh-wa-oh."
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Thursday, 25 August 2016 14:28 (eight years ago) link
the arpeggio was in fact invented by millennials for their pop soma
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Thursday, 25 August 2016 14:29 (eight years ago) link
Just dance and feel how awesome it is to be alive right now.
cf. the entire history of music
― blafe and sand (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 25 August 2016 14:31 (eight years ago) link
every micro-generation imagines itself as less frivolous than the next
― dc, Thursday, 25 August 2016 14:36 (eight years ago) link
That reads like biting sarcastic satire
― punksishippies, Thursday, 25 August 2016 21:31 (eight years ago) link
― imago, Thursday, 25 August 2016 21:41 (eight years ago) link
"Mary had a Little Lamb" at 438 Hz A4 is so disturbing because those notes, I don't know them, and it is the knowing of the notes that makes music comforting and not the intervals.
― veggie sticks potato snacks (Sufjan Grafton), Thursday, 25 August 2016 21:48 (eight years ago) link
http://www.theverge.com/2016/8/26/12657446/young-thug-harambe-song-no-my-name-is-jeffrey
― 龜, Friday, 26 August 2016 17:17 (eight years ago) link
It’s at this point that the Smith quote appears. The obvious conclusion is that Ocean is talking to Smith, or at least sitting and listening to “A Fond Farewell” while he ponders questions that have no answers.
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Friday, 26 August 2016 19:36 (eight years ago) link
This is the strangest thing I've ever seen on a music blog. Is it satire or sponsored content or...?http://www.alternativenation.net/live-nation-ceo-michael-rapino-influenced-life/
― Frozen CD, Friday, 26 August 2016 20:53 (eight years ago) link
― 龜, Friday, August 26, 2016 12:17 PM (three hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
They spelled Jeffery wrong.
― geoffreyess, Friday, 26 August 2016 21:15 (eight years ago) link
Back before Fred Durst revealed himself as the Antikurt, he listed four "perfect records" for a Spin profile: Nevermind, Ten, Aenima, and Nothing's Shocking. Perfect--Nirvana for cred, Pearl Jam for reach, Tool for stupidity posing as underground, Jane's Addiction for ambition posing as transgression. All that's missing is hip hop--which for Bizkit, whatever its roots in Durst's grayboy humanism and blackface sexism, turns out to be about market positioning--and Smashing Pumpkins for ambition indistinguishable from egomania.
You need at least two ambitions in there because the truly new thing about Durst is the candor of his will to power. True, hip hoppers often comport themselves as black capitalists first, artists second. But black capitalism is marginal by definition. Durst's isn't. However symbolic his Interscope vice-presidency may prove, his rise to the top of the center was a striking piece of image-making for a trigger-happy loudmouth who'd just ridden his second album into Hollywood from the Jacksonville he'd sworn never to leave. Mewl about "mooks" all you want, ring Durst up for inciting to rape at Woodstock 99, but recognize that he shares those crimes against progress with America itself. In his ambition he's an innovator. [...]Who's the vice-president mad at? Who else? Playa-haters, plus idol turned Bizkit basher Trent Reznor, who inspires a tirade called "Hot Dog." Given which gender usually gets raped, this is probably just as well. But it's tedious in a way rock's ambitious and insecure so often are. Maybe we'd all be better off artistically if Durst continued to confront, however pathologically, the pain he shares with the guys who love him. Instead he's playing a playa, a fast-lane success fantasy for "mooks" as surely as Christina Aguilera is for the girls they fear and crave. What a bitch.
― punksishippies, Friday, 26 August 2016 23:22 (eight years ago) link
wow.. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/music/what-to-listen-to/britney-spears-glory-review/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter
― TARANTINO! (dog latin), Saturday, 27 August 2016 07:32 (eight years ago) link
on top of the offensive misrepresentations of britney, this paragraph gets poptimism wrong as possible:
I have, though, always been a sucker for the effervescence of pure pop music, and on some superficial levels this album is machine tooled perfection, in that every track sounds like a single, with slick grooves, zinging hooks, ear-worm melodies, catchy choruses and some little spike of tension in the Britney-shaped centre that makes you question your own judgement as you find yourself singing along.
― niels, Saturday, 27 August 2016 08:47 (eight years ago) link
got as far as 'by neil mccormick, music critic' and peaced out tbh
― i can pee through time (bizarro gazzara), Saturday, 27 August 2016 12:09 (eight years ago) link
slick grooves, zinging hooks and catchy choruses do tend to make me question my own judgement
― thrusted pelvis-first back (ulysses), Saturday, 27 August 2016 16:46 (eight years ago) link
― niels, Saturday, 27 August 2016 16:47 (eight years ago) link
i really enjoyed this album... but did i "enjoy" it?
― thrusted pelvis-first back (ulysses), Saturday, 27 August 2016 17:42 (eight years ago) link
this is a really bad review of a shining show at the triple rock. it contains this gem: "I knew nothing about Shining, the next band to take the stage. Being me, I hate to research bands."
https://girlattherockshows.wordpress.com/2016/08/25/this-is-not-a-dream/
― The bald Phil Collins impersonator cash grab (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Sunday, 28 August 2016 10:54 (eight years ago) link
Last night this whole idea of being surprised backfired and it backfired hard.
I'm still trying to reconcile the plot hole where she was completely disgusted yet was still close enough to the stage when the singer was dancing with an audience member that she feared an interaction
― mh 😏, Sunday, 28 August 2016 14:40 (eight years ago) link
Huh didn't know about that blog, though that Swordlord productions dude stays putting on 10 band bills of metal bands with hard to read logos
― Pull your head on out your hippy haze (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Sunday, 28 August 2016 14:44 (eight years ago) link
MH - it's a small venue, being close to the stage or "farther back" on the floor is like 15 feet difference
― Pull your head on out your hippy haze (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Sunday, 28 August 2016 14:47 (eight years ago) link
Triple Rock? seemed bigger than that to me when I was there, like you could go chill by the back bar
― mh 😏, Sunday, 28 August 2016 14:53 (eight years ago) link
might be misremembering
― mh 😏, Sunday, 28 August 2016 14:54 (eight years ago) link
the comments on that blogpost are something else
Black metal in its purest form is the complete opposite of “nice”. The genre has a long and storied history of fucking with people’s heads and not giving a damn what kind of psychological trauma is inflicted.Mayhem’s vocalist Dead would sniff dead ravens before a show. They also often had pig heads on pikes and lots of animal blood. Several of their former members are dead.
Mayhem’s vocalist Dead would sniff dead ravens before a show. They also often had pig heads on pikes and lots of animal blood. Several of their former members are dead.
"Several of their former members are dead" is also true of e.g. Freddie and the Dreamers tbf
― soref, Sunday, 28 August 2016 16:16 (eight years ago) link
FUKKAUGUST 27, 2016 AT 12:19 PMYou don’t get it, darling. This is MEANT TO BE disturbing. This is no theatrics. Black Metal is a Music for which people have been killing dach other back in a day. It is no ‘safe haven’ to go and identify with some lame makeshift community. It is evil. And I do not mean some imaginary, methaphorical, conventional PC evil. It is evil in flesh and blood.
https://pitofultimatedarkshadows.files.wordpress.com/2014/11/evil.jpg
― soref, Sunday, 28 August 2016 16:18 (eight years ago) link
Actual evil is a bad thing, iirc. You're not supposed to murder people.
― jmm, Sunday, 28 August 2016 17:19 (eight years ago) link
idk
she had a bad time. it seems unfair to hoist her up for her writing
― Flamenco Drop (VegemiteGrrl), Sunday, 28 August 2016 17:35 (eight years ago) link
Bad show. Bad writing. Bad comments.
― how's life, Sunday, 28 August 2016 17:45 (eight years ago) link
The comments are of course ridiculous for the most part, but going to see Shining and complaining about the pro-self-harm, bloody, hostile, suicidal vibe is like going to see Parliament and saying "I was aghast at how funky the show became"
― The bald Phil Collins impersonator cash grab (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Sunday, 28 August 2016 18:11 (eight years ago) link
Are you making a sly reference to this canonical piece of music writing, my friend?
― Put Out More Flag Posts (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 28 August 2016 18:13 (eight years ago) link
lol classic
― mh 😏, Sunday, 28 August 2016 18:57 (eight years ago) link
"I would have loved to see Lars Ulrich from Metallica, who can be just as entertaining with speeches as Kanye West, be on hand to announce the nominees. If he wasn't available, maybe Steven Tyler? The Aerosmith singer has a new country album out, after all, and can usually be counted on for a potentially viral moment.
Coldplay has a show in Colorado tonight, but had a day off yesterday. Alessia Cara, who is on that tour, was at the VMAs. Surely the band could have come in for a special performance. Both Beyonce AND Rihanna were there -- imagine both of them coming out for “Hymn for the Weekend” and “Princess of China.” Alas, it wasn’t to be.
So many rock acts have new music either out or on the way. Surely, one could have been booked to perform. In the golden days of MTV, bands would leave holes in their touring schedules around the VMAs, seeing it as a prime promotion opportunity for a forthcoming project. That said: Green Day’s first album in four years, Revolution Radio, is out on Oct. 7. Korn’s 12th studio release, The Serenity of the Suffering, is out Oct. 21. Disturbed’s cover of Simon and Garfunkel’s “The Sound of Silence” was used on Dancing with the Stars for goodness sake. Taylor Momsen’s The Pretty Reckless has a hit with “Take Me Down,” and would surely attract some viewers. What about 5 Seconds of Summer? That band is exactly the right demo for the VMA audience.
Bon Jovi has a new record -- This House is Not for Sale -- coming out October 21, and the single just dropped. Surely the VMAs could have found a way to work with a guy that has so much history with the channel (Jon Bon Jovi once gave away his childhood home in an early MTV contest)."
http://www.billboard.com/articles/events/vma/7488030/for-those-looking-to-rock-at-the-2016-vmas-a-disappointing-show
surely the VMAs should've booked Bon Jovi
― Frozen CD, Monday, 29 August 2016 21:38 (eight years ago) link
why does mtv never want to rock
― mh 😏, Monday, 29 August 2016 21:46 (eight years ago) link
Their VMA nomination for “Missing You” -- where the band surprised fans with video chats thanking them for support
rock so popular that bands individually call up their fans and thank them for support?
― mh 😏, Monday, 29 August 2016 21:50 (eight years ago) link
who says a funk show can't play rock?
― fact checking cuz, Monday, 29 August 2016 21:51 (eight years ago) link
is this supposed to be a list of rock acts that are relevant to our times because wow
― mh 😏, Monday, 29 August 2016 21:52 (eight years ago) link
l (Jon Bon Jovi once gave away his childhood home in an early MTV contest)
― thrusted pelvis-first back (ulysses), Monday, 29 August 2016 23:32 (eight years ago) link
Disturbed’s cover of Simon and Garfunkel’s “The Sound of Silence” was used on Dancing with the Stars for goodness sake
― nomar, Monday, 29 August 2016 23:33 (eight years ago) link
Panic! At the Disco’s anthem, “Victorious,” contains lyrics that would have been perfect for a VMA crowd -- "Tonight we are victorious / Champagne pouring over us” -- and a driving guitar line would have lit up Madison Square Garden, easy.
― nomar, Monday, 29 August 2016 23:34 (eight years ago) link
was he told to write that article and decided to sabotage it by making all rock sound really bad
― mh 😏, Monday, 29 August 2016 23:56 (eight years ago) link
Make the VMAs White Again
― indie fresh (m coleman), Monday, 29 August 2016 23:57 (eight years ago) link
Terry Teachout on why rock 'n' roll is doomed to historical irrelevance, and why preservers of "golden-age popular music" like Diana Krall and John Pizzarelli are the future.
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Saturday, 3 September 2016 19:52 (eight years ago) link
Teachout is actually a good writer and critic--books on Ellington and Armstrong are well done. He posits himself as a "musically trained" critic who tends to look down on laymen who don't have his background. Also dislikes Albert Murray and Stanley Crouch, who I think are two great critics. Strange guy with a lot of virtues and what I think are some pretty big blind spots.
― Edd Hurt, Saturday, 3 September 2016 20:24 (eight years ago) link
Yeah, I liked his Ellington book a lot - got me to revisit the guy's music, which I'd mostly shrugged off as Fine, But Not For Me.
I like Murray, can't stand Crouch. And not because of his musical taste; because of his prose style.
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Saturday, 3 September 2016 20:49 (eight years ago) link
This exchange made me think Teachout wasn't exactly well-equipped to write about Ellington, or anyone else, for that matter. So I skipped his book (though his Armstrong bio is not completely worthless).
LOPEZ: One of the “peculiarities” of Duke Ellington’s career, you write, is that “he was a major composer but not an influential one.” Why is that? How does that happen? TEACHOUT: He wrote great music, but his techniques were so intensely personal and unique unto himself that they were for all intents and purposes inimitable. Hence he didn’t influence anybody — all that other artists could do was play his songs in their own ways.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Saturday, 3 September 2016 21:06 (eight years ago) link
Yeah, that's a pretty ridiculous definition of "influence."
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Saturday, 3 September 2016 21:13 (eight years ago) link
That is one strange article. It's fair enough to say "I prefer jazz and pre-rock pop to rock" but it's pretty bizarre to extend that to making broader claims that the most celebrated and ubiquitous classic rock music actually has no real audience.
In what universe do these statements make sense?:
The rock of the baby boomers and their Gen-X siblings is, up to a point, a different story. Nevertheless, most of it, from the Who’s “My Generation” in 1965 to Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit” in 1991, was also created by young people for consumption by younger people, which helps to explain why so little of it is capable of holding our attention today.
Who now listens to (say) America, Jethro Tull’s Aqualung, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young’s 4 Way Street, Yes’s Fragile, the Doors’ L.A. Woman, Elton John’s Madman Across the Water, Pink Floyd’s Meddle or Janis Joplin’s Pearl for any possible reason other than nostalgia?)
― Hi! I'm twice-coloured! (Sund4r), Saturday, 3 September 2016 21:19 (eight years ago) link
Does seem to discount Ellington's influence on Mingus and George Russell, for example. The above is kinda what makes Teachout so frustrating--on the one hand, he has a point there, because Ellington's manner and his ability to integrate his players into his vehicles for their idiosyncratic abilities is really important. But Teachout is being so reductive. Neo-con jazz writer who's convinced that no one who doesn't actually play music, as he did before he began writing full-time, has anything worthwhile to say.
― Edd Hurt, Saturday, 3 September 2016 21:27 (eight years ago) link
Most surprising of all is the long list of rock and contemporary pop singers, including Natalie Cole, Bob Dylan, Paul McCartney, Linda Ronstadt, and Rod Stewart, who have recorded golden-age pop songs to profitable effect and (in some cases) with passable artistic success.
Cole's Unforgettable was 25 years ago, and Ronstadt's What's New was over 30 years ago (and Ronstadt retired five years ago). You're really stretching the definition of "contemporary" there, Terry.
(also, I love how the photo of the Beatles they chose was one from the week or so when Jimmy Nicol replaced Ringo on tour.)
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Saturday, 3 September 2016 21:41 (eight years ago) link
The Jimmy Nicol version of The Beatles will be the one to be celebrated by future generations of aging contrarians and blowhards.
― Al Moon Faced Poon (Moodles), Saturday, 3 September 2016 21:47 (eight years ago) link
"by such younger artists as Diana Krall and John Pizzarelli"
― velko, Saturday, 3 September 2016 22:04 (eight years ago) link
if you're going to go this route just go full-on snob and say that popular music lacks the depth and sophistication of the 19th century classical masters. at least beethoven's music is worth being snobby over.
― a confederacy of lampreys (rushomancy), Sunday, 4 September 2016 17:09 (eight years ago) link
Pfft, no one has ever equalled the majesty and brilliance of Og, Son of Magog That man could hit a stone against a stone in a way that no one has equalled yet.
― thrusted pelvis-first back (ulysses), Sunday, 4 September 2016 17:13 (eight years ago) link
I know Nate P is an ILM bro (and is imo generally a strong writer) but that De La review on Pitchfork today was some condescending ageist garbage
― Wimmels, Sunday, 4 September 2016 17:31 (eight years ago) link
nobody knows how to _really_ play a flute made out of a human femur anymore
― a confederacy of lampreys (rushomancy), Sunday, 4 September 2016 22:43 (eight years ago) link
was this already on here? it's kinda old but it brightened my day.
"How pertinent is music from this album? “Starman” is used in the 2016 Academy Award Best Picture Nominee, The Martian."
"If there is one album that serves as a definitive example of the era, this is it. Alice In Chains, Soundgarden and Nirvana almost fit the bill, but something about Pearl Jam, and specifically this album, crossed from alternative to mainstream and boldly proclaimed that the best music being made during the 1990s was outside the box."
"Do you know this album from 1994? Portishead is an English band, named after an English town, consisting of three fellas and a sullen female. Okay, she’s not actually sullen. Beth Gibbons is pretty damn cool, but everything about this album is soaked in sullen song. And it’s perfect for…well…doing the things adults do. It’s also a good one for single gents to have, as any liberated, independent chick will flip through your collection and pause for this cause."
"Do you like to get crunk? Before that word became a thing, it was a thing, and Outkast did it. They did it well."
"Every year, someone discovers Grace for the first time, looks at the album cover, listens to it, thinks it was probably recorded in 2012, and look to see if Jeff is playing anywhere nearby. Jeff has been dead for almost 20 years. It’s quite remarkable."
http://www.goliath.com/music/12-albums-every-dude-should-own/6/
― scott seward, Tuesday, 6 September 2016 18:10 (eight years ago) link
just dude albums
― dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Tuesday, 6 September 2016 18:13 (eight years ago) link
I was going to not click since the concept of 12 dude albums is a great "worst music writing" concept
it seems they went the "ok, we need at least one album from each of these different segments, but be 'offbeat' and pick something less obvious"
― dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Tuesday, 6 September 2016 18:17 (eight years ago) link
(they're all still pretty obvious)
― dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Tuesday, 6 September 2016 18:18 (eight years ago) link
Ted Gioia: Bob Lefsetz with more jazz albums in his collection.
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 17:50 (eight years ago) link
Saw some stupid BBC podcast header about how Steve Reich's "experiments in rhythm" paved the way for Daft Punk. No article text to post, but, what?
― the last famous person you were surprised to discover was actually (man alive), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 17:53 (eight years ago) link
American minimalism paved the way for practically all electronic dance music
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 7 September 2016 19:20 (eight years ago) link
Reich though?
― the last famous person you were surprised to discover was actually (man alive), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 19:21 (eight years ago) link
they probably mean that in reich, riley, cage etc etc paved the way for silver apples, kraftwerk etc thereby spawning all electronic and dance music
― Pull your head on out your hippy haze (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 19:23 (eight years ago) link
i mean it's kinda the same way you could say that chuck berry "paved the way" for uh...metallica or something like there's not much direct correlation but in the macro he kind of invented the rock band format and the basis of rock music
― Pull your head on out your hippy haze (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 19:24 (eight years ago) link
Nate P is an ILM bro (and is imo generally a strong writer) but that De La review on Pitchfork today was some condescending ageist garbage
― Wimmels, Sunday, September 4, 2016 12:31 PM (three days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
I'm not someone who always agrees w Nate but I thought that was a pretty fair review
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 19:25 (eight years ago) link
I guess I've seen the claim before but I'm a little suspicious of it, like I have a feeling it might be like that record that set ragas to a disco beat and people pretend like it's proto-acid-house or some shit when it's totally just superficially coincidental use of the same technology. But hype gonna hype.
― the last famous person you were surprised to discover was actually (man alive), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 19:30 (eight years ago) link
from an old interview I found online with Carl Craig
TN: You yourself have explored the classical-electronic mix prettyextensively, mixing those two genres live with Francesco Tristanoand on record with Moritz von Oswald. What’s so fascinating aboutthe combination of human and machine?
CC: The experimental works of John Cage and Steve Reich are a biginfluence, using tape loops and things like that, it’s within the samerealm of using a CR-78 or an echo drum machine, something thatsounds very percussive and synthetic at the same time. It wasn’t everlike, ‘Okay this is what you’ve got to listen to’, we’ve been very goodat spreading our horizons in listening to things that are different anddiverse
― Pull your head on out your hippy haze (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 19:36 (eight years ago) link
from 75 Rolling Stone feature on Kraftwerk:
"Autobahn" describes a journey on the German expressway leading in and out of Berlin, and underscores the group's concern with pulse and wave over note and rhythm. A Beach Boys record it is not, even though a line from the piece – "Wir fahr'n, fahr'n, fahr'n auf der Autobahn" ("We're driving, driving, driving on the autobahn") – sounds uncannily reminiscent of the line from America's premier car group: "And she'll have fun, fun, fun till her daddy takes her T-Bird away." Hütter and Schneider, in fact, claim no U.S. groups as influences. Their favorites include such space-rock outfits as Pink Floyd, Yes and Tangerine Dream, as well as avant-garde classicists John Cage, Terry Riley and, particularly, countryman Karlheinz Stockhausen, whose pioneering electronic work provides a "spiritual" tie to their own.
― Pull your head on out your hippy haze (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 19:37 (eight years ago) link
Electronic music came from continental Europe because Jean Michael Jarre said so.
― the hair - it's lost its energy (Turrican), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 19:39 (eight years ago) link
*Michel
That’s one of the things that I enjoyed the most with the Electronica project: remembering that electronic music has nothing to do with the United States. It’s not related to jazz, blues, rock, it comes from continental Europe.It has nothing to do with English-speaking countries, it was born in Germany with Stockhausen and in France with Pierre Schaefer, then with the Germans on one side, or me. We each come with our own particularities and we have held this legacy: these long instrumentals are the legacy of music tied with technology.
It has nothing to do with English-speaking countries, it was born in Germany with Stockhausen and in France with Pierre Schaefer, then with the Germans on one side, or me. We each come with our own particularities and we have held this legacy: these long instrumentals are the legacy of music tied with technology.
http://www.konbini.com/en/entertainment-2/jean-michel-jarre-interview
― the hair - it's lost its energy (Turrican), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 19:43 (eight years ago) link
people pretend like it's proto-acid-house or some shit when it's totally just superficially coincidental use of the same technology
feel like the element of coincidence is what appeals to ppl the most about this if anything
― The Codling Of The London Suede (Legal Warning Across The Atlantic) (DJ Mencap), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 20:17 (eight years ago) link
yeah, "pave the way", "influenced", "inspired", they're narrative choices. i don't have a lot of time for that kind of Whig cultural history but i'm not sure when writers use them they are always claiming literal lineal descent, just structuring their observations.
every new thing rewrites every old thing that came before it anyway.
― you can't drowned a duck (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 20:21 (eight years ago) link
some people obviously are literally claiming lines of descent but like who cares what idiots think?
― you can't drowned a duck (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 20:22 (eight years ago) link
is this a narrative people are using or just one we're annoyed about but isn't what is actually being said?
― dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 20:24 (eight years ago) link
feel like it's second-generation thinkpieces and critical thought that tend to make bad generalizations like that and assume lineage and not the original reviews
― dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 20:25 (eight years ago) link
always enjoy white Germano-premicists being deaf to e.g. the latin rhythms in House music or the call and response running thru Disco etc
― you can't drowned a duck (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 20:26 (eight years ago) link
xp yeah largely but god there are a lot of second-generation makes you thinkpieces out there now
― you can't drowned a duck (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 20:27 (eight years ago) link
i guess quotes from the artists don't cut it?
― Pull your head on out your hippy haze (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 20:36 (eight years ago) link
man, fucking everybody in the '70s said they were influenced by stockhausen. i think it was one of those "you had to be there" things.
― a confederacy of lampreys (rushomancy), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 20:41 (eight years ago) link
i wouldn't treat them like gospel, artists are just as capable of retconning their own process as anybody else. but i'm not arguing with "i was listening to this" or "i wanted to sound like that" so much as "Artist X led to Artist Y" or "without Piece A there would be no Piece B"
― you can't drowned a duck (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 20:43 (eight years ago) link
"influenced by" and "sounds like" can be very different things
― dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 20:44 (eight years ago) link
i mean i'm barely arguing, more musing out loud: i would be cool with narrative histories of culture that start in the now and go backwards - Carl Craig begat Steve Reich etc etc
― you can't drowned a duck (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 20:44 (eight years ago) link
Ok Dr Who
― Pull your head on out your hippy haze (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 20:46 (eight years ago) link
the Beach Boys are in "Autobahn" and it doesn't really matter what Ralf or Florian say about it
― you can't drowned a duck (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 20:47 (eight years ago) link
alls i'm saying is that i don't find it particularly hard to believe that ppl who got involved in early electronic music or sequencer stuff would be influenced by nerdy composers who made music like rainbow in curved air or music for 18 musicians that basically sound like sequencers
― Pull your head on out your hippy haze (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 20:48 (eight years ago) link
no i can believe that too, i just think influence is more nebulous and difficult to delineate than a simple "X becomes Y" argument. and it's just as possible that musicians discover things that are reminiscent of what they're doing after they've started doing it. so in the Carl Craig quote above sure he's interested in Cage and Reich but it doesn't say when or how, he could just as easily have come to them after he'd noticed affinities with sounds and ideas he was already producing
― you can't drowned a duck (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 20:53 (eight years ago) link
and that's still influence but it works both ways, we hear and understand the stuff that's gone before us through the filter of our own already formed or half-formed ideas - again, like "Ragas to a Disco Beat", we hear it now in a different way to how it would sound in 1982 or whenever
― you can't drowned a duck (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 7 September 2016 20:55 (eight years ago) link
Imagine wondering what Elysia Crampton's music sounded like and then opening this
http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/22103-elysia-crampton-elysia-crampton-presents-demon-city/
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Thursday, 8 September 2016 21:51 (eight years ago) link
The Crampton review reads like an especially pretentious press release. She is an interesting artist who may actually combine Justin Bieber and Steve Reich, but the breathless prose here...whew. "It is victorious in so many ways."
― Edd Hurt, Thursday, 8 September 2016 21:57 (eight years ago) link
The early Reich tape pieces are surely not insignificant in the development of electronic loop-based music?
― Hi! I'm twice-coloured! (Sund4r), Thursday, 8 September 2016 22:53 (eight years ago) link
pretty sure the invention of synthesizers had the biggest effect.. It's not like rock music where it was so easy to imitate other players etc...
― brimstead, Friday, 9 September 2016 00:16 (eight years ago) link
Idk I'm dumb
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/25/books/review/bruce-springsteen-born-to-run-richard-ford.html?_r=0
this is very bad
― adam, Monday, 26 September 2016 12:18 (eight years ago) link
you'd think a novelist might spend a little more time analyzing the actual book rather than proving his "i love rock and roll" bona fides in but NO
― Britney Thinkpeace (m coleman), Monday, 26 September 2016 13:08 (eight years ago) link
can't believe he did rob sheffield's patented lyric-appropriation sentence riff
― Britney Thinkpeace (m coleman), Monday, 26 September 2016 13:09 (eight years ago) link
david brooks wrote about springsteen too. all the white guys are assembling.
― maura, Monday, 26 September 2016 13:54 (eight years ago) link
People who see art from the outside — from the spectator seats where we’re intended to see it — often don’t get the making of art very right. Which is a victimless crime. But it’s partly because we don’t quite get it that hosts of fans are drawn to Springsteen. His work’s entirety — the songs, the music, the guitar, the voice, the persona, the gyrations, the recitativos, the whole artifice of “the act,” or what Springsteen calls the “sum of all my parts” — is so dense, involved and authentic-seeming as to all but defy what we think we know about how regular human beings make things at ground level.
this is a better passage if you pretend it's describing weird al yankovic
― adam, Monday, 26 September 2016 14:19 (eight years ago) link
old white conservatives/intellectuals love to really harp on about Springsteen because he makes them think they could understand the common man, and they also like to imagine he is the common man
― dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Monday, 26 September 2016 14:26 (eight years ago) link
conservatives listen to the boss?
― Wimmels, Monday, 26 September 2016 14:33 (eight years ago) link
maura just said brooks wrote about him, maybe that doesn't necessarily mean he listened
― dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Monday, 26 September 2016 14:34 (eight years ago) link
Loads. xp
― the tightening is plateauing (Le Bateau Ivre), Monday, 26 September 2016 14:35 (eight years ago) link
insert 100 jokes about not listening to the "born in the usa" lyrics
― dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Monday, 26 September 2016 14:40 (eight years ago) link
I think this review is embarrassing and I *am* an old white guy
― Britney Thinkpeace (m coleman), Monday, 26 September 2016 14:45 (eight years ago) link
Bruce Springsteen is music for conservatives.
― Frederik B, Monday, 26 September 2016 14:50 (eight years ago) link
if you define conservatives in a way that means pining for a traditionalism that never existed, sure
― dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Monday, 26 September 2016 14:52 (eight years ago) link
how do u figure? springsteen's music is as much or more about the tragedies of a supposed idyllic time than it is about celebrating it. unless that traditionalism means a time when guitar music reigned supreme.
― Mordy, Monday, 26 September 2016 14:54 (eight years ago) link
it depends what lens you use to look at it. if you think of blue collar, small town people who have been kicked around and screwed over, and this idea that there's some ideal working man's america out there... some sort of american greatness that's been bruised not by you or me but by the man
if you take that and remove all the trappings of social justice that Springsteen believes in, which you don't necessarily get from a surface reading, you end up with "america was great"
― dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Monday, 26 September 2016 15:24 (eight years ago) link
This thread is spawning some candidates for OP's question on its own
― punksishippies, Monday, 26 September 2016 15:30 (eight years ago) link
Well, it's backwards looking musically. The review uses a quote from Springsteen on how he never wanted band democracy, and that's central as well. It's individualistic music, it's music for pulling yourself up by your boostraps, rather than of systemic oppression (or, as it's otherwise known: The real world). Bruce hasn't even gone through a self-negating phase like for instance Dylan, no, it's his band that he keeps breaking up and getting back together. The leader stays, the collective is rearranged. And while he has tried to broaden it, the central individual in the Springsteen mythos remains the great white male.
Conservative music can be good, though. I really enjoyed a Springsteen festival show a few years back, danced like mad. But there's a conservative core to Springsteen, and it bothers me everytime Born in the USA is presented as this liberal song getting horribly misread, when it contains such a heap of jingoistic, patriotic sentiment in the choruses, and music throughout. Springsteen wrote a song that didn't bring across the sentiment he aimed for, don't blame Reagan for figuring that out.
All of this is imo, obviously.
― Frederik B, Monday, 26 September 2016 15:31 (eight years ago) link
i guess i'm thinking about songs like "the river" where it may be about the white working class but it's super bleak + depressing
― Mordy, Monday, 26 September 2016 15:35 (eight years ago) link
if only being white and working class could be... great again
― dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Monday, 26 September 2016 15:37 (eight years ago) link
The River is about tragedies of the present, it's implied that things were better in the past ('I got a job working construction for the Johnstown Company / But lately there ain't been much work on account of the economy') There's a sense of being trapped by tradition - being expected to do as your father, and, well, the fact that the couple don't just get an abortion - but it's still also a song about how things used to be better.
Another thing that kinda weirds me out, is if the song is about Springsteen's sister and brother in law, how come Mary is a complete non-entity? Isn't it kinda weird that Springsteen was able to invent an inner life for the character based on his brother-in-law, but the one based on his sister vanishes once she gets pregnant, and the only description of her is that she was 'tan and wet'? There's a hierarchy to who's inner suffering is worthy of portrayal.
― Frederik B, Monday, 26 September 2016 16:07 (eight years ago) link
What's the best Bruce Springsteen song about a woman? I'm no expert.
― Frederik B, Monday, 26 September 2016 16:21 (eight years ago) link
certainly his most passionate love song is "Bobby Jean" directed at a man.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 26 September 2016 16:23 (eight years ago) link
I'm no expert
― mookieproof, Monday, 26 September 2016 16:33 (eight years ago) link
― Frederik B, Monday, September 26, 2016 4:50 PM (one hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
I wouldn't go that far, but Bruce does seem to be the 'cool' artist conservatives embrace. And it's probably wise to leave in depth analysis of song lyrics out of it, as his conservative public does not seem to mind. Speaking solely for the Netherlands, I could give you a list of ten big conservative/right wing pundits or politicians flaunting their love for Bruce every chance they get. No other musician is (ab)used that way iirc. The most blatantly bigot, racist right wingers all claim Bruce, almost as if they use him to show they have a heart (which they don't). It's his rugged masculinity and drive to keep going strong at his age that seems to appeal to something these people admire.
Bruce Springsteen is probably the most easily misunderstood musician of our days. A battlefield over which the left and right surge and fight to claim him.
― the tightening is plateauing (Le Bateau Ivre), Monday, 26 September 2016 16:39 (eight years ago) link
#trenchant
― the tightening is plateauing (Le Bateau Ivre), Monday, 26 September 2016 16:40 (eight years ago) link
if Brooks and George Will are explaining him, I'm happy he remains misunderstood *plays Tunnel of Love*
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 26 September 2016 16:41 (eight years ago) link
LBI, that's kinda what I mean. Consevatives love Bruce Springsteen = It's music for conservatives. It's not enough for me to say 'but they misunderstand'. The interesting part is why he is so 'easily misunderstood', which to my mind is the same thing as saying that he's politically confused, vague and weak. Which would of course be something conservatives would love in working class heroes.
― Frederik B, Monday, 26 September 2016 17:01 (eight years ago) link
marco rubio loves NWA and public enemy
conservatives love all kinds of music, a lot of ppl don't really give a shit they don't necessarily spend their lives connecting the music they listen and their own beliefs. i have a friend who's the president of a hydraulics company he inherited from his father and he loves fugazi the most.
― Pull your head on out your hippy haze (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 26 September 2016 17:09 (eight years ago) link
do you guys know actual american republicans that like Springsteen beyond playing singles or is this some thing where any american patriotic or nostalgic tendency sounds conservative
― dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Monday, 26 September 2016 17:12 (eight years ago) link
chris christie loves bruce springsteen = it's music for chris christie
― mookieproof, Monday, 26 September 2016 17:14 (eight years ago) link
41 Shots, for example. Try go to it's genius-page and see the discussion of the text. Is the 'American Skin' meant to say that all Americans live in danger of gun violence, or is it about racism? And the second verse, where a mother instructs her child what to do if the police comes by, is that about how Amadou allegedly failed to do as he was told, or is it about how African-American families have to have this conversation over and over and over? Well, it's kinda hard to say, because it's deliberately vague, it can be read both ways. But, for instance, perhaps if the names of the mother and son in the second verse wasn't Lena and Charles, it would be clearer. Yet over and over in his music, Springsteen hedges his bets when he goes political, always moves in the direction of the general.
― Frederik B, Monday, 26 September 2016 17:14 (eight years ago) link
chris christie loves new jersey, you see
haha just kidding no one loves new jersey
― dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Monday, 26 September 2016 17:15 (eight years ago) link
Try go to it's genius-page and see the discussion of the text.
finally we're back to the thread title
― dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Monday, 26 September 2016 17:16 (eight years ago) link
it's weird how often the T-Bone manifesto is getting referenced as some sort of piece of great thinking
― thrusted pelvis-first back (ulysses), Tuesday, 27 September 2016 21:19 (eight years ago) link
NYT just offered it to me as "the single best critique on the modern technological society and its effect on culture and politics"uh?
― thrusted pelvis-first back (ulysses), Tuesday, 27 September 2016 21:20 (eight years ago) link
Nice of Frederik to put his own worst music writing directly in this thread rather than waiting for someone to find it
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, 27 September 2016 23:05 (eight years ago) link
― flopson, Tuesday, 27 September 2016 23:07 (eight years ago) link
― Flamenco Drop (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 27 September 2016 23:08 (eight years ago) link
*farts*
― savvinesslessness (map), Tuesday, 27 September 2016 23:11 (eight years ago) link
it bothers me everytime Born in the USA is presented as this liberal song getting horribly misread, when it contains such a heap of jingoistic, patriotic sentiment in the choruses, and music throughout. Springsteen wrote a song that didn't bring across the sentiment he aimed for, don't blame Reagan for figuring that out.
― Frederik B, Monday, September 26, 2016 3:31 PM (yesterday)
this is fucking ridiculous
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, 27 September 2016 23:14 (eight years ago) link
one might guess the writer was not born in the united states
― dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Tuesday, 27 September 2016 23:39 (eight years ago) link
Bruce Springsteen is a conservative because he depicts the decline of the working class as a political and economic force which technically happened but saying anything in the past was better than the present is a tacit endorsement of racism
Is I think his argument here it's kind of unclear
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, 27 September 2016 23:49 (eight years ago) link
no it is because he likes america as an abstract idea and not just a place you can live
― dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Wednesday, 28 September 2016 00:58 (eight years ago) link
repeating the words born in the usa over and over again is jingoistic and patriotic cuz it's jingoistic and patriotic to have been born in the usa
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Wednesday, 28 September 2016 01:01 (eight years ago) link
bruce springsteen is 67 years old and plays four-hour shows featuring guitars; he is inherently conservative
― mookieproof, Wednesday, 28 September 2016 01:04 (eight years ago) link
It's possible to think Springsteen didn't quite know what he'd unleashed when he repeated the title over Weinberg's drums and that synth fanfare and that Frederik is bananas.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 28 September 2016 01:08 (eight years ago) link
mookie has a point
― dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Wednesday, 28 September 2016 01:36 (eight years ago) link
bruce springsteen is 67 years old and plays four-hour shows featuring guitars
and his primary guitar dates to the eisenhower era
― fact checking cuz, Wednesday, 28 September 2016 01:48 (eight years ago) link
how much do you have to wilfully misread something before it no longer qualifies as "reading"
― Flamenco Drop (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 28 September 2016 04:16 (eight years ago) link
<3 u fact checking cuz
perhaps, as a bo diddley beat aficionado, you'd be interested in Songs where a musician starts "ernie-ing"/summoning up the great musical god Ernie.
― mookieproof, Wednesday, 28 September 2016 04:34 (eight years ago) link
hang on i thought when it came to US politics Fred was all about stuff that was politically vague, confused and fundamentally conservative?
― i bill everything i duck (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 28 September 2016 05:54 (eight years ago) link
didn't read, don't know about the author
6 BANDS NAMED AFTER VAGINAS YOU'LL BE TOTALLY INTOTHIS WAY FOR PUNS.
BRENNA EHRLICH08/07/2015
― goole, Friday, 7 October 2016 19:40 (eight years ago) link
i never felt like there was anything to misinterpret about born in the u.s.a. americans love to feel sorry for themselves. that's why it's called country music. it's a very patriotic song. trump could easily use it as an anthem. the anti-government message works well with his crowd. the lyrics are terrible though. "summertime blues" said it better and said it quicker.
― scott seward, Friday, 7 October 2016 20:31 (eight years ago) link
it really sounds like the prelude to a Falling Down/Taxi Diver style tantrum... or something
― brimstead, Friday, 7 October 2016 22:27 (eight years ago) link
(BitUSA)
― brimstead, Friday, 7 October 2016 22:28 (eight years ago) link
this has gotta be on purpose and bear with it but
https://festivalpeak.com/an-open-letter-to-drake-dj-khaled-and-the-rap-world-84cd4940deb4#.qslc42y8e
― rip my mensches (s.clover), Thursday, 13 October 2016 02:22 (eight years ago) link
or maybe its not on purpose in the way the author thinks. anyway, there's a point, and you'll know when you see it, where something unexpected happens.
― rip my mensches (s.clover), Thursday, 13 October 2016 02:28 (eight years ago) link
clickbait
― niels, Thursday, 13 October 2016 05:30 (eight years ago) link
In fact, there are dozens of songs that people think were recorded by The Beatles that were written and recorded by other groups, that were hits during this time.
These were actually all recorded by Weird Al.
― duped and used by my worst Miss U (President Keyes), Thursday, 13 October 2016 13:49 (eight years ago) link
herman's hermits iirc
― dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏), Thursday, 13 October 2016 14:19 (eight years ago) link
I often wish there was a way to just hard reset my discover weekly data, particularly when it drives itself into a rut like this one
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Thursday, 13 October 2016 22:20 (eight years ago) link
i am requesting your fave "Dylan shouldn't / should have won that Nobel" pieces for this thread
― the notes the loon doesn't play (ulysses), Friday, 14 October 2016 03:56 (eight years ago) link
they'll all be dynamite
― mh 😏, Friday, 14 October 2016 03:57 (eight years ago) link
When I wrote this :
I was more or less thinking of this song :
https://youtu.be/MWZrIXS62Qo
Lies by The Knickerbockers, which almost everyone would swear is The Beatles. Of course, The Dave Clark Five also works, as do some of Herman's Hermits songs, as dr. mercurio arboria (mh 😏) mentioned.
― AMovieADayKeeps, Friday, 14 October 2016 07:48 (eight years ago) link
In fact, there are dozens of songs that people think were recorded by The Beatles that were written and recorded by other groups, that were hits during this time. Think how similar most boy bands have been since New Kids On The Block, or how for many of us we can’t remember if a particular song was done by *NSYNC or The Backstreet Boys.
I think 9/10 people in Denmark could name somewhere between 5 and 20 Beatles songs easily, and even though "Lies" is a great Beatles-knockoff, noone would bring it up - just like they might mistake A Public Execution for a Dylan track, but hardly anyone knows it https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LqmzLgoWl3w
Wasn't around when NKOTB was hot, but I'd never mistake an *NSYNC song for BSB (and BSB >>>>>> *NSYNC)
Also, I think you're misrepresenting early Beatles to make your point - those first albums r000l!
Same goes for Beyoncé, describing "Crazy in Love" as a catchy little pop song with her husband Jay-Z making an appearance on it - well... it's crazy talk imo
Artistic development isn't necessarily progressive in a sense where an artist gets "better and better", producing "more complicated material" - they just do something new / different, which is also cool
And finally, penis size as trope is not over and probably never will be
Sorry for all these banalities
― niels, Friday, 14 October 2016 08:08 (eight years ago) link
weed of all kinds. (purple kush,white rhino,afghan,ak47,sour diesel,white widow,panama red and g13)at the cheapest rates around here.instant delivery to wherever you want.contact me atsunderlopez (at) gmail (dot) com
― LUMBAGO MUJO, Friday, 14 October 2016 08:31 (eight years ago) link
Worst piece of weed writing ever.
― hardcore dilettante, Friday, 14 October 2016 11:46 (eight years ago) link
20 years ago this month, I was getting ready for work while my brother in law was plastering the walls. I absent-mindedly picked up the joint he was smoking instead of my roll up out of the ashtray and had one drag before realising my mistake. I had to go immediately back to bed. And I had to plead with him to phone in sick for me. He told me it was white rhino. Remarkably horrible stuff.
― Doran, Friday, 14 October 2016 13:15 (eight years ago) link
Not really fair, but this is from a press release touting Alan White's return to Yes:
The 6-date trek, beginning November 21 in Tokyo, will feature YES performing the 1973 album YESSONGS, the band's first live album, as well as sides one and four of 1973's double album TALES FROM TOPOGRAPHIC OCEANS, which received rave reviews throughout their 28-date U.S. outing this summer. Of the Tales portion of the show, Chicago Tribune Community Contributor Raymond Britt raved, "The pieces were nothing short of a tour de force of musical ambition, complexity and remarkable synchronicity. It sounded outstanding." Britt also added, "This version of Yes seems to play at a higher level, a more powerful level, like they've been together a decade or more. These guys are on no nostalgia tour. They play it like they mean business, with little intention of slowing down" (8/31/16). For their upcoming Japan tour, YES will perform at the Tokyo Orchard Hall on November 21, 22, 28 and 29, the Osaka Orix Theater on November 24 and Zepp Nagoya on November 25.
Yes, it cites "Chicago Tribune Community Contributor Raymond Britt." Pretty low when a press release quotes an internet commentator.
― Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 15 October 2016 18:30 (eight years ago) link
says more about the complete lack of support for acts older than 10 years imo
(I don't even particularly like Yes)
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Sunday, 16 October 2016 06:37 (eight years ago) link
No one posted the hip hop golden age article huh
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Sunday, 16 October 2016 06:40 (eight years ago) link
Would require reading past the headline
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Sunday, 16 October 2016 13:09 (eight years ago) link
here's the singer from landfill indie band The Enemy blogging about why the group are splitting up: https://tomclarkecoventry.wordpress.com/2016/10/16/pop-has-eaten-itself/
even allowing for what his music led me to expect he is a very very very bad writer
― The Codling Of The London Suede (Legal Warning Across The Atlantic) (DJ Mencap), Monday, 17 October 2016 11:30 (eight years ago) link
"But the song I want to tell you about most is “Rainbow.” If it ever emerges from private listenings, it will be your favorite Kesha song. It’s big and sweeping, and you can hear every instrument that Ben Folds and his associates played — it does recall a Beach Boys vibe, just as she wanted it to. And as Folds said, the way she sings the song is so rich and so real that it jerks you out of your expectation of a pop song. “I found a rainbow, rainbow, baby,” she sings. “Trust me, I know life is scary, but just put those colors on, girl, and come and paint the world with me tonight.” In the final section, her voice becomes stronger and more strained, and the effect is devastating. I asked to hear it three more times."
― maura, Wednesday, 26 October 2016 17:38 (eight years ago) link
you can hear every instrument
"Can I hear it three more times?"
― quis gropes ipsos gropiuses? (ledge), Wednesday, 26 October 2016 17:42 (eight years ago) link
Up above the streets and houses, 'Rainbow' climbs high
― kinder, Wednesday, 26 October 2016 17:45 (eight years ago) link
"Want to hear it a fifth time?""No thanks, I'm good."
― the notes the loon doesn't play (ulysses), Wednesday, 26 October 2016 18:24 (eight years ago) link
a blog by some guy i've never heard of from coventry is how far we have sunk? they don't actually teach writing at schools in the west midlands, you know. nothing but instructional sheepfucking!
okay, i made that last part up. i don't actually know if there are sheep there.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 26 October 2016 18:39 (eight years ago) link
The music industry used to be about two things, the appreciation of musicians creating art in sound, and the ability to monetise that art in order to fund its production. Now it is about one thing. Money.
orly?
― blonde redheads have more fun (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 26 October 2016 18:50 (eight years ago) link
iirc the time it was about those two things was the 1600s and ppl were mostly writing music for the local duke
― mh 😏, Wednesday, 26 October 2016 18:52 (eight years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eta2ulTm4iE
― tylerw, Wednesday, 26 October 2016 18:52 (eight years ago) link
wait my post was in this spirit
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tFELNIpeTjY
― maura, Wednesday, 26 October 2016 18:53 (eight years ago) link
everything sounds better when it was on home movies
― the notes the loon doesn't play (ulysses), Wednesday, 26 October 2016 18:58 (eight years ago) link
true
― maura, Wednesday, 26 October 2016 19:00 (eight years ago) link
i wont to schol in the west midlands and youm very rong, Scoot.
― nom de grrrrr (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 26 October 2016 19:02 (eight years ago) link
yeah, the feature itself was very good but that last paragraph fell into the trap of conflating musical style with musical personnel. like, if this is the kind of music kesha wants to make then I absolutely support that and god knows she deserves it, but this is the writer editorializing.
(there *is* perhaps something to be written about how the bleak apocalyptic partying of early-2010s pop by women coincided with the people making it, but A) I'm sure there are assholes in literally every pop era and B) it's a little underbaked as a thesis)
also I know Ben Folds means well but if he only knows one musician who "has gone from being packaged to real" then he knows remarkably few musicians. (like, he for sure knows Tori Amos, right?)
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 26 October 2016 19:14 (eight years ago) link
Ben Folds and his associates
great law firm
― blonde redheads have more fun (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 26 October 2016 19:14 (eight years ago) link
too bad they didn't get a music writer to do that feature or we would have missed out on a great "Ke$ha is sitting in an uber." lede
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 26 October 2016 19:23 (eight years ago) link
she is sitting in her saturn return
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Wednesday, 26 October 2016 19:26 (eight years ago) link
kesha's last album, warrior, had a cover featuring the pop star staring off to the west, green dust exploding from her head, a polygon-laden dress covering her body at strange angles like a unraveled bucky ball. the california hills in the background were purple, not their iconic verdant green, suggesting that things as we usually know them are, in fact, not what they seem. it's fitting then that kesha has had to be a "warrior" fighting in a strange world for the last four years.
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 26 October 2016 19:29 (eight years ago) link
i think "very good" is a stretch. i saw lots of lazy assumptions about pop and pop fans
― maura, Wednesday, 26 October 2016 19:33 (eight years ago) link
lol @ "iconic verdant green"
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Wednesday, 26 October 2016 19:37 (eight years ago) link
remember that period of time where music reviews in themselves were entertaining or inspiring? idk, it was probably an artifact of my age at the time
now I'm more interested in well-written and informative for music I might like, and failing that, a complete trainwreck of an article like this I can giggle at
― mh 😏, Wednesday, 26 October 2016 19:46 (eight years ago) link
I really am baffled at the consensus about this article -- the thing that gives me pause is that a lot of these assumptions are Kesha's, and if anyone has the right to completely hate pop music and making it, she probably does at this point.
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 26 October 2016 19:47 (eight years ago) link
(btw I was referring to the indie dudes retiring, not the kesha profile, which I haven't read)
― mh 😏, Wednesday, 26 October 2016 19:57 (eight years ago) link
i also learnt to write in the west midlands so i guess i am a test case, terrible music-writing-wise
also there are lots and lots of sheep there
― mark s, Wednesday, 26 October 2016 20:04 (eight years ago) link
i appear twice in a the enemy video, for a total of 4 seconds #funfact
― r|t|c, Wednesday, 26 October 2016 20:13 (eight years ago) link
we should do a thread on those "setting the scene ledes"
Sitting at a table at the Beverly Hills Four Season, surrounded by an assortment of G-Unit associates, 50 Cent listlessly picks at a plate of nachos.
― blonde redheads have more fun (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 26 October 2016 21:10 (eight years ago) link
meek mill looked through his glasses was my fav
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Wednesday, 26 October 2016 21:11 (eight years ago) link
"I'm not sure you ever really leave the Midwest..."
Conor O'Berst is sitting at a Shakey's Pizza buffet in a post suburb of Omaha, the town where he grew up and turned into an indie-rock mecca. He is 36 years old.
― blonde redheads have more fun (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 26 October 2016 21:11 (eight years ago) link
― blonde redheads have more fun (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, October 26, 2016 5:10 PM (sixteen minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Me and D-40 and Jordan S. used to talk about this all the time. There was a classic Jordan tweet about it
https://twitter.com/jordansarge/status/429349381142093824
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 26 October 2016 21:28 (eight years ago) link
i kind of like the apostrophe there in O'Berst, makes me think of the guy in a different way
― tylerw, Wednesday, 26 October 2016 21:30 (eight years ago) link
hi ben. may i introduce you to the beatles? or stevie wonder? or michael jackson? or, oh, i don't know, your entire industry?
― fact checking cuz, Wednesday, 26 October 2016 22:22 (eight years ago) link
jesus, will oldham. now i've read everything.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/the-new-lady-gaga-album-joanne-where-the-freaks-have-no-game/2016/10/28/87a7c8a6-9d0e-11e6-b3c9-f662adaa0048_story.html?tid=ss_fb-amp
― scott seward, Sunday, 30 October 2016 02:38 (eight years ago) link
This is strangely reported throughouthttp://www.billboard.com/articles/news/7557827/sarah-silverman-fred-armisen-weird-al-yankovic-festival-supreme-tenacious-d
― Frozen CD, Monday, 31 October 2016 01:10 (eight years ago) link
strangely reported as though the readers not only didn't know the comedians but didn't know what comedy is
― Britney Thinkpeace (m coleman), Monday, 31 October 2016 02:31 (eight years ago) link
I don't have a problem with the piece in general, but this bit from the NYT Magazine profile of Kesha was odd:
When the album was released, Kesha says, she was surprised that people criticized her for singing about the same things that her heroes, Bob Dylan and the Beastie Boys and Iggy Pop and Fugazi and Johnny Cash, had always been celebrated for.
Ah yes, who could forget all those celebrated Fugazi songs about drinking and partying?
― JRN, Monday, 31 October 2016 03:48 (eight years ago) link
lesser known works in their catalog
― mh 😏, Monday, 31 October 2016 14:10 (eight years ago) link
yeah whenever i want to pre-game i throw on some Bob Dylan cos he's always singing about partying
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 31 October 2016 14:13 (eight years ago) link
Rainy Day Women, BRAAAAAAAH
― hardcore dilettante, Monday, 31 October 2016 23:24 (eight years ago) link
Street Legal
― blonde redheads have more fun (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 1 November 2016 00:10 (eight years ago) link
from the 6 Best Things About a Tegan and Sara Show:
Their outfits are consistently on point and reflect the super-cool style they carry in their music. For the Love You to Death tour, the entire band has been rocking an all-white ensemble, plus a jacket of some sort for Tegan and Sara (usually a darker color or black). Can they get any cooler?
Show http://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/pop/7565716/tegan-and-sara-show-best-things
― Frozen CD, Sunday, 6 November 2016 01:24 (eight years ago) link
Noisey declares itself a voice of resistance.
It's been disheartening to see some entertainment outlets already begin to normalize Donald Trump, as if he is any way a traditional candidate or a leader whose opinions merely diverge from the norm. We at Noisey have zero interest in doing this. In fact, the agenda we plan on pursuing over the next four years will be the polar opposite. We will relentlessly and unrepentantly rail against fascism and bigotry in all forms. Further, we will continue to celebrate the culturally diverse voices that make America's music scenes wholly vital, unique, and wonderful.
We're going to fight like fuck for music fans who feel like they don't have a voice in Donald Trump's America. We're going to fight like fuck to give a home to artists willing to speak out against oppression, misogyny, white supremacy, and xenophobia. We're going to fight like fuck to provide an outlet to artists and writers of color, to writers who are women, who are immigrants, who are Muslim, who are working class, and who are members of the LGBTQIA community. We're going to fight like fuck to use our platform here at Noisey to oppose everything Donald Trump and his administration represent.
Noisey is still owned by Vice, right?
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 15 November 2016 17:07 (eight years ago) link
some rad people write for Noisey,some shitty ones too. the same applies to Vice'twas ever thus
― a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Tuesday, 15 November 2016 17:09 (eight years ago) link
I write for Noisey. Got a piece going up this week, I think. I just think it's funny that they're pretending/hoping nobody remembers who their parent company is and what that brand has stood for over the last, what, 20 years?
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 15 November 2016 17:20 (eight years ago) link
psyched that the music blog isn't going to normalize donald trump
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Tuesday, 15 November 2016 17:53 (eight years ago) link
in these times of domestic catastrophe and paralyzing anxiety, it is comforting to know that the world is ready to return to intra-media feuds
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Tuesday, 15 November 2016 18:16 (eight years ago) link
hi katherine
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 15 November 2016 18:20 (eight years ago) link
imo their brand has changed a lot, but yeah xxp
― mh 😏, Tuesday, 15 November 2016 18:53 (eight years ago) link
fight like fuck
― Wimmels, Tuesday, 15 November 2016 19:10 (eight years ago) link
would you like some fighting fuck, beseeeerkerrrr
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 15 November 2016 19:31 (eight years ago) link
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Tuesday, 15 November 2016 19:44 (eight years ago) link
lede:
It’s a fool’s game to try to make diagnoses as to what might or might not be wrong with celebrities who one has never actually met in real life. Or, worse, it’s actively counter-productive: it can lead to the excusing of behavior that’s inexcusable, or conversely, condemnation of behavior that should be considered in the context of mental illness.
headline, subhed and rest of story:
It Appears That All Is Not Well With Kanye West
Kanye looks like he could use some help.
there’s something going on with Kanye West, and it’s upsetting.
West did seem particularly emotional on Saturday night.
it’s hard to listen to this speech and not get the feeling that all is not well with Kanye West.
e’ve seen this movie before — a talented, unstable artist becoming more and more erratic, being egged on all the while by the press and the public, who love the vicarious consumption of “madness” without ever having to live its reality.
― fact checking cuz, Monday, 21 November 2016 22:11 (eight years ago) link
above from flavorwire
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Tuesday, November 15, 2016 12:53 PM Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
maybe pfork can give him one of those rare 0.0s
― the klosterman weekend (s.clover), Monday, 28 November 2016 19:01 (eight years ago) link
trumpistan
― mookieproof, Monday, 28 November 2016 19:05 (eight years ago) link
Trump= Shit, Cat
― duped and used by my worst Miss U (President Keyes), Tuesday, 29 November 2016 14:49 (eight years ago) link
more from the piece
We are going to start every week by re-reading this letter. We are going to remember our outrage at this moment and let it fuel our direction over the next four years. We are never going to let ourselves get complacent. We are never going to let the flames of resistance burn out.
after the fourth or fifth week of someone re-reading this letter to the staff people will start to feel pretty embarrassed about the whole thing. almost want to write a bot to tweet at noisey every monday "welcome to the workweek! have you reread your letter yet? reread it like fuck!"
― the klosterman weekend (s.clover), Wednesday, 30 November 2016 04:16 (eight years ago) link
Life comes at you fast
https://noisey.vice.com/en_us/article/i-got-trashed-on-whisky-with-brendon-urie-from-panic-at-the-disco
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 30 November 2016 15:15 (eight years ago) link
― niels, Wednesday, 30 November 2016 16:01 (eight years ago) link
Urie has been in the music industry for over a decade, the last remaining original member in a band who have consistently taken something inherently theatrical and turned it into something sincere, accessible, and fucking cool. He is one of the most versatile and enduring artists to emerge from a period in which people genuinely wore a tie and a t-shirt approximately two sizes too small. He delivers personal anecdotes like he's auditioning for a film about his own life, expressing joy in such overt ways that, if it wasn't a completely dehumanising concept, I would start a petition suggesting that everyone feeling weathered and weary of life should be prescribed fifteen minutes with him.
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 30 November 2016 16:04 (eight years ago) link
what the hell let's do it anyway
― the notes the loon doesn't play (ulysses), Wednesday, 30 November 2016 16:09 (eight years ago) link
I got tired just reading that
― mh 😏, Wednesday, 30 November 2016 19:10 (eight years ago) link
I find myself often wondering where the good writing is on Vice that explains its profile.
― boxedjoy, Wednesday, 30 November 2016 20:15 (eight years ago) link
so talk to me a LOT about this alcohol you're drinking... in fact let's just have that be half the interview
― Flamenco Drop (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 30 November 2016 21:06 (eight years ago) link
"That was the same year that less critically-adored but more groundbreaking albums were released by System of a Down (Toxicity), Thursday (Full Collapse), Jimmy Eat World (Bleed American), and Tool (Lateralus), to name a few."
http://www.brooklynvegan.com/if-rock-is-the-new-jazz-then-i-blame-the-strokes/?trackback=tsmclip
― scott seward, Wednesday, 30 November 2016 21:25 (eight years ago) link
groundbreaking claymation...
― scott seward, Wednesday, 30 November 2016 21:26 (eight years ago) link
always surprised when a brooklyn vegan post isn't just tour dates
― who is extremely unqualified to review this pop album (BradNelson), Wednesday, 30 November 2016 21:43 (eight years ago) link
I look at my parents and they just keep getting better with age, like really good wine. They get funnier, sometimes more aggressive but in a funny way… I think 30 is going to be fun.
so glad vice is fighting like fuck to give a voice to this in trump's america
― the klosterman weekend (s.clover), Wednesday, 30 November 2016 23:06 (eight years ago) link
it's been a while since I saw jerry maguire but iirc basically he wakes up hungover after writing the mission statement and realises he'd rather continue being a cunt after all
― diary of a mod how's life (wins), Wednesday, 30 November 2016 23:16 (eight years ago) link
Fight Like Fuck would make a great album title.
― Working night & day, I tried to stay awake... (Turrican), Wednesday, 30 November 2016 23:20 (eight years ago) link
Slipknot - Fight Like Fuck
The Who - Fight Like Fuck
Tindersticks - Fight Like Fuck
― Working night & day, I tried to stay awake... (Turrican), Wednesday, 30 November 2016 23:22 (eight years ago) link
We should really just start a separate thread so we can clown that essay for four years
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Thursday, 1 December 2016 00:05 (eight years ago) link
make it so
― Flamenco Drop (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 1 December 2016 05:11 (eight years ago) link
I think whiskey is one of those things that people really get into when they get older, like beer-I'm also into beer.
Or coffee.And coffee.
Well, you just love everything!
― niels, Thursday, 1 December 2016 08:52 (eight years ago) link
95% of year-end list blurbs are awful
― I've read Ta-nehisi Coates. (marcos), Wednesday, 7 December 2016 14:58 (eight years ago) link
"In this Post-Nov.8 world, 95% of year-end list blurbs are awful"
fixed
― duped and used by my worst Miss U (President Keyes), Wednesday, 7 December 2016 15:09 (eight years ago) link
do we have that thread yet? i was just thinking today "are they still reading that essay to themselves"
― the klosterman weekend (s.clover), Friday, 16 December 2016 22:49 (eight years ago) link
fighting like fuck to fuck to fight to make music to
― the klosterman weekend (s.clover), Friday, 16 December 2016 22:50 (eight years ago) link
Everyone knows that music has charms to soothe a savage breast, but few have read the rest of William Congreve’s line, which claims it can also “soften rocks, or bend a knotted oak,” and so, in these times of breast-beating savagery, heads full of stones, and tangles in desperate need of unknotting (times to try men’s and women’s souls, one might say), there is still a vital place for music in our lives. And so, here are my picks for the 10 best jazz albums of 2016, followed by the year’s four best previously unissued old treasures.
http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/music_box/2016/12/the_best_jazz_albums_of_2016_and_the_best_historical_releases.html
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 19 December 2016 16:58 (eight years ago) link
http://sd.keepcalm-o-matic.co.uk/i/keep-calm-and-soothe-your-savage-breast-3.png
― A big shout out goes to the lamb chops, thos lamb chops (ulysses), Monday, 19 December 2016 17:00 (eight years ago) link
oops that's actually the line and I'm a fucking dipshit redneck, carry on
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 19 December 2016 17:02 (eight years ago) link
why is that line bolded
lol xp
― forgive me fader for I have sinned (wins), Monday, 19 December 2016 17:02 (eight years ago) link
dammit got so excited for a pedants' pile-on for a minute there
― Rock Wokeman (Noodle Vague), Monday, 19 December 2016 17:06 (eight years ago) link
*extremely florida swamp trash voice*: i aint gon sit idly by while some pulitzer prize winning f*ggit with a phd from MIT misquotes CONGREVE on my watch
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 19 December 2016 17:09 (eight years ago) link
^^^ me irl
― Rock Wokeman (Noodle Vague), Monday, 19 December 2016 17:10 (eight years ago) link
keep calm and play yourself
― mookieproof, Monday, 19 December 2016 17:12 (eight years ago) link
alas poor whiney I knew him well
― forgive me fader for I have sinned (wins), Monday, 19 December 2016 17:13 (eight years ago) link
ah well, tomorrow to fresh fields and pastures new
― Rock Wokeman (Noodle Vague), Monday, 19 December 2016 17:16 (eight years ago) link
*spits tobacco into powerade bottle* 'Tis well enough for a servant to be bred at an University. But the education is a little too pedantic for a gentleman.
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 19 December 2016 17:17 (eight years ago) link
*googles william congreve* *makes ilx post*
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 19 December 2016 17:18 (eight years ago) link
why did you censor the word faggot in your post like we don't know what word you were using...
― J0rdan S., Monday, 19 December 2016 17:19 (eight years ago) link
the post was penned to create the illusion of an idiotic hick (also note the intentional mispelling), but the irl whiney didn't want to risk an ironic slur being irl triggering
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 19 December 2016 17:21 (eight years ago) link
the practice of typing an asterisk in the place of one vowel when typing a slur doesn't originate with whiney tbf, it's a baffling practice to me but that's for another time mebbe
― forgive me fader for I have sinned (wins), Monday, 19 December 2016 17:22 (eight years ago) link
"phew, with an i/a in it that word might be triggering!"
― forgive me fader for I have sinned (wins), Monday, 19 December 2016 17:24 (eight years ago) link
language is changing, and the inalienable right to type a misspelled homophobic slur in all its glory is not exactly a hill worth dying on
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 19 December 2016 17:27 (eight years ago) link
(as i have said before)
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 19 December 2016 17:28 (eight years ago) link
then why did you type it
― J0rdan S., Monday, 19 December 2016 17:29 (eight years ago) link
well, the irl wins would err on the side of not typing ironic slurs in the 1st place
― forgive me fader for I have sinned (wins), Monday, 19 December 2016 17:29 (eight years ago) link
it's not like we don't know what word you meant...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dF1NUposXVQ
― J0rdan S., Monday, 19 December 2016 17:30 (eight years ago) link
ILX: We Make Breasts Savage.
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 19 December 2016 17:30 (eight years ago) link
then why did you type it― J0rdan S., Monday, December 19, 2016 12:29 PM (one minute ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― J0rdan S., Monday, December 19, 2016 12:29 PM (one minute ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
i honestly toyed with the phrasing of the post to find the right combo of "ignorant disdain for coastal elites" to juxtapose with "having opinions on william congreve" and I couldn't find something that was as concisely effective at conveying ignorance as misspelling a homophobic slur
i sound like LJ now
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 19 December 2016 17:34 (eight years ago) link
And, also, my politics don't line up with every Louis CK routine despite also being a human Wall•E
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 19 December 2016 17:35 (eight years ago) link
― illbient microtonal poetry Surbiton (imago), Monday, 19 December 2016 17:35 (eight years ago) link
http://i.imgur.com/PrYAV.jpg
― The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 19 December 2016 17:37 (eight years ago) link
amazing that this came about from you trying to find the most effective way to make fun of your previous gaffe
yo dawg I heard you like to self-clown
― forgive me fader for I have sinned (wins), Monday, 19 December 2016 17:37 (eight years ago) link
https://c1.staticflickr.com/1/18/69879242_f05e5db0ff_b.jpg
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 19 December 2016 17:39 (eight years ago) link
we have all been that dog in that oven
― forgive me fader for I have sinned (wins), Monday, 19 December 2016 17:39 (eight years ago) link
― forgive me fader for I have sinned (wins), Monday, December 19, 2016 12:22 PM (fifteen minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
It's like the text equivalent of a silicone nipple petal
― Evan, Monday, 19 December 2016 17:41 (eight years ago) link
i'm doing a character, you *insert horrible insulting term my constructed stereotype would use*!!
― mh 😏, Monday, 19 December 2016 18:12 (eight years ago) link
i'm not sure why whiney doesn't just stick with "diaper drinkers", because he's never going to top that in or out of character
reminds me ofhttps://onsizzle.com/i/wyd-instagram-bruh-im-not-pulling-out-bruh-89775
― A big shout out goes to the lamb chops, thos lamb chops (ulysses), Monday, 19 December 2016 18:18 (eight years ago) link
[adds 'triggering' to list of words that now instantly give me a headache when I read them]
― Wimmels, Monday, 19 December 2016 18:35 (eight years ago) link
Aww bless, does it trigger you?
― Rock Wokeman (Noodle Vague), Monday, 19 December 2016 18:36 (eight years ago) link
let's just say it's become a problematic word for me
― Wimmels, Monday, 19 December 2016 18:37 (eight years ago) link
bacon
― flappy bird, Tuesday, December 13, 2016 1:23 PM (six days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Evan, Monday, 19 December 2016 18:51 (eight years ago) link
tr*ggering
― duped and used by my worst Miss U (President Keyes), Monday, 19 December 2016 18:56 (eight years ago) link
I stole that line from J4son P3ttigrew of Alternative Press iirc
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 19 December 2016 18:58 (eight years ago) link
Wading through as much of this as I could stand is what I imagine listening to 45 Omar Rodríguez-López solo albums is like:
http://thequietus.com/articles/21595-omar-rodrguez-lpez-albums-ipecac-review-7-12-mars-volta-at-the-drive-in
― めんどくさかった (Matt #2), Thursday, 19 January 2017 23:41 (eight years ago) link
I feel like every ex in this piece should receive a paycheck for being subjected to this http://www.complex.com/music/2017/01/what-happens-if-you-text-your-ex-bryson-tiller-lyrics/
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Tuesday, 24 January 2017 19:28 (eight years ago) link
gross
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 24 January 2017 19:30 (eight years ago) link
(assuming they're real people, which if not, it's equally shit in a different way)
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Tuesday, 24 January 2017 19:31 (eight years ago) link
No way in hell those are real, but he sure did get a lot of clicks with a headline suggesting they are
― Evan R, Tuesday, 24 January 2017 20:02 (eight years ago) link
lol there is a zero percent chance those were sent to real people. are you kidding?
i don't think they're trying to fool ppl into thinking otherwise either but apparently it's doing that regardless
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, 24 January 2017 20:30 (eight years ago) link
it's definitely fake but also gross in its own fake way. horrible piece of course.
― nomar, Tuesday, 24 January 2017 20:31 (eight years ago) link
What if someone texted these Run DMC lyrics to real sucker MCs
― duped and used by my worst Miss U (President Keyes), Tuesday, 24 January 2017 20:34 (eight years ago) link
you say "are you kidding" but if it turned out an actual publication actually commissioned this sort of thing, would anyone really be surprised
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Tuesday, 24 January 2017 20:45 (eight years ago) link
seems more corny than gross to me, i mean the punchline is "do you guys realize that bryson tiller is kind of a creep" but written in "we're down w/ the kids" memetalk via text messages ... its bad content but im not sure i see how it's 'gross'
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, 24 January 2017 20:46 (eight years ago) link
i guess the execution is kind of unintended-ly gross for making you think abt the poor people on the other side? but still it's clearly positioned to be mocking bryson tiller
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, 24 January 2017 20:47 (eight years ago) link
the suggestion that your exes are guinea pigs you could subject to a mind-fuck social experiment in the name of #content is gross
― Evan R, Tuesday, 24 January 2017 20:55 (eight years ago) link
sure? idk what kind of person reads this & goes away thinking "i should try this on my ex"
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, 24 January 2017 20:57 (eight years ago) link
like the message is clearly "this would turn out badly"
idek why im arguing this point, we all the think the article is bad
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, 24 January 2017 20:58 (eight years ago) link
there's also the angle of (probably-)white dude using rap lyrics for his hilarious idea of a "self-deprecating" prank
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Tuesday, 24 January 2017 21:06 (eight years ago) link
i mean, its more white dude stealing the concept from black people on twitter, where it's a longstanding joke where ppl express their *self awareness* about the douchey-ness of the lyrics by pointing out how no one would talk like that irl, drawing attention to the role of music like tiller's as a kind of therapeutic or emotional "its ok to feel it but not to act on it" kind of thing
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, 24 January 2017 21:08 (eight years ago) link
no one (w/ a moral compass) would talk like that irl
obviously those jokes can also be interpreted in other ways, like there's a subset of dudes who send those texts to their exes just to get funny responses (which is gross) & there's probably a subset of weirdos who dont get the joke, but the overall thrust of it is supposed to be: the way bryson tiller talks is not how healthy people in relationships talk to each other
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, 24 January 2017 21:10 (eight years ago) link
point being as i said before: there are problems with this bad article, but i think you're misinterpreting it
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, 24 January 2017 21:11 (eight years ago) link
there's something about how the female voice is being subtly mimicked and mocked here too, i think...some of the replies as written are i think meant to be self-deprecating to the author but come off the other way a bit.
― nomar, Tuesday, 24 January 2017 21:13 (eight years ago) link
this has little to do with the quality of the piece, I admit, but just the sheer arrogance of it, how women are called clingy bitches if they even so much as think about contacting an ex once or, like, go to an event in their neighborhood or whatnot
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Tuesday, 24 January 2017 22:24 (eight years ago) link
(and then how something like this fits perfectly into the ironic-acceptable ex behavior overton window)
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Tuesday, 24 January 2017 22:25 (eight years ago) link
Could you imagine being an adult media professional and either having or pretending someone is in your phone as "ex-bae" even jokingly
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 24 January 2017 22:27 (eight years ago) link
board description
― Islamic State of Mind (jim in vancouver), Tuesday, 24 January 2017 22:30 (eight years ago) link
lol i felt bad about that post. was kind of dickish
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, 24 January 2017 22:53 (eight years ago) link
if they sent the lyrics to people on tindr it coulda been ok i think
― the klosterman weekend (s.clover), Tuesday, 24 January 2017 22:58 (eight years ago) link
― mh 😏, Wednesday, 25 January 2017 01:38 (eight years ago) link
http://www.avclub.com/article/ice-cube-becomes-global-media-mogul-has-good-day-249009
― duped and used by my worst Miss U (President Keyes), Wednesday, 25 January 2017 03:00 (eight years ago) link
With the seven, seven-eleven, seven-eleven, seven—even Back Door Little Joe.
smh
― blonde redheads have more fun (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 25 January 2017 17:45 (eight years ago) link
That Complex article seems to have been taken down.
― heaven parker (anagram), Wednesday, 25 January 2017 18:39 (eight years ago) link
not for me
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 25 January 2017 19:05 (eight years ago) link
(although thanks for making me send it one more click I guess)
I think Father John Misty's long-winded explanation of his new album could fit on this list. http://pitchfork.com/news/71106-here-is-father-john-mistys-incredibly-long-incredibly-awesome-explanation-of-what-his-new-album-is-about/
― Everything Moves Towards The Sun (Ross), Wednesday, 1 February 2017 20:21 (eight years ago) link
i'm not reading that. you read it. give it to mikey, he hates everything.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 1 February 2017 20:46 (eight years ago) link
i had to check:
"Born May 3, 1981 (age 35)"
ouch....
― scott seward, Wednesday, 1 February 2017 20:49 (eight years ago) link
I could barely read it, it was mindless pap
― Everything Moves Towards The Sun (Ross), Wednesday, 1 February 2017 20:53 (eight years ago) link
fuck this guy
― niels, Wednesday, 1 February 2017 21:59 (eight years ago) link
shit, dude was born the week after me :/
― mh 😏, Wednesday, 1 February 2017 22:47 (eight years ago) link
OH KIDS THESE DAYS!!
http://ritholtz.com/2017/02/weve-got-no-protest-music
― Mr. Snrub, Sunday, 5 February 2017 14:41 (eight years ago) link
lol, no preamble or anything. Just straight into "1. Mariah Carey".
― jmm, Sunday, 5 February 2017 14:55 (eight years ago) link
welcome to lefsetz land
― ridiculous perm ban decision (voodoo chili), Sunday, 5 February 2017 15:21 (eight years ago) link
If only there was an embraceable anthem, akin to those of NWA and Public Enemy of yesteryear. I remember during the Rodney King riots realizing everything Ice-T said was right. But now that Trump’s in office and white man power is at its zenith, I can’t point to one hip-hop song that nails it.
if only there were a song that told Donald Trump to fuck off...
― ridiculous perm ban decision (voodoo chili), Sunday, 5 February 2017 15:23 (eight years ago) link
Waiting for people to do the heavy lifting and send him relevant songs
― mh 😏, Sunday, 5 February 2017 15:41 (eight years ago) link
We used to sit around and sing Beatle songs, playing the chords on our guitars. I haven’t seen a group of kids sitting around playing today’s music…ever!
― niels, Sunday, 5 February 2017 16:55 (eight years ago) link
lol must have never been to a fuckin' bar on a Friday night or to any dorms ever.
― Neanderthal, Sunday, 5 February 2017 16:57 (eight years ago) link
ugh this board is at its worst when people think it's fun to joke about shit like Alzheimer's
― sheer presence, look and size (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 5 February 2017 17:01 (eight years ago) link
If only there were some meme depicting an old man, say, yelling at a cloud or something
― Wimmels, Sunday, 5 February 2017 17:11 (eight years ago) link
quite the conundrum
― dorsalstop, Sunday, 5 February 2017 18:12 (eight years ago) link
it’s become self-referential, kinda like metal. You can’t understand today’s metal unless you listened to decades of it before.
It's a special kind of agony when Lefsetz says something you kind of agree with.
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Sunday, 5 February 2017 18:17 (eight years ago) link
Stopped clock etc
― sheer presence, look and size (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 5 February 2017 18:31 (eight years ago) link
I'm missing the part where anyone joked about Alzheimer's
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Sunday, 5 February 2017 19:04 (eight years ago) link
Yeah, I missed that too. Maybe a post landed in the wrong thread by mistake?
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Sunday, 5 February 2017 19:07 (eight years ago) link
I think that was supposed to be a joke? As in, don't make fun of this guy, he can't help himself, "senior moment," etc
that's how I read it anyway
― Wimmels, Sunday, 5 February 2017 20:08 (eight years ago) link
bingo
― sheer presence, look and size (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 5 February 2017 20:49 (eight years ago) link
Does this count
https://www.instagram.com/p/BQUSEiwl_zY/
― Evan, Friday, 10 February 2017 21:33 (eight years ago) link
i like it
― removed from the rain drops and drop tops of experience (ulysses), Monday, 13 February 2017 00:58 (eight years ago) link
Though the following exhibit came out in 2013, I maintain that it is the worst piece of music writing ever committed to pixels:
http://grantland.com/hollywood-prospectus/what-if-you-dont-like-beyonces-album/
― pomenitul, Monday, 13 February 2017 16:33 (eight years ago) link
When I was standing in line to validate a parking ticket after American Hustle, “Pretty Hurts” was stuck in my head, and I couldn’t get it out, even after sitting in a theater honed in on another piece of media for nearly three hours. Those are the moments that matter, and they never happen immediately. That’s how I was proven wrong.
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 13 February 2017 16:37 (eight years ago) link
When I was standing in line to validate a parking ticket after Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius, “The Chicken Dance” was stuck in my head, and I couldn’t get it out, even after sitting in a theater honed in on another piece of media for nearly three hours. Those are the moments that matter, and they never happen immediately. That’s how I was proven wrong.
― pomenitul, Monday, 13 February 2017 16:41 (eight years ago) link
this one time at band camp
― removed from the rain drops and drop tops of experience (ulysses), Monday, 13 February 2017 18:46 (eight years ago) link
lol, the byline is a good kicker
― maura, Monday, 13 February 2017 21:49 (eight years ago) link
well there's thishttp://louderthanwar.com/221207-2/#.WMevy6R8hts.twitter
― PaulTMA, Wednesday, 15 March 2017 20:58 (seven years ago) link
http://theconcourse.deadspin.com/nicki-minaj-is-out-to-prove-shes-better-than-remy-ma-a-1793221838
― the klosterman weekend (s.clover), Friday, 17 March 2017 16:32 (seven years ago) link
i mean, not the worst. just painfully earnest and long and sorta unreadable.
a good editor coulda saved it, but we don't have those anymore
― the klosterman weekend (s.clover), Friday, 17 March 2017 16:33 (seven years ago) link
well we do, they're just not employed to edit
― mark s, Friday, 17 March 2017 16:42 (seven years ago) link
I've liked a lot of Everett True's writing through the years, not such a fan now he's dismissing music on the grounds of being made by a "beardy ginge". It's almost enough to make me try listening to Ed Sheeran.
https://everetttrue.wordpress.com/2017/03/18/ed-sheeran-is-shit/
― Camaraderie at Arms Length, Sunday, 19 March 2017 15:47 (seven years ago) link
good music made by a beardy ginge or beardy ginges: Vivian Stanshall, Average White Band - who else?
― soref, Sunday, 19 March 2017 16:07 (seven years ago) link
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/a/ae/VanMorrisonMoondance.jpg
― mark s, Sunday, 19 March 2017 16:12 (seven years ago) link
https://img.discogs.com/CBcxJjd3tW_kqS9CmCEWBLRenQ8=/fit-in/300x300/filters:strip_icc():format(jpeg):mode_rgb():quality(40)/discogs-images/R-2555007-1290292012.jpeg.jpgmy fave dead beardy ginge
― calzino, Sunday, 19 March 2017 16:28 (seven years ago) link
http://www.trezhombrez.de/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/towerfestband01.jpg
― mark s, Sunday, 19 March 2017 16:32 (seven years ago) link
https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/0e/d6/7c/0ed67c09dbe142f40ebcc694266fcdc9.jpg
― mark s, Sunday, 19 March 2017 16:40 (seven years ago) link
http://cdn.pitchfork.com/features/9512/a4b83d5d.jpg
― mark s, Sunday, 19 March 2017 16:46 (seven years ago) link
http://www.kalamu.com/bol/wp-content/content/images/sun%20ra%20purple%20night%20cover.jpg
― mark s, Sunday, 19 March 2017 17:14 (seven years ago) link
absolutely shocked that E True wrote something in the style of a pissy 15 year-old
― Pengest & Corsa (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 19 March 2017 17:19 (seven years ago) link
https://i.ytimg.com/vi/s9WRZvLCalQ/hqdefault.jpg
― Vlogs from other credible bands such as Shed Seven (DJ Mencap), Sunday, 19 March 2017 18:02 (seven years ago) link
― Pengest & Corsa (Noodle Vague), Sunday, March 19, 2017 10:19 AM (three hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― the raindrops and drop tops of lived, earned experience (BradNelson), Sunday, 19 March 2017 20:59 (seven years ago) link
so True, funny how it seems
― salthigh, Sunday, 19 March 2017 21:13 (seven years ago) link
Not enough comparing of aquariums to blue construction paper or mentions of the interiors of geodes for my liking. Ed Sheeran is shit, though, so there is that.
― Coolio Iglesias (Turrican), Sunday, 19 March 2017 21:30 (seven years ago) link
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/5/5b/Fela_Kuti_Live.jpg
― Doran, Monday, 20 March 2017 21:21 (seven years ago) link
This review of the new Harriet Tubman album is kind of amazing...if you want to read the author's (actually pretty positive) thoughts about the music, you have to skip to paragraph 14. He had some stuff he wanted to get off his chest first, though.
https://www.allaboutjazz.com/araminta-by-budd-kopman.php
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Monday, 20 March 2017 21:27 (seven years ago) link
― SSN Lucci (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 20 March 2017 21:34 (seven years ago) link
yikes
― maura, Monday, 20 March 2017 21:34 (seven years ago) link
how dare SJWs politicize a band called Harriet Tubman
― SSN Lucci (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 20 March 2017 21:35 (seven years ago) link
the n-word "Nazi"
― Οὖτις, Monday, 20 March 2017 21:36 (seven years ago) link
BUDD KOPMAN seems like such a computer generated sock-name for a jazz reviewer as well, mind you so does Harriet Tubman!
― calzino, Monday, 20 March 2017 21:43 (seven years ago) link
So, who really are the fascists?
hmm, indeed
― mh 😏, Monday, 20 March 2017 21:45 (seven years ago) link
Now, what does all of the above have to do with Araminta by the band Harriet Tubman? The given name of Harriet Tubman the woman was Araminta Ross, hence the name of the album. Politically, the message is hardly controversial in that they are preaching to the converted.
Musically, however, the story is entirely different
Sad lols. This guy's lost the plot.
― Le Bateau Ivre, Monday, 20 March 2017 21:47 (seven years ago) link
Trump, Brexit, Marine Le Pen and Geert Wilders represent some of the voices and actions that are saying "No more! We are defending our culture!" This self-evident attitude is considered so horrifically shocking and immoral that college students have to retreat to their "safe spaces" so as not to be infected by "white privilege."
i... uh. ok... hm. *slowly backs away*
― the raindrops and drop tops of lived, earned experience (BradNelson), Monday, 20 March 2017 21:48 (seven years ago) link
http://s3.amazonaws.com/production.mediajoint.prx.org/public/piece_images/82867/Dino_Play_Bass_Jazz_it_up.gif
― removed from the rain drops and drop tops of experience (ulysses), Monday, 20 March 2017 22:04 (seven years ago) link
I don't mind reviews where people go off on little odysseys, that good person who did the Thelonious Monk review for P4k did it well recently. But this cunt needs to be taken around the back and put out of his misery.
― calzino, Monday, 20 March 2017 22:07 (seven years ago) link
I strongly suggest checking out Budd's personal page.
https://www.jazzatbudds.com/
You are on the official website of Budd Kopman. I am a regular reviewer at AllAboutJazz who gets a kick out of being able to combine my love for jazz with computer programming.
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 20 March 2017 22:21 (seven years ago) link
I'm still pondering the image at the top of the page, of course.
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 20 March 2017 22:22 (seven years ago) link
I suspect Don van Gorp will be particularly amused by this page:
https://www.jazzatbudds.com/musings.php
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 20 March 2017 22:23 (seven years ago) link
the 'musings' section makes me think of an ilx thread with those three posts, then "11 years pass", then dozens of paragraphs ranting about sjws
is he a professional reviewer or is AllAboutJazz a website where anyone can set up an account and start posting stuff?
― soref, Monday, 20 March 2017 22:31 (seven years ago) link
WASTEMAN
― soref, Monday, 20 March 2017 22:33 (seven years ago) link
The latter.
― Don Van Gorp, midwest regional VP, marketing (誤訳侮辱), Monday, 20 March 2017 22:39 (seven years ago) link
the game of trying to figure out who online is a reasonably well-adjusted person and who is just sitting alone in a room pounding on a keyboard alone coming up with hateful ideas of the world at large
brb the cat just walked in, need to see what he wants
― mh 😏, Tuesday, 21 March 2017 00:53 (seven years ago) link
melvin gibbs' response to the araminta review: https://www.facebook.com/melvin.gibbs/posts/10208792547123250
aaj editor michael ricci's apology (the review has been taken down): https://www.allaboutjazz.com/jazz-in-the-age-of-the-politicization-of-everything-araminta-harriet-tubman-by-budd-kopman.php?pg=1
― mark s, Wednesday, 22 March 2017 21:09 (seven years ago) link
I didn't get to see the Kopman piece before it was taken down, sound like I'm not missing much though
― Wimmels, Wednesday, 22 March 2017 21:22 (seven years ago) link
sorry, i meant to link this too (gibbs preserves/reposts the original): https://www.facebook.com/melvin.gibbs/posts/10208795027665262?pnref=story
― mark s, Wednesday, 22 March 2017 21:25 (seven years ago) link
yet another chance to test your rage aneurysm threshold / eyeroll capacity
― Balðy Daudrs (contenderizer), Wednesday, 22 March 2017 21:39 (seven years ago) link
gibbs piece is excellent, if perhaps too kind
― Balðy Daudrs (contenderizer), Wednesday, 22 March 2017 21:40 (seven years ago) link
I cannot begin to convey the degre of shock I experienced when, after all that buildup, the album review turned out to be positive.
― Champiness, Wednesday, 22 March 2017 23:14 (seven years ago) link
idk I don't think you necessarily need derrida to take down that review
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Wednesday, 22 March 2017 23:39 (seven years ago) link
Hasn't this clown noticed that Wilders lost?
― Ongar Is An Energy (Tom D.), Wednesday, 22 March 2017 23:49 (seven years ago) link
bud kopman notices JAZZ, buddy
― Balðy Daudrs (contenderizer), Thursday, 23 March 2017 01:01 (seven years ago) link
https://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2017-03-28/once-we-listened-to-the-beatles-now-we-eat-beetles
Most of the top music from the 1990s, such as say Alanis Morissette, would sound current if released today, a sign of cultural stasis in what was once a highly socially charged and rapidly changing sector. In 1967, music from 20 or even 10 years earlier sounded quite different and indeed archaic.As for where the change and innovation have come, it’s hard to think of any sphere of American life where the selection and quality have improved so much as food, whether in the supermarket or in restaurants. American cities become more interesting places to dine each year, and the attention paid to food on TV and online has been growing steadily since the 1990s.
As for where the change and innovation have come, it’s hard to think of any sphere of American life where the selection and quality have improved so much as food, whether in the supermarket or in restaurants. American cities become more interesting places to dine each year, and the attention paid to food on TV and online has been growing steadily since the 1990s.
― j., Thursday, 30 March 2017 00:42 (seven years ago) link
I haven't listened to Jagged Little Pill in a long time, but I'll bet it couldn't sound any more of its time.
― The Roger Waters Experience (Turrican), Thursday, 30 March 2017 01:16 (seven years ago) link
http://www.vulture.com/2017/04/john-mayer-could-learn-something-from-game-of-thrones.html
There are few easier targets in music writing. But somehow this guy still aimed the shotgun right at his own balls.
― Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Jr, and Violent J (誤訳侮辱), Thursday, 6 April 2017 20:32 (seven years ago) link
Should have just talked about the band Marillion instead.
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 6 April 2017 20:38 (seven years ago) link
"I’m not saying that John Mayer should be sealed away, tortured, blinded, and de-fingered because it would better his music."
go figure
― budo jeru, Thursday, 6 April 2017 21:55 (seven years ago) link
Whether Jagged Little Pill sounds of it's time probably comes down to whether you heard it at the time. The reference points for music are so different now that perhaps it would sound new to someone who is younger and only aware of the current sounds in music. That's a huge assumption on my part though
― Carlotta's Portrait (Ross), Thursday, 6 April 2017 21:58 (seven years ago) link
Over the weekend my girlfriend and I were on a quick road trip and for lack of anything else we listened to one of those Jack-FM style stations -- "Ironic" came up at one point and in the context of the mostly newish songs around it, it just sounded pretty out of place more than anything else. (Less so than the Thriller-era Michael Jackson songs they played, or anything random from the 80s.)
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 6 April 2017 22:02 (seven years ago) link
I was gonna say, it would probably sound old to someone who is younger, like '60s music did in the '80s.
― ...so music and chicken have become intertwined (Turrican), Thursday, 6 April 2017 22:06 (seven years ago) link
i think the basic point is that, when it comes to production, you can cherry pick more or less any element from the last forty years of music and use it as a filter, a signifier, whatever, and most likely people will hear it as contemporary. nobody in the '60s had that luxury and nobody wanted to "sound like" robert johnson or joe liggins or amos milburn in terms of production.
― budo jeru, Thursday, 6 April 2017 22:15 (seven years ago) link
what that has to do with food, or eating beetles, tough, is beyond me
― budo jeru, Thursday, 6 April 2017 22:20 (seven years ago) link
though*
― budo jeru, Thursday, 6 April 2017 22:21 (seven years ago) link
I can't ever imagine the drum loops on 'All I Really Want' or 'You Learn' sounding contemporary to anyone in 2017.
― ...so music and chicken have become intertwined (Turrican), Thursday, 6 April 2017 22:28 (seven years ago) link
what i'm saying is that we live in this kind eternal post-modern echo chamber and it's really hard for me to imagine something sounding utterly new (isn't there a thread about this somewhere?) anyway,
i just went and listened to those songs, i've never heard alanis morissette before, i guess i'm on the fence specifically with her production. the big compressed drum loops yeah, wasn't beck doing the same thing around the same time? is '90s beck really '90s sounding? my feeling is that you could salvage many elements of this sound and put it on the radio and re-contextualize it and people wouldn't immediately be like "woah time-warp to the nineties right here" but maybe i'm wrong
― budo jeru, Thursday, 6 April 2017 23:29 (seven years ago) link
How could a Guardian article about music be inflammatory enough to inspire a petition with over 600 signatures, I wondered. Then I read and marvelled: https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/mar/27/music-lessons-children-white-wealthy#comment-95607277
― My Body's Made of Crushed Little Evening Stars (Sund4r), Saturday, 8 April 2017 03:07 (seven years ago) link
lol that is incredible
― SSN Lucci (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 8 April 2017 05:23 (seven years ago) link
That is seriously like the Monty Python architect sketch come to life
― SSN Lucci (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 8 April 2017 05:24 (seven years ago) link
Ha. I meant to link the article, not a comment by a teenager: https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/mar/27/music-lessons-children-white-wealthy
I'm actually completely in favour of teaching music without notation in certain contexts but this article (and headline) still seem pretty wrongheaded to me.
― My Body's Made of Crushed Little Evening Stars (Sund4r), Saturday, 8 April 2017 15:25 (seven years ago) link
My advice would be to go into science, medicine, technology, languages etc. Anything but music. There's no money in it and it gets you nowhere - study something useful instead.
― ...so music and chicken have become intertwined (Turrican), Saturday, 8 April 2017 15:39 (seven years ago) link
ok this isn't "bad" per se https://theoutline.com/post/1368/pop-collabs-are-boring
but i feel like taking issue with the fact that features don't always synthesize artists into the song assumes that a hip-hop feature on pop song has to be a synthesis. the fact that ty$ and fifth harmony sound distinct from each other on Work From Home doesn't make the feature "disposable". also, equating "disposable" with "boring" is (semantically, i know, but still) kinda shortsighted, especially when most pop is knowingly "disposable" already.
maybe it's just that this feels pretty under-researched and "pop ruins everything"-y, overall—i'd love to look at a thing about how exactly the feature (are we talking about hip-hop verse in place of bridge or disco-diva style EDM vocalist, though? another glossed over distinction) became a staple of the pop hit structure, but this is so fixed on putting down its subject any good points feel totally lost.
― austinb, Tuesday, 11 April 2017 01:30 (seven years ago) link
i think that's pretty bad per se
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Tuesday, 11 April 2017 01:43 (seven years ago) link
lol wasn't sure if everything had to be as glaringly bad as that Flume review from the independent
― austinb, Tuesday, 11 April 2017 01:43 (seven years ago) link
would be more interesting to talk about how guest raps have become the equivalent of the guitar solo
― maura, Tuesday, 11 April 2017 12:25 (seven years ago) link
or how men have to horn in on ladies' songs for reasons that probably boil down to "millennial male" appeal, to sometimes disastrous effect (shudders at memory of soulja boy clomping around the opening of vistoso bosses' otherwise lovely "delirious")
― maura, Tuesday, 11 April 2017 12:27 (seven years ago) link
anyway the outline's writing on music is p poor across the board. lifeless and whiny and completely lacking in descriptions of sound - you know. the important part
― maura, Tuesday, 11 April 2017 12:29 (seven years ago) link
yeah they should stick to their lane of lefty politics and whatever this was
― a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Tuesday, 11 April 2017 12:54 (seven years ago) link
lol i didn't think soulja boy on "delirious" was that bad but yeah it was def unnecessary :X
but otm re: that kind of pairing
― dyl, Tuesday, 11 April 2017 15:27 (seven years ago) link
Not writing, but on his podcast the great Wesley Morris went on a riff about how we're in a musical period as great as the 70s with Kendrick as Stevie Wonder and Drake as Fleetwood Mac, with Views as his Tusk that just made my head explode.
― duped and used by my worst Miss U (President Keyes), Thursday, 20 April 2017 16:29 (seven years ago) link
― SSN Lucci (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 20 April 2017 16:34 (seven years ago) link
Finally, a TUSK we can call our own
I don't remember Fleetwood Mac sucking all to be damned
― Rachel Luther Queen (DJP), Thursday, 20 April 2017 16:35 (seven years ago) link
a drake is a male duck
― Bobson Dugnutt (ulysses), Thursday, 20 April 2017 16:41 (seven years ago) link
I do.
― Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Jr, and Violent J (誤訳侮辱), Thursday, 20 April 2017 16:42 (seven years ago) link
http://carriewintour.tumblr.com/post/143556693100/drake-is-the-modern-lindsey-buckingham
― nomar, Thursday, 20 April 2017 16:42 (seven years ago) link
drake is rap's phil collins only i still don't like him
― Bobson Dugnutt (ulysses), Thursday, 20 April 2017 17:14 (seven years ago) link
he's the phil collins era of genesis but only the song "illegal alien"
― a landlocked exclave (mh 😏), Thursday, 20 April 2017 17:27 (seven years ago) link
ok, not really, but that's the worst collins-related thing that came to mind
the article itself is not really noteworthy but the title made me want to crawl into the crypt:
"Shawn Mendes' 10 Best Deep Cuts"
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Monday, 24 April 2017 13:21 (seven years ago) link
there's only one shawn mendes deep cut I'd care to hear about tbh
― a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Monday, 24 April 2017 13:36 (seven years ago) link
going to show *some* restraint and not post about this on Twitter, but this is seriously one of the biggest self-inflated music-related clickbait abortions I've ever seen
http://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/pop/7768061/100-greatest-choruses-21st-century
Like, bear with me and ignore that the company that literally uses MATH to decide what America enjoys saying that some Sufjan Stevens song is somehow a more important/indelible chorus than Flo Rida. Also, ignore that it completely ignores "Uptown Funk" which carried TWO DIFFERENT HITS. Also, ignore whatever insane millennial retcon job where world-changing, wedding standards songs like like "Hey Ya" and "Crazy" and "Hips Don't Lie" and "Single Ladies" and "I Gotta Feeling" and "Happy" are all not "good" enough choruses to make this list because the staff at America's chart-pop music authority actually(?) somehow thinks that Mika and The Knife need those slots.
Ignore all that.
What makes this bad, irresponsible, deceptive and outright factually incorrect is that the list makes no effort to actually say where the melodies and music come from. Its gross, lazy, and def of a piece with the Donald Trump era where facts are worthless
To wit:--The "Get Low" entry makes no mention of the fact that "To the windows, to the walls" was actually from a black fraternity chant--The "Paper Planes" entry makes no mention of the fact that the hook is actually a repurposed line from Wrecks N Effect's mega-hit "Rumpshaker"--The "Drop It Like It's Hot" entry makes no mention of the fact that the phrase was born out of New Orleans rap music and, although I am no expert and would have to check, likely has an deeper history in New Orleans bounce music
At it's best the whole endeavor is millennial laziness cynically exploited by a company wealthy enough to buy Spin and Vibe, at worst it's a gaggle of white writers actively erasing black voices.
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 14:33 (seven years ago) link
we felt it was time that to start figuring out the new canon
^ their first mistake
― j., Tuesday, 25 April 2017 14:54 (seven years ago) link
we felt it was time that
to start figuring out
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 15:08 (seven years ago) link
i read through that whole list and i feel that much more cretinous now
― j., Tuesday, 25 April 2017 15:16 (seven years ago) link
beating canons into shares
― Brexectile dysfunction (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 15:16 (seven years ago) link
blessed are the canonmakers, for they shall be really short on irl friends
― Brexectile dysfunction (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 15:17 (seven years ago) link
can't really say anything about this
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 15:29 (seven years ago) link
first time for everything i guess
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 15:29 (seven years ago) link
whiney
this list is obviously a load of nonsense but you've literally reached the point where you're gunning for the black eyed peas over the knife
― imago, Tuesday, 25 April 2017 15:36 (seven years ago) link
karin andersson came BARRELLING down the hill yelling "NO!" at the black eyed peas, who were forced to jump into the east river
― imago, Tuesday, 25 April 2017 15:37 (seven years ago) link
― Bobson Dugnutt (ulysses), Thursday, April 20, 2017 12:14 PM (five days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
i'm contractually obligated to point out he's def a top 20 rock drummer of all time easy
― blonde redheads have more fun (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 15:43 (seven years ago) link
nah man Drake's top 30 AT BEST!
― duped and used by my worst Miss U (President Keyes), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 15:46 (seven years ago) link
amazing how the most anodyne fucking comment possible still gets me insulted for no reason
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 16:21 (seven years ago) link
Aw, it was an open goal, k, nothing but love
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 16:29 (seven years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XEXMJfvuQcQ
― j., Tuesday, 25 April 2017 16:35 (seven years ago) link
that's the first time i've ever heard those trivia, they are interesting and I'm glad I know em but I wouldn't begrudge someone for not knowing them and not writing about them.
― flopson, Tuesday, 25 April 2017 16:42 (seven years ago) link
I dont think "trivia" is the right word though? I think these things are all absolutely integral in understanding the main conceit of the story!
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 16:59 (seven years ago) link
Like Diplo eventually collaborating with an actual member of the Clash on a Converse ad is "trivia." M.I.A. detourning the melody and lyrics of 90s butt-shaking song to be about globalism is 100% integral to what makes is a good chorus
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 17:03 (seven years ago) link
trivia or not, i've been able to enjoy all those choruses without knowing those facts. also, i googled for like 2 mins and couldn't find ANY piece of writing (aside from your ilx post and whosampled.com) that mentions them
― flopson, Tuesday, 25 April 2017 17:39 (seven years ago) link
I hate to encourage the circular entropic flow of information between people writing chart articles and fucking genius.com, but genius does have the rumpshaker ref re:MIA
the "get low" annotations are worthless
― a landlocked exclave (mh), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 18:16 (seven years ago) link
less than five google searches and I get from "to the windows, to the walls" to this article, which at least cites a 1994 track
asking people writing articles on pop culture to do more than two google searches is nearly impossible afaict
― a landlocked exclave (mh), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 18:20 (seven years ago) link
forgot article link:https://www.redbullradio.com/shows/united-states-of-bass/episodes/mr-collipark
I mean it's not really a lack of googling, more just the whole regurgitated received wisdom with a chyme gloss of celebrity gossip and fun blog voice thing, but
― a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 18:51 (seven years ago) link
I guess writing doesn't necessarily imply anyone did research
― a landlocked exclave (mh), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 20:36 (seven years ago) link
I mean, honestly, on one level there's the skill of digging into some material, which used to be paging through Reader's Guide to Periodical Literature and hoping nothing really recent was relevant, and hopefully being able to have a couple sources that weren't just churn off the same article. (middle school library nerd here)
Now the actual digging is much easier with google, but the critical skills to find original sources to determine if you've found a traceable fact or just the same half-dozen people regurgitating one questionable source gets tricky.
I guess if you're churning out stuff in the ol' billboard post mill it might not matter
― a landlocked exclave (mh), Tuesday, 25 April 2017 20:41 (seven years ago) link
http://www.sfweekly.com/music/hearthis/colleen-green-is-the-queen-of-blase/
― Frozen CD, Wednesday, 3 May 2017 03:05 (seven years ago) link
that owns
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 3 May 2017 04:39 (seven years ago) link
San Francisco's on the Trump Train, baby
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 3 May 2017 04:50 (seven years ago) link
That openness reverberates through “Want You Back”’s verses, which have a Don Henley glimmer and a Christine McVie yearning
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 3 May 2017 23:39 (seven years ago) link
can't see what's particularly bad about that
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Wednesday, 3 May 2017 23:52 (seven years ago) link
they forgot to work in a Twin Peaks reference too
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 3 May 2017 23:56 (seven years ago) link
i hate to give mr. thenardlebop any attention at all, but this is so egregious how is he this uninformed
And here we have one of the ugliest attempts at capitalizing on the Caribbean craze: pic.twitter.com/U4ZtKtUkFy— Thee Anthony Fantano (@theneedledrop) May 3, 2017
@theneedledrop Wow man .. ugly attempt at Caribbean ? Man that's Afro beat that's my naija culture . I was born into this sound . This is OUR sound— Wale (@Wale) May 3, 2017
― austinb, Thursday, 4 May 2017 00:05 (seven years ago) link
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, May 3, 2017 4:56 PM (sixteen minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
haim make pop-rock full of deliberate callbacks to '70s los angeles pop-rock i.e. what are you talking about
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Thursday, 4 May 2017 00:13 (seven years ago) link
make it a Mulholland Drive reference then
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Thursday, 4 May 2017 00:16 (seven years ago) link
my point was, yes they make that style of music so obviously that one could have written that sentence without hearing a second of music.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Thursday, 4 May 2017 00:17 (seven years ago) link
Jesus fuck fantano scolding wale unreal lack of awareness
― I got da Midas touch as you fucking were LG x (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 4 May 2017 00:18 (seven years ago) link
*billy ocean voice* caribbean craze
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Thursday, 4 May 2017 00:19 (seven years ago) link
looks like "know how to diss diplo, i'll run with it" without recognizing wale whatsoever
― a landlocked exclave (mh), Thursday, 4 May 2017 00:24 (seven years ago) link
What's a Don Henley glimmer
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 4 May 2017 00:26 (seven years ago) link
The gleam of the LAPD badge as they search his partment?
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 4 May 2017 00:27 (seven years ago) link
the reflection the lights off his coke mirror.
― EZ Snappin, Thursday, 4 May 2017 00:38 (seven years ago) link
The fact that Wale responded to Fantano at all is an amazing self-ether
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 4 May 2017 02:43 (seven years ago) link
i get that ATDI is important but this is the most hagiographic, labored-over, critically uninteresting thing i've ever seen
http://thequietus.com/articles/22339-at-the-drive-in-inter-alia-album-review
― austinb, Friday, 5 May 2017 18:37 (seven years ago) link
I got halfway through that before thinking "is this is a review of a new record or a fucking history lesson?" ... a couple of paragraphs later and I was like "is this a review of a new record or is this just the writer telling us how much he likes the previous one?"
― The Anti-Climax Blues Band (Turrican), Friday, 5 May 2017 18:56 (seven years ago) link
The review didn't really click for me until paragraph seven:
Peers in my Devon sixth form college didn’t know what to make of them when I brought Relationship of Command into the common room
which is where I stopped reading. Especially once I noticed there were like 17 paragraphs to go. Pull your pants back up, buddy, it's just an album.
― Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Jr, and Violent J (誤訳侮辱), Friday, 5 May 2017 19:01 (seven years ago) link
I like At the Drive In quite a bit but I don't really know how "important" they are, they were solidly part of an emo-influence/mathy post-fugazi scene of underground rock
― I got da Midas touch as you fucking were LG x (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 5 May 2017 19:04 (seven years ago) link
holy crap it's almost 6,000 words. that's like Wright Thompson or Spencer Hall longform strokejob length.
― evol j, Friday, 5 May 2017 19:33 (seven years ago) link
Is there a Caribbean craze?
― Evan, Friday, 5 May 2017 19:38 (seven years ago) link
Pfft
http://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/three-days-at-stagecoach-californias-pro-trump-honkytonk/
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 8 May 2017 23:15 (seven years ago) link
Sitting on another set of lawn chairs was Craig, a civil engineer who’d spent the morning perfecting a spill-proof beer bong. The only thing more sculpted than its arrangement of PVC pipes and valves was his body.
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 8 May 2017 23:18 (seven years ago) link
Amazingly, this was not written by Bob Lefsetz.
Closing paragraph:
The hippie movement is actually a great case study in the intersection of pop music and activism. Listen to Joni Mitchell’s “Woodstock.” (Yes, she famously missed performing at the festival she wrote the definitive song about.) “We are stardust, we are golden, and we’ve got to get ourselves back to the garden.” Listen to Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young calling out police in the wake of the Kent State shooting in “Ohio.” Listen to Bob Dylan skewering government warmongering on “Masters of War.” 2017’s ambitious pop crop could wield this same power if they wanted. But do they?
― Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Jr, and Violent J (誤訳侮辱), Wednesday, 17 May 2017 23:18 (seven years ago) link
hey Katy Perry pricked her finger on a rose thorn in that one video. that's about as deep as you're gonna get these days
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 17 May 2017 23:48 (seven years ago) link
Before I heard you, I didn’t think it was possible for someone to front three separate bands over their career, and on top of that, release several albums as a solo artist. How could someone be that universal?Your voice sends chills to the spine. Your words stir the wheels of thought. Your melodies invent emotions most of us never even knew existed.Your songs have gotten me, as well as many other people, through some of the darkest, as well as some of the best times in our lives. You touched more people than you can imagine. And now you’ve hurt us.
Your voice sends chills to the spine. Your words stir the wheels of thought. Your melodies invent emotions most of us never even knew existed.
Your songs have gotten me, as well as many other people, through some of the darkest, as well as some of the best times in our lives. You touched more people than you can imagine. And now you’ve hurt us.
http://www.alternativenation.net/say-hello-2-heaven-open-letter-chris-cornell/
― Frozen CD, Saturday, 20 May 2017 02:20 (seven years ago) link
nah
― mookieproof, Saturday, 20 May 2017 02:22 (seven years ago) link
i wrote worse than that in my journal in college. she's 21 ffs
― Yoni Loves Chocha (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 20 May 2017 02:43 (seven years ago) link
Yeah, post denied
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 20 May 2017 12:55 (seven years ago) link
http://www.complex.com/pop-culture/2017/05/donald-glover-pop-culture-streak-is-unprecedented
https://media4.giphy.com/media/xT1XH3nKVJMCvzAc8M/giphy.gif
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 22 May 2017 15:44 (seven years ago) link
donald glover's pop culture streak is unprecedented....if you woke of from a coma in 2016 and have total amnesia
― Universal LULU Nation (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 22 May 2017 17:41 (seven years ago) link
if you woke from a coma in 2016 and have total amnesia
Primary qualifications for being a pop culture journalist in 2017
― grawlix (unperson), Monday, 22 May 2017 17:43 (seven years ago) link
I don't like the Beatles at all, but even bands I hate don't deserve to be the subject of an Amanda Marcotte piece.
― grawlix (unperson), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 12:15 (seven years ago) link
oh *that's* what people were talking about
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 12:18 (seven years ago) link
I Wrote the 500th Sgt Peppers Challops Article...and that's okay!
― President Keyes, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 12:36 (seven years ago) link
It’s no surprise, then, that the Beatles’ shift toward a more respectable and artistic branding meant shedding their sex appeal. The “Sgt. Pepper” album cover features the Fab Four dressed in goofy-looking uniforms that couldn’t be better suited to repel the female gaze. Beyond the title track and “Lucy in the Sky with the Diamonds,” there’s very little on the record that makes a lady want to shake her hips on the dance floor.“Sgt. Pepper” is a good pop record, don’t get me wrong. But it’s a record I resent, because it helped cement this notion that music for girls is silly and music for men is artistically significant. It’s a notion that is doubly appalling because history shows, time and time again, that girl-tastes are the ones that are ahead of the curve.
“Sgt. Pepper” is a good pop record, don’t get me wrong. But it’s a record I resent, because it helped cement this notion that music for girls is silly and music for men is artistically significant. It’s a notion that is doubly appalling because history shows, time and time again, that girl-tastes are the ones that are ahead of the curve.
― Le Bateau Ivre, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 12:40 (seven years ago) link
have we done a t/s: sgt pepper vs sgt pepper's? feel like we should put the thorny matter of how to shorten references to this album to bed once and for all
personally i believe anyone who prefers to say sgt pepper's should be dragged into the street and summarily executed
― heck i've even been an 'oyster pirate' (bizarro gazzara), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 12:41 (seven years ago) link
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Extermination Squad
― President Keyes, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 12:43 (seven years ago) link
why the fuck would you call it Sgt. Pepper?
because making it a possessive without a subject just sounds fucking weird and wrong, mainly
― heck i've even been an 'oyster pirate' (bizarro gazzara), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 12:54 (seven years ago) link
also would you mind stepping out into the street for a moment, i have something to show you *cocks pistol*
no thanks. after what happened in Portland, I'm steering clear of armed zealots
― President Keyes, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 12:58 (seven years ago) link
'Highway 61 Revisited' came out two years earlier and
*gagged and dragged off by mansplaining police*
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 13:10 (seven years ago) link
does Dylan get lady points for introducing hip swinging rhythms to folk music?
― President Keyes, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 13:20 (seven years ago) link
I think the thing I like most about the article is that it robs women of the agency to be pretentious!
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 13:30 (seven years ago) link
― President Keyes, Tuesday, May 30, 2017 2:20 PM (ten minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Funny, just reading positively 4th Street and it sounds like Richard Farina is more responsible for that. Maybe Dylan was exponentially more popular though, but that seems to be a couple of years later.
― Stevolende, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 13:33 (seven years ago) link
But Dylan got the grief for it at the Newport Folk and Mansplainsinging Festival
― President Keyes, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 13:35 (seven years ago) link
P sure that piece wins.
― Tomorrow Begat Tomorrow (Sund4r), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 13:55 (seven years ago) link
Is there any actual evidence that women did not buy Sgt Pepper btw?
― Tomorrow Begat Tomorrow (Sund4r), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 14:50 (seven years ago) link
Tina Turner and Nina Simone were planning on covering post-Peppers Beatles songs but instead decided to stay home and dance alone in their apartments to Robyn
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 14:56 (seven years ago) link
i get as excited about amanda marcotte articles as i do about jason whitlock articles, which is saying something!
― k3vin k., Tuesday, 30 May 2017 14:56 (seven years ago) link
yeah, it's pretty well-established that, of sgt pepperses' 32 million copies sold, only twelve of them were to women
― heck i've even been an 'oyster pirate' (bizarro gazzara), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 14:57 (seven years ago) link
but every one of those women went out and published a #hottake of their own as a result
What wing of the military was Sgt. Pepper in and did they even allow woman cadets?
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 14:58 (seven years ago) link
sgt pepper didn't actually hold a rank - 'sergeant' was just his first name
billy shears was a four-star general tho iirc
― heck i've even been an 'oyster pirate' (bizarro gazzara), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 15:00 (seven years ago) link
@scott_tobias A stupid Amanda Marcotte take. Well now I've seen everything.— Slammin Bod Jeb Lund (@Mobute) May 30, 2017
― k3vin k., Tuesday, 30 May 2017 15:04 (seven years ago) link
while I think people dragging A.M. tend to come off pretty gross this is the most legit problem with this article imo: it's rank essentialism. this is a broader problem w/in "I LIKE POP. YES THERE I SAID IT, CAN YOU BELIEVE HOW TRANSGRESSIVE I AM TO LIKE POP, ALL YOU HEGEMONIC ROCKISTS" discourse imo
― People like Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Jr, and (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 16:35 (seven years ago) link
it's the kind of piece you might write if you've only heard of rock essentialist writing and decided to make some weird points that other people probably wrote about in ways that make sense
― mh, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:02 (seven years ago) link
Beyond the title track and “Lucy in the Sky with the Diamonds,” there’s very little on the record that makes a lady want to shake her hips on the dance floor.
upbeat dance classic lucy in the sky with diamonds
― -_- (jim in vancouver), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:20 (seven years ago) link
I am not a lady but when I was a child listening to this album on endless repeat, the song I danced to the most was "Within You Without You"
― PJD PDJ DPJ (DJP), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:29 (seven years ago) link
guys Lucy is a lady
― President Keyes, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:34 (seven years ago) link
“Sgt. Pepper’s” was the point when rock stopped being the music of girls and started being the music of men five year old children.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:36 (seven years ago) link
beatles just chilling around trying to figure out what the unsexiest outfits would be
― mh, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:40 (seven years ago) link
I really don't see the difference between this and some of what's in the latest Rob Sheffield book that everyone was falling over themselves about, except perhaps that one was a book and one was an essay pegged to an anniversary, with accompanying research time.
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:43 (seven years ago) link
you can't link to a book
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:45 (seven years ago) link
like, besides some throwaway sentence ends ("hip-hop’s dominance of the pop charts that continues to this day" is the exact opposite of what is happening on the pop charts today), most of it -- the disco backlash being tinged with if not rooted in racism and misogyny, grunge being celebrated by critics for removing bubblegum pop from the zeitgeist, the Beatles' trajectory from proto-boy band to established canonical group -- seems as if it would be recognized for the generally accepted critical consensus that it is if people weren't conditioned to have a negative response to the byline and URL
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:46 (seven years ago) link
she completely left out racism re: disco
which confused me more than anything
― mh, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:51 (seven years ago) link
<i>Look at disco, for instance. Disco is classic girl music — or, more accurately, music for girls and gay men. Those things, <b>along with some barely concealed racial resentment,</b> were among the biggest reasons that disco was so demonized and despised by so many straight white men of the 1970s.</i>
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:51 (seven years ago) link
it kind of reads as if she independently discovered that critical consensus but didn't quite have all the pieces, despite music journalism churning out similar articles for decades?
― mh, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:52 (seven years ago) link
fuck
follow the markup yourself
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:52 (seven years ago) link
oh duh, sorry
maybe it just felt weird as an aside?
― mh, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:53 (seven years ago) link
I seem to remember critics celebrating grunge spelling the commercial end of hair metal rather than for slaying Duran Duran.
― President Keyes, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:57 (seven years ago) link
well the generally accepted critical consensus is often wrong. or at best reductive, oversimplified. since I'm almost 60 yo most of this isn't history. no question the disco backlash was racist AND misogynist. but as a practicing critic in the early 90s I recall grunge being celebrated as a return of rock rather than a vanquishing of "bubblegum pop" (small but significant distinction) while the Beatles didn't become an established canonical group they established the canon! there's a difference. that said, as a card-carrying baby boomer (though not an AARP card) I could care less about Sgt Pepper, remixed or whatever.
fwiw I've never encountered this writer or URL before.
― busy bee starski (m coleman), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:57 (seven years ago) link
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, May 30, 2017 1:46 PM (five minutes ago)
yes, it is possible for a piece of written work to draw broadly from widely-accepted theory and still make its points lazily. this pretty much describes any marcotte essay i've ever read (and i've hate-read a lot of them)
― k3vin k., Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:58 (seven years ago) link
hair metal = bubbliest of gum
― The Remoans of the May (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:58 (seven years ago) link
katherine, there are so many factually inaccurate and insulting things in here that it goes well beyond "ho-hum just another day where a politically blogger rehashes the critical consensus"
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:59 (seven years ago) link
yeah exactly. bubblegum kinda disappeared until the Spice Girls kicked off the new new pop millennium iirc
― busy bee starski (m coleman), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 17:59 (seven years ago) link
Exactly. Marcotte is a bad and lazy thinker no matter what subject she's attempting to tackle.
― grawlix (unperson), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:00 (seven years ago) link
Like, for starters, Highway 61 Revisited released in 1965 and the entire rock-critical discourse of Marcus et al; or that the whole whimsical psychedelia thing came up in a scene dominated by women like Grace Slick and Janis Joplin; or that house music isn't "girlish," it was made for and by gay black men; and that women are actually the thought leaders in "pretentious" art and avant-garde music right now and reducing women listeners to yepper yepper carly rae jepper stereotypes is ugly
Oh no, am i doing a sexism? actually actually not all men
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:03 (seven years ago) link
the whole article is dumb. i don't care who wrote it. and this is the dumbest: "Disco is classic girl music — or, more accurately, music for girls and gay men."
people who say or write stuff like that shouldn't be taken seriously. probably a trump voter.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:04 (seven years ago) link
The soundtracks to both “Guardians of the Galaxy” movies, made up of pop classics by artists like Fleetwood Mac and the Jackson 5, are darlings not just of audiences but critics as well.
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:04 (seven years ago) link
bernie would have beatles 1
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:05 (seven years ago) link
amanda marcotte writes troll thinkpieces for salon, she once criticized bernie sanders for supporting the sandinistas over the contras and it was p clear from the context she had just found out about both of those things
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:08 (seven years ago) link
I wasn't aware of Rob Sheffield's book, but judging from the excerpt on Rolling Stone it seems to fit squarely in the books for RS readers who live for lists of greatest rock bands and yet more books and articles about said bands?
AM's piece seems kind of a drive-by challops take, this "what's hot in the news I can have a take on" school of blogging
― mh, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:09 (seven years ago) link
there's a difference in targeting between writers who can probably describe what hairstyle each of the beatles had at any given time versus a salon blog giving a lukewarm take that's semi-topical
― mh, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:10 (seven years ago) link
its no big deal that its a dumb article. finding something good to read on the internet is hard enough. finding something good to read about the friggin' beatles? could take you years.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:11 (seven years ago) link
imo just reading wikipedia and then coming up with some ideas is a good way to blog
― mh, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:12 (seven years ago) link
hoo boy I just read AM's wiki entry. somebody should do her a favor and edit in some good stuff
― mh, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:14 (seven years ago) link
"women listen to records like THIS" is a generalization that needs to be stated with a lot more care than this piece did.
― maura, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:14 (seven years ago) link
I'm just personally going to reserve my outrage for things like the 100th "poptimism is bad and ruining music, writing and everything" piece by an established, secure writer than for mostly unremarkable pieces like this
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:25 (seven years ago) link
also, calling a feminist writer a Trump voter is pretty ...
that was a joke. i don't know who the writer is. will never read them again if i can help it. i only read stuff like that when people here are talking about it.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:36 (seven years ago) link
re-reading my post I'm probably (unintentionally) guilty of mansplaining...
― busy bee starski (m coleman), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:36 (seven years ago) link
i just meant that it was dumb like trump. that's all. but perfect for the trump era, i suppose....stereotypes, generalizations, poorly thought out arguments...
― scott seward, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:44 (seven years ago) link
Maybe I'm reading too much into this, but my takeaway is that 'girls' who don't prefer 'girly' music implicitly suffer from some form of Stockholm syndrome. Totally inoffensive and 'unremarkable.'
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:45 (seven years ago) link
iirc amanda marcotte was one of the ppl who thought democrats should root for trump b/c he'd be easier to beat in november
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:45 (seven years ago) link
fwiw I loved "Rio" inordinately then, and I love it inordinately now
― leprechaundriac (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:46 (seven years ago) link
every day is Rio day
― mh, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:46 (seven years ago) link
the central thesis of *people ruin everything* is, as always, on the money though.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:47 (seven years ago) link
Amanda Marcotte @AmandaMarcotte Feb 16The notion that there’s any meaningful difference between Perez and Ellison was created by drama addicts stoking their martyr complexes.
Amanda Marcotte @AmandaMarcotte Feb 16It's honestly dumber than people who used to make New Order v. Joy Division a thing. THEY ARE THE SAME BAND GET OVER YOURSELVES.
― salthigh, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:54 (seven years ago) link
C+ trolling
― busy bee starski (m coleman), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 18:57 (seven years ago) link
― salthigh, Tuesday, May 30, 2017 2:54 PM (five minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
true tbh
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 19:00 (seven years ago) link
Curti Bros
― President Keyes, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 19:02 (seven years ago) link
Alfred I'm shocked, SHOCKED
― busy bee starski (m coleman), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 19:04 (seven years ago) link
lukewarm takes, delivered regularly, to your door
― mh, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 19:05 (seven years ago) link
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, May 30, 2017 2:25 PM (fifty-nine minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, May 30, 2017 2:45 PM (thirty-nine minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
yes, yes she was, and then proceeded to blame not campaigning in wisconsin, having the wrong candidate for this time and virtually every other legitimate hilldog campaign problem on bernie bros
― royce jung (slothroprhymes), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 19:29 (seven years ago) link
i honestly don't know if marcotte is a troll who believes in next to nothing a la amanda palmer or if she actually /is/ as milquetoast a liberal as one could possibly be, but it hardly matters because she sounds like a fucking idiot
― royce jung (slothroprhymes), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 19:31 (seven years ago) link
why are there so many public trolls named amanda ;_;
― weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 19:32 (seven years ago) link
take my hand, I'll make you understand
― President Keyes, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 19:33 (seven years ago) link
confirmation bias imo
― mh, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 19:41 (seven years ago) link
2 is too many
― weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 19:45 (seven years ago) link
I WANNA DO A LITTLE STRUTAS YOU WIGGLE YOUR FIRM BUTT
AMANDA
― The Anti-Climax Blues Band (Turrican), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 19:52 (seven years ago) link
Sorry, wrong thread.
― weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 19:55 (seven years ago) link
― mh, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 19:57 (seven years ago) link
Little known Beatles tune
― Evan, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 20:02 (seven years ago) link
i have been harassed in this fashion since the late '80s :-/
― weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 20:05 (seven years ago) link
You'll hate the Boston thread, then!
― The Anti-Climax Blues Band (Turrican), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 20:11 (seven years ago) link
if it's full of sexist jokes at the expense of amandas, i already do
― weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 20:14 (seven years ago) link
not sure in what world responding to someone's comment about jerks sharing their first name being disheartening with actual harassment is a good idea
― mh, Tuesday, 30 May 2017 20:17 (seven years ago) link
i don't want to derail this thread but i do wish to express that amanda jokes are gross and not funny like say video gaaaaaaaames jokes
― weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 20:19 (seven years ago) link
This world, in which the comment was blatantly not aimed at the person whining about harrassment and was merely riffing on a thread which has been on this forum for... ooh, four years now and has offended absolutely nobody. But then, this is ILX where people, bless 'em, always get oversensitive, so... y'know, business as usual!
(If anyone hasn't read that thread, it's basically everyone taking the piss out of the Boston song 'Amanda' ... I appreciate it may not be funny if you're actually called Amanda, but I assume that most people on the planet with that name who recognise the song actually realise the song isn't directly about them.)
― The Anti-Climax Blues Band (Turrican), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 20:32 (seven years ago) link
things like the 100th "poptimism is bad and ruining music, writing and everything" piece
yeah, everybody knows
― Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 20:35 (seven years ago) link
get back to fuckin ilb morbsitronics lol isnt there a matt harvey incident to write about
― royce jung (slothroprhymes), Tuesday, 30 May 2017 20:45 (seven years ago) link
The Marcotte article wasn't that bad.
― Treeship, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 02:38 (seven years ago) link
https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/a5/f5/21/a5f52196ef344a9bda47c56b17b4e62b.jpg
― k3vin k., Wednesday, 31 May 2017 02:44 (seven years ago) link
― Treeship, Tuesday, May 30, 2017 10:38 PM
neither is Sean Spicer imo
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 02:45 (seven years ago) link
Her argument is rooted in a bunch of weird assumptions about what music is considered "girly" and what's "masculine" but she's on the right track. The Beatles had to die as a pop group in order to attain immortality in the canon. And a lot of the "experimentation" in Sgt Pepper's feels tacked on and annoying and the album succeeds,in the end, on the strength of its songs, just like With the Beatles. And finally, there is something gross about the way the Beatles' original fans, mostly young women, were pushed aside and mocked.
― Treeship, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 02:50 (seven years ago) link
Also she's right that disco was an underappreciated comet from the future.
― Treeship, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 02:59 (seven years ago) link
marcotte is such a bad and irritating and incompetent writer that she can express an argument i agree with in such a shitty way that i start to wonder if i'm wrong
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 03:06 (seven years ago) link
i find it annoying when ppl dismiss the beatles' early music as kid stuff or bubblegum pop or whatever but the contrarian argument that their later music was "pretentious" is just as unfair
and trying to draw a direct line from sgt pepper to homophobic attacks on disco is just a classic salon-style clickbait argument of the worst kind, completely unfounded and gross
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 03:13 (seven years ago) link
Yeah. I mean, the most offensive aspect of the piece was the idea that "girls" prefer more accessible music you can dance to while "men," especially "nerds," like "difficult music.
This binary is kind of radically offensive and its the basis of her argument, so I guess the piece is, technically, "bad." But there is also a shred of something that is kind of true there as well.
― Treeship, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 03:19 (seven years ago) link
Shred of truth wrt the Beatles' career trajectory, the politics of taste, hidden sexism in people's skepticism of pop and dance music, etc.
Not with regard to how she uncritically accepts many of the assumptions she should be critiquing.
― Treeship, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 03:22 (seven years ago) link
the entire gist of the argument is stolen from a book that does it much, much better:
https://www.amazon.com/How-Beatles-Destroyed-Rock-Roll/dp/019975697X
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 07:16 (seven years ago) link
Amanda Marcotte's arguments seems kind of similar one Robert Elms used to make, about how Sgt. Pepper's was the moment everything went wrong for rock music - but Elms's essentialism was regarding race rather than gender, iirc he said something like late period Beatles took the 'blackness' out of rock music. but the way Elms frames it is that it's pre-sgt.pepper's rock that is 'authentic' and 'real' etc and the sgt.pepper's that represents a shift to stuff that's plastic and shallow
But he adds: "I just think they are either childlike and simple or rather leaden and pompous - one or the other all the time."Theirs is a sanitised and anaemic version of American blues-inspired rock and roll, he complains."For me they turned something that was once sexy and raw and had roots, into something that was totally soulless, playground sing-along music."
― soref, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 09:00 (seven years ago) link
I don't think they were taking blackness out as much as putting whiteness (Englishness) in. Which is appropriate, given their own rather pale complexions. Indeed, one could argue that it is morally preferable to continued appropriation of black American forms.
Hence the music-hallish Mr. Kite and 64 (plus I guess Octopus's Garden, Yellow Sub, Mustard)
― leprechaundriac (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 10:56 (seven years ago) link
I don't think they were taking blackness out as much as putting whiteness (Englishness) in.
Which wasn't exactly novel in 1967.
― Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 11:00 (seven years ago) link
Of course not, but negging the Beatles for sounding *less* like Chuck Berry for a few minutes is kinda ridic
― leprechaundriac (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 11:07 (seven years ago) link
Exactly, nobody was sounding like Chuck Berry in 1967, and that wasn't down to Sgt. Pepper.
― Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 11:09 (seven years ago) link
the way the Beatles' original fans, mostly young women, were a pushed aside and mocked politely asked what they thought of the new direction
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8-keBliZndQ
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 11:35 (seven years ago) link
i imagine some Rolling Stone articles did this but i don't think it was widespread. maybe in print rock crit which hasn't been relevant in decades. this feels like fighting an argument a few people had 40 years ago.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 11:38 (seven years ago) link
Would love to hear a compilation of the music that Otis Redding made towards the end of 67 under the influence of Sgt Pepper etc.See what adding the blackness back into it would be like.
I heard that George Clinton recorded a full cover of the lp, so would love to hear taht too.Is the Booker T & The Ms set Mclemore avenue a set of covers of the lp or Beatles in general or what?
― Stevolende, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 11:44 (seven years ago) link
That Elms quote is a great example of the *other* school of rockist thought i.e. music should come from the gut/soul, none of this pretentious art-school nonsense for me thanks! I don't think that's Marcotte's stance though, despite the bits about danceability.
― Gavin, Leeds, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 11:44 (seven years ago) link
xp Or maybe a set of covers of Abbey rd.
― Stevolende, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 11:46 (seven years ago) link
All of the songs on McLemore Avenue are from Abbey Road, hence the alb title and the cover shot:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/a/af/Mclemoreavenue_album.jpg/220px-Mclemoreavenue_album.jpg
― Bernie Lugg (Ward Fowler), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 11:48 (seven years ago) link
Sure was decent of Billy Preston to rescue their pasty asses on subsequent recordings. Otherwise they just would have kept releasing "Till There Was You" b/w "Michelle."
― leprechaundriac (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 12:07 (seven years ago) link
The Elijah Wald book that D-40 mentions is really great, essential reading imo, and makes a FAR more nuanced and historically informed point.
― Tomorrow Begat Tomorrow (Sund4r), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 12:35 (seven years ago) link
is that the blues one? if so I should be buying it next week.
― Stevolende, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 12:44 (seven years ago) link
I meant How the Beatles Destroyed Rock 'n' Roll. (And his thesis is less simplistic than the title suggests.)
― Tomorrow Begat Tomorrow (Sund4r), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 12:46 (seven years ago) link
Right, should be getting Escaping The Delta; Robert Johnson and the invention of the blues. hadn't realised that the last bit of the thread had been about his other book on the Beatles.
― Stevolende, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 12:47 (seven years ago) link
― Gavin, Leeds, Wednesday, May 31, 2017 12:44 PM (fifty-four minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
this may not be Marcotte's stance, but I think it's similar to stuff that comes up in some of the more vulgar/clumsy iterations of poptimism, the idea that young women just enjoy pop music in some pure, unmediated, physical way, instead of overthinking everything like nerdy male music critics
― soref, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 12:48 (seven years ago) link
I know a few women who were Beatles fans "until they got weird." But I think it was more about them promoting drugs.
― President Keyes, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 12:50 (seven years ago) link
It was the facial hair duh
― leprechaundriac (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:06 (seven years ago) link
this is a good review...
http://www.richardgoldsteinonline.com/the-original-sgt-pepper-negative-review.html
― scott seward, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:14 (seven years ago) link
"And the pendulum started its long-term swings: progressive rock and corporate rock would be swatted back by punk and disco, hair metal would be blasted by grunge and hip-hop."
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/30/arts/music/beatles-sgt-peppers-lonely-hearts-club-band-anniversary.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=second-column-region®ion=top-news&WT.nav=top-news&_r=0
― scott seward, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:18 (seven years ago) link
I love how 70s music is still this weird rhetorical battleground. Back in the 80s I often heard that punk was a reaction against disco. I guess prog was kind of forgotten at that point.
― President Keyes, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:22 (seven years ago) link
hair metal obviously a reaction against disco.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:23 (seven years ago) link
grunge a reaction against hair metal. experimental horse music a reaction against grunge.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:24 (seven years ago) link
xpost reaction against baldness iirc
― President Keyes, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:24 (seven years ago) link
Pub Rock a reaction against Restaurant Rock which was a reaction against Cafe Jazz
― President Keyes, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:25 (seven years ago) link
this, by the way, was the beginning of the straight white male reaction against disco...
http://sleazethiscity.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/VH7-e1425291398633.jpeg
― scott seward, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:27 (seven years ago) link
"only i can save the children from disco..."
https://alfredogarcia70.files.wordpress.com/2015/10/david-lee-roth-assless-chaps.jpg
― scott seward, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:30 (seven years ago) link
listening to sgt pepper's now and my first reaction is that my copy skips.
― Treeship, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:32 (seven years ago) link
also a little help from my friends is a surprisingly beautiful song
― soref, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 12:48 (thirty-four minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Yeah that's true. I definitely think those characterisations are the weakest part of the piece.
― Gavin, Leeds, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:32 (seven years ago) link
Gregorian chants were a reaction to grindcore iirc xps gah
― leprechaundriac (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:33 (seven years ago) link
Women were into Grindcore first, before it got all pretentious
― President Keyes, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:36 (seven years ago) link
this is a really good album
― Treeship, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:37 (seven years ago) link
dang you guys still talking about the beatles in here huh
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:38 (seven years ago) link
I remember watching a BBC documentary about '70s brit heavy metal where a couple of interviewees (I'm 99% sure one was Tony Iommi) mentioned in passing an antagonism towards soul music (or at least the soul club scene of the time), the point wasn't really picked up on but it wasn't something I'd ever seen or heard mentioned before.
― Gavin, Leeds, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:39 (seven years ago) link
It was Geezer Butler.
― Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:40 (seven years ago) link
Did surprise me because nearly all of those 70s bands started of playing Motown/ soul/ R&B covers (hence the redundancy of a certain other thread).
― Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:41 (seven years ago) link
Maybe they just got bored of that though and wanted to get HEAVY.
― Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:42 (seven years ago) link
can't believe there's a redundant thread on ILM
― Covfefe growing vpon the skull of a man (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:45 (seven years ago) link
I was thinking last night that it wouldn't exactly be too difficult to lob a solid intersectional feminist critique against a band of bigamists, deadbeat dads and wife beaters but Marcotte took the brave path of "this is why boys like Tool, ew"
― Jay Elettronica Viva (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:45 (seven years ago) link
― Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:40 (eleven minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Ah thanks! Yeah I wonder where that break with r&b/soul came for that generation of rock bands.
― Gavin, Leeds, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 13:59 (seven years ago) link
whiney, the beatles weren't a band of john lennons
― Treeship, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 14:06 (seven years ago) link
that would've been really difficult given the level of knowledge of genetic engineering in 1960s Liverpool
― Covfefe growing vpon the skull of a man (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 14:07 (seven years ago) link
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Clone Band
― leprechaundriac (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 14:11 (seven years ago) link
or would "Clonely" be better?
― leprechaundriac (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 14:12 (seven years ago) link
clonely is better
― mark s, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 14:13 (seven years ago) link
When I'm 64 clearly about cloning overkill
― President Keyes, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 14:13 (seven years ago) link
tbf original Paul was the philanderer
― mh, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 14:22 (seven years ago) link
Yes, but the guy they replaced Paul with after he died has proven to remarkably faithful to his spouses.
― Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 14:24 (seven years ago) link
I Married Paul
― President Keyes, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 14:28 (seven years ago) link
at the end of the day, any band that can inspire something like this is inherently evil:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=59ahx9ckqIw
― scott seward, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 16:10 (seven years ago) link
that whole movie is a cringefest
― leprechaundriac (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 16:15 (seven years ago) link
Tim Burton's Pepperland! would be the logical next step.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 16:25 (seven years ago) link
at least the dumb bee gees one had earth, wind, & fire.
and aerosmith
― maura, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 16:38 (seven years ago) link
yeah that was the only other high point.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 17:15 (seven years ago) link
that movie is one long low point
― Οὖτις, Wednesday, 31 May 2017 17:17 (seven years ago) link
― scott seward, Wednesday, May 31, 2017 4:25 PM (two hours ago)
this will totally happen in my lifetime, won't it
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 19:25 (seven years ago) link
I remember watching a BBC documentary about '70s brit heavy metal where a couple of interviewees (I'm 99% sure one was Tony Iommi) mentioned in passing an antagonism towards soul music (or at least the soul club scene of the time), the point wasn't really picked up on but it wasn't something I'd ever seen or heard mentioned before
This feels more like Mids v. Rockers to me...? I've always suspected that punk & disco were two sides of the same Mod coin
― the rockists' red glare (Drugs A. Money), Wednesday, 31 May 2017 19:27 (seven years ago) link
*Mods v. Rockers lol
No, was definitely Geezer Butler. Was a story about how he met Ozzy, that he'd been at the blues club and Ozzy had been at the soul club and they glared at each other across the street on the way home. And through the miracle of YouTube...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=egCAUuBN0vI
― Mud... Jam... Failure... (aldo), Friday, 2 June 2017 09:34 (seven years ago) link
That's actually a different clip though! I was sure the original poster was referring to an interview in the Heavy Metal Britannia documentary and, through the miracle of YouTube, I found it. Geezer Butler, talking about the early days of Sabbath, says, at one point, "Everywhere you went it was soul clubs... I was just absolutely sick of going to places and listening to soul music..."
― Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Friday, 2 June 2017 10:00 (seven years ago) link
haven't seen the clip and so can't necessarily back this up as the source of the hostility, but there was a distinct split in 60s sensiblity between listener-clubbers who liked to go to clubs to dance to records (ideally by black american groups or singers) and listener-clubbers who liked to go to clubs to watch bands (which were on the whole white and local)
up to a certain point* there was a line of strong mod disdain for the very *idea* of live music as opposed to music on record (the who called themselves mods but most real mods disowned them) so this may be less a "northern soul sucks" line per se than a "live music rocks dude" line (which is after all what you'd expect a working musician to feel)
― mark s, Friday, 2 June 2017 10:09 (seven years ago) link
*apostrophe to extra suggestion when this certain point came, and why = mid-late 70s, by which time there were a lot more live shows featuring black music of all kinds, and also by which time the who -- via quadrophenia -- had reverse-engineered the meaning of the word mod, which sensibility began migrating away to descendent subcultures
― mark s, Friday, 2 June 2017 10:11 (seven years ago) link
Geezer goes on to say they were listening to Hendrix and Cream and wanted to do music like that - sounds like Ozzy wasn't though!
― Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Friday, 2 June 2017 10:16 (seven years ago) link
Haven't any recollection of seeing the one you're talking about at all! Must try and dig it out.
― Mud... Jam... Failure... (aldo), Friday, 2 June 2017 10:21 (seven years ago) link
This sounds right too. I wonder if it's an age thing too, Sabbath were a pretty young band, Geezer was born in 1949, seems like they hadn't done that thing of playing soul and r&b covers like so many 60s British musicians had.
― Punnet of the Grapes (Tom D.), Friday, 2 June 2017 10:29 (seven years ago) link
gotta check these guys out http://www.alternativenation.net/why-royal-blood-could-be-the-next-nirvana/
― Frozen CD, Sunday, 11 June 2017 23:40 (seven years ago) link
Alternative Nation is such a weird site
― Sutcliffe Juugin' (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 12 June 2017 02:23 (seven years ago) link
Thankfully, for every teenage girl singing Cyndi Lauper into a hairbrush, was her younger brother, listening to Misfits and Black Sabbath records.
Kurt would be so happy to know his fans are fighting to reclaim music from girls.
― Who's puttin' sponge in the zings I once zung (stevie), Monday, 12 June 2017 18:53 (seven years ago) link
Yes, how dare those young women sing along with music? Everyone knows music is only truly appreciated by boys.
― bleethal weapon (Ye Mad Puffin), Monday, 12 June 2017 19:50 (seven years ago) link
hang on, didn't we do the exact opposite of this one last week?
― Number None, Monday, 12 June 2017 19:58 (seven years ago) link
ok, someone (*ahem*) shared that there is a notably bad Lorde review and I think I found it, but can anyone corroborate
― mh, Monday, 19 June 2017 22:00 (seven years ago) link
i already regret posting about it
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Monday, 19 June 2017 22:14 (seven years ago) link
This is all starting to feel like the thing in the suitcase in Pulp Fiction, except it's a pile of dung.
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 19 June 2017 22:21 (seven years ago) link
i wasn't a fan of the one that wondered if she was being held back by being a pop artist...
― nomar, Monday, 19 June 2017 22:29 (seven years ago) link
generally there have been a lot of lorde thinkpieces
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Monday, 19 June 2017 22:33 (seven years ago) link
I don't know if it's the one Brad was thinking of, but the one on Uproxx is by someone who should be kept away from keyboards for at least a decade.
― grawlix (unperson), Monday, 19 June 2017 22:34 (seven years ago) link
I don't know, as a general rule I would rather prevent old dudes from writing about Lorde than young women
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Monday, 19 June 2017 22:39 (seven years ago) link
I hear there is a really great Father John Misty interview out there!
― mh, Monday, 19 June 2017 22:40 (seven years ago) link
Katherine otm though
some young women need editors who aren't themselves
― maura, Monday, 19 June 2017 23:11 (seven years ago) link
tbh everyone needs editors who aren't themselves
― maura, Monday, 19 June 2017 23:12 (seven years ago) link
https://68.media.tumblr.com/0ae4a458b02b1705c96dd846493e2aad/tumblr_inline_n3ghj9J3u91qcklud.gif
― grawlix (unperson), Monday, 19 June 2017 23:22 (seven years ago) link
― leprechaundriac (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, May 31, 2017 5:15 PM (two weeks ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
Just makes me feel grateful that the planned Robert Zemeckis Yellow Submarine remake got scrapped. Small mercies.
― Pheeel, Monday, 19 June 2017 23:33 (seven years ago) link
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Monday, 19 June 2017 22:39 (yesterday) Permalink
ok the piece still sucks tho
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, 20 June 2017 13:42 (seven years ago) link
Piece on Lorde that no one will link to and ILM can't reach a consensus on where it was published is definitely the worst piece of music writing ever.
― Position Position, Tuesday, 20 June 2017 15:59 (seven years ago) link
otoh if this guy hates it, there's probably some merit
― mh, Tuesday, 20 June 2017 16:01 (seven years ago) link
o lorde tupac mansplain to them
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Tuesday, 20 June 2017 17:07 (seven years ago) link
i'm issuing subpoenas to everyone on this thread, give up your sources on the Lorde review!!!!!!!
― Universal LULU Nation (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 20 June 2017 17:32 (seven years ago) link
tick tick tick
― President Keyes, Tuesday, 20 June 2017 17:33 (seven years ago) link
ilx melodrama
― Evan, Tuesday, 20 June 2017 17:42 (seven years ago) link
ilx d-d-d-d-dynamite
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 20 June 2017 17:51 (seven years ago) link
Wasn't really sure if it should go here or not but I think the 'hats of, chief' is worthy of it.
This is apparently in Q magazine.
http://i.imgur.com/Fk9phey.jpg
― Odysseus, Monday, 3 July 2017 17:47 (seven years ago) link
Whew! Close one.
― space chipmunk (Ye Mad Puffin), Monday, 3 July 2017 17:53 (seven years ago) link
I certainly can't remember the likes of Baby Ford or A Guy Called Gerald sawing up fenders back then, was that really a thing?
― calzino, Monday, 3 July 2017 17:59 (seven years ago) link
wallop! etc
― marcos, Monday, 3 July 2017 18:00 (seven years ago) link
same guy as this dude? Worst Thing In This Daily Telegraph "10 ways Britpop changed modern manhood" Article
― marcos, Monday, 3 July 2017 18:01 (seven years ago) link
tbh, everyone needs editors who aren't themselves
― maura, Monday, June 19, 2017 6:12 PM (two weeks ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― j., Monday, 3 July 2017 18:02 (seven years ago) link
I certainly can't remember the likes of Baby Ford or A Guy Called Gerald sawing up fenders back then, was that really a thing?― calzino,
― calzino,
I dont recall anyone doing that
― Odysseus, Monday, 3 July 2017 18:22 (seven years ago) link
Guitar Music means Stars of the Lid and Oren Ambarchi, right?
― more polls about food and reactionary art (Noodle Vague), Monday, 3 July 2017 18:25 (seven years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tVG9u_nxWBI
^^^my dance hero
― mark s, Monday, 3 July 2017 18:26 (seven years ago) link
It's not entirely imaginary - there was an ad for The White Room with Cauty and Drummond in mining gear showering sparks by taking hand grinders to a couple of guitars which Sounds also issued as a poster.
― everything, Monday, 3 July 2017 19:54 (seven years ago) link
This Facsist Kills Machines
― President Keyes, Wednesday, 5 July 2017 12:48 (seven years ago) link
Lorde: Melodrama (Lava/Republic) Having achieved world renown as a 16-year-old innocent with a throaty voice, a head on her shoulders, and the nerve to dissent from a style of upward mobility invented by black people a pole away, she returns four years later as what else—a pop property with a sex life. Thus her chief musical collaborator is Taylor/Sia/Carly Rae helpmeet Jack Antonoff rather than New Zealand svengali Joel Little, and it's Antonoff plus the extra grain in her voice that make the difference here. For me, the most meaningful line is "Put my hands under your T-shirt," because it suggests someone who's thought about how this sex thing works. Deep, no. Real, in theory. Sex life, presumably. Pop property, absolutely. B PLUS
― grawlix (unperson), Friday, 7 July 2017 22:41 (seven years ago) link
Lorde: now with shoulders AND a head!
― Yoni Loves Chocha (VegemiteGrrl), Friday, 7 July 2017 23:39 (seven years ago) link
What's the record sound like? Who cares! Lorde's having sex (probably)!
― grawlix (unperson), Friday, 7 July 2017 23:40 (seven years ago) link
Think that's the point of the review.
― everything, Saturday, 8 July 2017 02:53 (seven years ago) link
to write about how awesome Lorde is for inspiring a male fantasy
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 8 July 2017 02:59 (seven years ago) link
Not too awesome, only a B+! Not being devils advocate or anything but he's criticizing the disc for compromising/stereotyping a promising& unique talent or something like that.
― everything, Saturday, 8 July 2017 03:10 (seven years ago) link
or something
― Yoni Loves Chocha (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 8 July 2017 03:17 (seven years ago) link
"a pole away" strikes me as very... off
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Saturday, 8 July 2017 03:41 (seven years ago) link
Should be "across the Indian Ocean" ?
― everything, Saturday, 8 July 2017 05:25 (seven years ago) link
a hemisphere away
― maura, Saturday, 8 July 2017 11:53 (seven years ago) link
excited to find out black people invented vulgar materialism
― ramen play on 10 (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 8 July 2017 12:10 (seven years ago) link
hardly controversial to suggest Royals plays on a type of materialism associated with successful black artists, iirc Beyonce is name checked
― niels, Saturday, 8 July 2017 13:57 (seven years ago) link
Dude's such a fucking creep
― Universal LULU Nation (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 8 July 2017 15:28 (seven years ago) link
Lol @ "hardly controversial"; ILM argued the point for a month iirc.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Saturday, 8 July 2017 15:50 (seven years ago) link
one reason i can't be bothered to reargue, also i suspect niels was commenting without reading the review clearly
― ramen play on 10 (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 8 July 2017 16:13 (seven years ago) link
A lifetime of witty irrelevance behind him, self-proclaimed Dean aims for - and achieves! - for par on this creepy course. B-
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Saturday, 8 July 2017 16:29 (seven years ago) link
Male critics don't seem to get that even when like Christgau they've spent a lifetime extolling powerful, intelligent women these men still become drooling fools at the thought that these powerful, intelligent women can slip hands between their T-shirts and jerk them off. These women still exist as fantasy objects.
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 8 July 2017 16:35 (seven years ago) link
not seeing the creeping here, "most meaningful line" != most meaningful line, but banal pop property? that Antonoff has packaged her as another pop property fantasy object?
― by the light of the burning Citroën, Saturday, 8 July 2017 17:07 (seven years ago) link
(well aware that C has form for creeping, just not seeing it here)
― by the light of the burning Citroën, Saturday, 8 July 2017 17:10 (seven years ago) link
not seeing the creeping here
Let me run it down for you:
- the most meaningful line is one that makes Christgau think Lorde has been having (or at least thinking about) sex- the most important fact about the new album, for Christgau, is that she's working with the same producer as Taylor Swift, Sia, and Carly Rae Jepsen- given limited space, he'd rather talk about her (presumed) sex life than any aspect of the music he's supposedly reviewing
He's a fucking creep. And has been for decades. To paraphrase one of his own (in)famous lines, he should fold up his penis and stop typing with it.
― grawlix (unperson), Saturday, 8 July 2017 17:14 (seven years ago) link
I read that as the most meaningful line is a banal throwaway: "Deep, no. Real, in theory. Sex life, presumably. Pop property, absolutely."
He's not talking about her sex life, he's saying she's been packaged as pop property, real, in theory. "someone who's thought about how this sex thing works" is a zing, not frisson. the producer is singled out because he's doing the packaging.
But, yes, there's plenty of creeping that's been done.
― by the light of the burning Citroën, Saturday, 8 July 2017 17:21 (seven years ago) link
Now you have to explain the pole.
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 8 July 2017 17:22 (seven years ago) link
damn.
― by the light of the burning Citroën, Saturday, 8 July 2017 17:23 (seven years ago) link
Citroen otm imo
― Οὖτις, Saturday, 8 July 2017 17:49 (seven years ago) link
antonoff's so-far-recorded work with crj also amounts to a co-write on a KISS bonus track and some bleachers stuff. they've been in the studio together recently but she throws a lot of stuff out.
― maura, Saturday, 8 July 2017 17:59 (seven years ago) link
female popstars are always the ones who are "packaged" or "presented" it seems...critics tend to lean harder on that language with them anyway. I'd be curious to see a running count of how often producers are named and credited in these reviews, break it down make vs female artists and see what the numbers come out as.
― nomar, Saturday, 8 July 2017 18:30 (seven years ago) link
i don't know why people care so much more about branding than actual music.
― Treeship, Saturday, 8 July 2017 18:35 (seven years ago) link
it's easier to describe in concrete terms
― maura, Saturday, 8 July 2017 19:40 (seven years ago) link
Because nobody cares about music
― Οὖτις, Saturday, 8 July 2017 20:05 (seven years ago) link
^^^ new board description
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Saturday, 8 July 2017 20:08 (seven years ago) link
if christgau wants to talk about sex in the new lorde album he should just write about how it figures thematically into the music instead of speculating on how other people are trying to "position" her in the marketplace or whatever. certainly she shouldn't be called a "property."
like, pop music is a commodity, and so it's not unreasonable to think about how lorde is trying to change her brand or whatever, but god, what could be more boring.
― Treeship, Saturday, 8 July 2017 20:56 (seven years ago) link
Alfred's OTM re: fantasy objects
― Unchanging Window (Ross), Saturday, 8 July 2017 21:11 (seven years ago) link
well at least we're not talking about fantano
― The Saga of Rodney Stooksbury (rushomancy), Saturday, 8 July 2017 21:12 (seven years ago) link
That OP article "On selling out" has disappeared, ironically because Photobucket sold out. It's here if you ever need to cite it:
https://web.archive.org/web/20160715192338/http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v236/njsouthall/Screengrabs/onsellingoutexepose.jpg
From this week's R&R (Reviewed & Rated) section of Exeter University Guild Of Students' magnificent student paper, Exeposé...― Scik Mouthy, Monday, June 18, 2007
― sbahnhof, Sunday, 9 July 2017 09:33 (seven years ago) link
paging scotthttp://time.com/money/4822260/vinyl-collection-value-experts
Confused, I approached another expert — Ben Blackwell, who co-founded Third Man Records with Jack White — with my concerns about the future monetary value of vinyl.“To me that seems dumb as s***,” he said bluntly. “You should think of resale value for a car or a house. But a record? If you’re getting into anything for any sort of monetary reasons, you should just be buying f***ing stocks.”That made sense. Except it wasn’t what I was told way back when.
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Tuesday, 11 July 2017 13:03 (seven years ago) link
Ben Blackwell, as ever, OTM
― Shanty Brunch (stevie), Tuesday, 11 July 2017 14:10 (seven years ago) link
“R.E.M. used to be very big and collectible, and now you can’t give their records away to a 20-year-old,” Mello added.
P sure their records are quite pricey on discogs tho?
― Shanty Brunch (stevie), Tuesday, 11 July 2017 14:15 (seven years ago) link
I see a few of original pressing Reckonings for under $25. Not giving them away, but not collector prices.
Monster, on the other hand, looks like it's going for crazy money ($65 and up). But that's likely due to the fact that most '90s vinyl releases were pressed in relatively small quantities.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Tuesday, 11 July 2017 14:35 (seven years ago) link
lol @ $30 for Paul Simon Graceland reissue
― Colonel Poo, Tuesday, 11 July 2017 15:43 (seven years ago) link
the bell of the ball
― dinnerboat, Tuesday, 11 July 2017 15:51 (seven years ago) link
I mean, that piece does touch on the anxiety of "collecting" in 2017, which is a real thing
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 11 July 2017 16:29 (seven years ago) link
It's wild to think that, like, the Flaming Lips Zaireeka reissue had 7,200 copies and sit unsold in record stores across American and Talking Heads Robert Rauschenberg art edition of Speaking In Tongues had 50,000 copies and I hardly ever see it in the wild. It's hard not to feel like these limited runs are exciting!
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 11 July 2017 16:37 (seven years ago) link
My own personal weakest (or proudest) moment as a newish collector came towards the end of January, when I impulsively ordered an extremely limited-edition Ryan Adams box set for $179. The package featured 7-inch singles of every song on his new album, plus new, unheard B-sides. It also came with a box that became a concert stage and cardboard cutouts of him, his band, and his pet cat that you could position on the mock stage if you were feeling super bored or super lonely.
fucking christ
― Universal LULU Nation (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 11 July 2017 17:03 (seven years ago) link
the state of that
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Tuesday, 11 July 2017 17:12 (seven years ago) link
― Universal LULU Nation (upper mississippi sh@kedown),
We should let David Brooks know about it!
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 11 July 2017 17:15 (seven years ago) link
XTC sort of did something like that with the "No Thugs In Our House" 7" in 1982 -- there were cutout finger puppets and you could cut and bend the sleeve into a theater stage. But it only cost a couple of dollars, and it didn't have any Ryan Adams music on it.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Tuesday, 11 July 2017 17:16 (seven years ago) link
counterpoint: sure Ben, how's that resale value of a house working for folks right now
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, 11 July 2017 22:09 (seven years ago) link
The Bee Gees "To Whom It May Concern" LP from 1972 features a gatefold sleeve that opens up into a stage with pop-up figures of all the Brothers Gibb, they're backing band, orchestra, producers, road crew etc.
it's p awesome tbh
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 11 July 2017 22:15 (seven years ago) link
And yet, despite knowing the limitations of a rock band in 2017, the peak time of digital downloads, an era when audiences aren't getting behind even their most beloved performers making intimate, accessible records – Feist sold 37,000 units in Canada in the first six weeks of her previous album, Metals; Pleasure, her latest, sells 5,600 units in that same time – a compulsion drives the band back together. Social media, pornography, Donald Trump, terror: For himself and for his audience, Drew wants to provide something else.
― Frozen CD, Wednesday, 12 July 2017 15:52 (seven years ago) link
Is that just bad PR or...?
― Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 12 July 2017 16:23 (seven years ago) link
"[BAND] - an alternative to pornography and terror!"
― grawlix (unperson), Wednesday, 12 July 2017 16:50 (seven years ago) link
i found that article, it's all over the place, but it sounds like they saved music after the bataclan and restored manchester after the ariana grande tragedy.
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/music/broken-social-scenes-kevin-drew-on-how-an-indie-rock-cornerstone-made-a-roaringcomeback/article35604550/
― nomar, Wednesday, 12 July 2017 17:00 (seven years ago) link
Oh how my soul is now content.
― Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 12 July 2017 17:37 (seven years ago) link
EliteDaily is still around
http://elitedaily.com/entertainment/celebrity/carly-rae-jepsen-new-album/2017596/
― Frozen CD, Saturday, 15 July 2017 18:55 (seven years ago) link
I was alright until "Charli XCX's 'The Fault In Our Stars'".
― Champiness, Sunday, 16 July 2017 00:26 (seven years ago) link
politely written but infuriatinghttps://thewalrus.ca/carly-rae-jepsen-hasnt-earned-your-scholarly-scrutiny/
― austinb, Friday, 28 July 2017 18:39 (seven years ago) link
Jason Guriel is a writer based in Toronto. His work has appeared in Elle, The Atlantic, and Slate.
the works of jason guriel
― j., Friday, 28 July 2017 18:55 (seven years ago) link
musta took a wrong turn at albuquerque
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Friday, 28 July 2017 19:11 (seven years ago) link
lol what a dink
― maura, Friday, 28 July 2017 20:28 (seven years ago) link
that Anthony Lane paragraph he quotes is awful. "it's fine to write about pop-culture as long as you are sneering and dismissive" - can't understand how anyone can think that this would lead to good writing?
― soref, Friday, 28 July 2017 20:29 (seven years ago) link
there's probably something to be said about how everyone who derides carly rae jepsen assumes her to be much younger than she is. it reflects an arms length engagement *and* an unwillingness to dig in and think about why they're so bothered. have any of the anti crj broadsides discussed her, you know, music?
― maura, Friday, 28 July 2017 20:30 (seven years ago) link
Anyone who admires Anthony Lane (as a writer or a thinker) can get fucked.
― grawlix (unperson), Friday, 28 July 2017 20:39 (seven years ago) link
I liked him for about five months in 1998.
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 28 July 2017 20:45 (seven years ago) link
like most people, he's gotten dumber and glibber with age
― difficult listening hour, Friday, 28 July 2017 22:04 (seven years ago) link
None of this, I should point out, is meant to advance some silly value system pitting high art against pop culture; I’ll take the John Travolta vehicle Blow Out over Antonioni’s Blow Up any day.haha this sets up exactly the dichotomy it says it won't, which is weird seeing as blow up might as well have been directed by austin powers. prob still otm tho
― difficult listening hour, Friday, 28 July 2017 22:12 (seven years ago) link
Phillip J. Pierpont Kennicott VII looks down his lorgnette at the Kennedy Center Honors.
KenCen, apparently, is straight dissing ballet and opera to give awards to rock bands and even, gasp, rappers.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/the-kennedy-center-honors-abandon-the-arts-for-pop-culture/2017/08/02/0287e65c-77a0-11e7-8f39-eeb7d3a2d304_story.html?hpid=hp_local-news_kennicott-1115am%3Ahomepage%2Fstory&utm_term=.e1e19c23539f
― okapi paste (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 3 August 2017 18:45 (seven years ago) link
tbf opera is horrible
― Οὖτις, Thursday, 3 August 2017 18:48 (seven years ago) link
I read the tone pretty differently from this.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Thursday, 3 August 2017 19:54 (seven years ago) link
Yeah. I mean, I disagree with the thesis but it's not unsound; I think he wants to sway things too far in the opposite direction. The Kennedy Center Honors should be open across the spectrum and I would hope for a diverse group of honorees from disciplines popular and esoteric.
That said, LL as the first rapper to get an honor is both fitting and kind of weird. I guess Chuck D's sweet spot was too short for him to be a serious candidate and Will Smith was way too bubblegum to have credibility.
― this iphone speaks many languages (DJP), Thursday, 3 August 2017 20:24 (seven years ago) link
http://static.oprah.com/2016/02/ep516-own-watn-8-949x534.jpg
― mark s, Thursday, 3 August 2017 20:27 (seven years ago) link
(Thanks, DJP.)
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Thursday, 3 August 2017 20:41 (seven years ago) link
I guess I feel like the distinction that Kennicott (and many commenters) are drawing between traditional/classic art forms, on the one hand, and popular/commercial art forms, on the other, is not being given much scrutiny.
Also if, indeed, the pendulum has swung too far in the direction of LL Cool J / Eagles / Lionel, it may be worth remembering how long popular music was kept _out_ of consideration as Serious Art(TM). I am not the right person to unpack how much elitism or class/race/gender stuff has been involved, but surely that's at least worth mentioning as a factor in what gets taken seriously as art?
― okapi paste (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 3 August 2017 20:43 (seven years ago) link
I don't have a problem with any of them getting a Kennedy Center Honor! I do think it's reasonable to make an argument that Sam Shepard dying without one is a shame. It's also reasonable to make the argument that it is a little weird to give one to Gloria Estefan before giving one to Renee Fleming.
― this iphone speaks many languages (DJP), Thursday, 3 August 2017 20:50 (seven years ago) link
That distinction is a couple of centuries old, with a plethora of literature scrutinizing it. Kennicott clearly has an opinion on it that is different from yours, and somewhat different from mine, but I don't think it's exceptionally extreme or poorly grounded, in terms of being a candidate for "worst piece of music writing ever".
(Also, going by Wikipedia, Fred Astaire and Richard Rodgers received KCHs in the first year they were awarded.)
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Thursday, 3 August 2017 20:55 (seven years ago) link
KCH has always been a mix of high- and low-brow since its inception, which is the best thing about it. It should remain a mix. It's valid to be concerned if either side gains primary focus.
― this iphone speaks many languages (DJP), Thursday, 3 August 2017 21:00 (seven years ago) link
Or sund4r OTM, if you prefer
― this iphone speaks many languages (DJP), Thursday, 3 August 2017 21:01 (seven years ago) link
tbf lol @ u
― she carries a torch. two torches, actually (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Thursday, 3 August 2017 21:21 (seven years ago) link
hey JLCL, I just listened to a 70yo sing the shit out of Glitter and Be Gay; want the youtube link?
― this iphone speaks many languages (DJP), Thursday, 3 August 2017 21:40 (seven years ago) link
it's not the _worst_ piece of music writing ever, but i'm impressed that bill wyman has the clout and social skills to presumably get paid for this piece of sub-dave marsh hackwork. at least when marsh came up with a zinger, he was brief.
http://www.vulture.com/2017/08/all-165-pink-floyd-songs-ranked-from-worst-to-best.html
― The Saga of Rodney Stooksbury (rushomancy), Friday, 4 August 2017 13:22 (seven years ago) link
oh I don't know -- there's some sharp writing
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 4 August 2017 13:36 (seven years ago) link
it reminded me of the discussion we had earlier this week about negative criticism and its flaws.
― The Saga of Rodney Stooksbury (rushomancy), Friday, 4 August 2017 13:45 (seven years ago) link
Do you like prog rock, the extravagantly conceptual and wildly technical post-psychedelic subgenre that ruled the world for about 30 seconds in the early 1970s before being torn to pieces by the starving street dogs of punk rock? Do you like the proggers, with their terrible pampered proficiency, their priestly robes, and their air—once they get behind their instruments—of an inverted, almost abscessed Englishness? I don’t.
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/09/the-whitest-music-ever/534174
― Odysseus, Friday, 4 August 2017 21:46 (seven years ago) link
got a new d/n out of it at least
― starving street dogs of punk rock (Odysseus), Friday, 4 August 2017 21:47 (seven years ago) link
he talks about their priestly robes like that's a drawback to OTT rock music
― nomar, Friday, 4 August 2017 21:50 (seven years ago) link
'abcessed'?
― weird echo of the falsies (Tom D.), Friday, 4 August 2017 21:52 (seven years ago) link
I take that to mean, "so full of Englishness that if you prick them with a needle, out would come Devonshire clotted cream."
― okapi paste (Ye Mad Puffin), Friday, 4 August 2017 21:54 (seven years ago) link
inverted tho
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Friday, 4 August 2017 22:05 (seven years ago) link
If Weigel were David Foster Wallace, he would have written his entire book from inside that cruise ship, possibly never leaving his cabin, eavesdropping on snatches of music and chitchat and sending out his imagination in heavy spirals of paranoia and insight. But Weigel is a political reporter for The Washington Post, so he climbs off that wiggy, proggy boat and treads onto the dry land of chronology.
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Friday, 4 August 2017 22:10 (seven years ago) link
― okapi paste (Ye Mad Puffin),
sounds tasty tbh
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 4 August 2017 22:20 (seven years ago) link
Now you come to mention it, Jon Anderson was a milkman for a while.
― weird echo of the falsies (Tom D.), Friday, 4 August 2017 22:24 (seven years ago) link
This article seems to be creating a stramash on fb, tom
― starving street dogs of punk rock (Odysseus), Friday, 4 August 2017 23:53 (seven years ago) link
I think "pampered proficiency" deserves more attention. I haven't brought myself to read the whole article yet, though.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Saturday, 5 August 2017 12:19 (seven years ago) link
Before reading or looking up anything about the author, I'm going to guess that the writer i) is white and ii) grew up wealthier than Geddy Lee.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Saturday, 5 August 2017 12:29 (seven years ago) link
And has never worked as a milkman.
― weird echo of the falsies (Tom D.), Saturday, 5 August 2017 12:35 (seven years ago) link
I just read it out of masochism and don't really know where to start.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Saturday, 5 August 2017 12:53 (seven years ago) link
if weigel were david foster wallace, he would have killed himself by now. maybe james parker should try to be more like david foster wallace.
― The Saga of Rodney Stooksbury (rushomancy), Saturday, 5 August 2017 12:53 (seven years ago) link
ok that's enough
― Universal LULU Nation (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 5 August 2017 13:05 (seven years ago) link
the same guy did this articlehttps://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2016/10/donald-trump-sex-pistol/497528/
― starving street dogs of punk rock (Odysseus), Saturday, 5 August 2017 16:56 (seven years ago) link
Haha so the prog thing's not even the worst thing he's written
― Universal LULU Nation (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Sunday, 6 August 2017 13:59 (seven years ago) link
Parker's Rollins biog from the 90s was good. Not read/won't read these two pieces.
― Senator Luther Strange (stevie), Wednesday, 9 August 2017 14:07 (seven years ago) link
guys is everett true okay
Look at the way he looks. Not so much a rock star as an exercise in hair conditioner. Dave Grohl is shit. How many times do I need to say this before you start listening? Hey, why not start listening? Just cos you’ve only heard a handful of songs in your life does not mean that no alternatives exist. Dave Grohl is shit. Do not be scared of the crowd. Has it not occurred to you that the crowd can be wrong sometimes? Dave Grohl is shit. The idea of listening to his music drives me to extremes of nothing. Dave Grohl is shit. Shout it from the tops of buses and shout it from street corners. He is dreary, whiny, derivative, needless, grey. Dave Grohl is shit. He makes Chris Martin sound like Beyoncé. Flaunt the bump/don’t flaunt the bump/FLAUNT THE BUMP! He makes Ed Sheeran shine with an inner fire. He puts Theresa May into perspective.
― pizzarro gizzarda (bizarro gazzara), Thursday, 31 August 2017 13:25 (seven years ago) link
Everett True has not been ok for a long time but he's not wrong about Dave Grohl, he's just right for the usual tediously wrong aging POONK reasons
― a hulking and impenetrable dump (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 31 August 2017 13:30 (seven years ago) link
it's just... deeply not good, even by the rock-bottom expectation that has long come from seeing his byline on anything
― pizzarro gizzarda (bizarro gazzara), Thursday, 31 August 2017 13:32 (seven years ago) link
say what you like about the tenets of Trueism, dude, at least it's an ethos
sort of
― a hulking and impenetrable dump (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 31 August 2017 13:34 (seven years ago) link
a bathos mebbes
― pizzarro gizzarda (bizarro gazzara), Thursday, 31 August 2017 13:35 (seven years ago) link
no but he's a terrible man, the kind of terrible man who's trying really hard to be the worst kind of 17 year-old, which is a terrible, terrible look
― a hulking and impenetrable dump (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 31 August 2017 13:41 (seven years ago) link
"the kids, i am down with them" insists 'bad boy' of music writing everett true (73)
http://dis.images.s3.amazonaws.com/104433.jpeg
― pizzarro gizzarda (bizarro gazzara), Thursday, 31 August 2017 13:46 (seven years ago) link
this isn't the worst thing ever, and they do a REALLY good job of making the whole experience sound tedious and boring. like an anti-hunter thompson or something. like rock & roll = a trip to the department of motor vehicles. which, to me, is appropriate given the band. also, there are, like, two sentences devoted to the music played. which also seems appropriate somehow.
http://www.playboy.com/articles/phish-feature
― scott seward, Friday, 1 September 2017 16:52 (seven years ago) link
https://noisey.vice.com/en_us/article/wjjknm/taylor-swift-needs-to-sit-this-year-out?utm_source=vicefbdk^^this reads like parody but I'm afraid it's sincere
― niels, Saturday, 2 September 2017 10:29 (seven years ago) link
yeah that would be an amazing clickhole article
― k3vin k., Saturday, 2 September 2017 11:42 (seven years ago) link
Came here to post that insipid Taylor Swift piece.
― Loud guitars shit all over "Bette Davis Eyes" (NYCNative), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 08:24 (seven years ago) link
this reflexive criticism of any political piece just for being political is an incredibly bad look
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 12:08 (seven years ago) link
ozzi is a terrible writer
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 12:34 (seven years ago) link
Post a political piece by an intelligent writer with a cogent point and we'll see how it goes.
― grawlix (unperson), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 12:47 (seven years ago) link
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, September 5, 2017 8:08 AM (one hour ago)
there's no way you read the article
― k3vin k., Tuesday, 5 September 2017 13:21 (seven years ago) link
This is one of the worst examples of the "I think everyone is talking about this too much so here are another 2000 words on why I don't care about it" school of pop culture hot takes so far. Beyond any of the unfair assumptions made, I really have no idea why the writer can't just not listen to Taylor Swift.
― mfktz (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 13:33 (seven years ago) link
because other artists don't draw in as many eyeballs
feel like taylor is going to be subject to a particularly nasty version of the 'i don't want to cover this but GOD, i have to in order to earn out my paltry fee, so let me demonstrate how above all of it i am' nihilism that makes so much online reading worthless
― maura, Tuesday, 5 September 2017 13:52 (seven years ago) link
idk if i'd characterize it as "omg i don't want to write about taylor swift but she's sooooo bad that i have to" as much as it seems a lazy assemblage/simulation of already existing thinkpieces and twitter threads without containing any of its own ideas which leads to rich communicative passages such as
Even when unintentional, Swift can't get out of the way of her own pettiness. As many quickly pointed out, Reputation's launch date is set for the death anniversary of Kanye West's late mother. (A label rep claimed this was a coincidence.) And even when Swift (or presumably someone on her publicity team) first tweeted the link to the video for "Look What You Made Me Do" during the MTV VMAs, it was done while the mother of Heather Heyer, a woman killed by a vehicular attack while protesting white supremacists in Charlottesville, was speaking on stage. While likely unintentional, the unfortunate timing is emblematic of how utterly detached from the world Swift is.
could be unintentional, who knows
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 13:59 (seven years ago) link
Even when unintentional, Swift can't get out of the way of her own pettiness. As many quickly pointed out, Reputation's launch date is set for the death anniversary of Kanye West's late mother. (
This is execrable, lazy thinking.
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 14:00 (seven years ago) link
"As many quickly pointed out, Donald Trump is the president."
so petty that people put any other petty thing they can think of on her
― j., Tuesday, 5 September 2017 14:03 (seven years ago) link
That graf's amazing combo of concern trolling, performative wokeness and aggregating Tweets is really a perfect example of Noisey's garbage editorial vision and Vice's vampric greed. So glad the CEO could brag about double-stuffing interns for the greater good of calling out Taylor Swift for coincidences.
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 5 September 2017 14:04 (seven years ago) link
And even when Swift (or presumably someone on her publicity team) first tweeted the link to the video for "Look What You Made Me Do" during the MTV VMAs, it was done while the mother of Heather Heyer, a woman killed by a vehicular attack while protesting white supremacists in Charlottesville, was speaking on stage. While likely unintentional, the unfortunate timing is emblematic of how utterly detached from the world Swift is.
JFC
― I am a paying customer, who is very cordial and pleasant to talk to (stevie), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 16:21 (seven years ago) link
are we sure this isn't satire?
― a big sausage-handed small-eared guy (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 16:23 (seven years ago) link
this song was popular when bad things happened, i'm angry
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 16:36 (seven years ago) link
I did in fact read the article, and a) this is nowhere near "the worst piece of music writing ever," on either an argumentative or prose level; it's certainly no worse than the Ringer piece everyone loves and b) I really don't see "Taylor Swift's album campaign does not read the room in 2017" as an unreasonable conclusion, whether you agree or not. as far as it being an uniquely bad pop culture hot take, this is sort of like pulling a needle from a haystack and proclaiming it the worst needle ever because you don't like the pincushion it came from.`
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 16:36 (seven years ago) link
as far as the VMA scheduling, I'm pretty sure the scheduling is off (I wrote up the VMAs, and the next section in my notes is on Shawn Mendes).
that said I didn't pay attention to or time this particular tweet, so giving it the benefit of the doubt: whether it was intentional to time your video blast at the same time Susan Bro is speaking, it (again, benefit of the doubt) *still happened that way*, and given that brands operate in an attention economy (people criticize brands all the time for not pulling their scheduled tweets when shit is happening), I don't see how it's off-limits to note this fact.
(and this is *assuming* it's unintentional; I can completely see a label person going "well, we can't post this while Katy Perry is onstage because that'll be interpreted as part of the feud, and we can't post this during Alessia Cara because we want to set up a collaboration..." and scheduling it during the non-musical portion of the broadcast. this is an industry where Instagram follows and unfollows are intentional, eyeballs during a broadcast more than meet that bar)
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 16:43 (seven years ago) link
katherine, what was one thing you learned from that article that you didn't know before? a particular insight that impressed you?
― k3vin k., Tuesday, 5 September 2017 16:51 (seven years ago) link
i mean it's not the worst music writing ever but like probably none of the pieces in this thread qualify for that. maybe one of the essays about the tyranny of poptimism
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 16:54 (seven years ago) link
I'm a pop critic, I'm not the target audience or the person who is going to learn things from it, so you really don't need to give me an Accelerated Reader quiz, thanks
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 16:54 (seven years ago) link
because as brad pointed out, the piece is really just a roundup of other people's takes on the matter and is pretty much devoid of insight or original thought. but maybe there's something i missed!
― k3vin k., Tuesday, 5 September 2017 16:55 (seven years ago) link
the fact that the presumed target audience is not going to have an encyclopedic, up-to-the-minute knowledge of Taylor Swift Takes?
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 16:57 (seven years ago) link
taylor swift is hitler's wet dream seemed somewhat original to the piece but maybe he was paraphrasing daily stormer xp
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 16:57 (seven years ago) link
I would have left that part out but by now the ship has sailed on "the internet cosplay nazis are trolling you, do not take them seriously"
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 16:59 (seven years ago) link
i really don't think it's unreasonable to ask that if someone wants me to read their thoughts on an issue that they actually have something to say
― k3vin k., Tuesday, 5 September 2017 17:00 (seven years ago) link
Ehhhhh... I mean, I have zero interest in reading anything about Taylor Swift and haven't read this particular piece so I can't directly comment on it, but the idea that every piece about a famous person must have unique insight or else it is 100% worthless is built on the assumption that the audience is reading every single thing written about the subject, which strikes me as unreasonable at best. (I feel like I'm just restating katherine's core point here, which is its own irony.)
― this iphone speaks many languages (DJP), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 17:08 (seven years ago) link
DJP is right; you're only tired of seeing "this piece again" if you've seen all the other ones.
it's not the worst music writing ever but like probably none of the pieces in this thread qualify for that
Yeah I interpret the thread topic as "post examples of bad music writing here," not literally the worst piece ever. It's likely that the actual worst piece ever has, in fact, been posted here. And so the thread could theoretically be locked. However, no one agrees on which one it is, so people keep posting other candidates.
― Toblerroneous (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 17:10 (seven years ago) link
then that person should get a job regurgitating news stories, not writing analysis
are our standards really this low?
― k3vin k., Tuesday, 5 September 2017 17:14 (seven years ago) link
Mine aren't, which is one of the reasons why I didn't read the piece in the first place.
― this iphone speaks many languages (DJP), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 17:15 (seven years ago) link
you don't need to read it, djp. i read it for you.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 5 September 2017 17:28 (seven years ago) link
it is perfectly in keeping with the trump era though. because it reads like a little kid wrote it. #everythingishighschool
― scott seward, Tuesday, 5 September 2017 17:29 (seven years ago) link
the worst piece of music writing ever was probably written in the '60s.
― maura, Tuesday, 5 September 2017 17:31 (seven years ago) link
Wrestling Demons. Professionally, that is. Personally, she remains cloaked in a brooding sadness, all the more achingly impenetrable because she rarely talks about it—except when she sings. "I'm gonna make a gospel record," she told Mahalia Jackson not long ago, "and tell Jesus I cannot bear these burdens alone."
What one of these burdens might be came out last year when Aretha's husband, Ted White, roughed her up in public at Atlanta's Regency Hyatt House Hotel. It was not the first such incident. White, 37, a former dabbler in Detroit real estate and a street-corner wheeler-dealer, has come a long way since he married Aretha and took over the management of her career. Sighs Mahalia Jackson: "I don't think she's happy. Somebody else is making her sing the blues." But Aretha says nothing, and others can only speculate on the significance of her singing lyrics like these:
― maura, Tuesday, 5 September 2017 17:32 (seven years ago) link
etc.
that's from http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,841340,00.html
― maura, Tuesday, 5 September 2017 17:33 (seven years ago) link
IT SEEMS somewhat appropriate that Aretha should have been playing the scene in the movie in a restaurant since she definitely admits to an interest in cooking — which brings us conveniently back to the peach cobbler mentioned earlier. My only comment is that if she ever decides to give up her singing career, she can open a chain of soul food restaurants in a minute and become a millionaire all over again! "Yes, I like switchin' in the kitchen! It's relaxing and it's creative. I have my own special dishes — banana pudding, home made ice cream, barbecue ribs, hams, quiche. And we've been growing our own fresh vegetables in the garden. I've been learning the art of French cooking and I've already done some Indonesian and Viennese dishes — so I'm not doing too bad, right?"
Right — after two helpings of peach cobbler — the verdict is guilty: Aretha knows what to do with the pots and pans!
She confesses that her preoccupation with the kitchen hasn't helped her waistline but "I don't want to go back to being quite as thin as I got a few years back. It was great from some perspectives — like going to dress stores and buying exactly what I wanted off the rack — but to me, it wasn't quite the weight I wanted. However, now I'm on the other side of it and I do want to lose a few pounds! I've been pretty good with my diet so I know that what I need to do is exercise more. You know, do some more swimming and playing tennis."
this is from 1980.
― maura, Tuesday, 5 September 2017 17:34 (seven years ago) link
i can cut and paste more.
I'm a pop critic, I'm not the target audience or the person who is going to learn things from it, so you really don't need to give me an Accelerated Reader quiz, thanks― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, September 5, 2017 12:54 PM (thirty-four minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, September 5, 2017 12:54 PM (thirty-four minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
The funny part is that most woke music writing really is just for other media professionals since the election of Donald Trump to president pretty much confirmed that the "audience" for virtue-signaling media is pretty small in the grand scheme of things
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 5 September 2017 17:37 (seven years ago) link
But feel free to to keep strawmanning up the imaginary millennial taking a vape-break from FUCK, THAT'S DELICIOUS to get up-to-the-minute longread on Taylor Swift's woke level from Noisey's Japandroids guy
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 5 September 2017 17:42 (seven years ago) link
I thought every music critic already knew that we were only writing for each other.
― grawlix (unperson), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 18:04 (seven years ago) link
sure but if only media professionals clicked/read these things then they'd have been killed off long ago
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 18:06 (seven years ago) link
worst hunger games reboot ever
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 18:07 (seven years ago) link
actually it's media professionals posing as harmonizers in the comments section
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 18:09 (seven years ago) link
when i read pieces like this i just don't believe that the people who write them really feel this strongly about the subject. it feels deceptive, like they're angry about their internet addiction or inability to lose that last 5 pounds or the girlfriend that left them, it just feels like i can't access the emotion they are trying to get me to feel in reading these pieces—the righteous anger, the dismissiveness... it feels falsified or projected, misdirected.
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 18:41 (seven years ago) link
i just honestly dont believe you are this much about Taylor Swift! i really dont
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 18:42 (seven years ago) link
I don't read anything, I just link it on Facebook and write "this" in the comments.
― Evan, Tuesday, 5 September 2017 18:48 (seven years ago) link
*care
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 18:49 (seven years ago) link
this. except i just write "i can't even..."
"I don't read anything, I just link it on Facebook and write "this" in the comments."
― scott seward, Tuesday, 5 September 2017 18:56 (seven years ago) link
...can we talk about that Aretha piece.
― Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 5 September 2017 18:58 (seven years ago) link
this...
http://www.newyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/taylor-swifts-weirdly-mercenary-album-release-continues-with-ready-for-it
― scott seward, Tuesday, 5 September 2017 18:59 (seven years ago) link
"...can we talk about that Aretha piece."
its best to forget that 85% of all music writing ever happened.
David Nathan (who wrote a LOT of pieces on Aretha and who was responsible for the food-related piece above) called the aforementioned Time piece "(the story that probably did more damage to Aretha's relations with the press than any other ever did)" in a multi-part career retrospective he penned in 1977.
― maura, Tuesday, 5 September 2017 19:06 (seven years ago) link
janet joplin and mahalia jackson as secondary sources is something.
Blue-Eyed Soul. Does this mean that white musicians by definition don't have soul? A very few Negroes will concede that such white singers as Frank Sinatra and Peggy Lee have it, and Aretha also nominates Frenchman Charles Aznavour. A few more will accept such blues-oriented whites as the Righteous Brothers, Paul Butterfield, and England's Stevie Winwood—largely because their sound is almost indistinguishable from Negro performers'. But for the most part, Negroes leave it up to whites to defend the idea of "blue-eyed soul," whether by the criterion of talent, experience or temperament. Janis Joplin argues it this way: "There's no patent on it. It's just feeling things. A housewife in Nebraska has soul, but she represses it, makes it conform to a lot of rules like marriage, or sugarcoats it."
If the earnest racial jockeying can be suspended, the question of who has soul actually becomes intriguing, if rather fanciful fun. The very elusiveness of the soul concept invites a freewheeling, parlor-game approach. Not long ago, in an eleven-page feature on the soul mystique, Esquire half seriously argued that there are only two kinds of people in the world: the haves and the havenots—soul-wise. Others have taken up the sport, which prompts the engaging notion that important personalities of history and legend can be classed in these terms (see box).
As for those to whom soul is anything but a parlor game, one thing is certain: the closer a Negro gets to a "white" sound nowadays, the less soulful he is considered to be, and the more he is regarded as having betrayed his heritage. Dionne Warwick singing Alfie? Impure! Diana Ross and the Supremes recording an album of Rodgers and Hart songs? Unacceptable! Yet many "deviations" may be solid professionalism, a matter of adapting to changing audiences. As Lou Rawls says, "Show business is so vast—why should I limit myself to any one aspect if I have the capabilities to do more?"
On the other hand, some soul singers are so deeply imbued with the enduring streams of blues and gospel, so consumed by those primal currents of racial experience and emotion, that they could never be anything but soulful. Aretha Franklin is one of them. No matter what she sings, Aretha will never go white, and that certainty is as gratifying to her white fans as to her Negro ones.
― maura, Tuesday, 5 September 2017 19:08 (seven years ago) link
― this iphone speaks many languages (DJP), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 19:25 (seven years ago) link
is it bad that I feel like you could swap out Aretha/Janis/Dionne/Diana/Lou and put in Fantasia/Ariana/Beyonce/Rihanna/Miguel and I would expect to see that in a revived 2017 Da Capo
― this iphone speaks many languages (DJP), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 19:28 (seven years ago) link
the question of who has soul actually becomes intriguing, if rather fanciful fun, DJP.
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 19:45 (seven years ago) link
"earnest racial jockeying"
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Tuesday, 5 September 2017 19:50 (seven years ago) link
underrated big black b-side...
― scott seward, Tuesday, 5 September 2017 20:01 (seven years ago) link
i think we all agree that there are other examples of bad music writing, other than the piece being discussed today
― k3vin k., Tuesday, 5 September 2017 21:15 (seven years ago) link
https://i.ytimg.com/vi/RkI-B2JWSZI/hqdefault.jpg
― Evan, Tuesday, 5 September 2017 21:21 (seven years ago) link
yeah dan i definitely saw parallels between "the discourse" then and now.
― maura, Tuesday, 5 September 2017 23:36 (seven years ago) link
linked not for the Newsweek writer but for Rove's stunning blurb http://www.newsweek.com/national-sleep-well-beast-karl-rove-662307
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Saturday, 9 September 2017 18:16 (seven years ago) link
max landis.....hello
― a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Friday, 15 September 2017 18:29 (seven years ago) link
(for real, though, if I were in CRJ's crew I'd be investing more heavily in personal security)
― a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Friday, 15 September 2017 18:30 (seven years ago) link
if you visit the website he set up for this, it shows him Jared Leto Joker-style in a mental hospital. this is as far as i made it.
im hoping he turned himself in to save us all the trouble.
― AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 15 September 2017 19:23 (seven years ago) link
I blame poptimism for this.
― jmm, Friday, 15 September 2017 19:36 (seven years ago) link
i blame capitalism
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Friday, 15 September 2017 19:37 (seven years ago) link
I blame masculinity
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Friday, 15 September 2017 19:41 (seven years ago) link
this level of self-indulgence is indistinguishable from psychosis
― a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Friday, 15 September 2017 19:44 (seven years ago) link
katherine otm
― maura, Sunday, 17 September 2017 16:26 (seven years ago) link
http://stars.topix.com/slideshow/18800
― Treeship, Sunday, 17 September 2017 20:20 (seven years ago) link
don't click that by the way... it's one of those weird slideshows where you need to load a whole separate page to proceed to the next slide. the list is "27 Hilariously Lame Artists that Hipsters Love" and the author says that Modest Mouse is a "pale imitation of the Talking Heads" and that Radiohead's only good song is "Creep."
To be honest, the writing isn't as bad as I expected.
― Treeship, Sunday, 17 September 2017 20:32 (seven years ago) link
I mean, it's very bad, but still.
― Treeship, Sunday, 17 September 2017 20:37 (seven years ago) link
First, Aphex Twin is not a band, it's the stage name of Irishman Richard David James. He rose to fame with a song called "Windowlicker," which should tell you all you need to know about this ambient techno artist's off-putting vibe.
see how many mistakes you can spot
― be the cringe you want to see in the world (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 17 September 2017 20:39 (seven years ago) link
really into how mad the writer of that is about the very concept of solo musicians and also how despite their remit they can't bring themselves to be snarky about the Lumineers
― thirst trap your hare (DJ Mencap), Sunday, 17 September 2017 23:37 (seven years ago) link
this is bad:
There’s a reason a rock god like Springsteen might keep the prompter out of sight of his adoring fans. Because if they saw it, would they wonder: Is he singing from the heart? Or is it just from the McScroll?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/bruce-springsteen-uses-teleprompter-in-performances-does-it-matter/2012/03/30/gIQAQTXGlS_story.html?tid=a_inl
― niels, Thursday, 21 September 2017 05:27 (seven years ago) link
Is this the early 90s?
― how's life, Thursday, 21 September 2017 11:07 (seven years ago) link
Don't know about you but I'm forever racking my heart trying to remember the lyrics to songs.
― Gavin, Leeds, Thursday, 21 September 2017 11:29 (seven years ago) link
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DKRHuKiUQAEL2SW.png:small
― mookieproof, Thursday, 21 September 2017 19:11 (seven years ago) link
there's a bit in one of the lyttle lytton writeups about this kind of sweeping pat journalistic rimshot flourish (earlier this year: "The award show was a veritable orgy — not of sex, but of cultural appropriation") and it's bad enough when it's just about some college football team, not actual people actually dying
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Thursday, 21 September 2017 20:51 (seven years ago) link
holy shit that is tacky
― this iphone speaks many languages (DJP), Thursday, 21 September 2017 20:57 (seven years ago) link
― maura, Thursday, 21 September 2017 23:42 (seven years ago) link
bol serves up this hot piece of shit that is the first time i can honestly say, yes, this might be the worst piece of music writing ever. vile.
https://www.getrevue.co/profile/byroncrawford/issues/why-i-support-xxxtentacion-74240
― Universal LULU Nation (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 22 September 2017 19:45 (seven years ago) link
i have no idea how or why you would read a Byron Crawford article if you're not attuned to his schtick
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Friday, 22 September 2017 20:11 (seven years ago) link
"I can't *believe* this thing I saw on an account that I follow that has done exactly this type of thing for 10 years"
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Friday, 22 September 2017 20:13 (seven years ago) link
well I actually saw Craig Jenkins tweeting taking shots about some article that mentioned his writing and was like hmm I wonder what this is and the article was that bol piece. am I grounded?
― Universal LULU Nation (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 22 September 2017 21:32 (seven years ago) link
Def on goon cru probation
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Friday, 22 September 2017 22:16 (seven years ago) link
damn :(
― Universal LULU Nation (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 23 September 2017 00:42 (seven years ago) link
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/29/opinion/what-sincerity-looks-like.html?mcubz=3&_r=0
― maura, Friday, 29 September 2017 15:36 (seven years ago) link
"Swift is a phenomenally talented and beautiful songwriter who has lost touch with herself and seems to have been swallowed by the ethos of the Trump era."
david brooks retire bitch
― a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Friday, 29 September 2017 15:37 (seven years ago) link
yeah that seems willfully ignorant"some ordinary-looking backup singers behind him"
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Friday, 29 September 2017 15:37 (seven years ago) link
"It’s interesting how corporate the video looks and the song sounds. It’s been a long time since the Sex Pistols burst on the scene."
― maura, Friday, 29 September 2017 15:40 (seven years ago) link
EVER FEEL LIKE YOU'VE BEEN CHEATED???
Back in the 1950s, sincerity seemed treacly and boring, and authenticity, in the form of, say, Johnny Cash, seemed daring and new. But now rebellious authenticity is the familiar corporate success formula, and sincerity, like Chance the Rapper’s, is practically revolutionary.
https://media.giphy.com/media/26BRq84rhISRcFVUQ/giphy.gif
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 29 September 2017 15:40 (seven years ago) link
A person has a soul, which is what Chance is worrying about. A brand has a reputation, which is the title of Swift’s next album. A person has private dignity. A brand is a creation for an audience.
so was chance acting like a person or a brand when his management went after a MTV News writer
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Friday, 29 September 2017 15:57 (seven years ago) link
lol SERIOUSLY
― maura, Friday, 29 September 2017 16:09 (seven years ago) link
maybe he was just acting like a man... the most authentic way to act of all
he was certainly not acting as a rapper
― President Keyes, Friday, 29 September 2017 16:12 (seven years ago) link
Sincerity is the new authenticity.
― self-clowning oven (Murgatroid), Friday, 29 September 2017 16:15 (seven years ago) link
Aw, that takes me back. ILM circa 2005: fake is the new real / real is the new fake
― cornballio (Ye Mad Puffin), Friday, 29 September 2017 16:45 (seven years ago) link
I hope we get another "Mean" out of this.
― self-clowning oven (Murgatroid), Friday, 29 September 2017 16:47 (seven years ago) link
I mean we kind of already have
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Friday, 29 September 2017 16:50 (seven years ago) link
https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/41RG9XYD33L._SX305_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg
as in the rapper obv
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Friday, 29 September 2017 17:20 (seven years ago) link
ah, i hated that book so much 20 years ago—remember when he and wendy shalit were being pitched as the ivy leaguers who TOLD IT LIKE IT WAS (i.e. that america should be more conservative)? misty, watercolored, etc.
― maura, Friday, 29 September 2017 18:46 (seven years ago) link
dude got woke. it turns out that women make great music. if you really listen. while you are eating breakfast.
https://mobile.nytimes.com/2017/10/05/magazine/should-women-make-their-own-pop-music-canon.html?referer
THIS IS NOT THE WORST MUSIC WRITING. just didn't know where else to put it.
kinda would have respected him more if he had gone first person here. the marathon listening session he describes at the beginning seems like penance or something:
"We take female musicians just seriously enough not to notice that we don’t actually take them seriously enough."
― scott seward, Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:01 (seven years ago) link
lol at Wesley Morris suddenly getting woke
― President Keyes, Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:12 (seven years ago) link
We should start new thread for this and it's ilk called 'OK, is this the wokest piece of music writing ever?'
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:18 (seven years ago) link
Also, what New York does he live in where he doesn't hear women. I hear "Hips Don't Lie" all the time.
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:19 (seven years ago) link
he just hears the beatles everywhere
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:21 (seven years ago) link
The other day, I spent 75 minutes at a coffee shop and heard, one after the other, the Doors, Radiohead and Elvis Costello.
lasted 74 minutes longer than I would've
― The Walter Mittyville Horror (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:22 (seven years ago) link
The other day, I spent 75 minutes at a coffee shop
The saddest 11 words I've read all year, maybe.
― grawlix (unperson), Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:25 (seven years ago) link
it's hard when you're trying to stay sober
― The Walter Mittyville Horror (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:26 (seven years ago) link
I write a scathing Yelp review if I spend more than 5 minutes in a coffee shop without hearing Tribe 8's "Neanderthal Dyke" playing at deafening volumes
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:30 (seven years ago) link
what kind of new york does he live in where people eat hoagies???? IT'S CALLED A HERO
― maura, Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:38 (seven years ago) link
anyway ban all critical writing that uses 'we' as a rhetorical framework, because it ALWAYS lands poorly
― maura, Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:39 (seven years ago) link
yes^
― marcos, Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:39 (seven years ago) link
Morris grew up in Philadelphia. He attended high school at Girard College in 1993, graduating in 1993.[5] While a high school student, he wrote for the Philadelphia Inquirer's teen supplement, "Yo! Fresh Ink."[6]
― Mordy, Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:47 (seven years ago) link
Yep; I've been saying this for years.
― grawlix (unperson), Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:53 (seven years ago) link
we agree then
― j., Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:55 (seven years ago) link
I sometimes spend three hours grading, writing, and reading at a Starbucks on weekends, but I killed the barista and his Elvis Costello playlist three years ago.
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:57 (seven years ago) link
the spurlockesque stunt of listening to women
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:58 (seven years ago) link
fetishize this
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:58 (seven years ago) link
fuck, i fucked up the joke
fetishize me
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Thursday, 5 October 2017 15:59 (seven years ago) link
If the Scorpions’ “Wind of Change” comes on while I’m waiting for a hoagie, I’m not going to riot. I’ll just stand there in a state of stupid happiness while I sing the whole song and mime the whistle parts.
― nomar, Thursday, 5 October 2017 16:00 (seven years ago) link
oh god I know this guy
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 5 October 2017 16:02 (seven years ago) link
he also yells PUMP IT UP and mimes the organ part
also as someone who spends... significantly more than 75 minutes a day at coffee shops (my home wi-fi is beyond shitty), I don't remember a single playlist with no women.
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Thursday, 5 October 2017 16:06 (seven years ago) link
maybe he actually hangs out at a Subway because its the only place where he can get a sandwich that reminds him of his beloved hoagies from Wawa and he's too embarrassed to mention it. #yophilly
― scott seward, Thursday, 5 October 2017 16:28 (seven years ago) link
i believe if you're from philly you can order a "playlist with" or a "playlist without."
― fact checking cuz, Thursday, 5 October 2017 17:24 (seven years ago) link
HEY I'M PONTIFICATIN' HEAH
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Thursday, 5 October 2017 17:43 (seven years ago) link
I'm at coffee shop now, and it's blasting Sky Ferreira's "You're Not the One."
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 5 October 2017 17:58 (seven years ago) link
coffee is called "joe," a man's name, makes you think.
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Thursday, 5 October 2017 17:59 (seven years ago) link
you never watched "Facts of Life" did you
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 5 October 2017 18:01 (seven years ago) link
Central Perk was pretty woke,as they only had one performer, Phoebe
― Universal LULU Nation (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 5 October 2017 18:36 (seven years ago) link
Central Perk was run by a stalker though....
― scott seward, Thursday, 5 October 2017 18:41 (seven years ago) link
http://www.ocweekly.com/music/why-we-still-cant-get-enough-of-depeche-mode-8492499
y'all
― Marcus Hiles Remains Steadfast About Planting Trees.jpg (DJP), Thursday, 12 October 2017 17:59 (seven years ago) link
Affectionately; the band is known as DeMode, or simply DM by their hardcore fans. Dave Gahan is the band’s front-man, Martin Gore is on guitar / keys, and Andy Fletcher is on keys, and these cats continue to amaze with their infectious sound and soul-piercing lyrics.
― nomar, Thursday, 12 October 2017 18:15 (seven years ago) link
"front-man" reminds me of
http://www.9e3k.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/Batman-Begins-GIF-07.gif
As for the name, it’s been said the name was taken from a French fashion magazine, Dépêche mode. It means hurried fashion or fashion dispatch, or something along those lines. It was 1981, and with a name secured, and music set to hit the street, DM’s first album was Speak & Spell. It came out at the perfect moment to be caught up in the fledgling new-wave music genre. Their freshman debut featured songs “New Life” and “Dreaming of Me”, but what set them off into the new-wave stratosphere was a song called “Just Can’t Get Enough”. Truthfully, the kids couldn’t get enough of this British new-wave power band.
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Thursday, 12 October 2017 18:16 (seven years ago) link
I feel like there's there's some punchline to this entire piece that I'm not getting
― sic And Mordy’s worst fans don’t deserve sic And Mordy (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 12 October 2017 18:17 (seven years ago) link
Also noteworthy, DM recently received a nomination for the 2017 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Truth is, they’ve received just about every award you can imagine, except a Grammy, and that’s a travesty. That’s another story for another day.
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Thursday, 12 October 2017 18:20 (seven years ago) link
I am certain that this is an intentional stylistic choice and I am also certain that unless the intent was to troll fans, no one who actually wants to read about Depeche Mode will understand or appreciate said intentional stylistic choice.
― Marcus Hiles Remains Steadfast About Planting Trees.jpg (DJP), Thursday, 12 October 2017 18:22 (seven years ago) link
the dude is a local radio personality and not a music writer, so cool your jets, everyone
― sic And Mordy’s worst fans don’t deserve sic And Mordy (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 12 October 2017 18:30 (seven years ago) link
so this is meant to be read aloud
― ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Thursday, 12 October 2017 18:50 (seven years ago) link
― Marcus Hiles Remains Steadfast About Planting Trees.jpg (DJP), Thursday, 12 October 2017 18:51 (seven years ago) link
Busta Rhymes & the DeMode Squad
― Universal LULU Nation (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 12 October 2017 18:57 (seven years ago) link
Truly, today's kids were not ready for this local radio personality's fledgeling foray into the digital music scribe scene.
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 12 October 2017 19:47 (seven years ago) link
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/music-review-stargazing-for-beginners-dazzling_us_59d6634ce4b0666ad0c3cb75
...Sparkling guitar accents bring luminosity to the cogent resonance. “In A Past Life” exudes a new wave electro pop feel set in a prog rock matrix. The measured melody rumbles with deep tones. And Scott’s voice assumes a high-pitched sonority full of texture and undulating filaments.
The melody is minimal but heavy with vivacity flowing from Scott’s mellow voice. “Bodies” begins with a So-Cal intro segueing to a gleaming progressive rock melody. Restrained guitars provide lustrous mists of evocative intensity.
The title track delivers a quasi-psychedelic aroma within a prog rock melody. The melody oozes dark, heavy rhythms beneath soft, pale vocals juxtaposed against the liquid flow of random darkness. The tune discharges shadows blacker than black, along with a dank mysterious quality. It’s a great song.
...The bassline is stellar and palpable.... Poole’s guitar projects a raffish aroma that’s urgent and infectious... An aromatic guitar pours forth gracefully... The solo is chock-full of suffused sonic pigmentations, along with a bravura guitar.
― early rejecter, Thursday, 12 October 2017 20:35 (seven years ago) link
just smell that guitar
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Thursday, 12 October 2017 20:38 (seven years ago) link
those lustrous mists of guitar are quite aromatic
― Universal LULU Nation (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 12 October 2017 20:59 (seven years ago) link
in a weird way though i almost have to hear this album now so job done i guess?
“Bodies” begins with a So-Cal intro
It says so much.
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 12 October 2017 21:06 (seven years ago) link
progressive rock clot
― dinnerboat, Thursday, 12 October 2017 21:22 (seven years ago) link
At least this person is trying to describe what the music sounds like!!
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 12 October 2017 21:31 (seven years ago) link
sounds, looks, AND smells
― Marcus Hiles Remains Steadfast About Planting Trees.jpg (DJP), Thursday, 12 October 2017 21:31 (seven years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JkDLsq9lzsk
getting hints of oak, barnyard and overzealous press release
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Thursday, 12 October 2017 21:38 (seven years ago) link
"the lambent bass discharged sleek tunnels of fatty overdrive - and it was everything!"
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 12 October 2017 21:44 (seven years ago) link
https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/books/joni-mitchell-from-both-sides-now/2017/10/09/e571fc62-aad3-11e7-b3aa-c0e2e1d41e38_story.html?tid=kp_google&utm_term=.3c6f46fc7559
― kurt schwitterz, Friday, 13 October 2017 17:59 (seven years ago) link
https://www.vox.com/2017/10/28/16563618/trout-mask-replica-captain-beefheart-deconstructed
― IF (Terrorist) Yes, Explain (man alive), Monday, 30 October 2017 00:45 (seven years ago) link
"Deconstructed" is such a giveaway new media word that means "a lot of content about a thing that says absolutely nothing new or interesting"
― "the fgti incident?" (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 30 October 2017 13:40 (seven years ago) link
new derrida description
we could poll decoded vs. deconstructed (in worst music writing)
― niels, Monday, 30 October 2017 13:44 (seven years ago) link
ts: "deconstructed" (food) vs. "deconstructed" (literature)
― what if a much of a which of a wind (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 1 November 2017 02:25 (seven years ago) link
Still thinking about that NYT Mag piece. I got breakfast at the diner this morning and they played Eurhythmics, Lady Gaga, Heart, Rihanna, Ace of Base, Kim Wide and Katy Perry.
Of course I sat shivering and confused, these songs hitting me like Esperanto.
Finally a song with a man's voice came on. I stood on the table, kicked all the food off and screamed all the words like a normal person
― "the fgti incident?" (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 8 November 2017 14:50 (seven years ago) link
anecdotal experience truther up in here
― President Keyes, Wednesday, 8 November 2017 14:56 (seven years ago) link
Have a hoagie: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confirmation_bias
― "the fgti incident?" (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 8 November 2017 14:57 (seven years ago) link
there are no commercial stations in the entire country that would play that many female-led songs in a row
― dyl, Wednesday, 8 November 2017 23:48 (seven years ago) link
I think it was 106.7 Lite FM, but keep trying!
― "the fgti incident?" (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 9 November 2017 00:16 (seven years ago) link
There was two songs from men in there too iirc
― "the fgti incident?" (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 9 November 2017 00:17 (seven years ago) link
Both of which I saluted like a flag
Of course bodega hoagie radio is just Mentors, Meatmen, XXXManik and the Eminem songs about killing his ex-wife
― "the fgti incident?" (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 9 November 2017 00:19 (seven years ago) link
Looking like a lab experiment for Eurocentric beauty, toting a bank account full of platinum records and a panoply of celebrity friends, if Swift couldn’t seem to find love, and she wrote about this problem often, rooting for Taylor Swift the Cultural Question to find happiness was a bit like rooting for the house in blackjack.
― Frozen CD, Sunday, 12 November 2017 15:57 (seven years ago) link
"And how many celebrity friends would you like from your account today Ms Swift"
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Monday, 13 November 2017 02:25 (seven years ago) link
"Taylor Swift the Cultural Question" clap clap clap.. "Taylor Swift the Cultural Question" clap clap clap..
― Mark G, Monday, 13 November 2017 15:06 (seven years ago) link
idk I like that sentence
― Simon H., Monday, 13 November 2017 15:17 (seven years ago) link
yeah it's a bit overstuffed but I prefer that to bland
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Monday, 13 November 2017 15:51 (seven years ago) link
Bloody Nora, the radio guy just mentioned Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tale 'Der er forskel' to express the difference in quality between these two teams. This isn't supposed to be educational ffs
― Le Bateau Ivre, Tuesday, 14 November 2017 21:18 (seven years ago) link
sry rong thraed
― Le Bateau Ivre, Tuesday, 14 November 2017 21:19 (seven years ago) link
bump
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Tuesday, 14 November 2017 22:54 (seven years ago) link
How do I express my hatred of this shit without going on some "I'm not like the other gays" tangent: https://www.billboard.com/articles/events/year-in-music-2017/8070980/best-gay-anthems-2017-songs-halsey-rupaul
― self-clowning oven (Murgatroid), Tuesday, 19 December 2017 20:00 (seven years ago) link
Charli knows what The Gays™ want
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Tuesday, 19 December 2017 20:06 (seven years ago) link
Re: that Riton song - how does a house song w/ a choir and MNEK manage to sound rote, guess I answered my own question
― self-clowning oven (Murgatroid), Tuesday, 19 December 2017 20:09 (seven years ago) link
https://www.xlr8r.com/reviews/2017/12/nabihah-iqbal-weighing-of-the-heart/
The promo information said one of the important elements of retiring the Throwing Shade name in favor of her birth name is to promote her Asian heritage. Good. But what’s interesting about her mixed ethnic heritage and education and experience is that the music to my ears sounds very "white." The subject matter colorless. I don’t sense the Asian-British experience we’re usually given. In an interview with i-D when asked to name a memorable song from her childhood, she said "something by Oasis." Now what’s beautiful about that is it’s unexpected and rarer than a white guy referencing a minority’s culture.
Excellent foot in mouth situation courtesy of Anton Lang reviewing my album for @XLR8R. The reason why I've chosen to use my birth name is to breakdown racial prejudices such as this. Sorry if you think I shouldn't be able to make guitar music because I'm not white. pic.twitter.com/TS7Fve1VSj— Nabihah Iqbal (@nabihahiqbal) December 21, 2017
― maura, Friday, 22 December 2017 14:33 (seven years ago) link
But he's not saying she shouldn't be able to make guitar music because she's not white - he's saying he had higher expectations of her (based on an awareness of her prior work) than bland indie. If that's prejudice, OK then.
― grawlix (unperson), Friday, 22 December 2017 14:39 (seven years ago) link
it absolutely is. if he'd listened to it blindfolded would he have said the same thing? come on. also, his pulling out of a chance to chat with her about this on the radio speaks volumes.
― maura, Friday, 22 December 2017 14:42 (seven years ago) link
wow that is like a vortex of awful ideas and awful writing
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Friday, 22 December 2017 14:55 (seven years ago) link
old man yells at the cloud https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/the-lost-art-of-music-snobbery/article37455129/?cmpid=rss1&click=sf_globe
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Tuesday, 2 January 2018 16:20 (seven years ago) link
not gonna get capt-save-a-weingarten here, but I mean I do think there IS a viable defense for music snobbery, especially when sites are out here running in-defense-of-normies articles like this
https://www.buzzfeed.com/katienotopoulos/people-in-their-thirties-cant-stop-hoarding-cds?utm_term=.fkNJmLD8d#.rdearp9wG
http://nymag.com/selectall/2016/06/i-love-my-five-dollar-headphones-and-i-bet-you-will-too.html
or this intro from the Vinyl Me, Please guide, which, lmao, fucking NO
https://www.instagram.com/p/BaUmBxCjVxo/
However, this article is ... not it.
― mag gerwig! (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 2 January 2018 16:30 (seven years ago) link
not actually "laughing my fucking ass" off at that, but the NO stands
― mag gerwig! (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 2 January 2018 16:31 (seven years ago) link
Also, I still love you, Max, even if I disagree with your article
― mag gerwig! (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 2 January 2018 16:32 (seven years ago) link
Not sure Bob Dylan is a "thing no one else followed", even back then
― self-clowning oven (Murgatroid), Tuesday, 2 January 2018 16:33 (seven years ago) link
it's the snobbery bit that's ridiculous and boring and doesn't not need expressing in public
not being personally interested in swathes of popular culture is absolutely legit on a personal level, even believing that those swathes are in some definable or objective sense lesser is umremarkable as a personal feeling, sometimes you might make an interesting case in a conversation. getting into it as a public thinkpiece invariably puts you on the side of the idiots tho.
― you shoulda killfiled me last year (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 2 January 2018 16:38 (seven years ago) link
i guess there's a subtle distinction between "snobbery" and "one-upmanship" and that article is really about the latter and the latter is for jerks
― you shoulda killfiled me last year (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 2 January 2018 16:40 (seven years ago) link
I mean also where is he actually encountering this?
No, it's the neo-snobs that have me riled up, those ADHD completists who stream all of the cool stuff and have the gall to flaunt the secret knowledge that was so hard won for us.
Did he get triggered by a /mu/ post or something
― mag gerwig! (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 2 January 2018 16:43 (seven years ago) link
signs your article is bad: the “bad guys” in your head have a dsm5 diagnosis
― k3vin k., Tuesday, 2 January 2018 16:44 (seven years ago) link
he really pushed the boat out with “snoboisie” u_u
― Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 2 January 2018 17:49 (seven years ago) link
"Do you know how hard it was to track down a Big Star record in 1982?! All three of the band's albums were long out of print,"
the 1978 PVC pressing of the 3rd album wouldn't have been hard to find in 1982. and they put it out again in 1985 and that pressing was everywhere. 1982 not a bad year to be a fan of almost anything from the 60s and 70s. everything was everywhere.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 2 January 2018 18:34 (seven years ago) link
i was trying to describe the 90s CD boom to my kid the other day. he didn't know about the gold rush era. people going to Tower and spending a grand on jazz and soul and psych reissues like it was nothing. all of a sudden being able to buy 20 nurse with wound albums in one shot. people went nuts.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 2 January 2018 18:42 (seven years ago) link
lol, i do remember that time period; watching people go to the counter with ridiculous stacks of cds
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Tuesday, 2 January 2018 18:48 (seven years ago) link
in 1982, real snobs just did mail order.
― scott seward, Tuesday, 2 January 2018 18:48 (seven years ago) link
The vinyl me please guy rhapsodizes about wanting people to spend time with albums that matter meanwhile my buddy gifted me his (arrived in the mail like this) warped Vinyl Me Please copy of Dan deacon's Spiderman of the Rings.
― omar little, Tuesday, 2 January 2018 19:10 (seven years ago) link
I promised I'd be more charitable in 2018 but I am trying to wrap my mind around fighting The Evil Algorithms by going to major-label artist playlists. (the whole "Spotify can tell me that people who listen to Lorde also listen to other pop songs by young women, but it can’t pick out just the right one the way Lorde herself can" thing is showing up in more and more criticism.)
https://www.theverge.com/2018/1/2/16840940/spotify-algorithm-music-discovery-mix-cds-resolution
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Thursday, 4 January 2018 19:29 (seven years ago) link
tech sites' music coverage is terrible
― maura, Thursday, 4 January 2018 19:30 (seven years ago) link
true but you'd expect them to be better than music sites at not talking about The Algorithms the way you'd talk about Bigfoot
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Thursday, 4 January 2018 19:35 (seven years ago) link
(this is probably one of my biggest pet peeves right now because
a) the word "algorithm" has an actual meaning. like, every time you've done a multiplication problem, you used an algorithmb) algorithms don't appear from the autonomous mind of skynet or whatever, they are made by people, but it's much easier to blame it all on The Algorithms than to think about why people might make the coding decisions they make and what influences themc) the existence of an algorithm does not make something automatically bad)
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Thursday, 4 January 2018 19:41 (seven years ago) link
Feel like that article could be a short little blurb suggesting people pay attention to how the music presented to them got to be presented to them and put time in to find ways of getting music presented to you in ways that work best for you.
Feel like it's not really doing that but gesturing towards it, but missing looking at how the songs got presented to Lorde in the first place (possibly algorhythmically) and to (take things a cynical step further) assuming that she just chose those cuz she liked them and not for label promotional reasons, etc...
― husked, tonal wails (irrational), Thursday, 4 January 2018 19:50 (seven years ago) link
it's almost certainly not Lorde (or anyone else), though, it's a 23-year-old in the office coordinating with other 23-year-olds when Justin Bieber can spontaneously tweet about this great new song he discovered
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Thursday, 4 January 2018 19:55 (seven years ago) link
it's those damn 23 year olds!
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Thursday, 4 January 2018 20:31 (seven years ago) link
to be fair sometimes they're as old as 29
― sick, fucking funny, and well tasty (katherine), Thursday, 4 January 2018 20:31 (seven years ago) link
don't trust anyone under 30
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Thursday, 4 January 2018 20:33 (seven years ago) link
there's another "ooh spooky algorithms" piece by Rhett Miller in the outline (admittedly it touches on other subjects)
― Simon H., Thursday, 4 January 2018 20:37 (seven years ago) link
Didn't see it up there, does it have a bafflingly incongruous title or something?
― husked, tonal wails (irrational), Friday, 5 January 2018 15:18 (seven years ago) link
can't link rn but it's actually in The Baffler, sorry
― Simon H., Friday, 5 January 2018 15:21 (seven years ago) link
i think it’s in the baffler
― maura, Friday, 5 January 2018 15:21 (seven years ago) link
― Simon H., Friday, January 5, 2018 8:21 AM (one minute ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
goddamn you for making me try to find a story on the outline
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Friday, 5 January 2018 15:23 (seven years ago) link
lmao sorry
― Simon H., Friday, 5 January 2018 15:24 (seven years ago) link
anyway it's not really bad enough for this thread I don't think but man if I were a white rock musician in my 40s I'd think long and hard before writing dismissively about "SoundCloud rappers"
― Simon H., Friday, 5 January 2018 15:26 (seven years ago) link
I like a lot about The Outline, but they do make it hard to find what you want.
― husked, tonal wails (irrational), Friday, 5 January 2018 15:27 (seven years ago) link
the outline had a decent piece on this a few months back, albeit not about music: https://theoutline.com/post/2362/the-algorithm-is-innocent
― algorithm is a dancer (katherine), Friday, 5 January 2018 15:30 (seven years ago) link
No one in their 40s should be thinking about SoundCloud rappers at all. Accept that not everything is for you, and that that's a good thing, and move on.
― grawlix (unperson), Friday, 5 January 2018 16:58 (seven years ago) link
wait up there hoss - some of that soundcloud stuff you're dismissing is just fine for the over 40 crowd, maybe not for you tho'
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Friday, 5 January 2018 17:55 (seven years ago) link
As a 40 year old, I'm cool with soundcloud rappers. I also recognize that what I might have to say about them isn't notable or relevant to them (or anyone much, really)
― husked, tonal wails (irrational), Friday, 5 January 2018 17:58 (seven years ago) link
https://cdn.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/MpA2HVftSFntl9HhmhlQA3MEjIU=/0x0:1409x785/1200x800/filters:focal(622x252:846x476)/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_image/image/55701647/Screen_Shot_2017_07_13_at_1.09.20_PM.0.png
― mag gerwig! (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 5 January 2018 17:59 (seven years ago) link
A thread where white people old enough to remember the Challenger Explosion debate whether "I took a white bitch to starbucks/That lil' bitch got her throat fucked" is for them
― mag gerwig! (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 5 January 2018 18:02 (seven years ago) link
That's not really what's happening but whatever gramps
― queens of the stonage (ultros ultros-ghali), Friday, 5 January 2018 18:15 (seven years ago) link
Ageism goes both ways.
― pomenitul, Friday, 5 January 2018 18:15 (seven years ago) link
whiney if u aint' down with the kids how can u be down with the clown?
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Friday, 5 January 2018 18:22 (seven years ago) link
also NB: your immediate access to xxx bars is very suspect, i daresay you may be a greyhair turncoat
― Chocolate-covered gummy bears? Not ruling those lil' guys out. (ulysses), Friday, 5 January 2018 18:23 (seven years ago) link
does anyone under the age of 40 use that Buscemi meme anymore, is my question
― mh, Friday, 5 January 2018 22:11 (seven years ago) link
this piece is seriously called “cut the c-rap”
https://www.city-journal.org/html/cut-c-rap-15692.html
when does the pmrc reform
― maura, Thursday, 1 February 2018 05:19 (seven years ago) link
City Journal is the nation’s premier urban-policy magazine, “the Bible of the new urbanism,” as London’s Daily Telegraph puts it. During the Giuliani Administration, the magazine served as an idea factory as the then-mayor revivified New York City, quickly becoming, in the words of the New York Post, “the place where Rudy gets his ideas.”
― self-clowning oven (Murgatroid), Thursday, 1 February 2018 05:39 (seven years ago) link
lord help us
― maura, Thursday, 1 February 2018 05:40 (seven years ago) link
The guy looks like an Isaac Asimov cosplayer
http://myronmagnet.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/MyronMagnetAlexanderHamilton-x400.jpg
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 1 February 2018 05:42 (seven years ago) link
Peggy Noonan is on their publication committee.
― self-clowning oven (Murgatroid), Thursday, 1 February 2018 05:44 (seven years ago) link
i love that he quoted the skit from reasonable doubt as jay-z lyrics
― while my dirk gently weeps (symsymsym), Thursday, 1 February 2018 06:48 (seven years ago) link
Fuckin' Magnets, how do they work?
― Thomas NAGL (Neil S), Thursday, 1 February 2018 11:40 (seven years ago) link
not so much music writing as racist concern trolling tbf
― bizarrer Gandhara (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 1 February 2018 11:50 (seven years ago) link
lmao "myron magnet" from the creative team that brought you "geir hongro"
― very stabbable gaius (wins), Thursday, 1 February 2018 12:07 (seven years ago) link
the corruption and oppression of their kleptocratic governments that keep the proles in poverty, ignorance, and fear; their religions that teach violence or passive resignation; and their cultures that oppress women, devalue learning, promote superstition
but enough about america,
― faust apes (NickB), Thursday, 1 February 2018 12:10 (seven years ago) link
👌
― Le Bateau Ivre, Thursday, 1 February 2018 12:11 (seven years ago) link
that photo is perfect not-alt right "I am upholding civilization against the barbarian darkness" fantasy
― bizarrer Gandhara (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 1 February 2018 12:12 (seven years ago) link
Looks like Chris Cantwell's attorney
― how's life, Thursday, 1 February 2018 14:41 (seven years ago) link
to whom do i write a sharply worded letter about rescinding mr magnet's national humanities medal
― j., Thursday, 1 February 2018 14:45 (seven years ago) link
Too late, it'll be pretty firmly stuck to him
― scrüt (wins), Thursday, 1 February 2018 14:46 (seven years ago) link
shoulda checked the couch before he sat down
― j., Thursday, 1 February 2018 14:48 (seven years ago) link
the only magnet we acknowledge here is penelope magnet
― algorithm is a dancer (katherine), Thursday, 1 February 2018 15:16 (seven years ago) link
some of these ageing aesthetes are better off just staying safely inside their posh wanking pits, and refraining from saying anything until the death. Then we all win.
― the 'phet offensive (calzino), Thursday, 1 February 2018 15:24 (seven years ago) link
posh wanking pits
wait are these bad now?
― mark s, Thursday, 1 February 2018 15:25 (seven years ago) link
nowt wrong with 'em!
― the 'phet offensive (calzino), Thursday, 1 February 2018 15:26 (seven years ago) link
But people like Sir Roger Scrotum should stay inside them.
― the 'phet offensive (calzino), Thursday, 1 February 2018 15:51 (seven years ago) link
someone on twitter said he looks like Dr Snuggles & now I cant unsee ithttps://i.ytimg.com/vi/-7_WRSEwuk0/hqdefault.jpg
― Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 1 February 2018 19:49 (seven years ago) link
t/s friend of the animal world vs white supremacist who uses big words
― bizarrer Gandhara (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 1 February 2018 20:08 (seven years ago) link
This kind of thing not too unusual these days but published by the CBC, who have done tons of reporting on the story, possibly even breaking it in the first place?
http://www.cbc.ca/news/opinion/hedley-opinion-1.4586160
― everything, Thursday, 22 March 2018 19:24 (six years ago) link
― mh, Thursday, 22 March 2018 19:25 (six years ago) link
I've never heard of that band. I guess I should be glad to hear that there are bands I've never heard of that people are tattoo-level devoted to. There are more bands than are dreamt of in your philosophy, Horatio.
― yamnesia (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 22 March 2018 19:43 (six years ago) link
can con
― mh, Thursday, 22 March 2018 19:44 (six years ago) link
come on this guy seems supercool
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4_Dmilr2T10
― motorpsycho nightmare winningham (Hadrian VIII), Thursday, 22 March 2018 21:22 (six years ago) link
I think I now have a new least-favorite band/song/video of all time.
― absorbed carol channing's powers & psyche (morrisp), Thursday, 22 March 2018 21:39 (six years ago) link
Froot Loops = ruint
― yamnesia (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 22 March 2018 22:57 (six years ago) link
being male = ruint
― absorbed carol channing's powers & psyche (morrisp), Thursday, 22 March 2018 23:06 (six years ago) link
it was apparently sparked by the author having a picture of her tattoo run with a story on the assault
― maura, Thursday, 22 March 2018 23:36 (six years ago) link
― mh, Thursday, 22 March 2018 23:54 (six years ago) link
worst weird pointless npr write up of an absolutely nonsensical youtube video made by a maniac about how kanye west albums have some imaginary analog to situations from disgraced tv show 'the office', ever?
https://www.npr.org/sections/allsongs/2018/03/23/596443553/are-kanye-west-and-michael-scott-from-the-office-the-same-person-yes
― sleepingbag, Saturday, 24 March 2018 06:23 (six years ago) link
I thought that Kanye/The Office thing was a (really bad) take off of the "Every Radiohead album described with Peep Show" format
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hbSy5Z6m3u4
― in twelve parts (lamonti), Sunday, 25 March 2018 08:12 (six years ago) link
journalism in the era of legalization
― Hazy Maze Cave (Adam Bruneau), Sunday, 25 March 2018 19:04 (six years ago) link
fyc: https://www.stereogum.com/1988829/on-virtue-julian-casablancas-scorches-the-strokes-legacy-and-leaps-into-the-voidz/franchises/sounding-board/
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Wednesday, 28 March 2018 18:20 (six years ago) link
i didn't finish it but i can't see it getting much better after the first 100 paragraphs tbh
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Wednesday, 28 March 2018 18:24 (six years ago) link
I was gonna say, jfc no one is ever finishing that
― Simon H., Wednesday, 28 March 2018 18:26 (six years ago) link
10,000+ words!
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, 28 March 2018 18:27 (six years ago) link
(not unlike Tyranny in that sense) xp
― Simon H., Wednesday, 28 March 2018 18:27 (six years ago) link
i'm sure the reason there are this many paragraphs is bc the space between each resembles the line of coke he did before writing it
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Wednesday, 28 March 2018 18:28 (six years ago) link
tbh this did succeed in getting me to check out the new songs (much easier than trying tog et through any of this) and they're not bad, really
― Simon H., Wednesday, 28 March 2018 18:32 (six years ago) link
That was fucking painful to read - and no, I didn't finish it. I tried to read it, got a few paragraphs in, scrolled down, saw the writer had written "I SOUND LIKE A DICK", agreed with the writer on that point and then closed it.
― Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Wednesday, 28 March 2018 18:36 (six years ago) link
do the new songs take less time to listen to than finishing the first two grafs of this opus?
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 28 March 2018 18:39 (six years ago) link
Speaking of verb tenses . . .
― mookieproof, Wednesday, 28 March 2018 18:45 (six years ago) link
10,000 words of self-clowning
"a no-hope writer who couldn’t get into a half-decent MFA program"
i'm trying to imagine what this article would look like if michael nelson (ever considered a pseudonym, michael?) had gotten into a decent mfa program.
― ziggy the ginhead (rushomancy), Wednesday, 28 March 2018 19:10 (six years ago) link
the fact that stereogum commenters like his writing is further proof that stereogum commenters have the worst taste
― lowercase (eric), Wednesday, 28 March 2018 19:41 (six years ago) link
Michael NelsonHaha yeah I had literally a whole section here about my fave Jules verse ever, which is in "Electricityscape." I went on for a bit about that. But I had to cut it, sadly, because this piece was running on the semi-longer side. I'm stoked you caught that, tho!
― scott seward, Wednesday, 28 March 2018 21:41 (six years ago) link
"semi-longer"
― Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Wednesday, 28 March 2018 22:01 (six years ago) link
this was a real solid lol:
i'm sure the reason there are this many paragraphs is bc the space between each resembles the line of coke he did before writing it― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Wednesday, March 28, 2018 12:28 PM (three hours ago)
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Wednesday, March 28, 2018 12:28 PM (three hours ago)
― alpine static, Wednesday, 28 March 2018 22:56 (six years ago) link
I know this reads like … I mean it reads like bad writing, honestly, but it’s a real thing that really happened, I swear; it’s just that I don’t have better words.
The self-awareness makes it even more abysmal somehow.
― pomenitul, Wednesday, 28 March 2018 23:10 (six years ago) link
it reads like bad writing
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 28 March 2018 23:37 (six years ago) link
America's sudden favorite rapper, Cardi B, has built her body for optimal viewing at medium-to-long-distance range. This engineering foresight helps explain why, before she began making music history (a randomly chosen milestone from her tennis bracelet of success: she is the first rapper to have her first three Billboard Hot 100 entries in the Top 10 simultaneously), she was not just a successful stripper but a wildly successful one. The hills and slopes of her body are so captivating that you might not even notice the delicate beauty of her countenance until it's staring at you head-on from across a dimly lit restaurant booth while you wait to discover what it is that Cardi loves.
― Evan R, Monday, 9 April 2018 15:19 (six years ago) link
if you're gonna objectify, go big
― vermicious kid (Noodle Vague), Monday, 9 April 2018 15:21 (six years ago) link
'the hills and slopes of her body' jfc
i'd love for someone to write that about, say, tom chaplin from keane. or glenn danzig.
― star wars ep viii: the bay of porgs (bizarro gazzara), Monday, 9 April 2018 15:25 (six years ago) link
"wow, imagine saying that about a MAN" is one of the most useless criticisms in 2018 and also ever
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Monday, 9 April 2018 15:27 (six years ago) link
This extract has a wonderful Alan-Partridge-writing-for-Huffington-Post feel to it.
― mfktz (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Monday, 9 April 2018 15:28 (six years ago) link
it's not a criticism, it's an invitation to write clammy-palmed erotica in this style about don henley
― star wars ep viii: the bay of porgs (bizarro gazzara), Monday, 9 April 2018 15:29 (six years ago) link
Imagine if Obama had written that!
― President Keyes, Monday, 9 April 2018 15:30 (six years ago) link
written by Caity Weaver
― stormzy daniels (voodoo chili), Monday, 9 April 2018 15:30 (six years ago) link
who is a woman, from what i can tell.
imagine if Don Henley had written that
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 9 April 2018 15:31 (six years ago) link
GLENN: well, yeah
― star wars ep viii: the bay of porgs (bizarro gazzara), Monday, 9 April 2018 15:32 (six years ago) link
ACTUALLY, it isn't. (see what i did there)
― maura, Monday, 9 April 2018 15:41 (six years ago) link
The hills and slopes of Jeff Tweedy's body are built for optimal viewing at long distances
― bone thugs & prosody (Ye Mad Puffin), Monday, 9 April 2018 15:44 (six years ago) link
Caity Weaver is great tbh
― omar little, Monday, 9 April 2018 15:51 (six years ago) link
i like her writing a lot although i feel like music pieces in general-interest magazines always reveal editorial seams (knowledge limitations on parts of editors, higher-ups' desire to present their cultural remit in a certain way) and this suffered from that issue here and there. also the 'this woman EATS' trope is a bit overdone
― maura, Monday, 9 April 2018 15:55 (six years ago) link
i hate 100% of the scene-setting done in these interview pieces. "dafoe glides in, as smoothly as if his body were on gimbals, and the room is illuminated suddenly, like a large exotic bird has settled in to land, and we are its tree. cream-colored scarf, aviators, he has a discreet word with the head waiter and they share a small laugh. i've brought my digital recorder but, i think, nervously, beads of sweat breaking out on my upper lip, have i brought batteries?" etc
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Monday, 9 April 2018 16:29 (six years ago) link
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Wednesday, March 28, 2018 1:27 PM (one week ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― Simon H., Wednesday, March 28, 2018 1:27 PM (one week ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Wednesday, March 28, 2018 1:28 PM (one week ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
I probably shouldn't admit that that was actually one of the best pieces of writing I've come across this year, but what the hey
― The Harsh Tutelage of Michael McDonald (Raymond Cummings), Monday, 9 April 2018 21:42 (six years ago) link
Also, though, I'm a big Voidz fan and a big Michael Nelson fan, so
― The Harsh Tutelage of Michael McDonald (Raymond Cummings), Monday, 9 April 2018 21:44 (six years ago) link
lol you do you ray, i eventually felt mean ragging on it
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Monday, 9 April 2018 23:18 (six years ago) link
I mean, it IS probably 400 words too long, and it's just really long and takes some time to get to its point. BUT: This piece is dead-on and satisfying. I get it, he's doing the 1997-2001 Might/MicSweeney's fake-out thing where he's smuggling 2-3 larger points under cover of "awkward writing" but I still this is is exceptional. I know the approach doesn't count for much in an era where there's so much writing available, and most of the articles this long are edited to the hilt New Yorker/Atlantic articles.
Eh, I'm just grousing. Clearly you guys had fun with this on some level :)
― The Harsh Tutelage of Michael McDonald (Raymond Cummings), Monday, 9 April 2018 23:33 (six years ago) link
Nelson is a really good writer. I didn't say anything in the initial wave because I have a vested interest (he's my editor at Stereogum). And I didn't care much about that specific piece because I've only heard one Strokes song ever, never mind anything by any of the members in other contexts.
― grawlix (unperson), Monday, 9 April 2018 23:53 (six years ago) link
i also found that part of the cardi b piece (+ the others that suddenly reverted to similar comments) very uncomfortable, altho i enjoyed other parts of the profile
― dyl, Tuesday, 10 April 2018 00:24 (six years ago) link
Bro, if you work for Stereogum there’s no way you’ve only heard one Strokes song ever. Come on.
― Position Position, Tuesday, 10 April 2018 01:10 (six years ago) link
yo is it true phil got broed by a wite kid after a stereogum beef??????
― mookieproof, Tuesday, 10 April 2018 01:13 (six years ago) link
I write their monthly jazz column, and the occasional anniversary piece on a metal album.
― grawlix (unperson), Tuesday, 10 April 2018 01:19 (six years ago) link
also the 'this woman EATS' trope is a bit overdone
― maura, Monday, April 9, 2018
hard to believe it's already been 8 whole years since TRUFFLE FRIES
― Larry Elleison (rogermexico.), Tuesday, 10 April 2018 17:49 (six years ago) link
Nelson is a really good writer
everything i've read by him needs at the very least two more passes from an editor. i also think he has nothing intelligent to say about metal
but ymmv
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Tuesday, 10 April 2018 17:52 (six years ago) link
Thanks hip-hop writers from New York for your interest in Kacey Musgraves, but we’ve got this handled. Or as Kacey Musgraves would say, “Mind your own biscuits.”
― Frozen CD, Tuesday, 10 April 2018 18:05 (six years ago) link
xp he's good at writing about the music business, i find him lacking when he writes about the artform itself
― stormzy daniels (voodoo chili), Tuesday, 10 April 2018 18:10 (six years ago) link
I still think it’s funny that Michael Nelson called the band name Dog Shredder “gross and indefensible”
― like æ duce says, smell my anvil vapre (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 10 April 2018 18:27 (six years ago) link
i think it was weird that, given his casually enthusiastic style, his pallbearer review was p much all comparisons to other records, which made it p impenetrable to someone not acquainted w a lot of the records mentioned, but also sort of meaningless even w the ones which which i was. like, if the progressions are so great, try to describe them? he mentions a chord change that struck him once and doesn't expand on it
― lowercase (eric), Tuesday, 10 April 2018 18:55 (six years ago) link
tbf dog shredding is more gross and indefensible than most things
― lowercase (eric), Tuesday, 10 April 2018 18:56 (six years ago) link
no way, a german shepherd busting out some sweet lightspeed yngwie licks on a neon-green flying v is cool as shit
― star wars ep viii: the bay of porgs (bizarro gazzara), Tuesday, 10 April 2018 18:59 (six years ago) link
bizarro is right as usual. Are we talking about dogs who play fast modal tapping solos on guitar? Or are we talking about dogs being thrus in Fargo-esque woodchippers?
― like hell, but with more ketchup (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 10 April 2018 19:01 (six years ago) link
participles are confusing
― lowercase (eric), Tuesday, 10 April 2018 19:02 (six years ago) link
What if the shredder is a dog?
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 10 April 2018 19:07 (six years ago) link
(...should’ve read the other replies first...)
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 10 April 2018 19:08 (six years ago) link
bizarro is right as usual.
more of this from the rest of the board too pls
― star wars ep viii: the bay of porgs (bizarro gazzara), Tuesday, 10 April 2018 19:15 (six years ago) link
i like Nelson's stuff usually (a lot more than Brad, apparently) but again:
on the Strokes guy's not-the-Strokes new band!
― alpine static, Tuesday, 10 April 2018 23:27 (six years ago) link
serious question: is Nelson paid an annual salary by Stereogum? he's on there enough, i assume he's on staff.
and if so, did Scott, like, tell him he could take a week off of doing news updates or w/e and write that piece?
and if so, then I guess they think 10K words on the Voidz is clickworthy enough to go a man down on day-to-day stuff?
or am I way off base here and Nelson's a freelancer and he pitched a thousands-word-count story?
i'm never going to read the thing, but i am kinda interested in the economics and logistics behind it.
― alpine static, Tuesday, 10 April 2018 23:31 (six years ago) link
Michael Nelson is the managing editor, and he doesn't file that much copy in comparison to the others who are on staff. (I wish he'd do more on the music business - when he did that string of pieces on streaming in 2016-2017, he was knocking it out of the park every time.) Why do I know this? Because at this point, Stereogum is my favorite music site.
― The Harsh Tutelage of Michael McDonald (Raymond Cummings), Tuesday, 10 April 2018 23:45 (six years ago) link
saving country music is a horrible blog
― dyl, Wednesday, 11 April 2018 03:54 (six years ago) link
it really is.
― maura, Wednesday, 11 April 2018 04:39 (six years ago) link
xxpost thanks Raymond!
― alpine static, Wednesday, 11 April 2018 07:18 (six years ago) link
de nada, alpine static
― The Harsh Tutelage of Michael McDonald (Raymond Cummings), Wednesday, 11 April 2018 15:19 (six years ago) link
The Saving Country Music guy is just Neill Jameson (Decibel's go-to essayist for incoherent anti-Antifa grumblings and other "defenses" of "keeping" "metal" "dangerous") in a cowboy hat.
― grawlix (unperson), Wednesday, 11 April 2018 15:38 (six years ago) link
So Tracey Thorn complained about a review on Twitter:
A 55 year old wife and mother. God the more I think about it the crosser I'm getting. 55 year old husband and father. I'm trying to imagine it as a description in an album review. Nope. Can't do it.— Tracey Thorn (@tracey_thorn) April 13, 2018
And I figured it was probably just some random UK jagoff. Turns out it was King Jagoff, typing with his dick again:
Tracey Thorn: Record (Merge) Calm, deliberate, undemonstrative, Thorn is a singer some find magical and others prosaic. I've always tended other, but when a 55-year-old wife and mother claims she's recorded "nine feminist bangers," I pay attention.
Is this a "dog walking on its hind legs" situation for him? "She's old and married with a kid...but she says she's a feminist! This is a job for Christgau, The Dean of American Women's Studies Rock Critics!"
In four other songs, decent but fundamentally clueless guys mess with various women's lives, while two others evoke a motherhood you assume is autobiographical
Do you? I don't, any more than I assume George "Corpsegrinder" Fisher has really murdered all those people.
― grawlix (unperson), Saturday, 14 April 2018 15:17 (six years ago) link
*face palm*
― The Harsh Tutelage of Michael McDonald (Raymond Cummings), Saturday, 14 April 2018 16:20 (six years ago) link
And this one comes exactly one week after his Amy Rigby review. He's on a real roll.
Rigby's response, in part (the whole thing is worth reading):
All I know is that it was fine when he’d conjecture about me as a single mother, my work, my songs, hell even my breasts. It was fine cause I was hungry then – I wanted what ever any critic would say about me as long as it felt sort of like a compliment.But I don’t feel that way anymore. I don’t want his praise that feels like a put down. I don’t want him talking about me in terms of my first husband who, bless his heart I have not been married to for twenty years. I don’t want him praising while panning and damning my partner, my husband, by saying he’s kept me too busy to do much work on music when he’s done nothing but encourage me to work. I don’t want him dismissing my hardworking husband for taking the easy way and living on the past when he’s done nothing but try to outrun the past.I don’t want his readers thinking something’s a rave review when it feels hurtful and personal and dismissive.
But I don’t feel that way anymore. I don’t want his praise that feels like a put down. I don’t want him talking about me in terms of my first husband who, bless his heart I have not been married to for twenty years. I don’t want him praising while panning and damning my partner, my husband, by saying he’s kept me too busy to do much work on music when he’s done nothing but encourage me to work. I don’t want him dismissing my hardworking husband for taking the easy way and living on the past when he’s done nothing but try to outrun the past.
I don’t want his readers thinking something’s a rave review when it feels hurtful and personal and dismissive.
― grawlix (unperson), Saturday, 14 April 2018 16:37 (six years ago) link
I think Christgau’s issue (one of them) often is writing positive reviews that feel like condescending pats on the head and when they’re aimed at women they feel just really paternalistic and the winking asides and mild caveats come off as even insults. And he still can’t write about women without regarding them as equals (he’d say otherwise and then pause to be dazzled by their looks or juggling of the domestic chores with music-making.)
― omar little, Saturday, 14 April 2018 16:46 (six years ago) link
Christgau’s reviews seem largely worthless even just on the basic level of talking about the music (never mind the issues discussed above). I’ve never understood why he has such a rep.
― absorbed carol channing's powers & psyche (morrisp), Saturday, 14 April 2018 17:28 (six years ago) link
That Amy Rigby piece is terrific, btw
― absorbed carol channing's powers & psyche (morrisp), Saturday, 14 April 2018 17:37 (six years ago) link
change my comment above to *disregarding them
― omar little, Saturday, 14 April 2018 22:07 (six years ago) link
https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1348047913l/341633.jpg
Although Artificial Intelligence's sleeve notes had insisted that the new electronica "cannot be described as soulless or machine made," what's most interesting about Autechre's work is the absence of heart and humanity, the way that the listener's impulse to forge an emotional connection simply ricochet's off the impenetrable, gmonic surfaces of their sound. At times you can't help wonder if the "aut" in their name stands for autism; listening, the mind's eye conjures up a vision of two small boys surrounded by techno toys, lost in a preverbal world of chromatics, texture and contour.
― like æ duce says, smell my anvil vapre (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 16 April 2018 14:31 (six years ago) link
20-year-old music criticism in problematic attitudes to autism shocker
― Mahogany Loggins (bizarro gazzara), Monday, 16 April 2018 14:43 (six years ago) link
The Impenetrable Gnomic Surfaces is the name of my Autechre tribute band btw.
― fleetwood machiavellian (Ye Mad Puffin), Monday, 16 April 2018 14:54 (six years ago) link
jeezus fucking christ
― marcos, Monday, 16 April 2018 14:58 (six years ago) link
This is why I only write for Consumer Reports now
― Paul Ponzi, Monday, 16 April 2018 15:08 (six years ago) link
almost certain that it does stand for autism and that sean autechre is proudly autistic
yours, someone w/ mild autism
― imago, Monday, 16 April 2018 15:35 (six years ago) link
the only problem with that bit of writing is that autechre DOES contain emotion and feeling, but u neurotypicals don't get it I guess
― imago, Monday, 16 April 2018 15:37 (six years ago) link
hold me closerneurodancer
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 16 April 2018 15:47 (six years ago) link
This Scottish newspaper employs some good arts writers, but its op-ed section is a joke...
http://www.heraldscotland.com/opinion/16169683.Brian_Beacom__Pulitzer_music_prize_judges_deserve_a_rap_on_the_knuckles/
― Poor.Old.Tired.Horse. (Stew), Thursday, 19 April 2018 09:34 (six years ago) link
That might be the worst piece of music writing ever.
― Eyeball Kicks, Thursday, 19 April 2018 09:58 (six years ago) link
Jesus christ
― lbi's life of limitless european glamour (Le Bateau Ivre), Thursday, 19 April 2018 10:02 (six years ago) link
some excellent Scruton-ising there, it's a load of (c)rap, innit?
― calzino, Thursday, 19 April 2018 10:07 (six years ago) link
all I see there is a campaign to give Limmy a Pulitzer, everything else was just padding
― thirst trap your hare (DJ Mencap), Thursday, 19 April 2018 10:44 (six years ago) link
I imagine Brian Bee Cum is about to have a slaughter in his menchies
― like æ duce says, smell my anvil vapre (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 19 April 2018 12:20 (six years ago) link
High and low culture? Who is right when you recall Bob Dylan’s Nobel Prize for Literature last year, which caused a stooshie. “Lay lady lay, lay across my big brass bed,” may have acutely summed up man’s sexual imaginations but doesn’t quite compare with Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath.
This is something of a self-own, considering that lyric could literally be a line of Steinbeck dialogue...
― absorbed carol channing's powers & psyche (morrisp), Thursday, 19 April 2018 13:10 (six years ago) link
I'd ask if anyone had any bets on how many previous music Pulitzer winners Beacom has listened to but you can't really bet on a certainty.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Thursday, 19 April 2018 18:04 (six years ago) link
https://www.savingcountrymusic.com/album-review-jason-aldeans-rearview-town/
should be easy to see why this review is both poorly written and reprehensible (i don't buy his excuses in the comments.)
― omar little, Friday, 20 April 2018 18:55 (six years ago) link
this dude
― lowercase (eric), Friday, 20 April 2018 18:58 (six years ago) link
including in some songs these strange feminine (or synthesized) sighs and calls like something you would hear in the soundtrack of a 90’s-era war strategy RPG or 1st-person shooter game
what, like warcraft? is jason aldean going zug-zug
― aloha darkness my old friend (katherine), Friday, 20 April 2018 19:02 (six years ago) link
the zerg queen doing background vocals
― mh, Friday, 20 April 2018 19:15 (six years ago) link
best phrase...
Among other fair criticisms...
...in which he critiques his own critique, and judges it to be a good, fair critique.
― fact checking cuz, Friday, 20 April 2018 19:26 (six years ago) link
new jason aldean single right here
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RwWh1xy6gvU
― aloha darkness my old friend (katherine), Friday, 20 April 2018 19:27 (six years ago) link
There are a lot of provocative statements in here:http://www.vulture.com/2018/05/rock-and-roll-hall-of-fame-artists-ranked-from-best-to-worst.html
― aphoristical, Wednesday, 2 May 2018 22:31 (six years ago) link
lots of discussion about that on the Pitchfork thread but it belongs here in the HOF
― omar little, Wednesday, 2 May 2018 22:33 (six years ago) link
ctrl f trump
― lowercase (eric), Wednesday, 2 May 2018 22:39 (six years ago) link
she really tried it
https://uproxx.com/music/taylor-swift-reputation-tour-legacy/amp/
― maura, Wednesday, 9 May 2018 21:49 (six years ago) link
Taylor Swift is my culture. Surely, I already knew that to some degree, but I never realized it more than when Reputation dropped late last fall. Unexpectedly in Norway that weekend, I was covering a small European music festival — or, I was supposed to be covering it. Friday morning, attendees kept attempting to communicate with me while I sat ensconced in puffy, pink Beats headphones I couldn’t bring myself to remove, wrapped up in the world of Reptuation.
― chilis=lyrics...hypocrits (sic), Wednesday, 9 May 2018 22:16 (six years ago) link
"Waaahhh! I wrote a piece of sponsored content disguised as a personal essay and people called me an asshole for it - I'm just like Taylor Swift!"
― grawlix (unperson), Wednesday, 9 May 2018 23:47 (six years ago) link
That piece is better if you approach it as a satire of Taylor Swift's writing. i.e., making huge melodramatic emotional narratives out of small personal events that no one else should really give a shit about.
― triggercut, Thursday, 10 May 2018 01:33 (six years ago) link
i feel like writing about "small personal events that no one else should really give a shit about" describes a lot of good songwriting, but i'm not sure what that even means really so
― lowercase (eric), Thursday, 10 May 2018 01:51 (six years ago) link
@triggercut the author is not that self aware, trust
― maura, Thursday, 10 May 2018 02:37 (six years ago) link
eric: cf. Annie Dillard: "Write not about what you love most, but about what you alone love at all."
― moresoupial (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 10 May 2018 13:44 (six years ago) link
in fact just keep a private journal because nobody else is going to seek out your opinions on the new tram cops record
― Arch Bacon (rushomancy), Thursday, 10 May 2018 14:23 (six years ago) link
but i guess they have to submit some type of work to get paid
― F# A# (∞), Thursday, 10 May 2018 17:15 (six years ago) link
https://pitchfork.com/reviews/tracks/pusha-t-the-story-of-adidon/
― Number None, Wednesday, 30 May 2018 21:53 (six years ago) link
what's so bad about that?
― alpine static, Thursday, 31 May 2018 04:05 (six years ago) link
"My favorite way to listen to music is out in the world — walking to the grocery store or uphill to class, one earbud in and the other free to hear birds calling and insects buzzing."
― Frozen CD, Sunday, 3 June 2018 17:27 (six years ago) link
this lede is outrageous
https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/why-are-nashvilles-brightest-stars-touring-with-the-survivors-of-one-direction/2018/06/25/6d547f80-7890-11e8-93cc-6d3beccdd7a3_story.html?utm_term=.5c9342f325e2
― we æt so many shimripl (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 26 June 2018 17:21 (six years ago) link
Ooph
― triggercut, Tuesday, 26 June 2018 22:17 (six years ago) link
https://noisey.vice.com/en_us/article/zm8dve/the-saxophones-unlikely-journey-out-of-meme-hell
― grawlix (unperson), Wednesday, 27 June 2018 22:42 (six years ago) link
woof
― we æt so many shimripl (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 27 June 2018 22:54 (six years ago) link
idgi
― (V) (°,,,,°) (V) (Austin), Wednesday, 27 June 2018 22:58 (six years ago) link
I would say "Noisey should stick to covering Genre X or Genre Y," but literally 99% of what they publish is hot, wet garbage.
― grawlix (unperson), Thursday, 28 June 2018 00:00 (six years ago) link
https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/shawn-mendes-headlines-rolling-stone-relaunch-event-presented-by-youtube-music-699343/
yes i know it's a press release but.
the lede...
On July 26th, Rolling Stone will host 500 music industry insiders, influencers and a select group of fans at a raw industrial space in Brooklyn.
...would actually work pretty well as a mad lib.
― fact checking cuz, Wednesday, 18 July 2018 16:59 (six years ago) link
An old one. . .
Recurrence suggests an instant replay of the Railway Children's earlier album, and, in fact, it is. While the rhythms are spritely, the songs tend to sound alike -- at times like some of what Spandau Ballet was doing in the '80s, and at other times as though the Railway Children are trying to ape New Order. Recurrence's highlights, "Merciless" and "Over & Over," suggest that they are trying to do something original, only to fall just a bit short each time. Recurrence makes you wish you had a couple of aspirin to dull the effects. (four and half stars out of five)
https://www.allmusic.com/album/recurrence-mw0000200002
More of a case of actual content of the review not matching the score, but still, that's a pretty large jump.
― outside, you're never alone. (Austin), Wednesday, 8 August 2018 18:36 (six years ago) link
after the resignation of their editor last week, the AV Club apparently has nobody around to tell music writers about this wild new invention called "a single"
Burial released two of the most absorbing, darkly beautiful electronic records ever in 2006 and 2007, but rather than release a follow-up, he has spent the decade-plus since quietly firing off one- to three-track mini-albums.
He goes on to describe a release as a "split" because it has one Burial track on each side of the record.
― 16, 35, DCP, Go! (sic), Thursday, 9 August 2018 14:35 (six years ago) link
one- to three-track mini-albumslol‘Scuse me while I go ride my two-wheeled, motorless, pedal-powered, one-person car
― empire bro-lesque (morrisp), Thursday, 9 August 2018 14:40 (six years ago) link
tbf Burial was covering Burial on each side of that Split
― President Keyes, Thursday, 9 August 2018 14:42 (six years ago) link
Not long now until we can call it a side again.
"Good, gloomy industrial danceballad. Lacks vocals, but an attractive side all told. Could do some business with exposure" (Nonplus, BMI)
― Jeff W, Thursday, 9 August 2018 18:30 (six years ago) link
#tbt from dula peep
One of the most funny and embarrassing articles in history. Putting women against each other and speaking way too soon. It’s obvious everyone has room to grow but trying to diminish someones success just because... is a theme that rarely happens with male artists. pic.twitter.com/RTL7UDAmkf— DUA LIPA (@DUALIPA) August 7, 2018
― Frozen CD, Friday, 10 August 2018 01:03 (six years ago) link
wait, are we making fun of this *fifteen year old article* or the tweet? Because I can bearly get passed the grammer...in that tweet
― Paul Ponzi, Friday, 10 August 2018 01:32 (six years ago) link
I looked up the article and it’s not poorly written (the Lol’z are mainly in the headline, and in retrospect). As for pitting two female artists against each other... I feel like this was a standard thing the NYT did — reviewing two albums at once and comparing/contrasting — but maybe it’s true they didn’t do it as often w/male artists (or didn’t make the contrast as stark or critical, etc.)
― empire bro-lesque (morrisp), Friday, 10 August 2018 01:42 (six years ago) link
if you dorks don't think "The Solo Beyoncé: She's No Ashanti" is funny, idk what to say
― 5th Ward Weeaboo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 10 August 2018 01:47 (six years ago) link
The solo Paul Simon: he's no Leonard Cohen
― Pirate's booty call (Ye Mad Puffin), Friday, 10 August 2018 01:49 (six years ago) link
xp I said the headline was funny, dude
― empire bro-lesque (morrisp), Friday, 10 August 2018 01:52 (six years ago) link
Senator, you are no Ashanti
― Paul Ponzi, Friday, 10 August 2018 02:09 (six years ago) link
Investigating Beyoncé, NY Times Sees No Clear Link to Ashanti
― empire bro-lesque (morrisp), Friday, 10 August 2018 02:22 (six years ago) link
Xgau stays weird about women:
Amanda Shires: To the Sunset (Silver Knife) Although premier violinist and respected singer-songwriter Shires comes by most of her current swell of fame as Jason Isbell's wife, bedrock, and babymama, you wouldn't guess it from the advances she's made in these 10 coolly autonomous, acutely turned, observantly experienced songs. Her soprano incisive over arrangements longer on echo and electronics than you'd expect from tradmaster Dave Cobb, she deals more candidly with attraction ("Parking Lot Pirouette"), lust ("Leave It Alone"), personal rivalry ("Break Out the Champagne"), and even suicide ("Wasn't I Paying Attention?") than supportive domestic partners are expected to, and hardly plays her violin at all. That's how you end up with an album that takes some getting used to not just because it's unexpected but because it's halfway to sui generis. A MINUS
― evol j, Friday, 10 August 2018 18:06 (six years ago) link
jesus christ how is he still getting work?
― the Joao looked at Jonny (Noodle Vague), Friday, 10 August 2018 18:07 (six years ago) link
uhh wtf
― mh, Friday, 10 August 2018 19:12 (six years ago) link
goddamn, this guy
― empire bro-lesque (morrisp), Friday, 10 August 2018 19:14 (six years ago) link
dang brother, it's tough to even see you up on that high horse from this here ditch. and i'm fresh outta fucks.— sarahshook (@sarahshook) August 11, 2018
― omar little, Friday, 17 August 2018 23:26 (six years ago) link
Re:
Sarah Shook & the Disarmers: Years (Bloodshot) If only she could light up the melancholy of "Good as Gold" with the dawning consciousness of "What It Takes," she might be able to figure out how to duck men's meanness without drinking herself into the ditch ("Parting Words," "Lesson") **
― omar little, Friday, 17 August 2018 23:28 (six years ago) link
this fucking gau
― mookieproof, Friday, 17 August 2018 23:31 (six years ago) link
He's clearly not gonna change, I blame anybody paying him for it nowadays
― Noodle Vague, Friday, 17 August 2018 23:33 (six years ago) link
Why would he write that blurb as his “review”? Besides being very difficult to parse, it’s meaningless to the uninitiated reader (...never mind how it strikes the artist, as nicely illustrated by the above pushback). xpostLike, yeah, imagine a “newcomer” in the rock crit game turning in reviews like this, and expecting to be published
― stan in the place where you work (morrisp), Friday, 17 August 2018 23:35 (six years ago) link
difficult to parse, meaningless to the initiated reader is pretty much his mission statement afaikt
― The Desus & Mero Chain (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 17 August 2018 23:54 (six years ago) link
Exactly. I couldn't pinpoint the specific moment when he disappeared completely up his own ass, but it was definitely sometime last century.
― grawlix (unperson), Friday, 17 August 2018 23:59 (six years ago) link
i remember reading defenses of that indecipherability on ilx lol
not that it wasn't an interesting challop but this guys stuff has always been like this!
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Saturday, 18 August 2018 01:22 (six years ago) link
he's not difficult to parse lol
― mark s, Saturday, 18 August 2018 09:38 (six years ago) link
(a lot of the parsing xgau thread seems to be me proving that momus was misreading something: This is the thread where you ask for help in parsing one of Robert Christgau's sentences. )
― mark s, Saturday, 18 August 2018 10:28 (six years ago) link
If you were able to understand the above “review” (on just a syntactical level — never mind the content, which seems pretty useless in the context of a “consumer guide”) without slowly reading it four times, then you’re a better Xgau reader than I.(^I deliberately tried to make this sentence as confusing as his, and don’t think I even succeeded)
― stan in the place where you work (morrisp), Saturday, 18 August 2018 14:21 (six years ago) link
Although premier violinist and respected singer-songwriter Shires comes by most of her current swell of fame as Jason Isbell's wife, bedrock, and babymama,
Even though Shires is famous now mostly because she's married to this guy [I've never heard of]
you wouldn't guess it from the advances she's made in these 10 coolly autonomous, acutely turned, observantly experienced songs.
you might think listening to this album that she's famous because she makes good music.
Her soprano incisive over arrangements longer on echo and electronics than you'd expect from tradmaster Dave Cobb,
She has a soprano singing voice and uses it in more inventive ways than you'd expect from a Dave Cobb production. Also Xgau thinks that incisive is a verb.
she deals more candidly with attraction ("Parking Lot Pirouette"), lust ("Leave It Alone"), personal rivalry ("Break Out the Champagne"), and even suicide ("Wasn't I Paying Attention?") than supportive domestic partners are expected to,
Good domestic partners don't often have much interesting things to say about hot button issues like attraction, lust, personal rivalry and suicide
and hardly plays her violin at all.
she only plays her violin a little bit on this album.
That's how you end up with an album that takes some getting used to not just because it's unexpected but because it's halfway to sui generis.
So it's an unusual album because it's so candid and she doesn't play violin much and because you wouldn't expect it from someone most famous [to Xgau] for being married to someone else and that makes it halfway unique, a thing you can apparently be in percentages.
― Mordy, Saturday, 18 August 2018 15:59 (six years ago) link
incisive is an adjective there. he's dropped the "is" in trademark annoying telegram stylee. and to pick a nit with you, he's saying the arrangements are more inventive than you'd expect, not the way she uses her voice. i can't believe i finished writing all that without collapsing in ennui but there you go.
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Saturday, 18 August 2018 16:05 (six years ago) link
(FTR, I was talking about the one-sentence Sarah Shook review.)
― stan in the place where you work (morrisp), Saturday, 18 August 2018 16:09 (six years ago) link
if she could stop being so depressed by tapping into a higher consciousness then she wouldn't let men get to her enough that she's driven to drink to excess
― Mordy, Saturday, 18 August 2018 16:12 (six years ago) link
Yeah — so did you have to read it four times slowly first, like me?Is the “drinking into the ditch” thing from one of the songs (the “melancholy” one); or something he’s adding/projecting? I would have assumed the former, but the artist’s tweet seems to belie that.
― stan in the place where you work (morrisp), Saturday, 18 August 2018 16:27 (six years ago) link
Btw — I’m not saying the dude has to write like the AP style guide. But I don’t see the “payoff” to his approach, after taking the trouble to parse it out, as a reader interested in actually knowing something about the album.
― stan in the place where you work (morrisp), Saturday, 18 August 2018 16:30 (six years ago) link
i don't find it particularly abstruse and generally i prefer more cryptic complex content but that's generally bc the obscurity is in service of relating esoteric secrets and not just the sloppy syntax of a lazy lecher
― Mordy, Saturday, 18 August 2018 16:33 (six years ago) link
it would've been better that he did mean incisive as a verb at least that would indicate an inventive use of language but i think tracer is right that he is just dropping 'is' presumably bc he's educated to know that using passive verbs makes for poor writing but he's too lazy to write the sentence in a more dynamic way so he just dropped the offending verb making it incoherent rather than obviously poorly written
― Mordy, Saturday, 18 August 2018 16:38 (six years ago) link
i don't find any of these examples incoherent at all!
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Saturday, 18 August 2018 16:57 (six years ago) link
*two friends flip thru CD rack*— Hmm, the new Sarah Shook album... what did Christgau say about it?“He said one of the songs doesn’t have the same “consciousness” as another song, and gave it 2 stars. Also, apparently she’s an alcoholic who can’t handle men’s meanness, but she could fix these problems if she elevated her thinking and her songwriting.”— Uh, ok... guess I’ll... pass?
― stan in the place where you work (morrisp), Saturday, 18 August 2018 16:57 (six years ago) link
― mark s, Saturday, 18 August 2018 09:38 (seven hours ago) Permalink
Ok, annoying to parse?
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:00 (six years ago) link
he enumerates the songs in which she drinks herself into a ditch in the parentheses immediately after. (otherwise what would that be?)i don't partic find much insight from the guy and haven't for awhile but i don't mind if a review sounds different from the way people talk
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:01 (six years ago) link
Mordy otm, that’s a bad review but perfectly coherent
― jeremy cmbyn (wins), Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:02 (six years ago) link
When a board populated by a lot of writers and musicians has a thread devoted to parsing a writer's syntax, I think "difficult to parse" (as opposed to "impossible to parse" or "incoherent") is fair.
― The inexorable rise of identity condiments (Sund4r), Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:04 (six years ago) link
Difficult-to-parse prose has its merits and I even like the creativity and distinctiveness of his writing style. What can be frustrating is that, after the writing has been parsed, I don't always feel like I have gained much insight into or knowledge about the music.
― The inexorable rise of identity condiments (Sund4r), Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:08 (six years ago) link
he enumerates the songs in which she drinks herself into a ditch in the parentheses immediately after. (otherwise what would that be?)I assumed they were “key tracks” from the album, and listing a few of those is per the format of these little reviews (but I haven’t clicked over to Vice to see)
― stan in the place where you work (morrisp), Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:11 (six years ago) link
Yeah I mean the aphoristic style requires something from the reader, but not that much in term of rendering it legible - beyond that it does require a leap of faith that christgau absolutely doesn’t deserve
― jeremy cmbyn (wins), Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:11 (six years ago) link
that was an xp
― jeremy cmbyn (wins), Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:13 (six years ago) link
There’s something that Xgau has done historically (and not just him; but he does it more often than some) and that’s to basically wonder why a female musician lets guys get her down and how it shouldn’t affect them and the implicit suggestion if often that maybe their music suffers for it. It’s the “hey you should smile” of music crit.
― omar little, Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:18 (six years ago) link
*is often
that’s a perfect way of putting it xp
― maura, Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:19 (six years ago) link
another shitty review along those lines was a partic vile Brian Howe Pitchfork review of an Edith Frost LP.
― omar little, Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:20 (six years ago) link
That’s what the problem is to me.. if the labor is rewarded then I don’t mind... Brad nelson’s Prose (not to make this a blow smoke up an ilxor’s butt thread) sometimes takes its time getting to its point via vivid or detailed imagery but I feel like I come away w a greater understanding of the project under the microscope afterwards; xgau’s work now seems to bank off credibility he’s earned from listening to so much more than everyone but I feel like it’s at the zone of fruitless intensification point
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:20 (six years ago) link
That was XP’s to wins although omar’s Point seems good also
― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:21 (six years ago) link
It takes the barest amount of effort to see what xgau’s at, then you do and realise “fuck this guy” and move on
― jeremy cmbyn (wins), Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:22 (six years ago) link
thanks deej, floating on a cloud of buttsmoke rn
― princess of hell (BradNelson), Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:35 (six years ago) link
I'm not surprised he learned nothing after patting Tracey Thorn on the head for recording her feminist bangers.
His obsession with women who love their husbands and can enjoy great sex reads like the admission of a man continuously amazed that women are as awesome as he thinks he is.
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:44 (six years ago) link
I assumed they were “key tracks” from the album, and listing a few of those is per the format of these little reviews (but I haven’t clicked over to Vice to see)
― stan in the place where you work (morrisp)
Full disclosure — I just checked and seems i was wrong about this
― stan in the place where you work (morrisp), Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:45 (six years ago) link
Still, the fact that Shook seems pissed by the “ditch” reference suggests that it may not be an accurate characterization of those songs? (Not that a reviewer should necessarily worry about pissing off an artist, if his aim is true and he’s writing in good faith — but I question his reliability here)
― stan in the place where you work (morrisp), Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:50 (six years ago) link
I didn't have the faintest idea who Robert Christgau was or what he was meant to be until I started going on the internet for the first time back in the '90s. He kept seeming to crop up - usually in musical discussions with Americans - as someone who's opinion was worth reading, even though I'd never heard of him ever, so I checked a few of his reviews out.
From that moment on, I've never been interested in a single word the guy has written or his opinion on anything and I'm amazed that people ever were.
― Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:52 (six years ago) link
As for Brad's writing - well, I'll keep my opinions to myself on that one, other than reading some of it often involves a flask of coffee and a sleeping bag.
― Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:55 (six years ago) link
Xgau also sometimes writes like someone who has no idea women read music criticism.
― omar little, Saturday, 18 August 2018 17:57 (six years ago) link
Christgau's been around long enough to let you know this ain't his first rodeo, and his reviews read like he forgot to do his taxes. Still, the question remains: is he the cowboy or the clown? As far as funkless wonk goes, it beats fishing. B-
― The Desus & Mero Chain (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 18 August 2018 18:32 (six years ago) link
i generally always found xgau's longform essays good -- his chuck berry essay is a classic -- but i always found the short reviews that everyone else seemed to love kind of frustrating and glib. tbh he's written reviews i found even grosser than the ones referenced here -- his review of pj harvey's stories from the city has a line so creepy i don't even want to quote it here.
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Saturday, 18 August 2018 18:53 (six years ago) link
His best essay of the last five years wasn't on music; it led me to an obscure Christina Stead novel. Maybe he should concentrate on books:
https://www.robertchristgau.com/xg/bn/2013-12.php
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 18 August 2018 18:56 (six years ago) link
xpost, jeez I just read that and his Rid of Me, yuck
― The Desus & Mero Chain (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 18 August 2018 19:07 (six years ago) link
Just looked them up, too... O. M. G.
― stan in the place where you work (morrisp), Saturday, 18 August 2018 19:16 (six years ago) link
It wasn't too hard to locate the exact sentence J.D. was on about, it kinda leaps out at you from the screen, that!
― Le Baton Rose (Turrican), Saturday, 18 August 2018 19:41 (six years ago) link
Working a hunch, I looked up his Liz Phair reviews. Let me annotate this one: Exile in Guyville [Matador, 1993]She's a rebel, and if all goes well, also a pathfinder, which isn't certain mainly because the acts and attitudes that make her a rebel are so normal. (weird negging move?) Her number of partners may be over toward the right side of the bell curve. (says who? and why’s he gotta be shaming?) She may have commitment problems. But for at least two decades, bohemian women of a certain age have displayed this much desire, independence, bitchiness, self-doubt, and general weirdness (the negging continues: “female artists older than her have been doing the same thing for years”)--while continuing to pin down the unmanly emotional apercus that make "Dance of the Seven Veils" and "Divorce Song" so gender-specific (I’m honestly lost now... is the subject of the sentence still “bohemian women of a certain age”? what does this clause mean?). They can behave this way if they want--they're just not supposed to come out of the closet about it. And while Phair knows more than enough about tunes and guitars to challenge the taboo (if she were a lesser artist, would she not be allowed to challenge the taboo?), the weirdness level of her spare, intuitive, insinuating demos-plus is bohemia-specific. (...OK?) Which is apt for sure. (Huh?) But not necessarily pathfinding. (a final, summary neg!) A
― stan in the place where you work (morrisp), Saturday, 18 August 2018 19:45 (six years ago) link
To be fair, a lot of the initial press for that record had similar slut-shamey qualities. The '90s! They were a different time!
― maura, Saturday, 18 August 2018 19:47 (six years ago) link
yeah to be fair if you struggle with his writing - he's not on trial. did he invent misogyny in music journalism? obviously not - is he still out there being employed to write mysogynist shit? yeah apparently, stop paying him
― Noodle Vague, Saturday, 18 August 2018 19:56 (six years ago) link
(weird negging move?)
He does this shit constantly, and not just with women. Search up the Chuck Berry essay Alfred cites - he describes Berry's guitar playing as "limited but brilliant" and given the context, I feel like he was much more compelled to write the first two words than the third one.
― grawlix (unperson), Saturday, 18 August 2018 19:59 (six years ago) link
What a time we live in to see Xgau link this on twitter and get pushback from women for his sexism, and still a MAGA chud pops up to call him a “white knight”
― omar little, Saturday, 18 August 2018 20:01 (six years ago) link
Oh man I remember that Edith Frost review, extremely shitty.
― JoeStork, Saturday, 18 August 2018 20:15 (six years ago) link
I FUCKING HATE THIS
https://www.weeklystandard.com/dominic-green/john-coltrane-and-the-end-of-jazz
― The Desus & Mero Chain (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 28 August 2018 17:38 (six years ago) link
The story goes that Coltrane was using LSD after 1965. If so, then the overreach and incoherence of his final music, and his mingling with admiring but inferior talents like Alice Coltrane, the Yoko Ono of jazz, suggest that Coltrane might be the sixties’ first and foremost acid casualty, flailing out rather than flaming out, the peak of his late style already behind him.
― The Desus & Mero Chain (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 28 August 2018 17:40 (six years ago) link
Coltrane’s late style began on the legendary Davis album Kind of Blue (1959), and jazz began to die there too.
lol the yoko ono of jazz, great job
― tylerw, Tuesday, 28 August 2018 17:46 (six years ago) link
holy god
― stan in the place where you work (morrisp), Tuesday, 28 August 2018 17:50 (six years ago) link
I find the Yoko Ono of Jazz to be a kind of compelling and entertaining idea, but probably not for the reasons that writer intended
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 28 August 2018 18:02 (six years ago) link
innovative, collaborative, deeply spiritual, great discography, underrated and unjustly maligned thx to misogyny = yup checks all those boxes
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 28 August 2018 18:04 (six years ago) link
haha yeah. amazing that we're celebrating 50 years of yoko as a shitty sexist punchline this year! she must be doing something right.
― tylerw, Tuesday, 28 August 2018 18:14 (six years ago) link
https://www.xlr8r.com/reviews/review-houghton-festival-2018
do you think they regret any of the sets they missed?
― boxedjoy, Tuesday, 28 August 2018 20:38 (six years ago) link
That Yoko / Alice thing made the rounds on twitter, and while I get that it's tone deaf, I don't have a problem with it necessarily for two reasons: 1. like Οὖτις says above, it's actually a flattering and apt comparison in spite of itself, and 2. while it may be a bullshit and wrong opinion, people are allowed to have those
― Paul Ponzi, Tuesday, 28 August 2018 22:05 (six years ago) link
You do have a problem with, you think it's wrong and bullshit.
― Scottish Country Twerking (Tom D.), Tuesday, 28 August 2018 22:10 (six years ago) link
The next morning, rumours abounded that Jane Fitz had played a mind-bending techno set at Houghton’s secret stage deep into the small hours; while access last year required a train journey, this year it was reachable by a short walk back through the campsite. Options inside the arena were so good that I never felt the need to work out the hidden spot’s exact location, but Fitz’ performance generated some envy-inducing hype
― she carries a torch. two torches, actually (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Tuesday, 28 August 2018 22:17 (six years ago) link
2. while it may be a bullshit and wrong opinion, people are allowed to have those
― Paul Ponzi, Tuesday, August 28, 2018 3:05 PM (forty-six minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
referring you back to the thread title
― princess of hell (BradNelson), Tuesday, 28 August 2018 22:52 (six years ago) link
Who is the Yoko ono of acid house?
Or of crunk?
― Runcibly spooning (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 28 August 2018 23:33 (six years ago) link
That article is chock full of shitty jazz opinions besides the Alice stuff!
― The Desus & Mero Chain (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 29 August 2018 00:51 (six years ago) link
There are some aspects of it I agree with. If I had to pick just one John Coltrane album to listen to for the rest of my life, it would be Crescent, not A Love Supreme and certainly not Ascension or anything after. I also think Hank Mobley doesn't get nearly enough critical love, and was glad to see his name pop up.
― grawlix (unperson), Wednesday, 29 August 2018 01:33 (six years ago) link
John Coltrane really does bring out the worst in people (music writers):
Coltrane enters with a vortex of obsessively involuted streaks of chordal fragments that yield to furious, sound-shredded shrieks and bellows that suggest the will to break through the stuff of harmonic investigation to sheer expressive sound, the swinging patterns of pounding rhythm to shifting biocentric undulations.
From:https://www.newyorker.com/culture/richard-brody/sun-ship-the-complete-session-john-coltranes-musical-documentary
― dinnerboat, Monday, 22 October 2018 21:03 (six years ago) link
mmm I love a good medium rare streak, the chordal the better!
― You like queer? I like queer. Still like queer. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 22 October 2018 21:06 (six years ago) link
I was on board until 'biocentric'.
― pomenitul, Monday, 22 October 2018 21:09 (six years ago) link
yeah i stayed on a surprising long time, then - wipeout
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Monday, 22 October 2018 21:10 (six years ago) link
Should have left it at "the stuff of harmonic investigation," which sounds like a Leonard Cohen line.
― dinnerboat, Monday, 22 October 2018 21:11 (six years ago) link
I wavered at 'pounding' but 'biocentric' did me in.
― pomenitul, Monday, 22 October 2018 21:16 (six years ago) link
I was going to say it's like someone tried to write a review using only Robert Pollard song titles.
― Evan, Monday, 22 October 2018 21:17 (six years ago) link
go the full lovecraft dude: biofugal undulations
― mark s, Monday, 22 October 2018 21:27 (six years ago) link
lmao brody!!!!
― princess of hell (BradNelson), Monday, 22 October 2018 21:30 (six years ago) link
stick to film crit i guess?
― princess of hell (BradNelson), Monday, 22 October 2018 21:31 (six years ago) link
not that i necessarily want him to do that either
a vortex of obsessively hideous streaks of cosmic fragments that yield to furious, squamous shrieks and bellows that suggest the will to break through the stuff of unspeakable investigation to sheer blasphemous sound, the accursed patterns of nameless rhythm to shifting biofugal undulations
(he used primordial in another sentence, to qualify new orleans lol, dude it was like 100 years ago not 500 thousand)
― mark s, Monday, 22 October 2018 21:36 (six years ago) link
(actually fungoid is better than squamous)
― mark s, Monday, 22 October 2018 21:38 (six years ago) link
You guys are made of tougher stuff than I am... I bailed at involuted
jazz is tough to write about, what with no lyrics to analyse. But it sure does inspire a lot of writers to try to do 'word jazz'.
― enochroot, Monday, 22 October 2018 23:05 (six years ago) link
lol exactly where i got off too (even though i had to double-check the meaning of involuted)
― in twelve parts (lamonti), Thursday, 25 October 2018 06:59 (six years ago) link
https://broadly.vice.com/en_us/article/nepnqq/gwen-stefani-cultural-appropriation-legacy
― Never changed username before (cardamon), Saturday, 17 November 2018 19:45 (six years ago) link
Man that writer is in for a real shock when she finds out about Vice
― 5th Ward Weeaboo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 17 November 2018 19:49 (six years ago) link
the writing is awful but it's not like they're wrong
― dyl, Saturday, 17 November 2018 19:53 (six years ago) link
tired of takes on appropriation that focus on one individual tho
― dyl, Saturday, 17 November 2018 19:54 (six years ago) link
Sure bindis were a general 90s fashion no?
― Never changed username before (cardamon), Saturday, 17 November 2018 20:07 (six years ago) link
The harajuku girls side of it ... probably something wrong there. Asian women as props for diva sort of thing.
I dunno. I thought the point of Gwen stefani was at least partly the jouissance of playing dress up in crazy clothes, which feels maybe healthier than Britney in school uniform saying hit me.
― Never changed username before (cardamon), Saturday, 17 November 2018 20:13 (six years ago) link
I think this article makes it clear that if you try and do a critique of cultural appropriation in crazily exorbitant mixed media pop music entities you'll run into trouble
― Never changed username before (cardamon), Saturday, 17 November 2018 20:17 (six years ago) link
I couldn’t finish it. Lost the plot somewhere around “it wasn’t until Twitter raised my consciousness...”
― Larry Elleison (rogermexico.), Saturday, 17 November 2018 20:25 (six years ago) link
Gwen Stefani Has Been Culturally Appropriating For Twenty Years And Now I Kind Of Want To Die
― omar little, Saturday, 17 November 2018 20:32 (six years ago) link
I always want the authors of these pieces to take their logic to its inevitable conclusion. "Gwen Stefani Is Of English And Italian Descent. Here Are The Clothes It Is Acceptable For Her To Wear In Videos And Photo Shoots."
― grawlix (unperson), Saturday, 17 November 2018 20:46 (six years ago) link
sounds like task better suited to those who vociferously deny the reality of appropriation as a phenomenon or who acknowledge it exists but emphatically declare it to be value-neutral or Not Harmful Actually
― dyl, Saturday, 17 November 2018 20:56 (six years ago) link
I dunno. If there's a problem with what she did, isn't there a hypothetical thing she could have done instead?
― Never changed username before (cardamon), Saturday, 17 November 2018 21:05 (six years ago) link
wait til she finds out about the Village People
― Larry Elleison (rogermexico.), Sunday, 18 November 2018 15:06 (six years ago) link
The clickbait trend of re-appraising things that were made in a cultural context very different to this one as Actually Bad Because It Isn't Woke will give this thread material for years to come.
― triggercut, Sunday, 18 November 2018 15:47 (six years ago) link
it is a very bad & badly written piece for sure
― she carries a torch. two torches, actually (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Sunday, 18 November 2018 15:49 (six years ago) link
Was the cultural context of the late 90s/early 00s really that different? It's fair to debate the idea of cultural appropriation or its harmfulness but the ideas were not unfamiliar at that time. xp
― Locked in silent monologue, in silent scream (Sund4r), Sunday, 18 November 2018 15:58 (six years ago) link
it's a terribly written piece, for sure, but the idea that "the context was different" in this circumstance is simply that the criticisms of these moves made by Stefani et al weren't being heard because those who made them were less able to be heard
― boxedjoy, Sunday, 18 November 2018 16:00 (six years ago) link
^^^^It’s very surreal to hear the “it was a different time” defence wheeled out for stuff that I was alive for, like political correctness was invented 5 years ago or something
― coetzee.cx (wins), Sunday, 18 November 2018 16:03 (six years ago) link
(That’s more of a general comment than anything to do w this thing I haven’t read)
― coetzee.cx (wins), Sunday, 18 November 2018 16:05 (six years ago) link
fwiw I definitely read criticism of the harajuku girls at the time--quite probably the Salon piece linked in the article
― rob, Sunday, 18 November 2018 16:05 (six years ago) link
"cultural appropriation" discourse is often a real mess where the reasonable point "sometimes things from a foreign culture are used in a way that doesn't respect the culture, whether that's by misappropriating something of cultural significance (the classic example is native american war bonnets as festival headgear) or just using the foreign as meaningless ornamentation (such as plastering meaningless japanese characters on something for the ~aesthetic~)" is taken to the quite ridiculous extreme of "all mixing and exchange of ideas etc. between cultures is Racist and Bad"
this article is not a very good on the issue as it's just "i learned a while ago that this was bad from twitter" instead of any deeper look at things. i don't think most of its main points are ultimately incorrect though - the harajuku girls have always struck me as a weird and racist concept in the way that they're leaning into stereotypes and mostly just there as decoration?
― ufo, Sunday, 18 November 2018 16:36 (six years ago) link
I think the context is absolutely different from the 90s and early 00s, and social media + clickbait journalism is the big differentiator. You can't pretend that it hasn't changed how media savvy people perceive and react to these things. Generally speaking people knew about the concept of cultural appropriation, sure, but cared less about appearing morally righteous on the internet back then, and there was no Twitter for people to try to create a movement to "cancel" people on for an awkward yet innocently intended stylistic choice. Like, in 2004 being accused of cultural appropriation was maybe enough for people to be like "Oh yeah, that does seem kinda lame. I quite enjoy that song, though" and then moving on with their life. You could essentially have your career derailed if you're accused of it now (see: Lily Allen). So I would say that artists with PR teams are now more aware of this than ever before, and are hyper-conscious of letting anything that could be perceived as cultural appropriation slip through the cracks, lest they too get cancelled on social media, where their target audiences spend most of their time. So yeah, I think it is a different cultural context, and if Gwen Stefani did the Harajuku Girls thing as a Fresh Brand Strategy In 2018 she'd get (rightly) slammed for it, but there's no use in acting like she had the same access to information about cultural appropriation and its impacts that we do in a post-social media world where it's now written about A LOT. Basically, give her a break.
― triggercut, Sunday, 18 November 2018 16:49 (six years ago) link
that argument posits that cultural appropriation is bad if it upsets fans and affects sales, rather than its bad because its tasteless and unnecessary
― boxedjoy, Sunday, 18 November 2018 16:54 (six years ago) link
I suspect stefani will be ok
― coetzee.cx (wins), Sunday, 18 November 2018 16:54 (six years ago) link
I mean as a white guy from Scotland I don't really have a say on what is/isn't appropriation because I'm not the one who has to live in the shadow of it but it wouldn't take anyone two minutes to look at the harajuku girls and ask "what's going on here?"
which is all really annoying because "what you waiting for?" is a jam
― boxedjoy, Sunday, 18 November 2018 16:55 (six years ago) link
Orientalism was published in 1978
― coetzee.cx (wins), Sunday, 18 November 2018 16:56 (six years ago) link
The piece works on this measure of “can you believe we don’t talk about this” and then links to multiple articles where people were talking about it.
― 5th Ward Weeaboo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Sunday, 18 November 2018 17:02 (six years ago) link
Yeah, I think it's the case that:i) Stefani engaged in crass and largely tasteless use of 'exotic' cultural symbols, which isn't exactly a capital offence but is crass and tasteless.ii) There is no reason why this should have been hard to realize at the time.iii) The Wanna Thompson Broadly piece is incredibly dopey.
― Locked in silent monologue, in silent scream (Sund4r), Sunday, 18 November 2018 17:06 (six years ago) link
Guys this was discussed extensively at the time, I remember it well
― my guitar friend wants his money (morrisp), Sunday, 18 November 2018 17:10 (six years ago) link
Yeah, not only does Thompson link to a 2005 Slate piece, if she checked the Wikipedia entry for "Harajuku Girls", she would have learned of Margaret Cho's contemporary criticisms.
― Locked in silent monologue, in silent scream (Sund4r), Sunday, 18 November 2018 17:12 (six years ago) link
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuu_Kuu_Harajuku
This show is still ongoing
― omar little, Sunday, 18 November 2018 17:13 (six years ago) link
― boxedjoy
i'm not sure the aesthetic argument against cultural appropriation is any stronger than the capitalist argument against cultural appropriation!
― dub pilates (rushomancy), Sunday, 18 November 2018 17:27 (six years ago) link
I mean, it is if you care more about aesthetics than about capital. But, yeah, it can be disrespectful in the way that ufo describes.
― Locked in silent monologue, in silent scream (Sund4r), Sunday, 18 November 2018 17:34 (six years ago) link
Sorta surprised that the Harajuku thing is still the main charge against Stefani, as that was like 15 years ago
Honestly I thought she'd have moved on to I dunno hula dancers or Inuit girls or something by now
― Frank Lloyd RONG (Ye Mad Puffin), Sunday, 18 November 2018 19:43 (six years ago) link
wins otm!
― dyl, Sunday, 18 November 2018 20:15 (six years ago) link
lol at ppl actually believing the lily allen "people called her racist and that ruined her career!!" spin rather than the simple reality that she just wasn't releasing hits
― dyl, Sunday, 18 November 2018 20:17 (six years ago) link
― Locked in silent monologue, in silent scream (Sund4r)
my argument is more that there's a tendency to conflate the aesthetically bad with the morally objectionable, and i'd argue that they're distinct qualities.
― dub pilates (rushomancy), Sunday, 18 November 2018 20:24 (six years ago) link
Has literally one person in music been successfully cancelled?
― 5th Ward Weeaboo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Sunday, 18 November 2018 20:27 (six years ago) link
Like I saw Joan Jett and she is still straight up playing Gary Glitter songs, and gotta say what he did is way worse than being Neptunes Weeb
― 5th Ward Weeaboo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Sunday, 18 November 2018 20:31 (six years ago) link
thanks for the tip: Joan Jett is now cancelled
― rob, Sunday, 18 November 2018 20:41 (six years ago) link
too late — she’s been canonized!
― my guitar friend wants his money (morrisp), Sunday, 18 November 2018 20:50 (six years ago) link
i think charles manson has been successfully cancelled
― dub pilates (rushomancy), Sunday, 18 November 2018 21:12 (six years ago) link
she is still straight up playing Gary Glitter songs
FREE MIKE LEANDER
― Bing The Mighty Seat (sic), Sunday, 18 November 2018 21:56 (six years ago) link
wait, Paul McCartney hasn't played She's Leaving Home since 2003, maybe Mike Leander is cancelled (even more so than cancered)
― Bing The Mighty Seat (sic), Sunday, 18 November 2018 21:58 (six years ago) link
WTF @ this “cancelled” bullshit.
― Mr. Snrub, Sunday, 18 November 2018 23:43 (six years ago) link
You know who else's early branding would be considered offensive by today's standards? pic.twitter.com/7bGFZTu4vT— Jeremy Gordon (@jeremypgordon) November 18, 2018
― maura, Monday, 19 November 2018 18:12 (six years ago) link
....... vice isn't exactly virtuous!!
― I forgot her name, not trying to be funny, Veronica something? (map), Monday, 19 November 2018 19:02 (six years ago) link
Sadly, Dos & Don'ts Have Been Problematic This Whole Time
― pomenitul, Monday, 19 November 2018 19:03 (six years ago) link
It is a really fascinating irony
― Never changed username before (cardamon), Tuesday, 20 November 2018 02:38 (six years ago) link
Wonder if that links to a broader problem: as all culture is mongrel, you can't criticise cultural appropriation from a position of innocence
― Never changed username before (cardamon), Tuesday, 20 November 2018 02:43 (six years ago) link
why ppl in the west have always been drawn to classical antiquity revivals, positioning themselves as new athenses/romes iirc
― j., Tuesday, 20 November 2018 03:25 (six years ago) link
ftr i wasn't trying to be sarcastic i was just making a dumb joke. vice is actively racist trash that is a lot more than 'compromised like we all are' or whatever. cultural exploitation is lame. arguments in defense of it sound like trickle-down economics to me. that being said i don't really want to read an article about gwen stefani doing it written by a newly woke twenty-something for vice dot com but best of luck to that person u no.
― macropuente (map), Tuesday, 20 November 2018 03:39 (six years ago) link
We're going to fight like fuck to have Gwen Stefani recognised as problematic.
― triggercut, Tuesday, 20 November 2018 05:10 (six years ago) link
What the hell is this, from LA Weekly
Blackbear is more than just a musician. He is one of the most talented, hard-working, dedicated and strong artists to enter the studio. Aside from his ability to create hit records seemingly effortlessly, it’s his real-life experiences battling anxiety and substance abuse that he bravely recounts through his lyrics. Records like “Anxiety” and “If I Could I Would Feel Nothing” give hope and strength, allowing his growing fan base to not only relate but to find comfort.Real name Matthew Musto celebrates many successes, including three independent albums and sold-out shows across the world. In 2017, he landed his first placement on the Billboard Hot 100 with “Do Re Mi” from Digital Druglord, with the remix featuring Gucci Mane accumulating 88 million views on YouTube and counting.Now at 27 years old and in the best headspace he’s been in for a long time, Blackbear plans to take his already flourishing career to the next level. With his forthcoming project titled Anonymous coming on Valentine’s Day, fans can look forward to some of his best work yet
Real name Matthew Musto celebrates many successes, including three independent albums and sold-out shows across the world. In 2017, he landed his first placement on the Billboard Hot 100 with “Do Re Mi” from Digital Druglord, with the remix featuring Gucci Mane accumulating 88 million views on YouTube and counting.
Now at 27 years old and in the best headspace he’s been in for a long time, Blackbear plans to take his already flourishing career to the next level. With his forthcoming project titled Anonymous coming on Valentine’s Day, fans can look forward to some of his best work yet
I guess LA Weekly is the one that was bought out by a secret ownership group and they fired all the writers? It shows.
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Monday, 26 November 2018 17:10 (six years ago) link
Now at 27 years old and in the best headspace he’s been in for a long time,
is the writer his therapist?
― I like queer. You like queer, senator? (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 26 November 2018 17:12 (six years ago) link
Reads like a copy-paste job from a PR kit, and probably is.
― triggercut, Monday, 26 November 2018 17:14 (six years ago) link
Signed: Matthew T. Musto.
― pomenitul, Monday, 26 November 2018 17:17 (six years ago) link
Real name Matthew Musto celebrates many successes
― jmm, Monday, 26 November 2018 17:19 (six years ago) link
Yes, they recently appointed a new PR guy who immediately put another of his own businesses on the cover.
― Bing The Mighty Seat (sic), Monday, 26 November 2018 19:03 (six years ago) link
same writer
Poppy is a surreal yet intriguing artist. One look at her Instagram, which boasts an impressive 770,000 followers, and willing participants are sucked into a wormhole. Aside from the damn near perfect still photos, her page contains videos that will have you screaming “Who is Poppy?” and wanting to know more.
The artist, real name Moriah Rose Pereira, is a one-off who sings, dances and creates art on the daily. The welcome page of her website reads, “Are you ready for your salvation?” With statements like “Robots are going to take over the world,” this divine creature is intriguing.
― President Keyes, Monday, 26 November 2018 19:14 (six years ago) link
lmao ^^
"is a one-off" ?
― alpine static, Monday, 26 November 2018 23:33 (six years ago) link
unique, broke the mold, etc
― illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Monday, 26 November 2018 23:46 (six years ago) link
surreal yet intriguing
― I like queer. You like queer, senator? (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 26 November 2018 23:48 (six years ago) link
xpost: is that a generally accepted definition of "one-off"?
honestly, that LAWeekly is publishing stuff like Keyes posted is super sad. guess i should pitch in on that thing Jeff Weiss (and others, I'm sure) has been pushing on Twitter.
― alpine static, Monday, 26 November 2018 23:58 (six years ago) link
speaking of la weekly
Discovered tonight that a critic who was "dragged" a few years ago for writing a sexist column has rebranded as an explicitly conservative writer (but not MAGA, of course) -- amazing to witness a grift hatch in real-time— Jeremy Gordon (@jeremypgordon) November 27, 2018
― maura, Tuesday, 27 November 2018 03:49 (six years ago) link
I don't want to bag on the LA Weekly writer I quoted by name because I assume she's a struggling young person who has to produce these pieces by the dozen in 25 minutes each in order to scrape together a living wage. But there is some kind of special off-ness to the way those are written that goes beyond just "this was done in a hurry," I think, and I can't quite place it.
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Tuesday, 27 November 2018 03:58 (six years ago) link
it reads like a copy of a copy of someone else’s marketing copy
― maura, Tuesday, 27 November 2018 04:05 (six years ago) link
editors would help
they'd help drive up costs you mean!!!
― j., Tuesday, 27 November 2018 04:12 (six years ago) link
it reads like a copy of a copy of someone else’s marketing copyYeah, I was gonna say — it reads like a bad high school or college newspaper piece, Google-translated to another language and then back to English.
― my guitar friend wants his money (morrisp), Tuesday, 27 November 2018 04:30 (six years ago) link
the naked careerism of some of the longtime L.A. Weekly folks who were deigned worthy enough to stick around is pretty off-putting, but those weren't the writers i used to like there.
― omar little, Tuesday, 27 November 2018 04:40 (six years ago) link
I wouldn't have ever put Falling James and 'naked careerism' in the same sentence.
― wronger than 100 geir posts (MacDara), Tuesday, 27 November 2018 08:49 (six years ago) link
Via the Belle and Sebastian thread (and Wikipedia), I discovered this now-deleted OG Pitchfork gem:https://web.archive.org/web/20030604193859/http://pitchforkmedia.com/record-reviews/b/belle-and-sebastian/boy-with-the-arab-strap.shtml
whatever an Arab Strap is, it should be used to batten down the crap song hatch
― my guitar friend wants his money (morrisp), Tuesday, 27 November 2018 14:49 (six years ago) link
That's an awesome review that doesn't deserve to be mentioned in this thread. J@son Jos3ph3s is still active on twitter, btw.
― the word dog doesn't bark (anagram), Tuesday, 27 November 2018 14:57 (six years ago) link
"awesome" is pushing it, "lazy" and "by the numbers" is a better description
but yes, it doesn't belong on this thread
― mark s, Tuesday, 27 November 2018 15:00 (six years ago) link
I give the review a 5.9
― Evan, Tuesday, 27 November 2018 15:02 (six years ago) link
I give it a... 0.8
― my guitar friend wants his money (morrisp), Tuesday, 27 November 2018 15:08 (six years ago) link
They always used to slag off popular albums. Their policy in those days was pretty much “If you’ve heard of it, it must not be very good.” I guess it helped get clicks though.
― Mr. Snrub, Wednesday, 28 November 2018 00:54 (six years ago) link
Their policy in those days was pretty much “If you’ve heard of it, it must not be very good.”
What webcomic do you write for with this idea?
― 5th Ward Weeaboo (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 28 November 2018 01:05 (six years ago) link
Hologram Concerts Don't Suck, You're Just a Hater
professional troll Eve Peyser goes to a show where a video recording of a Roy Orbison impersonator with a CGI Roy Orbison face stuck on him is projected in front of an orchestra, just like the real Orbison played with
― sans lep (sic), Wednesday, 12 December 2018 21:53 (six years ago) link
but is there holographic clingfilm
― aloha darkness my old friend (katherine), Wednesday, 12 December 2018 21:56 (six years ago) link
holografanfic
― sans lep (sic), Wednesday, 12 December 2018 22:05 (six years ago) link
she really capitalized on that bari weiss kissyfest huh
― maura, Thursday, 13 December 2018 14:07 (six years ago) link
she's having quite a year
― resident hack (Simon H.), Thursday, 13 December 2018 14:27 (six years ago) link
very excited to not know who this is, thank you for not linking sic
― rob, Thursday, 13 December 2018 15:55 (six years ago) link
Twitter things you def need to care about for 5 seconds
― We were never Breeting Borting (President Keyes), Thursday, 13 December 2018 17:02 (six years ago) link
https://www.stereogum.com/2025587/vox-lux-review-natalie-portman-death-of-poptimism/franchises/sounding-board/
― ILX’s bad boy (D-40), Monday, 17 December 2018 18:24 (six years ago) link
― jolene club remix (BradNelson), Monday, 17 December 2018 18:26 (six years ago) link
But at what cost? Maybe poptimism’s fatal flaw is placing too much of our hopes and ideologies on an art form that cannot support or sustain them. Or maybe it doesn’t matter
if you peer deeply into the clause "or maybe it doesn't matter" you will see the phrase "i really regret pitching this dumbass idea" slowly clarifying itself in the dimness
― jolene club remix (BradNelson), Monday, 17 December 2018 19:41 (six years ago) link
― resident hack (Simon H.), Monday, 17 December 2018 19:42 (six years ago) link
how many times does somebody need to rewrite the "we've gone too far, time to reinstate cultural hierarchies" handwringer?
― I Accept the Word of Santa (Noodle Vague), Monday, 17 December 2018 19:46 (six years ago) link
I mean apart from on ILM
― I Accept the Word of Santa (Noodle Vague), Monday, 17 December 2018 19:47 (six years ago) link
alright everybody start writing Car Seat Headrest clickbait
― We were never Breeting Borting (President Keyes), Monday, 17 December 2018 19:49 (six years ago) link
“Every generation gets the rock star they deserve. An icon that both contextualises the surrounded cultural landscape and redefines it. Looking back on this bewildering decade, no star will better epitomise our fractured, hyper-sexed identities and fiscal insecurity than the swaggy nihilism of Post Malone. The world is literally on fire and 13-year-old YouTubers are covering entire Ferraris in Louis Vuitton x Supreme wraps. Posty reigns.”
― maura, Friday, 28 December 2018 14:09 (six years ago) link
ban fashion magazines from covering music imo
― maura, Friday, 28 December 2018 14:10 (six years ago) link
lol I had to read the whole thing. marilyn manson is def fondly remembered as stylish
― Larry Elleison (rogermexico.), Saturday, 29 December 2018 19:59 (six years ago) link
“If you've ever seen a photo of Miles Davis, Dwight Yoakam, Debbie Harry, or OutKast, you know that writing about music and writing about style are basically the same thing”
https://www.gq.com/story/whole-new-era-at-gq-ed-letter
wow dude really excited for your cutting edge magazine where your music issue features, uh, SoundCloud rap, John Mayer, and Vampire Weekend? You do know that music evolved since you left Fader right
― maura, Thursday, 10 January 2019 20:34 (six years ago) link
.... ah
― jolene club remix (BradNelson), Thursday, 10 January 2019 20:43 (six years ago) link
People who wear their shoes untied on purpose are insane
― Evan, Thursday, 10 January 2019 20:44 (six years ago) link
pitching GQ as an way-out-there magazine when it comes to anything is wild
like it's literally for 30 somethings who have an interest in owning more than one suit and want to read about things they've already heard of
― mh, Thursday, 10 January 2019 22:04 (six years ago) link
https://www.spin.com/2019/01/deerhunter-why-hasnt-everything-already-disappeared-review/
I'm probably being unfair, but this unedited+unreadable wordcloud (at one point referring to the "ponderous basso continuo" of a track, presumably to mean "it has harpsichord") turned up in my feed on the same day many of the best writers I know got canned, and I went for the state of "content" as I have not wept since Pitchfork Reviews Reviews was a thing
― The depressed somebody from the popular David Bowie song, (bernard snowy), Saturday, 26 January 2019 11:58 (six years ago) link
*first "went" should be "wept" obv, but thanks to autocorrect for trying to make me appear happier than I am
― The depressed somebody from the popular David Bowie song, (bernard snowy), Saturday, 26 January 2019 11:59 (six years ago) link
he shd have cut straight to "boffo continuo"
― mark s, Saturday, 26 January 2019 12:06 (six years ago) link
eh, dense screed apparently written by a megafan who is too close to gauge the interest to others of everything being said
united spiritual conduit tho
― j., Saturday, 26 January 2019 15:06 (six years ago) link
jesus christ dale
― jolene club remix (BradNelson), Saturday, 26 January 2019 15:08 (six years ago) link
'Ponderous basso continuo' is perfectly fine imho. As for the rest, it's not exactly good but it isn't bland either.
― pomenitul, Saturday, 26 January 2019 15:08 (six years ago) link
PONDEROUS, MAN, FUCKIN PONDEROUS
― ebro the letter (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 26 January 2019 16:52 (six years ago) link
“Nothing Ever Happened,” a short-but-sweet number that leads to one of the most-inspiring guitar riffs in modern indie rock history
― i stan corrected (morrisp), Saturday, 26 January 2019 17:22 (six years ago) link
I'd be hard-pressed to name one riff from modern indie rock besides maybe "A-Punk" which is just a busier version of Minutemen's "My Heart And The Real World"
― ebro the letter (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 26 January 2019 18:04 (six years ago) link
I'm struggling to articulate precisely why, but (for reasons undisclosed) really rubs me the wrong way. It just seems so uh... presumptuous? Idk
― The depressed somebody from the popular David Bowie song, (bernard snowy), Saturday, 26 January 2019 18:04 (six years ago) link
I recall Vedder saying he wished he'd written the guitar line from the dismemberment plan's "secret curse"
― resident hack (Simon H.), Saturday, 26 January 2019 18:07 (six years ago) link
I dunno what “most-inspiring” means (so I’ll bracket that); but when I think of great/iconic indie rock riffs, I guess I think immediately of — “Freed Pig,” “Hot & Cold Skulls,” “Trigger Cut” (which was swiped from VU), “Coming Hot and Proud”... (all from the ‘90s)
― i stan corrected (morrisp), Saturday, 26 January 2019 18:44 (six years ago) link
What VU is the "Trigger Cut" riff swiped from?
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Saturday, 26 January 2019 18:48 (six years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Lqyoq2P7OE
― i stan corrected (morrisp), Saturday, 26 January 2019 18:55 (six years ago) link
"modern indie rock history" means post-Oh Inverted World ifaic
― ebro the letter (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 26 January 2019 19:01 (six years ago) link
*afaic
― ebro the letter (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 26 January 2019 19:11 (six years ago) link
it's getting to the point where one of my favorite things about indie rock is its sheer unmemorability. if i could remember it i think i'd probably hate a lot of it.
― The Elvis of Nationalism and Amoral Patriotism (rushomancy), Saturday, 26 January 2019 19:14 (six years ago) link
I will def. concede there haven't been many memorable "indie rock riffs" since c. 2001 (that I have encountered)... indie music also became less guitar/riff-based around that time.
― i stan corrected (morrisp), Sunday, 27 January 2019 00:27 (six years ago) link
Here's a great one:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RcNcuGkhASw
― i stan corrected (morrisp), Sunday, 27 January 2019 00:28 (six years ago) link
http://drownedinsound.com/in_depth/4152207-the-beginners-guide-to--slowcoreverges on unreadably bad
― an incoherent crustacean (MatthewK), Wednesday, 6 February 2019 12:55 (six years ago) link
Despite being the second ever slowcore band, Galaxie 500 aren’t much of one.
makes u think
― Calgary customer Elvis Cavalic (bizarro gazzara), Wednesday, 6 February 2019 13:09 (six years ago) link
This is truly awful
― i stan corrected (morrisp), Wednesday, 6 February 2019 13:15 (six years ago) link
Laughing Stock isn’t slowcore because it doesn't feel like slowcore.
― pomenitul, Wednesday, 6 February 2019 13:17 (six years ago) link
Look guys sometimes space has to be filled
― Brex Avery (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 6 February 2019 13:17 (six years ago) link
i mean does it tho
― Calgary customer Elvis Cavalic (bizarro gazzara), Wednesday, 6 February 2019 13:18 (six years ago) link
Well obviously no but I'm a nihilist maybe
― Brex Avery (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 6 February 2019 13:19 (six years ago) link
not that i don't appreciate the irony of filling space with an article about slowcore, a space-filled form of music
― Calgary customer Elvis Cavalic (bizarro gazzara), Wednesday, 6 February 2019 13:20 (six years ago) link
By far the most recent release included in this guide, and our very own Album of the Year for 2018, Low’s latest work is definitely too close to see, but even considering the blinders of distance it is quite possibly their best work to date, and that can’t be understated
RLY makes u think
― Calgary customer Elvis Cavalic (bizarro gazzara), Wednesday, 6 February 2019 13:21 (six years ago) link
Maybe it’s not their best. I mean, I’m not really sure how someone could compare this to I Could Live In Hope or Things We Lost in the Fire; it seems like an immensely pointless task of comparing apples to oranges, or pecans to pelicans. But it’s not so different from Low’s previous work that it’s unrecognizable. Strangely enough, it feels quite the opposite, it’s strangeness and conflict the most obvious possible extension from the band’s past.
reading this part burst a blood vessel in my left eye
― Calgary customer Elvis Cavalic (bizarro gazzara), Wednesday, 6 February 2019 13:22 (six years ago) link
the "it's" made me burst a blood vessel, i know i shouldn't care when the writing is this bad but i still do
― The Elvis of Nationalism and Amoral Patriotism (rushomancy), Wednesday, 6 February 2019 14:32 (six years ago) link
this isn't "worst music writing" so much as "worst idea for study," but I cannot think of a SINGLE confounding variable here:
Several years ago, Chris Johnson, an audio software developer, tested a theory, espoused by some anti-loudness war activists, that the hyper-compression roiling the industry was partially to blame for shortened careers. Using a list of all-time best-selling recordings, he rearranged them by “commercial importance,” assigning each a score derived by multiplying an album’s number of platinum certifications (how many millions sold) by the number of years it had been on the market. These were records that were not merely popular — they also displayed longevity.
― theorizing your yells (katherine), Thursday, 7 February 2019 17:20 (six years ago) link
(that isn't even sarcasm -- I can't think of a single confounding variable because they're more like a rat king of them)
(also this is an unpopular opinion, probably, but the proper level of loudness for an Eagles record is silent)
― theorizing your yells (katherine), Thursday, 7 February 2019 17:21 (six years ago) link
I barely made it through the FIVE commas in that first sentence.
― Plinka Trinka Banga Tink (Eliza D.), Thursday, 7 February 2019 17:32 (six years ago) link
lol/+1 @ both comments above
― i stan corrected (morrisp), Thursday, 7 February 2019 17:36 (six years ago) link
to be clear this is not about the writing -- some of the commas can be eliminated with line editing, but the reason this is here is because there isn't a thread (but should be) for "terrible studies that set out to confirm one's beliefs about music sucking these days, at the expense of facts or the scientific method."
(also, I should note that Greg, the author of the piece, points out in his book some of the study's flaws, such as how asinine the "multiply by the years on the market" thing is)
― theorizing your yells (katherine), Thursday, 7 February 2019 17:36 (six years ago) link
for those unclear what's being talked about (I was):https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/07/opinion/what-these-grammy-songs-tell-us-about-the-loudness-wars.html
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Thursday, 7 February 2019 21:14 (six years ago) link
the proper level of loudness for an Eagles record is silent)
― theorizing your yells (katherine), Thursday, February 7, 2019 11:21 AM (three hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
lol, always love a good eagles zing
― budo jeru, Thursday, 7 February 2019 21:17 (six years ago) link
While the Elton John piano catches your ear during “Absentee,” Sam Griffin Owens’ sax warbles down in the mix, a class clown whose mischief makes the day’s lesson more fun for everyone, teacher included.
good heavens
― Paul Ponzi, Sunday, 10 February 2019 00:05 (six years ago) link
Grammys 2019 Hits a New Low Note
They call it Music’s Biggest Night.Is there actually one single person out there who still believes that’s true?The 2019 Grammy telecast was a neon-colored-chalk outline around a Xerox of the Google entry for American Idol, an over-staged infomercial for the instant gratification of the Spotify era and a shallow exercise in collective guilt....What is music to you? To your heart? To your life?Maybe it is this: Ecstasy and repetition. Identity and release. Music is the electric connection between your buzzing, happy, elated head and the starry dynamo in the machinery of night. Music is the way your heart thumps when the kick drum pushes the air of the old theatre. Music is your connection with the primeval memory of the rhythm of sweatshops and plantations, the high sigh of shtetl weddings, and the sand dances of Saharan ceremony.Music is memory: Playground chants and first-love stares; tenth grade stargazing and skating on beer slick in sophomore dorm basement parties; evenings spent watching bleached-blonde-dyed Brits scratching the air and climbing imaginary ladders in smoky, blue-lit old vaudeville halls; nights passed sharing stale air with shimmering, sibilant, shrieking cowpunk Canadians in narrow booze cans in the gray hours before dawn; mornings spent mummified in sheets waiting for the record store to open. Music is that song in the car on the way home from Hebrew school, that song bursting into your ears on the 7 train on the way to your new job. Music is the mnemonics of melody, ecstasy and repetition, identity and release....The Grammy show had nothing to do with the joy you felt when your son or daughter discovered the Small Faces or Stone Temple Pilots entirely on their own, or when you saw the smile on your elderly father’s face as he lay in his last hospital bed and thought about the Ink Spots. The Grammy telecast was as representative of your relationship with music as a crowd chanting “U-S-A” at a sporting event is representative of the American poetry of Martin Luther King, Huey Long, Carl Sandburg, or Abraham Lincoln.
Is there actually one single person out there who still believes that’s true?
The 2019 Grammy telecast was a neon-colored-chalk outline around a Xerox of the Google entry for American Idol, an over-staged infomercial for the instant gratification of the Spotify era and a shallow exercise in collective guilt.
What is music to you? To your heart? To your life?
Maybe it is this: Ecstasy and repetition. Identity and release. Music is the electric connection between your buzzing, happy, elated head and the starry dynamo in the machinery of night. Music is the way your heart thumps when the kick drum pushes the air of the old theatre. Music is your connection with the primeval memory of the rhythm of sweatshops and plantations, the high sigh of shtetl weddings, and the sand dances of Saharan ceremony.
Music is memory: Playground chants and first-love stares; tenth grade stargazing and skating on beer slick in sophomore dorm basement parties; evenings spent watching bleached-blonde-dyed Brits scratching the air and climbing imaginary ladders in smoky, blue-lit old vaudeville halls; nights passed sharing stale air with shimmering, sibilant, shrieking cowpunk Canadians in narrow booze cans in the gray hours before dawn; mornings spent mummified in sheets waiting for the record store to open. Music is that song in the car on the way home from Hebrew school, that song bursting into your ears on the 7 train on the way to your new job. Music is the mnemonics of melody, ecstasy and repetition, identity and release.
The Grammy show had nothing to do with the joy you felt when your son or daughter discovered the Small Faces or Stone Temple Pilots entirely on their own, or when you saw the smile on your elderly father’s face as he lay in his last hospital bed and thought about the Ink Spots. The Grammy telecast was as representative of your relationship with music as a crowd chanting “U-S-A” at a sporting event is representative of the American poetry of Martin Luther King, Huey Long, Carl Sandburg, or Abraham Lincoln.
He keeps digging.
― grawlix (unperson), Tuesday, 12 February 2019 14:34 (six years ago) link
god the thought of my daughter discovering stone temple pilots is too awful to contemplate tbh
― a surprise challenge that ended with a gunging (bizarro gazzara), Tuesday, 12 February 2019 14:43 (six years ago) link
huey long?
― the scientology of mountains (rushomancy), Tuesday, 12 February 2019 14:44 (six years ago) link
he was the singer in the fun lovin' criminals iirc
― a surprise challenge that ended with a gunging (bizarro gazzara), Tuesday, 12 February 2019 14:45 (six years ago) link
He must have meant Huey Lewis
― tylerw, Tuesday, 12 February 2019 14:46 (six years ago) link
i know who huey long is. i just am surprised that lefsetz (this is lefsetz, right?) is postulating huey long as an alternative to american populist jingoism.
― the scientology of mountains (rushomancy), Tuesday, 12 February 2019 15:12 (six years ago) link
(this is lefsetz, right?)
Close; it's this guy.
― grawlix (unperson), Tuesday, 12 February 2019 15:37 (six years ago) link
I wonder what Canadian cowpunk band he's talking about
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 12 February 2019 15:45 (six years ago) link
why would you read cultural criticism from an offshoot of "a Chicago-based political news and polling data aggregator formed in 2000 by former options trader John McIntyre and former advertising agency account executive Tom Bevan"
― maura, Tuesday, 12 February 2019 15:45 (six years ago) link
Patrick Stack of Time magazine has described the site's commentary section as "right-leaning".[17] The site has been described as being run by conservatives, and containing "opinion pieces from multiple media sources".[18] In 2009 RealClearPolitics was described as a weblog "in the conservative pantheon" by Richard Davis.[19][20]
In an interview with the conservative magazine Human Events, McIntyre described the philosophy behind the Web site as based on "freedom" and "common-sense values". Said Bevan, "We think debate on the issues is a very important thing. We post a variety of opinions". He further stated, "we have a frustration all conservatives have", which is "the bias in media against conservatives, religious conservatives, (and) Christian conservatives."
so... yeah
― maura, Tuesday, 12 February 2019 15:46 (six years ago) link
it's garbage because it's supposed to be garbage.
That dude's background does not scream "right-wing crank" to me.
― grawlix (unperson), Tuesday, 12 February 2019 15:47 (six years ago) link
yes, how did a rich white guy who also wrote for the ken kurson-era observer fall in with those types
― maura, Tuesday, 12 February 2019 15:48 (six years ago) link
I was gonna say — the closing bit of that excerpt above (bad as it all is) deviates a little from what my expectations might have been, based on that site description.
― yuh yuh (morrisp), Tuesday, 12 February 2019 15:50 (six years ago) link
He was also involved in the early careers of both the Beastie Boys and Kara's Flowers, producing three tracks for the latter in the summer of 2000, shortly before the group changed their name to Maroon 5.
― We were never Breeting Borting (President Keyes), Tuesday, 12 February 2019 16:03 (six years ago) link
Sommer was the inspiration for the lyrics of the Sonic Youth song "Kill Yr Idols", in which Moore questioned his friend Sommer's respect for Christgau.
― enochroot, Tuesday, 12 February 2019 16:23 (six years ago) link
By the way, rock’n’roll is an attitude, a state of mind, a way of holding your heart and squeezing your feelings. I hear rock’n’roll in the glassine gasps of Pink Floyd and in the starlight and chimes of Japanese ambient music. I hear rock’nroll in the urgency and neurotic brilliance of Glenn Gould, in the post-Atomic buzz of Tony Conrad, and in the overhead wire hum of La Monte Young. I hear rock’n’roll in the gnashed, gnawed flaming beauty of Tribe Called Quest. I even hear rock’n’roll in the soul and stare of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Rock’n’roll, you see, is the beautiful bucket of paint and blood, sugar and empathy, seduction and tears that we throw at the walls of our high school, the walls of our workplace, the wall of Valentines’ Day cards at CVS, the walls of our the brutalist gyms and city halls where we vote.
― omar little, Tuesday, 12 February 2019 16:46 (six years ago) link
i'd hate to be the cleaning staff where he works
― Number None, Tuesday, 12 February 2019 17:12 (six years ago) link
They want the gnashed, gnawed flaming beauty of A Tribe Called Quest/But they've got left is this guy called West.
― We were never Breeting Borting (President Keyes), Tuesday, 12 February 2019 17:18 (six years ago) link
and Rock 'n' Roll / in the soul / of Ocasio-Cortez
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Tuesday, 12 February 2019 18:43 (six years ago) link
RE: Sommer Hugo Largo is a fucking fantastic band
I've never gotten the idea he's right wing? I dunno.....He cashed out as the A&R who discovered Hootie & The Blowfish
was always a welcome b-list MTV personality in my aspiring indie days
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mfa6n7IH4NU
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 12 February 2019 18:48 (six years ago) link
yeah, Hugo Largo is awesome
― Paul Ponzi, Tuesday, 12 February 2019 18:53 (six years ago) link
I found that first hugo largo record in the dollar bin and never could get into it -- sounded to me like Edie Brickell doing a Cocteau Twins covers album.
― enochroot, Tuesday, 12 February 2019 19:29 (six years ago) link
yeah it is pretty cool
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 12 February 2019 19:45 (six years ago) link
guys i hate to break it to you but indie rock dudes can grow up and have if not nazi mouth breather attitudes at least enough comfort with the status quo to slide to their right
― maura, Tuesday, 12 February 2019 22:07 (six years ago) link
maura
my illusions
why must you shatter them
― j., Tuesday, 12 February 2019 22:10 (six years ago) link
sorry man i’m all about breaking hearts these days
― maura, Tuesday, 12 February 2019 22:11 (six years ago) link
kurt loder being a libertarian reason mag dude broke me heart :(
speaking of ex mtv folks
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 12 February 2019 23:10 (six years ago) link
baffler’s two plus decades on kurson piece is still worth reading https://thebaffler.com/salvos/three-scenes-from-a-bull-market
― maura, Tuesday, 12 February 2019 23:11 (six years ago) link
"Sommer was the bass player for the slowcore/dreampop band Hugo Largo.[4]"
ok wikipedia like two paragraphs down you point out that hugo largo had TWO bass players, where does this shit about him being "THE" bass player come from
― the scientology of mountains (rushomancy), Wednesday, 13 February 2019 00:49 (six years ago) link
i don't give two shits about his links to the intellectual dark web or whatever the fuck and i'm not going to burn my hugo largo record (at least not until after i burn my copy of "it's heavy in here"), mostly i'm just appalled that anybody finds lefsetz's writing style worth copying
― the scientology of mountains (rushomancy), Wednesday, 13 February 2019 00:51 (six years ago) link
Closest comparison i can make to the Sommer piece is Homer Simpson's Grand Funk Railroad monologue.
― omar little, Wednesday, 13 February 2019 01:05 (six years ago) link
Sommer has fulminated in his column against President Diarrhea, and yet he continues to associate with Ken Kurson, who remains in the Trump fold…
― veronica moser, Wednesday, 13 February 2019 01:18 (six years ago) link
wasn't sure whether to put this in the nat'l review thread or here, but it's a real gem
https://www.nationalreview.com/2019/02/why-is-lin-manuel-miranda-throwing-away-his-shot/
― she carries a torch. two torches, actually (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Wednesday, 13 February 2019 12:34 (six years ago) link
oh lord that url
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 13 February 2019 13:23 (six years ago) link
u_u
― Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 13 February 2019 15:09 (six years ago) link
i was gonna excelsior that pure omar parody ('glassine gasps of Pink Floyd') until i noticed it was real
― mookieproof, Wednesday, 13 February 2019 16:52 (six years ago) link
thanks to the how to dress well dude for endorsing this piece of shit https://medium.com/@matdryhurst/protocols-duty-despair-and-decentralisation-transcript-69acac62c8ea
please do say more about this "club music"
― theorizing your yells (katherine), Friday, 8 March 2019 20:42 (five years ago) link
My assumption is also that whichever streaming platform wins (as all roads lead to monopoly in this current paradigm)Why would this be the case?
― yuh yuh (morrisp), Friday, 8 March 2019 21:01 (five years ago) link
Oh I think we have a winner here.
a few years ago, a boy sent this to me to demonstrate his galaxy brain and i think about it constantly pic.twitter.com/VsPbCBY6F8— isobel mohyeddin (@isobelmohyeddin) March 7, 2019
keep in mind that this was the intro paragraph to a FULL LENGTH PAPER— isobel mohyeddin (@isobelmohyeddin) March 7, 2019
A full ten page paper, she says elsewhere.
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 8 March 2019 22:48 (five years ago) link
Often, I have found,
― Let's have sensible centrist armageddon (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 8 March 2019 22:49 (five years ago) link
Are we sure this wasn't an ILXor
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 8 March 2019 22:50 (five years ago) link
Damn, I wanna read that whole paper...!
― yuh yuh (morrisp), Friday, 8 March 2019 22:52 (five years ago) link
i think he raises some salient points
― Mike Skeavee (Noodle Vague), Friday, 8 March 2019 23:06 (five years ago) link
not notably distinct from plenty of OPINIONS 4 U comments on this very site a scant decade ago
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Friday, 8 March 2019 23:45 (five years ago) link
I had to put this somewhere https://tmz.com/2019/03/10/nicki-minaj-concert-canceled-france-fans-angry-chant-cardi-b/“France loves starting wars, and might have one with Nicki Minaj now after some angry fans turned on her in the most savage way possible....“As for the Cardi chanters -- we're guessing Nicki ain't sweatin' them too much.“It's not like the French do well in wars.”
― maura, Sunday, 10 March 2019 18:02 (five years ago) link
trenchant zing
― Gunther Gleiben (Ye Mad Puffin), Sunday, 10 March 2019 18:12 (five years ago) link
what else are you going to do with your history degree
― theorizing your yells (katherine), Sunday, 10 March 2019 20:52 (five years ago) link
My cousin used to stay, "The French are the only people who haven't marched under their own Arc de Triomphe nyuk nyuk nyuk"
― Let's have sensible centrist armageddon (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 10 March 2019 20:58 (five years ago) link
this is from bandcamp, and is as much blurb as "review", but i just am not sure this attempt to cast the new weregoat album as some kind of sex-positive feminist statement is wholly successful:
Its cover art might depict three bound, naked women in risqué poses, awaiting their grisly demise at the cloven claws of a hideous goat beast, but make no mistake: The latest effort from Portland blackened-thrash crew Weregoat is actually a celebration of sex positivity, with a sinister twist. Which is to say, these eight songs are mostly devoted to capital-F fucking — blasphemed unions between succubi and killer women with “nuclear cunts” (now that’s what I call pussy power!), gore-stained orgies and nocturnal hunts. The incendiary, Bathory-esque riff onslaughts and howled, lycanthropic vocals on standouts like “Invoke the Black Oblivion” and “By the Light of the Moon” similarly bely their staunch devotion to the id, wasting no time to get to the down and dirty. Light the candelabras, bust out the flogs, pour you and your sweetie two tall glasses of blood, and get cozy.
― the scientology of mountains (rushomancy), Saturday, 16 March 2019 14:51 (five years ago) link
I like that they rhymed "nuclear cunts" with "nocturnal hunts"
― flamboyant goon tie included, Saturday, 16 March 2019 15:01 (five years ago) link
Amused by this set-up/tear-down the strawman take:
We’re now living through a moment when it seems as if we might one day, you know, be pulling Led Zeppelin tracks from streaming sites because of the scandalous nature of the group’s offstage bacchanals. Yet I somehow doubt it.
― What's that Phish song that goes "Bag it, Tag it"? (morrisp), Saturday, 16 March 2019 20:03 (five years ago) link
Feature or press release?: https://www.latimes.com/entertainment/music/la-et-ms-wallows-interview-20190322-story.html
― What's that Phish song that goes "Bag it, Tag it"? (morrisp), Sunday, 24 March 2019 21:41 (five years ago) link
https://www.villagevoice.com/2011/07/13/qa-dos-kira-on-the-physicality-of-bass-playing-her-definition-of-punk-and-why-duos-should-stay-duos/
Every mention of Mike Watt made me slightly angrier.
― Greta Van Show Feets BB (milo z), Tuesday, 26 March 2019 00:52 (five years ago) link
Fugazi was effectively a startup from which valuable lessons in governance, business and sustainability might be inferred about the way an O’Rourke administration will approach the American economy.
Fugazi capitalism would be inclusive, consumer-friendly and ethical.
https://www.breakingviews.com/columns/cox-betonomics-would-have-certain-punk-rock-edge
― mookieproof, Thursday, 28 March 2019 15:53 (five years ago) link
oh sweet jesus no
― recreational colonoscopies 4 u (bizarro gazzara), Thursday, 28 March 2019 16:03 (five years ago) link
And anyone left on the right worrying about spending might like a MacKaye-like, bare-bones approach to big government, too.
― jmm, Thursday, 28 March 2019 16:04 (five years ago) link
It's DIY government!
― jmm, Thursday, 28 March 2019 16:05 (five years ago) link
the right would prefer an SSTocracy
― We were never Breeting Borting (President Keyes), Thursday, 28 March 2019 16:12 (five years ago) link
a blast first, ask questions later government
― recreational colonoscopies 4 u (bizarro gazzara), Thursday, 28 March 2019 16:28 (five years ago) link
ask me about my Gangrene New Deal
― We were never Breeting Borting (President Keyes), Thursday, 28 March 2019 16:40 (five years ago) link
SLASH government spending!
― fact checking cuz, Thursday, 28 March 2019 16:57 (five years ago) link
form a NEW ALLIANCE!
― fact checking cuz, Thursday, 28 March 2019 16:58 (five years ago) link
godspeed to everyone who actually read that; just looking at the URL is giving me hives
― GDPR vs GAPDY (DJP), Thursday, 28 March 2019 16:59 (five years ago) link
it's even worse than you'd expect!
― recreational colonoscopies 4 u (bizarro gazzara), Thursday, 28 March 2019 17:00 (five years ago) link
AMREPresentative democracy in action!
― Zeuhl Idol (Matt #2), Thursday, 28 March 2019 17:20 (five years ago) link
When I saw Beto speak it was like 50 Skidillion Watts of energy shot up leg.
― We were never Breeting Borting (President Keyes), Thursday, 28 March 2019 17:24 (five years ago) link
My
so you’re saying he made your calves cramp?
― recreational colonoscopies 4 u (bizarro gazzara), Thursday, 28 March 2019 19:25 (five years ago) link
can't believe the editor unearthed one of beto's since-now-undiscovered textfiles before the textfiles guy did
― like, I’m eating an elephant head (katherine), Thursday, 28 March 2019 21:16 (five years ago) link
Beto won't win the election but everyone who sees him speak will run for President in the future.
― Greta Van Show Feets BB (milo z), Thursday, 28 March 2019 22:24 (five years ago) link
http://i63.tinypic.com/bim98z.jpg
― difficult listening hour, Thursday, 28 March 2019 23:32 (five years ago) link
My neighborhood 7-11 is upstairs from Dischord btw
― Gunther Gleiben (Ye Mad Puffin), Friday, 29 March 2019 16:33 (five years ago) link
Ftr I could find no entry for Fugazi in the RIAA's gold and platinum database.
― All along there is the sound of feedback (Sund4r), Friday, 29 March 2019 16:44 (five years ago) link
In that respect, Tame Impala did more than enough to fill that void by drenching the crowd with their LSD-drenched visuals and even a little more crowd work than usual. (During one of their final songs, Parker crept onto the festival’s projectors with five eyeballs.)
sounds trippy
― Frozen CD, Sunday, 14 April 2019 22:37 (five years ago) link
read that three times, still can't parse
where have all the editors gone?
― Paul Ponzi, Sunday, 14 April 2019 22:42 (five years ago) link
so the projector had ... or wait, Parker had.... hang on now
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Sunday, 14 April 2019 23:00 (five years ago) link
Team Drench
― get your hand outta my pocket universe (morrisp), Sunday, 14 April 2019 23:08 (five years ago) link
I drenched my body with flavor drenched gatorade because I was working my body more than usual.
― Evan, Monday, 15 April 2019 00:45 (five years ago) link
got me a movie oh ho ho hocrept on five eyeballs oh ho ho hoalso whut
― Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Monday, 15 April 2019 03:02 (five years ago) link
editors the profession are pretty much like editors the band, they're still around but nobody gives a shit about them
― Jaki Liebowitz (rushomancy), Monday, 15 April 2019 12:55 (five years ago) link
The editor is dead, long live the involuntary poet!
― pomenitul, Monday, 15 April 2019 13:03 (five years ago) link
― Jaki Liebowitz (rushomancy), Monday, April 15, 2019 1:55 PM (nine minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
hm
― mark s, Monday, 15 April 2019 13:05 (five years ago) link
"crowd work"
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 15 April 2019 14:07 (five years ago) link
If this exercise in space-filling were printed in a college newspaper, I wouldn’t pick on it, but it’s in the L.A. Times: https://www.latimes.com/entertainment/music/la-et-ms-coachella-1975-rock-dead-20190420-story.html
― get your hand outta my pocket universe (morrisp), Sunday, 21 April 2019 04:10 (five years ago) link
can we start one of these for weed writingWhat name evokes so much? That of a world leader, a humanitarian or Nobel laureate? That of a sports legend, inventor, philanthropist or explorer? No. Once thought to be the most simple and humble of plants, it's now believed to be the most complex in Mother Nature’s entire garden. In existence since pre-biblical times, its cross-continent voyage began in Asia thousands of years ago, when a Chinese emperor discovered and unleashed its healing powers. Whether you use the Latin name of science, "cannabis," the U.S. government-imposed name, "mari(h)juana" or the 100-plus slang terms, its scope, breadth and reach is profound.
― maura, Thursday, 25 April 2019 02:37 (five years ago) link
whoa i never knew cannabis was latin for science
― difficult listening hour, Thursday, 25 April 2019 02:45 (five years ago) link
so much evoking
― mookieproof, Thursday, 25 April 2019 02:49 (five years ago) link
It is Mother Nature’s Steve Jobs; celestially conceived to meet our bodies' built-in demand.
― jmm, Thursday, 25 April 2019 02:59 (five years ago) link
can we start one of these for weed writing
I feel like "Vichy LA Weekly hires" is a separate category all of its own
― blokes you can't rust (sic), Thursday, 25 April 2019 12:35 (five years ago) link
The cannabis industry has its own "F" word. Instead of the letter "F," the letter is "H," and the word is "high."
― mick signals, Thursday, 25 April 2019 20:05 (five years ago) link
Loving that LA Times piece
Friday’s set offered a mix-and-match roll of contemporary rock varietals. Lemony new wave. Cherry-flavored ballads. Pineapple pop songs. Lime rockers.
Yum!
― One Eye Open, Thursday, 25 April 2019 20:14 (five years ago) link
what the flying high?
― Evan, Thursday, 25 April 2019 20:15 (five years ago) link
who the hell thinks cannabis is a simple, humble plant?
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Thursday, 25 April 2019 20:23 (five years ago) link
This feature reads like it was begrudgingly written as a favor to someone:
In Carly Rose’s knockout of a debut single, this sly young pop singer describes her burning desire to disappear with somebody from an overcrowded gathering.“I don’t want to dance, so just finish your Bacardi,” she moans over the creeping, bottom-heavy groove of “Birds & Bees,” which came out last month and quickly racked up nearly a quarter-million streams on Spotify and YouTube. And just before she rhymes "party" with the name-brand rum, she drops an unprintable modifier — two syllables, starts with F — to show how serious she is about leaving.(.....)
“I don’t want to dance, so just finish your Bacardi,” she moans over the creeping, bottom-heavy groove of “Birds & Bees,” which came out last month and quickly racked up nearly a quarter-million streams on Spotify and YouTube. And just before she rhymes "party" with the name-brand rum, she drops an unprintable modifier — two syllables, starts with F — to show how serious she is about leaving.
(.....)
― stan by me (morrisp), Wednesday, 3 July 2019 05:20 (five years ago) link
An unprintable modifier, you guys! Pop music is sure crazy these days, lol
― stan by me (morrisp), Wednesday, 3 July 2019 05:21 (five years ago) link
I too am faggot about leaving
― flamboyant goon tie included, Wednesday, 3 July 2019 05:31 (five years ago) link
Felcher
― Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 3 July 2019 05:37 (five years ago) link
lmao fgti
― space invaders are smokin penises!!!! (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 3 July 2019 06:03 (five years ago) link
I checked out the song; it’s a few degrees better / more interesting than the description makes it sound, IMO (another failure of the writing).
― stan by me (morrisp), Wednesday, 3 July 2019 06:30 (five years ago) link
Wow, you know, I’m really excited about Alex Cameron (musician) and I couldn’t imagine that somebody could be presented with his brilliant and rich and ripe-for-analysis body of work so far and instead rip it to shreds while doing a diarrhea
https://www.beat.com.au/the-best-and-weirdest-alex-cameron-lyrics/
― flamboyant goon tie included, Friday, 26 July 2019 12:36 (five years ago) link
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/20/magazine/neil-young-streaming-music.html
― maura, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 17:25 (five years ago) link
you will not trick me that easily, maura
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 17:25 (five years ago) link
wow that was awful, and I love Neil Young
― L'assie (Euler), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 17:39 (five years ago) link
You weren't kidding, huh. This a masterclass in abysmal writing.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 18:14 (five years ago) link
Also, lol @ '“I really wish this interview hadn’t happened,” he later said, seeming more downhearted than angry.'
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 18:16 (five years ago) link
That’s another thing about Young that rescues him from nihilism and self-pity: He does stuff, even if what he does sometimes seems loony.
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 18:19 (five years ago) link
One thing I really do appreciate about Young is all the....ugh what do you call it (*gestures*) you know “stuff” he does.
― omar little, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 18:24 (five years ago) link
From the comments section:
This article is painstakingly beautiful. If you have a child that is atypical in your life, it will pierce your soul. This sentence at the end made me cry. “His lesson Is that everything human is shot through with imperfection. Filtering that out doesn’t make us more perfect; it makes us sick. He’s a great artist, which means that he sees and hears more, which may make him a loon, but is also why he is still worth listening to.” The way David Samuels wrote this article conveys such love; love of Neil’s music, love for his son, love for something we’ve lost in streaming music. Thank you, thank you for reminding us that music touches our souls, hearts, and brains and that to dumb it down is just plain dumb!!!
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 18:34 (five years ago) link
comments are awful as well, do not wade in
― global tetrahedron, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 18:49 (five years ago) link
Neil Young is crankier than a hermit being stung by bees. He hates Spotify. He hates Facebook. He hates Apple. He hates Steve Jobs.
Neil, I have some good news for you my dude.
― triple-washed (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 18:55 (five years ago) link
lol they shit on Zuck only to praise Edison further down
― triple-washed (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 19:02 (five years ago) link
this article is now frontrunner for the thread title imo
― sleeve, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 19:07 (five years ago) link
His ire this afternoon, directed through me and my notebook and my Sony digital recorder,
I was hoping to soothe the old rock star, who spoke to me through the headphones of my Sony Walkman at the moments I felt most isolated and alone.
someone tell me at the end they reveal this is an advertorial for sony
― american bradass (BradNelson), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 19:19 (five years ago) link
no such luck, but did you hear that "high-end consumer digital-sound-recording systems" were made by companies such as Sony?
― maffew12, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 19:31 (five years ago) link
His music helped shape the melodic-depressive post-Beatles catalog of Pacific Northwest angst, which was brought to its songwriting peak by Kurt Cobain of Nirvana and Elliott Smith, the Irving Berlin and Cole Porter of suicidal ideation and addiction. Cobain committed suicide on April 5, 1994. Smith, who was an even more intimate songwriter, in the same catchy, brilliant, self-pitying vein, stabbed himself through the heart and bled to death on Oct. 21, 2003, in an apartment in Los Angeles. While the circumstances of both deaths are disputed by conspiracy theorists, Neil Young is indisputably still here.
sorry this is outstandingly bad
― american bradass (BradNelson), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 20:10 (five years ago) link
the Irving Berlin and Cole Porter of suicidal ideation and addiction
idk this is p hilarious
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 20:13 (five years ago) link
anything goes
― Mordy, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 20:13 (five years ago) link
Kurt Cobain jazz hands
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 20:15 (five years ago) link
sirius should be simplified to 3 stations: pre-Beatles, Beatles, and Radio Margaritaville (post-Beatles)
― triple-washed (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 20:21 (five years ago) link
post-Beatles catalog of Pacific Northwest angst
I think my favorite part of this is the implication that between 1969 and 1989, *nothing* happened in the Pacific Northwest
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 20:25 (five years ago) link
like, why are the Beatles even in that sentence?
i'm fascinated by the choice to wait until the fifth time he mentions elliot roberts, 20 paragraphs in, after describing elliot's porch, after watching tv in elliot's living room, and after elliot orders pizza for everybody, to point out that elliot is not currently alive.
― fact checking cuz, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 20:31 (five years ago) link
the reveal happens in this sentence, a masterpiece of bad editing:
His second studio album — and first with his longtime band Crazy Horse — “Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere,” is my personal favorite Neil Young record, and was also Elliot Roberts’s favorite (he died two months ago).
― fact checking cuz, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 20:32 (five years ago) link
last sentence from Brad's quotation is also a tour de force of bad independent clause usage
― rob, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 20:33 (five years ago) link
Courtney Love paid the Mentors dude to kill Kurt, but Neil Young is still alive
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 20:38 (five years ago) link
Biggie killed Elliot Smith
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 20:39 (five years ago) link
he killed elliot roberts, too, iirc
― fact checking cuz, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 20:40 (five years ago) link
How in the world does that sentence quoted by fcc even make it through the lightest of editing?
― Lavator Shemmelpennick, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 20:41 (five years ago) link
While the circumstances of both deaths are disputed by conspiracy theorists, Neil Young is indisputably still here.
this is, indisputably, an amazing way to make a non sequitur immune to criticism for being a non sequitur
― j., Tuesday, 20 August 2019 20:41 (five years ago) link
what's with all these comments about how ppl don't know how music is supposed to sound bc they only listen to streaming? i go to concerts regularly, play piano every day -- i think i know what music is supposed to sound like. i also use spotify extensively. it sounds fine.
― Mordy, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 20:44 (five years ago) link
pbbbbbblt
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 20:46 (five years ago) link
that's why it's so bad, it's even ruined your ears for real music, ruined. ruined!!
― j., Tuesday, 20 August 2019 20:47 (five years ago) link
Soon as I saw the thread revive, I knew it was this article. One gem is his description of Mozart as "perhaps the most perfectly structured and at the same time most effortlessly fluid sound that human beings have ever made." [fart joke redacted]
― dinnerboat, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 20:50 (five years ago) link
While the circumstances of both deaths are disputed by conspiracy theorists, Neil Young is indisputably still here (Elliot Roberts died two months ago).
― mick signals, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 21:09 (five years ago) link
Was this piece edited by a quahog?
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 21:10 (five years ago) link
while kurt cobain and elliot smith were perhaps "chris gaines" style projects of neil young, "neil young" is indisputably an ongoing project of neil young
― triple-washed (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 21:12 (five years ago) link
Young got mad about his Facebook user agreement, which not even his high-priced lawyers can untangle. “I’m pissed off about my user agreement,”
― devvvine, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 21:14 (five years ago) link
...Young says, using an unprintable post-Beatles slang phrase for anger [make sure to check w/NYT whether actually unprintable]
― mick signals, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 21:17 (five years ago) link
While Bush's involvement in 9/11 is disputed by conspiracy theorists, Neil Young is indisputably there in the melodic-depressive grunge music of Bush.
― triple-washed (Sufjan Grafton), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 21:18 (five years ago) link
I would like to be thought of as the Lorenz Hart, or possibly the Ira Gershwin, of suburban ennui and tipsiness.
― Rumspringsteen (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 20 August 2019 22:04 (five years ago) link
a heartless suggestion
― Vernon Locke, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 22:58 (five years ago) link
well I don't think we should overlook Queensryche, the Rodgers/Hammerstein of 80s Pacific Northwest fantasy metal
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 23:03 (five years ago) link
ÿ
― mookieproof, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 23:06 (five years ago) link
ÿeah ÿeah I wasn't sure how to make that sÿmbol
― Οὖτις, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 23:07 (five years ago) link
blasting 'jet city woman' in their/your honor
― mookieproof, Tuesday, 20 August 2019 23:08 (five years ago) link
Cindy Van LunenLong Beach Township NJ 11h agoThis article is painstakingly beautiful. If you have a child that is atypical in your life, it will pierce your soul. This sentence at the end made me cry.
Me: As I read this article, I just started sobbing and I couldn't stop!
Friend: Oh, do you have children with neurological disorders?
Me: No ... I'm a writer!
― mick signals, Wednesday, 21 August 2019 02:30 (five years ago) link
The WipersDead MoonHeart
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 21 August 2019 02:32 (five years ago) link
xpost ha ha ha
― Stub yr toe on the yacht rock (morrisp), Wednesday, 21 August 2019 02:49 (five years ago) link
The comparison of him and Fruciante was my least favourite among many many awful moments.
― husked, tonal wails (irrational), Friday, 23 August 2019 19:11 (five years ago) link
https://www.dallasobserver.com/music/mogwai-created-a-spiritual-experience-at-canton-hall-with-their-hope-through-darkness-rock-symphonies-11742010
― Badmotorfinger Debate Club (MFB), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 22:53 (five years ago) link
In anticipation of the headliner, 14-year-long Mogwai fan Houston Ellsworth, host of the punk podcast Local Obscene, says that he is stoked for the night’s performance and remembers a time when Mogwai’s music nourished his soul during a particularly difficult period.
― Stub yr toe on the yacht rock (morrisp), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 22:56 (five years ago) link
Am I missing something there? He’s been a fan of Mohawk for 14 years.
― what else are you all “over” (Champiness), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 23:12 (five years ago) link
Guess you're right -- that reading didn't occur to me, I assumed it was a flub of "14-year-old." Don't think I've ever seen that particular construction before (like most of the article, the phrase feels like it was autotranslated from another language).
― Stub yr toe on the yacht rock (morrisp), Tuesday, 27 August 2019 23:35 (five years ago) link
young team!
― maffew12, Wednesday, 28 August 2019 00:17 (five years ago) link
Is the Alternative Nation website written by an insane A.I.?
Links have been showing up in my Google News, and every one I've read has been completely incoherent.
https://www.alternativenation.net/eddie-vedder-makes-painful-the-who-revelation/
― Hideous Lump, Thursday, 5 September 2019 00:37 (five years ago) link
Steven Tyler Fat Girlfriend Revealed By Big Name
― jmm, Thursday, 5 September 2019 01:19 (five years ago) link
Ozzy Osbourne Reveals If He’s Broke After Tragic NewsLed Zeppelin Icon Reveals If He’s Broke After Tragic News
It's like they keep filling out the same Mad Lib over and over.
― Hideous Lump, Thursday, 5 September 2019 02:26 (five years ago) link
hey the writers get four cents per completed Lib go easy on the poor wretches
― j., Thursday, 5 September 2019 02:55 (five years ago) link
all my friends are bankrupt, take it slow
― FUCK YOUR POTATO (Neanderthal), Thursday, 5 September 2019 03:05 (five years ago) link
AC/DC singer Brian Johnson has uploaded a clip of his ‘Life on the Road’ series on AXS TV where he interviews Metallica drummers Lars Ulrich, who is drinking alcohol in the clip. Ulrich also discussed a ‘crazy’ show with AC/DC. An AC/DC Axl Rose breakup secret was revealed yesterday.Johnson said, “It looks rock and roll, that’s the good thing about it.” He added, “There’s nothing here that shouldn’t be. It looks the business.”Ulrich responded, “We’ve been here 15 years.” Johnson shot back, “There’s nothing here that shouldn’t be. That’s fantastic.”An AC/DC icon revealed why Angus Young is a ‘recluse’ last week. Ulrich laughed and proclaimed, “I like that. There’s nothing here that shouldn’t be.” The two then hugged. Ulrich recently wrote on social media, “28 years ago today, on August 10th 1991, we played the first show on the AC/DC European tour at Gentofte Stadium just north of Copenhagen in Denmark.
Johnson said, “It looks rock and roll, that’s the good thing about it.” He added, “There’s nothing here that shouldn’t be. It looks the business.”
Ulrich responded, “We’ve been here 15 years.” Johnson shot back, “There’s nothing here that shouldn’t be. That’s fantastic.”
An AC/DC icon revealed why Angus Young is a ‘recluse’ last week. Ulrich laughed and proclaimed, “I like that. There’s nothing here that shouldn’t be.” The two then hugged. Ulrich recently wrote on social media, “28 years ago today, on August 10th 1991, we played the first show on the AC/DC European tour at Gentofte Stadium just north of Copenhagen in Denmark.
― global tetrahedron, Thursday, 5 September 2019 03:09 (five years ago) link
― global tetrahedron, Thursday, 5 September 2019 03:10 (five years ago) link
Talk to transformer writes articles now huh
― FUCK YOUR POTATO (Neanderthal), Thursday, 5 September 2019 03:10 (five years ago) link
ha was just abt to post this^
― The Ravishing of ROFL Stein (Hadrian VIII), Thursday, 5 September 2019 03:29 (five years ago) link
there’s nothing here that shouldn’t be
― Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 5 September 2019 03:34 (five years ago) link
talk to transformer really doesn't yield too different results
Eddie Vedder Makes Painful The Who RevelationOnstage at the Rock & Brews in New York's Times Square in December 1989, Eddie Vedder's final Rock & Brews performance before his death at the age of 47, Vedder took aim at the Who, his favorite band, by revealing that they were "torturing him.""I've known the Who for years and they have been very kind to me," Vedder said of the band. "But lately I think they've been torturing themselves. I think they are trying to find something and I don't know what. They are playing for too many people and I'm getting tired of hearing them play and they want to play more."Vedder was referring to the band's recent decision to release a new album, With or Without You, which contains tracks about his personal life. Vedder expressed his frustration with the band, calling them "the biggest group in the world, the biggest band in rock and roll and I think they are not enjoying it."The Who recorded the album themselves, with Vedder
Onstage at the Rock & Brews in New York's Times Square in December 1989, Eddie Vedder's final Rock & Brews performance before his death at the age of 47, Vedder took aim at the Who, his favorite band, by revealing that they were "torturing him."
"I've known the Who for years and they have been very kind to me," Vedder said of the band. "But lately I think they've been torturing themselves. I think they are trying to find something and I don't know what. They are playing for too many people and I'm getting tired of hearing them play and they want to play more."
Vedder was referring to the band's recent decision to release a new album, With or Without You, which contains tracks about his personal life. Vedder expressed his frustration with the band, calling them "the biggest group in the world, the biggest band in rock and roll and I think they are not enjoying it."
The Who recorded the album themselves, with Vedder
― ufo, Thursday, 5 September 2019 03:43 (five years ago) link
They have to be using Talktotransformer or something like it.
― jmm, Thursday, 5 September 2019 03:44 (five years ago) link
https://i.imgur.com/rLYHMbz.png
― jmm, Thursday, 5 September 2019 03:56 (five years ago) link
I’m intrigued and wonder what the revelations are. Must subscribe to find out (revelations never to be revealed)
― untuned mass damper (mh), Thursday, 5 September 2019 04:30 (five years ago) link
Steven Tyler Fat Girlfriend Revealed By Big Name -- I cannot stop laughing
― Frozen CD, Thursday, 5 September 2019 05:07 (five years ago) link
rock & brews was founded in 2012 lol
― untuned mass damper (mh), Thursday, 5 September 2019 05:10 (five years ago) link
This one is annoying because there is something there in terms of general concept which may be worth exploring, by somebody else.
https://www.esquire.com/entertainment/music/a28904211/2003-to-2012-forgotten-music-era/
― mfktz (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Thursday, 5 September 2019 09:45 (five years ago) link
also xpost to 00s poll threads
Great idea, terrible examples.
― Mr. Snrub, Thursday, 5 September 2019 11:27 (five years ago) link
― maura, Thursday, 5 September 2019 13:59 (five years ago) link
How did he write this entire thing and not notice that his entire thesis boils down to "for every artist from this time period with multiple hits that people remember, there are one- or no-hit wonders that everyone has forgotten"?
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Thursday, 5 September 2019 17:00 (five years ago) link
a cursory listen to old episodes of american top 40 would reveal etc. etc.
― american bradass (BradNelson), Thursday, 5 September 2019 17:02 (five years ago) link
I thought it would be about indie/blog-era gems that are lost because you only had the mp3, post-cd and pre-streaming.
― change display name (Jordan), Thursday, 5 September 2019 17:03 (five years ago) link
"Can you believe the world has forgotten KT Tunstall?"
Um... yes? Pretty easily, in fact? (And I liked that song, too)
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Thursday, 5 September 2019 17:03 (five years ago) link
I have a similar problem with Alternative Nation, it always feeds me weird Van Halen oriented ckickbait
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 5 September 2019 17:04 (five years ago) link
Lol if only this guy had heard of the "studio groups" of the 60s
― FUCK YOUR POTATO (Neanderthal), Thursday, 5 September 2019 17:07 (five years ago) link
I finally read that Alternative Nation link and am I the only one who now REALLY wants to follow the writing career of Brett Buchanan?
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Thursday, 5 September 2019 17:08 (five years ago) link
Xpost Like bruh what if i told you Question Mark and the Mysterians didn't have an illustrious career
― FUCK YOUR POTATO (Neanderthal), Thursday, 5 September 2019 17:09 (five years ago) link
I’d like to believe this started life as a spiked LA Weekly listicle and was hurriedly punched up into paragraphs for prestige publication
― Larry Elleison (rogermexico.), Monday, 9 September 2019 19:34 (five years ago) link
that Deleted Years piece reads like a very ineffective attempt gee along nought-stalgia*
*(c)2019 frame casual
― frame casual (dog latin), Monday, 9 September 2019 23:00 (five years ago) link
https://consequenceofsound.net/2019/09/live-review-joanna-newsom-philadelphia/
Ah yes, a charming evening of career-spanning ragtime
While her dress positioned her somewhere between the angelic nymph persona she’s come to occupy over the years and Greco-Roman goddess of warfare, her sincerity in the face of noticeable nervousness revealed Newsom to be less of the stately elvish Homer of my generation’s dreams and more a spellbindingly human artist who proved the City of Brotherly Love to be true to its name.
― Lavator Shemmelpennick, Wednesday, 11 September 2019 03:21 (five years ago) link
Consequence of no editor dot net
― #YABASIC (morrisp), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 04:02 (five years ago) link
Ok is this a review or Ode to a Grecian Urn
― Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 05:26 (five years ago) link
that stately elvish homer in fullhttps://i.giphy.com/media/z2l1cinVfSyiY/giphy.gif
― don’t bore us, get to the aeon of horus (bizarro gazzara), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 07:23 (five years ago) link
maybe Newsom rearranged all of her music into ragtime
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 16:53 (five years ago) link
Having read that review, I didn't realize DiCrescenzo founded a school of journalism
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 17:22 (five years ago) link
The use of "ragtime" (and "rococo ragtime" in the review itself! though that seems ever so slightly more accurate tbh) almost made me wonder if there was a bot-generated component to this review. But googling around finds that a number of reviews of Divers include it on a list of styles that inform the album, presumably referring to Sapokanikan. Which, I guess. but pretty random for that descriptor to get linked to that song, let alone artist.
Highly recommend dipping into that reviewer's oeuvre. She has a similarly florid review of Roskilde 2019, rife with pull-quotes for this thread.
― Lavator Shemmelpennick, Wednesday, 11 September 2019 17:53 (five years ago) link
i may be just tired of the del rey overhype moment but something about this one really bugged mehttps://hyperallergic.com/515894/lana-del-rey-norman-fucking-rockwell/
Internet phenomenon turned Saturday Night Live laughing stock, her sustained popularity has perplexed those who would prefer to see brilliant women fail... based on her new album, she deserves comparison to the heavyweights of American mythology like Joni Mitchell and Joan Didion, Ernest Hemingway and Bob Dylan, Silvia Plath and Carole King.
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 18:00 (five years ago) link
I mean, in the context of "I am profoundly uninterested in what this person has to say with their art" I am pretty okay with comparing LDR to Hemingway and Dylan
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 18:05 (five years ago) link
well yeah i'm there with you but why not throw in lars von trier and evelyn waugh while you're at it
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 18:08 (five years ago) link
Those comparisons are absurd
― #YABASIC (morrisp), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 18:09 (five years ago) link
hemingway and dylan were both brilliant women
― sock fingering, baby (rushomancy), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 18:09 (five years ago) link
Bob Dylan as Cate Blanchett
― TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 18:09 (five years ago) link
just like lana del rey
who is Silvia Plath?
― a wagon to the curious (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 18:10 (five years ago) link
i think peter laughner, also a brilliant woman, once wrote a song about her
― sock fingering, baby (rushomancy), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 18:10 (five years ago) link
Del Rey’s latest album is a culmination of the artist’s last four records, a singularity that allows her various personae to converge into higher form
not just one persona but personae
― american bradass (BradNelson), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 18:12 (five years ago) link
xp tbf, the unedited version of that quote makes it clear that there's some space between "brilliant women" and that breathless lineup of people you can write your senior report on
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 18:12 (five years ago) link
"various" as an adjective bothers me in most uses.
― TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 18:13 (five years ago) link
it's a typo: https://www.mixcloud.com/silvio-plath/stream/
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 18:13 (five years ago) link
That same year, Del Rey stopped performing in front of the American flag, viewing it as “inappropriate” for the Trump era. She changed her backdrop to a screen of static instead, a multifaceted commentary on the “white noise” of American politics and the dissociative phenomenon of living in the world’s wealthiest country, which also happens to jail children.
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 18:15 (five years ago) link
ohhhhhh, *that* Silvio Plath
― a wagon to the curious (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 18:16 (five years ago) link
Joni Mitchell and Joan Didion, Ernest Hemingway and Bob Dylan, Silvia Plath and Carole King
all spellbindingly human
― mookieproof, Wednesday, 11 September 2019 18:17 (five years ago) link
Who are six people who've never been in my kitchen?
― Evans on Hammond (evol j), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 18:19 (five years ago) link
like i dunno if that's so much multifaceted as it is... monofaceted?― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Wednesday, September 11, 2019 11:15 AM (three minutes ago)
more "dumb as fuck" faceted
― Seany's too Dyche to mention (jim in vancouver), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 18:21 (five years ago) link
extremely appropriate for the trump era, tbf
― sock fingering, baby (rushomancy), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 18:38 (five years ago) link
has perplexed those who would prefer to see brilliant women fail
love this construction, where the fact that everyone agrees the subject is brilliant is presented as a given
― “Hakuna Matata,” a nihilist philosophy (One Eye Open), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 18:43 (five years ago) link
also the strawman internet chud bamboozled by LDR ascension when his druthers are, as a rule, to see brilliant women failimagining a masculinist america's funniest home video special where a parade of women in mortarboards, lab coats and astronaut suits keep stepping on rakes and slipping on banana peels
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 19:00 (five years ago) link
ove this construction, where the fact that everyone agrees the subject is brilliant is presented as a given
― “Hakuna Matata,” a nihilist philosophy (One Eye Open),
Don't see the big deal?
― TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 19:03 (five years ago) link
"Brilliant" is a cliche, though.
― TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 19:04 (five years ago) link
Norman Fucking Rockwell! slaps in all the right places.
― american bradass (BradNelson), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 19:05 (five years ago) link
Jesus Fucking Christ.
― TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 19:06 (five years ago) link
someone needed to slap the keyboard out of that writer's hand
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 19:13 (five years ago) link
couple of people in here really preferring to see brilliant women fail right now.
― unashamed and trash (Unctious), Wednesday, 11 September 2019 20:34 (five years ago) link
or maybe it’s that some people love imposing brilliance on vapid people because they’re pretty
― maura, Thursday, 12 September 2019 02:32 (five years ago) link
i do like seeing someone fail now and then but i'm not super picky about who
― j., Thursday, 12 September 2019 03:24 (five years ago) link
I mean I like LDR but jfc comparing her to Joan Didion my god
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 12 September 2019 15:28 (five years ago) link
I would like to put this on a t-shirt
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Thursday, 12 September 2019 15:31 (five years ago) link
Norman Fucking Rockwell! slaps in all the right places.― american bradass (BradNelson), Wednesday, September 11, 2019 2:05 PM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink
like "the face"
― Mommy...can I go out and VAPE tonight? (voodoo chili), Thursday, 12 September 2019 15:31 (five years ago) link
sorry, should clarify that brad was quoting somebody there
I keep imagining Meghan Trainor singing "All the right slaps/In all the right places"
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Thursday, 12 September 2019 15:32 (five years ago) link
I decided to read this piece as opposed to just making fun of it from afar and I don't think I'm going to get past the subhead:
The singer has defied critics and graduated summa cum laude from the pop pantheon into the hall of legends. Her latest album proves she deserves the respect of legends like Joni Mitchell and Carole King.
o rly
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Thursday, 12 September 2019 15:35 (five years ago) link
It must be true. *dies*
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 12 September 2019 15:36 (five years ago) link
In 2012, Del Rey’s debut album, Born to Die, delivered a complex satire of American neediness far ahead of its time, which combined babylike vocals with crushing instrumentals and lyrics rife with literary references to everything from Walt Whitman to Vladimir Nabokov. The net effect was like listening to a toddler recite passages from The Bell Jar: mesmerizing and depressing
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Thursday, 12 September 2019 15:37 (five years ago) link
If my toddler was reciting passages from The Bell Jar my reaction would probably be "HELLO WORLD? LOOK AT MY FUCKING TODDLER"
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Thursday, 12 September 2019 15:39 (five years ago) link
if my toddler recited passages from the bell jar i'd be like - this slaps
― “Hakuna Matata,” a nihilist philosophy (One Eye Open), Thursday, 12 September 2019 15:40 (five years ago) link
Elsewhere, she’s gloriously despondent. “Fresh out of fucks forever,” she sings on the prodigious “Venice Bitch” song. “Ice cream, ice queen, I dream in jeans and leather.”
I don't think this writer knows the definitions of the words he is using.
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Thursday, 12 September 2019 15:42 (five years ago) link
Thesaurus.com got a lot of clicks that night
― When I am afraid, I put my toast in you (Neanderthal), Thursday, 12 September 2019 16:04 (five years ago) link
Looks like that guy usually only writes about art
― Muswell Hillbilly Elegy (President Keyes), Thursday, 12 September 2019 16:06 (five years ago) link
Does the writer give any specific examples of how one of the "crushing instrumentals" aids the "complex satire of American neediness" or is that just one of those things people say when they mean "I like to get high and listen to this record and I hate Trump"?
― chr1sb3singer, Thursday, 12 September 2019 16:27 (five years ago) link
speaking of "crushing instrumentals" I would like both Lana Del Rey and Deafheaven more if she was their lead singer
― brigadier pudding (DJP), Thursday, 12 September 2019 16:58 (five years ago) link
she doesn't have the range
― j., Thursday, 12 September 2019 17:00 (five years ago) link
If my toddler recited The Bell Jar, I'd put it in an oven.
― TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 12 September 2019 17:00 (five years ago) link
Alfred, Edgelord Sotosyn
― Seany's too Dyche to mention (jim in vancouver), Thursday, 12 September 2019 17:08 (five years ago) link
I would like Lana Del Rey more if she'd named her album Norman Fucking Podhoretz
― Muswell Hillbilly Elegy (President Keyes), Thursday, 12 September 2019 17:43 (five years ago) link
why speak ill of the dead when MSNBC employs his chickenshit son?
― TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 12 September 2019 17:48 (five years ago) link
I'm all out of fucks and feeling really low
― untuned mass damper (mh), Thursday, 12 September 2019 17:56 (five years ago) link
in all the wrong places :(
― now let's play big lunch take little lunch (sic), Thursday, 12 September 2019 18:50 (five years ago) link
that toddler sounds brilliant
― Frozen CD, Thursday, 12 September 2019 19:01 (five years ago) link
but not Joan Didion brilliant. Let's calm down.
― Muswell Hillbilly Elegy (President Keyes), Thursday, 12 September 2019 19:04 (five years ago) link
Slouching Towards Bedtime
― Ramen? No thanks, I prefer them cooked (Ye Mad Puffin), Friday, 13 September 2019 14:51 (five years ago) link
This review of the new Neil Young album is kind of glorious. First, we get this opening paragraph:
‘Colorado’ is Neil Young’s 39th album. Let’s just let that sink in for a moment. He’s reached that point in his career where very few people have constructed as large a catalogue, while delivering a consistent level of quality.
"A consistent level of quality"? Are we still talking about Neil Young here?
That line gets even better when you hit paragraph 9 (of 10):
The return of Lofgren is inspired and Crazy Horse sound better than they have since 'Greendale' in 2003. The guitars feel tighter and have more bite. Young sounds invigorated but comfortable. In all fairness ‘Colorado’ isn’t going to join the pantheon of classic Neil Young albums, but few of his recent releases will, 'Le Noise' being the last that came close, but ‘Colorado’ is still a very good album.
What happened to that "consistent level of quality"?
― shared unit of analysis (unperson), Tuesday, 22 October 2019 11:43 (five years ago) link
I've never heard of this site.
― TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 22 October 2019 12:30 (five years ago) link
UK music title founded -- with a bit of noise, posters all over London and presumably elsewhere -- in 2004. I'm always startled to discover it still persists, and I think it is too.
― mark s, Tuesday, 22 October 2019 12:42 (five years ago) link
I dunno the writer says 'Colorado is still a very good album. 'Good' has something to do with quality iirc
― Muswell Hillbilly Elegy (President Keyes), Tuesday, 22 October 2019 13:29 (five years ago) link
https://ktla.com/2019/10/26/kurt-cobains-green-cardigan-from-unplugged-performance-sells-for-record-breaking-334k/
“The cardigan has never been washed since the concert and has all the original stains, too, so the new owner is sure to smell a lot like teen spirit.”
― dracula et son fils (morrisp), Sunday, 27 October 2019 20:10 (five years ago) link
does the writer know what teen spirit is?
― mfktz (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Sunday, 27 October 2019 20:12 (five years ago) link
https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-lists/the-50-most-important-music-moments-of-the-decade-912772
Sure looks like a promising article but, alas, every time I try to scroll down to the content or load any of the tabs my browser crashes or even more frustratingly, it says “Safari encountered a problem with the page and had to restart” and reloads, repeating the error all over again. Even if I click on the three bars in the address bar and put it into Safari’s “Reading Mode” it will only load the intro paragraph. Worst piece of music writing ever? It’s literally unreadable.
― Mr. Snrub, Monday, 25 November 2019 17:15 (five years ago) link
That's usually my experience with Rolling Stone's web interface.
― Lavator Shemmelpennick, Monday, 25 November 2019 17:16 (five years ago) link
ad blocker problem, maybe?
I've run into that problem on Gannett-owned publications. There's some sort of garbage that tries to reload the page when ads don't load, and it ends up crashing out
― mh, Monday, 25 November 2019 17:25 (five years ago) link
if it makes you feel better, it's not an interesting article, unless you're intrigued by deep thoughts like "Future unseats his own Number One with another Number One" or "What to do with R. Kelly and XXXTentacion?"
― Evans on Hammond (evol j), Monday, 25 November 2019 17:29 (five years ago) link
― Neanderthal, Saturday, June 7, 2014 9:39 AM bookmarkflaglink
Well I'm a lunatic of God's creation - and my baby she done goneWell I'm a lunatic of God's creation - and my baby she done goneBut when she meets that caco-daemon, that woman gonna find herself dead by dawn
― Jimmywine Dyspeptic, Saturday, June 7, 2014 11:22 AM bookmarkflaglink
― looking for Mon in Alderaan places (Neanderthal), Friday, 3 January 2020 03:04 (five years ago) link
goddamnit lmao
― american bradass (BradNelson), Friday, 3 January 2020 04:10 (five years ago) link
https://thecritic.co.uk/issues/january-2020/the-year-the-music-died/
i think this truly may be a contender for the title
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Monday, 13 January 2020 23:29 (five years ago) link
Lennon’s killing, though it said everything about the morbid psychology of fandom, said nothing about music because Lennon, by his own heroin-addled efforts, had made no significant music since the break-up of the Beatles.
https://media.tenor.com/images/fdc05dd7f127e6102955c1c62f1c9650/tenor.gif
― omar little, Monday, 13 January 2020 23:38 (five years ago) link
playing on his talented wife's records doesn't count
― don't care didn't ask still clappin (sic), Tuesday, 14 January 2020 00:52 (five years ago) link
I think its a fun mental exercise/argument starter to pinpoint where rock ended a certain progression of ideals, but to end it before American hardcore is wack
― The Mandymoorian (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 14 January 2020 00:53 (five years ago) link
"Pay to Cum" 7" was June 1980, so at least give it that
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=thnb3UlH2zE
― The Mandymoorian (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 14 January 2020 00:57 (five years ago) link
so many statements on artistic intent or lyrics (“phony Beatlemania” in London Calling) that are just interpreted lazily in a way to make the writer’s thesis work out
― babu frik fan account (mh), Tuesday, 14 January 2020 01:24 (five years ago) link
bret stephens, rock critic:
Most pop songs are about love. Most heavy metal songs are about sex. Most country music seems to be about hard knocks and heartbreak.
nytimes.com/2020/01/13/opinion/neil-peart-rush.html
― fact checking cuz, Tuesday, 14 January 2020 22:06 (five years ago) link
country songs: about 501s and heartbreaks
― TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 14 January 2020 22:07 (five years ago) link
oops, better link:
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/13/opinion/neil-peart-rush.html
― fact checking cuz, Tuesday, 14 January 2020 22:07 (five years ago) link
Most heavy metal songs are about sex.
Has this dude heard a heavy metal song released since like 1993?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ziL2FyIg1_I
― The Mandymoorian (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 15 January 2020 00:00 (five years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oXvYdnQraBc
― The Mandymoorian (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 15 January 2020 00:01 (five years ago) link
most heavy metal songs are about disembowled goblins ime
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Wednesday, 15 January 2020 00:02 (five years ago) link
I guess you could fuck them
― papa stank (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 15 January 2020 00:03 (five years ago) link
https://thequietus.com/articles/27692-xenakis-pauline-oliveros
Not the worst piece of music writing ever but certainly one of the most counterproductive zero-sum-game, either/or premises I've seen in a long time. Because if anyone is in dire needed of a critical takedown in 2020, it's Iannis fucking Xenakis.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 21 January 2020 10:25 (five years ago) link
Yeah, that's a very weird apples-and-oranges comparison between two very different and seemingly randomly chosen composers. Moreover, I am not at all sure that Xenakis DOES get more widespread recognition and acclaim than Oliveros. Siepmann cites plenty of praise for Oliveros; he just keeps asserting that these are exceptions while all the noise guys who namecheck Xenakis are somehow the rule. Googling Oliveros's name alone turns up loads of reverential discussion in the mainstream press.
I mean, he seems to be referring to this piece, which quotes eight artists on her influence: https://www.google.com/amp/s/thevinylfactory.com/features/pauline-oliveros-legacy-deep-listening/amp/
― One must put up barriers to keep oneself intact (Sund4r), Tuesday, 21 January 2020 12:24 (five years ago) link
And there's this: https://youtu.be/7SLAQdEiWhU
― One must put up barriers to keep oneself intact (Sund4r), Tuesday, 21 January 2020 12:25 (five years ago) link
It still wasn't as dumb as this, though: https://jacobinmag.com/2020/01/kenny-g-gorelick-jazz-blues-criticism-analysis-music
― One must put up barriers to keep oneself intact (Sund4r), Tuesday, 21 January 2020 12:26 (five years ago) link
Jacobin is spotty at the best of times but their pop culture writing is the fuckin pits.
― bold caucasian eroticism (Simon H.), Tuesday, 21 January 2020 12:45 (five years ago) link
"Art music hot takes" might actually be the worst emerging strand of contemporary music criticism.
― One must put up barriers to keep oneself intact (Sund4r), Tuesday, 21 January 2020 12:45 (five years ago) link
It's a genre I'm only beginning to discover, to my great dismay.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 21 January 2020 12:56 (five years ago) link
Re: that Kenny G piece, 'weasel-toned saxophonist' is otm.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 21 January 2020 12:59 (five years ago) link
just as "sociopolitical context" is often the scourge of pop-culture criticism, political magazines trying on pop culture is almost never a good idea (I have not read / will not read this Kenny G thing)
― bold caucasian eroticism (Simon H.), Tuesday, 21 January 2020 13:02 (five years ago) link
The funniest thing about the Kenny G piece is that the author posted it on his own blog in 2017, then talked Jacobin into re-publishing it two years later. Like, did you really need the $75 that badly?
― shared unit of analysis (unperson), Tuesday, 21 January 2020 13:15 (five years ago) link
maybe it's just the company I keep/shit I read but I'd guess I hear five mentions of Oliveros for every one of Xenakis. She's a much larger figure, imo. I think this article's take might have been a good one in, say, 1985.
― she carries a torch. two torches, actually (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Tuesday, 21 January 2020 13:19 (five years ago) link
yeah had a 'getting mad at google results based on your own previous searches' type vibe from this one
― wot's the tea mum? (not beef again) (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 21 January 2020 13:36 (five years ago) link
maybe it's just the company I keep/shit I read but I'd guess I hear five mentions of Oliveros for every one of Xenakis. She's a much larger figure, imo.
This is definitely true for me as well, but almost up until her death 3 1/2 years ago, she was still teaching/lecturing/performing, and probably at least 10% of my social circle has been her student at some time or another.
It's total apples and oranges, that comparison, though geez.
― sarahell, Tuesday, 21 January 2020 13:36 (five years ago) link
Challop disclaimer should the author of that piece be an ILXor: Xenakis and Oliveros are both awesome.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 21 January 2020 13:40 (five years ago) link
And today, artists more diverse (in both style and identity) than the early industrial kids see themselves traveling in the wake of Xenakis, from jazz pianist and composer Craig Taborn, to Battles' Tyondai Braxton,
the dude who wrote this article knows who Tyondai's dad is, right? ... this article is really awkward
― sarahell, Tuesday, 21 January 2020 15:57 (five years ago) link
Braxton: It’s certainly relative to electronic music and dance music, it’s certainly relative to generative music and musique concrète. A lot of my heroes are composers like Iannis Xenakis and Pierre Schaeffer.
― Muswell Hillbilly Elegy (President Keyes), Tuesday, 21 January 2020 16:01 (five years ago) link
It's a well-written piece with a terrible (and vaguely sexist) thesis. There's a fucking paragraph where the author tries to posit that Pharmakon must be influenced by Xenakis, despite having never acknowledged the influence? Why are these two completely disparate composers being compared like this?
If an "I wish I was in a Ph. D. program" dude wants to stencil "it's misogyny" on to comparative pieces about "why [x] and not [y]?" composers, he should write Cage vs. Olivieros and/or Xenakis vs. Ustvolskaya-- at least do a study where the composers have similar theses, bodies of work, outlook. (I would read either of these theoretical pieces, both Ustvolskaya and Olivieros deserve equal props as their more-established male counterparts.)
― Montegays and Capulez (flamboyant goon tie included), Tuesday, 21 January 2020 16:11 (five years ago) link
So the writer brings up gender, and how Xenakis' work has been portrayed as hyper-masculine and bro-y, but he doesn't seem to take note that the examples of contemporary music he is using to support his thesis are also way heavier on the bro-factor than others? ... of the musicians he cites, all are dudes, except for Russell Butler, Black Madonna, and Pharmakon ...
― sarahell, Tuesday, 21 January 2020 16:15 (five years ago) link
And Diamanda Galas, who is (in my experience) one of Xenakis's more ardent proselytizers
― Montegays and Capulez (flamboyant goon tie included), Tuesday, 21 January 2020 16:19 (five years ago) link
yeah that bit about Pharmakon is a real stretch -- I could bullshit that Holly Herndon must be influenced by Oliveros because she took a class from her in grad school.
― sarahell, Tuesday, 21 January 2020 16:29 (five years ago) link
also lol at citing the Nurse with Wound list as some evidence of the primacy of Xenakis -- I mean, Lemon Kittens are also on that list, and they are such a massive influence on like, a couple dozen weirdo arty noise bands that play to audiences of 30?
― sarahell, Tuesday, 21 January 2020 16:32 (five years ago) link
Contemporary women composers who cite Xenakis as an influence on their music are bros by association. To wit:
I’m also inspired by the abstraction of the late Beethoven string quartets, the power and uncompromising nature of the orchestral music of Xenakis, and the acoustic city landscapes of Varèse.
http://www.internationalartsmanager.com/features/qa-with-rebecca-saunders.html
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 21 January 2020 16:36 (five years ago) link
Not to mention Chaya Czernowin and Unsuk Chin. And Natasha Barrett:
http://usoproject.blogspot.com/2009/01/interview-with-natasha-barrett-pt2.html
I am now ready to write a corrective article.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 21 January 2020 16:46 (five years ago) link
"this smacks of gender!" I holler as I upend the table and dump all my compact discs on the floor
― babu frik fan account (mh), Tuesday, 21 January 2020 16:48 (five years ago) link
But the biggest Greekbro of all is Oliveros herself:
Her many years of involvement in new music have given her an informed and open-minded perspective. Although her interests have changed, she continues to write music for other performers, such as a piece for violinist Malcolm Goldstein, and her interest in pure electronic music didn't end in the 60s either - she contributed to a computer music compilation in 1990. She has praise for artists who seem at first very different, such as Iannis Xenakis (although perhaps with Oliveros's interest in space and Xenakis's interest in architecture, the difference isn't all it seems)."There is tremendous expansion in the so called new music scene. What used to be a village is now a metropolis. It's complex and asymmetrical. I like it. You never know where you will find a gem or in what style this gem will manifest."
"There is tremendous expansion in the so called new music scene. What used to be a village is now a metropolis. It's complex and asymmetrical. I like it. You never know where you will find a gem or in what style this gem will manifest."
http://media.hyperreal.org/zines/est/intervs/oliveros.html
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 21 January 2020 16:52 (five years ago) link
there are plenty of Oliveros-influenced bros too
― sarahell, Tuesday, 21 January 2020 16:53 (five years ago) link
Yeah, I've certainly met more Oliveros bros -- or, if you will, Oliverbros -- than Xenakis bros.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Tuesday, 21 January 2020 16:56 (five years ago) link
the part of the article where he writes about the aesthetics and processes and how the ascribed masculinity is a bit arbitrary in that Xenakis' process is super nerdy -- i feel like that's kinda interesting
― sarahell, Tuesday, 21 January 2020 17:02 (five years ago) link
There's some worthwhile insight in that piece, for sure, it's just asphyxiated by the binary premise.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 21 January 2020 17:06 (five years ago) link
idk i can't really excuse this
Yet whereas Xenakis sought to apply complex formulas to emulate the stochastic rumblings of the natural world (human agency be damned), Oliveros sought similar affects from an opposite angle. To tap into these ecological systems, she privileged the very intuition, vulnerability, and receptivity to our surroundings that Xenakis's superfans find so mewling and weak.
― budo jeru, Tuesday, 21 January 2020 17:11 (five years ago) link
it's just so icky and like "she was a woman and down with nature and her feelings"
― budo jeru, Tuesday, 21 January 2020 17:12 (five years ago) link
I thought das Ewig-Weibliche was peak feminism?
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 21 January 2020 17:16 (five years ago) link
accordions are not natural
― j., Tuesday, 21 January 2020 17:19 (five years ago) link
But… it breathes!
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 21 January 2020 17:21 (five years ago) link
― Montegays and Capulez (flamboyant goon tie included), Tuesday, 21 January 2020 18:44 (five years ago) link
https://aeon.co/ideas/why-are-pop-songs-getting-sadder-than-they-used-to-be
ok, i can't be arsed to read this, i don't care, it's probably terrible, but choosing to illustrate your "pop music used to be so much happier" argument with a picture of ABBA is so fucken stupid that i think we can save ourselves the time and effort
― babby bitter (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 15 February 2020 12:45 (five years ago) link
bet this person actually thinks "Happy Together" is a song about a couple being happy together
― sorry for butt rockin (Neanderthal), Saturday, 15 February 2020 15:15 (five years ago) link
^I skimmed it, and that seems to be exactly how their analysis works!
― You have seen the heavy groups (morrisp), Saturday, 15 February 2020 15:20 (five years ago) link
Look buddy I've seen lots of TV ads for soda, bubblegum and adult diapers and that's definitely what that song means
― Evan, Saturday, 15 February 2020 15:21 (five years ago) link
analysing lyrics alone to judge the emotional content of music is maybe the stupidest fucking thing i’ve ever heard in my life
― Homegrown Georgia speedster Ladd McConkey (bizarro gazzara), Saturday, 15 February 2020 15:30 (five years ago) link
Wait so what is Happy Together actually about
― Οὖτις, Saturday, 15 February 2020 15:31 (five years ago) link
a sad lonely dude imagining being together with someone who either doesn't know he exists or does and doesn't gaf about him
― sorry for butt rockin (Neanderthal), Saturday, 15 February 2020 15:36 (five years ago) link
i mean the first word is 'imagine'
It’s the A-prime example of Songs where the singer/protagonist comes off as a serious dick without meaning to
― You have seen the heavy groups (morrisp), Saturday, 15 February 2020 15:48 (five years ago) link
Sentiment analysis is often nonsense
― totally unnecessary bewbz of exploitation (DJP), Saturday, 15 February 2020 15:57 (five years ago) link
not to mention pop isn't any happier or more morose than it's ever been.
it's not like the charts are being topped by MC D-Pressed with hit single "I Ain't Shit"
― sorry for butt rockin (Neanderthal), Saturday, 15 February 2020 15:59 (five years ago) link
How do you quantify the emotional tenor of having your horses in the back, horse tack is attached?
― You have seen the heavy groups (morrisp), Saturday, 15 February 2020 16:06 (five years ago) link
You could argue that Post Malone’s career is depressing but I doubt it would be because of his lyrics
― totally unnecessary bewbz of exploitation (DJP), Saturday, 15 February 2020 16:11 (five years ago) link
I’m not going to read the article but it’s pretty unassailable knowledge that in the last 3+ years of rap have been incredibly depressive and pop quickly followed suit
― The Mandymoorian (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 15 February 2020 17:29 (five years ago) link
not to mention pop isn't any happier or more morose than it's ever been.it's not like the charts are being topped by MC D-Pressed with hit single "I Ain't Shit"
― The Mandymoorian (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 15 February 2020 17:31 (five years ago) link
Their analysis stops in 2015.
― You have seen the heavy groups (morrisp), Saturday, 15 February 2020 17:32 (five years ago) link
Also, they seem to be just looking at instances of words like “happy” vs. “sad,” and major vs. minor key. Someone actually paying attn to pop trends could probably write a thing about recent depressing rap lyrics, but this ain’t it.
― You have seen the heavy groups (morrisp), Saturday, 15 February 2020 17:36 (five years ago) link
imo all “scientific” studies of pop music are bad because they’re all pretty much rooted in confirmation bias
― maura, Saturday, 15 February 2020 17:40 (five years ago) link
i don't think this fits the thread perfectly but we need to talk about this
https://www.businessinsider.com/electric-guest-tour-north-america-mercedes-benz-sprinter-van-2020-3
How an LA band completed a tour around North America in a Mercedes-Benz Sprinter van...This means the duo — and the two other musicians who play with them while on tour — need to share the three-passenger row Sprinter while on the road.While they're on the road, Taccone takes the back passenger row while Compton gets the middle. The two additional touring members get the front row directly behind the driver and passenger seats.
This means the duo — and the two other musicians who play with them while on tour — need to share the three-passenger row Sprinter while on the road.
While they're on the road, Taccone takes the back passenger row while Compton gets the middle. The two additional touring members get the front row directly behind the driver and passenger seats.
― global tetrahedron, Monday, 23 March 2020 17:41 (four years ago) link
how in the hell is that not marked as sponsored content
― absolute idiot liar uneducated person (mh), Monday, 23 March 2020 17:45 (four years ago) link
"SEE ALSO: This $150,000 off-roading camper van built on a Mercedes-Benz Sprinter can stay off the grid for 7 days"
― morrisp, Monday, 23 March 2020 18:18 (four years ago) link
Business Insider, posting an ad thinly-disguised as an article? What is this world coming to?
― DJP, Monday, 23 March 2020 18:56 (four years ago) link
the band has a member of lonely island
― maura, Tuesday, 24 March 2020 14:22 (four years ago) link
but what kind of IPA do they drink?
― fits, Tuesday, 24 March 2020 14:23 (four years ago) link
xpost his brother is in the Lonely Island ... not that that changes your point, I don't imagine
― alpine static, Wednesday, 25 March 2020 04:16 (four years ago) link
unless i don't know something ... which is entirely possible.
i am only paying attn to twitter a little bit right now (work at a hospital and day job is, uh, very busy) but i couldn't quite tell if ppl were clowning the publication or the band. or both?
if it's not marked as ad content that's pretty silly.
the whole thing is silly.
but there are a lot of old punks on the timeline touting their '94 tour in a brokedown econoline and acting like they wouldn't have jumped through fire at a chance to tour in that van!
― alpine static, Wednesday, 25 March 2020 04:24 (four years ago) link
asa has written some of the lonely island’s music. he also co-wrote that big song by portugal the douchenozzle
― maura, Wednesday, 25 March 2020 13:13 (four years ago) link
the band too ephemeral to be a real nemesis
― absolute idiot liar uneducated person (mh), Wednesday, 25 March 2020 17:06 (four years ago) link
I think it was the timing more than anything, just with everything going on it seems even more vacuous and stupid
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 25 March 2020 17:11 (four years ago) link
I mean, it's Business Insider
― DJP, Wednesday, 25 March 2020 17:17 (four years ago) link
A colleague sent me a Business Insider link today, and it’s a “BI Prime” story (behind paywall) – which means he must actually subscribe(!?)
― morrisp, Wednesday, 25 March 2020 18:08 (four years ago) link
― absolute idiot liar uneducated person (mh), Wednesday, 25 March 2020 18:09 (four years ago) link
― brimstead, Wednesday, 25 March 2020 18:19 (four years ago) link
paid content articles are going to be a rich vein for literary analysis in about three years
― Muswell Hillbilly Elegy (President Keyes), Wednesday, 25 March 2020 19:46 (four years ago) link
Lady Gaga and Ariana Grande teamed up for "Rain On Me," an upbeat dance track where each singer takes a turn with a verse. They also sing together on some of the choruses. https://t.co/eap8R2kl0p— USA TODAY (@USATODAY) May 23, 2020
― Inadequate grass (morrisp), Sunday, 24 May 2020 20:31 (four years ago) link
(the tweet, dunno about the article)
"Both wear eye makeup."
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Sunday, 24 May 2020 23:29 (four years ago) link
reminds me of NAME RELEVANT SONG FROM ANTI THAT MATCHES DESCRIPTION
― dyl, Monday, 25 May 2020 00:07 (four years ago) link
Ladies and gentlemen, I rarely post articles in this thread. But today I found a piece of work that I feel is truly, truly exceptional. I hope you enjoy this as much as I did.
https://www.nme.com/blogs/nme-blogs/mark-words-lets-rock-way-extinction-2578080?fbclid=IwAR0JEbEYNsElq4MpZYShemmOw6LLkiDsOTTNI7EWf7We8i4tgYcALV5F08w
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 14:39 (four years ago) link
Made it to this point, couldn't go any further:
The fact is, whatever you think of their music, Coldplay put on one of the most spectacular, un-beige, bed-shitting live shows on the planet, a tornado of colour and excitement that makes a Beyonce show look like Milkfloat Karaoke.
Assuming it goes on in this manner and is confirmed to be parody by the end.
― soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 14:44 (four years ago) link
even without a pandemic going on i don't know if i'd attend a bed-shitting live show
― mellon collie and the infinite bradness (BradNelson), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 14:47 (four years ago) link
Holy shit, this article
― (so serious) (DJP), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 16:05 (four years ago) link
Does the bedshitting provide natural, renewable electricity to power the instruments
― I am a free. I am not man. A number. (Neanderthal), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 16:10 (four years ago) link
"un-beige bed shitting" suggests the blueberries went bad
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 16:17 (four years ago) link
And if our efforts to save the planet fail? I’d rather spend my last few decades of habitable planet rocking out to retina-exploding 5D live shows, thank you very much. At least I’ll end up saluting my desert mutant warlord with a whole bunch of euphoric nights behind me and a wrist full of flashing neon bracelets.
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 16:20 (four years ago) link
"At least I'll have my memories of Coldplay concerts when the environmental apocalypse comes" is one hell of a thesis statement
xp: lol I may have had similar posting motivation there
― (so serious) (DJP), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 16:22 (four years ago) link
it's strange to me that he invokes maroon 5 as the sort of cultural decay that would justify complete nuclear annihilation, and yet for some reason coldplay is the band whose shows must go on even if the price is total environmental catastrophe. like, if you just squint hard enough
― budo jeru, Tuesday, 26 May 2020 16:25 (four years ago) link
5. Bring on the day, says I, when all human culture is obliterated by ecological apocalypse and rebuilt by the brave few who were intelligent enough to keep their Strokes records off-Cloud and live up a hill.
I guarantee (and counting myself among them) no one who owns a physical copy of a Strokes album is going to survive the apocalypse.
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 16:48 (four years ago) link
sure but even so that’s probably the nicest conceivable way you could criticize that horrible sentence
― budo jeru, Tuesday, 26 May 2020 16:54 (four years ago) link
When you go to Bartertown, the Strokes cds are the first thing they will confiscate
― I am a free. I am not man. A number. (Neanderthal), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 16:56 (four years ago) link
at first they came for the maroon 5 CDs, and i said nothing
― budo jeru, Tuesday, 26 May 2020 16:56 (four years ago) link
Oh it's Mark Beaumont, I should've guessed - he was always a terrible writer.
― Gavin, Leeds, Tuesday, 26 May 2020 17:00 (four years ago) link
Also just want to point out that the column is called "Mark My Words"
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 17:18 (four years ago) link
Xxxpost budo - you don't see "says I" dropped into a sentence everyday
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 17:19 (four years ago) link
A Moment With Beaumont
― some infected evening (Matt #2), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 17:20 (four years ago) link
xp says you
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 17:20 (four years ago) link
Sez who?
― Trouble Is My Métier (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 17:23 (four years ago) link
It's actually "Mark, My Words" which is even more 😱
― (so serious) (DJP), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 17:27 (four years ago) link
"Heavens! I kill you know ;-)"
― Trouble Is My Métier (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 17:31 (four years ago) link
omg that thread
― (so serious) (DJP), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 17:35 (four years ago) link
"Heavens! Bring on the day, says I, when all human culture is obliterated by ecological apocalypse and rebuilt by the brave few who were intelligent enough to keep their Strokes records off-Cloud and live up a hill. ;-)"
― (so serious) (DJP), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 17:36 (four years ago) link
haha sorry! the comma really makes it next level
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 17:41 (four years ago) link
Mark, my Spotify playlists, let me show you them
― budo jeru, Tuesday, 26 May 2020 17:44 (four years ago) link
Apologies if this is mentioned in the article (I'm not reading it), but I'm reminded that Chris Martin said the following in 2005:
”I think Radiohead are better than us,” says Martin of his group, which includes guitarist Jonny Buckland, bassist Guy Berryman, and drummer Will Champion. ”They’ve pushed themselves further. Them and U2 are tough to catch up with. But my mission is to beat those bands out of town. When the world ends in 200 years, it’d be nice to have it be ‘Oh, yeah, and the best band was Coldplay.’”
― Charging for Brewskis™ (morrisp), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 20:31 (four years ago) link
(I'm not reading the article because my brain apparently retains 15-year-old EW blurbs, and so I need to be very careful what I put into it.)
― Charging for Brewskis™ (morrisp), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 20:33 (four years ago) link
Don't deny yourself
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 21:20 (four years ago) link
Read it!!
I feel swindled. That piece was partially tongue-in-cheek and just too predictable to rise to the inverted heights of 'Neil Young's Lonely Quest to Save Music'.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 26 May 2020 21:24 (four years ago) link
do you guys remember when Coldplay first appeared and the hook that every writer threw their hat on was that Chris Martin did this weird thing that appealed to American Christiany types where he would talk about being a virgin?
― mh, Tuesday, 26 May 2020 23:08 (four years ago) link
sorry, maybe that he was a virgin until the *omg* ripe old age of 22 and still relatively chaste, as if he was untouched by the vile rock sex cult
― mh, Tuesday, 26 May 2020 23:09 (four years ago) link
vile rock sex cult
think I saw them supporting Zodiac Mindwarp back in '92
― Neil S, Wednesday, 27 May 2020 12:42 (four years ago) link
It's hard to call this the "worst" piece of music writing given that the writing itself is good, but it's bad
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/08/14/magazine/music-black-culture-appropriation.html
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 01:53 (four years ago) link
I mean, for all of its writing quality, it's basically "White people be drivin like this, black people be drivin like this" the music essay
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 01:55 (four years ago) link
“White,” “Western,” “classical” music is the overarching basis for lots of American pop songs. Chromatic-chord harmony, clean timbre of voice and instrument: These are the ingredients for some of the hugely singable harmonies of the Beatles, the Eagles, Simon and Fleetwood Mac, something choral, “pure,” largely ungrained. Black music is a completely different story. It brims with call and response, layers of syncopation and this rougher element called “noise,” unique sounds that arise from the particular hue and timbre of an instrument — Little Richard’s woos and knuckled keyboard zooms. The dusky heat of Miles Davis’s trumpeting. Patti LaBelle’s emotional police siren. DMX’s scorched-earth bark. The visceral stank of Etta James, Aretha Franklin, live-in-concert Whitney Houston and Prince on electric guitar.
But there’s something even more fundamental, too. My friend Delvyn Case, a musician who teaches at Wheaton College, explained in an email that improvisation is one of the most crucial elements in what we think of as black music: “The raising of individual creativity/expression to the highest place within the aesthetic world of a song.” Without improvisation, a listener is seduced into the composition of the song itself and not the distorting or deviating elements that noise creates. Particular to black American music is the architecture to create a means by which singers and musicians can be completely free, free in the only way that would have been possible on a plantation: through art, through music — music no one “composed” (because enslaved people were denied literacy), music born of feeling, of play, of exhaustion, of hope.
Ah right, the only kind of white western music is classical music, which as we all know is based on "chromatic-chord harmony" and "clean timbre of voice and instrument." Whereas "black music" is raw and free and noisy and btw improvisation.
As though there are no european folk musics, as though there's no improvisation in any kind of european music, as though there's no black music that sounds "clean" or polished. No such thing as appalachian ballads or irish music or klezmir or romani folk music, no such thing as duke ellington or art tatum or west african master drummers. White people music like this, black people music like this.
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 01:58 (four years ago) link
and the not-so-covert divide being expressed is White = intellect and aesthetics, Black = instinct and emotion, i.e. pretty much restating centuries-old racist paradigms.
― assert (MatthewK), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 02:08 (four years ago) link
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 02:08 (four years ago) link
The visceral stank of Etta James
― budo jeru, Wednesday, 1 July 2020 02:15 (four years ago) link
I find myself wanting to object to every single sentence in those two paragraphs you posted.
― Pat McGroin (morrisp), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 02:15 (four years ago) link
trash
― budo jeru, Wednesday, 1 July 2020 02:16 (four years ago) link
racist trash
Four hundred years ago, more than 20 kidnapped Africans arrived in Virginia. They were put to work and put through hell. Twenty became millions, and some of those people found — somehow — deliverance in the power of music. Lil Nas X has descended from those millions and appears to be a believer in deliverance. The verses of his song flirt with Western kitsch, what young black internetters branded, with adorable idiosyncrasy and a deep sense of history, the “yee-haw agenda.” But once the song reaches its chorus (“I’m gonna take my horse to the Old Town Road, and ride til I can’t no more”), I don’t hear a kid in an outfit. I hear a cry of ancestry. He’s a westward-bound refugee; he’s an Exoduster. And Cyrus is down for the ride. Musically, they both know: This land is their land.
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 02:28 (four years ago) link
taking a break from ilx
― budo jeru, Wednesday, 1 July 2020 02:36 (four years ago) link
Wesley Morris is black but y’all knew that right?
― Evans on Hammond (evol j), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 02:43 (four years ago) link
TIL Little Richard wasn’t a Westerner. Top notch musicological analysis right there.Also, there has never been any folk music in the West ever. It’s all classical from Charlemagne onwards.
― pomenitul, Wednesday, 1 July 2020 02:52 (four years ago) link
Anyway, stay in your lane, race x, and you too, race y. Gotta work those God-given genes.
― pomenitul, Wednesday, 1 July 2020 02:54 (four years ago) link
I mean, there is a lot of interest to be said about white appropriation of black musical styles and affects, and it has been said so many times, in so many more nuanced and sophisticated ways that show so much more actual understanding of music.
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 03:16 (four years ago) link
I do think the piece is a little more nuanced than those excerpts suggest, although it's certainly not without its flaws. It actually has a lot more music-historical depth than what I would usually expect in an outlet like this. Tbh, it's only a few misplaced terms away from something you might get in a intro-level popular music/American music course. He's simplifying and generalizing historical Euro-American vs African-American musico-aesthetic priorities to tell his story, and doing so clumsily at times, but it's not worthless in terms of helping to explain the unique development of American popular music. Most of the essay is about how these things ended up being fused and interacting. He does discuss e.g. Motown (and soft rock/yacht rock) as musics that synthesize elements of these traditions. And he does refer to the Irish folk influence on the actual composition of 19th century minstrel songs, which isn't invalid. xp
― Feel a million filaments (Sund4r), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 03:30 (four years ago) link
So, right, there's much better out there but I don't think it's the worst introduction to this history for a lay audience in an outlet that's not primarily focused on music.
― Feel a million filaments (Sund4r), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 03:32 (four years ago) link
Today is my day to defend the indefensible, apparently.
― Feel a million filaments (Sund4r), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 03:34 (four years ago) link
barely-veiled essentialist thinking about race and music is, like, everywhere in highbrow cultural writing -- like, yeah, that might be a particularly egregious example, but you're lying to yourself if you think you haven't also seen it in some of the more erudite tomes in the 'good books about music' thread, npr recommendations + essays from more generalist newspaper writers whose ears perk up every time they notice that someone who wrote a recent top 40 hit is scandinavian
― dyl, Wednesday, 1 July 2020 03:38 (four years ago) link
(I have no idea what he means by 'chromatic-chord harmony', though, I have to say. I mean, I DO know what 'chromatic harmony' means to me but blues and jazz are filled with it.)
― Feel a million filaments (Sund4r), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 03:43 (four years ago) link
i have skimmed the essay, but not read it carefully; it seems like what he's got going on is an effort to trade in race-essentialist terms in order to narrate a critical history that's aimed ultimately at somehow articulating 'the contradictions' in that history from the perspective of the present day and for the benefit of the present day, landing on a certain tone of impossible optimism after all too many episodes of knowingness about the ironies of the past. comes off as kind of chronologically chaotic and tonally discombobulated, and you have to grant him an awful lot on the way many passing judgments are expressed in order to help the structure maintain enough rigidity to make it from start to finish. eh.
seems like a lot of its problems come from its being 'good writing'.
― j., Wednesday, 1 July 2020 03:49 (four years ago) link
That's fair imo.
― Feel a million filaments (Sund4r), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 03:58 (four years ago) link
Finally some people brave enough to take down the 1619 Project
― Muswell Hillbilly Elegy (President Keyes), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 13:04 (four years ago) link
I recently spent a few days with my 88 yr old father, whose house is full of copies of The Oldie, a monthly "humorous" UK magazine aimed at old people. It recently introduced a music column by Rachel Johnson, the socialite sister of the current Prime Minister. It is bad. I don't think it's available online, so you will have to take my word for the awfulness of her recent piece about The Clash and the teenage love for Sandinista she shared with Boris.
― fetter, Wednesday, 1 July 2020 15:26 (four years ago) link
https://www.theoldie.co.uk/article/feel-the-byrne
Is this my beautiful house? Is this my beautiful life? What are we doing here? Search me, guv! We’re all on a Road to Nowhere. Both sides of the Atlantic.
I was there. I’d fly almost anywhere – sorry, Greta – to see it again.
― Muswell Hillbilly Elegy (President Keyes), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 15:32 (four years ago) link
back when i was on-staff at the wire it shared a publisher with the oldie
― mark s, Wednesday, 1 July 2020 15:35 (four years ago) link
from a fawning interview with Chris Blackwell:
As I watch the gentle, tall, lean man chew his salad, composed with greens from his own farm, and patiently answer questions he must have replied to thousands of times, I can only sit back and marvel.He has led a charmed life, he has brought pleasure to millions, he lives a modest life on his island in the sun, and this, he says, is his secret to his success.‘Stay with what you love.’Ya mon. Irie.
He has led a charmed life, he has brought pleasure to millions, he lives a modest life on his island in the sun, and this, he says, is his secret to his success.
‘Stay with what you love.’
Ya mon. Irie.
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 15:36 (four years ago) link
HE LIVES A MODEST LIFE ON HIS ISLAND
it's a starter island
― Muswell Hillbilly Elegy (President Keyes), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 15:38 (four years ago) link
Ya mon.
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 15:40 (four years ago) link
https://donnacwrites.substack.com/p/on-jack-harlows-sudden-success
“You’re not always going to make fire, you have to go through making that weaker stuff before you’re gonna get the fire,” Jack told me in January 2018. At the time, the statement was a revelation for me, someone who is so set on perfection from jump. Only later would I realize every talk with Jack is an opportunity to learn about myself.
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Monday, 6 July 2020 22:03 (four years ago) link
"Years later, as I pulled back the hood of my robe, and put the challice to my lips, I wondered if maybe I was a little TOO devoted to him"
― I hear that sometimes Satan wants to defund police (Neanderthal), Monday, 6 July 2020 22:47 (four years ago) link
it should be noted that her muse there is this guyhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SFKb7JzSjaA
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Tuesday, 7 July 2020 04:24 (four years ago) link
haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
― shout-out to his family (DJP), Tuesday, 7 July 2020 11:30 (four years ago) link
How is Jack Harlow's hair allowed to be that bad
― JRN, Tuesday, 7 July 2020 15:54 (four years ago) link
the "what's poppin" instrumental is pretty nice; really can't listen to this guy tho
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Tuesday, 7 July 2020 16:08 (four years ago) link
The video ("what's poppin") in that "article" being my first (and hopefully only) exposure to Jack Harlow, I have to ask: is there a syncing problem on the video or is Jack unable to lip-sync in addition to being unable to rap?
― Tōne Locatelli Romano (PBKR), Tuesday, 7 July 2020 16:16 (four years ago) link
Lol, from the link:
I realized my take might not be so hot after all
― Tōne Locatelli Romano (PBKR), Tuesday, 7 July 2020 16:19 (four years ago) link
it was days after I had first seen the “Dark Knight” music video, and as I expressed in my lede, I was shocked no one was talking about the work.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pgKKY8bg3N8
this is some clown shit
― shout-out to his family (DJP), Tuesday, 7 July 2020 16:28 (four years ago) link
What is good about that? It has almost no musical content (the backing track); his rapping is fast and slightly more complex than other rappers his age, but he's still not saying anything worth hearing; the video just looks like a bunch of kids hanging out on a school night...this is literally worthless as art. The only thing worse than the song/video is the fact that someone somewhere thinks it's good.
― but also fuck you (unperson), Tuesday, 7 July 2020 16:45 (four years ago) link
what's good about that is that she found it first
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Tuesday, 7 July 2020 17:07 (four years ago) link
this is literally worthless as art
Someone please deconstruct this statement before ILM self-destructs.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 7 July 2020 17:10 (four years ago) link
sometimes you have an entire career of making that clown shit before you're gonna get the fire
― Muswell Hillbilly Elegy (President Keyes), Tuesday, 7 July 2020 17:29 (four years ago) link
375,215,674 WHATS POPPIN Fans Can’t Be Wrong
― No mean feat. DaBaby (breastcrawl), Tuesday, 7 July 2020 19:18 (four years ago) link
okay I read that whole thing and that is a lot of purple prose to drop about your crush from trigonometry
― shout-out to his family (DJP), Tuesday, 7 July 2020 20:07 (four years ago) link
waist like a cosine
― j., Tuesday, 7 July 2020 20:10 (four years ago) link
imagine if karmin had come to prominence in the substack era
― maura, Wednesday, 8 July 2020 16:45 (four years ago) link
you guys realize of course that this kid is gonna be doing his OG hologram tour in 2035 and we're gonna have to put up with crustbabies talking about where they were when they heard his first tik tok
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Wednesday, 8 July 2020 18:25 (four years ago) link
it was all a dreamI used to read Details magazine
― I hear that sometimes Satan wants to defund police (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 8 July 2020 23:04 (four years ago) link
i've only heard "whats poppin" but it's like a v normal run-of-the-mill song? not sure what's so earth-shatteringly terrible about it
it was posted in the rolling worst of 2020 thread basically immediately upon existing so perhaps i'm oblivious (yes i do realize he is a person of pallor getting played mostly at black radio, i mean other than that)
― dyl, Thursday, 9 July 2020 03:23 (four years ago) link
Try the lyrics
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Thursday, 9 July 2020 03:55 (four years ago) link
yes when i described the song as very average/typical i was clearly not including the lyrics in my assessment
― dyl, Thursday, 9 July 2020 04:21 (four years ago) link
https://www.vox.com/2020/8/14/21368137/wap-meaning-megan-thee-stallion-cardi-b
But Shakespeare, while he had an unending pandemic to create King Lear, never came close to creating this rhythmic flow of genius from Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion’s “WAP”:Put him on his knees, give him somethin’ to believe inNever lost a fight, but I’m lookin’ for a beatingIn the food chain, I’m the one that eat yaIf he ate my ass, he’s a bottom feederIn four lines, Megan Thee Stallion exalts the privilege of performing cunnilingus on her, before issuing a taunt, a guarantee of endurance from her vagina. Megan is a religious experience, a powerhouse, an apex predator, and a provider.
Put him on his knees, give him somethin’ to believe inNever lost a fight, but I’m lookin’ for a beatingIn the food chain, I’m the one that eat yaIf he ate my ass, he’s a bottom feeder
In four lines, Megan Thee Stallion exalts the privilege of performing cunnilingus on her, before issuing a taunt, a guarantee of endurance from her vagina. Megan is a religious experience, a powerhouse, an apex predator, and a provider.
In the same way Shakespeare used monarchy, kings, and two awful daughters in King Lear to talk about family, mental illness, and fear of old age, Cardi and Megan use hyperbolic, fantastic imagery — even herpetology, the harmless garter snake versus the king cobra — to tell a story about the basic, absolutely human feelings of desire and arousal.“It’s pretty simple,” Bianca Burke, a porn actress, told me. “When anything sexy is happening — like making out with a cute guy or when you replay last night’s hookup in your head during your 15-minute break at work, your pussy may get aroused, which can lead to it getting wet.”
“It’s pretty simple,” Bianca Burke, a porn actress, told me. “When anything sexy is happening — like making out with a cute guy or when you replay last night’s hookup in your head during your 15-minute break at work, your pussy may get aroused, which can lead to it getting wet.”
― treeship., Monday, 17 August 2020 07:21 (four years ago) link
vox is so terrible
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Monday, 17 August 2020 08:20 (four years ago) link
― magnet of the elk park (Sund4r), Monday, 17 August 2020 11:11 (four years ago) link
My husband read the first line to me last night and I was like 'please stop it hurts'
― healthy cocaine off perfect butts (the table is the table), Monday, 17 August 2020 12:04 (four years ago) link
so someone expanded the "goop on ya grinch" tweet into a whole article?
― turn the jawhatthefuckever on (One Eye Open), Monday, 17 August 2020 12:17 (four years ago) link
I mean, Marc Lamont Hill did a whole video about 'why WAP isn't problematic.' His intended audience was primarily more concervative Black people, from what I could tell, but the whole thing was really bizarre.
― healthy cocaine off perfect butts (the table is the table), Monday, 17 August 2020 12:53 (four years ago) link
https://imgur.com/a/qRejK2Q
― unpaid intern at the darvo institute (Simon H.), Monday, 17 August 2020 12:55 (four years ago) link
defending the song is fine. saying you like it because it affirms female desire is a sound argument. so too is the counter that it does so in a way that still panders to the male gaze. this vox article with the king lear angle, however, is wildly stupid.
― treeship., Monday, 17 August 2020 12:55 (four years ago) link
imagine shoehorning Lear into this dreck and not even quoting this part:
You cataracts and hurricanoes, spoutTill you have drench'd our steeples, drown'd the cocks!
― rob, Monday, 17 August 2020 13:19 (four years ago) link
― treeship., Monday, 17 August 2020 13:25 (four years ago) link
i take it back -- this piece is worthwhile, after all, as a set up for that post
― magnet of the elk park (Sund4r), Monday, 17 August 2020 13:32 (four years ago) link
One could see Shapiro’s comments as genuine concern; maybe he truly believes there’s a Sorcerer’s Apprentice situation going on with genitalia.
okay lol, article redeemed
― shout-out to his family (DJP), Monday, 17 August 2020 13:41 (four years ago) link
The fitchew, nor the soiled horse, goes to 'tWith a more riotous appetite.Down from the waist they are Centaurs,Though women all above
― neith moon (ledge), Monday, 17 August 2020 13:42 (four years ago) link
the vox piece is clearly a stunt, probably because of a dare, probably the result of a bored digression in a slack channel
― sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Monday, 17 August 2020 13:44 (four years ago) link
"hey bro, dare you to write a comparative analysis of king lear and wap, but like with the kind of shoddy reasoning and inflated claims you would see in a high school paper"
― treeship., Monday, 17 August 2020 13:48 (four years ago) link
namechecking "King Lear" once is not a comparative analysis
― shout-out to his family (DJP), Monday, 17 August 2020 13:49 (four years ago) link
what this piece presupposes is, what if it is?
― unpaid intern at the darvo institute (Simon H.), Monday, 17 August 2020 13:49 (four years ago) link
king lear is discussed throughout the article
― treeship., Monday, 17 August 2020 13:50 (four years ago) link
at least throughout the first couple paragraphs, which is all i read
― treeship., Monday, 17 August 2020 13:52 (four years ago) link
CORDELIA: I cannot heave my heart into my mouth
― all we are is durst in the wind (Ye Mad Puffin), Monday, 17 August 2020 13:54 (four years ago) link
Cordi B
― jmm, Monday, 17 August 2020 13:57 (four years ago) link
but Regan Thee Stallion
― rob, Monday, 17 August 2020 13:58 (four years ago) link
Omg y'all I'm dyyyyin over here lol
― healthy cocaine off perfect butts (the table is the table), Monday, 17 August 2020 14:47 (four years ago) link
thou borest thy ass on thy back o'erthe dirt
― pomenitul, Monday, 17 August 2020 14:52 (four years ago) link
shall I compare Thee to a Hot Girl Summer's day?
― No mean feat. DaBaby (breastcrawl), Monday, 17 August 2020 16:18 (four years ago) link
i thought you meant country matters
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Monday, 17 August 2020 17:03 (four years ago) link
once a week is ample
― poparse's eye (sic), Monday, 17 August 2020 17:57 (four years ago) link
i looked up the author and slack-dare pieces like this are his wheelhouse
― maura, Tuesday, 18 August 2020 11:48 (four years ago) link
“Megan Thee Stallion” sounds like a Billy Childish project
― Boring, Maryland, Tuesday, 18 August 2020 13:22 (four years ago) link
If, like me, you spent an unfortunate amount of your young adult life digging through the record stacks at thrift stores, you probably realized it at some point: Nobody actually listened to Jimi Hendrix in the 1960s. Setting a period picture montage of Vietnam protests and assassination to footage to "All Along the Watchtower" is Boomer Whig history. The crates don't lie: Most people were listening to Andy Williams and Herb Alpert, not whatever San Francisco Blueshammer crap you just bought in a deluxe vinyl reissue.
Until very recently the ghost of easy listening still haunted FM radio. But Train and Savage Garden were just neutered and spayed version of the same adolescent product you could hear on the top 40 station in the late '90s, not an attempt to do something radically different, much less "adult." The good news, though, is that nothing really stands in the way of an easy listening revival. (The only reason Cheek to Cheek didn't work is that Tony Bennett no longer has the pipes and Lady Gaga never will.)Spend a month alternating between old Angel pressings of Beethoven symphonies and Perry Como. I bet you will never want to hear an overdriven guitar again.
Spend a month alternating between old Angel pressings of Beethoven symphonies and Perry Como. I bet you will never want to hear an overdriven guitar again.
https://theweek.com/articles/827454/strange-death-easy-listening
Someone needs to tell this guy about the Easy Listening revival that happened around twenty-five years ago, it'd blow his mind.
― Brainless Addlepated Timid Muddleheaded Awful No-Account (Pheeel), Tuesday, 18 August 2020 13:46 (four years ago) link
That was more of a hipster thing, though, right? In the 80s, we still had radio stations that played this stuff. Sitcom themes were sung by Johnny Mathis instead of Barenaked Ladies. "Feelings" was a song that everyone knew. Someone who wants that world back is still waiting. Even the adult contemporary chart is now topped by people like Maroon 5 and Post Malone; there's not even a Celine Dion. (Maybe Adele??)
― magnet of the elk park (Sund4r), Tuesday, 18 August 2020 14:30 (four years ago) link
That said, I have a bunch of these records and I still prefer Hendrix (who I don't think was ever sold to me as 'what everyone listened to in the 60s').
― magnet of the elk park (Sund4r), Tuesday, 18 August 2020 14:32 (four years ago) link
That opening is stupid though. Obviously "nobody listened to Hendrix" is hyperbole, which fine I'm not that pedantic, but then saying it's anachronistic to play it over footage of protestors, presumably among the small minority of people who maybe actually did listen to Jimi (unless dude has never seen Woodstock?), makes you seem like a bullshitter in the Frankfurt sense.
― rob, Tuesday, 18 August 2020 14:34 (four years ago) link
Oh yeah, not saying the article is any good. Do non-Nrx people talk about 'Whig history' btw?
― magnet of the elk park (Sund4r), Tuesday, 18 August 2020 14:38 (four years ago) link
I've never heard that phrase.
― Get your filthy hands off my asp (morrisp), Tuesday, 18 August 2020 14:41 (four years ago) link
what is NRX? In my line of work "Whig history" is definitely something people talk about.
― Joey Corona (Euler), Tuesday, 18 August 2020 14:43 (four years ago) link
Whig history is a standard designation in historiography ime
― rob, Tuesday, 18 August 2020 14:43 (four years ago) link
NRX = dark enlightenment
― rob, Tuesday, 18 August 2020 14:44 (four years ago) link
i.e., neo-reactionary
(I am also today literally working on Whig history, as in, history of the Whigs (well, of one prominent Whig in particularly, and of his Whigness, fwiw))
― Joey Corona (Euler), Tuesday, 18 August 2020 14:44 (four years ago) link
dark enlightenment? think I will stay away.
― Joey Corona (Euler), Tuesday, 18 August 2020 14:45 (four years ago) link
I feel like Mordy started a thread on it at some point, but maybe it was just a strand within the alt-right one?
― rob, Tuesday, 18 August 2020 14:48 (four years ago) link
yeah I don't touch that stuff
― Joey Corona (Euler), Tuesday, 18 August 2020 14:49 (four years ago) link
I also don't get the premise of the crate-digging revelation. Maybe he's not finding a lot of Hendrix records because everyone's hanging onto them(?)
― Get your filthy hands off my asp (morrisp), Tuesday, 18 August 2020 14:51 (four years ago) link
Oh cool, thanks, genuinely didn't know it was a mainstream historical term. Yeah, you're fine staying away from NRx.
― magnet of the elk park (Sund4r), Tuesday, 18 August 2020 14:58 (four years ago) link
yeah I'm not a chart nerd, but this whole list seems like a solid refutation of the claim: https://www.billboard.com/charts/hot-100/1968-10-19
― rob, Tuesday, 18 August 2020 15:00 (four years ago) link
It's a shame about Land amidst other NRx stuff, because some of his earlier thought is really insightful. He allowed me to feel like I really understood Kant for the first time. The turn toward fascism, while not totally surprising in retrospect, is very disappointing.
― healthy cocaine off perfect butts (the table is the table), Tuesday, 18 August 2020 15:13 (four years ago) link
https://www.univ.ox.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/The-Whig-Interpretation-of-History-300x460.jpg
― budo jeru, Tuesday, 18 August 2020 17:54 (four years ago) link
"whig interpretation of history" is absolutely a milquetoast idea in the political analysis history, not something invented by or a gateway drug for the nrx
this is the classic text: https://cdn.waterstones.com/bookjackets/large/9780/4137/9780413772701.jpg
― mark s, Tuesday, 18 August 2020 18:07 (four years ago) link
correct
― budo jeru, Tuesday, 18 August 2020 18:11 (four years ago) link
Yeah, completely believe it, not contesting that at all. Just a testament to my ignorance of political history scholarship that I came across it in the context of NRx guys who wanted to redpill the Whig version of history.
― magnet of the elk park (Sund4r), Tuesday, 18 August 2020 18:13 (four years ago) link
which tbf is what the easy listening guy wants to do
― magnet of the elk park (Sund4r), Tuesday, 18 August 2020 18:21 (four years ago) link
it's not actually a very good way to think about history!
ps i am not a nazi
― mark s, Tuesday, 18 August 2020 18:32 (four years ago) link
mark s confirmed nazi, just as I suspected.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 18 August 2020 18:34 (four years ago) link
lots of questions already answered by mark s’s “i am not a nazi” t-shirt
― solo scampito (mh), Tuesday, 18 August 2020 18:46 (four years ago) link
mark s is the lead singer of Laibach.
― pomenitul, Tuesday, 18 August 2020 18:47 (four years ago) link
eighteen thirty four, i took the whig party to war,
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 18 August 2020 18:53 (four years ago) link
https://www.theringer.com/music/2020/10/1/21494313/radiohead-best-songs-ranked
Radiohead is immune to hyperbole. Many will say “Radiohead is the soundtrack to my life,” and those people aren’t wrong. Others will say “Radiohead is so boring. I don’t get it,” like Kid Rock did in 2001, and … well, who is going to argue Radiohead with the guy who wrote “Bawitdaba”? The fact is Radiohead is Radiohead, existing in its own musical world. Similar to predecessors like the Beatles, Led Zeppelin, and R.E.M., Radiohead has legions of fans, and endless cycles of rereleased, remastered, and reappraised albums. It’s with good reason. For the past 25 years, these five creeps have defined alternative rock.
The fact is Radiohead is Radiohead
― Lavator Shemmelpennick, Thursday, 1 October 2020 17:06 (four years ago) link
For the past 25 years, these five creeps have defined alternative rock.
― pomenitul, Thursday, 1 October 2020 17:14 (four years ago) link
Christian suburbanites
― healthy cocaine off perfect butts (the table is the table), Thursday, 1 October 2020 17:17 (four years ago) link
where is the lie???
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 1 October 2020 17:21 (four years ago) link
… well, who is going to argue Radiohead with the guy who wrote “Bawitdaba”?
― pomenitul, Thursday, 1 October 2020 17:22 (four years ago) link
Furthermore, I am me.
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 1 October 2020 17:22 (four years ago) link
Anticipation for the OK Computer follow-up built a comparable head of buzz to Britney Spears doing it again, Eminem threatening moms, and Mystikal yelling, “Shake ya ass, but watch yourself.”
― soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 1 October 2020 17:23 (four years ago) link
Just saw the author's name. What if this is all a ploy by the similarly named Icelandic band of Ágætis byrjun fame to dislodge their direct competitors in the annals?
― pomenitul, Thursday, 1 October 2020 17:25 (four years ago) link
https://www.cjnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/Burning-Bush-Moses-Ten-Commandments-Movie.jpg
Radiohead is that Radiohead is
― mookieproof, Thursday, 1 October 2020 17:25 (four years ago) link
head of buzz to Britney Spears
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Thursday, 1 October 2020 17:27 (four years ago) link
gonna start a radiohead / cure mashup cover band and call it "these five imaginary creeps." we need a singer and a bass player, who's in?
― Totally different head. Totally. (Austin), Thursday, 1 October 2020 17:30 (four years ago) link
He uses the same, um, rhetorical device just a few paragraphs later
Radiohead released their seventh album straight to fans, famously using a pay-what-you-want model. The move pissed off Trent Reznor, who then realized he was Trent Reznor and used a similar tactic for his next two Nine Inch Nails albums.
― Lavator Shemmelpennick, Thursday, 1 October 2020 17:37 (four years ago) link
Similar to predecessors like the Beatles, Led Zeppelin, and R.E.M.,
Where "predecessors" = "groups of white dudes who released records in the 20th Century," I guess?
Because I am not sure in what precise ways Radiohead is the successor to those bands.
And, if the criterion is simply "people who made music before Radiohead did," well, that's a pretty broad category that would, presumably, also include Mozart, Percy Faith, and GWAR.
― zombeekeeper (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 1 October 2020 17:46 (four years ago) link
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/mathonan/radiohead-kid-a-20th-anniversary
As you might expect, because I am a white Gen X’er bro in my late forties who was not cool enough to be familiar with Aphex Twin but was hip enough to shit all over U2, I really like Radiohead’s Kid A — which came out 20 years ago this week.It’s easy to forget just how good things seemed back in October 2000. The prevailing mood was one of optimism. The Cold War was over. The Supreme Court had not yet handed a contested election to George W. Bush. The 9/11 attacks were a year away. Climate change still seemed like a distant concern. The economy was in the midst of the dot-com boom/bubble. The internet was going to bring us all together in a marketplace of ideas, make the world a better place. Handjobs all around. And in the middle of all that, Radiohead rolled out Kid A.(...)The planet is dying, there’s a pandemic that’s killed a million people and counting, cops are still killing Black people, the country is being rent apart by racism and hate, it’s red state versus blue state, California is literally on fire, and did you even see the fucking debate? Did you see it? Jesus. Talk about “Idioteque.”
It’s easy to forget just how good things seemed back in October 2000. The prevailing mood was one of optimism. The Cold War was over. The Supreme Court had not yet handed a contested election to George W. Bush. The 9/11 attacks were a year away. Climate change still seemed like a distant concern. The economy was in the midst of the dot-com boom/bubble. The internet was going to bring us all together in a marketplace of ideas, make the world a better place. Handjobs all around. And in the middle of all that, Radiohead rolled out Kid A.
(...)
The planet is dying, there’s a pandemic that’s killed a million people and counting, cops are still killing Black people, the country is being rent apart by racism and hate, it’s red state versus blue state, California is literally on fire, and did you even see the fucking debate? Did you see it? Jesus. Talk about “Idioteque.”
― I Hate the Aedes (morrisp), Friday, 2 October 2020 00:40 (four years ago) link
Radiohead’s Kid A — which came out 20 years ago this week
just staring at this realizing I’ve lived more post-Kid A than pre-Kid A life and drafting my thinkpiece on what that means
― mh, Friday, 2 October 2020 00:51 (four years ago) link
not cool enough to be familiar with Aphex Twin but was hip enough to shit all over U2
― sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Friday, 2 October 2020 00:58 (four years ago) link
He's the "BuzzFeed News San Francisco Bureau Chief"
― I Hate the Aedes (morrisp), Friday, 2 October 2020 01:03 (four years ago) link
I’ve been a chief, this guy ain’t no chief of nothin
― sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Friday, 2 October 2020 01:10 (four years ago) link
Tombot knew Jack Kennedy. Tomboy served with Jack Kennedy.
― zombeekeeper (Ye Mad Puffin), Friday, 2 October 2020 01:12 (four years ago) link
Crud, Tombot, sorry
― zombeekeeper (Ye Mad Puffin), Friday, 2 October 2020 01:13 (four years ago) link
It’s easy to forget just how good things seemed back in October 2000. The prevailing mood was one of optimism.
Ha ha what the fuck
― Muswell Hillbilly Elegy (President Keyes), Friday, 2 October 2020 02:40 (four years ago) link
i remember my October 2000 "Everything's Going Great!" party well
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Friday, 2 October 2020 03:27 (four years ago) link
Hahahaha @ “The Cold War was over”
That happened like a decade earlier. You might as well say people were excited about Madchester bands
― Thoia Thoing, Maryland (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 2 October 2020 04:15 (four years ago) link
In addition to his music career, Van Halen will forever be remembered by fans for his contributions to pop culture and film, including cameos in series such as Frasier and Two and a Half Men and being one of the titular characters’ driving forces in Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure.
― Frozen CD, Wednesday, 7 October 2020 03:25 (four years ago) link
― in twelve parts (lamonti), Wednesday, 7 October 2020 07:32 (four years ago) link
was that written by billy eilish?
Entirely correct though.
― chap, Wednesday, 7 October 2020 21:01 (four years ago) link
From Scaruffi
(I capitalized all the song titles because Autechre's lower-case habit is misleading. It may lead to confuse the music with the design: the lower-case titles are part of the design, and the design has indeed remained high-class; but that doesn't translate into an appreciation of the music, although one could claim that the "content" includes both the design and the music).
Yes, I understand things better now that the titles are capitalized!
― Pataphysician, Friday, 16 October 2020 03:12 (four years ago) link
May 5, 2011By Pat Prince
Phil 'Fang' Volk, known as the spirited bass player for Paul Revere & The Raiders, has independently released a cover of Bob Dylan's enormously popular hit "The Times They Are a-Changin'" as a single.
The rendition is electric and hard-driving (what else would you expect from a rock 'n' roll bassist?) as the times we now live in. Volk adds a bit of 2011 to a timeless classic. Nothing can beat the Dylan original, but this energetic take adds to a message with a raw John Mellencamp-ish flair.
With this release, Volk wanted to make a statement about, what he calls, a "planet in transition."
As notes to the single, Volk writes "A SONG FOR A WORLD IN TURMOIL. Never before has humanity teetered with such instability, facing a future with incredible fear & uncertainty." Volk sees this as a "battle cry" for all those who stand ready to see things change for the better. Coincidentally, Volk released the CD on May 1, the same day that Osama Bin Laden, a proponent of such fear, was declared dead.
― down like 6:30 (morrisp), Wednesday, 18 November 2020 21:05 (four years ago) link
https://medium.com/@joshuacopperman1/what-your-favorite-album-of-2020-says-about-you-930285dad454
― pomenitul, Thursday, 3 December 2020 20:56 (four years ago) link
Oranssi Pazuzu: you have prepared yourself for the rise of the Master and shall welcome him with open arms
― imago, Thursday, 3 December 2020 21:01 (four years ago) link
https://beatsperminute.com/album-review-playboi-carti-whole-lotta-red/
― ufo, Friday, 8 January 2021 08:33 (four years ago) link
that Carti review in interminable while providing little actual content
― husked, tonal wails (irrational), Friday, 8 January 2021 15:44 (four years ago) link
There are valid arguments to be made for Autotune. They are not found here: https://popternative.com/music/getting-rid-of-the-stigma-that-surrounds-autotune/
― to party with our demons (Sund4r), Sunday, 21 February 2021 22:36 (four years ago) link
Aside from the utter confusion about music history, every argument in that article goes exactly against the thesis statement.
― Halfway there but for you, Sunday, 21 February 2021 23:41 (four years ago) link
Yeah, it's so incoherent I'm almost not sure how to even start arguing against it.
― to party with our demons (Sund4r), Monday, 22 February 2021 02:42 (four years ago) link
The moments of this have probably gone by, but this is nevertheless the stupidest review I've seen in years.
https://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/st-vincent-daddys-home/
It presents the point of the whole fucking album as arguing for childlessness or something. Peyton Thomas gives this argument 6.7.
― Eyeball Kicks, Saturday, 29 May 2021 02:00 (three years ago) link
It’s odd, for example, that two songs on the album refer to calling “the cops,” or 911, in light of the past year’s uprisings against police brutality.
Docked points for snitching
― Muswell Hillbilly Elegy (President Keyes), Saturday, 29 May 2021 17:25 (three years ago) link
Calling 911 because you have a medical emergency makes you a Karen
― bruce spr!ngisH3r3 (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 29 May 2021 17:42 (three years ago) link
[Verse 1]9-1-1 (9-1-1, what's your emergency?)I'm in love (I see, so how can I help you?)
Wow, do better, St. Vincent
― bruce spr!ngisH3r3 (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 29 May 2021 17:49 (three years ago) link
Fwiw, here’s the other lyric being referenced:
HelloDo you know where you are?You've been out coldWe almost called the copsDon't get upCan you count to ten?Oh, boy, you're so lucky we found you when we did
― like a d4mn sociopath! (morrisp), Saturday, 29 May 2021 17:54 (three years ago) link
scandalous
― Paul Ponzi, Saturday, 29 May 2021 20:22 (three years ago) link
The writer’s oeuvre is full of bangers:
The audible crosswalk signals Jordan samples were developed to make life easier for visually impaired pedestrians. But they benefit everyone, adding clarity, joy, and a little music to busy urban journeys. (Recently, while I was waiting at an intersection, a mechanical voice pronounced “Wait”; I turned to my boyfriend and sang, “They don’t love you like I love you.”)
― Muswell Hillbilly Elegy (President Keyes), Saturday, 29 May 2021 23:36 (three years ago) link
I like that
― bobo honkin' slobo babe (sic), Saturday, 29 May 2021 23:41 (three years ago) link
It kind of strikes me as the NPR/podcast voice turned to music criticism
― Muswell Hillbilly Elegy (President Keyes), Saturday, 29 May 2021 23:48 (three years ago) link
I thought his Zooropa piece was good (even if not quite my bag).
― like a d4mn sociopath! (morrisp), Sunday, 30 May 2021 00:39 (three years ago) link
Not going to link to The Federalist for obvious reasons, but the 22 year-old daughter of Rachel from The Real World: San Fransisco and Sean from The Real World: Boston wrote an unresearched, openly racist hit piece about country artist Mickey Guyton. Among her claims is that corporate country radio is "shoving Guyton down listeners throats"... despite the fact that Guyton's had exactly one top 40 hit at country radio, back in 2015.
― jon_oh, Monday, 21 June 2021 12:51 (three years ago) link
Not the worst piece of music writing ever I guess, but should the Guardian really be publishing these wide-eyed fanzine-level scribblings?
― yellow magic orchestral manoeuvres in the park (Matt #2), Saturday, 24 July 2021 20:41 (three years ago) link
if you say "not the worst" and also don't add a link, don't expect me to go to the Guardian to sniff around to find out wtf you're talking about
― self-clowning oven (Murgatroid), Saturday, 24 July 2021 21:48 (three years ago) link
lol I forgot the important bit, this is what the fuck I'm talking about
https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2021/jul/24/latitude-festival-2021-40000-party-people-good-vibes-and-not-a-mask-in-sight
― yellow magic orchestral manoeuvres in the park (Matt #2), Saturday, 24 July 2021 22:26 (three years ago) link
This doesn't even really count as "music writing" or even "writing," (may even be algorithm generated) but I had to put it somewherehttps://www.tvguidetime.com/singer/billy-strings-height-age-who-girlfriend-biography-wiki-net-worth-18716.html
Billy String is a well known artist and musician from Michigan. The white person is one of the best nation vocalists in the United States in the present date. In 2017, Rolling Stone highlighted Billy Strings in the rundown of the ‘Main 10 Country Singers’. Brought up in a modest community in Michigan, Billy was profoundly impacted by down home music. He picked his first guitar while he was only 4 years of age.
Discover some intriguing realities about the nation performer, Billy Strings here.
Billy Strings is a famous nation performer, vocalist, and lyricist from the United States. He is a tremendous aficionado of blue grass music and grew up tuning in to jazz tunes. In addition, Billy is likewise a guitarist.
Billy received music as his full-time calling subsequent to dropping out of secondary school. He moved to Traverse City during his high school years, where he found a guide in veteran performer Don Julin.
Billy delivered his introduction LP named Turmoil and Tinfoil on September 22, 2016.
Name Billy StringsBirthday October 3Age 27 years oldGender MaleHeight 5 feet & 9 inchWeight 62 kgNationality AmericanEthnicity WhiteProfession Singer/ SongwriterNet Worth $4 millionMarried/Single SingleInstagram billystringsTwitter @bstrings1Youtube Billy StringsBorn in the year 1992, Strings praises his birthday on the third of October. He is at present 27 years of age. His sun sign is Libra.
Billy Strings was born in Michigan, the United States, so he is an American national. His ethnicity is white.
Billy was raised by his mom and step-father. His natural dad wasn’t close to him since he was a kid. Billy adores his stepfather Terry Barber. Terry is a beginner country picker.
The white person stands 5 feet and 9 inches tall. Additionally, he weighs 62 kg. His hair shading is earthy colored and has dim hued eyes.
Billy Strings is a school drop out. His genuine name is William Apostol.
As an expert vocalist for a couple of years at this point, Billy may have aggregated better than average total assets. Shockingly, the insights regarding his profit and total assets are not distributed.
You can follow Billy Strings on Instagram and Twitter.
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Sunday, 1 August 2021 03:04 (three years ago) link
That sounds (poorly) translated from another language
― Paul Ponzi, Sunday, 1 August 2021 09:03 (three years ago) link
computer-translated probably, “nation” for “country” and “beginner” for “amateur” are giveaways
― tean mean poleand cheaseang theas means hamseak feasts (breastcrawl), Sunday, 1 August 2021 10:08 (three years ago) link
computer suspiciously interested in ethnicity, but that's how they're all programmed amirite
― mark s, Sunday, 1 August 2021 11:14 (three years ago) link
The algorithm missed that his BMI works out as impressive 20.2 .
― Luna Schlosser, Sunday, 1 August 2021 13:23 (three years ago) link
I mean: https://www.theverge.com/2016/3/24/11297050/tay-microsoft-chatbot-racist
― pomenitul, Sunday, 1 August 2021 14:11 (three years ago) link
Billy Strings beginner with dick. Billy String big house Traverse City nation.
― heyy nineteen, that's john belushi (the table is the table), Tuesday, 3 August 2021 13:53 (three years ago) link
Tired of writers, all writers, using the term "banger."
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 3 August 2021 16:35 (three years ago) link
Also, "slaps," "slays," "bop."
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 9 August 2021 18:56 (three years ago) link
Hear hear. They should just use "sausage."
― biz markie post malone (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 10 August 2021 10:44 (three years ago) link
all these words are entirely fine, plz don't let this never-exactly-great thread decline into the always awful "words and phrases" thread
― mark s, Tuesday, 10 August 2021 11:09 (three years ago) link
I'd be cool with reviews using "sausage."
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 10 August 2021 13:04 (three years ago) link
you want people to write reviews with their penis?
― there's too much fucking shit on me (Neanderthal), Tuesday, 10 August 2021 13:53 (three years ago) link
he said sausage, not sauseeg.
― peace, man, Tuesday, 10 August 2021 14:30 (three years ago) link
My sausage slaps!
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 10 August 2021 14:31 (three years ago) link
mine's a banger
― Muswell Hillbilly Elegy (President Keyes), Tuesday, 10 August 2021 14:34 (three years ago) link
bangers 'n' smash
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 10 August 2021 14:35 (three years ago) link
Sausage Slaps is a great name for a band.
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 10 August 2021 14:36 (three years ago) link
Don’t know where to put this, but it’s amusing to me that this article refers to Megan Thee Stallion as “Stallion” on second reference.
― Shallot Shortage 2021 (morrisp), Wednesday, 25 August 2021 04:03 (three years ago) link
lol that is very funny.
― heyy nineteen, that's john belushi (the table is the table), Sunday, 29 August 2021 21:13 (three years ago) link
"Mr Vert"
― think “Gypsy-Pixie” and misspelled. (We are a white family.) (forksclovetofu), Sunday, 29 August 2021 22:50 (three years ago) link
Film not music but please enjoy this sentence with me
"Despite the film’s compact running time of just more than 80 minutes, some of these scenes drag out and never quite arrive at a level of depth and originality a filmmaker like Miranda July, whose distinct style the film brings to mind, possesses with her one-of-a-kind voice."
https://variety.com/2021/film/reviews/how-it-ends-review-1234896131/
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Sunday, 5 September 2021 17:00 (three years ago) link
OOf, that's bad.
― Kind regards, Anus (the table is the table), Tuesday, 7 September 2021 18:51 (three years ago) link
that distinctive style is possessing a compact running time
― think “Gypsy-Pixie” and misspelled. (We are a white family.) (forksclovetofu), Wednesday, 8 September 2021 19:06 (three years ago) link
something about the combination of arguments, bullshit postulates and crap writing makes this one specialhttps://www.slantmagazine.com/music/the-pixies-trompe-le-monde-retrospective-review/
― assert (matttkkkk), Friday, 24 September 2021 02:22 (three years ago) link
https://californianewstimes.com/r-kelly-conviction-will-this-be-musics-metoo-moment/544694/
I'm guessing this is some translation problem but wow:
“Executives are paralyzed. They’re burying their heads in the sand,” said Drew Dixon, a former A & R executive who raped music tycoon Russell Simmons. “The idea that this dysfunctional culture is needed to create the magic of hit records is a crackdown.”
Former A & R executive Drew Dixon, who raped music tycoon Russell Simmons, denies him © Getty / Equality Now
Dixon in his early twenties got a dream job. A Def Jam Recordings scout talent who worked with artists such as Notorious BIG, she left the company after Simmons claimed to have been raped. She will eventually leave the industry altogether. Simmons denied Dixon’s allegations, stating that all his relationships had reached an agreement.
― Muswell Hillbilly Elegy (President Keyes), Wednesday, 6 October 2021 18:26 (three years ago) link
What the fuck is California News Times?
― peace, man, Wednesday, 6 October 2021 18:31 (three years ago) link
I think that's an AI bot, fam
― licorice in the front, pizza in the rear (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 6 October 2021 18:44 (three years ago) link
most of these sites are bad at getting a lot of search clout but some sneak into google news or whatever. they just scrape popular headlines, grab some text from existing stories, and then use a halfassed completion engine to generate vaguely English-looking text in order to get clicks
― mh, Wednesday, 6 October 2021 19:47 (three years ago) link
cool world
― alpine static, Wednesday, 6 October 2021 21:39 (three years ago) link
there’s always been a lot of noise in the machine
― mh, Wednesday, 6 October 2021 23:09 (three years ago) link
are you saying there was as much noise in the machine, say, 50 or 100 years ago as there is today?
― alpine static, Thursday, 7 October 2021 05:46 (three years ago) link
let me rephrase: are you saying today's noise is comparable to the noise 50 or 100 years ago?
static up in those hills
― mh, Thursday, 7 October 2021 17:57 (three years ago) link
https://www.hometownsource.com/morrison_county_record/opinion/west-what-is-the-dumbest-song-ever/article_4f8dc4da-f0b9-11eb-b36c-3f39e888ef68.html
― juristic person (morrisp), Sunday, 10 October 2021 04:12 (three years ago) link
If that is bad music writing, I don't want to see good.
― Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Sunday, 10 October 2021 04:20 (three years ago) link
More reviews of 60-year-old novelty songs by retired editors of Minnesota community papers plz
― Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Sunday, 10 October 2021 04:21 (three years ago) link
Perhaps you will enjoy the follow-up column.
― juristic person (morrisp), Sunday, 10 October 2021 04:29 (three years ago) link
The shout-out to “critical race theory” really situates the dude in a milieu.
― New Zealand, with that hottie (hardcore dilettante), Sunday, 10 October 2021 05:45 (three years ago) link
I would happily dance to a song called "Critical Race Theory" (I'm imagining Gang of Four styles) but I respect the views of those who would find it difficult.
― Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Sunday, 10 October 2021 12:18 (three years ago) link
With 10 minutes and a notepad, I could probably work up a critical race theory parody of Supertramp's "Logical Song."
― Extinct Namibian shrub genus: Var. (Ye Mad Puffin), Sunday, 10 October 2021 14:40 (three years ago) link
I believe they're still accepting submissions for the ilx comp.
― Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Sunday, 10 October 2021 15:10 (three years ago) link
Maybe comp 9 should be devoted to dancing to critical race theory?
― Sequel to Sadness (Sund4r), Sunday, 10 October 2021 15:11 (three years ago) link
Bonded by a shared love of Eighties hardcore and Nineties hip-hop, the creators of @boredapeyc make more than NFTs— they built an immersive, fantastical world. See how Bored Ape Yacht Club took over the internet, and how the founders envision their future. https://t.co/708BlWQGEq pic.twitter.com/XQ00Ijmjsp— Rolling Stone (@RollingStone) November 1, 2021
― ufo, Tuesday, 2 November 2021 00:58 (three years ago) link
‘Are we the Beastie Boys of NFTs?”
― Chappies banging dustbin lids together (President Keyes), Tuesday, 2 November 2021 01:30 (three years ago) link
“Bored Ape Yacht Club,” folks
― Legalize Suburban Benches (Raymond Cummings), Tuesday, 2 November 2021 01:39 (three years ago) link
There is a universe in which they have taken over the internet apparently
― Chappies banging dustbin lids together (President Keyes), Tuesday, 2 November 2021 02:52 (three years ago) link
Any universe I’m welcome to
― Exploding Plastic Bertrand (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 2 November 2021 03:09 (three years ago) link
If you like Gorillaz as much as Toad the Wet Sprocket, then you’ll love…
― Exploding Plastic Bertrand (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 2 November 2021 03:12 (three years ago) link
trashbat.co.ck
― A Pile of Ants (Boring, Maryland), Tuesday, 2 November 2021 14:54 (three years ago) link
Immersive! Fantastical! Morally Corrupt!
― When Young Sheldon began to rap (forksclovetofu), Saturday, 6 November 2021 06:34 (three years ago) link
It's broadcast media, so I don't know whether it qualifies for this thread, but there is a current BBC series on 80s music written and presented by GQ editor and biographer of David Cameron Dylan Jones that is just terrible.
― fetter, Saturday, 6 November 2021 09:05 (three years ago) link
So I guess the Express is some kind of britisher garbagepaper, but even our garbagepapers are better than this:
https://www.express.co.uk/celebrity-news/1530552/Richard-Cole-dead-death-Led-Zeppelin-tour-manager-Robert-Plant-instagram-tribute-news
Richard Cole dead: Led Zeppelin tour manager dies as Robert Plant praises his 'bravery'RICHARD COLE, former Led Zeppelin tour manager, has died aged 75.By MELANIE KAIDAN17:17, Thu, Dec 2, 2021 | UPDATED: 17:53, Thu, Dec 2, 2021
Richard Cole, best known for his work as Led Zeppelin’s tour manager, has died aged 75, one month before his birthday. The London-born music manager worked with legendary rock band Led Zeppelin from 1968 to 1980.
He also worked with other music giants including Eric Clapton, Black Sabbath, Lita Ford, and Ozzy Osbourne.
Led Zeppelin’s lead singer and lyricist, Robert Plant, paid an emotional tribute to his late tour manager:
In view of his 615,000 Instagram followers, the singer referred to Richard as “brave to the end”.
He wrote: “Farewell Ricardo...
“Sadly no more tall tales... brave to the end.”
The candid caption was accompanied by a photograph of the pair laughing.
Robert received an outpouring of messages of support from fans on the social media platform.
_sha_nizzle typed: “Very sorry to read this..
“May he rest in peace.”
groupieplant added: “It can't be!
“I do not believe.”
_bella_jenn_ said: “Condolences for your loss. R.I.P. Richard”
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Friday, 3 December 2021 13:07 (three years ago) link
That's it. That's the article.
Our nation turns its lonely eyes to _sha_nizzle
― tone-loki (Ye Mad Puffin), Friday, 3 December 2021 13:09 (three years ago) link
groupieplant
― who's afraid of adrian woolfe? (Bananaman Begins), Friday, 3 December 2021 15:22 (three years ago) link
.
― Goofy the Grifter (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 3 December 2021 15:53 (three years ago) link
"hope he's on the 'stairway to heaven'" added _zep_mom_9456
― Chappies banging dustbin lids together (President Keyes), Friday, 3 December 2021 16:14 (three years ago) link
Heh
― Goofy the Grifter (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 3 December 2021 18:09 (three years ago) link
Surprised Plant only has 615,000 Instagram followers (seems low)
― katebishopfan616 (morrisp), Friday, 3 December 2021 18:10 (three years ago) link
surprised he has that many! i bet whatever the led zep insta is has far more
― When Young Sheldon began to rap (forksclovetofu), Friday, 3 December 2021 18:28 (three years ago) link
Zep has 1.4 million followers. But does Plant post a lot? Pete Townshend only has just under 68,000 Instagram followers, but rarely posts more than once every few months. (But he has the best handle: @yaggerdang)
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Friday, 3 December 2021 18:33 (three years ago) link
Hot off the heels of her successful comeback album, I'm in Love, Evelyn "Champagne" King was in her commercial prime when Get Loose hit stores in 1982. One of the earliest R&B/funk female vocalists to use the music video medium (for 1981's "I'm in Love"), she was frequently on airwaves in the early '80s with songs found here like "Love Come Down" and "Betcha She Don't Love You." The romantic lyrics and celestial keyboard layerings against a steady funk beat on "Love Come Down" were expertly layed down by Kashif, who would become a prominent R&B producer and artist in his own right. His stamp is also on many of the album's other cuts, though Morrie Brown is the album's actual producer. "Betcha" is another unique number -- a down-paced dancefloor ditty with a rock-friendly chorus and vocal arrangement. Meanwhile the title track is a colorful up-tempo number that hearkens back slightly to 1977's "Shame." Equally appealing are the refined "Back to Love" and "I'm Just Warmin' Up," the album's soothing closer. King sounds fresh and stylish throughout, making Get Loose one of her strongest efforts.
layed
(the review is fine btw. just . . . "layed" lol)
― please don't refer to me as (Austin), Tuesday, 7 December 2021 15:50 (three years ago) link
this song fucks... LITERALLY
― talkin' about his flat tire (DJP), Tuesday, 7 December 2021 18:34 (three years ago) link
expertly even
― please don't refer to me as (Austin), Tuesday, 7 December 2021 22:51 (three years ago) link
John McWhorter bravely takes on the cultural elites of 1920s Vienna: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/26/opinion/classical-music.html
― And liberty she pirouette (Sund4r), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 13:10 (two years ago) link
"Audiences have resisted Dvorak’s call for American classical music to flourish based on our own homegrown substrate, Native American and, especially, Black music" Guess how many Native American or Black composers he goes on to at least name-check:— Will Mason (@willmasonmusic) April 26, 2022
― And liberty she pirouette (Sund4r), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 13:19 (two years ago) link
That was horrible, my god.
― we need outrage! we need dicks!! (the table is the table), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 18:08 (two years ago) link
Anyone can Op-Ed
― Eric B. Mash Up the Resident (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 18:23 (two years ago) link
Got all I needed from Darcy James Argue’s tweet.
Taste aside, it's very weird for a few reasons: he seems to associate all 'ugly' classical music with the 12-tone method, which is just one specific system of pitch organization and not a terribly fashionable one, nor even the basis of all atonal music. He writes as if 12-tone music enjoys some kind of hegemony in classical music venues, unsupported by any evidence other than something he sang in choir 30 years ago, which is so far removed from the reality of concert programming in the US as to seem insane. He uses an approx 70yo quote from Boulez, ignoring Boulez's own subsequent development, which includes conducting a lot of the standard orchestral repertoire. And there is a total refusal to even engage with the intentions of 'ugly' music composers, just assuming some objective and highly reactionary standard of beauty. Linking Schoenberg's Variations, hardly an incomprehensible piece, and saying "hardly the William Tell Overture" is mind-boggling.
― And liberty she pirouette (Sund4r), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 18:49 (two years ago) link
Even "Native American and Black music", to which he pays no more than lip service, is not always 'beautiful' in the same way as the William Tell Overture.
― And liberty she pirouette (Sund4r), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 19:25 (two years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ucTg6rZJCu4
― Eric B. Mash Up the Resident (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 19:35 (two years ago) link
"I like pretty classical! And show tunes!" would have been the basis for a perfectly fine essay all on its own if he didn't have to build himself a strawman to beat up first. Hell, he could have gone in a really interesting direction by talking about how ideas pioneered by serialists and other mid-century avant-gardists were borrowed by Hollywood for the soundtracks to sci-fi and horror movies. But no, he had to make the dumbest, knee-jerk, shorthand rhetorical leaps available, ones that just make him seem like he hasn't listened to any forward-looking composed music made since the 1950s. I'd love to sit him down with some of Anna Thorvaldsdottir's CDs, for example. That shit is weird, forbidding, and beautiful, but having to think about it would probably break his brain.
― but also fuck you (unperson), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 19:42 (two years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ZYVymFmL88
― Eric B. Mash Up the Resident (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 19:53 (two years ago) link
i used to try to listen to his language podcast occasionally but had to stop bc half the time he would just end up talking about musicals & playing endless clips of crappy forgotten broadway junk. he should hook up with the "punk rock is bullshit" guy aka bean dad and they can do a substack about how only normal regular stuff is good.
― nobody like my rap (One Eye Open), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 20:08 (two years ago) link
had never heard of this dude before. took a gander at his wikipedia page. jesus christ
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 20:16 (two years ago) link
Oh yeah he's a bit of a piece of work.
― Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 27 April 2022 20:19 (two years ago) link
In his book The indispensable composers, critic Anthony Tommasini wrote about how, when he was a composition student in the early 70s, anything that wasn't twelve-tone composition was looked down upon by his peers as outmoded or pandering. Are there similar "rules" in academic music now, or have post-modernism and other cultural shifts opened up the field?
― Halfway there but for you, Wednesday, 27 April 2022 22:04 (two years ago) link
This bugs me too, musical traditionalists/conservatives keep railing against a 100 year old idiom no one writes in anymore. Schoenberg really bothers these people in a way that I can’t completely eliminate anti-Semitism as a motivating factor.
― DAMAGED by Black Flat (Boring, Maryland), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 22:14 (two years ago) link
Halfway there, the climate at institutions varies a lot and someone who studies with Moor Mother at CalArts will probably have a different experience than someone who studies with Ferneyhough at Stanford but it would be hard for me to overstate how far I think the overall academic composition climate is from some kind of serialist or modernist hegemony. (NB there are also programmes like SUNY Purchase, which produced Regina Spektor and Mitski, among others.) I taught at a progressive New England liberal arts college for a few years and supervised a lot of hip-hop, EDM, indie rock, etc projects. The thing is that I suspect that for the McWhorters of the world, ANY modernist presence would be too much.
Fwiw, in this piece, Tommasini (who afaik never majored in composition) considers the other side wrt even the 50s-early 70s: https://www.nytimes.com/2000/07/09/arts/music-midcentury-serialists-the-bullies-or-the-besieged.html?pagewanted=all . I can share the Straus article he mentions if there is interest. His own recollections btw are based on a few anecdotes from one institution. I'm also not sure being looked down on by one's peers constitutes a 'rule'.
― And liberty she pirouette (Sund4r), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 23:00 (two years ago) link
You're right about his major, he studied piano.
― Halfway there but for you, Wednesday, 27 April 2022 23:09 (two years ago) link
musical traditionalists/conservatives keep railing against a 100 year old idiom no one writes in anymore
There are a lot of political "scholars" who have apparently only ever observed three elections: Nixon in 1972, Reagan in 1984, and Clinton in 1992.
― but also fuck you (unperson), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 23:09 (two years ago) link
Almost read that guy's The Language Hoax once, but something made me think better of it.
― Eric B. Mash Up the Resident (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 27 April 2022 23:58 (two years ago) link
I read Doing Our Own Thing. It was...OK. The actual linguistic stuff was interesting, but when he let himself slip too far into social prescriptiveness it got silly. (But no sillier than David Foster Wallace's essay on AAVE.)
― but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 28 April 2022 00:06 (two years ago) link
Can we also take a moment to marvel at this passage?
there are warehouses full of sophisticated and complex, but easily lovable, classical music, some we don’t hear because of an association with ignominious regimes.As Mauceri writes, “Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin had stylistic demands that would give an official sound to their regimes.” In all three of their countries, “they silenced non-tonal and 12-tone music along with anything that might be considered experimental.” In Italy, music in the grand opera tradition à la Verdi was embraced by officialdom, but later tainted by association. In Russia, explains Mauceri, Stalin dictated a policy favoring “Socialist Realism — music that was defiantly not experimental.” The renowned composers Prokofiev and Shostakovich walked a fine line “between approbation and annihilation.” Lesser-known composers such as Dmitri Kabalevsky, Aram Khachaturian and others are now performed very little. (In the gabby, showstopping song “Tschaikowsky” from the 1941 Broadway musical “Lady in the Dark,” a long list of Russian composers, many of whom we’ve hardly heard from, are rattled off.)Mauceri writes: “As the generations have passed, a source of these aesthetic judgments — the racial policies of the Nazis and the Fascists and the war against Soviet Communism — has been forgotten, and postwar aesthetic conclusions have been accepted as objective. And after having removed so much music and so many composers from our lives, what have we gotten in return?”
As Mauceri writes, “Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin had stylistic demands that would give an official sound to their regimes.” In all three of their countries, “they silenced non-tonal and 12-tone music along with anything that might be considered experimental.” In Italy, music in the grand opera tradition à la Verdi was embraced by officialdom, but later tainted by association. In Russia, explains Mauceri, Stalin dictated a policy favoring “Socialist Realism — music that was defiantly not experimental.” The renowned composers Prokofiev and Shostakovich walked a fine line “between approbation and annihilation.” Lesser-known composers such as Dmitri Kabalevsky, Aram Khachaturian and others are now performed very little. (In the gabby, showstopping song “Tschaikowsky” from the 1941 Broadway musical “Lady in the Dark,” a long list of Russian composers, many of whom we’ve hardly heard from, are rattled off.)
Mauceri writes: “As the generations have passed, a source of these aesthetic judgments — the racial policies of the Nazis and the Fascists and the war against Soviet Communism — has been forgotten, and postwar aesthetic conclusions have been accepted as objective. And after having removed so much music and so many composers from our lives, what have we gotten in return?”
If I understand correctly, the argument is i) we don't get to hear composers like Orff, Verdi, and the "lesser known" Khatchaturian (composer of this obscurity: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabre_Dance) and are overwhelmed with 12-tone music ii) the reason is cancel culture iii) because of these composers' associations with fascist and Stalinist regimes iv) (which got a lot wrong but basically had the right take on classical music, since they endorsed these 'beautiful' composers and silenced 'ugly' music). (Tbc McWhorther doesn't say we should go as far as state repression; he's just concerned about the current dominance of atonality and the repression of beauty.) Every step of that is incredible.
― And liberty she pirouette (Sund4r), Thursday, 28 April 2022 02:23 (two years ago) link
Say what you will about the tenets of National Socialism, at least it's an aesthetic.
― immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Thursday, 28 April 2022 03:16 (two years ago) link
Has there been any large-scale attempt to "cancel" Wagner (more recently than Nietzsche)?
― Halfway there but for you, Thursday, 28 April 2022 03:29 (two years ago) link
The Met went all in on Wagner during the pandemic:
https://www.wnycstudios.org/podcasts/gig-alerts/episodes/wagner-week-nightly-met-opera-streams
https://www.metopera.org/user-information/nightly-met-opera-streams/week-30/
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/01/arts/music/met-opera-meistersinger-wagner.html
― And liberty she pirouette (Sund4r), Thursday, 28 April 2022 03:37 (two years ago) link
Dave Edmunds would like a word:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GpqYU3Nzbts
― Eric B. Mash Up the Resident (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 28 April 2022 10:51 (two years ago) link
Twelve Tone good, Two Tone better:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xEPfSWk0Lsw
― Eric B. Mash Up the Resident (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 28 April 2022 11:06 (two years ago) link
Ross has written about how right after WW2, there was a deliberate effort in Europe, especially in West Germany under the occupation US military government, to suppress some of the Romantic/post-Romantic Germanic music loved by the Nazis and promote avant-garde music that challenged that tradition as well as Jewish composers, so e.g. the Darmstadt school got some covert funding from the US military early on. As far as I know, though, there was no comparable attempt made in North America, where Hitler's and Mussolini's faves have always had a wide audience (as far as classical audiences go) and concert hall presence.
― And liberty she pirouette (Sund4r), Thursday, 28 April 2022 11:17 (two years ago) link
This is all bringing to mind a long ago Concert in the Park I was at which was interrupted in mid-performance– on the 4th of July? before the 1812 Overture? – by a stage invader who said a few words before he was escorted off the stage that I remember as “Wagner, I miss you.” This in protest of the perceived under-programming of his favorite composer.
― Eric B. Mash Up the Resident (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 28 April 2022 11:54 (two years ago) link
Found it! https://www.nytimes.com/1982/07/28/arts/music-parks-series-opens-with-bang.html
― Eric B. Mash Up the Resident (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 28 April 2022 11:58 (two years ago) link
”When he first came on stage, I was in shock,'' said John Nelson, the conductor. ''But there was nothing harmful about him.'' ''He kept shouting, 'Herr Richard Wagner, where are you?''' said Charles Rex, the associate concertmaster, who contributed some impressively lush, secure violin solos to ''Scheherazade'' - and who repeated the final pages with aplomb after Mr. Aybar had been removed.
― Eric B. Mash Up the Resident (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 28 April 2022 12:05 (two years ago) link
Also note the ad for Edie, by Jean Stein. #onethread
― Eric B. Mash Up the Resident (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 28 April 2022 12:08 (two years ago) link
Feel like "Herr Richard Wagner, where are you?" is the new "tell that to your new leader, Sting!"
― Eric B. Mash Up the Resident (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 28 April 2022 13:04 (two years ago) link
The whole piece reminded me of taking my grandmother to a contemporary art exhibition when I was 14, and having her say “I don’t understand why people don’t make beautiful things any more.” The woman was a member of the Communist Party for thirty years and didn’t under shit about art.How can anyone expect a bootlicker like McWhorter to be any better? He might be the worst of the Times columnists afaic, up there with the conservative white dude crue.
― we need outrage! we need dicks!! (the table is the table), Saturday, 30 April 2022 02:35 (two years ago) link
This reminds me of that old Guy Tavares interview
― Xii, Monday, 2 May 2022 16:18 (two years ago) link
https://www.music-news.com/news/UK/148730/Morrissey-remains-centrestage-as-he-turns-63
What a god amongst us all....
― Mark G, Thursday, 19 May 2022 09:49 (two years ago) link
This week - 22nd May, to be precise – music legend Morrissey will be celebrating his 63rd birthday. It's almost inconceivable to staunch critics that the artist has been able to remain so revered, relevant and respected for so long. In the somewhat fickle world of entertainment, to attain the kind of longevity Morrissey has, is an almost impossible feat. Impossible for some, clearly not for the singer himself, who has been releasing music for four decades and who continues to draw vast crowds in the live aren
― Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 19 May 2022 10:00 (two years ago) link
😬
― Legalize Suburban Benches (Raymond Cummings), Thursday, 19 May 2022 12:29 (two years ago) link
a big scoop for music-news.com
― nobody like my rap (One Eye Open), Thursday, 19 May 2022 12:55 (two years ago) link
Imagine releasing music and touring in your early sixties. Never been done.
― Nabozo, Thursday, 19 May 2022 13:01 (two years ago) link
Morrissey's dedication to music is only surpassed by his devotion to racism
― mookie wilson shaggin balls (Neanderthal), Thursday, 19 May 2022 13:13 (two years ago) link
It would be hard for even his most stubborn opponents to deny Morrissey possesses that extra “something” - that unique charisma and energy that keeps generations of music-lovers queueing at the barriers. Morrissey fills arenas, theatre stages and festival line-ups around the world, even after 40 years in the business. Looking back to those heady days of The Smiths, where his
etc
― Mark G, Thursday, 19 May 2022 13:39 (two years ago) link
he fills festival line-ups
― corrs unplugged, Thursday, 19 May 2022 15:03 (two years ago) link
Did Morrissey write this?
― Bob Dylan's iconic Ray Ban sunglasses (morrisp), Thursday, 19 May 2022 15:40 (two years ago) link
Morrissey was a popular racist and he still is
― Chappies banging dustbin lids together (President Keyes), Thursday, 19 May 2022 15:46 (two years ago) link
My mama don't play no MozI saw her when she turned him off
― mookie wilson shaggin balls (Neanderthal), Thursday, 19 May 2022 16:31 (two years ago) link
To many, the Chili Peppers have always been synonymous with sexy time. Flea’s bass has always felt primal, like a playful slap on the ass during passionate lovemaking
― Frozen CD, Sunday, 24 July 2022 18:50 (two years ago) link
i mean if you think of how the band envisions themselves . . . probably not completely missing the mark.
but yeah, gross. no.
― "Why is the voice of reason treated as the unreliable narrator?", asked (Austin), Sunday, 24 July 2022 19:04 (two years ago) link
The band’s history of accusations of sexual harassment of young women in the music industry makes that gross.
― Antifa Sandwich Artist (Boring, Maryland), Sunday, 24 July 2022 19:41 (two years ago) link
oof, you're right. even grosser.
(unless maybe the writer is just the smartest guy in the room and that's their way of drawing attention to the band's collective creepiness)
― "Why is the voice of reason treated as the unreliable narrator?", asked (Austin), Sunday, 24 July 2022 20:22 (two years ago) link
oh my, curious to see how workshop's "Meiguiweisheng Xiang" was received on release (it's a curious & very successful piece of CAN worship albeit a little more querulous & fey) i stumbled across this on allmusic"While Workshop is similar to other indie-rock attempts at trip-hop (Broadcast, Portishead), the sub-par vocals and anemic production values sink the album."erm...
― massaman gai (front tea for two), Wednesday, 10 August 2022 12:58 (two years ago) link
I'm still dying of gross from that Chili Peppers review.
― Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 10 August 2022 13:05 (two years ago) link
Dig around in the context and biography behind a famously ambiguous and opaque song until you can find a vague snippet to support a tenuous reading in the service of half-assed fashionable politics, avoid looking at the content of the work itself closely enough that it might challenge your fantasy, profit (not really).
6.Nirvana: “Smells Like Teen Spirit” (1991)As much as anything, it was a breakup song. “Who will be the king and queen of the outcasted teens?” Kurt Cobain asked in a discarded lyric from an early draft of “Smells Like Teen Spirit.” One of his biographers is pretty sure he was talking about Tobi Vail, the “over-bored” and “self-assured” riot grrrl vanguardist. The two of them had had a brief romance, which she ended, and Cobain responded in the manner of so many thwarted, sensitive young men, turning rejection into a synecdoche for the oppressions of life writ large. He filled up his journal with violent fantasies and weird drawings. His friends started to worry. And somewhere in this burst of energy, Cobain wrote the perfect pop song.A denial, a denial, a denial. It hangs over “Teen Spirit” like bad weather. Call it the teenage boy’s blues—a young dude’s awakening to the fact that he is caught in the crosswinds of, like, the whole system, man, that panders to him, that fires his imagination, and then constrains him, tells him to chill. Very often it’s sex being denied. Sometimes it’s a car, which is just sex at one remove. Maybe it’s money or a fix. Whatever their subject, the teenage boy’s blues have been the very stuff of pop music since around the time Chuck Berry went motorvatin’ after that Coupe DeVille. The result has been a great deal of regrettable pop songs, but on occasion there have been transcendent exceptions, like the lead single off of Nirvana’s Nevermind. Above all it rips, even still, from that first Gap Band flam to the last, exhausted denial. It’s got a screamy part and a soft part, and right at the point where you expect the song to fuzz out and go totally to shit, there’s a crisp guitar solo that restates the vocal melody from the verse, almost as if Cobain were satirizing himself and having a damn good time of it.Well, he probably was, right? Self-doubt is everything in “Teen Spirit.” The song famously stands outside itself, mocking its own postures, hating its own apathy and irresolution, anthemic in its insistence on being unanthemic: “Oh well, whatever, never mind.” I remember the girls in middle school who had Cobain’s photo taped up in their lockers and thinking how funny it was that they were treating this king of the outcasts like something they'd clipped out of Tiger Beat. But of course they were the ones who were actually seeing Cobain clearly—that underneath all the marketing and self-mythology and fraying cardigans there was a true pop idol, beautiful, androgynous, too wounded to be threatening, a troubadour of their uncertainty. He sang as if he were owed something. That’s the teenage boy’s blues. In the next breath he wondered if he was worthy of any of it. That’s a blues for everyone else. –Tommy Craggs
A denial, a denial, a denial. It hangs over “Teen Spirit” like bad weather. Call it the teenage boy’s blues—a young dude’s awakening to the fact that he is caught in the crosswinds of, like, the whole system, man, that panders to him, that fires his imagination, and then constrains him, tells him to chill. Very often it’s sex being denied. Sometimes it’s a car, which is just sex at one remove. Maybe it’s money or a fix. Whatever their subject, the teenage boy’s blues have been the very stuff of pop music since around the time Chuck Berry went motorvatin’ after that Coupe DeVille. The result has been a great deal of regrettable pop songs, but on occasion there have been transcendent exceptions, like the lead single off of Nirvana’s Nevermind. Above all it rips, even still, from that first Gap Band flam to the last, exhausted denial. It’s got a screamy part and a soft part, and right at the point where you expect the song to fuzz out and go totally to shit, there’s a crisp guitar solo that restates the vocal melody from the verse, almost as if Cobain were satirizing himself and having a damn good time of it.
Well, he probably was, right? Self-doubt is everything in “Teen Spirit.” The song famously stands outside itself, mocking its own postures, hating its own apathy and irresolution, anthemic in its insistence on being unanthemic: “Oh well, whatever, never mind.” I remember the girls in middle school who had Cobain’s photo taped up in their lockers and thinking how funny it was that they were treating this king of the outcasts like something they'd clipped out of Tiger Beat. But of course they were the ones who were actually seeing Cobain clearly—that underneath all the marketing and self-mythology and fraying cardigans there was a true pop idol, beautiful, androgynous, too wounded to be threatening, a troubadour of their uncertainty. He sang as if he were owed something. That’s the teenage boy’s blues. In the next breath he wondered if he was worthy of any of it. That’s a blues for everyone else. –Tommy Craggs
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Tuesday, 27 September 2022 17:39 (two years ago) link
I remember the girls in middle school who had Cobain’s photo taped up in their lockers and thinking how funny it was that they were treating this king of the outcasts like something they'd clipped out of Tiger Beat. But of course they were the ones who were actually seeing Cobain clearly—that underneath all the marketing and self-mythology and fraying cardigans there was a true pop idol, beautiful, androgynous, too wounded to be threatening, a troubadour of their uncertainty.
He was a good-looking rock star, it's not that complicated...
― "Cool ranch dressing!" (morrisp), Tuesday, 27 September 2022 17:48 (two years ago) link
yeah that is awful wtf
― rob, Tuesday, 27 September 2022 18:00 (two years ago) link
Sometimes I see a vague resemblance between Kurt and a 1970ish James Taylor
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p0FJUVo-BaM
Must be the sweater
― the floor is guava (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 27 September 2022 19:19 (two years ago) link
kurt was way hotter imo
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 27 September 2022 20:26 (two years ago) link
that's bcz he was beautiful, androgynous, too wounded to be threatening, a troubadour of our uncertainty
not even joking
― mark s, Tuesday, 27 September 2022 20:27 (two years ago) link
I swear, something about this song produces the absolute direst music writing
― jmm, Tuesday, 27 September 2022 20:46 (two years ago) link
well, a key line is "here we are, entertain us"
― Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 27 September 2022 20:53 (two years ago) link
‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’ is a Men’s Rights anthem, and that’s okay
― SincereLee 'Scratch' Perry (President Keyes), Tuesday, 27 September 2022 23:36 (two years ago) link
treasure trove of lol terrible writing in here (alongside some not-terrible writing)
https://pitchfork.com/features/lists-and-guides/musicians-on-their-favorite-albums-of-the-90s/
― Paul Ponzi, Thursday, 6 October 2022 11:13 (two years ago) link
Dawn Richard on Throwing Copper: "This album had a lot of layers for me. It was the lyrical journey that I found myself loving the most."
The 90s revisiting/revival has produced a lot of shocking takes but "I'm into Live for the lyrics" is one that I may never recover from
― nobody like my rap (One Eye Open), Thursday, 6 October 2022 13:08 (two years ago) link
I'm not in the least surprised she'd like it.
― Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 6 October 2022 13:13 (two years ago) link
harsh - i thought you liked her!
― nobody like my rap (One Eye Open), Thursday, 6 October 2022 13:28 (two years ago) link
I do. Many artists like shitty music and write better music based on their affection for the shitty music.
― Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 6 October 2022 13:34 (two years ago) link
It's hard to imagine Dawn Richard's agon with Ed Kowalczyk, it's true.
― Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 6 October 2022 13:35 (two years ago) link
Jewel's entry is somehow far more embarrassing. Almost poll-worthy
― Paul Ponzi, Thursday, 6 October 2022 13:40 (two years ago) link
xp I don't see the revisiting/revival in that quote. the album came out when she was 10.
― sloop johnnin' skater (geoffreyess), Thursday, 6 October 2022 13:49 (two years ago) link
not the quote itself but the piece that produced it, which is part of pforks current big 90s deep dive feature
― nobody like my rap (One Eye Open), Thursday, 6 October 2022 14:11 (two years ago) link
lol that jewell blurb is gold
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 6 October 2022 14:23 (two years ago) link
truly a masterclass in making everything about Jewel
― Paul Ponzi, Thursday, 6 October 2022 14:27 (two years ago) link
Mike Kinsella (American Football) Back in the ’90s, hamburgers sucked, moms and dads weren’t ironic, and “’90s albums” were just called “albums.” The one album that probably influenced me the most is Loveless by My Bloody Valentine.Hamburgers sucked(?) What does that mean
― Linkin Bio (morrisp), Thursday, 6 October 2022 14:28 (two years ago) link
it means he thought they were bad not good
― mark s, Thursday, 6 October 2022 14:32 (two years ago) link
maybe he meant "Hamburglar sucked"
― Critique of the Goth Programme (Neil S), Thursday, 6 October 2022 14:35 (two years ago) link
I really like what the American Football guy wrote. also thing the Slowdive guy wrote some good stuff about Cranes.
― charlie rex, Thursday, 6 October 2022 14:50 (two years ago) link
thing = think
How have hamburgers changedIs it a Mad Cow joke?(I also don’t get the “moms and dads” thing)
― Linkin Bio (morrisp), Thursday, 6 October 2022 14:59 (two years ago) link
We didn't have fast casual burger joints in the 90s
― “uhh”—like, this is an insane oatmeal raisin cookie “uhh” (President Keyes), Thursday, 6 October 2022 15:03 (two years ago) link
the moms and dads thing I think is in line with how every commercial and kids show is made by aging hipsters these days
― “uhh”—like, this is an insane oatmeal raisin cookie “uhh” (President Keyes), Thursday, 6 October 2022 15:05 (two years ago) link
Trying to parse the burgers thing, since I'm procrastinating anyway: maybe he's talking about the rise of places like Five Guys and In & Out Burger and other relatively upscale (ie more expensive) franchises as alternatives to McDonalds and Burger King, but that's just a wild guess, I'm a vegetarian, I dunno
― Paul Ponzi, Thursday, 6 October 2022 15:22 (two years ago) link
i do not think that sentence is worth this level of analysis
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Thursday, 6 October 2022 15:24 (two years ago) link
Let's not get into 90s hot dogs
― “uhh”—like, this is an insane oatmeal raisin cookie “uhh” (President Keyes), Thursday, 6 October 2022 15:27 (two years ago) link
“’90s albums” were just called “CDs” would have been a better joke, IMO
― Linkin Bio (morrisp), Thursday, 6 October 2022 15:33 (two years ago) link
Cobain responded in the manner of so many thwarted, sensitive young men
biting my tongue REAL FUCKING HARD here
iykyk
― Kate (rushomancy), Thursday, 6 October 2022 16:00 (two years ago) link
The Amps’ Pacer (1995)Excellent noisy pop album, every song’s a hit! The production works really well with the style of songwriting. I also love the 33 minute and 15 second run time.
girl talk otm
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Thursday, 6 October 2022 16:02 (two years ago) link
ok, i'll say it. if you're a guy and you, in your heart, think of yourself as a "thwarted, sensitive young man" with a "teenage boy's blues", "beautiful, androgynous, too wounded to be threatening", you should consider whether you might possibly benefit from a blue pill made by Teva Pharmaceuticals with a lowercase "b" on the side.
― Kate (rushomancy), Thursday, 6 October 2022 16:05 (two years ago) link
Yeah, I'm pretty sure the dude who wore dresses and envied the seahorse would have identified as enby, but kudos to some Mother Jones dork for retconning him as a toxic privileged incel
― hi hole im dad (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 6 October 2022 16:14 (two years ago) link
i'd like give dawn richard credit for picking the only live album that's listenable from front-to-back and also a goofily earnest album that no critic (that i've seen) has attempted to rehabilitate as "cool"
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Thursday, 6 October 2022 16:15 (two years ago) link
"I can't decide if Kurt Cobain is a sensitive pangender icon of body dysmorphia or an entitled white supremacist school-shooter-in-training. But one thing is for certain: If he were alive his Twitter avatar would be an anime"
― hi hole im dad (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 6 October 2022 16:21 (two years ago) link
you need to seek intensive therapy urgently
― J0rdan S., Thursday, 6 October 2022 16:23 (two years ago) link
"You can't nitpick in here, this is the worst piece of music writing thread"
― hi hole im dad (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 6 October 2022 16:31 (two years ago) link
― hi hole im dad (Whiney G. Weingarten)
OK. I'll say it. This is a _very controversial topic_ in transfem communities. A lot of people will tell you that saying that anybody else - Elagabalus, Lou Alcott, whoever - was trans violates the trans Prime Directive of self-determination. I don't believe that principle applies to people who (a) are dead and (b) never had a genuine _opportunity_ to self-determine. At the risk of bringing a whole dumptruck load of shit down on me: Kurt Cobain was a trans woman. Since this is the "worst music writing" thread, I can't think of a better place to post this piece I spent some time working on in August:
To put it in more straightforward terms, what other trans people see as violating self-determination, I see as challenging a form of queer erasure that is not just ongoing, but has significant historical precedent. Gender affirming treatment is the _only_ treatment shown to be effective for gender dysphoria. Kurt Cobain suffered under the same conditions I suffered under - enforced ignorance. He did not have access to the _knowledge_ we do today. He did not have an accurate understanding of gender dysphoria, its symptoms, and how they might have applied to him. Instead, he had access to a false narrative that explicitly told him that he was _not_ trans. In retrospect, Cobain's behavior is _clearly and unambiguously_ indicative of severe gender dysphoria. People who suffer from untreated gender dysphoria are profoundly miserable. Lacking any real option to alleviate their suffering, they often kill themselves.
Recognizing and acknowledging Kurt Cobain as a trans woman, posthumously, is _extremely_ important to me. Most people still have a lot of misunderstandings about transgender people, about who we are, how many of us there are, what it _looks_ like to transgender. Cobain isn't a _typical_ example of what it looked like to be trans in 1994 by any means. He was fucking brilliant. He was the biggest rock star in the world. He was, however, far from alone in two things. First, despite being intelligent, insightful, and deeply engaged with gender issues, he was unable to conceive of himself as being transgender. Second, his unrelieved gender dysphoria was almost certainly a major factor in his suicide.
I believe that people need to _know_ this. I believe that _everybody_ needs to know this. Read the piece, and if you find my argument convincing, tell people.
And if you're not convinced, well, you wouldn't be the first. I have friends who have stopped talking to me because of my insistence on saying that Kurt Cobain was a trans woman. My cis friends, they don't necessarily know why it should _matter_ that much, but it does. If my saying this means that people will pigeonhole me as one of those crazy people who thinks that _everybody_ was trans, well, so be it.
― Kate (rushomancy), Thursday, 6 October 2022 17:33 (two years ago) link
Kate, thank you. I came to this same conclusion independently a few years ago. It just seems so fucking obvious to me, as a non-binary trans woman, that Kurt was trans. I had no idea others thought the same too.
The only person I've ever talked to about this is my partner. I guess I've been afraid of transgressing the acceptable ways of talking about transness. On the one hand, I think it's somewhat disingenuous to retrospectively apply modern labels to people who lived in very different worlds and wouldn't identify that way (for example, labelling Radclyffe Hall a lesbian or trans man, when she would have understood herself as the now outmoded term of 'invert'). Then there's the danger of applying homogenising Western gender labels across the board (e.g. subsuming indigenous identities into inappropriate notions of 'queerness'). But on the other hand... Kurt was fucking trans. No argument.
Sometimes when I'm feeling dysphoric I listen to 'Dumb' and am grateful I have access to information, support, and gender-affirming healthcare. Not every trans woman makes it, as Kurt so sadly demonstrated. I'm so fucking grateful I did.
― The Ghost Club, Thursday, 6 October 2022 18:25 (two years ago) link
Yeah, no one can say for sure, but it really does seem incredibly probable. The whole of Cobain would have played out quite differently if we had a better understanding of the language around gender and mental health in the ‘90s
― hi hole im dad (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 6 October 2022 18:30 (two years ago) link
Kate, thank you for the link.
― Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 6 October 2022 18:46 (two years ago) link
This, right here, is why I finally wound up speaking up, sharing the thing I wrote. I mean, isn't that just the absolute soul of the trans experience, right there? "I thought it was just me". Whatever else happens from here, your post has made me sure that what I said it was worth saying.
I resonate so, so much with the rest of what you wrote. I've had so many feelings like the ones you shared - I've tried to express them, in my own way, in the piece.
Just for the record, I've also definitely had thoughts about myself like the things unperson said about me. (Is saying Kurt Cobain was trans a grotesque offense like the Mormons baptizing Anne Frank was? Personally, I think it's closer to saying that Anne Frank was a lesbian. There's textual evidence for it, evidence that was omitted from the original publication of her diary. I honestly personally think it was a rightful omission, perhaps even a _necessary_ omission, but it's one more example of the special form of _erasure_ queer people suffer.)
I wish it didn't have to be that way. I wish I didn't _have_ to think these things, to anticipate all of the things people I basically respect would say about me, to have to decide something is important enough to lose friends over. But this, too, is what it's like to be trans, isn't it? It belongs to the trans tradition of Porpentine, of Isabel Fall, of so many other people I could name.
I do encourage people to read (and share!) the piece I wrote and linked to. It's a complicated subject and I've tried to do it justice.
― Kate (rushomancy), Thursday, 6 October 2022 19:20 (two years ago) link
Hold on I'm gonna need a new link for that post, gimme a bit
― Kate (rushomancy), Thursday, 6 October 2022 19:27 (two years ago) link
Thanks for sharing that link Kate - it very much absolutely does not belong in a 'worst piece of music writing ever' thread (ie, to over-explain, it's a very fucking good piece of writing about music).
― Shard-borne Beatles with their drowsy hums (Chinaski), Thursday, 6 October 2022 19:36 (two years ago) link
Thanks for sharing that link Kate - it very much absolutely does not belong in a 'worst piece of music writing ever' thread (ie, to over-explain, it's a very fucking good piece of writing about music).― Shard-borne Beatles with their drowsy hums (Chinaski)
― Shard-borne Beatles with their drowsy hums (Chinaski)
Apologies for the self-deprecation. It's a bad habit of mine I'm trying to wean myself from.
Kate, thank you for the link.― Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn)
― Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn)
Thank you for listening, Alfred.
Yeah, no one can say for sure, but it really does seem incredibly probable. The whole of Cobain would have played out quite differently if we had a better understanding of the language around gender and mental health in the ‘90s― hi hole im dad (Whiney G. Weingarten)
Right. It's the hypocrisy of it, seeing Tommy Craggs write the sort of horseshit he wrote about Cobain in Pitchfork, writing about him as a "sensitive young man" who had "violent fantasies". Did I _know_ Kurt Cobain? No. Do I understand his _soul_? Not particularly. Is there a certain _context_ to his life, work, and death that most people are _not fucking considering_? Absolutely, and I _will_ speak to that context.
― Kate (rushomancy), Thursday, 6 October 2022 19:48 (two years ago) link
Yes, excellent piece, Kate. fwiw, I'm convinced. I'm a cis man and predictably the thought had never occurred to me, but all the details you mentioned were things that were super striking at the time. Back then I mostly mentally filed them under "androgynous" or "feminist" but in retrospect, being trans basically just makes more sense.
One minor question: I've never seen agnotology defined that way—is that derived from a specific source? I've only encountered it as the study of deliberate attempts to keep people uninformed (e.g., the tobacco industry & cancer; oil companies & climate change), mostly in social studies of science contexts. AFAICT, it's not technically a "real" word anyway—i.e., not in the dictionary—so I'm curious about your usage (I like the word a lot).
― rob, Thursday, 6 October 2022 19:58 (two years ago) link
― rob
Nah I just picked it up somewhere and in the best tradition of language defined it to mean what I wanted it to mean haha
― Kate (rushomancy), Thursday, 6 October 2022 20:08 (two years ago) link
lol sounds good! Like I said, it's up for grabs.
Though now that I think of it, the other meaning would be extremely relevant to histories of trans people & cultures, including the one you outline in your piece
― rob, Thursday, 6 October 2022 20:22 (two years ago) link
Yeah it really is, quite honestly!
I just went ahead and threw it on a tumblr.
https://www.tumblr.com/waskurttrans
Not exactly the best opsec in the world, but it's not the fucking Panama Papers or anything.
― Kate (rushomancy), Thursday, 6 October 2022 20:29 (two years ago) link
Really interesting piece Kate, it does connect the dots compellingly. I wish Cobain had found understanding. He certainly celebrated women and femininity at every opportunity and as you say, seemed to have a level of empathy far beyond the cis male range typical of the time.
― assert (matttkkkk), Thursday, 6 October 2022 21:22 (two years ago) link
ok, i'll say it. if you're a guy and you, in your heart, think of yourself as a "thwarted, sensitive young man" with a "teenage boy's blues", "beautiful, androgynous, too wounded to be threatening", you should consider whether you might possibly benefit from a blue pill made by Teva Pharmaceuticals with a lowercase "b" on the side.― Kate (rushomancy), Thursday, October 6, 2022 9:05 AM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink
― Kate (rushomancy), Thursday, October 6, 2022 9:05 AM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink
Or you could just be a fag? I find this conversation really fucked up tbh.
― broccoli rabe thomas (the table is the table), Friday, 7 October 2022 20:30 (two years ago) link
As in, Kurt could have just been a fag, sorry for the second person there.
You can see the receipts on ILX of when I came out to my parents the final time, when I was close to 23 years old. I'd come out to them at 13 and 16, too.
The idea that a young cis man is trans just because he is "androgynous, non-threatening to women," "wounded," "enlightened regarding gender issues, " etc, is absolutely ridiculous. And I say this as someone who has lovers who are trans, best friends who are trans.
― broccoli rabe thomas (the table is the table), Friday, 7 October 2022 20:36 (two years ago) link
And yes, I read the tumblr, so feel free to tell me to go fuck myself, but I will honestly say that I believe your thinking is wrongheaded and more about wanting to impose your vision of trans-ness on the world than anything else.
― broccoli rabe thomas (the table is the table), Friday, 7 October 2022 20:40 (two years ago) link
https://andrewdubber.com/over-saulted/
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 3 November 2022 13:43 (two years ago) link
Jesus fucking christ.
― stank viola (Neanderthal), Thursday, 3 November 2022 13:53 (two years ago) link
way to write a review that tells me everything but what it sounds like (oh they're a "jam band", how helpful!). and scolding the band for making the music available for free.
― stank viola (Neanderthal), Thursday, 3 November 2022 13:54 (two years ago) link
oh jeez
― mh, Thursday, 3 November 2022 13:54 (two years ago) link
writer is maybe a bit churlish and should probably have mentioned Inflo at some point but I basically agree with his premise tbh
― imago, Thursday, 3 November 2022 13:56 (two years ago) link
I tried to comment but everything was there except...the button to submit?
― stank viola (Neanderthal), Thursday, 3 November 2022 13:57 (two years ago) link
there are enough breathless uncritical encomia to sault among the UK critical establishment that we can permit the occasional humbug, no?
― imago, Thursday, 3 November 2022 13:57 (two years ago) link
sure, do it in one paragraph, then. as that's about all of the content his review contained.
― stank viola (Neanderthal), Thursday, 3 November 2022 13:58 (two years ago) link
also tired of 'get off my lawn' being used in writing as a joeky "lol see I'm self-aware of how pretentious and shallow my criticisms are, ergo it negates that criticism"
― stank viola (Neanderthal), Thursday, 3 November 2022 13:59 (two years ago) link
idk his criticisms seem pretty pointed and evidenced? maybe it depends on whether you see sault's self-presentation and public engagement practices as slick marketing techniques or, idk, sincere enigmatisation of the artistic process
― imago, Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:02 (two years ago) link
I agree with a few points, but that piece is a firehose of opinions4u, some of which are quite bullshit (the Albarn hunch is basically racist)
― rob, Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:03 (two years ago) link
idk I find it hard to square complaining that "it's just marketing" with "it devalues music" like which is it
― rob, Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:04 (two years ago) link
also it is quite clearly a review of the release method rather than the music
yeah the Albarn hunch + the cast-of-thousands stuff sells Inflo way short
― imago, Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:04 (two years ago) link
I don't have any opinions on Sault whatsoever and my reaction to seeing I could download some albums for free was "hmm, that's nice, I might have to check that out"
writing that many words seems to indicate this was meant to be something remarkable to someone, his retort is "this isn't remarkable, maybe the music isn't good, maybe this is marketing"
why would someone think it's remarkable? oh, because it's covered by music news. who thinks music news is remarkable? people who write about music. who is feeding into this being something worthy of comment? the guy writing an overly long bit about how it's nothing
― mh, Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:06 (two years ago) link
ultimately the artist decides how much they want to sell their music for, one collective giving the shit away for free doesn't mean Anal Stabwound's career is over because nobody will ever pay for his music again.
― stank viola (Neanderthal), Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:06 (two years ago) link
like maybe it is a nice thing to give people some downloads and it's also marketing"it's very 90s" oh ok so you've seen this happen before, wonder if anyone's written about album giveaways before
― mh, Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:07 (two years ago) link
my theory was that Sault's game was flooding the listening-time of critics just when they should be recapping 2022 lol
― imago, Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:09 (two years ago) link
also daerest Nikhil, childe of death, won't be short of sponsorship I suspect
― imago, Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:10 (two years ago) link
ultimately the artist decides how much they want to sell their music forwell, I wouldn't go that far!
Byt yeah you should know you're getting too huffily defensive when you're including "Untitled is not a title" in your list of complaints. That said, I don't think that's a terrible piece of writing really, just smug & unfocused; I mean it's a blog post from someone I've never heard of (maybe he's known to you all?).
This, otoh, took years off my life expectancy: https://www.newyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/the-case-for-listening-to-complete-discographies
― rob, Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:10 (two years ago) link
damn that new yorker article is playing all the hits
― mh, Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:13 (two years ago) link
my theory was that Sault's game was flooding the listening-time of critics just when they should be recapping 2022 lol― imago, Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:09 (two minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
― imago, Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:09 (two minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
this is good then: critics shd spend far less time (= none at all) "recapping 2022" or indeed any other year past or future
― mark s, Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:14 (two years ago) link
EOEOY
― mark s, Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:15 (two years ago) link
catching up on things they'd missed is surely fine?
― imago, Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:16 (two years ago) link
releasing something during a year end wrap-up season or awards season to keep it fresh in mind? wow never heard of that
next thing you know, albums will start coming out early in the year right before summer touring season and ticket sales
― mh, Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:23 (two years ago) link
A few good points, a few bad ones. The article is as scattershot as SAULT's latest batch of material. DO YOU SEE
― but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:45 (two years ago) link
Maybe...it IS Sault.
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:47 (two years ago) link
It's a Sault of sorts
― stank viola (Neanderthal), Thursday, 3 November 2022 14:48 (two years ago) link
A Sault with a deadly Pepa
― m0stly clean (Slowsquatch), Thursday, 3 November 2022 15:04 (two years ago) link
andrew dobber morelike
― manic pixie dream shatner (bizarro gazzara), Thursday, 3 November 2022 15:08 (two years ago) link
Why isn't his blog called Dub and Dubber?
― jmm, Thursday, 3 November 2022 15:13 (two years ago) link
i really don't understand the "sault is a jam band" thing like at all
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 3 November 2022 15:16 (two years ago) link
sault is a jam bandsomeone talking junkyo i bust 'im in the eyeand then I take the punk's blog
― Fash Gordon (Neanderthal), Thursday, 3 November 2022 15:25 (two years ago) link
He's not from America; he doesn't understand the American definition of "jam band." He seems to mean that their songs feel like loose jams halfway thrown together right before someone presses the record button.
― but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 3 November 2022 15:26 (two years ago) link
the "actually it's not just available for 5 days" bit was so petty and pedantic, who fucking cares?
― link.exposing.politically (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Thursday, 3 November 2022 15:59 (two years ago) link
No, you see, it will *always* be available. All you have to do is download and run torrenting software, then rip and upload lots of rare CDs to build a good enough ratio to download five albums
― insane oatmeal raisin cookie posse (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 3 November 2022 16:11 (two years ago) link
Is that why I was never able to figure out how to torrent? I didn't upload anything first? what the hell is that bitcoin shit just gimme my rare music
― Lord Pickles (Boring, Maryland), Thursday, 3 November 2022 17:22 (two years ago) link
y/s/I?
― Fash Gordon (Neanderthal), Thursday, 3 November 2022 17:26 (two years ago) link
why torrent when slsk exists?
― link.exposing.politically (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Thursday, 3 November 2022 17:28 (two years ago) link
Shit I just paid $50 to jump the queue and now u tell me this
― Fash Gordon (Neanderthal), Thursday, 3 November 2022 17:30 (two years ago) link
Gawd, that New Yorker article… I can’t do it, even as a “hate read”
― Reese's Pisces Iscariot (morrisp), Thursday, 3 November 2022 19:16 (two years ago) link
lol yeah it's brutal, I was amazed it was published in 2022.
After I binged the new-ish High Fidelity tv adaptation, I thought about starting a "Rockism 2.0" thread but that nyer piece convinced me not to
― rob, Thursday, 3 November 2022 19:34 (two years ago) link
No rockist would prefer the Beach Boys' 1985 self-titled album to Pet Sounds.
― Halfway there but for you, Thursday, 3 November 2022 19:41 (two years ago) link
it's a middle-aged symphony to rum
― Fash Gordon (Neanderthal), Thursday, 3 November 2022 19:45 (two years ago) link
tbf that actually sounds way better than a teen-aged symphony to god
― rob, Thursday, 3 November 2022 19:47 (two years ago) link
this reads like someone who just ate at Olive Garden and didn't get enough parm
― | (Latham Green), Thursday, 3 November 2022 19:54 (two years ago) link
the psychotic heavy hitting trainspotters on slsk who don’t let you download anything and shame you for existing >>>>> torrenters with perfect logs and optimal ratio
― lets hear some blues on those synths (brimstead), Thursday, 3 November 2022 19:59 (two years ago) link
let's just say they're all terrible people
― wearing wraparounds (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 3 November 2022 20:04 (two years ago) link
Sault is a jam bandby which we measure five daysI'll say it again
― budo jeru, Thursday, 3 November 2022 20:10 (two years ago) link
Try to make ends meet
You're a slave to money and you're dumb
― blissfully unawarewolf (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 3 November 2022 20:30 (two years ago) link
The style of that New Yorker article was bleh and the guy is smug as fuck but when we do albums polls around here, losing myself in an artist does feel… good.
― poppin' debussy (the table is the table), Saturday, 5 November 2022 02:25 (two years ago) link
that new yorker piece was written by a nerd
ofc observing an artistic process develop over the course of years-to-decades is incredibly rewarding and i do it all the time, i spend next to no time recounting the revolutionary recording techniques employed in the beatles revolver as if no one has ever heard of them before
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Saturday, 5 November 2022 03:59 (two years ago) link
listening to an artist's entire discography is great because it allowed me to realize that the beatles are pretty neat
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Saturday, 5 November 2022 04:01 (two years ago) link
I admit, I like to do a discography "deep dive" occasionally. Some are casual: I just listen to each album/single/EP in chronological order over the course of a month or so. For artists I'm really interested in exploring, I'll get a bit more elaborate. I'll read a biography, use Rock's Back Pages for contemporary articles on the current album I'm listening to, find a live concert for that era. For the latter, I tend to stretch out so I'm not exclusively listening to one band all the time. The latter approach I usually use for bands I loved at one time, but haven't heard in years, and want to see how I feel as an adult. I can see why this approach would be unappealing though; it's treating an artist like a school subject, to sit down and research and plan out rather than just throwing on a record and enjoying it. What can I say, though: I'm a big history buff, so it suits me.
I saw Pavement last month, and it really reinvigorated my interest in them. I'd loved S&E and CRCR in my early 20s but am unfamiliar with other albums, and know little of their b-sides etc. I've been doing their discography since then and it's rewarding to find "new" favorite tracks from a familiar artist.
― blatherskite, Saturday, 5 November 2022 15:46 (two years ago) link
Deep dives are great, it’s just the writing in that piece that’s ridiculous.
― Reese's Pisces Iscariot (morrisp), Saturday, 5 November 2022 15:55 (two years ago) link
Or thinking deep dives is interesting enough to warrant a New Yorker article!
― insane oatmeal raisin cookie posse (Whiney G. Weingarten), Saturday, 5 November 2022 16:04 (two years ago) link
I get what the writer is trying to say with this review of the new Hammock; I'm mostly curious what language it was translated out of.
For those new to Hammock, they are a dynamic duo comprised of Marc Byrd and Andrew Thompson from Nashville. They already have quite a substantial catalogue behind them; twelve releases strong already infact. Their previous work has managed to get them noticed by big time pedlars of cinematic ‘dreamscape rock’ Sigur Rós, who have subsequently worked together.Kicking the whole thing off with the aptly named track ‘Procession’, the band slowly make an entrance with a slow and steady build up. It is minimal and yet conveys everything they are about all at once. Delicately played guitar melodies softly grace the listeners ears. We are transported to their kingdom. It is gradual as if guided by hand through the gates into the domain of dream. By the time one has arrived the many layers of delicate guitar and subsequent echoes surround. There are no drums yet, which just creates the most beautifully subtle sensation of suspense.What comes next? Their album title track and it is juicy. In come the drums (which alternate somewhere between the dream-popiness of Cigaretts for Sex and certain Mogwai works in their style), in comes the distortion, and agonizingly beautiful crescendos. The melodies are haunting and soft. The slow pace coupled with the title of the track create images of longing, one heart calling out into the emptiness for another. The overall arrangement of the album is sweeping and romantic. The production quality is so delicious it is almost edible. Everything sits perfectly in the mix.
Kicking the whole thing off with the aptly named track ‘Procession’, the band slowly make an entrance with a slow and steady build up. It is minimal and yet conveys everything they are about all at once. Delicately played guitar melodies softly grace the listeners ears. We are transported to their kingdom. It is gradual as if guided by hand through the gates into the domain of dream. By the time one has arrived the many layers of delicate guitar and subsequent echoes surround. There are no drums yet, which just creates the most beautifully subtle sensation of suspense.
What comes next? Their album title track and it is juicy. In come the drums (which alternate somewhere between the dream-popiness of Cigaretts for Sex and certain Mogwai works in their style), in comes the distortion, and agonizingly beautiful crescendos. The melodies are haunting and soft. The slow pace coupled with the title of the track create images of longing, one heart calling out into the emptiness for another. The overall arrangement of the album is sweeping and romantic. The production quality is so delicious it is almost edible. Everything sits perfectly in the mix.
― but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 26 January 2023 10:23 (two years ago) link
that is the exact perfect reviewing style for that sort of music tbf
― imago, Thursday, 26 January 2023 10:28 (two years ago) link
unperson, author is a woman from Bahrain, living in London. Her mother is apparently a soul singer.
― Goose Bigelow, Fowl Gigolo (the table is the table), Thursday, 26 January 2023 11:57 (two years ago) link
Marilyn Haggerty's amazing Olive Garden review and the subsequent viral shitstorm
― POLIZISTEN VERSINKEN IM SCHLAMM (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 26 January 2023 15:24 (two years ago) link
The nicely cooked pasta coupled with the unlimited breadsticks create images of longing, one heart calling out into the emptiness for another. Another breadstick.
― is it milli vanilli or just a facsimile (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 26 January 2023 16:02 (two years ago) link
really wish people would back off Marilyn Hagerty tbh
― J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Thursday, 26 January 2023 16:03 (two years ago) link
I believe Alfred is a true fan of Marilyn's.
Hammock rules and finding the best way to talk about them -- and they are truly underrated from where I sit -- is kinda hard.
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 26 January 2023 16:05 (two years ago) link
Jclc, you are a kind soul and your concern is warranted. But personally I don't see any meanness in the Haggerty discourse.
To me, ilx is processing its cultural anxieties in a very ilxian way. It often looks like savage mockery but I like to think it comes from a place of omnivorous curiosity and, ultimately, love. Love of the variety and complexity of contemporary existence.
Plus, breadsticks.
― is it milli vanilli or just a facsimile (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 26 January 2023 16:08 (two years ago) link
Feel free to justify Tonetta77-ing some local newspaper lady however you want
― Whiney G. Weingarten, Thursday, 26 January 2023 16:12 (two years ago) link
Agree about Hammock's musical merits, and my response to the review honestly was less "what moron wrote this shit?" than "why didn't someone edit this into a better version of itself?"
― but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 26 January 2023 16:34 (two years ago) link
I'm now listening to and enjoying the heretofore unknown to me band Hammock so I guess it did its job
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 26 January 2023 16:38 (two years ago) link
Where were all you Hammock fans hiding when we did the ambient poll?
― Camaraderie at Arms Length, Thursday, 26 January 2023 16:44 (two years ago) link
napping obv
― INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Thursday, 26 January 2023 16:53 (two years ago) link
I...post Hagerty reviews because her stuff does interest me.
― Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 26 January 2023 17:01 (two years ago) link
Agree about Hammock’s musical merits, and my response to the review honestly was less “what moron wrote this shit?” than “why didn’t someone edit this into a better version of itself?”
My first response to reading it, being a subeditor (copy editor), was, “No one subbed this.”
― wronger than 100 geir posts (MacDara), Thursday, 26 January 2023 18:00 (two years ago) link
Hammock show up a lot on ambient playlists in corporate environments, I've found, so I associate them with that— not a knock, necessarily, just an observation.
― Goose Bigelow, Fowl Gigolo (the table is the table), Thursday, 26 January 2023 18:09 (two years ago) link
Trippy. I just coincidentally had Hammock recommended to me.
― Evan, Thursday, 26 January 2023 18:10 (two years ago) link
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FqZw8BGXgAEp2_p?format=png&name=900x900
― mookieproof, Saturday, 4 March 2023 21:10 (one year ago) link
egads
― Paul Ponzi, Saturday, 4 March 2023 21:16 (one year ago) link
You can check out at any time you likeBut you can't get the milk for free
― jmm, Saturday, 4 March 2023 21:46 (one year ago) link
Jeff Mangum proves you do, in fact, need to buy the cow.
― immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Saturday, 4 March 2023 21:50 (one year ago) link
Hammock are pretty dull corporate ambient. I sort if think of it as AWVFTS but more chill tech company lounge vibe or fancy skin creme store vibe
― Goose Bigelow, Fowl Gigolo (the table is the table), Sunday, 5 March 2023 01:48 (one year ago) link
This is horrible on its own, but it's even more horrible because of what it apparently represents. JazzTimes, formerly a pretty good magazine, is under new ownership and has dismissed its entire editorial staff, cancelled existing assignments, and apparently plans to go forward using j-school newcomers. So with that in mind, I give you JazzTimes' Wayne Shorter obituary (which was not written by a student, but by the magazine's new senior editor, a retired teacher(!) from Tallahassee):
Innovative, Enigmatic, and Inventive are all words that are used to describe this century’s visionary musician, Wayne Shorter. And these words are all true. But, when we look a little further into his compositional career, we come upon Emanon. Emanon – No Name spelled Backwards – is a 3 CD Album that includes a Graphic Novel by the same name. ‘Emanon,’ he says in a press release , ‘It hit me way Back then as a teenager: ‘No name’ means a whole lot. The connection with Emanon and artists and other heroes is the quest to find originality, which is probably the closest thing you can get to creation.’At one point in an interview, he even says “At this point I’m looking to express eternity in composition.” So we’ve lost a visionary whose music was a quest to form an expression of Eternity. We’ve been a part of a search for Creation and Eternity. So it’s no wonder the words like Innovative and Enigmatic are used to describe his work. But how do his intentions affect Jazz, or rather inform and instruct Jazz.When you think about music, every music has a genre from which they may not escape. The waltz is not in search of anything other than that certain rhythm for dancing. The salsa is also contained in a particular format that makes it what it is. Jazz on the other hand depends on that “Quest.” That constant effort to be “original” and “creative.” And because Mr. Shorter was grounded in that Quest, his music rose above so many others efforts to compose. He was not in it for mastering a particular style, while style was important, but he was in it to change it, to use it to create something new, original and express Eternity. That effort changes the whole of Jazz for us, because heretofore, we may not have known what we were listening for or listening to. What were his markers of change.If we review his career, we know that he started with Be Bop. His work with Art Blakey was “pace-setting.” But having mastered that he moved on to form his own group, Weather Report. During his stint with his group, his “quest” took him to Jazz Fusion. He’d go on to compose many jazz standards and refined modern Harmonic language. But at bottom, the Quest was the primary objective. The search for originality and creation were paramount on his mind and his compositions during this time in the 1970s point to his intentions. The average listeners knew there was something going on with his compositions but the actual goals that led to his intentions were not yet expressed in a fashion these listener could wrap their arms around. But, they were transported none the less.Shorter understood clearly what JAZZ meant to musicians and the sophisticated listener. It meant a certain freedom. While the years during which these transformations took place offered very little freedom to the traditional music formats. Jazz offered a freedom that encouraged and confirmed and supported Innovation mentioned by so many. It wasn’t an accident that Jazz was the one art -followed soon by abstract art – that allowed for, indeed permitted freedom. With the country so focused on freedom and so willing to fight for it, Jazz was that one place that freedom and change and every creative avenue was encouraged. So when we see those “hep Cats” sitting around shoulder to shoulder with their cigarettes, coffee and black berets, they are soaking in the vibe of freedom and wondering how to Create that into a manifestation in their own lives. Mr. Shorter was the sound track, no, the example of what beautiful freedom can come from that quest. He led the way to show us all how we might break free from the constraints holding us. Mr. Shorter was more than a musician, he was a visionary who led the way for the rest of us and continued to do so for decades.Now Mr. Shorter hadn’t just come lately to creating. At fifteen, he illustrated and wrote a Comic Book called Star Talk. He drew it in Blue Ink and added script in Blue Ink as well. Blue Ink. Who does that? His Characters, Men and women, headed to the moon where – upon landing – the main character ”Remembers that Spot.” That was in 1949. Wayne was also a High school Grad from the first fine Arts and Performance school in New Jersey. He was recruited for Painting, but was convinced to switch to the music side of the program. He started out with clarinet, but switched to Tenor Sax and took private lessons. He was a kid in a family who clearly saw his potential. He and his brother even started a group while in high school. Mr. Shorter would go on to graduate from NYU and he’d spend two years in the military at Fort Hood. He was married and had several children. So many artists speak well of Him, and it shows how a legacy can indeed be an important part of ones memory of you.Billy Harper said, “Wayne Shorter was a seeker, a herald of truth for the jazz community. Shorter was one of the longer expressions of truth in our music, carrying tons of creativity in his writing and playing. May he rest in Heavenly Music with Trane and Miles.”Wallace Roney, Jr said “I am in shock, and distraught over the news of the great Wayne Shorter. He was, and still is, one of the fundamental reasons I fell in love with this music. His prolific brilliance and longevity as a composer provided me motivation when I was at my lowest points. His honesty Humanity and virtue as a saxophonist made me feel like I could trust every note he played. I was raised on his music. There wasn’t a time in my life where I didn’t know who Wayne Shorter was. He has been a central figure in my development as a musician and as a human being for as long as I can remember. My sincerest, most heartfelt condolences go out to all his friends, family, and everyone whose lives he’s impacted both directly and indirectly. May he rest in Peace.”Mr. Shorter has met his goals and intentions. His Quest to find Originality has been taken up by musicians all around the world and has allowed us, as listeners, a profound freedom as we listen to his compositions and realize that we are in the midst of a Creation experience. May Jazz Bless You and Keep You, Mr. Shorter
‘Emanon,’ he says in a press release , ‘It hit me way Back then as a teenager: ‘No name’ means a whole lot. The connection with Emanon and artists and other heroes is the quest to find originality, which is probably the closest thing you can get to creation.’
At one point in an interview, he even says “At this point I’m looking to express eternity in composition.”
So we’ve lost a visionary whose music was a quest to form an expression of Eternity. We’ve been a part of a search for Creation and Eternity. So it’s no wonder the words like Innovative and Enigmatic are used to describe his work. But how do his intentions affect Jazz, or rather inform and instruct Jazz.
When you think about music, every music has a genre from which they may not escape. The waltz is not in search of anything other than that certain rhythm for dancing. The salsa is also contained in a particular format that makes it what it is. Jazz on the other hand depends on that “Quest.” That constant effort to be “original” and “creative.” And because Mr. Shorter was grounded in that Quest, his music rose above so many others efforts to compose. He was not in it for mastering a particular style, while style was important, but he was in it to change it, to use it to create something new, original and express Eternity. That effort changes the whole of Jazz for us, because heretofore, we may not have known what we were listening for or listening to. What were his markers of change.
If we review his career, we know that he started with Be Bop. His work with Art Blakey was “pace-setting.” But having mastered that he moved on to form his own group, Weather Report. During his stint with his group, his “quest” took him to Jazz Fusion. He’d go on to compose many jazz standards and refined modern Harmonic language. But at bottom, the Quest was the primary objective. The search for originality and creation were paramount on his mind and his compositions during this time in the 1970s point to his intentions. The average listeners knew there was something going on with his compositions but the actual goals that led to his intentions were not yet expressed in a fashion these listener could wrap their arms around. But, they were transported none the less.
Shorter understood clearly what JAZZ meant to musicians and the sophisticated listener. It meant a certain freedom. While the years during which these transformations took place offered very little freedom to the traditional music formats. Jazz offered a freedom that encouraged and confirmed and supported Innovation mentioned by so many. It wasn’t an accident that Jazz was the one art -followed soon by abstract art – that allowed for, indeed permitted freedom. With the country so focused on freedom and so willing to fight for it, Jazz was that one place that freedom and change and every creative avenue was encouraged. So when we see those “hep Cats” sitting around shoulder to shoulder with their cigarettes, coffee and black berets, they are soaking in the vibe of freedom and wondering how to Create that into a manifestation in their own lives. Mr. Shorter was the sound track, no, the example of what beautiful freedom can come from that quest. He led the way to show us all how we might break free from the constraints holding us. Mr. Shorter was more than a musician, he was a visionary who led the way for the rest of us and continued to do so for decades.
Now Mr. Shorter hadn’t just come lately to creating. At fifteen, he illustrated and wrote a Comic Book called Star Talk. He drew it in Blue Ink and added script in Blue Ink as well. Blue Ink. Who does that? His Characters, Men and women, headed to the moon where – upon landing – the main character ”Remembers that Spot.” That was in 1949. Wayne was also a High school Grad from the first fine Arts and Performance school in New Jersey. He was recruited for Painting, but was convinced to switch to the music side of the program. He started out with clarinet, but switched to Tenor Sax and took private lessons. He was a kid in a family who clearly saw his potential. He and his brother even started a group while in high school. Mr. Shorter would go on to graduate from NYU and he’d spend two years in the military at Fort Hood. He was married and had several children.
So many artists speak well of Him, and it shows how a legacy can indeed be an important part of ones memory of you.
Billy Harper said, “Wayne Shorter was a seeker, a herald of truth for the jazz community. Shorter was one of the longer expressions of truth in our music, carrying tons of creativity in his writing and playing. May he rest in Heavenly Music with Trane and Miles.”
Wallace Roney, Jr said “I am in shock, and distraught over the news of the great Wayne Shorter. He was, and still is, one of the fundamental reasons I fell in love with this music. His prolific brilliance and longevity as a composer provided me motivation when I was at my lowest points. His honesty Humanity and virtue as a saxophonist made me feel like I could trust every note he played. I was raised on his music. There wasn’t a time in my life where I didn’t know who Wayne Shorter was. He has been a central figure in my development as a musician and as a human being for as long as I can remember.
My sincerest, most heartfelt condolences go out to all his friends, family, and everyone whose lives he’s impacted both directly and indirectly. May he rest in Peace.”
Mr. Shorter has met his goals and intentions. His Quest to find Originality has been taken up by musicians all around the world and has allowed us, as listeners, a profound freedom as we listen to his compositions and realize that we are in the midst of a Creation experience.
May Jazz Bless You and Keep You, Mr. Shorter
― but also fuck you (unperson), Tuesday, 7 March 2023 00:03 (one year ago) link
Oh shit I subscribe to jazz times. Did madavor media sell it?
― Alicia Silver Stone (Boring, Maryland), Tuesday, 7 March 2023 00:41 (one year ago) link
Apparently, yeah. According to Wikipedia, "On February 15, 2023 Madavor Media was acquired by The BeBop Channel Corporation, a public company under the ticker symbol BBOP and headed up by jazz musician and interim CEO Gregory Charles Royal."
― but also fuck you (unperson), Tuesday, 7 March 2023 00:45 (one year ago) link
Is ChatGPT a retired teacher from Talahasee?
― m0stly clean (Slowsquatch), Tuesday, 7 March 2023 01:09 (one year ago) link
ChatGPT probably knows better than to capitalize random words.
― Hans Holbein (Chinchilla Volapük), Tuesday, 7 March 2023 01:25 (one year ago) link
ChatGPT was an answer on Jeopardy tonight
― hootenanny-soundtracking clusterfucks about milking cows (Neanderthal), Tuesday, 7 March 2023 01:27 (one year ago) link
the jazz bless you and keep youthe jazz make its face to shine upon youand give you peace
The April issue I just got is only 56 pages, and may be the last issue with the old staff.
― Alicia Silver Stone (Boring, Maryland), Tuesday, 7 March 2023 02:19 (one year ago) link
I went to look at an article I'd bookmarked on the JazzTimes site earlier today, and was told that this was the first of three free articles...but they were treating each slide in their slideshow as one article, so I'd used up my free articles before I got to the slide I was looking for.
― Halfway there but for you, Tuesday, 7 March 2023 02:22 (one year ago) link
I'm assuming the BeBop Channel Corporation is a CIA front
― your original display name is still visible (Left), Tuesday, 7 March 2023 04:14 (one year ago) link
What the fuck, that is the worst obit I've ever read. My composition students could write better.
― Goose Bigelow, Fowl Gigolo (the table is the table), Tuesday, 7 March 2023 17:00 (one year ago) link
it shows how a legacy can indeed be an important part of ones memory of you.
― INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Tuesday, 7 March 2023 17:04 (one year ago) link
I'm losing my Mind over this bizarre Jump Cut:
If we review his career, we know that he started with Be Bop. His work with Art Blakey was “pace-setting.” But having mastered that he moved on to form his own group, Weather Report. During his stint with his group, his “quest” took him to Jazz Fusion.
― J. Sam, Tuesday, 7 March 2023 18:08 (one year ago) link
Yeah, nothing really happening for ol' Wayne between 1964 and 1970...
― but also fuck you (unperson), Tuesday, 7 March 2023 18:25 (one year ago) link
― Paul Ponzi, Tuesday, 7 March 2023 18:39 (one year ago) link
Now Mr. Shorter hadn’t just come lately to creating.
https://www.nsmt.org/uploads/1/9/9/5/19956447/nsmt-acc-17-narrator.jpg
― INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Tuesday, 7 March 2023 18:41 (one year ago) link
thread has a winner xps
― Toshirō Nofune (The Seventh ILXorai), Tuesday, 7 March 2023 19:39 (one year ago) link
it’s so bad also because it’s obvious the writer hasn’t even heard of shorter before, but arrogantly and patronizingly tried be all like “I can learn about this person and give a totally informed thoughtful overview”
― not too strange just bad audio (brimstead), Tuesday, 7 March 2023 19:50 (one year ago) link
I wouldn't necessarily conclude that--she's a jazz club owner, has probably heard Shorter before. This seems like the only thing she's written for Jazz Times? Maybe not a professional writer.
― INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Tuesday, 7 March 2023 20:04 (one year ago) link
ah ok, the high concept pontificating taking precedence over information confused me
― not too strange just bad audio (brimstead), Tuesday, 7 March 2023 20:05 (one year ago) link
He was recruited for Painting, but was convinced to switch to the music side of the program.
I guess Shorter totally blew them away at the Painting Combine (did a still life in 4.65) but the Music Team head coach really had designs on growing the Clarinet Line.
― chr1sb3singer, Tuesday, 7 March 2023 20:19 (one year ago) link
Laughing out loud...
― unknown blues singer (morrisp), Tuesday, 7 March 2023 20:22 (one year ago) link
just because I was triggered by the beauty of
those “hep Cats”
― at bottom, wrapping my arms around some tripe called "Quest" (breastcrawl), Tuesday, 7 March 2023 20:34 (one year ago) link
Jazz Times magazine changing owners, editor, and dropping staff for this... ugh
― curmudgeon, Tuesday, 7 March 2023 20:35 (one year ago) link
https://i.postimg.cc/x1m1B0s0/image.png
― ✖, Wednesday, 8 March 2023 03:05 (one year ago) link
https://i.gifer.com/origin/eb/eb7c8fa2bdfa8ceb9304e24599036648.gif
― mookieproof, Wednesday, 8 March 2023 03:11 (one year ago) link
Just read the entirety of that Shorter obit on the original site (quoting it here misses the use of bolding to add emphasis, alongside her curious ideas about capitalization and scare quotes). This is like lock thread worthy. Truly and literally the worst piece of music writing ever, at least that has crossed my eyes.
― Lavator Shemmelpennick, Wednesday, 8 March 2023 13:35 (one year ago) link
my posts on ilx are also a quest to form an expression of eternity.
― treeship., Wednesday, 8 March 2023 14:38 (one year ago) link
isn't that in the ilx user agreement?
"all posts must be part of a quest to form an expression of eternity."
it's one of the main reasons i haven't been banned yet iirc.
ॐ
(but yes, that obit seems kind of "light" coming from "JAZZ TIMES")
― .austinuos, plug forth. (Austin), Wednesday, 8 March 2023 15:07 (one year ago) link
― your original display name is still visible (Left)
front corporation for shredder's hench-warthog
― Kate (rushomancy), Wednesday, 8 March 2023 15:11 (one year ago) link
Just interminable
― J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Saturday, 25 March 2023 13:59 (one year ago) link
The occasional misspellings of his hero’s name (“Flannagan”) are a perfect touch.
― chemtrails over the turkey club (morrisp), Saturday, 25 March 2023 14:15 (one year ago) link
Mike Adams is a High Times Staff writer hailing from the darkest depths of the Armpit of America—Southern Indiana.
oh, it gets darker, Mike
― Paul Ponzi, Saturday, 25 March 2023 14:30 (one year ago) link
look, nothing against the writer on this, who very sensibly left their name off this, but the fact that an article about the "4 Most Essential Led Zeppelin Albums" even exists is really depressing to me.
https://www.discogs.com/digs/music/best-led-zeppelin-albums/
i just wanted to see if lincoln olivetti was involved with the 1983 album by "Brasil Show" (the answer is "no" as far as i can tell)
― Kate (rushomancy), Tuesday, 28 March 2023 14:38 (one year ago) link
It looks like the article's author is "Led Zeppelin"
― INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Tuesday, 28 March 2023 14:40 (one year ago) link
I would love to read something critical of boygenius not by Steve Hyden or like something I would have wrote on my Myspace blog when I was in high school: https://constantlyhating.substack.com/p/boygenius-is-insipid-music
― Murgatroid, Saturday, 1 April 2023 16:29 (one year ago) link
“No wonder Phoebe Bridgers has so many goddamn stans on Twitter, this is indie music for the pop brain. And you can’t have it both ways! “
Gotta keep em seperated
― INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Saturday, 1 April 2023 16:37 (one year ago) link
If anything I wish it were more poppy!
― hypnic jerk (morrisp), Saturday, 1 April 2023 17:05 (one year ago) link
(but I’m on the opposite end of the Greater Millennial timeline, which this writer seems to think is an important point for music reception, so what do I know)
― hypnic jerk (morrisp), Saturday, 1 April 2023 17:08 (one year ago) link
I listened to about half the boygenius album this morning and it's not really for me, but it's fine for what it is. But there's a Slate piece (which I haven't read) with a headline calling them "Rock's Greatest Supergroup" and...just...fuck you. The editor who came up with that should be beaten with a bag of oranges.
― but also fuck you (unperson), Saturday, 1 April 2023 17:14 (one year ago) link
Isn't that by the guy who wrote the Celine Dion book?
― Paul Ponzi, Saturday, 1 April 2023 18:16 (one year ago) link
Yes, and he's a smart guy and a good writer who I like, which is why I don't blame him for the headline. I blame the all-too-typical idiocy of Slate.
― but also fuck you (unperson), Saturday, 1 April 2023 19:08 (one year ago) link
the backlash to this record feels primarily like a backlash to phoebe bridgers, incidentally it also doesn’t feel rooted in the quality of her music but by some ostensible thing she represents
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Saturday, 1 April 2023 22:02 (one year ago) link
i don’t love the record as much as i wanted to but it’s because my expectations were probably off—these are three songwriters i want to hear write together and there’s only 1-2 instances of that on the record, otherwise these feel like siloed off songs that they brought to each other, which is fine, they’re just very distinct songwriters and thus i feel invited to compare what one offers vs. what another doesn’t. julien baker is prob offering up the best indie rock i’ve heard in a decade, dacus is the best lyricist of the three easy but i prefer when her sound has a little more oomph (historian, an album where EVERY song makes me cry and i don’t even know why), and bridgers is kinda like… in the center of both of these styles without ever seeming to unite them? there that’s my considered takedown of the boygenius record, a record i like
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Saturday, 1 April 2023 22:06 (one year ago) link
yeah, saw a Twitter thread yesterday that called Phoebe "cringe", which seems p emblematic of the backlash
― Murgatroid, Saturday, 1 April 2023 22:23 (one year ago) link
whoops, no, the guy called her "corny"
― Murgatroid, Saturday, 1 April 2023 22:24 (one year ago) link
Ryan Adams truthers getting their revenge
― papal hotwife (milo z), Saturday, 1 April 2023 22:47 (one year ago) link
i wish schoop was better at hating lol, he loves his contrarian hot take pieces but this one especially is so lazy and lacking in substance
― ufo, Saturday, 1 April 2023 23:06 (one year ago) link
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Saturday, April 1, 2023 5:02 PM (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink
typical twitter music discourse. instead of criticizing the music, imagine an annoying person who might like that music and criticize that fake person
― ludicrously capacious bag (voodoo chili), Saturday, 1 April 2023 23:42 (one year ago) link
I’m not familiar with “Schoop” but for someone whose blog URL is “constantlyhating”, that piece was bad at its job and he seems bad at “hating”
I would have loved reading someone whose shtick is taking down hyped up artists maybe a decade ago but now this dude just seems extremely tiresome
― Murgatroid, Sunday, 2 April 2023 00:58 (one year ago) link
mostly i just know him from tumblr like a decade ago well before he'd started seriously writing about music. he had a slightly less negative renaissance dunk piece last year too
lazy dunks like this are good at getting attention though, both from people who support the inevitable backlash against the dunk's target but also from people annoyed at how lazy it is
― ufo, Sunday, 2 April 2023 01:05 (one year ago) link
I can fathom where "indie music for pop fans" is coming from, there's a smoothness to some of Bridgers work that I find offputting... but that was also true of The Postal Service almost 20 years ago and you just have to accept that "indie" hasn't meant anything for American audiences for 30 years so who cares.
― papal hotwife (milo z), Sunday, 2 April 2023 01:36 (one year ago) link
"mostly i just know him from tumblr like a decade ago well before he'd started seriously writing about music."
lmao seems about right
― Murgatroid, Sunday, 2 April 2023 02:27 (one year ago) link
sorry, can't get over how half-assed this backlash is
It’s kind of sad now that white women singer/songwriters are all called like Puny Tyrant and make songs about how having a pebble in your shoe reminds you of being ghosted and all of their fans lie about how that feeling is so real it makes them want to jump off a balcony— Ben (@perma___ben) April 2, 2023
back in my day, backlashes etc blah blah
― Murgatroid, Sunday, 2 April 2023 21:15 (one year ago) link
Music fans always lying about liking music
― INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Sunday, 2 April 2023 21:21 (one year ago) link
“Puny Tyrant”(?)
― hypnic jerk (morrisp), Sunday, 2 April 2023 21:32 (one year ago) link
The way some of those guys write about these female musicians certainly says a lot more about themselves than their targets
― omar little, Sunday, 2 April 2023 21:32 (one year ago) link
between constantly hating and this dude, their hearts are clearly not in it!
― Murgatroid, Sunday, 2 April 2023 21:39 (one year ago) link
Making up a guy to be mad at vs. making up a woman singer-songwriter to be mad at
― papal hotwife (milo z), Sunday, 2 April 2023 21:44 (one year ago) link
kind of sad how these guys think pointing out the whiteness of white women makes their gender coded sneering (and their own whiteness, where applicable) less obvious somehow?
― Left, Sunday, 2 April 2023 21:46 (one year ago) link
I bet they have some real dogshit taste in music too
― Left, Sunday, 2 April 2023 21:47 (one year ago) link
i’ve got dogshit taste in music but i just occasionally blast it on a messageboard
― mh, Monday, 3 April 2023 00:58 (one year ago) link
l mean, lol, that’s the thing, the people who complain the loudest always have shit taste anyway
― brimstead, Monday, 3 April 2023 01:00 (one year ago) link
I will say that any piece that says Wojnarowicz and Feinberg paved the way for boygenius is a stretch— partly because the latter didn’t have much to do with music, and the former was a Danceteria worker for a spell who was in a shortlived post-punk band 3 Teens Kill 4. And frankly, their politics were much more radical than what appears on boygenius records. That’s fine! Revolutionary art and activism doesn’t need to have anything to do with pop music! The imperative to draw these connections when they simply aren’t there is on critics, so while I don’t agree with the rest of the review— I like the new record well enough— Schoop has a point there. Just because something is queer doesn’t mean it has anything to do with queer struggle !
― Goose Bigelow, Fowl Gigolo (the table is the table), Monday, 3 April 2023 11:33 (one year ago) link
as ever, the negative reviews of something like the boygenius album are as much a review of the critical reception as they are of the music. when the music press gets together to unanimously revere something that already seems to have the exposure and support odds tilted in its favour, it can all have the feel of enforced consensus-building, the canon being assembled in real time. which, if you don't fully buy the importance of the music, can feel very disheartening and result in ugly lashing-out at music which probably doesn't deserve it.
i say this as someone who has done the above many, many times
― imago, Monday, 3 April 2023 11:56 (one year ago) link
last year's big thief album i just had to shut off the hype, ignore it all, just listen to the music, and it worked. if i listen to boygenius i don't want to know anything about it first. no narrative, no prejudice
― imago, Monday, 3 April 2023 11:59 (one year ago) link
i want it sprung on me in a cafe, i don't want to think to myself 'right, i shall now sit, and RESPOND to the boygenius record, i shall PEN MY RESPONSE', that is monstrous, it needs to be organic. whither radio, whither accident
― imago, Monday, 3 April 2023 12:12 (one year ago) link
a cafe or an EOY rollout ;)
― imago, Monday, 3 April 2023 12:13 (one year ago) link
― imago, Monday, April 3, 2023 7:56 AM (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink
It isn't the saturation that irks me, particularly but the types of records that get elevated to the extent the boygenius record has. To me, this is regressive, bland music that does nothing to challenge the status quo of cafe playlist indie dominance. I'd be fine with Pitchfork plastering seven different articles about, say, Fever Ray or Angel Bat Dawid on the front page, because they're in my opinion legitimately groundbreaking artists who just released excellent albums, and it's just disheartening to see that level of space and focus wasted on zoomer Wilson Philips. I guess what I'm saying is that you're right: it's not the record itself, but what you correctly identify as the enforced consensus-building that some of us are reacting to. Like, why this?
― Paul Ponzi, Monday, 3 April 2023 13:40 (one year ago) link
it's just disheartening to see that level of space and focus wasted on zoomer Wilson Philips
Three women harmonzing = Wilson Phillips? OK.
― the very juice and sperm of kindness. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 3 April 2023 13:44 (one year ago) link
i like that this thread has transformed into the thing it was complaining about yesterday
― flamenco drop (BradNelson), Monday, 3 April 2023 13:44 (one year ago) link
But what if cafe playlist indie is your thing?
― INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Monday, 3 April 2023 13:47 (one year ago) link
I'm just chuffed that Case/Lang/Veirs didn't get this hype
come on darlin, hear me darlinthis thread's a waste of time for me
― hootenanny-soundtracking clusterfucks about milking cows (Neanderthal), Monday, 3 April 2023 13:52 (one year ago) link
― the very juice and sperm of kindness. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, April 3, 2023 9:44 AM (eight minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
You're right, that was an unfair comparison. I usually remember Wilson Phillips songs five minutes after I hear them
― Paul Ponzi, Monday, 3 April 2023 13:55 (one year ago) link
TS a hypothetical band called Puny Tyrant who sound like zoomer Wilson Philips vs Boygenius
― soref, Monday, 3 April 2023 14:04 (one year ago) link
Puny Tyrant consists of Amanda Palmer and two fans who paid their life savings for a spot in the group
― INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Monday, 3 April 2023 14:08 (one year ago) link
Case/Lang/Veirs = awesome/awesome/awesome
― she loves me like a rock lobster (Ye Mad Puffin), Monday, 3 April 2023 15:56 (one year ago) link
It's funny, I've also thought of that album as a comparison point... I should revisit it.
― hypnic jerk (morrisp), Monday, 3 April 2023 16:00 (one year ago) link
it's terrific.
i don't agree with "Zoomer Wilson Phillips" but that was a good line
― alpine static, Monday, 3 April 2023 16:12 (one year ago) link
i want to go to sleep forever inside "Blue Fires"
― alpine static, Monday, 3 April 2023 16:14 (one year ago) link
I'm just chuffed that Case/Lang/Veirs didn't get this hype― INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Monday, April 3, 2023 6:47 AM
― INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Monday, April 3, 2023 6:47 AM
lol otm
(i have zero interest in the boygenius material, but only because i am a stick in the mud)
― ''i am the kanye west kanye west thinks he is.'' (Austin), Monday, 3 April 2023 16:18 (one year ago) link
The Rolling Stone cover story surprised me, but I see it as a combination of appealing biographies, good reputations for songwriting, and timing.
I like the album but recognize how smart, mostly acoustic tunes may not resonate in 2022, especially if like Paul you want "groundbreaking" (a quality dependent on the writer's attitude toward the music specifically and singularity generallly).
― the very juice and sperm of kindness. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 3 April 2023 16:26 (one year ago) link
There are a lot of thoughtful ways to be critically write about the hype cycle without attacking artists personally for benefiting from it. I think weaker writers are less capable of avoiding the latter. It’s not like boygenius is pushing other ascendant artists down the stairs on the way to the top. It’s not like their feelings are false and their fans are lying because it doesn’t make others feel the same way.
― omar little, Monday, 3 April 2023 16:30 (one year ago) link
If boygenius did push anyone down some stairs I stand corrected.
― omar little, Monday, 3 April 2023 16:31 (one year ago) link
I had never heard of any of the people in boygenius until a friend posted a video in 2020 of slowly driving through Providence, listening to “Me & My Dog.” That track is unstoppable pathos for me, and at the height of the pandemic’s first year, it had some resonance with my own personal feelings. That is, I agree with imago about a certain element of what he’s saying— hearing these sorts of records organically assures my ears will be open and not in thrall to the expectations or exuberance of critics.
― Goose Bigelow, Fowl Gigolo (the table is the table), Monday, 3 April 2023 16:39 (one year ago) link
Blame the hypers not the hyped.
― Maggot Bairn (Tom D.), Monday, 3 April 2023 16:45 (one year ago) link
“I think [hyped album] is very mid, sorry” is essentially “modern distro models allow me to find several more-obscure examples of the genre/style of [hyped album], however they reach my specific taste preferences more directly, thus I wish they got the hype instead of [hyped album artist]”.
I’m sure there are numerous pre-streaming-era examples, but Gen Xers who attended college in the mid-90s may recall being told “You think Alanis is good? You need to hear Ani DiFranco!”; with a more modern version being “Yeah, Big Thief is fine, but it would be great if the same critical love was thrown at (for me, anyway) Trace or Art School Girlfriend…”
― Front-loaded albums are musical gerrymandering (Prefecture), Monday, 3 April 2023 17:43 (one year ago) link
Not to make too much of the comparison btw these acts, but I would quibble that Case & Lang, at least, aren't/weren't any more obscure than even the most famed Boygenius member (although granted didn't have the same "heat" at the time).
― hypnic jerk (morrisp), Monday, 3 April 2023 18:13 (one year ago) link
PB is capable of filling 5000+ cap amphitheaters across the country.
Neko has never been that big. (Love her, of course.) Lang, maybe ... but that was a long time ago.
Or maybe I'm reading what you're saying wrong? Entirely possible!
― alpine static, Monday, 3 April 2023 22:02 (one year ago) link
Well fair enough!
― hypnic jerk (morrisp), Monday, 3 April 2023 22:20 (one year ago) link
(Btw – I re-listened to Case/Lang/Viers today, and it is really good; although also the sort of album that seems destined to be less "buzzy" for aesthetic reasons. It happens to have received the exact same Pitchfork score as Boygenius's LP – though doesn't have a "Best New Music" tag, if they were doing that then.)
― hypnic jerk (morrisp), Monday, 3 April 2023 22:25 (one year ago) link
case/lang/veirs were all in their mid-40s or older when that record came out
perhaps not too unusual that it didn't generate buzz with the kids
― mookieproof, Tuesday, 4 April 2023 00:39 (one year ago) link
Perhaps, but isn’t that’s part of the “complaint”when it comes to certain artists being hyped(?) Nothing’s stopping RS from putting artists that age on the cover, etc.
― hypnic jerk (morrisp), Tuesday, 4 April 2023 00:45 (one year ago) link
Anyway I’ll stop “comparing” those two trios (as it feels icky and doesn’t make much sense anyway), but I agree it’s common to respond to hype by asking “why these particular artists and not others,” and the reasons may be good or bad or make sense or not, there are all sorts of factors involved.
― hypnic jerk (morrisp), Tuesday, 4 April 2023 00:48 (one year ago) link
yeah not really apples to apples
― But his face would not turn into hot Kirby (Evan), Tuesday, 4 April 2023 04:06 (one year ago) link
I am once again calling for the Fiona Apple/Oranssi Pazuzu supergroup
― imago, Tuesday, 4 April 2023 04:18 (one year ago) link
sadly feel like Apple & Oranges is likelier to be her, Blood Orange and Rex Orange County
― imago, Tuesday, 4 April 2023 04:21 (one year ago) link
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_Oranges?wprov=sfla1
― she loves me like a rock lobster (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 4 April 2023 04:32 (one year ago) link
I thought indie rock writ large was regressive music for lame dweebs when it was a misogynist boys club, and just because women play it now doesn't mean that it somehow transcends being regressive music for lame dweebs
― young sussy (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 4 April 2023 16:42 (one year ago) link
got 'em
― alpine static, Tuesday, 4 April 2023 16:50 (one year ago) link
Ouch. Lame Dweebs is the name of my Bright Eyes tribute band.
― she loves me like a rock lobster (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 4 April 2023 17:23 (one year ago) link
funny, my Puny Tyrant tribute band is called Dame Lweebs
― INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Wednesday, 5 April 2023 14:10 (one year ago) link
this made me lol, i'm sorryhttps://metal-digest.com/2022/10/26/harakiri-for-the-sky-harakiri-for-the-sky-mmxxii/
― StanM, Wednesday, 19 April 2023 10:56 (one year ago) link
"The meritorious wonders that are portrayed upon this re-recording can be viewed from the angle wherein a soul wrestles not with the currents of a river, for you should be within its flow rather than trying to control the inevitable.". And then:"But the question still remains unanswered…besides a length of 10 years, what separates the re-recorded version from the original?"I love it when you're not sure if the writer understands his own writing
― Nabozo, Wednesday, 19 April 2023 12:24 (one year ago) link
I suppose it's all a tangential reference to Heraclitus
― Nabozo, Wednesday, 19 April 2023 12:26 (one year ago) link
Isn't everything, really?
― when you wish upon a tsar (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 19 April 2023 14:46 (one year ago) link
no one posts in the same thread twice
― mark s, Wednesday, 19 April 2023 15:05 (one year ago) link
Coldplay just want their music to be heard in the correct context
― INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Wednesday, 19 April 2023 15:10 (one year ago) link
Clearly AI generated & full of wrong mistakes & wrong takes: https://singersroom.com/w5/best-pavement-songs-of-all-time/
― BrianB, Thursday, 4 May 2023 11:01 (one year ago) link
I like that they never tire in pointing out that these Pavement songs are by the band Pavement
― INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Thursday, 4 May 2023 13:32 (one year ago) link
a wrong take AND a mistake
― mark s, Thursday, 4 May 2023 13:43 (one year ago) link
Very important to start from first principles
― jmm, Thursday, 4 May 2023 13:49 (one year ago) link
That Edw@rd Toml1n is a very prolific writer
― symsymsym, Thursday, 4 May 2023 14:12 (one year ago) link
Google proofing from an AI? I’d welcome his coming here to tell us more about 80s band the Smashing Pumpkins.
― Every post of mine is an expression of eternity (Boring, Maryland), Thursday, 4 May 2023 14:41 (one year ago) link
music criticism is the laziest, most formulaic, and least insightful form of writing, so it makes sense that they would replace music writers with AI
― budo jeru, Thursday, 4 May 2023 15:07 (one year ago) link
omg google for Tomlin and find symsymsym
― Cthulhu Diamond Phillips (Neanderthal), Thursday, 4 May 2023 15:07 (one year ago) link
xpost helluva board to make that claim on :)
― Cthulhu Diamond Phillips (Neanderthal), Thursday, 4 May 2023 15:08 (one year ago) link
it's interesting that the positive/descriptive/bland house style of AI is at this point not just immediately recognisable but acutely annoying. have to wonder if there will be a reaction against this in regular non-AI writing, maybe this time next year everyone will be writing criticism like hunter s thompson. again.
― the world is your octopus (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Thursday, 4 May 2023 15:13 (one year ago) link
CaAL, that will just inspire coders to develop a Gonzo module.
"I was wacked-out on peyote and household bleach when I listened to the latest Rihanna album. I took a loaded .45 and a bottle of Jose Cuervo and headed down I-80 while listening to it. Here are my impressions:"
― coolgnoscenti (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 4 May 2023 15:31 (one year ago) link
A Spike Jonze film about teaching an AI to be edgy
― INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Thursday, 4 May 2023 15:38 (one year ago) link
AI having late night phone calls with a Lester Bangs hologram after losing virginity to an NFT
― INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Thursday, 4 May 2023 15:41 (one year ago) link
you can already ask chatbots to mimic writing styles anyway though
and I don't think it's the "house style of AI" you're hearing in that listicle, it's very much the alien way music is written about on Wikipedia
― rob, Thursday, 4 May 2023 15:42 (one year ago) link
I think something weirdly off-putting (and recognizable) about AI-generated text is the mechanically perfect grammar... actual writers mix it up and bend the rules, y'know?
― Are You There God? It's a-Me, Mario (morrisp), Thursday, 4 May 2023 15:44 (one year ago) link
no there is definitely a house style of AI, I've been dealing with a load of students who've used it, some things it does:* relentlessly seeing the difficulties in things, but then the positive side, and reminding people to be mindful and consider both sides of debates.* discussing everything on the blandest, most impersonal terms but always avoiding any suggestion of systemic change* never playing with language & grammar, there's no poetry to anything it puts outI know it used to write in different styles, but I feel like that was beaten out of it at some point. if you try now it might identify some themes or tropes the author uses, but has no clue about how they use language, or if it has a clue then the heavy morality in play overrides it somehow.
― the world is your octopus (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Thursday, 4 May 2023 15:53 (one year ago) link
look, it just can't do it.
Rihanna LP ReviewWrite a review of a Rihanna LP in the style of Hunter S Thompson ChatGPTFear and Loathing in the Studio: A Review of Rihanna's Latest LPThe air was thick with smoke and the room was awash in neon lights as I sat down to listen to Rihanna's latest LP. I was expecting a wild ride, and let me tell you, I wasn't disappointed.From the moment the first beat dropped, I was transported to a world of debauchery and excess. Rihanna's voice was like a siren's call, beckoning me deeper into the depths of her sonic universe.As I listened to track after track, I couldn't help but feel like I was living in a fever dream. The beats were frenetic, the basslines thumping, and the lyrics were pure poetry. It was as if Rihanna had tapped into some primal energy source, channeling it directly into her music.But for all its raucous energy, there was also a sense of darkness lurking just beneath the surface. The lyrics hinted at a life lived on the edge, where pleasure and pain were inextricably intertwined. It was as if Rihanna was daring us to come along for the ride, to embrace the madness and the chaos.As the LP drew to a close, I was left feeling both exhilarated and exhausted. It was like I had been on a wild journey through the heart of Rihanna's psyche, and I wasn't quite sure if I was ready to come back to reality.In the end, Rihanna's latest LP is a testament to her incredible talent and her fearless spirit. It's not for the faint of heart, but for those brave enough to take the plunge, it's an experience that they'll never forget.
― the world is your octopus (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Thursday, 4 May 2023 15:57 (one year ago) link
music criticism is the laziest, most formulaic, and least insightful form of writing, so it makes sense that they would replace music writers with AI― budo jeru, Thursday, May 4, 2023 8:07 AM
― budo jeru, Thursday, May 4, 2023 8:07 AM
dunno if you're joking, but i genuinely feel this way about sports journalists. like i'd rate fox news shitheels above them (at least they have a sense of showmanship ffs).
xpost lol @ "the beats were frenetic" idk why that tickles me so much
― my beard exists more than i do. (Austin), Thursday, 4 May 2023 15:59 (one year ago) link
xp I mean yes, that sucks bad, but it's not the same style as that Pavement thing, right?
which chatgpt are you using btw?
― rob, Thursday, 4 May 2023 16:02 (one year ago) link
In one of my few experiments w/ChatGPT, I asked it to write a short story about a Google Pixel phone, in the style of a few different authors. For Hemingway and Joyce, it basically generated the same dull narrative, just swapping the location from Key West to Dublin... but for Bukowski, the story started with a few details equivalent to the Hunter S. thing above – "as I downed my final beer and swerved off the barstool," or whatever. Funny, but obv. no one would mistake it for the real thing.
― Are You There God? It's a-Me, Mario (morrisp), Thursday, 4 May 2023 16:03 (one year ago) link
I asked it to write a review of the Hamilton soundtrack in the style of Lester Bangs and it gave me a bunch of Freedom Rock lines: "Well, let me tell you, the Hamilton Soundtrack LP is a freaking revelation, man!"
― INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Thursday, 4 May 2023 16:07 (one year ago) link
all the AI generated pieces I've read of this kind come off as if the writer is being held hostage and forced to come up with listicles. "Dry facts only. I cut off a finger for every strongly held opinion you express."
― omar little, Thursday, 4 May 2023 16:09 (one year ago) link
I'm still on ChatGPT3, if anyone is on 4 they could give it a go?
― the world is your octopus (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Thursday, 4 May 2023 16:10 (one year ago) link
These posts are going to seem so quaint after 1 or 2 years of exponential improvement in the technology.
― enochroot, Thursday, 4 May 2023 16:10 (one year ago) link
Well maybe, but until it can actually listen to the music and at least mimic a human response to it, it's not going to write a half-decent music review.
― the world is your octopus (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Thursday, 4 May 2023 16:16 (one year ago) link
It could just call everything shit and make you feel dumb for liking it
― INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Thursday, 4 May 2023 16:18 (one year ago) link
maybe those people were AI all along, makes sense.
― the world is your octopus (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Thursday, 4 May 2023 16:19 (one year ago) link
That's why it's important to clown early and clown often while it's still shit
O noes Rockys Basilisk don't hurt me lol
― Toploader on the road, unite and take over (Bananaman Begins), Thursday, 4 May 2023 17:08 (one year ago) link
I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream (That I Disagree With the Computer's Boygenius Rating)
― Are You There God? It's a-Me, Mario (morrisp), Thursday, 4 May 2023 17:15 (one year ago) link
this is supposed to be in the style of a 2002 Pitchfork review, I give ChatGPT a D-minus
Liz Phair's 1993 debut album, "Exile in Guyville," has long been heralded as a landmark release in the world of indie rock. A critical darling upon its release, the album has maintained its status as a touchstone of the genre for nearly three decades. But what is it about this album that continues to captivate listeners, even in 2023?For starters, the songwriting on "Exile in Guyville" is top-notch. Phair's lyrics are sharp, witty, and often confrontational, touching on themes of sexuality, gender dynamics, and the perils of youth. Her voice is simultaneously vulnerable and confident, imbuing each track with a sense of urgency and authenticity.Musically, the album draws heavily from the lo-fi sound that was popular in the early '90s, but Phair's pop sensibilities keep the songs from feeling too rough around the edges. From the crunchy guitars of "6'1"" to the acoustic strumming of "Divorce Song," each track is imbued with a distinct personality that keeps the listener engaged.Of course, it's impossible to discuss "Exile in Guyville" without addressing its context. The album was conceived as a response to The Rolling Stones' "Exile on Main St.," and its exploration of the male-dominated rock scene of the time is a crucial part of its legacy. Phair's lyrics are unflinching in their examination of the ways in which women are often marginalized and objectified in music, and her refusal to shy away from these topics was a bold statement in 1993.If there's one criticism that can be leveled at "Exile in Guyville," it's that some of the songs can feel a bit repetitive. The lo-fi sound and simple song structures can make it easy for tracks to blend together upon first listen. However, this is a minor quibble, and the album's strengths more than make up for any perceived weaknesses.All in all, "Exile in Guyville" is a classic of the indie rock canon for a reason. Its incisive songwriting, unique sound, and fearless attitude continue to inspire new generations of musicians and listeners alike. Highly recommended.
For starters, the songwriting on "Exile in Guyville" is top-notch. Phair's lyrics are sharp, witty, and often confrontational, touching on themes of sexuality, gender dynamics, and the perils of youth. Her voice is simultaneously vulnerable and confident, imbuing each track with a sense of urgency and authenticity.
Musically, the album draws heavily from the lo-fi sound that was popular in the early '90s, but Phair's pop sensibilities keep the songs from feeling too rough around the edges. From the crunchy guitars of "6'1"" to the acoustic strumming of "Divorce Song," each track is imbued with a distinct personality that keeps the listener engaged.
Of course, it's impossible to discuss "Exile in Guyville" without addressing its context. The album was conceived as a response to The Rolling Stones' "Exile on Main St.," and its exploration of the male-dominated rock scene of the time is a crucial part of its legacy. Phair's lyrics are unflinching in their examination of the ways in which women are often marginalized and objectified in music, and her refusal to shy away from these topics was a bold statement in 1993.
If there's one criticism that can be leveled at "Exile in Guyville," it's that some of the songs can feel a bit repetitive. The lo-fi sound and simple song structures can make it easy for tracks to blend together upon first listen. However, this is a minor quibble, and the album's strengths more than make up for any perceived weaknesses.
All in all, "Exile in Guyville" is a classic of the indie rock canon for a reason. Its incisive songwriting, unique sound, and fearless attitude continue to inspire new generations of musicians and listeners alike. Highly recommended.
― papal hotwife (milo z), Thursday, 4 May 2023 17:27 (one year ago) link
Her voice is simultaneously vulnerable and confident
So how does it come up with an "observation" like this, which doesn't seem to be taken verbatim from something else on the Web? Does it pick and choose from lines which I do see online, like Phair's 25-year-old voice—as caustic and funny as it was candid and vulnerable and a girl from suburban Chicago with an electric guitar who sang explicitly about her sex drive and self-confidence with no hint of pretenses or pleasantries?
― Are You There God? It's a-Me, Mario (morrisp), Thursday, 4 May 2023 17:50 (one year ago) link
Seems plausible for a computer to take two opposing adjectives used to describe her voice and put them together with "simultaneously" to imply some depth in its observation.
― BrianB, Thursday, 4 May 2023 18:26 (one year ago) link
Yeah I mean it's obviously plausible (it did it, after all!)... just wondering how it, like, technically works
― Are You There God? It's a-Me, Mario (morrisp), Thursday, 4 May 2023 18:33 (one year ago) link
Generative AI (at least at the moment) is both mind-boggling impressive and "yeah, so what?" banal, at the same time... it's hard to wrap my head around.
― Are You There God? It's a-Me, Mario (morrisp), Thursday, 4 May 2023 18:37 (one year ago) link
(I guess you might say it's... "simultaneously banal and impressive, imbuing the reader with a sense of both skepticism and discomfort")
― Are You There God? It's a-Me, Mario (morrisp), Thursday, 4 May 2023 18:39 (one year ago) link
god, this sucks so bad ... not just the writing but the sheer existence, and the future. :(
― alpine static, Thursday, 4 May 2023 19:52 (one year ago) link
xxxpost - Part of the AI program combs the web for content and another part of it is programed to put that content into sentences that mimic human writing. By "plausible", I meant that it wouldn't be hard for a programmer to tell it to take two opposing adjectives describing a noun from the web and present them as "noun is simultaneously adjective 1 and adjective 2" to give the reader pause to consider how the noun could be described by both adjectives simultaneously and interpret that as some kind of human insight.
― BrianB, Thursday, 4 May 2023 20:08 (one year ago) link
Is it actually part of its programming, to do that specific thing ("take two opposing adjectives...")? Or has it "learned" on its own that that type of construction is often found in the style of writing it's mimicking (review writing, in this case)?
― Are You There God? It's a-Me, Mario (morrisp), Thursday, 4 May 2023 20:12 (one year ago) link
the latter aiui
one thing that might help is that if you search just for the phrase "simultaneously vulnerable and confident" you do get plenty of results: none specifically referring to Phair that I saw, but many of them are about music/singing and some include the word "voice" as well.
you have to keep in mind it doesn't "know" anything about Liz Phair, obvs, it's trying to guess what a natural speaker would say in response to your prompt
― rob, Thursday, 4 May 2023 20:12 (one year ago) link
There are plenty of Liz Phair articles that contain the words "vulnerable" and "confident" but not in the same sentence.
― INDEPENDENTS DAY BY STEVEN SPILBERG (President Keyes), Thursday, 4 May 2023 20:14 (one year ago) link
Also whatever program was used for that pavement listicle performed far worse than chapgpt did with Liz Phair or perhaps the scope of picking and describing the 10 best Pavement songs was too broad for it whereas emulating a review of one of the most talked about albums of the 90s should be right in it's wheelhouse.
― BrianB, Thursday, 4 May 2023 20:17 (one year ago) link
I have tried to pay as little attention as possible to AI aside from shitposting-quality prompts, what sticks out most to me (with the Phair review) is the choppiness - it's competent but on the level of a high school sophomore grudgingly writing a short essay. I don't know if stronger prompts have generated anything with any kind of human flair.
― papal hotwife (milo z), Thursday, 4 May 2023 20:40 (one year ago) link
I think that with AI chat bots at least, the amount of "learning" that they do is overstated. At their base, they only do what they've been told to do. The "voice" of their output is just reverse engineered sentence diagramming. They don't understand language any more than we humans understand our own consciousness. We input a sentence, they take our words and search for other applicable words to fulfil our command and they put what they find back into sentences. The words that they output don't mean anything to them, they're only concerned with the words we input and what the words in their code tell them to do with them.
― BrianB, Thursday, 4 May 2023 21:35 (one year ago) link
The danger isn't that AI will become conscious and destroy us, it's that humans will mistakenly use it to destroy ourselves.
― BrianB, Thursday, 4 May 2023 21:42 (one year ago) link
The impressive/startling thing to me – putting aside the arguably mediocre quality of the output, when compared to actual human work – is how well they "understand" such thin/basic prompts, and rich (and quick) their output is. Y'know, this part – they take our words and search for other applicable words to fulfil our command and they put what they find back into sentences. It's one thing to say it, and another to see it at work with a command like, Write a Liz Phair review.
― Are You There God? It's a-Me, Mario (morrisp), Thursday, 4 May 2023 22:06 (one year ago) link
the fact that what made the AI lightbulb go on for morrisp is a fake "Exile in Guyville" review... that just makes me feel like, these are my people here.
(those of you who aren't chatbots, anyway)
― enochroot, Friday, 5 May 2023 00:26 (one year ago) link
Across North and South Philly neighborhoods, two dozen or so rappers were defining a fierce local style: halting but high-velocity, herky-jerk but smooth, slick but hard.
today's pfork archive review lol
― my beard exists more than i do. (Austin), Sunday, 7 May 2023 16:01 (one year ago) link
(not saying the review as a whole is bad, just funny timing)
― my beard exists more than i do. (Austin), Sunday, 7 May 2023 16:20 (one year ago) link
Baffling choices aside, I’m kind of shocked this gauche and incompetent piece was let out the door:https://www.avclub.com/the-cure-best-songs-ranked-1850397749/slides/33
― assert (matttkkkk), Tuesday, 9 May 2023 20:28 (one year ago) link
yeah i just read that and thought: i don't *think* this was written by AI but it'd make me feel better if it was
― orifex, Tuesday, 9 May 2023 20:43 (one year ago) link
cool pop sensibilities you got there, bro.
― my beard exists more than i do. (Austin), Tuesday, 9 May 2023 21:06 (one year ago) link
The writing in that piece made me wince a few times, but for better or worse there seemed to be something human, callow, in it. Like I felt embarrassment for a person rather than a website.
― Halfway there but for you, Wednesday, 10 May 2023 14:30 (one year ago) link
I wasn't expecting Fight to be mentioned only 13 words in
― you can see me from westbury white horse, Wednesday, 10 May 2023 14:42 (one year ago) link
yeah, was gonna say. nothing to do with the writing, but some of the picks are a little... outside of the usual consensus.
(not necessarily bad, just don't think i've ever seen "fight" rated like that. by anybody.)
― my beard exists more than i do. (Austin), Wednesday, 10 May 2023 14:53 (one year ago) link
it's just junk made by someone who googled the cure for a half hour and then wrote it. you get what you pay for.
― treeship., Wednesday, 10 May 2023 15:37 (one year ago) link
this, on the other hand, delighted me: https://www.theringer.com/music/2023/5/10/23714711/the-cure-best-songs-ranked-tour
― orifex, Wednesday, 10 May 2023 20:37 (one year ago) link
not the worst music writing ever, but who knew that the best albums of 2013 were 25 albums from pitchfork's year-end list in a slightly different order plus 5 albums by huge rock acts?https://uproxx.com/indie/best-albums-of-2013-ranked-10-years-later/
― ludicrously capacious bag (voodoo chili), Thursday, 22 June 2023 15:29 (one year ago) link
not the worst but certainly the most mediocre
― ivy (BradNelson), Thursday, 22 June 2023 15:30 (one year ago) link
this is some hilarious head-in-the-sand stuff:
At the time that he put out Southeastern, Jason Isbell was a journeyman Americana artist who many people assumed had already peaked as a songwriter when he was in Drive-By Truckers. For that reason, the love for Southeastern took a while to build, as critics simply weren’t used to paying close attention to this guy. But over time, the narrative of Southeastern proved irresistible.
― Alito Bit of Soap (President Keyes), Thursday, 22 June 2023 15:36 (one year ago) link
people just weren't paying enough attention to indie rock music in...*checks notes*...2013
― ludicrously capacious bag (voodoo chili), Thursday, 22 June 2023 15:41 (one year ago) link
it's not that southeastern proved irresistible, but the narrative of southeastern did.
― omar little, Thursday, 22 June 2023 15:54 (one year ago) link
astonishing ability to craft a paragraph with zero ideas in it
― ivy (BradNelson), Thursday, 22 June 2023 15:58 (one year ago) link
Are we sure Hyden didn’t farm that out to AI?
― papal hotwife (milo z), Thursday, 22 June 2023 15:59 (one year ago) link
the chance blurb is funny bcuz he explains the rather obvious context of the whole thing but then doesn't actually say whether he thinks the album holds up artistically or not, when it's, for the reasons he states, prob the most interesting re-evaluation of anything on this list. i guess that would've required actual work, but still...
― J0rdan S., Thursday, 22 June 2023 16:02 (one year ago) link
As we’ll see, this is the year when the 2010s really began in a musical sense, while a lot of the trends that were popular in the previous decade fell away.
― omar little, Thursday, 22 June 2023 16:03 (one year ago) link
still waiting for the 2020s to begin
― Alito Bit of Soap (President Keyes), Thursday, 22 June 2023 16:04 (one year ago) link
"Acid Rap was released about three months after Barack Obama was inaugurated for his second term. But rather than represent a new beginning, that album now feels like the tail end of the original Obama optimism from his first term."
― Alito Bit of Soap (President Keyes), Thursday, 22 June 2023 16:07 (one year ago) link
5. Kurt Vile, Wakin On A Pretty DazeJust to demonstrate my objectivity: This is my favorite album of 2013. It’s the one I have played the most. It’s the one that makes me happiest when it is on. It’s the one that evokes the happiest memories. But it’s not the best album of the year. It’s among the best, but it’s not the best.
I'm definitely going to listen to this record
― jmm, Thursday, 22 June 2023 16:10 (one year ago) link
"Back then, the political centrism that Obama promoted was still in vogue, which cleared a path in pop culture for feel-good, middle-of-the-road rappers. Musically, this was signified by the old-school ’60s and ’70s soul that Obama adopted as an unofficial soundtrack, most often in the guise of Stevie Wonder, possibly the most universally liked living American musician."
Wait, so the feel-good rappers were not musical?
― Alito Bit of Soap (President Keyes), Thursday, 22 June 2023 16:12 (one year ago) link
Here’s a hypothetical that helps to put this album in perspective: If Haim did not exist, would Taylor Swift have made 1989? I honestly don’t think so.
― Alito Bit of Soap (President Keyes), Thursday, 22 June 2023 16:16 (one year ago) link
i do agree w/ him that modern vampires of the city is essentially a perfect album tho
― J0rdan S., Thursday, 22 June 2023 16:21 (one year ago) link
this is honestly one of the funniest things i've read recently, just completely smooth brain, vacant and dressed up in quasi academic b.s., truly amazing
https://americansongwriter.com/the-often-overshadowed-meaning-behind-rock-and-roll-hoochie-koo-by-rick-derringer/
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 22 June 2023 16:22 (one year ago) link
Not clicking on that but the URL is making me laugh, so thanks.
I tried with that Hyden thing, but a) I have no memory of roughly 20 of those 25 albums, have certainly never listened to them, so who cares, and b) some of those blurbs are present-day-AV-Club lazy. Like, if you hit Chuck Klosterman in the head with a hammer, this is the level of prose you'd get.
― but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 22 June 2023 16:26 (one year ago) link
xpost I'd expect more from the author of articles like "8 Wham songs you didn't know were written solely by George Michael"
― Alito Bit of Soap (President Keyes), Thursday, 22 June 2023 16:32 (one year ago) link
omg M@tt that is incredible
When I got to “in the throws of whatever” I started full-on hollering (also even my phone knew it was “throes” as I was typing)
― the new drip king (DJP), Thursday, 22 June 2023 16:35 (one year ago) link
this one is really what killed me:
the song’s titular phrase, “hoochie koo,” describes a state of being. It’s playful, emphasizing the excitement and freedom the music makes him feel. It lights his fuse.
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 22 June 2023 16:37 (one year ago) link
I can't distinguish between AI prose and grotesque human prose
― the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 22 June 2023 16:39 (one year ago) link
it's so weird because listen I've worked in the content mines and do have sympathy for everyone who's gotta pull up their pants and, say, shit out Taylor Swift article to do numbers when the tour is going on but like who asked for this?
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 22 June 2023 16:43 (one year ago) link
― omar little, Thursday, June 22, 2023 11:03 AM (thirty-four minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
anyway here's an album by the national
― ludicrously capacious bag (voodoo chili), Thursday, 22 June 2023 16:46 (one year ago) link
Derringer wrote “Rock and Roll, Hoochie Koo” during his tenure in the acclaimed blues guitarist Johnny Winter’s band, Johnny Winter And. Winter was the first to record the tune, releasing it on his 1970 album, Johnny Winter And.
damn try reading this aloud
― omar little, Thursday, 22 June 2023 16:53 (one year ago) link
Johnny Winter And by Johnny Winter and Johnny Winter’s band, Johnny Winter And
― jmm, Thursday, 22 June 2023 16:57 (one year ago) link
Did Johnny Winter's Band Johnny Winter And ever tour with The Band?
― Alito Bit of Soap (President Keyes), Thursday, 22 June 2023 17:06 (one year ago) link
Bad enough they overlooked Tony Molina and Joanna Gruesome, but overlooking Ovlov is just unacceptable. They had 10 years.
"25 albums from pitchfork's year-end list in a slightly different order plus 5 albums by huge rock acts" - Every reassessment of mid-00s to present, until the end of time, is going to be exactly this.
― billstevejim, Thursday, 22 June 2023 17:22 (one year ago) link
That was also Omar Souleyman's breakthrough year in the U.S.
― billstevejim, Thursday, 22 June 2023 17:23 (one year ago) link
That was a giant xpost btw
― billstevejim, Thursday, 22 June 2023 17:24 (one year ago) link
It would just be nice for once to feel like there's any room left in this world for people who don't give a fuck about Vampire Weekend or Haim or Arctic Monkeys.
― billstevejim, Thursday, 22 June 2023 17:35 (one year ago) link
― ludicrously capacious bag (voodoo chili), Thursday, June 22, 2023
― the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 22 June 2023 17:38 (one year ago) link
The Uproxx thing really bums me out in that, I feel like the last few years of rock criticism have just been endlessly endlessly recycling agreed-upon but essentially flawed narratives like "Woodstock 99 was cause by male rage" to "The Strokes were an important band" to "Pitchfork Indie was actually the best music" All these places just kind of rewriting opinions media people already held but with some new headline to signal this is new content for social media. Lots of 10 Year Anniversary content from people that already covered the stuff 10 years ago. Just an oroborous of content and received wisdom. It's really sad.
― sean paul akerman (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 22 June 2023 17:43 (one year ago) link
Idk if it's part of it that anyone else notices but there's just a real lack of enthusiasm in so many of these pieces, like zero love for music expressed, just an exhausted recitation of everything, like someone forced to write a paper on history and muster some feigned appreciation for the subject matter. It's maybe part of why a lot of it reads as AI when it's actually not, it's just the dead-eyed cliff notes style too.
― omar little, Thursday, 22 June 2023 17:49 (one year ago) link
you say that like ILM wouldn't wearily regurgitate 90% of that list if required to repoll 2013 lol
― imago, Thursday, 22 June 2023 17:51 (one year ago) link
facebook memories of music writing
― sarahell, Thursday, 22 June 2023 17:51 (one year ago) link
it reminds me of the AMG reviews that, when compared to some of the much higher quality jobs on the site, were obvious rush-jobs from people who didn't have a lot of experience writing about said genre, and either got a lot of details wrong (an old review that's since been pulled down of Helloween's Keeper of the Seven Keys Part I, that erroneously said there was never a Part 2 made), or just seemed like "by numbers", as if half of the content was drawn from received wisdom merged with cursory thoughts of the new album.
now this style seems like the predominant writing style.
― sad Mings of dynasty (Neanderthal), Thursday, 22 June 2023 17:53 (one year ago) link
― imago, Thursday, June 22, 2023 12:51 PM (four minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
at the very least 1017 thug would be on there lol
― ludicrously capacious bag (voodoo chili), Thursday, 22 June 2023 17:56 (one year ago) link
i appreciate it that there's a lot of care put into so many AMG reviews, because that's a site that could likely get away with half-assing it a lot more than it does.
― omar little, Thursday, 22 June 2023 17:56 (one year ago) link
2013's rap masterpiece was Signor Benedick The Moor's El Negro, I will not be swayed on this
― imago, Thursday, 22 June 2023 17:58 (one year ago) link
xp Whiney otm
― Paul Ponzi, Thursday, 22 June 2023 18:23 (one year ago) link
2013 feels way too recent for a reappraisal. Most of those acts have put out like two albums since then.
― Alito Bit of Soap (President Keyes), Thursday, 22 June 2023 18:25 (one year ago) link
"an oroborous of content and received wisdom" nails it, I think. Almost as if there is a desire to create a canon despite the rest of the world seeming increasingly very post-canon
― Paul Ponzi, Thursday, 22 June 2023 18:26 (one year ago) link
It’s not really a problem if a consensus forms around what the most popular/“best” acts of a particular time forms; the issue is when everyone talking about it says exactly the same thing with no nuance/interrogation/sense of enjoying the music as a tangible, meaningful artifact
― the new drip king (DJP), Thursday, 22 June 2023 20:12 (one year ago) link
― sad Mings of dynasty (Neanderthal), Thursday, 22 June 2023 20:15 (one year ago) link
i think only food adjectives should be allowed in reviews
agreed with Dan— this is passionless, bored (and thus boring) writing that doesn’t say much about the way the music sounds at all.
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Thursday, 22 June 2023 22:55 (one year ago) link
what the hell?
"This was No. 1 record of 2013 in 2013. I put it as my No. 10 about of 2013 in 2023 because..."
― alpine static, Thursday, 22 June 2023 23:39 (one year ago) link
Hyden does that a lot, putting his favourite music later down in the list in favour of an objective "best" at number 1. I think the distinction between the two is bunk, but...
― vexingvexillologist, Friday, 23 June 2023 11:17 (one year ago) link
The writing is literally fucked. Like it went through a bad autocorrect.
― Alito Bit of Soap (President Keyes), Friday, 23 June 2023 11:39 (one year ago) link
ranking stuff or giving it star ratings or even percentages is fine, taking the scores very seriously indeed and writing at length about your rationale is almost always boring and shit
― the world is your octopus (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Friday, 23 June 2023 11:53 (one year ago) link
lists have killed writing basically
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 23 June 2023 14:58 (one year ago) link
and here's why.
― Alito Bit of Soap (President Keyes), Friday, 23 June 2023 15:00 (one year ago) link
rankings really are lame because people don't bother to dig deeper. but i think we're conditioned to want them now.
we have an evaluation form we use at work where we give feedback to our instructors and there's of course a numerical rating alongside the feedback and almost everybody focuses on that instead of the feedback.
likewise, "such and such got 85% on Rotten Tomatoes" without bothering to understand what that means in terms of data aggregation and reading a few reviews.
― sad Mings of dynasty (Neanderthal), Friday, 23 June 2023 15:01 (one year ago) link
The emphasis on scores and year-end-lists and chart placements and televised award wins gets heavier every year. If a great record slowly generates a good amount of steam between 2013 and the present, well too bad. They didn't get people's attention right away, so what good are they?
It feels strange how desperately certain types need to revise the canon of the 80s and 90s but rigidly worship the canon of 2007 to present.
― billstevejim, Friday, 23 June 2023 15:03 (one year ago) link
what's the music equivalent of oscar bait?
― the world is your octopus (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Friday, 23 June 2023 15:08 (one year ago) link
how so? xpost
― the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 23 June 2023 15:08 (one year ago) link
― the world is your octopus (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Friday, 23 June 2023 15:08 (two minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
jessie ware
― imago, Friday, 23 June 2023 15:10 (one year ago) link
― rob, Friday, 23 June 2023 15:11 (one year ago) link
nu-slowdive
― imago, Friday, 23 June 2023 15:13 (one year ago) link
if you're talking grammy bait, it's stuff like silk sonic, jon batiste, jacob collier
― ludicrously capacious bag (voodoo chili), Friday, 23 June 2023 15:13 (one year ago) link
Simple, you just need to be [artist x who had a hot album 2-8 years ago] and release literally anything.
― billstevejim, Friday, 23 June 2023 15:14 (one year ago) link
(That's "Artist X" meaning "full in the blank", not "artist multiplied by")
― billstevejim, Friday, 23 June 2023 15:16 (one year ago) link
lol President Keyes
― Bittern Storm Over My Hammy (morrisp), Friday, 23 June 2023 15:16 (one year ago) link
― imago, Friday, 23 June 2023 15:13 (six minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
this wasn't entirely serious ftr sorry lol
― imago, Friday, 23 June 2023 15:20 (one year ago) link
H.E.R.
― but also fuck you (unperson), Friday, 23 June 2023 15:29 (one year ago) link
yeah basically anything that sounds like thrice xeroxed versions of 70s stevie
― ludicrously capacious bag (voodoo chili), Friday, 23 June 2023 15:33 (one year ago) link
is there a music site even worth looking at in 2023? i can't remember the last time i looked at music reviews online. its been years. i figured they would just make me sad. seems like a bygone era. i'm not going on tiktok...
(there must be brainy cool young writers out there somewhere. does anyone do cool zines anymore?)
― scott seward, Friday, 23 June 2023 16:19 (one year ago) link
I thought the Lumineers were something-bait, but I don't pretend to understand anything released earlier than 1978 or later than 1989.
― pomplamoose and circumstance (Ye Mad Puffin), Friday, 23 June 2023 16:27 (one year ago) link
is there a music site even worth looking at in 2023? i can't remember the last time i looked at music reviews online. its been years. i figured they would just make me sad. seems like a bygone era. i'm not going on tiktok... (there must be brainy cool young writers out there somewhere. does anyone do cool zines anymore?)
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Friday, 23 June 2023 17:37 (one year ago) link
i should make a zine. for real! i know smart people. who don't want to make lists. i feel like there is a serious lack of fun when it comes to music writing. its all so......not fun. what i see of it anyway.
i should check in with the quietus. they have always done good work. stereogum....i made the mistake of looking at a best of metal 2022 list and it was rough. to read. i stopped reading it.
― scott seward, Friday, 23 June 2023 17:43 (one year ago) link
blogging 2.0 aka newsletters are all the rage these days, i prob have more fun writing mine than any other kind of writing i do, unfortunately i never have the time to write it
― ivy (BradNelson), Friday, 23 June 2023 17:44 (one year ago) link
i'm too old to substack or whatever. i think i'll make a real zine. (i don't go to cities so i never see new zines but i know they exist.)
that thing that JBR is on. those are cool. i get e-mails about them. seems like an easy way for people to speak to people online.
― scott seward, Friday, 23 June 2023 17:48 (one year ago) link
the stereogum article on the battle of the depeche tribute bands in la is the best thing ive read in a minute
― kurt schwitterz, Friday, 23 June 2023 17:48 (one year ago) link
some friends of mine around the corner have an arts space and they have a risograph machine. it could make great covers for a mag.
x-post - will make a note of depeche tribute bands article.
― scott seward, Friday, 23 June 2023 17:50 (one year ago) link
there is a ton of stuff on here that is probably really good as long as you don't mind searching through it all. i remember reading some outstanding disco writing on one of the RBA sites. they even had a newspaper that i never saw. anyway, i should just shut up and read some of this. there is a long meredith monk piece that looks good.
https://daily.redbullmusicacademy.com/
https://daily.redbullmusicacademy.com/2017/03/meredith-monk-feature
https://daily.redbullmusicacademy.com/pioneering-women
― scott seward, Friday, 23 June 2023 17:57 (one year ago) link
hell yeah! i could probably get you "distribution" in a few spaces out here in the Bay if you made one ... i put that in quotes because it would be like, storefront record stores and art galleries that no one really cares about except a few hundred people lol
― sarahell, Friday, 23 June 2023 17:57 (one year ago) link
haha, that's good inspiration, cheers! and its a reminder that i could ask my pal raub roy to write something. and you too! we shall see. sometimes i blab a lot and nothing happens. but sometimes things happen too! you never know. i definitely need a summer hobby. i'm going a little stir crazy, creatively. and if those texas winds start hitting massachusetts, i'll be inside for awhile. its been getting pretty brutal here in summer. we get some unlivable weeks.
― scott seward, Friday, 23 June 2023 18:20 (one year ago) link
On the topic of lists, there's this week's "70 Best Alt-Country Albums" over at Paste:
https://www.pastemagazine.com/music/alt-country/the-50-best-alt-country-albums-of-all-time
Apparently it's repackaged from 2016, but they managed to leave in a sentence about how, if Justin Townes Earle can "manage his demons," he just might be one of the all-time greats.
― jon_oh, Friday, 23 June 2023 18:46 (one year ago) link
― Crabber B. Munson (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 23 June 2023 18:53 (one year ago) link
i've heard three of those! ingenue is alt-country? in what world? ingenue is tied with meantime for my fave album of 1992. i wore that knitters album OUT in high school. and obviously that mekons record is top ten of 1985 material. the rest i don't listen to. maybe by accident.
― scott seward, Friday, 23 June 2023 18:56 (one year ago) link
i like to think that i listen to almost everything but i guess i've met my match with alt-country. i picked up about 50 CDrs of hillbilly and rockabilly and country swing comps and i've been playing them for weeks at the store. someone burned a ton of bear family and euro-reissue label discs of that stuff and they sound great. and they made photocopied inserts of the covers which i always appreciate.
― scott seward, Friday, 23 June 2023 18:59 (one year ago) link
There are definitely still zines and zine shops.
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Friday, 23 June 2023 21:53 (one year ago) link
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown)
please don't pull _up_ your pants to shit
― Kate (rushomancy), Friday, 23 June 2023 22:02 (one year ago) link
writers shit through their fingers
― ivy (BradNelson), Friday, 23 June 2023 22:04 (one year ago) link
have sympathy for everyone who's gotta pull up their pants and, say, shit out Taylor Swift article
― assert (matttkkkk), Friday, 23 June 2023 22:05 (one year ago) link
― ivy (BradNelson)
fine but why you gotta wear pants to do it
― Kate (rushomancy), Friday, 23 June 2023 22:09 (one year ago) link
first rule of content mine club is shit your pants
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 23 June 2023 22:15 (one year ago) link
I’ve said this many times but Neil McCormick is the *worst* music writer in the British media by a cunt-ry mile. For a start, every one of the Arctic Monkeys is a millennial. pic.twitter.com/ObVQ7pCwtE— Mic Wright (@brokenbottleboy) June 24, 2023
― the pinefox, Saturday, 24 June 2023 08:57 (one year ago) link
I'd say it isn't inaccurate to state that Gen X sometimes adopts bands from younger generations, especially ones that play real music with real instruments. Wet Leg are the newest Gen X house band, for example
― imago, Saturday, 24 June 2023 09:05 (one year ago) link
or older, even.
― you can see me from westbury white horse, Saturday, 24 June 2023 09:09 (one year ago) link
I have never used "utter" or "utterly" in any piece of published or unpublished writing.
― the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 24 June 2023 09:43 (one year ago) link
I do teach my students to not use absolutes if they can avoid it, true
― imago, Saturday, 24 June 2023 09:58 (one year ago) link
markedly compelling Glastonbury performance
― imago, Saturday, 24 June 2023 09:59 (one year ago) link
omg Kate I stole your joke and didn’t even realise, maximum apologies
― assert (matttkkkk), Saturday, 24 June 2023 10:19 (one year ago) link
Neil McCormick, however, reinforced past complaints about the album, ranking it as the band's worst album in a 2014 retrospective on the band in The Daily Telegraph: "Muddy production, perky synths, jaunty pop rhythms and an orchestral ballad make these songs barely recognisable as the heaviest band in history."[21]
Perhaps muddy production aside (and I disagree), McCormick's 1/5 of In Through the Out Door reads closer to a 5/5 to me :)
This is the first thing that I always think of when he's mentioned. Not even U2.
― you can see me from westbury white horse, Saturday, 24 June 2023 10:24 (one year ago) link
"house band for a generation" is a very bad notion in general which will tend to lead to false and badly written statements.
― the pinefox, Saturday, 24 June 2023 12:13 (one year ago) link
My future's so bright I gotta wear pants
― pomplamoose and circumstance (Ye Mad Puffin), Saturday, 24 June 2023 14:20 (one year ago) link
omg Kate I stole your joke and didn’t even realise, maximum apologies― assert (matttkkkk)
― assert (matttkkkk)
just don't use it in your standup set and we're cool
(haha nah you didn't "steal" it you came up with it independently, different thing)
I'd say it isn't inaccurate to state that Gen X sometimes adopts bands from younger generations, especially ones that play real music with real instruments. Wet Leg are the newest Gen X house band, for example― imago
― imago
there is no "generation x", the entire thing about my supposed "generation" is that we don't matter and nobody cares. even the name ultimately derives from a 1964 book about... fucking boomers. to me, my generation are boomers lite. nowadays everybody younger than gen x just calls us boomers and to be _offended_ by that would be the most boomer thing ever. i'm a boomer? ok. fine. whatever.
yeah most of the new music i listen to is from "younger generations", i haven't _adopted_ it, it's just music i find good and relatable. most of the best bands of "my generation" are broken up, dead, or boring. i'm not going to be sitting in a retirement home listening to whatever the fuck the latest tortoise album is, you know?
― Kate (rushomancy), Saturday, 24 June 2023 16:06 (one year ago) link
*John McEntire weeps silently somewhere in Chicago*
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Saturday, 24 June 2023 17:05 (one year ago) link
judging by his girlfriend mcentire is very in touch with millennials
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 24 June 2023 17:22 (one year ago) link
I'd say it isn't inaccurate to state that Gen X sometimes adopts bands from younger generations, especially ones that play real music with real instruments. Wet Leg are the newest Gen X house band, for example― imagonot to be all the internet is real life, the amount of real world gen x people who even know who the fuck wet leg is is like 0.0000001 percent
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 24 June 2023 17:23 (one year ago) link
maybe in the US!
― imago, Saturday, 24 June 2023 18:32 (one year ago) link
In the US it’s Greta Van Fleet
― Alito Bit of Soap (President Keyes), Saturday, 24 June 2023 18:43 (one year ago) link
I’ll say it again
― Alito Bit of Soap (President Keyes), Saturday, 24 June 2023 18:44 (one year ago) link
People keep changing the parameters of what Gen X is even … I have never been called or considered a boomer … “we” were basically the population trough kids that were born to be an insignificant demographic minority
― sarahell, Saturday, 24 June 2023 18:44 (one year ago) link
Yeah GenXers were born in a baby bust, not a boom. Schools were closing and consolidating when I was a kid because of low enrollment. We’re the kids OF the boomers.
― Crabber B. Munson (Boring, Maryland), Saturday, 24 June 2023 18:57 (one year ago) link
They (we) were even called “Baby Busters” before the Coupland book provided the name that stuck.
― Bittern Storm Over My Hammy (morrisp), Saturday, 24 June 2023 19:00 (one year ago) link
soon all generations will agree that Blue Oyster Cult was the only good rock band and peace will reign for a thousand years
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 24 June 2023 19:08 (one year ago) link
History shows again and again how nature points out the folly of men...
― BrianB, Saturday, 24 June 2023 19:15 (one year ago) link
Schools were closing and consolidating when I was a kid because of low enrollment.
yep. also budgets were being cut for public education and other social programs that benefited children (aka fuck you Reagan) ... and instead we had D.A.R.E. and Just Say No to Drugs and the Satanic Panic
― sarahell, Saturday, 24 June 2023 19:31 (one year ago) link
to be fair, also fuck Nixon
― sarahell, Saturday, 24 June 2023 19:32 (one year ago) link
and this is why musical touchstones of this "generation" were Danzig-era Misfits and Iron Maiden lol
― sarahell, Saturday, 24 June 2023 19:33 (one year ago) link
king wizard gizzard just sold out the hollywood bowl buncha wine drinking gen x-ers filled the place
― kurt schwitterz, Saturday, 24 June 2023 21:11 (one year ago) link
there's definitely an annoying jam band adjacent fan base developing with them
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 24 June 2023 21:21 (one year ago) link
Also there's a weird old millennial hipster F1 racing thing that I don't like the vibe of
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 24 June 2023 21:22 (one year ago) link
king gizz are core zoomer rock band too is the thing. i'm not into them but who knows, this could change
― imago, Saturday, 24 June 2023 21:42 (one year ago) link
i used to feel like "gen x" meant anyone in the states who grew up with mass market shit like scooby doo and star wars but now "gen x" just makes me thing "white pavement fan". or even "white people who remember public enemy fondly". maybe it was always like that. the slacker thing. and marketers obviously go where the money is and try to appeal to white millennial/x/boomers in ways that appeal to them. ancient goth rock revival tours. limited edition scooby doo swatches. all that. but maybe i should ask people of color of a certain age if they feel like the term "gen x" or "millennial" speaks to them at all. or if it ever did. I realize its just a fake name that stuck... i feel like even "boomer" meant something different at first. howdy doody. hydrox cookies. still a white thing kinda but broader. and tied in with social justice and Vietnam and blah blah. now i just think of some annoying blowhard talking about seeing Grand Funk once in Springfield, Mass. But that's just an occupational hazard for me. all of this makes me wish i would remember to go to one of those awesome freestyle oldies shows at foxwoods. its right up the road! less than two hours and i could be serenaded by the cover girls and shannon! (i have no interest in most reunion/oldies/anniversary shows. i don't know why. they make me a little sad. i didn't even go see souls of mischief last week TWO DOORS from my store. i have a hard gen x heart. but i will be freestyle until i die.)
― scott seward, Saturday, 24 June 2023 22:16 (one year ago) link
i used to feel like "gen x" meant anyone in the states who grew up with mass market shit like scooby doo and star wars but now "gen x" just makes me thing "white pavement fan". or even "white people who remember public enemy fondly".
I totally get this, but as a guy who had his head blown open by Einstürzende Neubauten, Sonic Youth, Big Black, Pussy Galore, Ice-T, Boogie Down Productions, Just-Ice and Eric B. & Rakim all at the same time in high school (and saw Public Enemy, Stetsasonic, EPMD and Big Daddy Kane in 1988) it hurts my heart. Like, my interest in the output of Matador Records ends with the first Unsane record, you know?
― but also fuck you (unperson), Saturday, 24 June 2023 22:24 (one year ago) link
xp began as a reflection, grew into a credo
― assert (matttkkkk), Saturday, 24 June 2023 22:39 (one year ago) link
i totally fit the hipster gen x stereotypes. it doesn't bother me. i just say whatevernevermind. i never read infinite jest though. or even the generation x book. i read less than zero though.
― scott seward, Saturday, 24 June 2023 22:40 (one year ago) link
I’m going to Freestyle Festival 2023 in a few weeks.
― Bittern Storm Over My Hammy (morrisp), Saturday, 24 June 2023 22:44 (one year ago) link
Have a rockin' time!
― scott seward, Saturday, 24 June 2023 22:52 (one year ago) link
We are the sandwich generation. The shit sandwich generation.
― immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Saturday, 24 June 2023 22:56 (one year ago) link
Culturally, I find it more useful to split the generations... I recently learned the term Generation Jones, which is the tail end of Boomers... i.e., the cohort of folks like Morrissey and Micheal Stipe, who seem to have more in common with the oldest X'ers than they do, say, my dad. And long before the term "Xennial" existed, I felt like I was part of a "post-X" cohort, on the younger side of X'ers. I def feel like I have more in common with folks 10 years younger than me than ppl 10 years older.
Obv it's all BS to a certain degree; but if you're talking about very rough groupings of shared cultural experiences, these "micro-generations" seem to capture it better than the big categories spanning 15 or even 20 years.
― Bittern Storm Over My Hammy (morrisp), Sunday, 25 June 2023 01:24 (one year ago) link
Obv it's all BS
― mookieproof, Sunday, 25 June 2023 01:26 (one year ago) link
sorry to misspell "Michael," btw ("they airbrushed my face"
― Bittern Storm Over My Hammy (morrisp), Sunday, 25 June 2023 01:27 (one year ago) link
I’m sure he heard Micheál Stipe plenty of times since REM seemed to love Dublin so much.
― wronger than 100 geir posts (MacDara), Sunday, 25 June 2023 06:58 (one year ago) link
What is this shit: https://www.thedriftmag.com/dream-of-antonoffication/
― Bittern Storm Over My Hammy (morrisp), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 04:02 (one year ago) link
some bizarre claims in that, like what is this:
It is no wonder that Jack has made a cottage industry out of replicating “Venice Bitch.” The song hovers over records like Solar Power and Being Funny in a Foreign Language, the Antonoff collaboration with last-pop-rock-band-standing The 1975, like either a benevolent spirit guide or a demanding ideal ego, something to be emulated but never matched.
i think antonoff is relatively anonymous as a producer despite being so prolific. to the extent that he has a sound it's that sometimes his production/co-writing work ends up sounding very close to his solo work ("out of the woods" etc.) but that was only really prominent early in his production career
― ufo, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 04:55 (one year ago) link
If Antonoff had been around in the 70s he would have been just another competent craftsman like Ted Templeman or Bill Szymczyk. People have decided it's necessary to portray him as an auteur for some reason, but he's not.
― but also fuck you (unperson), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 04:59 (one year ago) link
that feels like what the article is saying tbh. morrisp feeling attacked out here
― imago, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 09:17 (one year ago) link
In the 2000s, a fierce debate raged among music critics between proponents of “rockism,” those committed to enclave principles of taste and a rigorously policed standard of authenticity, and of “poptimism,” those who resisted the idea that some musical genres were worthy of serious critical attention and others were not. Today such terms, along with the divide between high and low culture on which they were premised, feel almost foreign. Increasingly, where once there were musical subcultures with their own standards of taste, under the regime of streaming there is now a free-floating tastefulness, a pop version of what Lee Konstantinou calls “mass high culture.”
ilm bang to rights. mitch therieau should post here lol
― imago, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 09:32 (one year ago) link
"where once there were musical subcultures with their own standards of taste, under the regime of streaming there is now a free-floating tastefulness"
I think there is something in this. But then again I also still feel that music is more balkanized than ever.
― the pinefox, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 09:37 (one year ago) link
i shd add, a competent craftsman who has lucked out on focusing on a couple of replicatable styles which fuse indie and pop aesthetics into machines of sonic suggestion. nothing wrong with that claim - it's an incomplete picture that doesn't address other current movements in pop (contemporary rap or reggaeton, for example, but also a myriad other less-popular trends which ilm loves to ignore) but i feel like 'antonoff pop' is definitely a thing, even though it shouldn't be. he ISN'T an auteur, but his particular limitations have crowned him by default as he lies so close to what is currently tasteful (according to a certain critical hegemony).
― imago, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 09:37 (one year ago) link
lol there was no fierce debate in the 2000s, gtfo, and insofar as a "debate" existed it wasn't Jets-vs-Sharks.
― the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 09:44 (one year ago) link
the local indie rock website in Portugal reached out to me at that time to write about pop/hip-hop, which they'd previously ignored as a matter of course, and this was def trickling down from discussions they'd been following amongst UK and US critics
― Daniel_Rf, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 09:50 (one year ago) link
― the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 09:44 (seven minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
how quickly we forget alex in nyc
― imago, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 09:52 (one year ago) link
I think this article is... pretty good? I agreed with the stuff about tasteful pop, Harry Styles etc.
― Piedie Gimbel, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 09:57 (one year ago) link
if we really want to re-ignite the beefs of the 00s then plz to respond to what perpetua* says:
If yr gonna publish a Jack Antonoff hit piece in July 2023 and never mention "A&W," the best and most artistically ambitious thing he's ever worked on, then you simply don't have credibility as a critic - yr conveniently leaving something huge out to make a point from 3 years ago— Matthew Perpetua (@perpetua) July 10, 2023
*i have no particular issue w/perpetua and am totally stirring r/n but for some here he was routinely a PUNCHING BAG
― mark s, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 10:05 (one year ago) link
Cuz he was a knob?
― Toshirō Nofune (The Seventh ILXorai), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 10:06 (one year ago) link
I was lurking at the time and thus have no partic issue either but I do remember his "joycore" thing being v embarassing.
― Daniel_Rf, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 10:13 (one year ago) link
You can come and embrace my free-floating tastefulness and feel its ubiquity
― Nabozo, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 10:33 (one year ago) link
I think the best Jack Antonoff indictment was that clip that was going around on twitter where someone listened to a new Taylor Swift album and was able to identify whether he produced the song within the first ten seconds of audio
― mh, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 14:33 (one year ago) link
It's because of his tag: "If Antonoff don't trust you I'm gon' sue you"
― Alito Bit of Soap (President Keyes), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 14:36 (one year ago) link
Remember when Jack Antonoff made his fans walk through the room he jacked off in like 5,000 times
https://www.spin.com/2017/05/bleachers-jack-antonoff-bedroom-trailer-tour/
― sean paul akerman (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 15:12 (one year ago) link
ant jackenoff
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 15:20 (one year ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NY1RsDpRmIU
― Alito Bit of Soap (President Keyes), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 15:26 (one year ago) link
i barely know anton
― difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 16:18 (one year ago) link
there was a debate in the 00s! it wasn't jets vs sharks because one side found the choreography inauthentic.
― difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 16:20 (one year ago) link
a fierce debate raged among music critics between proponents of “rockism,”
Did anyone actually think of themselves as a proponent of "rockism"?
― Alito Bit of Soap (President Keyes), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 16:24 (one year ago) link
history written by the victors iirc
― budo jeru, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 16:38 (one year ago) link
no rockist would ever admit to being one, they just think they're right
― ivy (BradNelson), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 16:39 (one year ago) link
anyway i only read about half of that antonoff piece but even if i disagree with the particulars it felt decently-written and argued
― ivy (BradNelson), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 16:40 (one year ago) link
lol this is like someone talking about a debate between the groomers and the freedom lovers.
― Alito Bit of Soap (President Keyes), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 16:41 (one year ago) link
morrisp feeling attacked out here
I don't even really care about the subject matter or "argument," I just thought it was so poorly written that it physically repulsed me.
― Bittern Storm Over My Hammy (morrisp), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 16:42 (one year ago) link
i lol'd at "He is often an abuser."
― budo jeru, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 16:48 (one year ago) link
Rockists disliked the label (obv, it was perjorative) but there were absolutely tons of ppl signed up to the ethos, don't really need a monicker when your stance was basically just conventional wisdom. There's a few embarassing threads you can hunt down where some of them had a go at diagnosing "popism" (before the also bad poptimism label was coined).
― Daniel_Rf, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 16:52 (one year ago) link
anyway, i shouldn't read this thread because i hate almost all writing about music, but i will say i agree the piece is bad. it feels of a piece with a lot of recent online criticism in that it uses lots of jargon and fancy language without really saying anything. i kind of hate writing that takes it self so seriously but is ultimately vacuous and just a front for some half-baked non-ideas
― budo jeru, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 16:54 (one year ago) link
"there is still no neat place for the producer in the mythology of pop music."
one paragraph later:
"In the history of pop, the producer’s place is clearer."
― Alito Bit of Soap (President Keyes), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 16:55 (one year ago) link
it's important that people have a space to write "kids today don't appreciate real music" every so often tho
― orcas who sign their posts like it's a freaking email (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 16:57 (one year ago) link
kids today pay to look at people's toes
― Alito Bit of Soap (President Keyes), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 16:58 (one year ago) link
most toe fetischists I've known had great taste in mysic ftr
― Daniel_Rf, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 17:08 (one year ago) link
And music.
it does seem to continually hedge its bets instead of actively saying something about anything, yes
― ivy (BradNelson), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 17:13 (one year ago) link
yesterday, i talked to a 19 year old kid - a very nice kid - and he liked metal - lots of bad metal but he's 19 - and somehow he started talking about how "real music" played by people playing instruments was more valid and harder to make than taylor swift music blah blah blah and i wanted to ask him if he was secretly one of my regular old beardo customers in disguise cuz he was 19 and wasn't he weaned on cloud rap and all that but i just let it go. we talked about trumpers instead. a safer topic. the rockists are born young!
― scott seward, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 19:03 (one year ago) link
School of Rock alum, obviously.
― Alito Bit of Soap (President Keyes), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 19:10 (one year ago) link
to be fair scott, you do live in the boonies. limited cell service. maybe he was born in a shack
― Gerard Grisey Funk (Boring, Maryland), Tuesday, 11 July 2023 19:31 (one year ago) link
i think young people sense pretty early on that music is something that people use for status and for sex. and young people pitting their ideals and their art against a crass, materialistic society is a story that's rather old and definitely not unique to rock N roll. so i think certain aspects of rockism are likely to recur just as a process of identity formation
― budo jeru, Tuesday, 11 July 2023 20:27 (one year ago) link
I’ve always found a lot of this debate strange, frankly.
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Wednesday, 12 July 2023 01:48 (one year ago) link
"how quickly we forget alex in nyc"
Fuck is that supposed to imply?
― Alex in NYC, Tuesday, 18 July 2023 20:16 (one year ago) link
They forgot you didn’t like bad music writing.
― Live and Left Eye (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 19 July 2023 01:21 (one year ago) link
Alex, think imago was just citing you as the main person pushing back against early ILX's love of commercial pop, don't think it was meant as a diss?
― Daniel_Rf, Wednesday, 19 July 2023 09:38 (one year ago) link
I wasn’t sure if Alex’s comment yesterday was leaning into that for comic effect.
― Chewshabadoo, Wednesday, 19 July 2023 09:39 (one year ago) link
A shirt I wear while posting to ILX that reads “I’m with Alex in NYC”
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Wednesday, 19 July 2023 11:20 (one year ago) link
https://www.theguardian.com/music/2023/jul/21/new-labour-1997-rave-culture-ed-gillett-book-extract
― Toshirō Nofune (The Seventh ILXorai), Friday, 21 July 2023 15:53 (one year ago) link
Worst music tweeting 2023:
Snoop Dogg has canceled two of his forthcoming concerts at the Hollywood Bowl in solidarity with the strikes that are completely unrelated to what he does as a musician. https://t.co/SdS5LqRUEj— Rolling Stone (@RollingStone) July 25, 2023
― hardcore technician gimmicks are also another popular choice f (President Keyes), Tuesday, 25 July 2023 19:40 (one year ago) link
this is not the worst but it does read a bit like a very high person seeing the lighthttps://www.stereogum.com/2230948/big-thief-pitchfork-festival-2023/reviews/concert-review/
― corrs unplugged, Wednesday, 26 July 2023 08:21 (one year ago) link
Good thread about that piece:
This is so unbelievably condescending. The fact that he’s like “I’m not trying to slam the writer” in this thread yet implies said writer is “too young” to write a piece with good musical references and has “brain worms” is pretty abhorrent tbh pic.twitter.com/9n5R5BbCcs— Grant Sharples (@grantsharpies) July 25, 2023
― the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 09:26 (one year ago) link
as someone who is not sold completely on the band big thief, i thought it was a nice piece? personal, self-aware, not overbearing, something v sweet about it. as a reader was able to understand a bit more what i'm missing and also clarify what turns me off.
― devvvine, Wednesday, 26 July 2023 10:00 (one year ago) link
I hated that piece, happy to continue to steer clear of BT.
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 11:21 (one year ago) link
to be more specific, i am not sure that the writer’s style choices are very interesting— the debatable point about autofiction and the self-mythologization of “the fan” comes into play— but i also left the review totally unclear as to what Big Thief sounded like. the author even makes casual mention of Big Thief songs (“you know the one”), as if the piece is written solely by and for people like the author. it simply isn’t good writing!
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 11:50 (one year ago) link
the piece successfully conveys that big thief are goofy hippies, but not that their music is so transcendentally good that that becomes an endearing quality instead of an annoying one
― ufo, Wednesday, 26 July 2023 11:59 (one year ago) link
I think it’s a cute piece, but yeah I’m not really sure who it’s “for,” and also what ufo said.
― Empty Tushy Fills (morrisp), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 14:12 (one year ago) link
It just seems like the writer is saying that unlike a lot of popular indie acts these days, Big Thief is a band in the old fashioned sense of that. That Perpetua is like "what about Fugazi or Jam Bands?" is missing the point.
― hardcore technician gimmicks are also another popular choice f (President Keyes), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 14:31 (one year ago) link
\no editor i've met would let me get away with any of the "stylistic flourishes" in that piece, and they'd be right to stop me
― ivy., Wednesday, 26 July 2023 14:40 (one year ago) link
Never having heard them, my takeaway from the article is that they're Edie Brickell and the New Bohemians for Gen Z?Also I hope the writer soon realizes the fine line between cute and irritating.
― Halfway there but for you, Wednesday, 26 July 2023 14:45 (one year ago) link
and as a closer, the raucous stomp-along of “Spud Infinity” was — speaking in the strictest dictionary definition of a “hoot and a holler” — a hoot and a holler.
:|
― ivy., Wednesday, 26 July 2023 14:47 (one year ago) link
As usual I blame the uh infelicities in this piece on editing, which includes perhaps nixing the idea entirely. That said, Perpetua was wrong to shame such a young writer.
― the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 14:49 (one year ago) link
oh don't get me wrong, perpetua should take a long look in the mirror, genuinely one of the most embarrassing people to ever do it
― ivy., Wednesday, 26 July 2023 14:52 (one year ago) link
just can't help thinking that if i, as a young music writer, were indulged in this way, all of my pieces would be unreadable, and a great number of them already are (to me), and i think one of the jobs of the people who read these pieces before they upload them to the internet is to make them less embarrassing for the writer's sake, so they can look back with pride on their work and the collaboration that resulted in it
alas
― ivy., Wednesday, 26 July 2023 14:54 (one year ago) link
― the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 14:56 (one year ago) link
But maybe the roiling tempo of internet fandom in 2023 is simply too resting-fascist to put its faith in a band that reworks its setlist each night
The roiling tempo is resting-fascist?
― jmm, Wednesday, 26 July 2023 15:10 (one year ago) link
resting fash face
― hardcore technician gimmicks are also another popular choice f (President Keyes), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 15:19 (one year ago) link
wait are they saying that internet fans aren't fans? i thought they were popular! even got a recent 40 page piece in the new yorker. (okay, it just felt like 40...) my 20 year old drove from montreal canada to northampton ma to see them last week. that's some sorta fandom.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 26 July 2023 15:30 (one year ago) link
(and no offense to the writer of new yorker piece. anything written about indie rock over 500 words is probably a bit long for me...felt the same way about the national and wxahchee things that i tried to skim in 30 seconds. new yorker is nu-pitchfork.)
― scott seward, Wednesday, 26 July 2023 15:33 (one year ago) link
If I were a light-touch editor inclined only to use my red pencil on one line in the piece, it would indeed be that “resting-fascist” one.
― Empty Tushy Fills (morrisp), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 15:45 (one year ago) link
none of you would even know me if i had had a more heavy-penciled editor when i started writing. and now you can all say: "EXACTLY!"
― scott seward, Wednesday, 26 July 2023 16:10 (one year ago) link
lol i mean also getting edited to death is one of the reasons i have the most merciless and evil editor of all time living in my head, and they are the reason i spend agonizing amounts of time on everything i write, so ymmv
having an editor who understands you and appreciates/prioritizes your voice but helps you refine it and clear away the garbage is priceless, i've been lucky to have a few
― ivy., Wednesday, 26 July 2023 16:22 (one year ago) link
It's 2023, I can't imagine any publication doing much in between "Make this read like our house style" or "Don't edit this at all"
― sean paul akerman (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 16:59 (one year ago) link
does stereogum even pay people? because if not then yeah they can write whatever they want.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 26 July 2023 17:03 (one year ago) link
lol what IS the stereogum house style, btw?
― scott seward, Wednesday, 26 July 2023 17:04 (one year ago) link
I'm not conjecturing on Stereogum in particular, I'm just saying anyone expecting any world where someone is line-editing over your shoulder like William Shawn editing John Hersey's Hiroshima or whatever, well, you need to stop waiting for the Don Draper drink cart to roll in...
― sean paul akerman (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 17:11 (one year ago) link
They pay a little.
― but also fuck you (unperson), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 17:13 (one year ago) link
yeah thats understood all you have to do is read something online to know that. its pretty dire.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 26 July 2023 17:13 (one year ago) link
“You want us to EDIT your piece , kid? Oh sure, let me go down the hall and get Ezra Pound for you.”
― hardcore technician gimmicks are also another popular choice f (President Keyes), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 17:23 (one year ago) link
when I wrote for XLR8R right before the great dying (2009-2011), I was edited constantly. we made fun of publications that used a lot of flowery prose and flourishes that said little about the actual music. i know i sound like an old man, but yeah, that piece needed a good editor, so that the young writer could get a sense of what it might mean to actually write about music instead of writing a meta-commentary on their own experience of the music and its cultural connotations
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 17:32 (one year ago) link
Stereogum's "masthead" lists five editors, seems reasonable to imagine they do some editing.
― Empty Tushy Fills (morrisp), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 17:38 (one year ago) link
Maybe they all work on the company sailboat
― linoleum gallagher (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 17:40 (one year ago) link
There's also a big gap between line-by-line editing and not touching a piece at all... they could encourage certain things to be rethought, approached a different way, etc. (maybe they did, and the initial draft was even more out-there!)
― Empty Tushy Fills (morrisp), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 17:41 (one year ago) link
― but also fuck you (unperson),
and they pay fastq
― the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 17:42 (one year ago) link
i wrote some nothing 100 word thing for an indie rock magazine once and i swear they made me rewrite it ten times. then they never paid me for it. and THAT is all i need to know about indie rock.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 26 July 2023 17:45 (one year ago) link
see i just learned to write by writing a bunch of crappy garbage and posting it to the internet. after 30 years of doing that i'm actually a pretty good writer now apparently. still haven't ever gotten paid for it, but i'm slowly working on getting rid of my inferiority complex about that.
― Kate (rushomancy), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 20:16 (one year ago) link
I learned to write by stealing from most of you all.
but I guess it didn't take.
― linoleum gallagher (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 20:56 (one year ago) link
Great couplet.
― the dreaded dependent claus (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 20:56 (one year ago) link
― The Triumphant Return of Bernard & Stubbs (Raymond Cummings), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 20:59 (one year ago) link
(seriously though, lots of phrases that I've adopted into my daily vernacular have come from here!)
― linoleum gallagher (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 26 July 2023 21:00 (one year ago) link
like when I go to the dentist I yell "we want hen fap!"
was this written by AI
https://chorus.fm/reviews/greta-van-fleet-starcatcher/
― Frozen CD, Friday, 4 August 2023 16:21 (one year ago) link
this review sucks, but AI usually doesn't use colloquialisms like "give their right arm" or even say things like "snarky takes".
AI writing tends to be very bland, repetitive, and mind-numbing like this example from a Fuel fansite that seems to mostly consist of weird, overlong, error filled AI-generated articles about drumming:
https://www.fuelrocks.com/chevy-chase-and-steely-dan-unraveling-the-drumming-mystery/
― Judi Dench's Human Hand (methanietanner), Friday, 4 August 2023 16:32 (one year ago) link
Lmao that is baaaad
― the new drip king (DJP), Friday, 4 August 2023 16:43 (one year ago) link
thanks for the new name
― Chevy Chase drumming mystery (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 4 August 2023 17:00 (one year ago) link
instantly obsessed with that Fuel piece... amazing work
― Nonhuman biologics enthusiast (morrisp), Friday, 4 August 2023 17:36 (one year ago) link
The fuel website also has useful non-drumming related content: https://www.fuelrocks.com/sustainable-solutions-how-to-properly-dispose-of-55-gallon-drums-of-oil/
― Chevy Chase drumming mystery (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 4 August 2023 18:03 (one year ago) link
Title could be shorter, “Eric”: https://www.fuelrocks.com/mastering-midi-channel-invasion-for-getgood-drums-a-step-by-step-guideintroductionbriefly-explain-what-midi-channel-invasion-is-and-its-relevance-in-using-getgood-drums-highlight-the-importance-of-ma/
― Chevy Chase drumming mystery (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 4 August 2023 18:11 (one year ago) link
Oh shit:https://www.fuelrocks.com/kid-rock-iconoclastic-american-singer-songwriter-dies-at-46/
― Chevy Chase drumming mystery (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 4 August 2023 18:22 (one year ago) link
Pour one out for the Kid...
― Nonhuman biologics enthusiast (morrisp), Friday, 4 August 2023 18:25 (one year ago) link
Keep reading those articles, they get funnier and funnier
― the new drip king (DJP), Friday, 4 August 2023 19:00 (one year ago) link
https://www.fuelrocks.com/prince-harry-and-his-drumming-skills-unveiling-the-musical-side-of-the-duke-of-sussex/
― Christine Green Leafy Dragon Indigo, Friday, 4 August 2023 19:54 (one year ago) link
hahaha that's the mother lode wow
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 4 August 2023 20:03 (one year ago) link
Truly we have found the great mystery here
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 4 August 2023 20:13 (one year ago) link
Key Points
The collaboration between Will Ferrell and Red Hot Chili Peppers was an unforgettable and unforgettable experience for both the performers and the audience. A world audience was treated to Will Ferrell’s drumming skills alongside the legendary rock band as they created a musical and entertainment fusion that was both entertaining and popular.
This collaboration will have a long-term impact as well as an immediate impact. As a result, creativity has no boundaries, and artists can experiment and express themselves in a variety of creative ways. Aside from expanding Will Ferrell’s reach into new genres, the collaboration also provided him with new avenues for future collaborations and projects with artists such as the Red Hot Chili Peppers, The Flaming Lips, and many others.
― hardcore technician gimmicks are also another popular choice f (President Keyes), Friday, 4 August 2023 20:55 (one year ago) link
that kid rock article gets his age wrong too, which seems like something AI should be able to get right
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 4 August 2023 21:19 (one year ago) link
Sachin Tendulkar is one of the greatest batsmen of all time, no doubt about it!
― Chevy Chase drumming mystery (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 4 August 2023 22:32 (one year ago) link
It's not "worst ever," but I got irrationally annoyed at a Rolling Stone Lollapalooza writeup that referred to Billie Eilish performing "Oxycontin" (the song is "Oxytocin")
Feels like an argument in favor of A.I. tbh
― The king of the demo (bernard snowy), Sunday, 6 August 2023 09:48 (one year ago) link
Or sub-editors
― Ward Fowler, Sunday, 6 August 2023 10:52 (one year ago) link
Not sure if I am doing this correctly, but #OneThread
Oh! I Always Get Those Two Mixed Up!
― Judi Dench's Human Hand (methanietanner), Sunday, 6 August 2023 21:34 (one year ago) link
https://www.stereogum.com/2232515/broadcast-haha-sound-turns-20/reviews/the-anniversary/god, where to begin, I’ll start with ctrl-f Cargill
― assert (matttkkkk), Friday, 11 August 2023 18:04 (one year ago) link
yeah I peaced out after the opening, surprised I got through the entire paragraph tbh
― Murgatroid, Friday, 11 August 2023 18:44 (one year ago) link
first paragraph came perilously close to ruining the album for me. proceed with caution.
― waste of compute (One Eye Open), Friday, 11 August 2023 18:52 (one year ago) link
confident failure on simple terms like "archetype" and "naïeveté", or calling TNMBP "dissonant experimentation" rmde
― assert (matttkkkk), Friday, 11 August 2023 19:30 (one year ago) link
One moment the titular Valerie wears a purple dress in an all-white bedroom, the next she’s surrounded by nuns at a church service where the state of being a woman is compared to the state of being a pomegranate (which is to say, split me open at the center and fuck me, daddy).
I am not letting this author near my fruit salad
― the new drip king (DJP), Friday, 11 August 2023 20:50 (one year ago) link
I'm just the same boy I used to be
― earosmith (Neanderthal), Friday, 11 August 2023 21:01 (one year ago) link
My wife almost never mentions music writing, but she sent me this link and was like "???", and... oh boy, whadda piece (turns out it's the one mookieproof posted a screenshot of back on March 4, but I'm not sure if it excellence was fully appreciated): Are We Finally Ready to See Neutral Milk Hotel for What It Really Was?
― You have been verified with your voice (morrisp), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 16:30 (one year ago) link
The last sentence of that piece is a gem
― jmm, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 16:32 (one year ago) link
that is way too long to read after being posted itt
I did scroll to the last sentence and oof
― rob, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 16:35 (one year ago) link
aside from the fact that loading slate on my phone is always a painful experience, I thought that essay was…fine?
― k3vin k., Wednesday, 16 August 2023 17:01 (one year ago) link
as far as bad essays go I figured the revive would be about this one
https://www.newyorker.com/news/our-columnists/a-close-listen-to-rich-men-north-of-richmond
― k3vin k., Wednesday, 16 August 2023 17:02 (one year ago) link
oh god no
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 17:07 (one year ago) link
Much like “Idol” contestants, such as Bo Bice or Scotty McCreery, Anthony can really sing. His voice isn’t quite as smooth and virtuosic as the country star Chris Stapleton’s, but it carries a similar depth of tone and his screamy rasp never feels like the affectation of an amateur who is trying too hard, but rather does what it’s supposed to do: communicate emotion.
Counterpoint: No.
― sean paul akerman (Whiney G. Weingarten), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 17:30 (one year ago) link
Tell it to my rasp, my achy screamy rasp
― hardcore technician gimmicks are also another popular choice f (President Keyes), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 17:32 (one year ago) link
slate informs me we need to talk about my adblocker
personally I feel the adblocker prevented me from reading this piece, and that's ok
― Daniel_Rf, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 17:42 (one year ago) link
It is (believe me) – though fwiw, activating the ol' Reading Mode (or whatever such browser extension you may use for that) gets around it.
― You have been verified with your voice (morrisp), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 17:45 (one year ago) link
Should We Be Blocking Ads? A Case For Being Sold To
― hardcore technician gimmicks are also another popular choice f (President Keyes), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 18:14 (one year ago) link
I thought Carl Wilson was respected here; now he's the written the worst music article ever?
― Halfway there but for you, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 20:32 (one year ago) link
both things can be true, or sequential perhaps
― rob, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 20:51 (one year ago) link
just a matter of taste
― hardcore technician gimmicks are also another popular choice f (President Keyes), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 20:54 (one year ago) link
Yes, I may just not be into certain types of “today’s” music writing (so it’s a me thing to some degree). There’ve been one or two other cases like that recently, maybe in the Pitchfork thread.
― You have been verified with your voice (morrisp), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 21:12 (one year ago) link
I believe PK was making a reference to Wilson's Celine Dion 33 1/3 book
― rob, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 21:13 (one year ago) link
which I remember liking, but I'm not sure I've ever been that into his work for Slate
― rob, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 21:14 (one year ago) link
all that quote needed was a comparison to Greta Van Fleet singer
― earosmith (Neanderthal), Thursday, 17 August 2023 02:48 (one year ago) link
https://louderthanwar.com/swans-albert-hall-manchester-live-review/author is a "creative music writer" and this reads like a sixth-form assignment
― lord of the rongs (anagram), Sunday, 20 August 2023 04:26 (one year ago) link
Eh, at least she tried something. An editor could have helped her but I doubt that site has one.
― read-only (unperson), Sunday, 20 August 2023 04:34 (one year ago) link
Guess I just shouldn’t click on music writing anymore, b/c holy shit: https://thebaffler.com/latest/california-gothic-marzoni
― Clientless (Scooter's Version) (morrisp), Thursday, 24 August 2023 01:10 (one year ago) link
I think the author of that is a return nominee to this thread?
― Elvis Telecom, Thursday, 24 August 2023 01:27 (one year ago) link
The Baffler living up to its name
― the new drip king (DJP), Thursday, 24 August 2023 02:15 (one year ago) link
The urban fog that has trailed shibboleths of progress to the Pacific Rim hovers over a reflection in once-clear water that looks final in its murkiness: finding the barbarisms of modernity exacerbated and multiplied on the outer cusp of the American continent, settled under the false assurance of beginning anew, we can no longer dispute that the monsters are us.
In his neo-noir western, There Will Be Blood, Paul Thomas Anderson diagnoses mastery of the Occidental frontier as an Oedipal struggle between Christianity and capitalism, while statutory rapist Roman Polanski reimagines, in Chinatown, super engineer William Mulholland’s irrigation of the desert by means of the Los Angeles Aqueduct as an incest fantasy (a prevalent subgenre of the Gothic and noir) wherein the archetypal small-business owner, private investigator Jake Gittes (Jack Nicholson), uncovers the extent to which developers have fucked the local citizenry, their own offspring not excepted, for eons to come—and as Nicholson’s 1990 sequel, The Two Jakes, attests, boy, will they fuck again.
― Lavator Shemmelpennick, Thursday, 24 August 2023 04:07 (one year ago) link
I honestly don’t think it’s meant to be “read”… how could it be(??)
― Clientless (Scooter's Version) (morrisp), Thursday, 24 August 2023 04:09 (one year ago) link
https://www.stereogum.com/2233806/alice-cooper-new-album-keanu-reeves-trans-issues/interviews/weve-got-a-file-on-you/
why would anyone think asking alice cooper for his opinions on trans people is a good idea at all, just inviting him to say something bigoted. most charitably this just seems like total naivety from the interviewer hoping that he might say something positive based on comments from nearly 50 years ago? but even in the best case that does pretty much nothing for anyone and otherwise they're just letting him spew hate
― ufo, Thursday, 24 August 2023 11:42 (one year ago) link
Because that approach generates clicks?
― But his face would not turn into hot Kirby (Evan), Thursday, 24 August 2023 14:31 (one year ago) link
most charitably this just seems like total naivety from the interviewer hoping that he might say something positive based on comments from nearly 50 years ago?
Based on the interviewer's previous work, that's my guess as to what happened. She mostly writes about contemporary pop music, in a cheerleading style. I've interviewed Cooper; he's a genuinely nice guy. I have no reason to believe he holds any hostility toward trans people. But he's also a befuddled old man who really shouldn't be asked what he thinks about things that his 75-year-old cable-news-addled mind is not prepared to process.
― read-only (unperson), Thursday, 24 August 2023 14:40 (one year ago) link
Cooper is clearly transphobic and also closeted in some sense and I won't elaborate but it's a highly relevant question even though his answers will inevitably be disappointing
― your original display name is still visible (Left), Thursday, 24 August 2023 14:53 (one year ago) link
it's worth it if only to have him on record as a case study for later generations to learn from
― your original display name is still visible (Left), Thursday, 24 August 2023 14:55 (one year ago) link
the LDR piece just sort of washed over me in a haze without leaving much of anything behind so it compliments her music very well
― your original display name is still visible (Left), Thursday, 24 August 2023 15:01 (one year ago) link
I'll take the baffler's music coverage over jacobin's any day
― your original display name is still visible (Left), Thursday, 24 August 2023 15:02 (one year ago) link
I don't care enough about LDR to read that piece, but going to the Baffler for "music writing" is a category error. I agree that first sentence Lavator quoted is impenetrable, but the incest point in the second is interesting imo
― rob, Thursday, 24 August 2023 15:10 (one year ago) link
The LDR piece isn't as bad as it could have been. It's somewhat impenetrable, but once you pull it apart (I've been reading Albert Murray lately, so I'm in practice with untangling people's prose) there are some good observations.
― read-only (unperson), Thursday, 24 August 2023 15:12 (one year ago) link
Based on the interviewer's previous work, that's my guess as to what happened. She mostly writes about contemporary pop music, in a cheerleading style. I've interviewed Cooper; he's a genuinely nice guy. I have no reason to believe he holds any hostility toward trans people. But he's also a befuddled old man who really shouldn't be asked what he thinks about things that his 75-year-old cable-news-addled mind is not prepared to process.― read-only (unperson)
― read-only (unperson)
look it's not the interviewer's fault for cooper saying bigoted shit, it's alice cooper's fault for being (apparently, i'm not going to read the article because i have enough transphobia in my life thank you very much) a fuckin' bigot
― Kate (rushomancy), Thursday, 24 August 2023 15:20 (one year ago) link
Absolutely. Re-reading the interview, it's actually worse than it seemed yesterday. At first I thought it was just a confused but well-meaning take best responded to with "oh, bless your heart, grandpa," but re-reading it, he sounds hostile and insane, like someone who's been pouring Fox News into his eyeballs for a decade or more. (And I bet it got a lot of play in the UK, because there are some very fucked-up comments on the article now that read like they're ported over from the Daily Mail or something.)
― read-only (unperson), Thursday, 24 August 2023 15:32 (one year ago) link
lana thing has a college paper problem where it can't quote someone without giving a gloss of their career or invoke noir without explaining that california is the terminus of manifest destiny (as is traditional my own state doesn't count because it's not where the movie industry is) and that william holden is dead at the beginning of sunset boulevard, but otherwise it's on the right track about lana, a rare thing
this from alice cooper--
I’m not going to tell a seven-year-old boy, ‘Go put a dress on because maybe you’re a girl,’ and he’s going, ‘No, I’m not. I’m a boy.'
--reminded me of rick perlstein's pointing out that everything in the deer hunter is a specific memory from the war with the roles compulsively reversed
― difficult listening hour, Thursday, 24 August 2023 15:39 (one year ago) link
The California "mythos" somehow fries some ppl's brains for some reason, I'm not sure why (IMOM, that was one of the issues with Ann Powers' notorious LDR piece, which otherwise & of course was much more readable than the Baffler thing – which I'm impressed some of you have been able to penetrate to get to whatever its "point" is).
― Clientless (Scooter's Version) (morrisp), Thursday, 24 August 2023 16:04 (one year ago) link
*IMO (though that reminds me, I should call my mother...)
― Clientless (Scooter's Version) (morrisp), Thursday, 24 August 2023 16:05 (one year ago) link
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Thursday, 24 August 2023 18:04 (one year ago) link
in the interviewer's defense, they do try to give him several off ramps and he just keeps digging
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 24 August 2023 18:06 (one year ago) link
xp Nah, those people probably sucked to begin with. Respectfully disagree!
― Clientless (Scooter's Version) (morrisp), Thursday, 24 August 2023 18:27 (one year ago) link
yeah they're tossing him a softball and he sounds like "oh good, I, Alice, am now ready to share my thoughts on gender conformity"
― J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Thursday, 24 August 2023 20:44 (one year ago) link
I keep coming back to “you perform under the name Alice Cooper, how are you so bad at this”
― the new drip king (DJP), Thursday, 24 August 2023 20:53 (one year ago) link
seriously my dude Alice. this is an easy one for you
― J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Thursday, 24 August 2023 21:00 (one year ago) link
Especially when the original question was "Here's some really progressive shit you said 50 years ago — do you still stand by that?" and all he had to do was say, "Absolutely! Now about my new album..."
― read-only (unperson), Thursday, 24 August 2023 21:35 (one year ago) link
i'm just shocked that a born-again christian could be in any way hostile to queer people! it's so out of character!
― Kate (rushomancy), Thursday, 24 August 2023 23:12 (one year ago) link
If it's any comfort, most of these people will soon be dead.
― immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Thursday, 24 August 2023 23:37 (one year ago) link
this would be the case if cooper had brought it up unprompted, but he was explicitly asked about it and really didn't need to be.
In a 1974 interview with SPEC, you gave really forward-thinking responses to questions about sexuality and gender. You said “In the future, everyone will be bisexual,” and you accurately defined pansexuality, among other things. You also said, “Lots of men who perform wear make-up – that’s a theatrical tradition, it has nothing to do with sexuality.”Recently some of your “theatrical” rock peers have commented about gender identity, with Paul Stanley and Dee Snider calling gender-affirming care for kids a “sad and dangerous fad.”As someone who played around with gender expectations early on, do you have any thoughts on what some of your contemporaries have said before they walked those comments back?
Recently some of your “theatrical” rock peers have commented about gender identity, with Paul Stanley and Dee Snider calling gender-affirming care for kids a “sad and dangerous fad.”
As someone who played around with gender expectations early on, do you have any thoughts on what some of your contemporaries have said before they walked those comments back?
this is the full question! explicitly inviting the possibility of him saying some wildly bigoted shit by mentioning some other 70s hard rockers who recently did that. i'm objecting to the interviewer thinking it was a worthwhile question to ask at all and just treating us as an object of debate without any real consideration. there is absolutely no reason to think that alice cooper would have something interesting or insightful to say about trans healthcare for kids, and even just trying to get him to weigh in on trans issues is stupid and unnecessary.
― ufo, Friday, 25 August 2023 00:14 (one year ago) link
I think it’s reasonably worth asking, but not worth printing when the answer sucks shit
is it worth the news cycle of outing another old man’s hate-filled bullshit at the cost of printing hate-filled bullshit?
― mh, Friday, 25 August 2023 13:39 (one year ago) link
https://www.pastemagazine.com/music/transphobia-in-music/always-the-topic-rarely-the-voice-transphobic-rock-stars
This article belongs in this thread imo, not as an example of “bad music writing” (it is the opposite), but bc bad music writing is its target
― Snoopy is a cat, who lives in a cage (flamboyant goon tie included), Friday, 25 August 2023 17:21 (one year ago) link
Good piece. Shame about the capitalization error in the author bio:
Niko Stratis is a freelance writer whose work has appeared in outlets like SPIN, Bitch, Autostraddle, Catapult and more. Her work primarily focuses on culture, the 1990s, queer/trans topics and as often as possible where all those ideas intersect. Niko lives in downtown Toronto with her fiancé and their dog and 2 cats. She is a cancer.
― read-only (unperson), Friday, 25 August 2023 17:54 (one year ago) link
Ha I thought it was an intentional joke on Niko’s end tbh
― Snoopy is a cat, who lives in a cage (flamboyant goon tie included), Friday, 25 August 2023 18:02 (one year ago) link
Literally LOL’ing (as a July baby myself)
― ROSE, W. AXL UNITED STATES INDIVIDUAL (morrisp), Friday, 25 August 2023 18:07 (one year ago) link
Always better to go with Cancerian or Moon Child
― Josefa, Friday, 25 August 2023 18:09 (one year ago) link
This isn't the worst of anything, but I thought it was kind of funny how the writer seizes on some mindless complaints (which I'll take his word on their numbering in the "hundreds") and refutes them point-by-point: https://variety.com/2023/music/news/olvia-rodrigo-short-album-guts-running-time-1235698333/
― ROSE, W. AXL UNITED STATES INDIVIDUAL (morrisp), Friday, 25 August 2023 18:14 (one year ago) link
(the tweets he quotes are pretty amusing – “So basically an EP")
― ROSE, W. AXL UNITED STATES INDIVIDUAL (morrisp), Friday, 25 August 2023 18:16 (one year ago) link
― ufo, Thursday, August 24, 2023 8:14 PM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink
― mh, Friday, August 25, 2023 9:39 AM (four hours ago) bookmarkflaglink
AGAIN: clicks! they want them!
― But his face would not turn into hot Kirby (Evan), Friday, 25 August 2023 18:27 (one year ago) link
I don't really think anyone is confused about that Evan. Maybe just wondering how many ad pennies is worth selling your soul for
― rob, Friday, 25 August 2023 18:53 (one year ago) link
ah, then yeah I don't think they believe goading old rockers into saying embarrassing/hateful/ignorant shit is really giving them any pause in light of the traffic it brings
― But his face would not turn into hot Kirby (Evan), Friday, 25 August 2023 19:12 (one year ago) link
the worst thing is, by publishing his answer, it's just a negative despairing thing to put into the world. it's going to make folks who are trans feel helpless, make them feel worse, it'll do the same for their allies, and make the opposition feel emboldened by yet another major figure coming out as an absolute moron on the subject. i can see the argument for exposing the bigotry, but idk if it does anything but add to the shit pile of dumbfuckery.
― omar little, Friday, 25 August 2023 20:40 (one year ago) link
thanks for sharing that Niko Stratis piece, fgti!
― mh, Friday, 25 August 2023 21:38 (one year ago) link
I’m sorry but what the hell is this
https://www.newyorker.com/culture/the-weekend-essay/listening-to-taylor-swift-in-prison
― k3vin k., Sunday, 3 September 2023 18:34 (one year ago) link
He said he'd kill for Taylor Swift tickets, we thought it was a euphemism
― Neanderthal, Sunday, 3 September 2023 19:07 (one year ago) link
No body no crime
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Sunday, 3 September 2023 21:02 (one year ago) link
Will that turn all the Swifties into prison abolitionists or will they want more people in prison in order to facilitate their discovery of the Swift?
― papal hotwife (milo z), Monday, 4 September 2023 01:40 (one year ago) link
Afraid it may make aspiring writers consider murder as a way into The New Yorker.
― Disappointing cantaloupe (morrisp), Monday, 4 September 2023 01:47 (one year ago) link
I thought it was good
― tylerw, Monday, 4 September 2023 01:50 (one year ago) link
Ha I thought it was an intentional joke on Niko’s end tbh― Snoopy is a cat, who lives in a cage (flamboyant goon tie included)
― Snoopy is a cat, who lives in a cage (flamboyant goon tie included)
yeah seriously this is just how a lot of queer people _talk_ haha
you wanna talk about capitalization that nearly gave me a heart attack, how about this:
If news breaks today that whatever madlib of an elder rockstar is transphobic
jesus christ stratis if you hadn't said "rockstar" in there...
it's interesting because i do come at it from a different angle than stratis... i don't want to have a _voice_, i want a world that neither needs or wants my voice on trans issues, because there _is_ no "trans debate", because anybody who is transphobic is a bigot and is treated accordingly. that's a completely unrealistic expectation but fuck it, i'm a trans woman, "realistic expectations" haven't really done much for me
i also want people to pay me for existing, because existing is hard and i deserve to get paid way more for it than i am now
― Kate (rushomancy), Monday, 4 September 2023 02:13 (one year ago) link
actually let me amend that, i definitely want a world that wants my voice on trans issues, i just think the major trans issue of the day should be "just how hot are trans people? very hot or extremely hot?" (the answer, of course, is "why not both?")
― Kate (rushomancy), Monday, 4 September 2023 02:15 (one year ago) link
do people think that Swift in prison piece is bad? i think it's really good.
― alpine static, Monday, 4 September 2023 06:15 (one year ago) link
I thought it was good, for sure
― assert (matttkkkk), Monday, 4 September 2023 07:49 (one year ago) link
your feelings on it probably vary depending on your tolerance for taytay's cultural ubiquity
― imago, Monday, 4 September 2023 09:06 (one year ago) link
Good first line.
This is what your 9th Grade English teacher means when she says "give your essay a strong opener." https://t.co/NSwu33OC5J— Rohita Kadambi (@RohitaKadambi) September 4, 2023
― xyzzzz__, Monday, 4 September 2023 10:28 (one year ago) link
Tory boy who claims to love Aphex Twin "reviews" his recent gig. Several paras of banal reminiscences and scene setting, one clueless one about the performance itself that can be summarised as "it's just a bunch of noise".
https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/a-50-quid-hour-and-a-bit-troll-aphex-twin-at-field-day-reviewed/
― Composition 40b (Stew), Monday, 4 September 2023 14:34 (one year ago) link
How has he never managed to hear any post-1994 Aphex before? Oh, because he's literally only heard SAW1 and never bothered to check out anything else by this artist he "loves".
― the world is your octopus (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Monday, 4 September 2023 14:40 (one year ago) link
I'm hardly an Aphex expert, but I know there's more to him than SAW1. The one time I saw him live, he was supported by The Bug and Wolf Eyes. Nuff said.
A reactionary review in the fascist Spectator is a recommendation of course. The full set has been posted on Youtube and it's fantastic: loads of acid, chopped up Amen breaks, and a brutal Come To Daddy.
― Composition 40b (Stew), Monday, 4 September 2023 15:30 (one year ago) link
The singer for Fat White Family has written one of those "you just can't say/do anything anymore" pieces for Unherd, a reactionary website masquerading as a "free thought zone" or whatthefuckever. People are just too timid and easily offended these days, he says, like so very many aging "punk" frontmen before him.
https://unherd.com/2023/09/punks-spirit-is-broken/
― read-only (unperson), Thursday, 14 September 2023 15:45 (one year ago) link
those of you who know me, mark my words: if I ever meet Jann Wenner, and it's not outside the realm of possibility, weirder things have happened in my life, I'm gonna punch him in the mouth for the shit he says in his NYT interview here.
― J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Friday, 15 September 2023 14:21 (one year ago) link
Q: I think it’s fair to say that the average reader assumes that what shows up in the publication is basically what was said. But you’re saying, actually the subjects go over the transcripts. And, for example, you got pilloried for reviewing Mick Jagger’s “Goddess in the Doorway,” giving it five stars, when the critical consensus on that album was that it was kind of a dud. The broader question is, when it comes to interviews with the people that you admire, who are also your friends, are you shading into something that’s a little more like fan service, or a kind of branding, than objective journalism?
A: Look, nothing was ever substantively changed from the original interviews. These are all minor changes that really get to accuracy and readability and all that stuff. Secondly, these were not meant to be confrontational interviews. They were always meant to be cooperative interviews.
Q:But there aren’t two kinds of interviews.
A: Yes, there are. The kind of interview I wanted to do was to elicit real thinking, not to confront or challenge or get somebody defensive. But let’s go to the underlying thing: Did my too-cozy relationships alter our coverage?
Q: That’s right.
― hat trick of trashiness (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 15 September 2023 14:28 (one year ago) link
That was something.
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Friday, 15 September 2023 14:35 (one year ago) link
I have no idea when the last time I was this angry about a music-related piece anywhere. just such fucking bullshit, and such a giant shining indicator -- as if one were needed, but still -- of how much was lost, obscured, hidden, diminished, obviated by guys like this determining who did or didn't get the lead review, the front cover, the news item.
― J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Friday, 15 September 2023 14:36 (one year ago) link
Insofar as the women, just none of them were as articulate enough on this intellectual level.
Oh, stop it. You’re telling me Joni Mitchell is not articulate enough on an intellectual level?
Hold on a second.
I’ll let you rephrase that.
All right, thank you. It’s not that they’re not creative geniuses. It’s not that they’re inarticulate, although, go have a deep conversation with Grace Slick or Janis Joplin. Please, be my guest. You know, Joni was not a philosopher of rock ’n’ roll. She didn’t, in my mind, meet that test. Not by her work, not by other interviews she did. The people I interviewed were the kind of philosophers of rock.
Of Black artists — you know, Stevie Wonder, genius, right? I suppose when you use a word as broad as “masters,” the fault is using that word. Maybe Marvin Gaye, or Curtis Mayfield? I mean, they just didn’t articulate at that level.
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Friday, 15 September 2023 14:37 (one year ago) link
Oh, stop it. You’re telling me Joni Mitchell is not articulate enough on an intellectual level?Hold on a second.I’ll let you rephrase that.A: All right, thank you. It’s not that they’re not creative geniuses. It’s not that they’re inarticulate, although, go have a deep conversation with Grace Slick or Janis Joplin. Please, be my guest. You know, Joni was not a philosopher of rock ’n’ roll. She didn’t, in my mind, meet that test. Not by her work, not by other interviews she did. The people I interviewed were the kind of philosophers of rock.Of Black artists — you know, Stevie Wonder, genius, right? I suppose when you use a word as broad as “masters,” the fault is using that word. Maybe Marvin Gaye, or Curtis Mayfield? I mean, they just didn’t articulate at that level.Q: How do you know if you didn’t give them a chance?A: Because I read interviews with them. I listen to their music. I mean, look at what Pete Townshend was writing about, or Jagger, or any of them. They were deep things about a particular generation, a particular spirit and a particular attitude about rock ’n’ roll. Not that the others weren’t, but these were the ones that could really articulate it.
A: All right, thank you. It’s not that they’re not creative geniuses. It’s not that they’re inarticulate, although, go have a deep conversation with Grace Slick or Janis Joplin. Please, be my guest. You know, Joni was not a philosopher of rock ’n’ roll. She didn’t, in my mind, meet that test. Not by her work, not by other interviews she did. The people I interviewed were the kind of philosophers of rock.
Q: How do you know if you didn’t give them a chance?
A: Because I read interviews with them. I listen to their music. I mean, look at what Pete Townshend was writing about, or Jagger, or any of them. They were deep things about a particular generation, a particular spirit and a particular attitude about rock ’n’ roll. Not that the others weren’t, but these were the ones that could really articulate it.
I can't be rational about how fucked up this is, it enrages me.
― J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Friday, 15 September 2023 14:39 (one year ago) link
Fat White Family are absolute garbage and I'm glad Unperson has included that piece in here. The inanity of its arguments aside, it's a terribly written piece. Lots of strained overwriting to show how clever and righteous he is.
― Composition 40b (Stew), Friday, 15 September 2023 14:44 (one year ago) link
I cant read the article. Can anyone paste it for me please?
― Toshirō Nofune (The Seventh ILXorai), Friday, 15 September 2023 14:45 (one year ago) link
You know, just for public relations sake, maybe I should have gone and found one Black and one woman artist to include here that didn’t measure up to that same historical standard, just to avert this kind of criticism.
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Friday, 15 September 2023 14:45 (one year ago) link
(the jann wenner thing, not the gobshite from fat shite family)
Would love to hear Grace Slick's retort about this guy.
― my brain goes aahhhh (morrisp), Friday, 15 September 2023 14:48 (one year ago) link
Also this Wenner thing is appalling. Thinking Pete Townsend or Mick Jagger are deeper writers than the authors of What's Going On or There's No Place Like America Today...
― Composition 40b (Stew), Friday, 15 September 2023 14:49 (one year ago) link
I cant imagine anybody saying Curtis Mayfield was inarticulate. Until now.
― Toshirō Nofune (The Seventh ILXorai), Friday, 15 September 2023 14:50 (one year ago) link
he is so fucking stupid that it is astounding that everyone in a position to know consistently attested to his incisive editing ability.
― veronica moser, Friday, 15 September 2023 14:51 (one year ago) link
Dude's really talking like there's nothing they could have done differently with the UVA story
As we all know now, if somebody really wants to hoax you, there’s very little you can do about it. Except have the kind of hypervigilance that would mean you could probably publish nothing.
― jmm, Friday, 15 September 2023 14:52 (one year ago) link
And of course the money quote about the 5 star review for Goddess in the Doorway:
“I confess: I probably went too far. So what? I’m entitled.”
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Friday, 15 September 2023 14:54 (one year ago) link
if somebody really wants to hoax you, there’s very little you can do about it.
just iconically dumb
― J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Friday, 15 September 2023 14:55 (one year ago) link
Sounds like a guy who's real fun on coke.
― hat trick of trashiness (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 15 September 2023 14:55 (one year ago) link
it was also often said that he was uncomfortable around black folks…like Touré, the first black RS staffer, scared him…TOURE!no question that he among much of the staff also considered black music of the time pandering show biz crap, compared to the oracular musing of Jagger, Dylan, Boss, Townshend, etc
― veronica moser, Friday, 15 September 2023 14:55 (one year ago) link
What didn’t the rock ’n’ roll generation do? I mean, it didn’t get everything done. But I have no fundamental, deep criticisms. Is there something that you think we didn’t get right?
― difficult listening hour, Friday, 15 September 2023 14:56 (one year ago) link
^ possibly the most boomer thing anyone's ever said
― jmm, Friday, 15 September 2023 14:59 (one year ago) link
fitting that he ends up arguing against one of his Rock Philosopher Kings
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Friday, 15 September 2023 15:00 (one year ago) link
"We didn't blow it"
― Critique of the Goth Programme (Neil S), Friday, 15 September 2023 15:00 (one year ago) link
They didn't do ALL the drugs, and thus left some over for the next generation
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Friday, 15 September 2023 15:01 (one year ago) link
the wrong kind of eyes
― difficult listening hour, Friday, 15 September 2023 15:01 (one year ago) link
He could talk to all the 14 year olds the rock stars had sex with but they probably aren't that articulate
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Friday, 15 September 2023 15:02 (one year ago) link
I mistakenly thought that the interview was old. Y’know, like from his self-loathing and closeted years, making unto straight white guitar heroes some sort of unattainable ideal. That might have almost made some sense. But … Jesus. Hope this turns into a pod ep of Bad Gays
― 50 Best Fellas (Eric H.), Friday, 15 September 2023 15:24 (one year ago) link
those of you who know me, mark my words: if I ever meet Jann Wenner, and it's not outside the realm of possibility, weirder things have happened in my life, I'm gonna punch him in the mouth for the shit he says in his NYT interview here.🕸
― Boris Yitsbin (wins), Friday, 15 September 2023 15:26 (one year ago) link
I never knew how much I needed a wenner episode of bad gays
it's like he went out of his way to confirm all of the worst rumours about him
I haven't read that sticky fingers book but apparently he didn't learn a thing from that experience
― die cis scum (Left), Friday, 15 September 2023 15:30 (one year ago) link
sounds like he hasn't learned a thing since 1972
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Friday, 15 September 2023 15:31 (one year ago) link
he's turned into Glenn Frey
― hat trick of trashiness (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 15 September 2023 15:34 (one year ago) link
i could barely read that interview after reading the segment posted here upthread.
lord, what a cumquat
― Make the chats AI (Neanderthal), Friday, 15 September 2023 15:40 (one year ago) link
the part where he says maybe he should have included "one Black and one woman artist to include here that didn’t measure up to that same historical standard, just to avert this kind of criticism." the fucking nerve
― J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Friday, 15 September 2023 16:29 (one year ago) link
for whatever reason i can only hear that bit about 'philosophers of rock' in longmont potion castle's voice
― ufo, Friday, 15 September 2023 16:36 (one year ago) link
― J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Friday, 15 September 2023 16:47 (one year ago) link
i feel like ilx has existed for 23 years almost purely for this moment of apotheosis & righteous fury haha, or at least this thread has. Nemesis hath arisen, slavering
― imago, Friday, 15 September 2023 16:47 (one year ago) link
end boss of rockism
― imago, Friday, 15 September 2023 16:48 (one year ago) link
the audacity of him mentioning Curtis Mayfield as being lacking compared to these dudes is just infuriating. Mayfield was a genius, maybe one of the most talented musicians of the century....he literally did everything better than those guys, he was a producer, arranger, songwriter, amazing guitar player, produced tons of stuff for other artist, ran a record label. he even had his own guitar tuning he invented himself. fucking Bono? Jagger? these guys aren't even in the same realm as Mayfield
(guitar tuning article)https://www.premierguitar.com/digging-deeper-curtis-mayfield
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Friday, 15 September 2023 16:58 (one year ago) link
wow, just in time for the ever-growing backlash against "poptimism" (or at least the strawman version of it)
― Murgatroid, Friday, 15 September 2023 17:03 (one year ago) link
What the fuck does someone like Jagger know about how rock changed the world or whatever? He's been a millionaire for longer than most people have been alive.
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Friday, 15 September 2023 17:04 (one year ago) link
wow rude
― imago, Friday, 15 September 2023 17:05 (one year ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-iMqBhNKfPo
― hat trick of trashiness (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 15 September 2023 17:14 (one year ago) link
wenner fears black people and hates radical politics so turn of the 70s funk must have really terrified him, I think that's the crux of his issue with CM
imagine how much more expansive "rock" could have been without people like this calling the shots
― Left, Friday, 15 September 2023 17:15 (one year ago) link
I think Alfred will agree with me here as to what this quote most reminds me of:
https://www.upi.com/Archives/1983/09/21/Interior-Secretary-James-Watt-drew-laughs-when-he-told/1131432964800/
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 15 September 2023 17:38 (one year ago) link
roffle
― hat trick of trashiness (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 15 September 2023 17:39 (one year ago) link
i feel like even Mick would cringe at being called a "philosopher" of any kind. Dude has never been particularly articulate, he seems to just coast whenever anyone tries to ask him anything meaningful. Which is fine! That's how Mick Jagger should be!
― tylerw, Friday, 15 September 2023 18:21 (one year ago) link
idk I’m holding the dulux chart up to a pic and he looks v Articulate to me
― Boris Yitsbin (wins), Friday, 15 September 2023 18:23 (one year ago) link
Jagger's contributions to Harriet Vyner's book about Robert Fraser, Groovy Bob, are actually quite thoughtful and interesting, perhaps because he's not talking about the Stones specifically.
― Ward Fowler, Friday, 15 September 2023 18:38 (one year ago) link
Jeb Lund on Bluesky:
my wenner story is that i once found a guy in my editor's office who radiated the pre-indictment energy of every real-estate crook i've met & was dressed as if he'd asked "what's the most expensive looking version of this i could wear" and immediately put on whatever the answer is, and that was jann
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 15 September 2023 19:08 (one year ago) link
i am gonna be the guy who says, “why is anybody surprised that this guy is among the biggest assholes ever, and the Times is doing puff pieces for him”
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Friday, 15 September 2023 19:28 (one year ago) link
If that's supposed to be a "puff piece", I really want to see the guy's hatchet jobs because uh, this is exposing Wenner's assholishness to entirely new audiences, going by what I'm seeing on social media.
― Maxmillion D. Boosted (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Friday, 15 September 2023 19:31 (one year ago) link
they would've gotten someone other than marchese if they wanted a puff piece
― is he disgruntled adrian? (voodoo chili), Friday, 15 September 2023 20:16 (one year ago) link
Yeah. NYT interviewer went pretty hard during that section, at least
― 50 Best Fellas (Eric H.), Friday, 15 September 2023 21:18 (one year ago) link
lol the preview text and the headline definitely made it seem like a puffy, i didn’t read it cuz fuck Jann Wenner
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Friday, 15 September 2023 22:56 (one year ago) link
The interview is the definition of give em enough rope
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 16 September 2023 00:00 (one year ago) link
We have a new contender in this review of Boston Lyric Opera’s updated production of Madama Butterfly:
https://www.classical-scene.com/2023/09/18/correcting-butterfly/
― the new drip king (DJP), Wednesday, 20 September 2023 00:43 (one year ago) link
Among all the horrors of war, the experience of Japanese Americans in camps seems relatively mild. Yes, 1,800 people died from medical problems while in the camps and about one out of every 10 of these people died of tuberculosis—the given cause of death for Cio-Cio-San’s baby in the current version. How many would have died had they remained in San Francisco’s densely populated Japantown?
― omar little, Wednesday, 20 September 2023 00:58 (one year ago) link
I’m amazed that this was written and published without the author ever rereading it and thinking “is this REALLY the hill I’m dying on today”
― the new drip king (DJP), Wednesday, 20 September 2023 00:59 (one year ago) link
It reads like he accidentally pasted Facebook group posts he made under an anonymous account
― omar little, Wednesday, 20 September 2023 01:02 (one year ago) link
that is an amazing passage in a review of a 120yo opera anywhere
― mookieproof, Wednesday, 20 September 2023 01:05 (one year ago) link
It’s an updated production that moves the setting to San Francisco in the 40s so there’s context that makes it comprehensible but nothing about it actually makes sense
― the new drip king (DJP), Wednesday, 20 September 2023 01:08 (one year ago) link
I got too out of breath trying to find the end of the sentences in the first paragraph and gave up.
― enochroot, Wednesday, 20 September 2023 01:13 (one year ago) link
Don’t ever upset the opera queens.
― deep wubs and tribral rhythms (Boring, Maryland), Wednesday, 20 September 2023 02:07 (one year ago) link
Counterpoint: upset the opera queens as often as humanly possible
― the new drip king (DJP), Wednesday, 20 September 2023 13:49 (one year ago) link
that part that omar quoted is
O_O
― ɥɯ ︵ (°□°) (mh), Wednesday, 20 September 2023 13:53 (one year ago) link
Why did BLO depict the Poston camp with a sharpshooter in a guard tower taking aim at Suzuki during an argument? A Wikipedia article on the Poston camp said that “the site was so remote that authorities considered building guard towers to be unnecessary.” Did the conceit lay a guilt trip on us?
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Wednesday, 20 September 2023 13:57 (one year ago) link
of all the things I expected to show up in this thread, "interning japanese-americans during ww2 was good, actually" was not one of them
― ɥɯ ︵ (°□°) (mh), Wednesday, 20 September 2023 13:59 (one year ago) link
You’d think “internment camps are bad” would be considered fact at this point in time but you don’t expect “but they weren’t THAT bad” as a kicker
― the new drip king (DJP), Wednesday, 20 September 2023 14:19 (one year ago) link
lol the comments are getting lively now
― Make the chats AI (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 20 September 2023 14:22 (one year ago) link
claims he's not taking down posts for any reason other than valid emails, took all three of mine down within seconds!
― Make the chats AI (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 20 September 2023 14:29 (one year ago) link
― the new drip king (DJP), Wednesday, 20 September 2023 14:52 (one year ago) link
"Ashley"
― omar little, Wednesday, 20 September 2023 15:46 (one year ago) link
The eleven singers (six of whom had Asian-sounding names)
― symsymsym, Wednesday, 20 September 2023 15:54 (one year ago) link
It’s the job of a journalist to question received wisdom, event sometimes when he personally agrees with it
also the writer responded to someone who criticized the piece by saying "you didn't seem to take umbrage when we reviewed your performances positively in the past!" like....what?
― Make the chats AI (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 20 September 2023 17:29 (one year ago) link
"we gave you a good review, you have no right to criticize us!"
lol so my comments eventually got posted. it's ridiculous - their 'verification' system isn't automated.
not long after you post the comment, it disappears, then you get an email that someone manually writes to you saying "Is this you?" and nothing else, and if you reply "yes" they say thank you and post the comment
― Make the chats AI (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 20 September 2023 17:30 (one year ago) link
What comment is yours, actually?
― the new drip king (DJP), Wednesday, 20 September 2023 19:09 (one year ago) link
(There’s a Facebook thread of people tracking vanishing comments and it would be good to point them to it so it’s clearer that dude is 100% fossil)
― the new drip king (DJP), Wednesday, 20 September 2023 19:10 (one year ago) link
lol mine is "Peter Bobles"
― Make the chats AI (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 20 September 2023 19:48 (one year ago) link
We got a live one here!
https://thefederalist.com/2023/09/05/taylor-swifts-popularity-is-a-sign-of-societal-decline/
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 26 September 2023 23:49 (one year ago) link
They just don't make 'em like Tom Petty any more.
― immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Tuesday, 26 September 2023 23:52 (one year ago) link
Petty was obviously very masculine and a baby boomer
― omar little, Tuesday, 26 September 2023 23:54 (one year ago) link
Unlike, say, Taylor Swift or Barack Obama.
― immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Tuesday, 26 September 2023 23:56 (one year ago) link
this horrible seeming website that I already regret giving a click to also provided me with a pop up ad about open carry permits #onethread
― Judi Dench's Human Hand (methanietanner), Tuesday, 26 September 2023 23:57 (one year ago) link
lol at twitter account “heminator”
― ɥɯ ︵ (°□°) (mh), Wednesday, 27 September 2023 00:58 (one year ago) link
Still, someone who truly, deeply cares about the state of popular music has to stand athwart Taylor Swift, yelling “what is this @#?!,” and it might as well be an intellectually dyspeptic Gen X guy with nothing to lose.
ahhhhhahahahahaha
― I Wanna Find an ILXor That'll Flag My Last Post Till I Have To Go (WmC), Wednesday, 27 September 2023 01:37 (one year ago) link
he wishes
― symsymsym, Wednesday, 27 September 2023 02:30 (one year ago) link
Negative partisanship is making me a fan of Taytay
― deep wubs and tribral rhythms (Boring, Maryland), Wednesday, 27 September 2023 06:06 (one year ago) link
let's anticipate
Pondering a column about Taylor Swift and American conservatism, pray for me.— Ross Douthat (@DouthatNYT) September 26, 2023
― mookieproof, Wednesday, 27 September 2023 06:16 (one year ago) link
i've been so ponderin with a column every day tay won't say that we've fallen
― difficult listening hour, Wednesday, 27 September 2023 07:08 (one year ago) link
People say Swift is a good songwriter but have you considered The Beatles?
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Wednesday, 27 September 2023 12:05 (one year ago) link
This might be the most absurd claim I've ever seen, no one ever wrote songs about how their ex was bad until Taylor!
To that end, she has almost wholly pioneered a new genre of what an acquaintance of mine calls the “bellyaching about a boyfriend” song.
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 27 September 2023 14:34 (one year ago) link
yeah weird that Swift came out of Country Music where that kind of song is never written
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Wednesday, 27 September 2023 14:37 (one year ago) link
there is obviously space for thoughtful countering of taytay's cultural supremacy. feel like this guy might not quite bring that
― imago, Wednesday, 27 September 2023 14:41 (one year ago) link
maybe the experience of seeing grown adults fantasising about her swinging the next US election to the Dems was the real critique all along
― imago, Wednesday, 27 September 2023 14:42 (one year ago) link
they'll be begging her to run next!
― imago, Wednesday, 27 September 2023 14:43 (one year ago) link
you laugh, but she's having a real impact as far as I can tell
― out-of-print LaserDisc edition (sleeve), Wednesday, 27 September 2023 14:48 (one year ago) link
I for one welcome a future in which our leaders are determined by pop stars
― Paul Ponzi, Wednesday, 27 September 2023 15:02 (one year ago) link
Guy needs to hear "Here, My Dear" by Marvin Gaye
― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 27 September 2023 15:04 (one year ago) link
Pop stars >>> reality TV stars
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Wednesday, 27 September 2023 15:05 (one year ago) link
yes, this is a worrying turn away from the high-minded debate that normally decides the electoral process
― Steve Bully IX (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 27 September 2023 15:07 (one year ago) link
maybe she can help flip Kansas
― omar little, Wednesday, 27 September 2023 16:13 (one year ago) link
or missouri. or both!
― omar little, Wednesday, 27 September 2023 16:14 (one year ago) link
I am hearing that women are dumping somewhat conservative men at accelerated rates so that they can better relate to Taylor Swift songs
― ɥɯ ︵ (°□°) (mh), Wednesday, 27 September 2023 17:16 (one year ago) link
iirc Taylor Swift dates guys with Fuck the Patriarchy keychains
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Wednesday, 27 September 2023 17:44 (one year ago) link
jfchttps://x.com/perpetua/status/1727145778072948985?s=20
― campreverb, Wednesday, 22 November 2023 17:20 (one year ago) link
Not a piece of music writing really
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Wednesday, 22 November 2023 17:29 (one year ago) link
And it's a fairly standard "I'm noticing something you guys aren't" thing. Which is annoying, but then again I don't know who Tate McRae is.
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Wednesday, 22 November 2023 17:31 (one year ago) link
no not a piece of writing per se, but it is a kind of superficial analysis that sends me over the edge.
― campreverb, Wednesday, 22 November 2023 17:59 (one year ago) link
he's saying we're being suffocated by something that is invisible to us?
― Evan, Wednesday, 22 November 2023 18:09 (one year ago) link
Which Gen Z artists is he talking about?
― This field is required (morrisp), Wednesday, 22 November 2023 18:10 (one year ago) link
Taylor Swift, I assume
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Wednesday, 22 November 2023 18:12 (one year ago) link
We cannot know because we are too old
― I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Wednesday, 22 November 2023 18:12 (one year ago) link
sorry, mis-read that. He mentions Troye Slivin or whatever
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Wednesday, 22 November 2023 18:13 (one year ago) link
He mentions____________or whatever
huh??
― Evan, Wednesday, 22 November 2023 18:16 (one year ago) link
These artists make music in frequencies that can't be heard if you're over 25.
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Wednesday, 22 November 2023 18:17 (one year ago) link
and also they're SUFFOCATING me
― Evan, Wednesday, 22 November 2023 18:18 (one year ago) link
Like, Billie Eilish and Olivia Rodrigo come immediately to mind as “massively successful” Gen Z artists who are surely invisible to no one…
― This field is required (morrisp), Wednesday, 22 November 2023 18:21 (one year ago) link
old people don’t know who the musicians are that young people are listening to? shocking!
― ɥɯ ︵ (°□°) (mh), Wednesday, 22 November 2023 20:01 (one year ago) link
Can’t we just ignore him?
― The Triumphant Return of Bernard & Stubbs (Raymond Cummings), Wednesday, 22 November 2023 20:09 (one year ago) link
It worked on here
― Toshirō Nofune (The Seventh ILXorai), Wednesday, 22 November 2023 20:15 (one year ago) link
sadly no longer an option due to the theory of Perpetua motion
― a very very unfair (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 22 November 2023 20:17 (one year ago) link
inside out, outside in
― mookieproof, Wednesday, 22 November 2023 21:03 (one year ago) link
Not writing but I don’t think we have a worst music-related podcast thread.
Dissect from Ringer - the episode on “Nosetalgia” starts out by explaining ‘nose - which you use to snort cocaine’ and nostalgia, followed quickly by ‘Johnson and Johnson makes baby powder, used to cut cocaine.’
I had to bail at that point.
― papal hotwife (milo z), Friday, 24 November 2023 20:17 (one year ago) link
I mean, what did you honestly expect from a 56 minute podcast about one Pusha T song
― The SoyBoy West Coast (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 24 November 2023 20:31 (one year ago) link
wait so there's a Pusha T song about coke?
― symsymsym, Friday, 24 November 2023 21:16 (one year ago) link
Bandsplain and 60 Songs That Explain The '90s aren't bad, I expected more of that than 7th grade essay.
― papal hotwife (milo z), Friday, 24 November 2023 22:45 (one year ago) link
Why does 60 Songs That Explain the 90s have 111 episodes?
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Saturday, 25 November 2023 00:59 (one year ago) link
the '90s never ended
― papal hotwife (milo z), Saturday, 25 November 2023 01:30 (one year ago) link
There's 52 episodes about the "girls who Abercrombie and Fitch" song
― Halfway there but for you, Saturday, 25 November 2023 01:50 (one year ago) link
Similarly I had the “Switched on Pop” podcast recommended to me after the dudes treated some basic double entendres in a Weeknd song like rich and evocative symbolism
― intheblanks, Saturday, 25 November 2023 02:17 (one year ago) link
“And I dropped it after I heard the dudes” I mean
lol Halfway
― This field is required (morrisp), Saturday, 25 November 2023 03:14 (one year ago) link
woof: https://www.spin.com/2023/12/album-of-the-year-killer-mike-michael/
― Murgatroid, Tuesday, 26 December 2023 03:13 (one year ago) link
Layers upon layers of stink in there.
― BrianB, Tuesday, 26 December 2023 03:35 (one year ago) link
Michael is for Killer Mike's given name
whoa
― mookieproof, Tuesday, 26 December 2023 03:59 (one year ago) link
oh my god what the fuck is that
― ivy., Tuesday, 26 December 2023 04:01 (one year ago) link
what blathering dreck!
― assert (matttkkkk), Tuesday, 26 December 2023 04:04 (one year ago) link
lmao that suuuucks
― rob, Tuesday, 26 December 2023 04:16 (one year ago) link
That's sad.
― jmm, Tuesday, 26 December 2023 04:18 (one year ago) link
tempted to start a poll for everyone's favourite line in this piece
― Murgatroid, Tuesday, 26 December 2023 04:20 (one year ago) link
1st reaction was OK dad, 2nd reaction was this is overwrought and underwritten at the same time how is this dude a publisher, then he dissed the pitchfork person and things got exciting for a minute but he denies us a decent rant and just gestures at the bootstraps party line of his class which is honestly a bit of a letdown, he clearly sees Mike as a fellow capitalist striver
he definitely writes like the kind of guy who inherited his dad's porn empire and published nude pics of teenagers to sell his own magazine while also sexually harassing his employees
― Left, Tuesday, 26 December 2023 04:23 (one year ago) link
https://ximage.c-spanvideo.org/eyJidWNrZXQiOiJwaWN0dXJlcy5jLXNwYW52aWRlby5vcmciLCJrZXkiOiJGaWxlc1wvZGJhXC8xNjQyNC0xNTI1OC0xLmpwZyIsImVkaXRzIjp7InJlc2l6ZSI6eyJmaXQiOiJjb3ZlciIsImhlaWdodCI6MjAwLCJ3aWR0aCI6MjAwfX19
"I’m not a fan of most rap, and of what I do like I prefer old school to new."
― Murgatroid, Tuesday, 26 December 2023 04:29 (one year ago) link
well, fuck, that didn't work out the way I wanted it to
― Murgatroid, Tuesday, 26 December 2023 04:30 (one year ago) link
I think Omni Magazine was his passion project, not Spin. In it’s 80s-90s heyday Spin was essential reading
― Expansion to Mackerel (Boring, Maryland), Tuesday, 26 December 2023 04:34 (one year ago) link
I like getting a peek behind the curtain and seeing the failupwardsons that run everything now and how little they bring to the table in terms of ideas and how their one ideological move is always meritocracy which is refuted by their own existence
― Left, Tuesday, 26 December 2023 04:47 (one year ago) link
Last September, the rapper Killer Mike was DJing hip-hop classics like Snoop Dogg’s Ain’t No Fun at a music festival afterparty in Louisville, Kentucky. “The inspiration for the night’s set is freedom of speech, so say what the fuck you want!” he told a crowd of hundreds. Killer Mike, half of the duo Run the Jewels, is known for speaking out against police brutality and racial injustice, as well as campaigning for Bernie Sanders.But this night’s set was co-sponsored by Stand Together Music, an organization backed by the libertarian billionaire Charles Koch, who made his fortune in fossil fuels. Other sponsors of the party included the free-speech group Fire (which has received millions of dollars in contributions from the Charles G Koch charitable foundation), as well as the music outlet Spin, an official partner of Stand Together Music.
But this night’s set was co-sponsored by Stand Together Music, an organization backed by the libertarian billionaire Charles Koch, who made his fortune in fossil fuels. Other sponsors of the party included the free-speech group Fire (which has received millions of dollars in contributions from the Charles G Koch charitable foundation), as well as the music outlet Spin, an official partner of Stand Together Music.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/dec/07/koch-family-stand-together-music
― Frozen CD, Tuesday, 26 December 2023 06:08 (one year ago) link
― rob, Tuesday, 26 December 2023 06:10 (one year ago) link
I feel bad for the section editor, who presumably / hopefully cringed the whole way through that process, starting when Bob messaged one day and was like "This is the best rap record in decades, I'll write about it for album of the year!" ... and from that point there was no stopping it.
Maybe it didn't go that way, but you can picture it.
― alpine static, Tuesday, 26 December 2023 17:53 (one year ago) link
Banging Left posts
― The SoyBoy West Coast (Whiney G. Weingarten), Tuesday, 26 December 2023 17:58 (one year ago) link
Enthusiasts of this style may appreciate Charles Lyons-Burt, who "covers the government contracting industry by day and culture by night." Certainly his eye-watering takes on contemporary hip-hop and rap albums capture the vibe and hustle of government contracting.https://www.slantmagazine.com/author/clyonsburt/
― assert (matttkkkk), Tuesday, 2 January 2024 00:40 (one year ago) link
I'm putting this Zachary Lipez essay about Pitchfork here because, while he makes some decent if obvious points, his prose style fills me with an unquenchable thirst for blood. I haaaaate this style of 21st century knowitall in-joke rockwritin', because it presumes an audience that gets all the references while bemoaning the fact that nobody reads this shit. I mean, maybe there's a connection between those two things?
― Tahuti Watches L&O:SVU Reruns Without His Ape (unperson), Thursday, 22 February 2024 20:18 (one year ago) link
You mean stuff like this:
At the end of January, overnight, with only eight years of buildup, Pitchfork went from being “The Most Trusted Voice in Music” to being as trusted as a big butt and a smile; with a reduced staff of Jeremy Larson +1 sharing a basement cubicle with Graydon Carter’s wig, the desiccated mummy of the last Details coverboy, and a spec script for a Ghostbusters remake where Bill Murray plays all the characters and is in a May/December relationship with a Japanese girlfriend.
― poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 22 February 2024 20:26 (one year ago) link
^ i didn't understand a word of that fwiw
― A street taco cart named Des'ree (Deflatormouse), Thursday, 22 February 2024 20:29 (one year ago) link
AI prompt: Try too hard to be clever. Humorous hip artsy movie voice narration.
― Evan, Thursday, 22 February 2024 20:34 (one year ago) link
in-joke rockwritin', because it presumes an audience that gets all the references while bemoaning the fact that nobody reads this shit. I mean, maybe there's a connection between those two things?
completely agree with you here -- relying on references to communicate a point is (at least part of) why no one wants to read music writing. i don't necessarily think it's a 21st c thing but it's def a music writing thing. not a fan!!
― Piggy Lepton (La Lechera), Thursday, 22 February 2024 20:47 (one year ago) link
Only so much can be gleaned from chatter picked up by hanging out at the Fishbone “Party at Ground Zero” Mall which stands across the street from P4K headquarters like a giant memorial food court. And there are limits to how much fruit a holiday text from one of Ryan Schreiber’s ex coke dealers might bear. But even an observer as disconnected as this writer received emails containing theories. These theories ranged from site-appropriate conspiracies of an inside job—with the role of the Mossad being played by ex-Fader types bearing grudges—to the possibility of Pitchfork being hurt by a refusal to give special preference to artists/publicists important to other Condé Nast publications. The occasional middling review of Eurovision pablum and diaristic nepo-babies may seem like no big deal to peasants like you or I, but managers and publicists act on their own peculiar morality. Ron Laffitte has been indie rock’s monied whipping boy for twenty-five long years and maybe a 6.2 for Gracie Abrams was the final straw. Theory mongering, in this case, bears the pellucidity of old Pavement lyrics.
As well the theories should. For most analysts’ purposes, a love for Demolition Plot J-7 was enough. You don’t bring tequila to an Irish wake.
maybe he's going for early p4k style?
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Thursday, 22 February 2024 20:47 (one year ago) link
i hate that writing not just because it presupposes the reader gets the references but also because it seems like a cover for saying nothing new whatsoever, and just trying to say it with style and not even a good style.
― omar little, Thursday, 22 February 2024 21:03 (one year ago) link
pretty funny that he positions himself as someone who might not otherwise be told theories about what's going on in the music writing world. feel like that is not really the case
― slob wizard (J0rdan S.), Thursday, 22 February 2024 21:05 (one year ago) link
I like it, but I've been accused of doing hipster Dennis Miller schtick on this very site, so ymmv
― The SoyBoy West Coast (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 22 February 2024 21:15 (one year ago) link
Also, it's a Substack
― The SoyBoy West Coast (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 22 February 2024 21:16 (one year ago) link
Lester Bangs was a malign influence
― B. Amato (Boring, Maryland), Thursday, 22 February 2024 21:18 (one year ago) link
lol people pay for this insight, then
― B. Amato (Boring, Maryland), Thursday, 22 February 2024 21:19 (one year ago) link
No, no; our boy has moral objections to Substack. He publishes on Ghost.
― Tahuti Watches L&O:SVU Reruns Without His Ape (unperson), Thursday, 22 February 2024 21:25 (one year ago) link
I was just gonna say - that stuff reads like Knock-Off Whiney to me. (Whiney's works, imo. ZL's doesn't.)
― alpine static, Thursday, 22 February 2024 21:29 (one year ago) link
i like some of the music he digs up, but his tweets are at least half eye-rolls
― alpine static, Thursday, 22 February 2024 21:30 (one year ago) link
that's like someone's blog. that doesn't count for me. you can write anything on your own space.
― scott seward, Thursday, 22 February 2024 21:32 (one year ago) link
jeez louise no fair bringing whiney into this. he's a real riter.
i couldn't really read much of that thing above though. i think i'm just getting old.
i went looking for some old thing on google last night and i saw the very first rock review i ever wrote (for the VV) and it came out 25 years ago this month!! i felt like graydon carter's dessicated mummy or whatever. where does the time go.....
― scott seward, Thursday, 22 February 2024 21:35 (one year ago) link
xpost i know, but Lipez is a real writer, too. i'm not just comparing Whiney to a guy with a blog ... although yes, he wrote this on his blog, or newsletter, or whatever it is.
― alpine static, Thursday, 22 February 2024 21:51 (one year ago) link
Yeah, Lipez writes for zombie Creem. Which I haven't read, but I hope he's got someone reining him in a little bit more over there.
― Tahuti Watches L&O:SVU Reruns Without His Ape (unperson), Thursday, 22 February 2024 21:58 (one year ago) link
The phrase "hipper-than-thou" was coined for this sort of prose voice...
― gucci meme (theStalePrince), Thursday, 22 February 2024 22:40 (one year ago) link
And there are limits to how much fruit a holiday text from one of Ryan Schreiber’s ex coke dealers might bear.
srsly our whiney would never. this is very bad. the guy is bad with prepositions, doesn't know the requirements of metaphor, actually writes "pellucidity."
― J Edgar Noothgrush (Joan Crawford Loves Chachi), Thursday, 22 February 2024 22:52 (one year ago) link
Men like deBoer tend to be glib about aspects of culture which are fascinating when taken seriously and they tend to be humorless about the absurd.
this is a good line
― slob wizard (J0rdan S.), Thursday, 22 February 2024 22:56 (one year ago) link
I think I got two paragraphs in and then had to tap out.
(And, yes, I got the references! But this writing style is insufferable.)
― Marten Broadcloak, mild-mannered GOP congressman (Raymond Cummings), Friday, 23 February 2024 00:23 (eleven months ago) link
<q>And there are limits to how much fruit a holiday text from one of Ryan Schreiber’s ex coke dealers might bear
srsly our whiney would never. this is very bad. the guy is bad with prepositions, doesn't know the requirements of metaphor, actually writes "pellucidity."<q/>
― gucci meme (theStalePrince), Friday, 23 February 2024 00:30 (eleven months ago) link
argh!
was gonna say, dude also seems to think that coke grows on trees....
― gucci meme (theStalePrince), Friday, 23 February 2024 00:31 (eleven months ago) link
he calls out coke snorting like a homophobe does gay sex
― poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 23 February 2024 00:34 (eleven months ago) link
he's good re deBoer
The 'Ex-Fader as Mossad' dig seems to be directed to Will Welch, the GQ EIC. That's all I got lol
― fpsa, Friday, 23 February 2024 01:18 (eleven months ago) link
I understand the hate, but I enjoyed the piece, despite his reliance on coke jokes. It was a funny, ranty, know-it-all blog post and in that sense it Made me feel nostalgic lol
― husked, tonal wails (irrational), Friday, 23 February 2024 15:02 (eleven months ago) link
I was just like “Dennis Miller has a music blog now?”
― Cemetry Gaetz (DJP), Friday, 23 February 2024 15:14 (eleven months ago) link
https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/1JoAAOSwQjFlNDpe/s-l960.jpg
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Friday, 23 February 2024 15:23 (eleven months ago) link
― CEO Greedwagon (Neanderthal), Friday, 23 February 2024 15:31 (eleven months ago) link
Before it closed, the Fun Factory arcade in Redondo Beach still had tons of talking Dennis Miller dolls the last time I was there
― The SoyBoy West Coast (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 23 February 2024 17:35 (eleven months ago) link
One of those guys where it's like "what the hell happened to you?" He was really great on SNL and if you watch a lot of old reruns, it's easy to see why he was considered the gold standard for Weekend Update for so long. In some ways, I think he was everything Charles Rocket's Weekend Update shtick hoped to be and failed to be, but even better, and he sort of did it accidentally. There's an early Letterman interview (maybe two seasons into his time at SNL) where amazingly he discusses how he really didn't address real news as standup material until Lorne Michaels hired him specifically to anchor Weekend Update - so from that point on, he really had to do his homework to keep up with politics and world events. I've seen him claim 9/11 changed him (maybe the way it changed Ron Silver) and I've seen Al Franken claim he has NOT changed, that he was always more of a libertarian with as many conservative tendencies as liberal ones. But based on the visual evidence, it's mind-boggling to see him suck up to a nitwit like George W. Bush while savaging Reagan for his intellectual shortcomings.
― birdistheword, Friday, 23 February 2024 19:35 (eleven months ago) link
"The Blinders’ latest album, ‘Beholder’, offers a darkly romantic odyssey that sees the Doncaster-born band, now sporting an expanded new line-up, reaching new heights. Capturing the raw energy of the band’s debut, it takes that spark and sends it soaring into more adventurous and cinematic territories.
With a richer, more layered sound that still retains that punch they made their own, there’s a newfound unpredictability that adds an exhilarating edge. But it’s ‘Nocturnal Skies’ that stands out, a testament to the band’s ability to craft a powerful, emotive song that resonates long after the last note has faded.
This is The Blinders at their most ambitious and confident, a band that has embraced their darkness and turned it into something truly captivating."
― husked, tonal wails (irrational), Friday, 1 March 2024 17:40 (eleven months ago) link
https://readdork.com/albums/the-blinders-beholder/
No shade meant to you, irrational, actually more of a thank you, as I was lost in my Cali election work, thus was unable to do much music reading this past week. Dork was totally right about The Blinders' new alb. Hell yeah!
― Front-loaded albums are musical gerrymandering (Prefecture), Monday, 4 March 2024 03:33 (eleven months ago) link
https://www.vox.com/culture/24099908/justin-timberlake-everything-i-thought-it-was-britney-scandal-forgiveness
why
Now, after years away from the spotlight (and one Instagram apology), Timberlake is releasing a new album titled Everything I Thought It Was. So far, its lead single (“Selfish”) and promotional track (“Drown”) point to a more mellow, R&B-lite direction for the singer — with the exception of the gospel-flavored song “Sanctified,” which previewed on Saturday Night Live. And the album’s artwork, influenced by 1971’s Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory and Federico Fellini’s masterpiece 8 ½, hints at an emphasis on visuals.
His third record saw a softer, more romantic side of Timberlake, with sultry serenades that reflected his personal life, including his marriage to actress Jessica Biel. His newfound maturity was best represented in the album’s blockbuster single “Mirrors,” which — despite its arguably narcissistic lyrics — signified his commitment to monogamy.Unfortunately for Timberlake, he would experience a significant fall from grace in the following years, both as an artist and as a wife guy.
Unfortunately for Timberlake, he would experience a significant fall from grace in the following years, both as an artist and as a wife guy.
whyyyyyyyyyyyyy
― Kate (rushomancy), Thursday, 14 March 2024 16:01 (eleven months ago) link
Music writing basically just summaries social media these days
― President Keyes, Thursday, 14 March 2024 16:16 (eleven months ago) link
summarizes I mean
SummariesMake me feel fineBlowin' thru the Justin in my mind
― Halfway there but for you, Thursday, 14 March 2024 17:27 (eleven months ago) link
a wife guy
― poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 14 March 2024 17:31 (eleven months ago) link
pretty fly for a wife guy
― President Keyes, Thursday, 14 March 2024 17:42 (eleven months ago) link
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Friday, 15 March 2024 00:15 (eleven months ago) link
I came across this Chicago Reader piece from 2000 where this douche bag lambasted jazz for becoming "art" rather than pop. I wondered who he was - first Google hit reveals he "briefly drew national attention during the 2018 Supreme Court nomination hearings of Brett Kavanaugh, when professor Christine Blasey Ford alleged that Judge was present and laughing as Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her when they were high school students over 30 years previously." What a prick.
― birdistheword, Wednesday, 22 May 2024 07:25 (nine months ago) link
this was written by an AI, right? this reads like it was written by an AI. it's really bad. particularly as a take on LGBTQ+ culture.https://www.discogs.com/digs/music/ballroom-culture-madonna-vogueif not i guess it should go in the "worst music writing" thread. i don't feel like AI "writing" counts for the purposes of that thread. only bad writing by humans should count. i like human bad writing better.― Kate (rushomancy), Friday, June 14, 2024 8:02 AM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglinkthat's pretty hacky but no I don't think it's AI. here's what AI writing looks like:https://oldtimemusic.com/the-meaning-behind-the-song-vogue-single-version-by-madonna/― frogbs, Friday, June 14, 2024 8:28 AM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink
https://www.discogs.com/digs/music/ballroom-culture-madonna-vogue
if not i guess it should go in the "worst music writing" thread. i don't feel like AI "writing" counts for the purposes of that thread. only bad writing by humans should count. i like human bad writing better.
― Kate (rushomancy), Friday, June 14, 2024 8:02 AM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink
that's pretty hacky but no I don't think it's AI. here's what AI writing looks like:
https://oldtimemusic.com/the-meaning-behind-the-song-vogue-single-version-by-madonna/
― frogbs, Friday, June 14, 2024 8:28 AM (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink
ok, i'd like to nominate the anon discogs "vogue" article as bad music writing. giving "vogue", a song which is still pretty contentious in a lot of ways, a bland, hacky, superficial gloss and saying it's a "pride" thing has gotta be one of my least favorite ways of "celebrating" lgbtq+ people.
― Kate (rushomancy), Saturday, 15 June 2024 15:12 (eight months ago) link
“ By the start of the ’90s, the stage was set for Madonna to drop “Vogue,” and once again change mainstream dance floors.”
Oh, was it? What is that?
“She was already a household name, still had a controversial edge, and was dating renowned ladies’ man Warren Beatty.”
Ah, I see.
― A So-Called Pulitzer price winner (President Keyes), Saturday, 15 June 2024 20:12 (eight months ago) link
This review left me with my mouth hanging open, no joke. It's the most stick-in-the-mud/stick-up-the-ass jazz "criticism" I've read in I can't even tell you how long. This is the kind of thing the term "moldy fig" was invented for.
https://allaboutjazz.com/evergreen-julius-rodriguez-verve-records
― Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Friday, 21 June 2024 02:35 (eight months ago) link
personally, i wouldn't put anything from discogs on here because its a store and i wouldn't put anything anonymous on here either. i mean, its kind of a given that its gonna be bad or not worth reading.
― scott seward, Friday, 21 June 2024 14:12 (eight months ago) link
xp lol that review is so wack. The continuous switching the spelling of his last name almost feels like an intentional bit that corresponds with his two-faces thesis, but then he also misspells Billie Eilish. This was incredible though: "He has composed for film and television, including the unforgettable series Suits."
― rob, Friday, 21 June 2024 20:08 (eight months ago) link
Thinking about his publicist reporting back like, “soooo… we got a review”
― The SoyBoy West Coast (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 21 June 2024 20:16 (eight months ago) link
Even when this guy likes something, he's a fucking idiot about it:
More faux-intellectual codswallop has been written about Cecil Taylor than about any other jazz musician, dead or alive. He has been, and continues to be, misrepresented as an arcane Einsteinian theorist by a cult whose members are afraid of visceral reactions to his art (or to anyone else's). But Taylor's work demands a visceral response. It has nothing to do with rational thought and everything to do with emotion and physicality. Sadly, the nonsense that has been written about his music will have driven unknown numbers of potential listeners away from it.
Basically every sentence in that paragraph is wrong, in different and sometimes contradictory ways.
Anyone unfamiliar with Taylor's work is advised to forget everything they have read about it before listening to Live At Fat Tuesday's February 9, 1980 First Visit. Everything except Taylor's own famous description of the piano as "eighty-eight tuned drums."
Taylor didn't say this about himself; Valerie Wilmer wrote it in her book As Serious As Your Life, and lazy critics have been borrowing it ever since.
This is the key to appreciating his music. Taylor played those drums with the energy, muscularity and stamina of an Olympic athlete, and on occasion of Zeus himself. Japan's kodo drummers are minnows by comparison. If James Brown was the hardest-working man in showbusiness, Taylor was the hardest-working man in jazz. Indeed, James Brown is Taylor's closest musical comparator. Brown's performances may have been choreographed and through composed to a molecular degree, while Taylor's were as in-the-moment and impulsive as could be, but the end result for the listener is identical: a combination of trance, catharsis and ecstasy. Providing, that is, that one lets go and surrenders to the music.
Taylor loved James Brown (and Aretha Franklin, and Marvin Gaye, and Beyoncé, and Rihanna), but come the fuck on.
― Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Friday, 21 June 2024 20:29 (eight months ago) link
Hey Cecil, I hear you like drums
― A So-Called Pulitzer price winner (President Keyes), Friday, 21 June 2024 20:39 (eight months ago) link
xp I suggest that you may be a little too close to this subject, and that's understandable, but as shitty as the other examples are - and they are shitty - I don't find the premise of that first quote especially objectionable or even incorrect, though I will concede that the binary is weird. I think Taylor's music is rewarding whether you approach it "rationally" or viscerally. I sorta feel the same way about people like Lacy, Tristano, and Braxton (but not Zorn)
― Paul Ponzi, Friday, 21 June 2024 20:46 (eight months ago) link
How much of Taylor’s stamina was just coke.
― Gigi Allen (Boring, Maryland), Friday, 21 June 2024 21:46 (eight months ago) link
OK, I admit it, he was exactly like James Brown!
― Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Friday, 21 June 2024 21:59 (eight months ago) link
"It has nothing to do with rational thought and everything to do with emotion and physicality."
This is such a dated way of thinking though. Apart from all the non-Euro philosophies that never made this mistake in the first place, we now also have decades of neuroscience about how these three things are all inextricably connected. You could argue he's merely adopting this binary for analytical reasons, but he's being such a prick about it I'm not inclined to justify it
― rob, Friday, 21 June 2024 22:35 (eight months ago) link
Exactly. Also, I'm not gonna dig through the rest of his writing to find out, but I wonder if he's ever said anything like this about a white artist...
― Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Friday, 21 June 2024 22:46 (eight months ago) link
It's also musical elitism in the guise of anti-elitism, because if you don't "get it" on a "visceral" level, there's no option to learn about it or understand it better.It also suggests that only people who haven't heard Cecil Taylor's music could dislike it!
― Halfway there but for you, Friday, 21 June 2024 22:46 (eight months ago) link
Les Borsai is the co-founder of Wave Digital Assets.
https://www.spin.com/2024/07/music-critics-suck/
― Frozen CD, Friday, 26 July 2024 17:40 (six months ago) link
The Pitchfork review system’s highest review is a 9.9 — used only once, for the Complete Motown Singles, in 2007
huh
― Jersey Devil Vance (President Keyes), Friday, 26 July 2024 17:44 (six months ago) link
? don't they have several 10.0s?
or is that what the 'huh' is about
― rick beato meato manifesto (Neanderthal), Friday, 26 July 2024 17:45 (six months ago) link
yeah, I have no idea why he thinks the scale only goes to 9.9
― Jersey Devil Vance (President Keyes), Friday, 26 July 2024 17:47 (six months ago) link
“He begs to get canceled by audiences who don’t think about him and have no idea he thinks about them.”
Well, is that actually true? Is Eminem that out of touch, irrelevant? Because it seems to me that you, Rob Sheffield, are talking about it.
Perhaps the writer is adopting Eminem's "battle rap" style because that was a ferocious diss.
― Jersey Devil Vance (President Keyes), Friday, 26 July 2024 17:51 (six months ago) link
This genuinely is the worst piece of music writing ever.
― jmm, Friday, 26 July 2024 17:54 (six months ago) link
Then he goes on to compare it to the Hindenburg disaster, the gas-stuffed zeppelin of “The horror! The horror!” fame
I can't
― jmm, Friday, 26 July 2024 17:58 (six months ago) link
lol isn't that "Heart of Darkness"?
― Jersey Devil Vance (President Keyes), Friday, 26 July 2024 17:59 (six months ago) link
this may explain some things
This is the dumbest thing I have ever seen. I asked the question 6 years 1 month and 27 days ago. @Gartner_inc @KenAllard pic.twitter.com/xOdmx4R68q— les.eth (@lesborsai) July 5, 2024
― Jersey Devil Vance (President Keyes), Friday, 26 July 2024 18:05 (six months ago) link
lol his company website bio says he ‘sits at the cross-section of entertainment and economics’
― mookieproof, Friday, 26 July 2024 18:15 (six months ago) link
finally someone is willing to take down the "loud voices" setting the discourse like...Dash Lewis
what a clown
Incidentally, Dash Lewis is one of the best of the (presumably) younger Pfork critics and I'd be very happy if his reviews did have the cultural impact this writer seems to suggest he has
― Paul Ponzi, Friday, 26 July 2024 18:45 (six months ago) link
It could be worse. A certain kind of British music writer of the 1990s would have followed the opening sentence ("I recently came across Eminem’s Hall of Fame induction speech by Dr. Dre") with "and then I wiped it up" or something like that.
Having skimmed through the article, the writing just comes across as flat and dull. I had no desire to engage with it deeply. It has the curious teenage habit of simultaneously trying to be impactful and assertive, but without attracting too much attention, as if the writer was scared. It reminded me of those indie bands from the 1990s who split up the moment their single got to number 37, because they couldn't stand the pressure. If you want to be a writer you have to be prepared to end up with blood on your hands.
More importantly I don't detect a distinctive individual voice, so what's the point? My own writing is immediately identifiable because I have a distinctive, original voice. I present myself as a crazed, fascistic demagogue delivering a sermon to a crowd of mice - a gross exaggeration of my actual personality, obsessed with pop trivia rather than the union of corporate power and the state. I skirt as close as I can to the style of fascism without actually being offensive because I am at heart a good egg. Whether you love or merely adore my writing, it is at the very least distinctive.
You know, I remember reading about Harry Harlow. He was a scientist who separated tiny little monkeys from their mothers and made them suckle from a wire monkey doll covered in cloth. In doing so he demonstrated that love is not real. It's just that we crave cloth. We love to feel cloth. There was something sadistic about Harlow's experiments. But also hilarious, because he was such an unrepentant misanthrope. And that is my goal as a writer. That is why I cover myself in cloth. Because, over time, the population of this planet will learn to stroke my cloth and also suckle from me. And not the other mothers. Only me.
Ultimately people want to be entertained. All of life is entertainment. Writing is entertainment. The article linked above is dull. It's not entertaining. It didn't entertain me. It didn't even make me angry. And it didn't encourage me to read anything else by the writer. No! I do not want to suckle from that man's teat. Not that man. Or from that woman's teat, because this is 2024 and we can all suckle from women's teats now. Not just men.
At this point the next message will probably be "jesus fucking christ", to which my responses are I admit that, yes, remember the cloth, and remember the cloth in that order.
― Ashley Pomeroy, Friday, 26 July 2024 18:58 (six months ago) link
pic.twitter.com/x7Ycc8C5dv— les.eth (@lesborsai) March 12, 2024
― papal hotwife (milo z), Friday, 26 July 2024 18:59 (six months ago) link
This guy's only other Spin article is about how we can't make good films anymore because of the wokes.
― Jersey Devil Vance (President Keyes), Friday, 26 July 2024 19:06 (six months ago) link
Then he goes on to compare it to the Hindenburg disaster, the gas-stuffed zeppelin of “The horror! The horror!” fame that crashed in New Jersey in 1939, to completely ruin the fun. Thirty-five people died that day.
― The SoyBoy West Coast (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 26 July 2024 20:34 (six months ago) link
That part is so good, because it’s not only concern trolling but gets the quote wrong
― The SoyBoy West Coast (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 26 July 2024 20:35 (six months ago) link
I actually enjoyed the Eminem album but Dash was otm in that entire review. I would have given it like a 6.0 or something but he def nailed what doesn’t work about it
― The SoyBoy West Coast (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 26 July 2024 20:37 (six months ago) link
god that was EXCRUCIATING
― assert (matttkkkk), Friday, 26 July 2024 21:20 (six months ago) link
"Eminem taps into something primal for me and my fellow Generation X-ers, the same way Rage Against the Machine and Oasis do. Their complete disregard towards anything other than the opinions they hold true is what art should be."
uh...
― scott seward, Friday, 26 July 2024 22:00 (six months ago) link
i don't think i can read past that...
Hindenburg was 1937 for the record.
― Pierre Delecto, Friday, 26 July 2024 22:10 (six months ago) link
Heh, this is the full paragraph in Sheffield's original:
Not just a flop. The flop. The flop that killed the 20th century. We’ll never get another rock flop like this one, for the same reason we’ll never get another Hindenberg. It only takes one exploding gas-stuffed blimp to ruin the fun for everybody.
Interesting how the "gas-stuffed" and "ruin the fun" parts got transferred over, outside of any quotation marks.
― jmm, Friday, 26 July 2024 22:28 (six months ago) link
Friends we seem not to have given the author credit for going back all the way to April 2023 as the basis for his bizarre ad hominem
― assert (matttkkkk), Friday, 26 July 2024 23:23 (six months ago) link
Led Zeppelin have permanent and exclusive rights to exploit the Hindenburg disaster.
― Halfway there but for you, Saturday, 27 July 2024 00:58 (six months ago) link
This guy is the master of “this thing that annoys me on the internet is a world-historical problem” writing
― intheblanks, Saturday, 27 July 2024 01:38 (six months ago) link
Whoops wrong thread
― intheblanks, Saturday, 27 July 2024 01:43 (six months ago) link
I’m not saying “lock thread” but Les has made a compelling case
― ɥɯ ︵ (°□°) (mh), Saturday, 27 July 2024 04:16 (six months ago) link
this is not the worst music writing ever, but i hate it:
https://www.pastemagazine.com/music/david-berman/everything-in-this-room-right-now-is-a-part-of-me-david-berman
can someone read the first two or three paragraphs and explain to me why this person is writing this piece?
or am i barking up the wrong tree because i would much rather read about DCB than the author, and this kind of piece is supposed to be about the author, and therefore i'm clicking on the wrong things?
― alpine static, Wednesday, 7 August 2024 22:09 (six months ago) link
Sorry, I bailed out when I learned that the author was a senior in college in 2019.
― Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Wednesday, 7 August 2024 22:16 (six months ago) link
dude is the music editor of paste so i guess he can do what he wants but in general don't click on paste links. you save time that way.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 7 August 2024 22:17 (six months ago) link
if it had started: "I was sitting in a Hyatt bathtub with my mom when the bleach starts to burn..." i might have been intrigued enough to continue.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 7 August 2024 22:20 (six months ago) link
well he’s the editor so at least no one else had to read it
― brimstead, Wednesday, 7 August 2024 22:26 (six months ago) link
I found a good pull quote:
"Admittedly, I had know idea who David Berman was. I didn’t know what Silver Jews was, nor had I heard much about Purple Mountains at all."
― alpine static, Wednesday, 7 August 2024 22:41 (six months ago) link
I wish I knew such serenity— seriously, have never been able to understand what’s to like about any DB projects.
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Wednesday, 7 August 2024 22:48 (six months ago) link
“I wasn’t familiar with Drag City and had only just recently gotten into Pavement’s Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain. Songwriters like Bonnie “Prince” Billy, Joanna Newsom, Bill Callahan and Stephen Malkmus were just names I’d likely scrolled past without considering.”
Ok already
― There’s a Monster in my Vance (President Keyes), Wednesday, 7 August 2024 22:56 (six months ago) link
Wasn't that Hindenberg quote "the humanity *2" or am I being obv?
― Mark G, Thursday, 8 August 2024 15:00 (six months ago) link
yeah, "The horror, the horror" is from Joseph Conrad
― There’s a Monster in my Vance (President Keyes), Thursday, 8 August 2024 15:01 (six months ago) link
― Mark G, Thursday, 8 August 2024 15:05 (six months ago) link
https://www.wewriteaboutmusic.com/festivals/pavement-bumbershoot-festival-2024
I went to this show and there are some inaccuracies in this AI review (no Cut Your Hair, for one)
― symsymsym, Thursday, 5 September 2024 22:30 (five months ago) link
https://www.standard.co.uk/culture/music/primal-scream-album-come-ahead-bobby-gillespie-b1191957.html
― Toshirō Nofune (The Seventh ILXorai), Wednesday, 6 November 2024 00:20 (three months ago) link
Brace yourselves
https://louderthanwar.com/we-are-fugazi-from-washington-d-c-film-review/
― Paul Ponzi, Wednesday, 5 February 2025 14:33 (two weeks ago) link
that is totally AI. or large portions of it are.
didn't fugazi already have a movie? how many movies does this fugazi band from washington d.c. need?
also, has a single fugazi fan held any position of great power in washington d.c.? let's face it, fugazi band from washington d.c. failed.
― scott seward, Wednesday, 5 February 2025 16:02 (two weeks ago) link
Clicked on this yesterday cause I love Aimee, but I left wondering: AI or just plain old super banal writing?
https://www.popmatters.com/aimee-mann-bachelor-no-2
― cryptosicko, Wednesday, 5 February 2025 17:29 (two weeks ago) link
Kinda feels like AI has ruined bad music writing.
― jmm, Wednesday, 5 February 2025 17:34 (two weeks ago) link
AI points accusingly at the music press: "I learned it from YOU"
― Halfway there but for you, Wednesday, 5 February 2025 18:08 (two weeks ago) link
A new candidate!https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/music-news/chappell-roan-grammys-speech-misguided-1236128051/
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 6 February 2025 15:00 (two weeks ago) link
― ɥɯ ︵ (°□°) (mh), Thursday, 6 February 2025 15:05 (two weeks ago) link
lol at section titled "Bill Maher Had a Point"
― jaymc, Thursday, 6 February 2025 15:08 (two weeks ago) link
Fugazi and Aimee Mann pieces make me think there's a new generation of writers whose primary influence is ChatGPT, and who do all they can to write in the same style. Didn't take long!
― like watching brian eno dancing (Matt #2), Thursday, 6 February 2025 15:15 (two weeks ago) link
It takes some skill to get close to a point only to completely reverse course in every paragraph
― ɥɯ ︵ (°□°) (mh), Thursday, 6 February 2025 15:17 (two weeks ago) link
Whether it’s Prince wresting back control of his master recordings at the height of his popularity or Petty taking on his label for raising the price on his LP, and later funding his iconic album Damn the Torpedos himself — and then refusing to release it — skin in the game earns a seat at the table. But that table requires a willingness to leave blood on the floor and to put your money where your mouth is.
Stopped reading after the fourth cliche in a single sentence--in the opening paragraph!
― cryptosicko, Thursday, 6 February 2025 15:25 (two weeks ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CRzfajyQL_k
― Critique of the Goth Programme (Neil S), Thursday, 6 February 2025 15:28 (two weeks ago) link
Petty taking on his label for raising the price on his LP, and later funding his iconic album Damn the Torpedos himself
The latter happened before the former.
― il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Thursday, 6 February 2025 15:44 (two weeks ago) link
I thought so! Wasn't Hard Promises the one he battled his label on?
― cryptosicko, Thursday, 6 February 2025 15:45 (two weeks ago) link
and I thought the problem was over Hard Promises.
― the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 6 February 2025 15:46 (two weeks ago) link
jinx!
opened up my Bluesky feed this morning and it was wall-to-wall mockery of this clown
― sleeve, Thursday, 6 February 2025 15:55 (two weeks ago) link
I am glad to have played a small part.
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 6 February 2025 16:00 (two weeks ago) link
― sleeve, Thursday, 6 February 2025 16:01 (two weeks ago) link
i just don't understand how you can look at the astounding wealth generated by the music industry and think, "nah, more of that shouldn't go to artists. also, people who complain about this situation are just naïve and don't understand the 'intricacies' of this business." literal shit stain of a human
― budo jeru, Thursday, 6 February 2025 16:15 (two weeks ago) link
Wow, talk about a piece that makes me want to make a birthday cake for Luigi and bake a saw into it
― omar little, Thursday, 6 February 2025 16:24 (two weeks ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b6FiGUsjulA
― budo jeru, Thursday, 6 February 2025 16:49 (two weeks ago) link
ok, i instantly regret posting a ben shapiro video, but i think the point is clear about the kind of person this is
also i'm not making any comment about the topic allegedly under discussion in the video, just the fact that he's appearing on that program speaks for itslef
― budo jeru, Thursday, 6 February 2025 17:06 (two weeks ago) link
Capital fighting labor on every front
― Dialysis Den (Boring, Maryland), Thursday, 6 February 2025 17:49 (two weeks ago) link
Fish-in-barrel time: a metal blog writing for only other metalheads is always gonna be a purple prose danger zone, but this review of the new Obscura album is almost indecipherable (and grammatically more than a little shaky). (The album sucks harder than he suggests, btw.)
― Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Saturday, 15 February 2025 02:53 (one week ago) link