I Confess : What sucks most about your musical tastes and attitudes ?

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too many white people.

Godfrzej Ljang (godfrzej), Sunday, 27 February 2000 02:31 (twenty-four years ago) link

I don't like rap, like, at all.

And then I heard a song on the radio with sweet hip-hop riddims and I was like "HEY I LIKE THIS" then I found out that it was M.I.A. and I was just another dork who likes M.I.A.

Curt1s St3ph3ns, Sunday, 27 February 2000 02:41 (twenty-four years ago) link

one year passes...
Tastes : Still struggling with the fact that I don't get techno despite all my best intentions (and all the smart people who live for it), but not sure it's not at least partly the music's fault. I have a hard time with music that doesn't have a steady rhythm, so most jazz is out of my reach. I wish I liked 2001 top 40 pop as much as many here say they do (again, not sure it's only me who's at fault there).

Attitudes : Frequent snobbery towards people who only care for music as a background noise (the 12-CD crowd), as well as people who only care about a very narrow range of music (sometimes including me).

Also on ILM I'm definitely guilty of hyper-defensive anti-anti-rockism, taking almost any reference to something being rockist as a personal attack on anyone who's ever fallen in love with any song with a guitar on it. Also I tend to attribute a lot of people's dismissive attitudes here to snobbery, but, uh, I'm probably right ;).

Patrick, Thursday, 21 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Hmmm... sounds like I have all the same problems you have.

Can't stand techno or electronica unless heavily diluted with pop (o.k. computer is about as electronic as I can stand). Same with rap ("3 feet high and rising" is my only rap album)

Can't get "real" jazz, although I like "jazzy" rock and "jazzy" pop singers (Sinatra, Nat Cole, Dean Martin, et al.).

I get annoyed with obscuranist listeners, although I'm secretely proud of the one or two obscure things that I listen to. Similarly, I can't get poeple who only like "indie" music, even though most of my interests are "indie-rock."

Also: I can't listen to Grateful Dead (& Phish, etc) just cause I hate the fans so much, even though I REALLY like some of the tunes.

My biggest problem is that I get angry when someone doesn't like something that I play for them, when they clearly SHOULD like it (dammit). If someone likes Garbage, they should like My Bloody Valentine MORE (dammit).

Why are we like this? Why does music do this to us?

Blake, Thursday, 21 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I have no aspirations for my taste in music. I like liking what I like.

Otis Wheeler, Thursday, 21 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Ah, I love hip hop though. It's about the only part of 2001 chart-pop that I don't have to twist myself into absurd convolutions trying to figure out what's supposed to be good about it (I get the feeling this sentence is extremely ungrammatical).

Patrick, Thursday, 21 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I do sometimes worry about how some of the music I like is antithetical to my ideal world, and potentially very damaging to that prospect. But then some of the other music I like fits perfectly into my ideal world, so I can live with liking the stuff that contradicts it.

Robin Carmody, Thursday, 21 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Tastes: I must have an unconscious bias against current Top 40 music. I like my share of what I hear when I have the radio on, but something typically steers me from actually buying music that is mass- marketed. Even when I've spent money on something like Radiohead or Daft Punk it feels a little strange to me, the idea that I could get either at any Musicland coast-to-coast. I must be secretly in love with the snobby idea of trying to find "undiscovered" music, or at least music that not many have heard. It's unconscious because when I sit and think about it, the idea of what is happening in mainstream pop excites me. But that's not how I vote with my dollar. It's a pretty stupid way to think about music.

I love that quote in Ned's Momus interview about intelligence and loneliness; that is the best thing about chart pop to me, sharing it with others. I am alone A LOT so maybe that also helps explain my tastes.

Attitudes: Sorry if it seems like I'm taking the high road here, but I have a very utilitarian view of music. It's something that helps people get through the day, like having a sturdy table to set your drink on. Some people spend considerable energy searching for the best, others could give a shit, neither has an impact on my life. That's why topics here about FANS and GOOD TASTE V. BAD TASTE make little sense to me. It's pretty much my main interest, but nothing about what is happening in music, either with artists or music fans, makes me angry or even irritates me. At all. Really! Something that makes me angry is the guy in the house behind me shooting stray cats because they leave footprints on his truck. Not how obsessive Belle and Sebastian fans are, or that Amerindie rockers wear dorkie glasses, or how Radiohead fans fail to understand where the band sits on the experimental music continuum, or even that most people just pick up on whatever is played on the radio.

The reality is, no matter what you are looking for in music, no matter what you need, it is out there somewhere. The way global distribution is set up now, "music" doesn't need to change, it's all happening, all the time. The challenge is in figuring out what you want, not finding it.

Not sure how I got from there to here, so, uh, I guess I've nothing to confess, as far as attitude.

Mark, Thursday, 21 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

My knee-jerk rspnse, Robin, is to say "yeah well, you don't have any difficulty enjoying 'Butcher Boy' on its merits, so why treat Wu-Tang any different?" But music functions differently than a book or a movie, it's entangled in "pop", defines itself against trends, allies with others, somehow in a much more immediate and identifiable way than books or movies have been recently. I'm guilty of treating the music I like as a badge of honor, even a code for living. So when someone hates what I like it's much more insulting, on some personal level; it's like they're insulting *me*. Whereas if someone was like "yeah, I didn't really like the Brothers Karamozov" I can put up a spirited defense but I'm not going to feel this wound.

tracer Hand, Thursday, 21 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I think I have the same issue as Mark about hit records, in that I keep hearing records I like on the radio and then thinking "I'll buy that, but only if it isn't a hit". I usually don't buy it anyway in case one week at number 34 was too much. I think there is some logic behind this, because if a record is a hit you'll here it a lot anyway, so there's not so much point in buying it. Time to get the Destiny's Child LP I think.

Graham, Thursday, 21 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I actually DON'T like pop records until they become hits. I didn't see the point of Madonna until she reached 'icon' status, and if a chart act makes the cover of RS I pay attention. (Sorry, not NME, not enough world-dominating corporate authority.) When it comes to more obscure acts, I like to see who's getting the best critical notices and biggest cult following. I worship power and always like to be on the winning side. (Maybe it's because I DON'T understand pop and trust that collective wisdom must have some implicit worth.)

tarden, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I confess the jazz is all melody, no rhythm problem too. I confess to being suspicious of collectors - especially American Collectors of course - is this just the same knee jerk poor persons reaction to everything rich? Also, I think my taste is superior. I am an inverse snob. I secretly believe that people who like jazz are just making it all up and they're wrong. I secretly believe that they don't really get any pleasure out of it and have murdered their capacity for pleasure. Don't be offended jazz fans, it's just because I'm scared of ambiguity.

So Tarden, do you like Radiohead - I mean, do you like absolutely everything that becomes popular, just because it's popular? Do you mean that's a rule that you apply intentionally, or just a sort of intuition that you have about yourself? Or were you just joking?

maryann, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Maryann, why do "jazz fans" have to like only jazz? In fact, I don't know anyone who likes just jazz and nothing else. I get different types of fulfillment from jazz than I do from other types of music. And you're treading on dangerous water when you talk about "making it all up," because who's to say you're not just making it up, or if everyone isn't just making it up?...

Clarke B., Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Great topic Patrick!

I'm with Tracer Hand on "the code for living", although I've become a bit more relaxed about it in the past few years (mainly for taking so much shit about dancemusic and Miles Davis, that after years you finally think "sod it!"). Still I must confess that this year I've felt "wounded" by what people close to me have said about "Discovery" and "10.000Hz Legend". ILM has been good in this sense too, there's a neat distancing effect that makes a put-down of something you love just less hard (although Killing Joke fans obviously feel different ;)

2nd one is obvious, I take sardonic pleasure in putting down "Rockism" and esp. the canonical artists *unless* they're The Rolling Stones or Patti Smith. (...and ask yourself how does he know all these artists? Because he has heard every single record and owns Sister Marquee White Power Ladyland! They're just stuck on a lower shelf than all techno/house albums ;)

Omar, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

o boy, some of my best friends like jazz, you know, this is sposed to be like some kind of Catholic thing where we say why we're bad and then you say that's okay, go and sin again - isn't it? Listen - to rush thru an idea I hate, cos it means I'm really bad - there are three stages of development: the fucked up person or society who needs order (authoritarian father/fascism/autocracy), the medium person who can tolerate some ambiguity (paternalist parents/democracy), the carnivalesque healthy person (tolerant loving parents/anarchy or something?) - aesthetically (etc) I am at the bottom, I like absolute simplicity or purity, this is what I'm saying, I can see that this is my problem for the problem page. Jazz has no repetition or order! Where is the foothold, the loss of self, bla bla? This is a sincere question, not a critique.

. . . connected to my question to Tarden: cos Tarden, are you saying you have a religious attitude to pop, a leap of faith thing? Don't worry I'm not damning your idea with faint understanding.

Maryann, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

a)Radiohead - that's a tough one. I originally had no opinion on Kid A until I saw how much pain and bewilderment it caused in 'Bends'fans, which made me automatically like it. Plus by that time it had dropped into the bargain bins, so I bought it.
'Leaps of faith' are sometimes important, otherwise you become an ideologue, or an ELvis Costello fan.

tarden, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

FT and ILM has certainly bowled me plenty of googlies (= curveball for US people = unexpectedly strong spliff for Omar)in the last six months or so. At various times I've been too close to rock and have neglected the 'pop' side of my brain. FT has helped here.

What sucks? I don't like and can't get into hip-hop. I can't say that I lose sleep over it, but maybe I'm missing something. The interest in nouveau chart pop say, Destiny's Child or Britney, is something else I don't 'get'. The music is pleasant enough, but any attempts at criticism or analysis seem like compemplating the precentage of Nitrogen in air. Before too long you begin wondering about the marketing plan and forget the tune.

Dr. C, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Compemplating should be contemplating. Sorry.

Dr. C, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

The topic is a good one. Obviously it's also a paradoxical one - because one's tastes would seem to oneself to be good by definition, and thus not something to which to confess. But I appreciate that the question is trying to get us to get around the back of our own tastes, so to speak. So:

Tastes: most of my dislikes cause me no soul-searching at all, unlike some of the other respondents so far. The idea that I should worry about not liking Black Box is incomprehensible to me. But there are two vast areas of music which I believe are important, profound, and perhaps beautiful, but of which I cannot speak. They are Classical Music and Jazz. These are 'gaps' the size of canyons. I don't know that they'll ever be filled, or bridged.

Attitudes: I have one feature which is limiting and prescriptive - namely, an utterly nostalgic approach to music. Anything I liked once I must, it seems, like forever; and this makes it hard for me ever to 'move on'.

the pinefox, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

"White Power Ladyland" is a great album title, Omar, can I use it?

Yeah anyway like Mr Pinefox said, a real paradox. I also know that I'm not "getting" classical music...I even like some of it, have a couple of "favourites"...but I'd totally avoid discussing it with anyone who really seems to know what they're talking about. Uh, that's just not having confidence, conviction in one's own tastes, is that the kind of thing we're talking about here?

duane, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

.......& about modern music - I don't go ape over a whole bunch of new stuff, which *sometimes* seems to me a limitation on my own part...but I dunno, I'm quite old, what do you expect. i.e., you know, all the big bomb-drop eye-opening experiences happened ages ago. sorta wish some new ones would happen......can't decide tho' whether that's my own "fault [that they don't] or whether that's just what happens w/ age & the diminishing returns of musical forms that rely to such an extent on the "shock of the new". so maybe this is not really still on-topic.

duane, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

please go ahead, Duane. You imagine how many album titles there are still to be found just by combining classic album titles?

Omar, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

yeah but i tought i'd done 'em all already, y'know.

BUT! this question! back to this fucking question! I'D been (I now see) EVADING it absolutely! the thing that's wrong with my taste in music? Just OBVIOUS - that it is still affected by OTHER people's tastes. I'm thirty-(mumble) years old & i still do that thing where if yr talking to someone whose ideas you respect you wait 'til they've said their bit before yo say what YOU think of something. That's terrible!
But on the + side(?), i suppose it proves that music still has some "social" "relevence" in my life - I was pretty sure that was a thing of the distant past.

duane, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I think I am too easily persuaded by people with intelligent opinions and I have a tendency to absorb these opinions as my own. I try to question my motives for liking and disliking certain music as often as possible, but constantly second-guessing yourself while trying to define that often indefinable "it" that makes a piece of music "work" for you can be frustrating ( if ultimately rewarding! ). As for specific genres that I don't like, there are certainly a number of things that don't turn my knobs at the moment, ( hard house, most things that fall under the umbrella of "rave", probably most chart pop, actually) but I might download an mp3 sometime soon or hear something on the radio that'll alter my perceptions entirely. A year ago, I might have been suprised to learn that my hard drive and CD collection would include Autechre, Miles Davis, Bob Dylan and Missy Elliot, but there ya go.

Mitch Lastnamewithheld, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Thing is, most of my fears of suckage about my musical tastes are not about *musical* tastes at all (in which I am perfectly secure. I like what I like, I feel no pressure to like what I don't like.) but about more political things.

Because my parents were born in South Africa, I have this perpetual fear that I am a racist (because I was told so many times by PC American liberals that all South Africans are racist, therefore we must be racists by extension). And I fear that I cannot get into hip-hop or rap *because* I am a racist. I can actually get into white indie-boy (and girl) rap like the Beastie Boys, or Luscious Jackson, or Beck, but I can't get any further.

I suspect that it is more to do with the *texture* of rap and hip-hop, because I listen to music for texture and harmony, rather than than lyrics or melody. (Lyrics are probably *the* least important thing for me in the enjoyment of music, while they are probably *the* most important element, in fact that defining element, in rap.) When I heaar rap or hip hop that *is* "psychedelic" or textural or "stoner rap", (early De La Soul and Cypress Hill spring to mind as examples) it *does* stick to my ear and make me happy.

But still, I worry. Isn't it the most white, middle class, racist thing in the world, to *worry* about being a racist?

masonic boom, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Kate - listen to 'Madness' on the Deltron 3030 album. Echoes some of what you said...

Paul Strange, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Too many words. When there are that many lyrics in a song, I just lose attention... and then some codnobbler that sounds like Damon Albarn comes in and starts wailing in my ear, and I really switch off. I am trying to pay attention to the words, but I'm not intrigued by textures around it to want to listen to it. So, I don't even get the message. Sigh.

masonic boom, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

That was a brave admission, Kate. This board could use more of that kind of thing.

Mark, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I fuck chickens.

Nick, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

But still, I worry. Isn't it the most white, middle class, racist thing in the world, to *worry* about being a racist?

This is making my head spin

Patrick, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

No, not at all, Kate, it's perfectly natural at a phase in your life, though I'm over that now.

Robin Carmody, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

What's a phase? Worrying about being racist, or not listening to lyrics?

masonic boom, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Worrying about being racist. As I said, I'm over it now.

Robin Carmody, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Being a priviledged young white South African, I suppose I now have to confront my inner racist ( just kidding, I hope.) I don't own any rap or hip-hop records ( time for an even bigger ILM confession- I don't own that many records.. yet ) , but I've been thinking about changing that recently- I've enjoyed the Outkast and Missy mp3s I've downloaded of late so it might be a good idea to give one of those albums a chance next time I crave a change of aesthetics (I've just started my tentative journey into jazz appreciation).

However : even if I expressed no desire to listen to any "black" music, I wouldn't classify myself as a racist. There's a substantial difference between saying "*I* don't like this" and "This is (objectively) bad". It might be racist to assume that rap or hip- hop is simply terrible music, it's a different matter entirely to accept that this type of music doesn't do what *you* want music to do. That said, the rap and hip-hop I've heard has been satisfying on a sonic level, while pretty much failing to really speak to me on a personal level. But, like I mentioned above, I might download a Roots or A Tribe Called Quest (f'rinstance) song in a moment that could change all that. I haven't enjoyed any local rap or hip-hop that I've heard, perhaps that's something I should try and address. My lack of identification with these songs is probably a major obstacle. Because of the racial relations in my country ( still rife with tension, although definitely lessening ) I'm aware that my cultural experiences in South Africa differ wildly ( in most cases ) to the experiences of the people making this music. But if said music doesn't connect with me, should I strain to appreciate it in the name of, what, Political Correctness? I don't believe my relationship with any black person that I might meet would hinge on my enjoyment of hip- hop. Nor do all black people listen to rap and hip-hop. I apologize for the rambling, but these are things I have to order in my mind.

And Nick- we're here for you.

Mitch Lastnamewithheld, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Themes here: no appreciation of jazz or classical, fear of hip-hop. I like that most everyone here will stipulate that jazz and classical are both musical forms with plenty of worthwhile content and appeal--- we're actually living up to the standards set in the whole "taste" thread, in terms of removing one's personal appreciation of the form from the larger question of aesthetic value. Grrreat. And why the sort of indifferent reaction to jazz and classical? I'd argue that they simply require a different sort of musical training---a different form of listening---than rock or pop do, and that that's perfectly okay. I'd imagine that if you gave Wynton Marsalis records by the Cramps, the Birthday Party, and the Pop Group, he'd have just as hard a time really delineating the purposes of each as a Cramps fan would have distinguishing between Freddie Hubbard and Miles Davis- --and whatever opinions a "jazz person" formed about rock music would be coming from a "jazz listening" perspective, just as the opinions of indie-rockers on jazz would come from a "rock listening" perspective. The questions I'd be interested in concern crossovers. Would jazz listeners like, say, Tortoise, for incorporating jazz elements into the indie-rock idiom? Or would they hate them for bastardizing pure jazz and feeding it to indie kids who don't know a thing about it? I suppose both views exist, but I'd truly be interesting in hearing more about it.

As for fear of hip-hop, I don't think anyone need feel that it's strictly a race issue. Nor is it really a musical issue. I think for many, it's an issue of culture and cultural content---the association of much mainstream hip-hop with attitudes that border not only on misogyny or homophobia but also materialism and anti- intellectualism and etc. etc. This can be a huge barrier with appreciation of popular music, which tends to put a lot of emphasis on the listener's association with the artist as an individual whose personal expression is worthwhile---and particularly hip-hop, which tends to be more about lifestyle and attitude and verbal content that music per se. This probably explains why non-hip-hop-listening indie kids tend to dig "positive" hip-hop acts---De La Soul, Tribe, etc.--- who general presentation is a few notches closer to the sort of reserved, cerebral model so favored among indie folk.

All of which is to say: that's most of why *I* don't dig hip-hop, and as a black person, I think I can cast the race issue aside.

Nitsuh, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I'd be interested to hear who likes the 'mainstream hip-hop with the negative attitudes' which Nitsuh described. And why you like it.

Dr. C, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

i'm somewhat embarrassed about liking as much 80s music as i do, compared to how much 2001 music i like. i might try too hard to overcompensate sometimes by buying cds i'm somewhat lukewarm about or by gushing about a new album i'll hate in three months. i've generally felt better since i stopped trying too much to like any current indie. after someone explained to me recently why she likes yo la tengo vocals, i've realized that i was trying to get into the stuff without much understanding of it.

i think i like some mainstream "negative" hip-hop. i like the beats, the samples, and the use of voices. i sometimes enjoy the emotions associated with the "negative" attitudes. i like big black too. so do a number of "reserved, cerebral" indie rockers. (did we go through punk so we could have reserved and cerebral?)

sundar subramanian, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Dr C : Just have a look at the "Dr Dre: C or D" thread. People either just tune out the violent mysogynist bullshit (as I sometimes do) or don't think it matters. I personally have a visceral reaction against any performer who comes on like a 13 year-old schoolyard bully.

Patrick, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Mitch- the South African thing was more a comment on the racism of Americans. I have never lived in SA for more than about 3 months, I wasn't born there, and in fact my socialist parents left the country because of their political leanings. None of this mattered to the PC-nuts who tormented me through school. They assumed that because I was of South African descent, that I *must* be racist. Which is a racist statement in and of itself. And the ironic thing is that my mum said that the racism she confronted in the States was far more blatant, far more insidious, and ultimately far *worse* than any she had encountered in SA.

Anyway... I've been thinking more on the issue, and wondering what it is about the music that doesn't engage me. What is important to me in music, in descending order is 1) texture 2) harmony (and interesting harmonics) 3) melody 4) rthythem (can't even spell it, how can I appreciate it) 5) lyrics.

The more I think about hip hop or rap, I realise that it's nothing even to do with race, or with culture, but simply that the *principle* elements of the genres - lyrics and rhtyhm - are the two musical elements least important to me.

masonic boom, Friday, 22 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Kate - what do u think of Lauryn Hill?

Tracer Hand, Saturday, 23 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

or of public enemy or wu-tang? surely production texture is one of the most notable aspects of their records?

sundar subramanian, Sunday, 24 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I'd be interested to hear who likes the 'mainstream hip-hop with the negative attitudes' which Nitsuh described. And why you like it. (Dr. C)

I don't seek it out...but then I don't seek out anything. But when I hear it I find the lyrics amusing (in the same way as the writings of Stewart Home).

David, Sunday, 24 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I'd be interested to hear who likes the 'mainstream hip-hop with the negative attitudes' which Nitsuh described. And why you like it. (Dr. C)

I like to desensitize myself. I'm curious to see if they will go beyond the pale.

tarden, Sunday, 24 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

And do they?

Dr. C, Sunday, 24 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Well, very often I think "they" do, but I can just about live with it.

Robin Carmody, Sunday, 24 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I wish I could do that. At least sometimes I wish it. I'm probably the most sensitized person I know, and at times I can take a perverse pride in it, but mostly it's a living hell. I can't turn it off. I can't tune it out. I'm literally jealous of those who can, because that must make life so much easier. It makes it impossible to relate to a rapidly hardening environment - It's so rare to completely like or enjoy anything (because it's all or nothing after all) and resultingly, the more you know, the deeper you sink, and you end up trying to float without moving because that's least painful, and, and, and that *is* what sucks the most about my musical tastes and attitudes.

After all that, I don't even sympathise with Cobain, before you go thinking.

Kim, Sunday, 24 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I'm not very knowledgeable about current hip-hop, mainstream or otherwise, but I am interested in how listeners perceive the lyrics. One thing I think has been ignored here is that songs with these attitudes are selling in a massive way. So people, lots and lots of people, either get some thrill from Eminem and Snoop or identify with what they're rapping. This can't be denied. So what of these folks? A bunch of dumb kids?

This is interesting to me because most characteristics of pop music that shift units are easily identified, analyzed and critiqued by those who frequent this board (there are a lot of smart people hanging out here!) There is no loss of words in explaining Britney, or even Creed.

The violence in hip-hop is easy to explain, at least in terms of the U.S. Violence is everywhere, so why not in music? People get some kind of visceral thrill from hearing the description of carnage; same way Pulp Fiction got the blood pumping, or Doom or Quake or whatever.

The misogyny is tougher. I'd be interested in knowing what percentage of those who bought Dre's 2001 are men. If it were all men listening to this stuff, then I'd have to say most guys hearing those lyrics are getting some kind of assurance from them. Having their fear of women relieved by song after song putting the "hos" in their place, reducing half the population to nothing more than "something to poke on."

Eminem sold like ten million records, which just can't be done if everybody is thinking either "Hmmm, this is an interesting portrait of a disturbed individual…what an artful statement" or just ignoring the words altogether, which are in your face and high in the mix for the whole album. In addition to chuckling at his clevery wordplay, lots of people are FEELING what Eminem is saying, on some level. They have to be. Maybe they're all just impressionable kids, maybe not. But critics discussing Eminem have not scratched the surface of his appeal, I don't think.

Mark, Sunday, 24 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I was reading something that addressed this recently - can't at this moment recall where though - but I agreed with the sentiment expressed which was essentially that the phenomena we are experiencing right now is some kind of backlash against the riot grrl/Lilith Fair/Girl Power trends of not so long ago. That in the purely reactionary sense, "real" men have now been given licence to reassert themselves and as such are reverting to the "golden age" of manhood, rebuilding the cave and such. It's all pretty yucky. I try not to think about it for (now) obvious reasons, but if I remember where that article was I'll be back.

Kim, Sunday, 24 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I don't know, though, Lilith Fair and gangsta rap are two totally different worlds, in terms of music makers and fans. Hard to see how there could be a feedback loop there.

Mark, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Kim: don't know if this is what you read (probably not) but this is where I came across the idea.

Tom, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Erm... wow, to go back into the mists of time and answer some...

Lauryn Hill - of the little I've heard (just the single I've heard on the MTV, unfortunately) some of it I thought was texturally intriguing, but unfortunately I got really turned off by the gargling, cut-up, jumpy, jerky production style. I know it's ground-breaking and so influential that even Whitney Houston wanted some of it, but the production style really got in the way of the music for me.

Wu-Tang Clan - all the other silliness, the image, the stunts, the idiocy got in the way of my even being able to take them seriously enough to actually listen to what was going on in the music.

Public Enemy - yes, liked them enough to own one of the albums, though it's back in storage so I couldn't tell you which one. In fact, I've seen them live, too. On tour with the Sisters of Mercy of all people (I can just imagine both bands saying to their booking agents "Get me the BLACKEST band that you can find for support" and ending up with each other.) What appealed to me was the beautifully textured sample collage of their music, more than the lyrical content. Sonically interesting music, that's what I'm talking about. Yes.

masonic boom, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

And Kim, yes, a thousand times yes. The article on Maura.com is a summary of things which have been kicking around in the "riot grrl" circles (I cringe at that term, funnily enough, but what else to call pro-female musician circles?) for a couple of years now. However high you manage to claw yourself, the backlash will come and sweep you off.

I don't know. The only thing I can really think is... this *is* just a backlash. Progress, when viewed from above, is not a straight line, but a series of zig-zags that only look like a straight line when viewed from a distance. Backlashes cannot last forever, and if we just keep going, then when it is all over, we'll be a little bit closer to an equilibrium.

masonic boom, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

But some of the "real men" thing is ENVY, isn't it? So even as a backlash it co-opts some of what it seems to resist or repel? One of the weird things about laddism is how queer-flirty some bits of it actually are... Spose I'm wondering if this isn't the mark of a shadowed victory — sorta — rather than a straight defeat...: men emoting and acting out REALLY IS better than power operating at level of unspoken assumption. Isn't it?

mark s, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

To be clearer: if riot grrrl is genuinely "empowering", then it risks empowering more than just grrrls: eg RIOT MEN...

Wild MEN with Steak-Knives = Eminem?

mark s, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

A-AND (sorry) Eminem's 10 million listeners include [x] thousand angry women who he speaks TO (rather than just against): which makes him a spark-point for the next (better) cycle...?

mark s, Monday, 25 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Well, I like mainstream hiphop with 'negative' attitudes a lot. In fact, it sustains my interest in pop music, because there's danger and at least some suggestion of passion in the songs. Plus new ways of doing things and imagining the world pop up from the t.v. screen and into my head - a rare and clebratory occasion. Recent mainstream hiphop has provided not just 'choice' - a non-word, let's face it - but also diversity and complexity. You can really sink your teeth into this music.

During the last few months I've been listening to a lot of Cash Money Records' records, where violence, materialism and misogyny are all present and (in)correct. Needless to say, these records sold extremely well, not just because they did a better job of presenting themselves as more 'real' or 'gangsta' than everyone else (you scared of Lil' Wayne?), but because aggression was not just limited to the lyrics and visuals: Compare Mannie Fresh's Cash Money work or Swizz Beats' production for Jay-Z and DMX with those of Indie rap producers - most of them (except El Producto and a couple of others) just don't cut the mustard. Fresh's beats aren't just 'good': they are the bones of memorable songs, such as the magnificent 'Back That Azz Up'. With a Mannie Fresh produced album, rhythm becomes not king (a recent and hopefully short-lived pop obsession) but adaptable component, all mean and ready for battle.

The 'gangsta' raps themselves are often genuinely witty and clever. They have to be: the ideas that the Hot Boys and the Big Tymers are offering were first spat out by the likes of NWA and (gulp) the 2 Live Crew over a decade ago. Nevertheless, the 'commercial' hiphop (and I mean Juvenile and Jay-Z and not the 'keeping it real' rap-and- scratch of Mobb Deep, C-N-N et al) of the last couple of years has consistently out-imagined and out-thrilled its indie rivals, and attitude's got very little to do with it.

None of this is 'negative', by the way. Unless you're worried for your kids, in which case you had better switch off now.

L, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

wow - Kate if you hear the Miseducation of Lauryn Hill as jumpy and jerky then I really can see why you don't like hiphop - cause that album sounds positively... mellifluous next to its peers. Is it the density of the tracking maybe that's offputting? (tho in that case how could you like Public Enemy?) The reason I brought it up is that seems to follows your priority list to a tee, it's got no guns or hos on it... she talks specifically about race and gender backlash.... check it out maybe.

2. WHAT is wrong w/silliness, stunts and idiocy?? You've just named like, the 3 pillars of any great rock group!! Rolling Stones, The Who -- where would they be without their stunts, idiocy, and silliness?? In fact the only time Wu-Tang gets bad in my mind is when they drop the tomfoolery, smoke WAY too much weed and basically pass out in front of the mic (Wu-Tang Forever, 2nd Raekwon album, Killarmy...)

Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I promise I will come up w/something good (?) abt why I love many cash/guns/hos songs but it is a HARD question. "That's What I'm Lookin For" by Da Brat, for instance, is Exhibit A for Faludi-style backlash against feminist progress - it's a WOMAN saying

Where my Rolley wearing thugs who
Claim they don't love you
But any time you want something done, they do it
(That's what I'm looking for)
The ball all night type
Frontin', screaming, thug life
That's the type of nigga I like


For now I'll say that I think both Maxim and Da Brat are concerned with authenticity, and the meathead impulses of the unreconstructed "baller" appeal to that.

Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 26 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

ten months pass...
There's nothing I don't like about my musical tastes - unlike other, less open-minded 13-year-olds I don't think anything published before 1990 is automatically crap. In fact, Pink Floyd, King Crimson and Talking Heads are my favourite bands - so unlike anyone who likes Destiny's Child or Eminem, I don't have to worry :-D

Anna Rose, Wednesday, 8 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Anna, check back on this statement in five years. 13 to 18 changed my outlook on a lot of things. ;-)

Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 8 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Well, I don't like any classical or opera. I'm not sure whether that's a fault. I might have to be less unreasonably dismissive and sneering about it (that's my bad attitude there) when I have my first date next week (probably) with a classical pianist!

Martin Skidmore, Wednesday, 8 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

My dirty secret: I own about thirty jazz records (not much, I know, but certainly enough to get a taste), mostly the standards (Davis, Mingus, Coltrane, Coleman) and I'm still not entirely sure that I could differentiate most of these recordings from one another.

At what point do I admit defeat?

Mark, Wednesday, 8 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

They are dismissive and sneering about opera = they are monkeys. (I was monkey up until I turned 19.)

Dan Perry, Wednesday, 8 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

ned, you shouldnt be winking at 13 yr old girls.

jess, Wednesday, 8 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Forget Melissa Etheridge; has anyone ever seen Ned Raggett and R. Kelly in the same room?

Dan Perry, Wednesday, 8 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

The prospect of me having to write and sing "I Believe I Can Fly" is so disturbing to my tender sensibilities that I must now kill myself.

Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 8 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Anna: I'm exactly twenty years older than you. When I was growing up, lots of 13-year-olds had Pink Floyd as a favorite band, also.

Christine "Green Leafy Dragon" Indigo, Wednesday, 8 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I know that 20 years ago Pink Floyd were really popular but today nobody of this generation likes them (which is completely unfair): just ask my friends.

Anna Rose, Thursday, 9 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

My big flaws (both of these are also kind-of virtues I think):

- a fear of/fascination with my own adolescence and unresolved issues therein which leads me to my current (3 yrs and counting) backlash against 'indie'

- deadly low attention span

Tom, Thursday, 9 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I have major issues with so called IDM. I'm sure I'd like some of it because as someone pointed out I'd listened to noodlyish indie and therefore couldn't complain alot.

Still it just strikes me that the intentions behind IDM records are so suspect. I mean what are these guys trying to do? Do they have any aim? Maybe that's the point I'm missing. I really don't know and frankly I don't want to know.

Also I am fiercely cranky about people's prejudices against dancefloor dance music which I feel will never really be critically recognised, yadda yadda yadda. Also I'm developing a complex over Orbital, Chemical Bros, Underworld/any other popular dance act and it's fans not being 4 real enough to like the club derivatives of these acts.

What else? Jesus now I start I could go on all day......

Ronan, Thursday, 9 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

The club derivative of Orbital?????

Dan Perry, Thursday, 9 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Um eh.......ok you've got me sort of. Next time I see Hartnoll DJ I'll let you know.

I'm more talking about the fact that the actual club scene at which Orbital might DJ is mainly centred on singles. And the vast majority of people never hear these singles. They generally have their own appeal independent of the albumdance bands I named. I think it's odd because alot of the singles surface months later, and the ones which don't are still quite catchy. That is to say I'm not talking about some underground thing here, I just think there's genuine potential for more people to hear this music.

I suppose it's a singles versus albums thing.

Ronan, Thursday, 9 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

two weeks pass...
What sucks most is that it's so perfect. Every single day when I wake up I am astounded to discover it's still pristine.

cuba libre (nathalie), Saturday, 25 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

four years pass...
this is an interesting thread I thought I could revive.

Me? I guess I'm just not ready to accept poptimism outright. I realise this is frowned upon in IL-circles, but for whatever it's worth I can't understand the appeal behind so-called manufactured pop bands. And yes, I've heard all the reasons why I shouldn't NOT like them ("All bands are commercial", "You enjoy it on its sonic merits" etc) but really I feel most pop (as in Britney or whoever's the top of the charts these days) is aimed at an entirely different demographic from mine. Then again I've come round to the fact ABBA were an incredible band, a band who spawned the girl and boy groups of today and yet no-one has hit quite those emotions since AFAIK.

I'm also quite rubbish when it comes to Garage and Grime - it's not fast or slow enough for this white ass to do anything other than wiggle a bit and then sit back down confused.

wogan lenin (dog latin), Thursday, 7 September 2006 00:22 (seventeen years ago) link

instrumental music pretty much invariably bores me to absolute tears

electric sound of jim [and why not] (electricsound), Thursday, 7 September 2006 01:18 (seventeen years ago) link

I can't bring myself to care about music when I don't care about the person/people making it.

bernard snow (sixteen sergeants), Thursday, 7 September 2006 01:29 (seventeen years ago) link

I'm of the Glen Matlock School- I like the Beatles.

My Little Ruud Book (Ken L), Thursday, 7 September 2006 01:46 (seventeen years ago) link

where did those posts from 2000 come from!?

ryan (ryan), Thursday, 7 September 2006 01:59 (seventeen years ago) link

my attitude and taste, period.

mts (theoreticalgirl), Thursday, 7 September 2006 02:04 (seventeen years ago) link

My total boredom regarding opera and the great majority of pre-20th century classical music.

polyphonic (polyphonic), Thursday, 7 September 2006 02:06 (seventeen years ago) link

those dates!

a name means a lot just by itself (lfam), Thursday, 7 September 2006 02:29 (seventeen years ago) link

I'm fairly in love with just about everything. Seriously. I love everything. I've even grown to like country, which five years ago would have made me writhe in disgust. My tastes have grown leaps and bounds over the years, to the point where music in general makes me way more excited than it does bored or angry or disappointed. There's a relatively short list of bands that I simply can't stand; Nickelback springs to mind. The Eagles. Dave Matthews Band, after "Under the Table and Dreaming". Jewel and her ilk. Mall punk, like Simple Plan or Taking Back Sunday or whatever. There's stuff that doesn't interest me, but that has more to do with the actual sounds the band is making, as opposed to the sounds plus the awful social context they sit within and the generalized stupidity they probably represent. I'm not going to listen to Merzbow. I appreciate him for what he does, but I'm just not going to give it more than a cursory listen just so I know what I'm not listening to.

I will say, though, that I have a tendency to love things for what I think are purely ironic reasons. Like, I love Meatloaf. I'm not sure if it's because I love "Paradise by the Dashboard Lights" because it's a fucking incredible song, or because it's so cheesy and bombastic that I love it for how bad it is. I honestly don't know - I guess it's probably both. I don't know if that makes me less of a genuine music fan, to like something for how "bad" it is. "My Humps" gives me lots of joy, and I'm pretty sure I only like it because it's so fucking retarded. I'm gonna go with dancing like an idiot in the club over not having fun because I'm not actually "enjoying" the song, though.

Emily B (Emily B), Thursday, 7 September 2006 02:33 (seventeen years ago) link

Oh, and I have absolutely no patience for anyone that only owns 12 CDs, which almost always includes Dave Matthews Band and whatever cute acoustic guitar playing dude of the moment (John Mayer, Jack Johnson, etc). But that's because music is so incredbly important to me that I can't fathom not really caring about it. Much in the same way I don't understand how you could not like, say, ice cream, unless it made you violently ill.

Emily B (Emily B), Thursday, 7 September 2006 02:36 (seventeen years ago) link

Count me in as one of the "I seem to like jazz and classical better in theory than in practice" people, though I'm always trying to get into them more.

Marmot (marmotwolof), Thursday, 7 September 2006 02:36 (seventeen years ago) link

I have so much to confess...please forgive me.

in theory I'm a reasonable man. I believe there's no fundamental, objective difference in quality between, say, paris hilton and stravinsky - it all depends on the criteria you use to assess a piece of work.

but beneath the surface I'm a complete snob and I hate pop music. I find grown men obsessing over teeny music such as kelly clarkson or timberlake highly disturbing. I have an instinctively averse reaction to jauntiness. I am disgusted by synchronised dancing. I don't see catchiness as a virtue; quite the opposite. deep down, I suspect that the current vogue among adults for children's music designed by marketing departmetns is a passing hipster fad. please forgive me.

but at the same time I'm a hypocrite. I like a fair amount of adolescent metal. like I said, please forgive me.

I'm bored by repetitive beats and value complexity. therefore dance music and hip hop are closed worlds to me. I have tried, but I have found nothing of worth there. I fear this is an omission, but it's not one I care about. this makes me feel guilty.

I love jazz, noise, heavy prog, hardcore punk, japanese oddities, various 'world' musics and far-out experimental weirdness. I consider pushing the envelope to be a virtue in and of itself. forgive, etc.

I hate so many canonical 'icons' that I wonder whether I hate them simply because they're icons and I'm a contrary git...bowie, dylan, neil young, the stones, the pistols, the clash, madonna, pink floyd, etc, etc. then I wonder if I'm a boring old fart because I like the beatles, the doors and tim buckley. hypocrite. confused hypocrite.

I care far too much about music and nowhere near enough about anything else.

guanoman (mister the guanoman), Thursday, 7 September 2006 07:44 (seventeen years ago) link

Deep down I realize that I'm being silly by making a sweeping generalization in saying that it's all shit and all sounds the same, but I really loathe classical music. I know it's dumb when I say:"All those instruments, why can't they simplify it?" Also, it lacks words so why bother? I'm coming up with all these random reasons - like that I wasn't brought up with it or whatever.

Nathalie (stevie nixed), Thursday, 7 September 2006 09:23 (seventeen years ago) link

I simply can't understand what's good in mainstream hiphop and R&B nowadays. I still think R&B is for tiny girls or gays.
Also I don't get metal, so maybe I'm gay too.

zeus (zeus), Thursday, 7 September 2006 09:58 (seventeen years ago) link

but beneath the surface I'm a complete snob and I hate pop music. I find grown men obsessing over teeny music such as kelly clarkson or timberlake highly disturbing. I have an instinctively averse reaction to jauntiness. I am disgusted by synchronised dancing. I don't see catchiness as a virtue; quite the opposite. deep down, I suspect that the current vogue among adults for children's music designed by marketing departmetns is a passing hipster fad. please forgive me.

but at the same time I'm a hypocrite. I like a fair amount of adolescent metal. like I said, please forgive me.

YEh, that sums me up pretty much.

wogan lenin (dog latin), Thursday, 7 September 2006 10:01 (seventeen years ago) link

Nothing "sucks" about my musical tastes and attitudes. They have been arrived at by means of experience, knowledge and instinct and are robust.

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Thursday, 7 September 2006 10:07 (seventeen years ago) link

I lsiten to "old stuff" almost exclusively

20th century boy (lovebug starski), Thursday, 7 September 2006 10:22 (seventeen years ago) link

Do you read the Guardian?

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Thursday, 7 September 2006 10:25 (seventeen years ago) link

The magpie aesthetic: getting the shiny, pretty, well known singles, and not investigating the rest of the album or any other of the artist's work.

ledge (ledge), Thursday, 7 September 2006 10:27 (seventeen years ago) link

xpost

online, from the states, but just abt politics mostly

m coleman (lovebug starski), Thursday, 7 September 2006 10:30 (seventeen years ago) link

The magpie aesthetic: Tommy Boyd exclaiming WHAT ARE WE DOING TO OUR WILDLIFE?

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Thursday, 7 September 2006 10:31 (seventeen years ago) link

What sucks, maybe, is that I don't anticipate new releases nowadays as I might have back in the days when I counted the days until a new Buzzcocks or Bowie or Talking Heads album.

After 30 years of being into music (on and off), you start to see how inbred rock's family tree is; I've liked Thee Hydrogen Terrors, Tight Bros, Magik Markers, Deerhoof, and assorted freakyfolky stuff in recent years, but it's always with a "been there, heard that" attitude that precludes me from searching further or being long-term excited about it.

As a long-time lurker here, I've been most often amused by threads about music I don't particularly like, e.g. the one-named
prefab divas (they're all Little Eva With Attitude, aren't they?) with designer beats and industrial-strength marketing. They all sound much the same to me. While the practices of Phil Spector and Berry Gordy could have been called "assembly line" long ago, they seem more like outsider art compared to today's music-industry Henry Fords. You can have your Model T in any color you like, as long as it's a hue of Timbaland or Storch.

(I do, however, like Justin, in small doses.)

I'm also tickled at how music marketed to teens and tweens, who don't have rivers of pop history running through their heads (i.e. the ideal consumer), is inexplicably
overanalysed
by middle-aged individuals who can't seem to let go of the shiny-shiny products of the entertainment-industrial complex — for fear of not being "with it", perhaps. Is it a "life gives you lemons" thing for xhuxk and Kogan? Here's a clue folks: Paul Anka is better in 2006 than he was in 1957. Which isn't saying much, actually.


NP: a whole bunch of Herbie Nichols, on WKCR.

mark 0 (mark 0), Thursday, 7 September 2006 10:46 (seventeen years ago) link

I find I agree with quite a lot of that. As far as contemporary rock goes I absolutely adore what's happening in Canada at the moment, since the music there seems to have that precise balance of freshness and spirit which, with BSS and others, makes me think: "actually, I haven't been there or seen that!"

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Thursday, 7 September 2006 10:51 (seventeen years ago) link

Oh, and pace Sinker on Pill Box comments, AMM piss over Boney M from an immeasurable height.

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Thursday, 7 September 2006 10:52 (seventeen years ago) link

Heh, started back when ILM was 25 people writing long posts to each other. What a time capsule.

Mark (MarkR), Thursday, 7 September 2006 11:27 (seventeen years ago) link

i agree with a lot of people about what sucks about their taste/attitudes.

The Lex (The Lex), Thursday, 7 September 2006 11:31 (seventeen years ago) link

http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/MDWeb/People/images/SMILEY.GIF

mark 0 (mark 0), Thursday, 7 September 2006 11:44 (seventeen years ago) link

I don't like much popular music that's not relatively new - the 'worst' thing, in terms of being a 'balanced listener' or whatever, is that I don't much care for classic soul or funk, although I like a lot of stuff that's founded on the both or either of them. I love instrumental classical music (+ baroque, 20th c, not so hot on romantic tho) but hate about 80% of classical singers' voices; conversely, I like vocal jazz but get pretty bored of the 'hard' instrumental stuff.

stop moving. (cis), Thursday, 7 September 2006 12:15 (seventeen years ago) link

I am increasingly bored of mainstream pop, r'n'b, hip hop and rock music, and retreating into a pre-urban idyll of country / folk / rural jazz / really outsider indie type bollocks, that I'd have wanted to hate because they weren't NEW and INNOVATIVE and SUBVERTING THINGS FROM WITHIN a few years ago. After three years (2002-2004 incl.) of trying to "keep up with the SteveMs" (no offence, SteveM! [and I don't even mean you, it just sounded better in my head]) I simply can't be arsed anymore. I get much more out of Lambchop or Wilco than... well, I don't even know anymore. iPop. I've sold a load, purged records I'll never listen to again that I bought for one single or because I felt I should have them. And that includes Man Or Astro-Man and Trail Of Dead as well as JC Chasez and Amerie, and lots of others too.

I have little interest in classical or opera or lots of other things.

I tried Beefheart once and frankly could not be arsed.

For all my talk of "listening properly" I still don't find enough time between other things to do enough of that to not feel guilty, and so do rely on the iPod and the commute. Although I still have better headphones than most.

I could carry on for ages.

Sick Mouthy (Nick Southall), Thursday, 7 September 2006 12:38 (seventeen years ago) link

Also, fucking fed up to the back teeth of popists.

Sick Mouthy (Nick Southall), Thursday, 7 September 2006 12:41 (seventeen years ago) link

Nick OTM with that first paragraph.

The thought of the new Beyonce or Justin album fills me with instant ennui (and dig my CoM cheerleading for both back in the 2003 day).

Whereas I'm looking forward to the new M Ward, the new Bonnie Prince Billy, and *whisper it* the new Junior Boys.

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Thursday, 7 September 2006 12:52 (seventeen years ago) link

the new junior boys is INCREDIBLE marcello (also isn't it out yet?)

but so is the new justin!

The Lex (The Lex), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:02 (seventeen years ago) link

Nick, get Ice Cream For Crow. Not that you have to get Beefheart but I'd be surprised if you really found that one too much like hard work.

just say no to individuality (fandango), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:03 (seventeen years ago) link

The Justin Boys. (It would improve him immeasurably.)

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:05 (seventeen years ago) link

Junior Boys is out coming Monday in the UK. HOW DO YOU "FANS" NOT KNOW THIS? Oh, because no one fucking buys records anymore, which is why little artists work on two-year cycles too.

Sick Mouthy (Nick Southall), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:06 (seventeen years ago) link

"Whereas I'm looking forward to the new M Ward, the new Bonnie Prince Billy"

"I get much more out of Lambchop or Wilco than..."


jesus, you guys really have given up. should we take you out behind the barn and shoot you?

scott seward (scott seward), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:09 (seventeen years ago) link

Right, so it's the gas chamber for everyone who doesn't subscribe unquestionably to the Pop(tim)ist party line, is it?

You stupid fucking idiot.

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:11 (seventeen years ago) link

x-post -- No, don't. Then Ryan Adams will write a song about it.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:12 (seventeen years ago) link

Well, I do go around wearing a blindfold, with one last cigarette dangling from my mouth.

xpost

mark 0 (mark 0), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:15 (seventeen years ago) link

at first they came for the lambchop fans, but i was not a lambchop fan...

scott seward (scott seward), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:16 (seventeen years ago) link

...the end.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:17 (seventeen years ago) link

Is Scott Seward a poptimist party-liner? I never got that sense before...

My tastes appear to be going in exactly the opposite direction from yours, Sick Mouthy!

except she got a little more ass (cis), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:18 (seventeen years ago) link

Cis, I like how your handle completes the thought.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:19 (seventeen years ago) link

I like to play reggaeton first thing in the morning.

Rockist_Scientist (RSLaRue), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:21 (seventeen years ago) link

xxxpost..

Speaking of jesus, here's my confession: To a much greater extent than I would like to admit, my tastes are influenced by the "praise and worship" music I heard at my parents' church between the ages of 8 and 16.

I wish there were a better reason why I prefer the beautiful/epic over the gritty/urban, but I suspect that most of the reasons I've come up with are largely a cover-up...

jackl (jackl), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:21 (seventeen years ago) link

I hate "gritty/urban." Leave it to Lambeth Council when the snow falls where it belongs.

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:23 (seventeen years ago) link

lambchop, wilco, m.ward, it all spells tedium to me. fine, you don't feel like following the charts, we all get OLD, but do you have to go in the complete oppposite direction and listen to people with absolutely no charisma who couldn't write a memorable song to save their lives?

scott seward (scott seward), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:24 (seventeen years ago) link

I actually don't mind Lambchop, FWIW. But the only song of theirs that ever sticks in my head is "All Smiles and Mariachi" and they did that one over a decade ago.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:26 (seventeen years ago) link

beyonce, rihanna, j timberlake, it all spells tedium to me. fine, you feel like following the charts, you are all YOUNG, but do you have to go in the complete oppposite direction and listen to people with absolutely no charisma who couldn't write a memorahble song to save their lives?

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:27 (seventeen years ago) link

that's "rah" as in the RAH Band, real pop, ask your dad.

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:27 (seventeen years ago) link

yeah, actually i don't hate lambchop. pleasant enough background music. it's all like one long song. same with grandaddy.

scott seward (scott seward), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:28 (seventeen years ago) link

i don't actually follow the charts. i love most beyonce singles though.

scott seward (scott seward), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:30 (seventeen years ago) link

My tastes are influenced by the fact that I live here;

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v236/njsouthall/journeytoworkpluskids038.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v236/njsouthall/journeytoworkpluskids032.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v236/njsouthall/journeytoworkpluskids060.jpg

Eskiboy doens't WORK on your iPod if you walk along a Devon seawall to get to the train station every morning. You'd look and feel like a cretin.

And Scott, as for the "tedium" and "couldn't write a memorable song" stuff, well, has it occured to you that different people like different records and that doens't make them morons or Nazis? Wilco and Lambchop are two deliberately contentious artists that I used; I could have easily said Guillemots or Midlake or Faux Pas or Patrick Wolf or whatever. Or Embrace! Or Final Fantasy or blah blah blah. But I know full-well what signifiers Wiclo carry on this board. What IS memorable or not tedious to you? People have different brains, dude.

Sick Mouthy (Nick Southall), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:30 (seventeen years ago) link

I'm also wary of stuff like House (but not necessarily Electro/Minimal stuff), especially when they ruin a perfectly good tune with some woman singing "Come into my arms/We'll be shooting in the sky/Love me till I die/Love me now forever/Sing with me and dance/Talk about romance/Shoot me in the sky/Bake an apple pie". Now I'm not exactly Arnold Schwarzenegger but that shit is pussy and not the least bit macho nor emotive. I like Belle and Sebastian and they're wimps, but at least they have interesting lyrics and can hold a pop song together but House-y stuff (as in the "Funky" pop stuff with singing) is the wimpiest music of all.
Same goes with the vast majority of modern pop R'n'B which to these ears sounds like loads of people going "Woa-wooa-wooaaah Ah Ah Wooah-Woah Ah Baaa-aaa-beee/Gimme Gimme/Love and Life-tcha!/Woah come on/Give it to me right now" I mean what is the point in having any singing if you're just going to bleat the same stock phrases over an admittedly dull plod of a beat?

wogan lenin (dog latin), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:31 (seventeen years ago) link

Eskiboy doens't WORK on your iPod if you walk along a Devon seawall to get to the train station every morning. You'd look and feel like a cretin.

What type of attitude is that? Cognitive dissonance is a brilliant thing.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:31 (seventeen years ago) link

I can't pay attention to sung lyrics (i.e. anything besides rap, I guess).

I'm kind of done with free jazz and noize-ish stuff, but I'm not feeling a lot of mainstream jazz either (esp. piano or guitar-heavy stuff).

I think reggaeton kind of sucks.

I don't listen to classical music and that makes me feel kind of dumb, musically.

I don't really like indie rock or punk rock and have never listened to Pavement, Yo La Tengo, etc. etc., but I do like the rock bands that my friends play in.

Jordan (Jordan), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:32 (seventeen years ago) link

i don't think i've ever heard rihanna. unless i didn't know who it was when i heard her. when i do tune into the top40/chart/dance/r&b radio stations, i always hear SOMETHING interesting though. but i am into the music thing for the sounds and not much else. which is why i will listen to anything. or attempt to.

scott seward (scott seward), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:34 (seventeen years ago) link

I had no interest in the charts when I was 6 or 16 or 26. And I am now 27. Music was always about how I listen, about what moves me, not about what's... I don't even know. It's about making my life better, not making it pass faster because I'm bored.

Cognitive dissonance is a brilliant thing.

Yeah but I don't always want it from music.

Sick Mouthy (Nick Southall), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:34 (seventeen years ago) link

My main problem with a lot of the Poptimist favoured stuff happens when I can audibly hear the process that's gone into the making of it, I can hear the accountants & creative directors dead hands on it and the end product feels tainted, however effervescent a face it's put on.

I have no problem suspending my disbelief where 'manufactured' pop is concerned but I DO need some amount of effortlessness in the final product to get there. Which may be rockist who knows. But I don't really like rock music that strikes me as 'meta' either so there could be something consistent in this.

just say no to individuality (fandango), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:34 (seventeen years ago) link

I mean what is the point in having any singing if you're just going to bleat the same stock phrases over an admittedly dull plod of a beat?

You see, that's what Otis Redding did, except it was the manner of his bleat which mattered, and the emotions behind it, plus the Stax beat was anything but a dull plod - I mean, Al Jackson FFS!

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:34 (seventeen years ago) link

I have only the remnants of interest in the charts really, mostly because the mindset of the people they are relevant too these days just seems stuck in the past in the mp3 age... but it doesn't stop me liking a good pop song.

just say no to individuality (fandango), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:36 (seventeen years ago) link

I have a hard time listening to certain kinds of vocals, ones that I would consider "not pretty". It sucks. I can't listen to whole schools of bands because the vox turn me off: VU, Beefheart, even Bowie to an extent. Nobody else seems to have this problem, at least in my music geek peer circle.

I also have trouble listening to music where "the drummer sucks". However, I don't feel I'm missing as much there.

Dominique (dleone), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:36 (seventeen years ago) link

i'm not going to argue/diss people here because i think it's a good and important step that they recognise these FAILINGS in themselves - this is after all a self-denunciation thread, cultural revolution stylee!

The Lex (The Lex), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:37 (seventeen years ago) link

(i myself can think of no personal attitude towards music that i think sucks. i don't listen to as much as i want to but that is because there are only so many hours in the day and so many pounds in the bank account)

The Lex (The Lex), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:38 (seventeen years ago) link

The charts are also completely fucking insane. I've read the chart rules, I've been involved in the marketing of big singles, I know how many you need to sell and the format abuse and it's just absolutely fucking insane.

I love how the poptimist Nazis never ever ever recognise that maybe, just maybe, they're being as small-minded as the people they bitch about AND THEN SOME.

Sick Mouthy (Nick Southall), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:38 (seventeen years ago) link

"What IS memorable or not tedious to you?"


lots of stuff! almost everything that isn't wilco! i want to save people with brains from wilco! cuz their is SO MUCH stuff out there that is truly memorable and vibrant and entertaining and exciting, and they have always struck me as deadly and dudly. but that's cool. yeah, we are all different. your home looks like my home.

scott seward (scott seward), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:38 (seventeen years ago) link

Dog Latin why are you expecting house to be 'macho'??

feh.. R'n'B is just pop with a bit more 'soul' (in the black sense) to me. The hardest thing to get your head around is just that there's a whole different canon of approaches to writing a sappy love song that if you've grown up an indie kid take some getting used to. Sounding like a huge r'n'b fan myself now... I don't go looking for it, but then I don't go in search of good indie rock like it actually matters these days either.. both are a little peripheral to my general tastes.

just say no to individuality (fandango), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:40 (seventeen years ago) link

and for what it's worth, i love at least 95% of the albums that marcello put up on that list site. whatever its called. the one that shows the album covers. there was a link on some thread. i own most of them.

scott seward (scott seward), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:41 (seventeen years ago) link

I love how the poptimist Nazis never ever ever recognise that maybe, just maybe, they're being as small-minded as the people they bitch about AND THEN SOME.

what? the attitude of all poptimists i know, dom and ed o apart, to the charts is basically "botherd. do people still buy cd singles?"

The Lex (The Lex), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:42 (seventeen years ago) link

Nick why don't you write a piece on the current state of the charts, (seriously) I'd be mildly curious as to an update on the state of all that BPI shenanigans in the '00s

just say no to individuality (fandango), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:42 (seventeen years ago) link

....Of course the worst failing would be to believe that there was nothing wrong with one's musical tastes and attitudes. :D

except she got a little more ass (cis), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:44 (seventeen years ago) link

"I also have trouble listening to music where "the drummer sucks". However, I don't feel I'm missing as much there."

The Rolling Stones had some cool singles.

scott seward (scott seward), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:45 (seventeen years ago) link

My main problem with a lot of the Poptimist favoured stuff happens when I can audibly hear the process that's gone into the making of it, I can hear the accountants & creative directors dead hands on it and the end product feels tainted, however effervescent a face it's put on.

And there's no indie rock or metal or nu-emo that presses these same buttons for you?

DJ Mencap (DJ Mencap), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:46 (seventeen years ago) link

actually, I don't think Charlie Watts sucks. I just think I get the fits when I *watch* him play

x-post

Dominique (dleone), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:46 (seventeen years ago) link

Fandango, yes and I think this is an argument that poptimists have been trying to justify for ages and then of course because of indie guilt, you aren't allowed to stand up and say:
"B-b-b-but can't you HEAR the studio people going 'Yeeeees, yeees Reggae-Pop is going to be veeery beeg this year Paris' and she's all like 'Okay, whatever!' and then they go 'Ah Justin, Justin, my very own Justin. You know there are still a few drops left in the Electro barrel' and he's like 'Electro? Yeh I've heard of that stuff. You mean that Beverley Hills Cop music, right?' 'Yes my pretty' and he's like 'Okay! Whatever'".
Saying that "all music is commercial and you should just be listening to the music and not what went into it" is bullcrap really. Yes, everyone wants a record deal and wants to be signed and for people to like their music, but when that music wasn't what the artist even intended in the first place (do you really think it was Paris's idea to do a dub vocal over a version of Kingston Town?) and not only that but has then been pushed, pulled, reformed, stretched, rebranded, remarketed, appraised, terraformed, reappraised, repackaged, dumbed down and done up, no amount of intellectualisation or "listening to just the music" will make this taste any better than that Kraft lego-cheese you get in microwave burgers. Sure, kids love that kind of cheese and adults will eat it as a kind of punishment/treat but you can't really go round extolling it's virtues and eating it all the time. And I agree there is something disturbing about straight grown men getting excited about a new teen-pop act.

wogan lenin (dog latin), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:49 (seventeen years ago) link

xxposts (well, on preview dog latin is right here) - I kind of agree about blaring cheese vocal House cliches fwiw, I suspect for a lot of people they DO just serve the same function as another instrument/drum and get deliberately limited w/r/t how much they can "express" emotionally.

The trouble is the flipside of that for a lot of house people seems to be the deathly dull purism and real ale soul/jazz/funkateer-ness of the "been there done that I NOW KNOW MYSELF FULLY" tedious worthiness crowd.

In the middle I guess would be Inaya Day.. who I can get along with fine.

just say no to individuality (fandango), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:51 (seventeen years ago) link

My main problem with a lot of the Poptimist favoured stuff happens when I can audibly hear the process that's gone into the making of it, I can hear the accountants & creative directors dead hands on it and the end product feels tainted, however effervescent a face it's put on.

And there's no indie rock or metal or nu-emo that presses these same buttons for you?

-- DJ Mencap

no, there's tons!

and I'm not even going to start on emo/nu-compression-rock (i.e. whatever the hell kids punk about to lately).

just say no to individuality (fandango), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:52 (seventeen years ago) link

You see, that's what Otis Redding did, except it was the manner of his bleat which mattered, and the emotions behind it, plus the Stax beat was anything but a dull plod - I mean, Al Jackson FFS!

But what I find with most older R'n'B and Soul is that the songs actually touch me and don't just contain empty paens to nothing at all. "He's Mistra Know It All", "Ain't No Sunshine", "What's Going On" to name but three which actually have well thought out lyrical content. And although my knowledge of Otis is pretty slim, as you say it is the manner of his singing which matters whereas many of the female (and male) R'n'B groups coming out are carbon-copying what has gone before with the emotion disappearing each time.

wogan lenin (dog latin), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:54 (seventeen years ago) link

Heh. "Forgive me, Father..."

Most of the sins that I feel that I had when I was younger I think I've shed. I used to consider myself an elitist gladly, while listening to the metal/industrial hybrids of the '90s (KMFDM, Stabbing Westward, etc.), something that embarrasses me now when I go back to listen to those bands.
But what I'd feel most sucks now is that I always feel like I have a really superficial understanding of music, especially music theory as it relates to the music I like. I like a lot of skronk jazz or weird psych or even radio pop, but I frequently stumble on explaining why I like it. I also don't like that people around me still seem to think of me as a snob when I try really hard not to be. I think that I give things a fair listen (though I'll also confess that I rarely give music the type of deep alienated attention that I did when I was younger), and then either I like 'em or I don't, and I don't ever feel like I'm telling other people that they can't like something (though I will admit that when I write my column that I tend to be overly-dismissive some times), but it's rare that I actively hate something. Far more often I'm just bored by it. I've been told it's because I'm not a musician that I can't understand why Wilco is so great, but frankly, they (especially recently) just bore the hell out of me. I kinda wish that I got it and could get the same thrill that other people seem to, and that's a recurring longing. I remember feeling it when hearing about Notwists' Neon Golden. The album just bores me, and I'd like to be able to understand what other people get out of it, but I can't. And again, I've been told that this is because I don't play an instrument, so I don't understand how music is constructed. And I worry, because more and more music that I see lauded feels the same way for me: not bad, just unexciting. I get a thrill out of Christina's No Other Man, but the whole Paris Hilton album leaves me cold. I want to be able to hear it the way Lex does, but I can't seem to.

js (honestengine), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:58 (seventeen years ago) link

I love how the poptimist Nazis never ever ever recognise that maybe, just maybe, they're being as small-minded as the people they bitch about AND THEN SOME.

OTM. Yes, extreme Rockism is tedious, I don't count myself as Rockist because I listen to almost everything other than "commercial" pop and R'n'B, but a lot of the Poptimists do literally go around like a gestapo. The Lily Allen thread is absolutely incredible - I still don't know if some people were joking or not about her not being "real" and then banging on about Girls Aloud being "real". I mean, that's just Rockist ideology superimposed onto pop isn't it?

wogan lenin (dog latin), Thursday, 7 September 2006 13:59 (seventeen years ago) link

What about stuff like Erykah Badu DL? Okay it's nu-soul rather than r'n'b but the lyrics seem to have more of a personal touch there no?

(I sort of agree about the carbon-copying but not to the point where I'd feel comfy making it a blanket statement, as I say I don't listen to that much r'n'b!)

just say no to individuality (fandango), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:01 (seventeen years ago) link

Dog Latin why are you expecting house to be 'macho'??

"Macho" is the wrong word. I want to say something politically incorrect like "House is for girls and gays" to paraphrase matey-boy upthread.

wogan lenin (dog latin), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:01 (seventeen years ago) link

fandango, I haven't knowingly heard Erykah. I quite like the odd Destiny's Child track because 1. the production was refreshing for its time and 2. many of the songs had actual subjects - although I wasn't particularly sympathetic to the femme-chauvanism of "Bills Bills Bills", I could appreciate it for not cloning all the "C'mere baybee I luuuuuu--woooaah--vve yooouuuu" blandness of a vast amount of R'n'B acts.

wogan lenin (dog latin), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:04 (seventeen years ago) link

Destiny's Child just seemed to get emotionally colder and colder as they went on (Beyonce has hardly reversed the trend either) to me. Even something like Bug-A-Boo sounded fun, despite being a whole song about telling some ex/failed date to just get lost.

just say no to individuality (fandango), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:08 (seventeen years ago) link

I find things which have an overt process involved in them more 'honest' than things which claim to be direct and straightforward and authentic! And weirdly enough this is because I'm totally indie - because I think something occluded is closer to reality, to how humans relate to their emotions, than something full-facing (that talking around a statement of emotion is more affecting than straight-out saying it, because it's more believable. the same reason that I don't trust ballads all that well - that i trust bright eyes' melodramatic confessional more than cat power's direct version).

I know that it's been through the consumerist mill and therefore I can take that into account in listening, therefore I don't have to treat it with any exaggerated respect that might get in the way of my loving it or taking part in it. I can get my claws in and tear it open and build myself a nest inside and make up my own ideas about what it means, and who for. All of that fuss and bother happened so that I could have a relationship with this one song! It's pretty beautiful, when you think about it.

Also, dudes, it just sounds better.

except she got a little more ass (cis), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:09 (seventeen years ago) link

dog latin - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R5nFAXY_4Yw

still not really sticking up for r'n'b with this tho'... main difference with nu-soul (I think that's what ILM calls it ;) ) stuff is it doesn't have the _steel_ in the production which I suspect also helps to dehumanize the lyrics for a lot of people.

just say no to individuality (fandango), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:12 (seventeen years ago) link

So modern pop/R&B is the exact equivalent of Wire-approved "avant-garde" music - it's all about the process; forget the end product.

The probable reason why more people don't confess to being lukewarm about contemporary R&B is fear of the racist card being played.

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:16 (seventeen years ago) link

Marcello, the end product and the process are inextricable, no matter what the music.

except she got a little more ass (cis), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:20 (seventeen years ago) link

I find things which have an overt process involved in them more 'honest' than things which claim to be direct and straightforward and authentic! And weirdly enough this is because I'm totally indie - because I think something occluded is closer to reality, to how humans relate to their emotions, than something full-facing (that talking around a statement of emotion is more affecting than straight-out saying it, because it's more believable. the same reason that I don't trust ballads all that well - that i trust bright eyes' melodramatic confessional more than cat power's direct version).

I know that it's been through the consumerist mill and therefore I can take that into account in listening, therefore I don't have to treat it with any exaggerated respect that might get in the way of my loving it or taking part in it. I can get my claws in and tear it open and build myself a nest inside and make up my own ideas about what it means, and who for. All of that fuss and bother happened so that I could have a relationship with this one song! It's pretty beautiful, when you think about it.

Also, dudes, it just sounds better.

haha this is so ridiculously otm and also the entire text of an entirely separate email discussion i've been having today!!!!

The Lex (The Lex), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:21 (seventeen years ago) link

who with?

except she got a little more ass (cis), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:22 (seventeen years ago) link

Me. No, wait...

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:23 (seventeen years ago) link

Marcello, the end product and the process are inextricable, no matter what the music.

I disagree.

What matters is what the LISTENER gets out of the end product, regardless of what the artist put into it, and the process by which s/he did so.

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:24 (seventeen years ago) link

But what the listener gets out of the end product is coloured by their knowledge of what the artist put into it and the process by which they did so!

except she got a little more ass (cis), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:25 (seventeen years ago) link

bollox

just say no to individuality (fandango), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:27 (seventeen years ago) link

sorry, that was unconstructive... let me have a think.

just say no to individuality (fandango), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:28 (seventeen years ago) link

who with?

haha, sophie h

The Lex (The Lex), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:28 (seventeen years ago) link

Not necessarily (xpost x 3).

When I listen to "Good Vibrations" I don't think about Mike Love flicking wet towels at the back of Brian's head, nor of the state of Brian's mind at the time.

When I listen to "Be My Baby" I don't think about its singer being kept a prisoner in her own home by the guy who produced the record.

You impose your own interpretation of what these records mean as combinations of sounds, as unions of words and music, so subjectively it doesn't matter how much blood was spilt in their making.

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:28 (seventeen years ago) link

Biggest thing that sucks: My continued reticence to balance more my focus on both stuff old and new/recent.

I'm not sure it matters to me anymore that I don't like much new club dance music tho this was bothering me for some time.

Doglatin's posts still kinda depress me tho.

Konal Doddz (blueski), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:31 (seventeen years ago) link

Marcello, the end product and the process are inextricable, no matter what the music.

I disagree.

Me too. Absolutely without question.

Konal Doddz (blueski), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:32 (seventeen years ago) link

You impose your own interpretation of what these records mean as combinations of sounds, as unions of words and music, so subjectively it doesn't matter how much blood was spilt in their making.

you do both. it depends on the context in which you hear the record. if you hear eg 'stars are blind' on the radio without knowing who is singing it, obv you will hear it is a good/bad record and this reaction will be 100% divorced from your sense of who paris hilton is. but that's NOT the way we hear most records - with most of them, even if we're not coming at it with the pre-listening baggage of what we think of paris hilton as a celebrity, we will be coming at it with some...expectation which has nothing to do with the actual sound. this could be "last time i heard this artist hey sounded like this" or "last time i read about this artist she was splitting up with her boyfriend" or "what i've heard about this album makes me excited to hear it" or...any amount of information which is already in our brains about anything to do with the product.

The Lex (The Lex), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:34 (seventeen years ago) link

This inauthenticity as being somehow MORE authentic than something which feels authentic (for -whatever- reason) argument is totally Orwellian, and still baffling.

just say no to individuality (fandango), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:34 (seventeen years ago) link

gah.. not helping. carry on.

just say no to individuality (fandango), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:36 (seventeen years ago) link

oh, I thought of another one: I tend to think most orchestral music is a bit rubbish. but I like a lot of solo and smaller ensemble classical music, which keeps me from feeling like too much of a mouth-breather.

bernard snow (sixteen sergeants), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:37 (seventeen years ago) link

I heard "Stars Are Blind" on the radio without knowing who it was or what "inspired" it and it still sounded rubbish.

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:37 (seventeen years ago) link

Sorry re cis's point, I think the process is v important to the artist but needn't be at all to the listener i.e. there are songs old and new I would say I LOVE even though all I know is what they're called and the artist credit. If I haven't gone and found out more about them, how they were made etc. is it not real love of the song? It might just be a very simplistic love...infatuation?

Konal Doddz (blueski), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:38 (seventeen years ago) link

When I listen to "Good Vibrations" I don't think about Mike Love flicking wet towels at the back of Brian's head, nor of the state of Brian's mind at the time.

but surely when you see Brian perform Smile you're influenced by knowing what went before?

If Syd Barrett had decided to release a record 5 year ago wouldn't you approach it with more than "I wonder if Syd's new record's any good" in your head.

When you reviewed Aerial didn't you have "12 years in the making" in your head as you played it for the first time?

Onimo (GerryNemo), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:44 (seventeen years ago) link

No. I had "four years of me as a walking ghost" in my head.

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:45 (seventeen years ago) link

"What matters is what the LISTENER gets out of the end product, regardless of what the artist put into it, and the process by which s/he did so."

totally true.

scott seward (scott seward), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:46 (seventeen years ago) link

Unless it's an artist I know nothing about I can't help but be influenced by their history, attitudes, actions, interviews, etc. I realise this prevents me from listening impartially but who wants to be impartial?

If I'm aware of what went into a record I can't ignore that when I hear the record.

Onimo (GerryNemo), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:47 (seventeen years ago) link

"You impose your own interpretation of what these records mean as combinations of sounds, as unions of words and music, so subjectively it doesn't matter how much blood was spilt in their making."

By 'these records' do you mean those two specific records, or records of their type which in your opinion are Great, or all records?

I don't think about the artist story behind each record (I have real problems with relating songs to a person's private life), that's not what I meant, I'm sorry I was confusing. It's just that I don't find the process which goes into producing a manufactured-pop record any more distracting than the process than goes into a different record; knowledge of the existence of both affects my listening, and I know it, and I'm fine with that. In fact I often find it less distracting with manufactured pop, because it's overt, it's not a shimmer at the corner of your eye that disappears and reappears when you turn your head.

xposts i know fandango! it's weird and wrong and confusing, but to me it doesn't appear backwards!

except she got a little more ass (cis), Thursday, 7 September 2006 14:49 (seventeen years ago) link

Wow, what a strange thread! I keep reading this "poptimist" word and not recognising anything said about it.

Anyway, I am actually, honestly, very happy indeed with my musical tastes and attitudes: I don't think there's anything that sucks about them.

Tom (Groke), Thursday, 7 September 2006 15:02 (seventeen years ago) link

Unless it's an artist I know nothing about I can't help but be influenced by their history, attitudes, actions, interviews, etc. I realise this prevents me from listening impartially but who wants to be impartial?

this is why I make it a point not to read interviews before I hear someone's music for the first time. I don't need to know anything about them or how the record was made in order to find out whether I like it or not. it's better to approach new art with a completely open mind if at all possible.

guanoman (mister the guanoman), Thursday, 7 September 2006 15:05 (seventeen years ago) link

"Anyway, I am actually, honestly, very happy indeed with my musical tastes and attitudes: I don't think there's anything that sucks about them."

same here! there isn't anything i won't listen to. i love listening. i am always constantly amazed and surprised by stuff at the ripe old age of 37 going on 38. i am open to anything. i will end up liking m.ward and wilco someday. actually, i don't have anything against m.ward either. just not very exciting to me. i poke fun at the guys at the record store cuz they are always listening to those dreary guys. iron&wine, buckner, ward, ad infintum. they have their place! like when i'm record shopping.

scott seward (scott seward), Thursday, 7 September 2006 15:14 (seventeen years ago) link

fandango - that erykah badu thing didn't move me at all. very samey all the way through, typical late-90s slow-jam cali-production. i tried to pay attention to the lyrics but they didn't surmount to all that much and i stopped trying after a few verses as they were very "You do this and I do that/You say this and I say that" and it sounded like someone talking to their lover about very generic issues.

(Sorry).

Re: current discussion. I think one of the problems with being a massive music fan is that it can be hard to step away from the picture and listen to music on its own merits. The first single I ever bought when I was 9 years old was Pat'n'Mick's "Shake Your Party Down" (or something). I didn't know it was a cover version. I didn't know who Pat Sharp was other than he presented "Fun House" on CITV. I had no idea who Mick Brown was either. I just liked the songs. Since then I've become increasingly addicted to music. I have also learnt a bunch of instruments and music programs. I know how much effort it is to try and form a band and write decent songs that don't suck and therefore my respect for the creative and musical processes increases. It was only, for instance, that someone pointed out to me the exact scope of Brian Wilson's genius that I began appreciating the Beach Boys and learning about the different thought processes and conflicts going on on each album. Previous to that I'd seen them as a cheesy worthless 60's boyband with a couple of silly tunes about surfing.

wogan lenin (dog latin), Thursday, 7 September 2006 15:40 (seventeen years ago) link

The Pat#n#Mick song was "Use It Up and Wear It Out".

wogan lenin (dog latin), Thursday, 7 September 2006 15:42 (seventeen years ago) link

I'm not sure there is a such thing as "authenticity" any longer. everything is a copy of a copy of a copy of a representation of (an assumed) reality. artists are influenced by previous artists, and on and on. authenticity is like a wet dream.

marbles (marbles), Thursday, 7 September 2006 15:58 (seventeen years ago) link

Ah, you just ripped that off.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 7 September 2006 15:59 (seventeen years ago) link

I can't imagine hating my own taste. That does not compute.

deej.. (deej..), Thursday, 7 September 2006 16:24 (seventeen years ago) link

hating ANYTHING about it really. I mean, sometimes I wish I could focus my energies on more music than I do, but thats more of an issue of 24 hours in a day and only so much time to spend.

deej.. (deej..), Thursday, 7 September 2006 16:25 (seventeen years ago) link

Though I appreciate the uplifting and the intellectual, I also seem to respond really well to the crass and to the goofy. But all of that is good ... an open mind is a fertile land. Sorta ... :-)

O'Connor (OConnorScribe), Thursday, 7 September 2006 16:25 (seventeen years ago) link

I hate everything my friends like. :(

Dan I. (Dan I.), Thursday, 7 September 2006 16:33 (seventeen years ago) link

I don't think there's anything that "sucks" about my taste, I just know that the likes of The Lex do!

Also, not listening to "pop" does NOT = listening to fucking emo, are you 9?!

Sick Mouthy (Nick Southall), Thursday, 7 September 2006 16:55 (seventeen years ago) link

hi dere i hate my tastes dey are borne out of fear

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Thursday, 7 September 2006 16:59 (seventeen years ago) link

"authenticity is like a wet dream."

so authenticity comes in the middle of the night, while you're sleeping, and you wake up finding its sticky traces in the sheets?

latebloomer (latebloomer), Thursday, 7 September 2006 17:03 (seventeen years ago) link

man i was fucking REAL at 11

latebloomer (latebloomer), Thursday, 7 September 2006 17:04 (seventeen years ago) link

"authenticity is like a wet dream."

so authenticity comes in the middle of the night, while you're sleeping, and you wake up finding its sticky traces in the sheets?

yeah. actually.

marbles (marbles), Thursday, 7 September 2006 17:53 (seventeen years ago) link

Also, not listening to "pop" does NOT = listening to fucking emo, are you 9?!

Was that at me? I can't see anything else that it might reference on here. It wasn't what I meant, I literally just wondered if cis was singling "pop" as a genre out for overproduction or cynicism or whatever. A lot of people do

DJ Mencap (DJ Mencap), Thursday, 7 September 2006 17:59 (seventeen years ago) link

What sucks most about my musical taste is that I no longer actively hate any kind of music whatsoever, and very few actual musical acts. I think this is making it difficult for me as a critic, because I'm not really sure if I have a yardstick any more or if I just kind of like everything and have misgivings about some individual things. I'm certainly less fun as a contributor to ILM than I used to be when I LOVED and HATED certain things.

Haikunym (Haikunym), Thursday, 7 September 2006 18:02 (seventeen years ago) link

Maybe you should start threads like: "I don't like these bands much, what other bands might I actually hate?"

Rockist_Scientist (RSLaRue), Thursday, 7 September 2006 18:05 (seventeen years ago) link

Surely, LOVING something is not the flipside/correlative of HATING things, Matt.

Tim Ellison (Tim Ellison), Thursday, 7 September 2006 18:37 (seventeen years ago) link

Matt, can you try to stick to writing only about things you have strong feelings about, even limiting it to things that you find really moving? (I guess that might not be practical.)

Rockist_Scientist (RSLaRue), Thursday, 7 September 2006 18:38 (seventeen years ago) link

"(i myself can think of no personal attitude towards music that i think sucks. i don't listen to as much as i want to but that is because there are only so many hours in the day and so many pounds in the bank account)

-- The Lex (alex.macpherso...), September 7th, 2006."

He's PROUD to not have any idea who David Byrne is! I guess "willful ignorance" is not a "personal attitude."

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 7 September 2006 21:25 (seventeen years ago) link

He's PROUD to not have any idea who David Byrne is!

Fuck, I'd be glad not to know who David Byrne is!

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 7 September 2006 21:26 (seventeen years ago) link

a world with out geggy tah is no world i want to live in.

M@tt He1geson: Real Name, No Gimmicks (Matt Helgeson), Thursday, 7 September 2006 21:41 (seventeen years ago) link

dammit all my sucky attitudes are spoken for already >:(

just say no to individuality (fandango), Thursday, 7 September 2006 21:45 (seventeen years ago) link

The problem with my taste is that it's too refined. I barely like anything. As I get older I find more and more reasons to dislike things. I should get a more rewarding hobby really.

Bidfurd (Bidfurd), Thursday, 7 September 2006 22:02 (seventeen years ago) link

try collecting monocles, guvner.

M@tt He1geson: Real Name, No Gimmicks (Matt Helgeson), Thursday, 7 September 2006 22:05 (seventeen years ago) link

I was considering Gardening.

Bidfurd (Bidfurd), Thursday, 7 September 2006 22:11 (seventeen years ago) link

that's what gardeners are for.

M@tt He1geson: Real Name, No Gimmicks (Matt Helgeson), Thursday, 7 September 2006 22:26 (seventeen years ago) link

My total boredom regarding opera and the great majority of pre-20th century classical music.

This is me too.

Danny Aioli (Rock Hardy), Thursday, 7 September 2006 22:38 (seventeen years ago) link

I'm fine with my taste as it is. The only thing that sucks is that I can't stand quite a lot of modern chart pop, which means that it's difficult to go into a store or supermarket while the PA system is playing shite music. If they're playing something I like, it's fine. But then they'll switch to some crappy pap and URGH! >_

GLC (ZakAce), Thursday, 7 September 2006 22:52 (seventeen years ago) link

http://www.gofeet.info/images/cover_large/feet1216_cover_large.jpg

Run Ruud Run (Ken L), Thursday, 7 September 2006 23:04 (seventeen years ago) link

http://www.geekculture.dk/bedler/auto/1099337185cap005.jpg

Run Ruud Run (Ken L), Thursday, 7 September 2006 23:08 (seventeen years ago) link

He's got the right profile, I must confess.

Run Ruud Run (Ken L), Thursday, 7 September 2006 23:12 (seventeen years ago) link

here is who i was listening to today:

eugene wilde
firefall
vic damone
opus seven
the beck family
apache
j.c. philips
2 live crew
southern contemporary rock ensemble
dave valentin
jo march
kay armen
axe
t.c. curtis
sister sledge
e.q.
john anderson
new edition
ray gomez
snapper
nick straker band
herbie hancock
teddy pendergrass
randy crawford
george benson
john o'banion
garrison & van dyke
whitesnake
betty madigan
the godz (70's version)
little anthony
guy
b.j. thomas
ian lloyd
angel city
bruce roberts
spyro gyra
scott jarrett
jonathan edwards
ronnie laws
don rondo
lazy racer
al caiola
heat
the dramatics
chris rea
the will bronson singers
barbara law
toad hall
bad company
jewel blanch
tom sparks
point blank
spider
phil davis
spinners
nantucket
jimmy roselli
billy swan
warren storm
jeff cannata
pete hanley
georgio
the jets
john davis & the monster orchestra
millie jackson
lionel cartwright
loose ends
the right choice
tommy tutone
dr.strut
leon ware
alfonzo surrett
j.silver ("(Baby Let Me) Bang Your Box". love that one. especially all the mentions of mr.bill. oh noooooooooo!)
candi
charly mc clain
jo jo zep & the falcons
zed
danny davis & the nashville brass
jubai
gary bonner
kool & the gang
dolores hawkins
thunder
peter brown
shawn phillips
the greenwood singers
mary lou turner
jonathan mars
liner
hilly michaels
taffy mcelroy
the whites
tasha thomas
wild cherry
sharon ridley
don king
love committee
booker t
bunny debarge
frank marino & mahogany rush
sheela conroy
round trip
aquarian dream
jackie de shannon
sounds of sunshine
cugini
marion worth
the blue boys
googie and tom coppola
face dancer (not to be confused with face dancers! who i love!)
southern exposure
mtume
earl scruggs revue
sabu
tantrum
the inmates
sweat band
thrills
buddy miles regiment
fotomaker
the kings
the motors
starbuck
the chocolate jam company
mass production
clout
rona
dickey lee
robin trower
the limit
kathy zory
mother's finest
court pickett
lonnie youngblood
andy kim
style
blancmange
gabriel
nancy martinez
jona lewie

scott seward (scott seward), Thursday, 7 September 2006 23:49 (seventeen years ago) link

well, not EVERYTHING i was listening to, but, you know, my point being that taste is overrated.

scott seward (scott seward), Thursday, 7 September 2006 23:49 (seventeen years ago) link

the problem as i see it, scott, is that "those guys" you were talking about upthread really do vary wildly in quality & lumping M. Ward in with Wilco really does damn him before you've really had the chance to listen to him (and he's terribly good) but hell, who cares, you can't give everything time of day

jed_ (jed), Friday, 8 September 2006 00:00 (seventeen years ago) link

this week though, for the most part, i am all about randy pie, randyandy, trefethen, and dane donohue. (lovers of steely dan need that dane donohue album from 1978.)

scott seward (scott seward), Friday, 8 September 2006 00:01 (seventeen years ago) link

i have heard m.ward! and i said i don't have a problem with him up there somewhere. he's okay. just not somebody i would listen to on my own.

scott seward (scott seward), Friday, 8 September 2006 00:02 (seventeen years ago) link

i'm trying to think of a modern singer/songwriter type that i really enjoy. hmmmm...i bought the new bob dylan album! um, maybe being a red house painters fan kinda ruins me for other dreary dudes.

scott seward (scott seward), Friday, 8 September 2006 00:06 (seventeen years ago) link

do you not like smog?

jed_ (jed), Friday, 8 September 2006 00:07 (seventeen years ago) link

Having not read all 2,952 other answers, my main problem is that there's not enough time to hear everything I would possibly enjoy. Most of my listening nowadays is from non-Western musics, and delving into entire parallel histories is so frustrating from a lifespan standpoint. Because for every piece I enjoy by, say, Umm Kulthum, there's probably ten or twenty other obscure artists or recordings from Egypt's musical history that would slay me, if only I had conscious access to them.

Myke. (Myke Weiskopf), Friday, 8 September 2006 00:24 (seventeen years ago) link

"do you not like smog?"

i like the funeral song. that has to be his best song. isn't it? it's undeniable. i can live without him for the most part though.

scott seward (scott seward), Friday, 8 September 2006 00:36 (seventeen years ago) link

Because for every piece I enjoy by, say, Umm Kulthum, there's probably ten or twenty other obscure artists or recordings from Egypt's musical history that would slay me, if only I had conscious access to them.

Maybe, maybe not. She's pretty exceptional. Also, in the golden age of Egyptian popular music, there were always just a few extremely exceptional singers at the topic of the pyramid (as it were). Have you see that Topic compilation of Egyptian female singers (from the 1920s/30s, I think it was)? Sorry to swoop down as soon as her name came up. Anyway, I guess your larger point stands about unpacking the history of music from other cultures.

Rockist_Scientist (RSLaRue), Friday, 8 September 2006 00:44 (seventeen years ago) link

"that has to be his best song. isn't it?"

nowhere near.

jed_ (jed), Friday, 8 September 2006 00:46 (seventeen years ago) link

really? that's a good song.

scott seward (scott seward), Friday, 8 September 2006 00:51 (seventeen years ago) link

Marcello, the end product and the process are inextricable, no matter what the music.

--(cis)

Well, literally, yes. To the extent this is true, though, it's mere tautology. And if you mean that, therefore, one must consider process in considering the end product, I disagree totally, utterly and completely.

M. V. (M.V.), Friday, 8 September 2006 01:58 (seventeen years ago) link

I'm still laughing at "are you 9?!!"

wogan lenin (dog latin), Friday, 8 September 2006 08:19 (seventeen years ago) link

I think I'm too dismissive of a lot of the British indie rock stuff that gets reported in the NME. Granted, the whole affair of that kind of reportage irks me a lot and for me I see it as a bunch of faceless bands with little musical ability, poor songwriting, far too many influences and no originality, playing exactly the same music as I could hear from any other band in the local pub except they're somehow elevated to meteorlogical status by this one paper. What is the essential difference between Babyshambles and Oasis? Therefore as soon as the Killers or Franz or Strokes or Arctic Monkeys come on the radio, my gut instinct is to stop listening because these bands do not deserve the hype they receive.
That said, my girlfriend was telling me about how much she enjoyed the lyrics to "Mr Brightside" and explained what they were about. I really enjoyed "22 Grand Job" but only until someone told me they really liked it first. The odd Franz song comes on the radio now and then and now the fuss about them is over, I actually start getting into the mindlessness of it all. The Futureheads - yes I'm not going to prize your version of "Hounds Of Love" above Kate Bush, but good job all the same. Arctic Monkeys - ooh how I hate thee! You stand for everything I hate because you're just crap. But fuck me do you sometimes come out with some gems and your guitar sound is pretty smashing.

I still hate that kind of music, more because the hype is generally undeserved, but I feel that sometimes I can miss out on a perfectly good song because of this.

wogan lenin (dog latin), Friday, 8 September 2006 08:33 (seventeen years ago) link

Not really much, but I should have been more critical towards some of the most cheesy 80s stuff that I probably like for nostalgic reasons only. I mean, it is almost like anything that was on the hitlists in the first half of the 80s, and has prominent synths, I will like. Even if it is rubbish , and nowhere near the quality of "Dare" or "Construction Time Again".

Geir Hongro (GeirHong), Friday, 8 September 2006 09:08 (seventeen years ago) link

but I should have been more critical towards some of the most cheesy 80s stuff

I'm sure we've all got these blind spots: I loose all judgement with 1955-60 rockabilly and 1980-85 American underground stuff. Everthing on Sun, Chess or smaller lables of the time I like, and with the latter era, anything on Slash/SST/AT etc I'll like.

bendy (bendy), Friday, 8 September 2006 16:17 (seventeen years ago) link

I really wish I could get into '50s rock 'n' roll... I've tried from different angles, but it hasn't hit me yet (I'm sure something will make it click at some point).

I can identify with all the folks wishing they were into an even more diverse slate - there are tons of genres and styles I want to dig, but don't (yet)... but I don't worry about it too much. I've been exposed to stuff, often by great sources, and it just hasn't taken hold... that's just me, no big deal. Over a lifetime, there's plenty of time for more to "click"... I'm actually trying to focus on revisiting and appreciating all the music I already have, getting back into stuff I've lost touch with, etc.

I'm at WORK, Otto! (samjeff), Friday, 8 September 2006 16:36 (seventeen years ago) link

I don't get the first song on Special Beat Service

zaxxon25 (zaxxon25), Friday, 8 September 2006 16:36 (seventeen years ago) link

I thought this thread would be about Dave Wakeling.

Steve Shasta (Steve Shasta), Friday, 8 September 2006 16:37 (seventeen years ago) link

The suck factor that goes along with my musical taste probably have to be along the lines of the, I like too many things neg-out. But the problem is not this specifically; it is not that I don't not like enough to discern what is good, it is just that (especially these past few years) there is such a variety OF great music out there, all across whatever the genre, era, and it (at least, now) is so accessible. So, I love it all, I love music, I love it as a medium for personal expression, I love it as trashy pop music, I love the sort of sound that anyone chooses to create out of whatever 'why,' whether it be political or to suit a specific mood, to rep PG County and College Park after dark, to drone on with atonal madness on because everyone needs a thinkpiece or something, to tell me that it wasn't actually so wholesome back then, to say something, to say nothing much louder, whatever.
But I have found too many things that qualify as stimulating music in some sort of way, so now I own too many things. So, as I'm listening to one thing, suddenly my mood will shift. I find connections and history within a certain piece and want to see if the songs match up. or I'm just antsy, whatever. And so I find myself skipgoing on the mp3 player, CD deck, whatever to get to the next song. Even though I might have been enjoying that track.
30 seconds of this, a minute and a half of that.
I guess some guzzly part of me wants it all at once. (and this is what the current incarnation of 'mix all the songs together' DJwhatever Girltalk seemed good for. and that semimeticulousness wasn't underwhelming, it's just, the songs got pretty tired just after one spin.)
And it stems from the fact that I've refined my musical tastes enough to know what I like, and seek it out. Bit apparently refined also mean, has opened my mind to enjoy specific parts of everything.
I wish I had stuck to thinking that any sort of Top 40 music sucks all the good braincells out of your head. or that techno is mostly for hyperactive 12 year olds.
Then maybe my playlist would be significantly minimalized and I could actually listen to those good CDs more than twice, get to know it like a good friend instead giving half a wave to several the attractive passerby. or something.
Anyhow. Confession, listening to everything all over the place but barely til the end.

mox twelve (Mox twleve), Friday, 8 September 2006 21:17 (seventeen years ago) link

and, not to say the top forty and techno takes up a lot of space in my collection, but, just whatever examples. I hope it's not redundant what I said, probably not too significant. I didn't go through the whole thread.

mox twelve (Mox twleve), Friday, 8 September 2006 21:22 (seventeen years ago) link

1) I can really cop an attitude about jam bands like Phish, the Dead, DMB, etc, etc - it doesn't make sense to me as a musican that I don't appreciate (and, in some cases, I actively dislike) "musicianly" music. The same goes for pop-jazz or jazz fusiony stuff (notable exception: I absolutely love Steely Dan).

2) I have a bit of a hair trigger about people who insist on dissing hip-hop. Even though I don't listen to nearly as much rap as I used to, it's been an undeniable influence on my personal musical aesthetic, and I get very frustrated with people who roll out the same anti-rap arguments again & again. I always end up thinking: "It's been nearly 30 years since 'Rapper's Delight' and you're still whining about hip-hop? Either accept that it's not going away (and, maybe, find something to like about it), or kindly shut the fuck up."

3) Sometimes I can't tell when people are enjoying things ironically or in earnest, and it has the potential to completely fuck up my vibe for the night. I was at a bar a few nights ago, waiting for an acqaintance's band to go on, when the resident DJ dropped Lisa Lisa & The Cult Jam's "I Wonder If I Take You Home" (classic), much to the delight of the early-twentysomething crowd. And I was too busy trying to figure out if people were dancing because they liked the song, or because "HA HA, OMG THE EIGHTIES" to have a good time myself.

Tantrum The Cat (Tantrum The Cat), Saturday, 9 September 2006 19:07 (seventeen years ago) link

it doesn't make sense to me as a musican that I don't appreciate (and, in some cases, I actively dislike) "musicianly" music.

Then again, maybe you're annoyed because they have all the training but can't do a damn memorable thing with it, much. (A stance I fully appreciate.)

Ned Raggett (Ned), Saturday, 9 September 2006 19:55 (seventeen years ago) link

Ned OTM. (The reason Steely Dan work for me is that the songs are impeccably written, and not merely a backdrop for endless soloing. I can't say that about a lot of the fusion and jam band stuff I've heard. Of course, if anyone is willing to change my mind, drop me a line.)

Tantrum The Cat (Tantrum The Cat), Monday, 11 September 2006 12:25 (seventeen years ago) link

Larry Carlton on Gaucho to thread (no bad thing, but there is a bit of endless soloing going on there)...

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Monday, 11 September 2006 12:50 (seventeen years ago) link

If anything, I'm happier about my musical tastes and attitudes as I get older. I'm 34, and I listen to a much wider variety of music than I ever have. I subscribe to the simple theory that every genre of music has something good to offer.

I still have a few faults though:

- I've been pretty knee-jerk anti-indie over the past few years.
- I'm prone to dismiss anything with hype surrounding it.
- I don't follow Hip-Hop or R&B, even though I know there is plenty of stuff I would like.
- I don't spend time the time getting to intimately know a record like I used to. Too much surface level listening of a wide variety of records, when I should be reaping the rewards contained in the gems that truly "hit" me.
- I'm an opinionated bastard when it comes to music, so I have to be careful discussing music with the majority of people I know. I mostly enjoy discussing music with other opinionated bastards who can quantify their opinions.

Brooker Buckingham (Brooker B), Monday, 11 September 2006 14:33 (seventeen years ago) link

I can't imagine hating my own taste. That does not compute.

-- deej.. (clublonel...), September 7th, 2006.

No Catholic upbringing.

hi dere i hate my tastes dey are borne out of fear
-- Tim Ellison (thefriendlyfriendlybubbl...), September 7th, 2006.

Catholic upbringing.

I overthink music - I can't just relax and enjoy a piece of music, the mind's always on overdrive analyzing it. I historically contextualize music (dud?) - imagining its relationship to the time it was made, the artist's discography, impact on others.

Everything you need to know about authenticity comes out of the speakers. But when I was a teenager Tim Cronin taught me the sacred art of being able to tell whether a record sucks or not by looking at its cover, and some small part of me still belives in such arcane witchcraft.

I'm indie-schizo. I find M Ward, Elliott Smith, Iron & Wine, Devendra Banheart, and Bright Eyes boring. I've tried and failed several times to listen to a Wilco album all the way through. But I'm a sucker for oddballs and wackos like Marc Eitzel, Cat Power, Antony, Joanna Newsom, Faun Fables, Daniel Johnston. I like Neko Case, Arcade Fire, and Destroyer, but not The New Pornographers. I don't like Pavement but thought the first Strokes was a good listen. Huh?

I think in terms of "ultimate expressions" e.g. Iron Maiden's Killers was the ultimate expression of the NWOBHM.

I'm hung up on the concept of music as ecstatic and rebellious Dionysian abandon (but I can't stand The Doors).

I dislike music that tries too hard, or not hard enough.

I'm suspicious of fun and earnestness.

I don't mind pretentiousness, except when you haven't earned it.

I can't listen to mainstream radio.

Here's a comp I put together recently. My jukebox is rebellious.

Be Your Own Pet - "Adventure"
Pink Fairies - "Do It"
Public Image Ltd. - "Public Image"
Pink Floyd - "See Emily Play (mono)"
Nas - "One Mic"
Suburban Lawns - "Janitor"
David Shire - "Main Title" from The Taking of Pelham 1,2,3
Big Daddy Kane - "Raw"
Dog of Mystery - "Willoughby (The Insect God)"
Pretenders - "Night In My Veins"
Ultramagnetic MCs - "Critical Beatdown"
Napoleon XIV - "They're Coming To Take Me Away Ha Ha"
King Crimson - "Larks Tongue In Aspic Pt 2 (live)"
Kas Product - "Man of Time"
Loop - "Ghost Rider"

Edward III (edward iii), Monday, 11 September 2006 16:59 (seventeen years ago) link

No Catholic upbringing.

haha I am catholic! I was confirmed and everything. I save my self-loathing and guilt for shit that matters, like s3x.

deej.. (deej..), Monday, 11 September 2006 19:53 (seventeen years ago) link

four months pass...
I like this thread

is anyone anticipating the new Baaderonixx? (baaderonixx), Monday, 5 February 2007 13:50 (seventeen years ago) link

- I'm an opinionated bastard when it comes to music, so I have to be careful discussing music with the majority of people I know. I mostly enjoy discussing music with other opinionated bastards who can quantify their opinions.

OTM. Except I don't know any "other opinionated bastards" IRL.

Hoosteen (Hoosteen), Monday, 5 February 2007 15:26 (seventeen years ago) link

three years pass...

When it comes to more obscure acts, I like to see who's getting the best critical notices and biggest cult following. I worship power and always like to be on the winning side. (Maybe it's because I DON'T understand pop and trust that collective wisdom must have some implicit worth.)

― tarden, Thursday, June 21, 2001 7:00 PM (9 years ago)

"When it comes to more obscure acts, I like acts that have lots of fans and critical accolades, and are not all that obscure."

the new mordant & zingy ilxor persona (ilxor), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 05:49 (thirteen years ago) link

Ladies and gentlemen, Dave Q.

Ukranian crocodile that swallowed a mobile phone (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 07:55 (thirteen years ago) link

I don't believe in guilty pleasures. I believe in pleasures without guilt. Some people have a problem with this.

NYCNative, Tuesday, 25 January 2011 07:57 (thirteen years ago) link

lol I am so embarrassed by my early post on this thread

I have no idea when it was posted because it clearly was not actually 2000

just johnin' (crüt), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 08:02 (thirteen years ago) link

Gosh, reading this thread back, I really was angry five years ago.

The two things that I feel are weaknesses in my taste these days are pretty minor concerns to me, because neither of them stops me enjoying music at all, which is when they would become problematic.

Anyway, those two things are thus:

1. I feel like a dilettante. I always have to some extent. I've never delved deeply into any one particular genre, never become an expert or specialist about one kind of music, be that jazz or techno or indierock or anything else. All the genres and styles and almost all the artists I like, I like really superficially, and sometimes I feel like this means I'm missing out on some kind of depth of experience. Then again, that depth of knowledge also strikes me as being really boring. Which. Guess is why I never bothered to acquire it about anything.

2. I have increasingly less time for hip hop, possibly because I'm increasingly less bothered about lyrics, and I've never really been bothered by wordplay skillzor. Fascinations with Timbaland, Missy, Outkast and a few others besides I pretty much only like old canonical boring stuff like Tribe and De La and PE that I've liked forever. Kate says upthread that she doesn't find much of sonic appeal in a lot of hip hop and I think that's a big part of it; I don't listen to music for lyrics, as a rule, so a form that's based on lyrics is always going to be difficult for me, especially when the lyrics are generally about lifestyles very very alien to my own and at I have pretty much zero interest in.

Other minor considerations are genre black holes - pop country, metal, opera. I've not investigated classical much yet but I'm waiting until I'm old for that, perhaps.

Ukranian crocodile that swallowed a mobile phone (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 08:13 (thirteen years ago) link

don't wait, dive in

just johnin' (crüt), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 08:17 (thirteen years ago) link

so many regrets:

1) like SM, i'm a dilettante. i lack the curiosity and dedication that might drive me to deeply explore the artists and genres that interest me. instead, i flit from one shiny object from the next.

2) i don't listen to music all the time. even now, while doing nothing but posting alone in my apartment, i'm not listening to anything. i don't want to. i prefer the silence.

3) i'm attracted to obscurity and the idea that i'm "with it," that i'm aware of and into secretly cool music. this makes me feel that my tastes are dishonest, that i'm trying to define myself through music rather than simply enjoying it on its own terms.

4) my tastes have become ossified. the indie punk aesthetics and musical values of my youth still dominate my taste and thinking. unfortunately, i never actually want to listen to 80s indie punk, unless i'm drunk. it's become boring to me.

normal_fantasy-unicorns (contenderizer), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 08:37 (thirteen years ago) link

I like a lot of music which simply cannot be enjoyed in group. I'm also always late to the game: I will start taking interest in a couple of yesteryear's biggest pop hits when everybody is already tired of hearing them.

Moka, Tuesday, 25 January 2011 08:56 (thirteen years ago) link

The good thing is every now and then I'll hit just the right spot and give my friends their new favorite songs so they still think I've got a good, varied taste despite my obsession with playing the boring, obscure stuff at parties.

Moka, Tuesday, 25 January 2011 08:58 (thirteen years ago) link

3) Sometimes I can't tell when people are enjoying things ironically or in earnest, and it has the potential to completely fuck up my vibe for the night. I was at a bar a few nights ago, waiting for an acqaintance's band to go on, when the resident DJ dropped Lisa Lisa & The Cult Jam's "I Wonder If I Take You Home" (classic), much to the delight of the early-twentysomething crowd. And I was too busy trying to figure out if people were dancing because they liked the song, or because "HA HA, OMG THE EIGHTIES" to have a good time myself.

― Tantrum The Cat (Tantrum The Cat), sábado 9 de septiembre de 2006 20:07 (4 years ago)

Maybe it's popularity had something to do with the Black Eyed Peas paraphrasing it?

Moka, Tuesday, 25 January 2011 09:23 (thirteen years ago) link

i listen to too many white people who don't really deserve my time.

supply 'n d-man (a hoy hoy), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 09:29 (thirteen years ago) link

Yeah I kinda hate when white people appropriate a black rooted genre just to make it dorky and easy. Ironically, maybe due to racism in the 20th century they always seemed to fare better than the usually more tasteful black pioneers.

Moka, Tuesday, 25 January 2011 09:35 (thirteen years ago) link

eg: reggae, blue eyed soul, hip hop, blues...

Moka, Tuesday, 25 January 2011 09:37 (thirteen years ago) link

so many white people fair better at hip-hop and reggae than black people

o_O

supply 'n d-man (a hoy hoy), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 09:39 (thirteen years ago) link

Ok I actually meant that usually it was the white people who helped the genre break through. Eric Clapton was heavily responsible for reggae's incursion in the pop charts and the beastie boys' Licensed to Ill was the first rap album to hit ·1 on the charts. I don't mean nowadays, hopefully we're already way past musical racism.

Moka, Tuesday, 25 January 2011 09:45 (thirteen years ago) link

Eric Clapton recorded a cover version that was included on his album, 461 Ocean Boulevard. It is the most successful version of the song, peaking at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming Clapton's only chart-topping hit in the U.S.

zvookster, Tuesday, 25 January 2011 09:47 (thirteen years ago) link

"Ice Ice Baby" was the first hip hop single to top the Billboard charts. Topping the Australian, Dutch, Irish, Italian and UK charts, the song helped diversify hip hop by introducing it to a mainstream audience.

zvookster, Tuesday, 25 January 2011 09:49 (thirteen years ago) link

crut i think ur post at the top is p self-aware and funny btw

zvookster, Tuesday, 25 January 2011 09:50 (thirteen years ago) link

so many white people fair better at hip-hop and reggae than black people

o_O

well, commercially, this is often true. the white pop artists who adapt black-rooted genres (in moka's language) have often seemed to win attention and commercial success more easily than the black artists that inspired them. this seems to have been very true in the mid 20th century, up through the early hip hop era. perhaps it's less of a factor nowadays? dunno...

normal_fantasy-unicorns (contenderizer), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 09:58 (thirteen years ago) link

1. Overly sweet tooth when it comes to inane, bouncy chart pop. Gimme gimme gimme that Guettabeat!

2. Have lost the ability to appreciate hip-hop. I came to a grinding halt with it about 6 years ago. Whereas in the mid-to-late 80s, it formed a huge part of my listening diet.

3. Cannot form even the slightest connection with metal or opera. (What's the link there? Is it some sort of aversion to bombast?)

4. I give too easy a ride to pleasant background music.

5. Over-reliance on various 1970s comfort zones.

mike t-diva, Tuesday, 25 January 2011 12:02 (thirteen years ago) link

classic post chain upthread:

Thing is, most of my fears of suckage about my musical tastes are not about *musical* tastes at all (in which I am perfectly secure. I like what I like, I feel no pressure to like what I don't like.) but about more political things.

Because my parents were born in South Africa, I have this perpetual fear that I am a racist (because I was told so many times by PC American liberals that all South Africans are racist, therefore we must be racists by extension). And I fear that I cannot get into hip-hop or rap *because* I am a racist. I can actually get into white indie-boy (and girl) rap like the Beastie Boys, or Luscious Jackson, or Beck, but I can't get any further.

I suspect that it is more to do with the *texture* of rap and hip-hop, because I listen to music for texture and harmony, rather than than lyrics or melody. (Lyrics are probably *the* least important thing for me in the enjoyment of music, while they are probably *the* most important element, in fact that defining element, in rap.) When I heaar rap or hip hop that *is* "psychedelic" or textural or "stoner rap", (early De La Soul and Cypress Hill spring to mind as examples) it *does* stick to my ear and make me happy.

But still, I worry. Isn't it the most white, middle class, racist thing in the world, to *worry* about being a racist?

― masonic boom, Thursday, June 21, 2001 7:00 PM (9 years ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

That was a brave admission, Kate. This board could use more of that kind of thing.

― Mark, Thursday, June 21, 2001 7:00 PM (9 years ago)

I fuck chickens.

― Nick, Thursday, June 21, 2001 7:00 PM (9 years ago)

the new mordant & zingy ilxor persona (ilxor), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 15:04 (thirteen years ago) link

loool

nakhchivan, Tuesday, 25 January 2011 15:09 (thirteen years ago) link

i get pissed when bands that were obscure or not hip suddenly get insanely popular and everyone likes them. I always feel like they were my little secret that i shared with a select few and now everyone knows about them.

Moonlight Graham (chrisv2010), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 15:13 (thirteen years ago) link

I really like some artists that get seemingly zero appreciation here or from any other sources I respect and it makes me wonder if I'm crazy. Elliott Smith is an example.

Pomplamoose walk in front of me (rip van wanko), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 15:25 (thirteen years ago) link

seems odd. elliott smith is popular and gets (got) tons of critical respect. you mean only from the wrong sources?

normal_fantasy-unicorns (contenderizer), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 16:14 (thirteen years ago) link

My incuriosity.

earnest goes to camp, ironic goes to ilm (pixel farmer), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 16:21 (thirteen years ago) link

my frequent laziness to follow up stuff I really like the sound of, a habit which Spotify has helped me shake :)

I've been dancing since 9 and I'm tired and hungry (acoleuthic), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 16:24 (thirteen years ago) link

my occasional habit of leaping to judgement a teeeeeeeny bit too quickly and also biasing myself against certain musical acts

I've been dancing since 9 and I'm tired and hungry (acoleuthic), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 16:25 (thirteen years ago) link

I'm pretty impatient with stuff that doesn't grab me immediately.

Rejoice that you weren't eaten (chap), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 16:34 (thirteen years ago) link

I have to *know* everything

getting over this

=(^ • ‿‿ • ^)= (corey), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 16:44 (thirteen years ago) link

i tend to like a lot of stuff, but as a result i don't get deep enough into a lot of things, like i have shitloads of albums but with some exceptions not super deep collections of a lot of artists

smang a goon (get it on) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 16:52 (thirteen years ago) link

I sometimes fail to listen to things because all the reviews are bad.

dlp9001, Tuesday, 25 January 2011 17:09 (thirteen years ago) link

i'm just lazy. i have scattered lists of shit to get, things saved in emusic, notes stuck in my wallet, even stuff downloaded that i haven't played yet. and i never get around to it. i listen to music all the time, idgi

goole, Tuesday, 25 January 2011 17:35 (thirteen years ago) link

  • I get intimidated by artists with huge discographies, especially when there's no critical consensus on which of their releases are strongest/most representative/most accessible. it's a lot more immediately satisfying to buy or download an artist's entire back catalogue when it consists of just a few albums than it is to ease into a prolific artist's oevre bit by bit, knowing that it will take a long time to digest.
  • when I do try to get into an artist with a huge discography, I often seek out all of their critically acclaimed works but avoid works that are less highly rated or further removed chronologically from their artistic peak. I'm sure I miss out on some colorful, unjustly derided music because of this.
  • I have a way of falling in love with certain artists, albums, or songs for a matter of months (or less) but abandoning them once I move on to other things. I still return to a lot of music I discovered five years ago (when my listening habits were less fickle), but there's a surprising amount of music I adored a year ago but have essentially forgotten.

the loneliness of the dexys midnight runner (unregistered), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 20:41 (thirteen years ago) link

  • i like too much.
  • it's only been over the past few years that i've begun to trust my own ears and taste enough.

Daniel, Esq., Tuesday, 25 January 2011 20:47 (thirteen years ago) link

I feel like a dilettante. I always have to some extent. I've never delved deeply into any one particular genre, never become an expert or specialist about one kind of music, be that jazz or techno or indierock or anything else. All the genres and styles and almost all the artists I like, I like really superficially, and sometimes I feel like this means I'm missing out on some kind of depth of experience. Then again, that depth of knowledge also strikes me as being really boring. Which. Guess is why I never bothered to acquire it about anything.

I don't see what's wrong with this attitude...? Listen -- and write well -- about what you like. Don't feel guilty.

Rich Lolwry (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 20:49 (thirteen years ago) link

one word: clueless.

some hills are never seen (Drugs A. Money), Tuesday, 25 January 2011 20:50 (thirteen years ago) link

my horrendous "taste" sucks all attitude OUT OF musiclife. ;_;

Ioannis, Tuesday, 25 January 2011 21:08 (thirteen years ago) link

Most of the music I like best is depressing.

Can't stand "funny" music (TMBG and the like)

Also, really high voices bug me. Like Geddy Lee. Scoldy and screechy. Even Robert Plant.

thirdalternative, Tuesday, 25 January 2011 21:16 (thirteen years ago) link

you need to listen to Spike Jones. stat.

Ioannis, Tuesday, 25 January 2011 21:19 (thirteen years ago) link

contenderizer- 2) i don't listen to music all the time. even now, while doing nothing but posting alone in my apartment, i'm not listening to anything. i don't want to. i prefer the silence.

I recognise this. Most of the time I can't read & listen to music.

Thing I find most frustrating is the low degree of overlap in taste I have w/ most of my friends. Partly me spending much more time on music generally & partly just different interests, but the music I go see & enjoy most is often stuff that is not peripheral to my taste but not core either, just because it's what I can persuade ppl/be persuaded to go to & obv going to shit alone or w/ patient but unenthusiastic is much less fun. But I'm used to it.

I also wish I cld improve my consumption of some stuff; certain shit w/ low UK presence I only really hear about online and my engagement is a bit patchy as a result.

ogmor, Tuesday, 25 January 2011 21:38 (thirteen years ago) link

With regards to some of the above posts:

a.) silence is the ultimate palette cleanser and should be utilized! If I find myself starting to feel a little burned out, a few days of no-music is the ultimate cure.

b.) I, too, often feel like a dilettante. But if you want to sample a shitload of new music while still at least occasionally enjoying your past favorites (not to mention having a life other than constantly listening to music nonstop), isn't that almost necessary? To some, maybe spending months exclusively checking out '50s bebop jazz records is more rewarding, but I find that tedious and boring.

I'll come up with my own shortcomings in taste later after thinking a bit (probably too many to list, tbh)...

musicfanatic, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 02:32 (thirteen years ago) link

This thread (poss. the oldest one I've ever seen) reminds me how irritating Marcello could be (when he wasn't OTM)(and when he wasn't posing as "Comstock Carbinieri")(that WAS him, wasn't it?)

ilxor gets into jazz (Myonga Vön Bontee), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 03:35 (thirteen years ago) link

Yup.

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 03:43 (thirteen years ago) link

This is one of those ancient thread where I read it with a knot in my stomach, knowing some dumb statement I made might be lurking around the corner. There was also a period around this time where there was another plain "Mark" I think-- is that possible? I'm almost certain that during some early switchover you could have the same display name as someone else, but I never monkeyed with it. I think that's when I went to MarkR for a while.

This is a good old thread.

Mark, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 04:36 (thirteen years ago) link

I'm actually ok with my musical tastes, I like what I like, but...There are a few artists that I discovered in my youth that, while great, I overrate way out of proportion. I have a distorted image of the post punk music of the mid to late 80s as being the greatest music ever made, bar none. I suppose old hippies who still go on and on about Woodstock are the same way.

I tend to fixate on artists I really like, and play them exclusively, really get to know their
discography, until I burn myself out on their music permanently and I'm not able to listen to
them again.

I tend to focus on new music that has just been released or even leaked. I am anal about stay
ing current with the latest music, but I feel like I only have a surface level acquaintance wi
th new releases as I often only listen to the singles off an album, or skim the album once the
n only listen to a few tracks. I feel like I'm missing out on a lot of rewarding 'deep album
cuts', but everytime I try to listen to newer albums all the way through I get bored and go ba
ck to my iPod shuffle of singles, it's like I have ADD.

I have a very minimal knowledge of Jazz and Classical, despite owning a fairly extensive colle
ction of Jazz and Classical albums. I'm just too lazy to devote any time to close listening (see above). I also can't get into Blues, most old Folk, Country, and Dub Reggae. When I talk to real music obsessive fans like on this board, I often feel like my exposure to a lot of canonical works is very incomplete, and I'm only able to identify famous names. Like
I know that Dylan, Leonard Cohen, Eno, etc. have extensive catalogs of classic works but I ju
st can't be bothered, because I get a more immediate sugar fix via my iPod shuffle of 80's pos
t punk and current Top 40 mashups.

John Lennon, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 05:07 (thirteen years ago) link

I think I have fairly good taste overall, however as with probably a fair few ilxors, I'm a dilletante and a jack of all trades.

I'm as comfortable or uncomfortable chatting about house as I am post-punk, but sometimes I wish I had a deep knowledge of one particular style, particularly dance music which I enjoy but in which I don't have any particular specialisms.

Strangely now I come to think of it, the only style of which I have close to a deep knowledge is reggae, but it's such a big sphere that I think I only scrape the surface in the grander scheme of things.

Bernard V. O'Hare (dog latin), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 11:05 (thirteen years ago) link

Haha, reading upthread it seems "dilletante" is the mot du jour ITT.

My pop/hiphop/r'n'b tastes have widened. Whereas I used to despise most pop, not understand r'n'b and new hiphop alienated me, thanks to ILX polls I'm coming round to all three.

I used to find hiphop frustrating because I felt it needed a lot of attention paid to the lyrics, which isn't always practical if you're reading or something.

Conversely another thing that frustrates me about the music I listen to, is it's getting more accessible. This is down to living in closer proximity to people than before. I can't exactly blast Deicide all day long without complaints.

Bernard V. O'Hare (dog latin), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 11:27 (thirteen years ago) link

Not interested in new music. Actually, that's not true, I love the new stuff which I get largely from polls on here or, um, from shazaming when I'm at the shops. But no way am I spending my own time doing the filtering, so while I miss out on tons of dull stuff, no doubt there are masses of great tunes that I'll never hear.

Also, lyrics are basically dead to me now. I like the voice as just another instrument, with the advantage that it's the one that's most fun to bellow along to, but a tiny sample does basically the same job as I get from all but the best singing. The exception that I do appreciate is cleverness with form - I'll get a kick out of a long series of rhymes, say, but I'm not hearing the meaning at all (kind of odd because what I like reading has followed more or less exactly the opposite trajectory).

The days of being thrilled by an eighteen-year-old with an attitude are not, I think, coming back.

Ismael Klata, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 12:18 (thirteen years ago) link

My resignation that R&B and hip-hop will never again mean anything to me. Used to listen to quite a lot, but when I met my wife she actively disliked it, so I stopped playing it anywhere near so much. And now I have preteen kids I dare not put any on for fear of the language. And having been away so long I have no idea where to return to.

Alan Partridge Project (ithappens), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 12:57 (thirteen years ago) link

^^^
Who you hang around with can have as much of a negative impact as positive when it comes to things like this.

Bernard V. O'Hare (dog latin), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 13:02 (thirteen years ago) link

Yep. But, you know, my wife makes me happier than hip-hop, so it's not a hard choice. First Wu-Tang album was the definitive cut-off moment: the skit about anal rape (am I remembering that right?) saw her walk over to the CD player, press eject, and tell me she didn't want to hear that, because it upset and offended her.

Alan Partridge Project (ithappens), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 13:15 (thirteen years ago) link

I can't help feeling like there's something disingenuous about people's shame about listening only to older music. But that's probably because I'm sometimes embarrassed that the vast majority of what I listen to is new.

Tyler/Perry's "Dude (Looks Like a Lady)" (jaymc), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 13:57 (thirteen years ago) link

i refuse to give any new hip-hop or R&B a listen. i stopped listening to anything in those genres in 1998...the hip hop I have heard sounds like complete shit and to me is a disgrace to the classic hip hop of the past...it just seems like anyone with a beat, some screaming and a stupid fucking name like waka flocka fucka and whatever can make a hip hop album. I'd like to hear what some classic artists think of the new shit.

The Round Mound of Sound (chrisv2010), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 14:51 (thirteen years ago) link

Lex to thread.

Alan Partridge Project (ithappens), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 14:54 (thirteen years ago) link

Wow. I'm really surprised to see such a blatantly regressive attitude expressed on ILM. I mean, if you're not interested in current hiphop or think it compares negatively to that of the past, that's altogether fine, but to put it in those terms...I generally assume everyone here is smarter than that.

banjee trillness (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 15:04 (thirteen years ago) link

i think most ARE smarter than that, cf WAKA (rightly) placing second in the 2010 trax poll we've just concluded.

lextasy refix (lex pretend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 15:08 (thirteen years ago) link

I've totally come round to stuff like Waka Flocka - sure it's not really dextrous rap in the original sense (Fu Schnickens or whatever) as the rapping's slower and more, i dunno, shout-along i guess? but it's unadulterated fun - pure maniacal glee in tracks like Hard In Da Paint. Comparing it to old stuff doesn't make much sense. It's like trying to compare Chase & Status with Altern-8.

Bernard V. O'Hare (dog latin), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 15:13 (thirteen years ago) link

hip-hop is not, like, one monolithic thing with one set way of doing things and one set spirit to keep alive. its essential formal values can encompass a huge range of stuff. i don't know why in 2011 i still seem to have to say that.

lextasy refix (lex pretend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 15:15 (thirteen years ago) link

I find it really weird when people say they only listen to new music (and many on here do). Do you throw away albums when they reach a certain sell-by date? Do you not enjoy having a historical frame of reference to the current stuff? I like new music, but things like, say, there are certain production values in sixties music which just don't exist any more but are just as welcome to my ears as something produced in an ultra modern studio.

Bernard V. O'Hare (dog latin), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 15:17 (thirteen years ago) link

assume they just mean that they find enough good new shit to keep them occupied, rather than a stance or w/e - not endorsing that but it's easy enough to do

look its not that you listen to metal its that youre a bellend ok (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 15:20 (thirteen years ago) link

i don't think anyone says that, not even me! i prioritise new music, which isn't the same thing. i've spent most of this week listening to old (and new) pj harvey.

lextasy refix (lex pretend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 15:21 (thirteen years ago) link

lex, just out of interest and i'm not challenging anything here, but how often are you tempted to delve into older music that came out "before your time" i.e. Sure you could go back and listen to the PJ Harvey back catalogue, but I'm assuming you were previously familiar with some of her stuff?

Bernard V. O'Hare (dog latin), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 15:24 (thirteen years ago) link

haha and now i am listening to "let the dollar circulate" by billy paul which was like 1975 or something.

lextasy refix (lex pretend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 15:26 (thirteen years ago) link

Good title for a song that

Tom D (Lenin's his feir and Liebknecht's his mate) (Tom D.), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 15:27 (thirteen years ago) link

I will sometimes buy music because the artwork is pleasant or the artist looks hot in the music video.

Moka, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 15:27 (thirteen years ago) link

And that sucks. Music shouldn't be about models or museum exhibits.

Moka, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 15:28 (thirteen years ago) link

i mean, we've gone over this before though - i can and often do listen to music "before my time" but like 90% of the time i find it's impossible to have ownership of them, really find my way into them like i can for music i'm around for (or - like i could had i been around for them). it's, like, someone else's zeitgeist.

lextasy refix (lex pretend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 15:29 (thirteen years ago) link

That makes sense. It's interesting that being a part of a current zeitgeist is important to people, and I can appreciate that.

I guess coming from a dormitory town with no real culture of its own to speak of, I always used music to escape the monotony of middle England and to inhabit other worlds time travel being a part of that. So e.g. if I listen to the Beach Boys, that's as close to East Coast '60s America as I'm likely to get. And to an extent, '60s LA is as foreign and exotic to me as a basement in Peckham, so be it grime or surf-pop, it's all an escapade.

Bernard V. O'Hare (dog latin), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 15:35 (thirteen years ago) link

xpost: When I actively followed and enjoyed hip hop, I responded most to the elements that made it work as club music. I can't discern those elements so readily in contemporary hip hop. It feels, to me, in my admittedly reduced experience (not helped by feeling that I lack vast swathes of useful context), less funky, more abrasive, hence less personally appealing. But then again, I can totally appreciate that the rhythmic and linguistic dexterity of the best contemporary rappers tends to be, in general, streets ahead of the old school. I listened to some old Tribe Called Quest the other day, and the rapping just sounded so tame, lame and formally constrained. On the other hand, I heard Young MC's "Know How" played before a gig a couple of weeks ago - very much a club track, of course - and was blown away by it all over again. As for newer stuff, I enjoyed some Bun B recently but was put off by the gangsta-isms, and I'm all over "Coming Home" - but it's slim pickings, and I don't feel motivated to try harder and delve deeper.

mike t-diva, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 15:42 (thirteen years ago) link

i should clarify, i've checked out a few of the newer artists, just find it all annoying. And basically what mike says above, just not motivated by any of it. To me it sounds like grunts, growls, autotunes...i just dont get the feeling with this newer stuff that i would with EPMD or Eric B. It just doesn't compare to me.

The Round Mound of Sound (chrisv2010), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 15:53 (thirteen years ago) link

is it because its more dancey now than in the past...i don't know. it just doesn't grab me like older stuff did and does.

The Round Mound of Sound (chrisv2010), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 15:55 (thirteen years ago) link

you old fart

scott seward, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:02 (thirteen years ago) link

i mean educate me people, is there stuff thats isn't so auto-tuney and more classic sounding? Like dog latin said, i dont care for the shout-along aspect of it.

The Round Mound of Sound (chrisv2010), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:02 (thirteen years ago) link

educate yourself fool! get on it!

scott seward, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:05 (thirteen years ago) link

get on the tip!

scott seward, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:06 (thirteen years ago) link

people get more conservative as they age. its a fact.

and lex is in his 20's, right? he should be listening to new music. he should kill old music with a stick. don't listen to them, lexy!

scott seward, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:09 (thirteen years ago) link

Let your freak flag fly!

T.V.O.D. Party (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:11 (thirteen years ago) link

to some extent I do kind of understand chris's POV - a lot of rappers in the last few years sound like they're going out of their ways to be obnoxious: arrogance, commodity fetishism and dunderheaded gangsta mentally all play a part in this. While this is obviously the point and the attraction for a lot of modern rap fans, I can see how older fans might have trouble with Flocka's steez, as opposed to, say, Chuck D's brand of call-to-arms rap, or Q-Tip's fluffy quirkiness. Flocka and Gucci are grotesque cartoon anti-heroes who are not necessarily likable in a buddy kind of way. They probably don't give a fuck if you don't agree with whatever it is they're saying. So this is really something one has to buy into, otherwise I can see how it would be totally annoying.

Bernard V. O'Hare (dog latin), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:12 (thirteen years ago) link

i don't listen to current top 40 at all, and probably haven't for close to 8 years (since the last time I had a car and listened to the radio regularly.) i only keep up with a few contemporary artists.

not everything is a campfire (ian), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:14 (thirteen years ago) link

waka flocka flame and gucci mane are not the only archetypes in contemporary rap

lextasy refix (lex pretend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:15 (thirteen years ago) link

i tried to post on ilx about contemporary rap but got made fun of for being 6 months behind the times :(

not everything is a campfire (ian), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:15 (thirteen years ago) link

autotune, love it or hate it, doesn't seem to be going away any time soon and has become as much a part of this era of music as the flange guitar in the 60s, or slap bass and saxophone in the 80s or the amen break in the 90s. It's just another instrument really, all too often confused as a substitute for "real singing", which it shouldn't be.

xpost lex - no i realise this, but I use gucci and flocka as examples.

Bernard V. O'Hare (dog latin), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:16 (thirteen years ago) link

chrisv - why not take a look around some of the entries in the EOY lists. This is how I opened up to new hiphop and r'n'b.

Maybe try Currensy?

Bernard V. O'Hare (dog latin), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:17 (thirteen years ago) link

The vast majority of rap today is neither autotuney or shouty and a fair amount of it is very classicist. If anything, Waka's success has been in part because there was an empty niche for loud, aggressive rap.

banjee trillness (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:17 (thirteen years ago) link

yeah, waka sounded refreshing to me!

scott seward, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:19 (thirteen years ago) link

Oh and Strong Arm Steady - The Search For Stoney Jackson is kind of classic sounding too.

Bernard V. O'Hare (dog latin), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:20 (thirteen years ago) link

rilly sometimes music SHOULDN'T be for you. i used to rant about that ed banger/justice stuff until i realized that i was old man yelling at cloud. it wasn't made to appeal to me! its for the kidz. that's why i hate when people go on and on about how awful some animated movie they just saw was. hey dumbo you are 30 years old! the movie is rated G! its for 5 year olds! sorry it didn't meet your lofty standards. and 5 year olds ENJOY disposable crap.

scott seward, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:23 (thirteen years ago) link

rev otm - WAKA broke through in a landscape where commercial rap = soft-serve, lightweight slop like drake and b.o.b, and most non-chart rappers emphasised lyrical prowess. his kind of raw aggressive energy (and ability to channel it as an aesthetic rather just a one-off random song) marks him out as a bit of a one-off atm.

lextasy refix (lex pretend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:24 (thirteen years ago) link

it wasn't made to appeal to me! its for the kidz.

part of the reason that someone like ke$ha makes me so pissed off is because her schtick is EXACTLY that which always has appealed to me - trashy party girl on banging club pop tracks. so it really really annoys me to see her getting it so wrong.

lextasy refix (lex pretend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:25 (thirteen years ago) link

rilly sometimes music SHOULDN'T be for you. i used to rant about that ed banger/justice stuff until i realized that i was old man yelling at cloud. it wasn't made to appeal to me! its for the kidz. that's why i hate when people go on and on about how awful some animated movie they just saw was. hey dumbo you are 30 years old! the movie is rated G! its for 5 year olds! sorry it didn't meet your lofty standards. and 5 year olds ENJOY disposable crap.

― scott seward, Tuesday, February 8, 2011 11:23 AM (2 minutes ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

To some extent I am starting to feel this way about people who bitch about the star wars prequels.

kkvgz, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:28 (thirteen years ago) link

rev otm - WAKA broke through in a landscape where commercial rap = soft-serve, lightweight slop like drake and b.o.b, and most non-chart rappers emphasised lyrical prowess. his kind of raw aggressive energy (and ability to channel it as an aesthetic rather just a one-off random song) marks him out as a bit of a one-off atm.

― lextasy refix (lex pretend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:24 (2 minutes ago) Bookmark

Forgive me here cos I'm out of my depth, but isn't this what Lil Jon and people from that scene have also been doing too? I dunno, when I heard Flocka, I liked it for all the reasons you mentioned, but I'd assumed there was a whole style of music that did this kind of thing?

Bernard V. O'Hare (dog latin), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:28 (thirteen years ago) link

Yah, but there's a good intervening half a decade there.

banjee trillness (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:30 (thirteen years ago) link

assume they just mean that they find enough good new shit to keep them occupied, rather than a stance or w/e - not endorsing that but it's easy enough to do

Yeah, that about sums it up. And of course, it doesn't mean that I *never* listen to old music. For one, I still listen to old music that was once new to me. But it's rare that I actively seek out older stuff I haven't heard.

Tyler/Perry's "Dude (Looks Like a Lady)" (jaymc), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:31 (thirteen years ago) link

to some extent I do kind of understand chris's POV - a lot of rappers in the last few years sound like they're going out of their ways to be obnoxious: arrogance, commodity fetishism and dunderheaded gangsta mentally all play a part in this. While this is obviously the point and the attraction for a lot of modern rap fans, I can see how older fans might have trouble with Flocka's steez, as opposed to, say, Chuck D's brand of call-to-arms rap, or Q-Tip's fluffy quirkiness. Flocka and Gucci are grotesque cartoon anti-heroes who are not necessarily likable in a buddy kind of way. They probably don't give a fuck if you don't agree with whatever it is they're saying. So this is really something one has to buy into, otherwise I can see how it would be totally annoying.

― Bernard V. O'Hare (dog latin), Tuesday, February 8, 2011 11:12 AM (16 minutes ago) Bookmark

this is what im trying to say, excuse my grumpiness in my first post!

The Round Mound of Sound (chrisv2010), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:32 (thirteen years ago) link

I mean, Lil Jon and that whole style were well out of style by the time Waka emerged. Even Jon himself has been for years focused more on making party hits than street music.

banjee trillness (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:33 (thirteen years ago) link

xxp

banjee trillness (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:33 (thirteen years ago) link

x-post: I suppose I have to admit that even I realize Lil Jon hasn't been real prominent for a while.

Waka sounds like more of the same stuff I keep being repulsed by when I check in with what ILM rap fans like, or when I pay attention to what's rolling down the street. I probably have a skewed idea of where rap is commercially, since ILM really is my main exposure to the genre these days.

_Rudipherous_, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:34 (thirteen years ago) link

Maybe try Currensy?

Good suggestion. For a while, I was recommending the Knux to people who like hip-hop but don't like its most popular current iterations.

Tyler/Perry's "Dude (Looks Like a Lady)" (jaymc), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:35 (thirteen years ago) link

ilm rap fans like a real range of stuff? WAKA is hardly representative when other faves include, like, curren$y and lil b and the jacka and na'tee and yelawolf

lextasy refix (lex pretend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:37 (thirteen years ago) link

and ANGEL HAZE <3

lextasy refix (lex pretend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:37 (thirteen years ago) link

jeez

zvookster, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:38 (thirteen years ago) link

I think the point about Lil Jon just underscores how quickly everything is liable to and does change in rap.

banjee trillness (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:38 (thirteen years ago) link

maybe its because im getting old and there have been some times at my bar where i put on the old-skool hip hop on sirius and the young kids have no idea who the older artists are, i mean if your a hip hop fan how can you not know Eric B, Public Enemy etc?

The Round Mound of Sound (chrisv2010), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:38 (thirteen years ago) link

almost half of this list is p trad sounding, and around 100% of this one is. all 2010 releases.

also i dispute that ian was made fun of :P

zvookster, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:40 (thirteen years ago) link

why should they?

it's totally a vow of mine never to act outraged or disbelieving when some kid says he's never heard/heard of [legendary act]. (unless it's j0rdan and madonna because WTF.)

lextasy refix (lex pretend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:40 (thirteen years ago) link

i don't think anyone is required to know anything about anything

cherry blossom, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:40 (thirteen years ago) link

the same reason why i would want to learn about new hip hop Lex. I dont act outraged, just surprised. yeah but wouldn't you think Eric B and not knowing who WU-TANG was would be a WTF?

The Round Mound of Sound (chrisv2010), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:43 (thirteen years ago) link

see Raekwon. yay. someone i know. I also like Rick Ross.

The Round Mound of Sound (chrisv2010), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:44 (thirteen years ago) link

maybe everyone in your bar hates rap music. like you!

scott seward, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:45 (thirteen years ago) link

nah i dont think so, with their baggy pants and godamn sideways hats.

The Round Mound of Sound (chrisv2010), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:46 (thirteen years ago) link

you have a bar?

scott seward, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:46 (thirteen years ago) link

maybe your bar is a gay bar! does everyone smell nice?

scott seward, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:47 (thirteen years ago) link

If I were a politician, I guess I'd something like "I care too much."

My biggest problems are a) I'm too hung up on melody, which means all kinds of less melody-driven music largely pass me by (blues and funk would be two prominent examples), and b) I'm too much of a list-maker, or too much of a cannon person; I too easily discard music that isn't a candidate for a Top 100, or isn't going to be saved on my permanent hard drive. Lots of "pretty good" music ceases to exist with me.

clemenza, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:47 (thirteen years ago) link

Um, canon. There may be a song or two about cannons that I like too, I'm not sure.

clemenza, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:48 (thirteen years ago) link

i dont have a bar, i work at one a few nights.

The Round Mound of Sound (chrisv2010), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:49 (thirteen years ago) link

someone make me a playlist of newer hip-hop? i will be forever grateful, and make you an old bastard one.

The Round Mound of Sound (chrisv2010), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:51 (thirteen years ago) link

I don't really care about personality, I have no particular interest in music being played live, I'm not especially interested in hearing a bunch of songs by the same person,

Don't think any of these attitudes suck though, they're just what they are

cherry blossom, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 16:52 (thirteen years ago) link

xp: Not gonna make a whole playlist right now, but see what you think of this.

banjee trillness (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:04 (thirteen years ago) link

that kyleon verse is so dopeeeeeeeeee

zvookster, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:05 (thirteen years ago) link

verse of the month

zvookster, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:05 (thirteen years ago) link

we shld do Hip Hop Quotable thing, a verse of the month rolling thread

zvookster, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:05 (thirteen years ago) link

i could listen to more old music, more new music, more music made by people very different to me culturally, more music with a different order of priorities to what i recognise as my preference...but i tend to feel like i do or have done these things to a reasonable extent already tho obv there is always something else to hear/learn/consider theoretically. i do want to do all of those things more but i don't really want to do them based on people's recommendations. instead i want to discover them more 'accidentally' or indirectly and form opinions without reading anything for/against beforehand. something about that is good but something about it also sucks (just as being selfish is often bad but sometimes necessary).

probably a bigger source of frustration is that i'm nowhere near as much of a musician as i would like to be and that has an effect on my tastes and attitude that may cause them to occasionally suck (not in the 'i should value lyrics or singing or melody more than other stuff' sense, more a 'i want to be more confident about and back up the arguments i do make with more technical knowledge of Music from an academic perspective').

idgi fridays (blueski), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:09 (thirteen years ago) link

xp: Yeah, start it.

banjee trillness (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:09 (thirteen years ago) link

ok rev, thats pretty fuckin awesome.

The Round Mound of Sound (chrisv2010), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:10 (thirteen years ago) link

^___^

banjee trillness (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:11 (thirteen years ago) link

this has been the most civilized & erudite goon dogpile in years

flopson, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:14 (thirteen years ago) link

see stuff like that i can get with, its mostly those shouting things i cant. their flow reminds me of something, cant quite place it.

The Round Mound of Sound (chrisv2010), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:14 (thirteen years ago) link

old man yells at shout rap

flopson, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:15 (thirteen years ago) link

would read a Sickest Beat of the month thread

idgi fridays (blueski), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:16 (thirteen years ago) link

i like that wiz khalifa fella.

The Round Mound of Sound (chrisv2010), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:17 (thirteen years ago) link

just changed my username, thanks.

Old Man Yells At Shout Rap (chrisv2010), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:18 (thirteen years ago) link

I like that Wiz Khalifa fella, too.

banjee trillness (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:23 (thirteen years ago) link

so i guess its not all new hip hop that i dislike.

OLD MAN YELLS AT SHOUT RAP (chrisv2010), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:26 (thirteen years ago) link

YOU GUESSED RIGHT!

scott seward, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:26 (thirteen years ago) link

scott you never struck me as a hip hop fan.

OLD MAN YELLS AT SHOUT RAP (chrisv2010), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:29 (thirteen years ago) link

Scott is an everything fan.

i could listen to more old music, more new music, more music made by people very different to me culturally, more music with a different order of priorities to what i recognise as my preference...but i tend to feel like i do or have done these things to a reasonable extent already tho obv there is always something else to hear/learn/consider theoretically. i do want to do all of those things more but i don't really want to do them based on people's recommendations. instead i want to discover them more 'accidentally' or indirectly and form opinions without reading anything for/against beforehand. something about that is good but something about it also sucks (just as being selfish is often bad but sometimes necessary).

Oddly (or not?) enough, this is pretty much where I'm at at present, at least in general terms. But I also tend to see this in both terms of age as Scott identifies it earlier in this thread combined with a generally much more relaxed philosophy about music (and to a larger extent art and culture, however you want to define it) that I've happily settled into over the past few years. I suspect it was the logical reaction to the overdose of my twenties on such stuff; my thirties was more of a conscious turning away and I'm reaching forty feeling a certain equanimity about it all.

If I tried to keep up with everything I'm 'supposed' to, I would have no time. I really would much rather have relaxed evenings idly reading a book, sometimes listening to music and sometimes not at all. I suppose an earlier self would think that sucks but my current one -- which always liked to do that anyway -- is resolutely unconcerned.

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:30 (thirteen years ago) link

oh yeah there was another thread a bit like this where i said one problem is that i'm letting things like spotify and last.fm have too much control over what i hear and how. i might exclude stuff because it's not immediately available how i want it, i'm listening to some stuff just so it appears higher in my last.fm stats. probably too contrived an approach altho it has been useful as i do get overwhelmed by the choice and need these exercises or motivations to listen sometimes.

idgi fridays (blueski), Tuesday, 8 February 2011 17:37 (thirteen years ago) link


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