― bass braille (....), Tuesday, 1 February 2005 06:44 (nineteen years ago) link
As I said, I actually want to know why you think your question is so important. I mean why is me dodging it of any importance whatsoever? If it is then surely you can tell me why you think dance broke through more in 89 than 97? You've dodged explaining your question every bit as much as I've dodged answering it. I'm reluctant to give an answer because I think it's just some rhetorical trap whereby you then go "see, see he hates disco" etc or whatever other thing you decide to make up.
I have a question for you, how do I hate disco or hiphop? Where do I say anything about that?
That's a more clearly bullshit assertion than anything I've said on this thread, and what's more it's personal.
― Ronan (Ronan), Tuesday, 1 February 2005 11:19 (nineteen years ago) link
― Stevem On X (blueski), Tuesday, 1 February 2005 11:21 (nineteen years ago) link
― Stevem On X (blueski), Tuesday, 1 February 2005 11:23 (nineteen years ago) link
― Ronan (Ronan), Tuesday, 1 February 2005 11:26 (nineteen years ago) link
Still nice to note that ONCE AGAIN you try to make this an argument about patriotism, ie "you hate hiphop and disco", "your patriotisms showing Ronan" etc. Is it that hard to just let that go?
On a thread where I've been objecting about the use of the word "Brit" I am called a patriot!
― Ronan (Ronan), Tuesday, 1 February 2005 11:29 (nineteen years ago) link
the decline of one affects the rise of the other. of course there were people in either scene at an earlier point, and will continue to be, at a later point, but, in a social sense, it takes the floating people to make the demises and rises)
different scenes are not independent of each other, they are related to varying degrees, the crossover audience that microhouse or electroclash needs to be fashionable and larger, is the same crossover audience folk/noise/weird needs for the same purpose. ie, yes, the 'original' audiences may be different, but outside the immediate, they go for the same people.
ie, electroclash-folk, is not a weird transition at all
― charltonlido (gareth), Tuesday, 1 February 2005 11:48 (nineteen years ago) link
― Stevem On X (blueski), Tuesday, 1 February 2005 11:51 (nineteen years ago) link
I think it's funny Walter accuses Simon of flitting from one genre to the next, do you ever actually read his blog? This is the guy who talks about the "hardcore continuum", who fairly openly is looking for a consistent thread through the stuff he likes, and I think has a fairly solid taste in music.
"He seems to get caught up in genres, sub-genres, labelling and categorization in a way that I think encourages that kind of disposable "time to move on to the next new thing" faddism."
These are the words of someone who has never even read Blissblog.
― Ronan (Ronan), Tuesday, 1 February 2005 11:53 (nineteen years ago) link
― Miles Finch, Tuesday, 1 February 2005 11:58 (nineteen years ago) link
― charltonlido (gareth), Tuesday, 1 February 2005 11:59 (nineteen years ago) link
it was way before glenda collins blew up
― stevie nixed (stevie nixed), Tuesday, 1 February 2005 12:14 (nineteen years ago) link
― huh, Tuesday, 1 February 2005 13:39 (nineteen years ago) link
As Ronan said, Simon is hooked on the changing-same; he doesn't really switch styles so much as demand that the music he listens to continues to mutate and transform. When combined with his love of drama, I think this can lead to separate "problems" (more accurately, areas of disagreement between him and me) where he dismisses music because its mutational qualities aren't immediately apparent. Jess does this too. So do I maybe, in other circumstances (I have less patience for "breakcore" than either of them, but then I've listened to it less). There's no right or wrong here really: we all apply different levels of scaling or zoom; I maybe am more generally enthused by German electro/post-microhouse etc. because my demands for transformation in that area are smaller. And maybe this means I listen to more "boring" music than either Jess or Simon. But both came around to Tiefschwarz, and Jess came around to Mei Lwun, and I am confident that both will come around to Get Physical. I can think of very few people who are more rigorous in their attempts to articulate the value of a specific piece of music once their attention is sufficiently focused towards it.
― Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Tuesday, 1 February 2005 14:11 (nineteen years ago) link
Marz - Wir Sind Hier...they just sound so beardy.
― Omar (Omar), Tuesday, 1 February 2005 14:36 (nineteen years ago) link
― it's tricky (disco stu), Tuesday, 1 February 2005 15:46 (nineteen years ago) link
― Jay-Kid (Jay-Kid), Tuesday, 1 February 2005 15:59 (nineteen years ago) link
And also kids coming in and adults going out. (Though I'm sure most of us will be at the club until we keel.)
― Pete Scholtes, Tuesday, 1 February 2005 16:44 (nineteen years ago) link
― hstencil (hstencil), Tuesday, 1 February 2005 17:30 (nineteen years ago) link
Exactly, and the point I was trying to make is that his writing sets up this narrative of dance music as a constant progression. It's not that I believe that Reynolds personally loses interest in one type of music and moves onto something new. For all I know he listens to nothing but records from '89 all day. But I think that this demand for change, mutation or progression in the music is one of that factors that leads to the genre-hopping that Jess was complaining about. It just doesn't make sense to me to criticize trend-hopping hipsters who have abandoned dance music for folk music when the dance scene itself encourages that hunger for change and novelty.
I think it's funny Walter accuses Simon of flitting from one genre to the next, do you ever actually read his blog?
How is that relevant? If I didn't care for the articles of his that I've read then why would I follow his personal blog? I apologize for the rude tone of some of my previous posts as I really have no beef with the guy. Let's just say I just disagree with some of his opinions and leave it at that. I'll try to veil my distaste more heavily in the future.
― walter kranz (walterkranz), Tuesday, 1 February 2005 19:31 (nineteen years ago) link
These are v. different things though! It's not like Reynolds is saying "y'know guys, I was really into dance music but now it's not moving fast enough so I'm gonna drop it all and get into speed metal/folk/etc!" I mean, for all his complaints about dance music no longer moving fast enough (and he's been making this complaint since 1998 at least, if not a bit earlier) he's been pretty loyal, and the developments/expansions in his tastes (to accomodate post-Timbaland hip hop, dancehall, grime, breakcore etc etc) have all been very logical when viewed from the vantage point of his tastes at the point when he started making those complaints.
If anything Jess's model is a bit strawman-ish, not in that it's not realistic but that this sort of thing is very hard to locate in individuals; it's more the product of an entire discourse shifting from focusing around one thing to focusing around another. Hence the level to which grime became a "talking point" on ILM in late 2002/early 2003 (following one or two years in which dilettante interest in 2-step garage had contracted significantly) is much more vulnerable to charges of fashionability/trend-following than Reynolds' individual championing of it, which was totally consistent with everything he'd written prior to writing about grime.
The strawman aspect is the presupposition of a certain passivity in how we make choices as to which music we choose to listen to. Is Banhart-style New Folk only popular because certain media organs are pushing it? I dunno; or rather, I know that's part of it but I can't give any particular reasons as to why this is more true or damning in the case of new folk than it is with grime/dancehall/baile funk/reggaeton beyond my own personal preference for the latter (you might make the argument that, unlike Banhart, the majority of the audiences for these styles don't seek critical sanction before listening to this music - but for the purposes of this conversation such audiences are practically hypothetical).
If there appears to be something dishonest about huge numbers of people suddenly getting into Banhart it may be the arbitrariness of it - the sense that it's a shift which does not rise out of the listening habits of the audience which has made it, but has rather been imposed on them by a force too persuasive to ignore (the media/fashion etc.). I'm not sure if that is true actually: I imagine that a lot of people who were secure during the alt-country/expansive-american-rock era of the late nineties and early zeroes were never actually totally won over by rock is back revivalism, and have only moved further and further into prarie expanse of sepia-toned pastoral lassitude (if anything, I think a lot of people in their mid-to-late twenties have actually been moving in this direction on an almost unbroken trajectory ever since grunge. The kind of people who really got into Neil Young via the Pearl Jam connection).
But the broader point (which I hope that final digression kinda illuminates) is that the arbitariness of fashion offends by dint of its perceived meaningless, the suspicion that Devendra Banhart or whoever merely stands in as a placeholder for some concept of up-to-date-ness which has no real aesthetic criteria to support it (ie. Banhart is "now" because the media say he is). Even if this were actually the case with Banhart fans, it would certainly be the very last accusation one could make of Reynolds, whose tastes are if anything constrained (to the extent that they are constructed by) by the aesthetic criteria he has spent so much of the last twenty years formulating and articulating.
― Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Wednesday, 2 February 2005 19:41 (nineteen years ago) link
― it's tricky (disco stu), Wednesday, 2 February 2005 20:07 (nineteen years ago) link
But who says that those critera of "up-to-date-ness" or being in the "now" have any use for the people who like Banhart? The whole point I was trying to make is that the concept of being up-to-date is something that has no value to me at all as a music fan. Newness says nothing about the quality of the music regardless of whether or not the perceived newness is as you say supported by aesthetic criteria.
It's not like Reynolds is saying "y'know guys, I was really into dance music but now it's not moving fast enough so I'm gonna drop it all and get into speed metal/folk/etc!"
Well, maybe he should! I guess there are three possibilities as a listener here. You can decide that the music you're listening to is not mutating and moving fast enough and move onto something entirely different. You can remain faithful to a narrowly-defined aesthetic and simply lament that your chosen genre has ceased to grow and change. Or you could give up this whole idea of constant progressive change completely. The first two choices ultimately don't seem that different to me.
― walter kranz (walterkranz), Wednesday, 2 February 2005 22:05 (nineteen years ago) link
― youn, Tuesday, 22 November 2005 13:03 (eighteen years ago) link
― blunt (blunt), Tuesday, 22 November 2005 21:50 (eighteen years ago) link
Good times.
― Pete Scholtes, Wednesday, 23 November 2005 05:10 (eighteen years ago) link
― Mr. Snrub (Mr. Snrub), Tuesday, 14 March 2006 23:33 (eighteen years ago) link
― Konal Doddz (blueski), Tuesday, 14 March 2006 23:36 (eighteen years ago) link
WAHT IS DAHANCE MUSIK MADE?
― gershy, Sunday, 16 September 2007 02:50 (sixteen years ago) link
mayahoo, mayahee, mayaha, mayahaha
― hstencil, Sunday, 16 September 2007 04:11 (sixteen years ago) link