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

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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


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