So, what is the worst music review ever then?

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Brian Whitman and team:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/comedy/lookaroundyou/furniture/banner1.gif

Dom Passantino (Dom Passantino), Monday, 21 February 2005 22:29 (nineteen years ago) link

i can think of TONS. but i probably shouldn't post them.

...people might post some of mine.

deadair (deadair), Monday, 21 February 2005 22:38 (nineteen years ago) link

it might be fun to be the writer of the worst music review ever. it's sort of an honor to be so incredibly horrible at something instead of middling and bland.
m.

msp (msp), Monday, 21 February 2005 23:15 (nineteen years ago) link

what would the THEORETICAL worst review ever entail?

Fat Anarchy on Airtube (ex machina), Monday, 21 February 2005 23:17 (nineteen years ago) link

that's a good question.

m.

msp (msp), Monday, 21 February 2005 23:35 (nineteen years ago) link

"So, what is the worst music review ever then?"
they can generally be found on www.ilxor.com i believe.

madhattr, Monday, 21 February 2005 23:50 (nineteen years ago) link

I'd like to nominate the one where ILM whipping boy Jim Derogatis compared buying a Britney Spears album to being raped.

lovebug starski (lovebug starski), Tuesday, 22 February 2005 00:00 (nineteen years ago) link

one year passes...
quite strange that nobody mentioned this:

http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/article/record_review/16927/Death_Cab_for_Cutie_Transatlanticism

Aditya (dan138zig), Sunday, 13 August 2006 11:51 (seventeen years ago) link

two years pass...

Who needs this shit?

That said, we can progress to a more balanced appreciation of the third Funkadelic album. In it, the group continues their rather limited exploration of the dark side of psychedelia–a shattered, desolate landscape with few pleasures.

At its most mindless, we are given almost nine and a half minutes of "Wars of Armageddon" - steady bongos and drums behind a creeping ooze of guitars and repeated nudges from an organ, collaged with an arbitrary mix of angry yells, airport departure announcements, cuckoo clocks, garbled conversation and lame variations of popular slogans ("More people to the power; More power to the pussy") -which ends with: 1) several rumbling bomb blasts, 2) a beating heart and 3) a three-second disintegrating snatch of music. Far out. Balancing this is the ten-minute title cut which layers stark electric guitars over a simple, repeated, "beautiful" pattern on what at first sounds like acoustic guitar but at times swells to harp-like vibrancy. With this pattern unfolding like a cool breeze in the background, the electric guitars pursue independent courses out front like dragonflies dipping and sweeping; abrasive and fuzzy, then pure, lovely and shimmering.

In between "Maggot Brain" and "Armageddon," the opening and closing cuts, is an uneven group of shorter, more precise funk songs. One of these, "Can You Get to That," is a reworking of an old Parliaments single, "What You Been Growing," written by the producer here, George Clinton. The changes the song has been put through are indicative of Clinton's declining inspiration as a songwriter. The first verse in both versions ends with the lines, "But I read an old quotation in a book just yesterday: Said, 'You gonna reap just what you sow The less you make you'll have to pay.'" But instead of the original chorus "You been growing just what you been sowing," a nicely succinct message to an errant lover the Funkadelic substitute soul cliche: "Can you get to that I wanna know if you can get to that." In spite of this tell-tale change for the worse (and the other material displays an even more pronounced lyric thinness), "Get to That" is bright and enjoyable, making use of a female chorus and a tight but deliberately slowed-down pace.

Funkadelic is primarily an instrumental group, performing as the band for Clinton's funked-up Parliament, and the LP is marked as a "Parliafunkadelic Thang," although the Parliaments aren't on the record. With the exception of the two long showcase cuts one awfully muddy and jumbled, the other a fine sweet-and-sour dish the music on the whole is more competent than exciting. At best. Side two, culminating in (or descending to) "Armageddon," is a horrible mush. Such dead-end stuff.

Funk for funk's sake becomes merely garbage. Maggot Brain begins with a few echoed introductory lines: "... I have tasted the maggots in the mind of the universe. I was not offended; for I knew I had to rise above it all or drown in my own shit." Don't look now, bro' but it's up around your knees.

VINCE ALETTI
(Posted: Sep 30, 1971)

Mr. Snrub, Thursday, 5 March 2009 20:05 (fifteen years ago) link

oh funk for funk's sake

Fox Force Five Punchline (sexyDancer), Thursday, 5 March 2009 20:36 (fifteen years ago) link

the review that always come to my mind when discussing the worst review ever is this:

http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/article/record_review/16927-death-cab-for-cutie-transatlanticism

dan138zig (Durrr Durrr Durrrrrr), Thursday, 5 March 2009 22:30 (fifteen years ago) link

VINCE ALETTI

^^^WOULD STAB

One of the Most High Profile Comedy Directors of the 90s (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 5 March 2009 22:48 (fifteen years ago) link

Oh thanks for reminding me of that Death Cab review.

ban everyone imho (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 5 March 2009 22:50 (fifteen years ago) link

wouldnt piss on him if he was on fire
x-post

I've always hated DCFC but now I guess I hate their fans too

One of the Most High Profile Comedy Directors of the 90s (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 5 March 2009 22:51 (fifteen years ago) link

ACH! That Funkadellic review is bad yes.

Dan Landings, Thursday, 5 March 2009 22:54 (fifteen years ago) link

CONCLUSION: (III),
Ends the album where the Stability EP left off, w/ "A Lack of Color"-- a low-key ziplock on the freshest meal. Record IS a meal, with all courses well thought out. Ingredients may be obvious-- final taste and chef's vision remain a family secret. Just have to taste for yourself. Same cook-- bigger batch of sound.

UGHHHHHHHH!

ilxor, Thursday, 5 March 2009 23:06 (fifteen years ago) link

I don't understand that Death Cab For Cutie review at all. What's the point?

Mr. Snrub, Thursday, 5 March 2009 23:16 (fifteen years ago) link

it is a parody of people's circa-whenever-that-was expectations of Pitchfork reviews and how they were written

nabisco, Thursday, 5 March 2009 23:23 (fifteen years ago) link

kind of a bitch to read and not very good, in my opinion, but I don't think what it's attempting to do is all that opaque

nabisco, Thursday, 5 March 2009 23:24 (fifteen years ago) link

Well couldn't you say the same thing about all their "gonzo" reviews? Like the ones for White Stripes' Elephant and Tool's Lateralus and the first Franz Ferdinand album?

Mr. Snrub, Thursday, 5 March 2009 23:25 (fifteen years ago) link

(x-post)

Mr. Snrub, Thursday, 5 March 2009 23:25 (fifteen years ago) link

lol @ people wanting to kill Vince Aletti

Matos W.K., Thursday, 5 March 2009 23:28 (fifteen years ago) link

Aletti = one of the great music writers, can't wait to get that new book of his disco columns that's coming out in April. I don't agree with that review either, though I think it's funny.

Matos W.K., Thursday, 5 March 2009 23:28 (fifteen years ago) link

Now here's a gaffe that TO THIS DAY they continue to apologize for at every opportunity:

The popular formula in England in this, the aftermath era of such successful British bluesmen as Cream and John Mayall, seems to be: add, to an excellent guitarist who, since leaving the Yardbirds and/or Mayall, has become a minor musical deity, a competent rhythm section and pretty soul-belter who can do a good spade imitation. The latest of the British blues groups so conceived offers little that its twin, the Jeff Beck Group, didn't say as well or better three months ago, and the excesses of the Beck group's Truth album (most notably its self-indulgence and restrictedness), are fully in evidence on Led Zeppelin's debut album.

Jimmy Page, around whom the Zeppelin revolves, is, admittedly, an extraordinarily proficient blues guitarist and explorer of his instrument's electronic capabilities. Unfortunately, he is also a very limited producer and a writer of weak, unimaginative songs, and the Zeppelin album suffers from his having both produced it and written most of it (alone or in combination with his accomplices in the group).

The album opens with lots of guitarrhythm section exchanges (in the fashion of Beck's "Shapes of Things" on "Good Times Bad Times," which might have been ideal for a Yardbirds' B-side. Here, as almost everywhere else on the album, it is Page's guitar that provides most of the excitement. "Babe I'm Gonna Leave You" alternates between prissy Robert Plant's howled vocals fronting an acoustic guitar and driving choruses of the band running down a four-chord progression while John Bonham smashes his cymbals on every beat. The song is very dull in places (especially on the vocal passages), very redundant, and certainly not worth the six-and-a-half minutes the Zeppelin gives it.

Two much-overdone Willie Dixon blues standards fail to be revivified by being turned into showcases for Page and Plant. "You Shook Me" is the more interesting of the two – at the end of each line Plant's echo-chambered voice drops into a small explosion of fuzz-tone guitar, with which it matches shrieks at the end.

The album's most representative cut is "How Many More Times." Here a jazzy introduction gives way to a driving (albeit monotonous) guitar-dominated background for Plant's strained and unconvincing shouting (he may be as foppish as Rod Stewart, but he's nowhere near so exciting, especially in the higher registers). A fine Page solo then leads the band into what sounds like a backwards version of the Page-composed "Beck's Bolero," hence to a little snatch of Albert King's "The Hunter," and finally to an avalanche of drums and shouting.

In their willingness to waste their considerable talent on unworthy material the Zeppelin has produced an album which is sadly reminiscent of Truth. Like the Beck group they are also perfectly willing to make themselves a two- (or, more accurately, one-a-half) man show. It would seem that, if they're to help fill the void created by the demise of Cream, they will have to find a producer (and editor) and some material worthy of their collective attention.

JOHN MENDELSOHN
(Posted: Mar 15, 1969)

Mr. Snrub, Thursday, 5 March 2009 23:34 (fifteen years ago) link

pretty soul-belter who can do a good spade imitation

stopped reading

One of the Most High Profile Comedy Directors of the 90s (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 5 March 2009 23:37 (fifteen years ago) link

"posted"

the thick man from the late "imp!" clusterfucks (k3vin k.), Thursday, 5 March 2009 23:47 (fifteen years ago) link

Dunno if it's the worst but Glam, the singer from Wig Wam of 2005 Eurovision fame, recently complained about a review in a newspaper of his recent solo album. The review was written in a way which actually made his kids believe their dad had been reported to the police. Because, well, the reviewer thought the album was so bad that he should be for making it...

Geir Hongro, Friday, 6 March 2009 00:14 (fifteen years ago) link

Besides, I dunno if there is a minimum requirement about the rewier to actually call it a review, or Rate Your Music is crowded with contenders for this thread.

Geir Hongro, Friday, 6 March 2009 00:15 (fifteen years ago) link

Check this one out: http://www.island50.com/albums/detail/five_leaves_left

No wonder Nick Drake topped himself.

Also see the Bob Woffinden review of I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight on the same site. Basically it says "Good album but why don't they cheer up a bit?". I would love to read what Bob had to say about What's Going On or Blue or Blood On The Tracks. But I'll forgive Bob as he is now one of the few people in the UK writing about miscarriages of justice which is perhaps the great neglected issue of our age.

Christopher Cross, Friday, 6 March 2009 01:19 (fifteen years ago) link

Rock criticism as we know it hadn't really begun properly then. OK, it had in Rolling Stone, which was probably more critical then than it is now. But in Europe, critique was still mainly "Do I hear a hit here?". And Peter Sarstedt did sell more records than Nick Drake. At least back then.

Geir Hongro, Friday, 6 March 2009 02:48 (fifteen years ago) link

Btw. I am pretty sure Sex Pistols got some truly awful reviews back then. On the other hand, maybe those critics were the ones who were right, after all. :)

Geir Hongro, Friday, 6 March 2009 02:49 (fifteen years ago) link

: )

court suggester (omar little), Friday, 6 March 2009 02:50 (fifteen years ago) link

Peter Sarstedt sounds like he might be onto something....a review from AMG on his Where Did You Go, Lovely album....wondering about that "sub-Donovan sense of melody and delivery" though.

<<"I looked up from my book and thought, I am a cathedral, in the shadow of St. Stephen." The very first line of Sarstedt's debut LP gives fair warning that you're dealing with a writer who isn't going to let a little thing like overblown cosmic pretension be a cause for embarrassment. If you want more along that line, there's the song about "Many Coloured Semi Precious Plastic Easter Eggs," and if you want an over-ambitious subject, there's "The Sons of Cain Are Abel." He does show a sense of humor, though, in "My Daddy Is a Millionaire." Elsewhere, his overtly observational, oh-so-slightly self-satisfied sense of wordplay dominates. His sub-Donovan sense of melody and delivery isn't bad, and the precious baroque orchestration both dates the record and invests it with a peculiar fascination. Originally released as Peter Sarstedt, it features the huge European hit title track. >>

smurfherder, Friday, 6 March 2009 19:16 (fifteen years ago) link

I have to admit, I don't really get the habit of digging up bad reviews of now-legendary material and having a laugh at the writer's expense, often because I don't think the writers are actually all that wrong -- and because they were in a position to have pointed out obvious aspects of the material that people are too cowed by the legendary status to say anymore without the whole thing being vexed and controversial. Okay, obviously it's funny and ironic when someone's dismissing some legends and saying they're never going to get anywhere. But pointing out that Funkadelic can be a bit jumbled and muddy and aimless at points is, like ... sort of true! This is why a lot of people who are generally fond of Funkadelic don't listen straight through their albums all the time!

I sort of like seeing that -- the ultimate example, I guess, being Edmund White reviewing Ulysses and saying "this is terrific, but seriously, all the Homeric illusions get to be kind of a chore at some point, we get it"

nabisco, Friday, 6 March 2009 19:32 (fifteen years ago) link

Everyone Who Pretended to Like Me Is Gone [Startime International, 2002
Just what we always wanted--Jonathan Fire*Eater grows up. Put some DreamWorks money into a studio, that was mature. Realized Radiohead was the greatest band in the world, brainy. Stopped playing so fast, hoo boy. And most important, switched vocalists from Nick Cave imitator to Rufus Wainwright imitator. Wainwright makes up better melodies with a dick in his mouth, and not only that, Cave has more literary ability. New York scene or (hint hint) no New York scene, DreamWorks isn't buying.

- Robert Christgau

Shannon Whirry & the Bad Brains, Friday, 6 March 2009 19:37 (fifteen years ago) link

Not only tin-eared and way-off-the-mark (regardless of what you think of The Walkmen), but offensive!

Shannon Whirry & the Bad Brains, Friday, 6 March 2009 19:39 (fifteen years ago) link

hahahaha the Walkmen hahahaha

Matos W.K., Friday, 6 March 2009 20:15 (fifteen years ago) link

ha?

s1ocki, Friday, 6 March 2009 20:27 (fifteen years ago) link

hahaha--that Funkadelic review is brilliant! i don't agree with it at all, but that is the best description of what the thang actually sounds/feels like i've ever seen anywhere. wonder if he warmed up to it at all later on?

51 SBs and there's nothing on (Ioannis), Friday, 6 March 2009 20:27 (fifteen years ago) link

But pointing out that Funkadelic can be a bit jumbled and muddy and aimless at points is, like ... sort of true!

That review says considerably more.

QuantumNoise, Friday, 6 March 2009 20:57 (fifteen years ago) link

yeah dismissing "funk for funk's sake" kinda um misses the whole point of P-Funk

its like criticizing a rap album for having too much rapping

Add "indulgent" to the list? I mean, leaving aside the value judgments, I think the points of criticism there are actually fairly accurate. But like I said, I'm a sucker for the point where legendary things were still new and people felt free to point out obvious things about them, like "oh, this Nick Drake album is a bit monochromatic." (I'd be even fonder of anyone who wrote "I dunno, this Drake fellow's a bit depressing.")

nabisco, Friday, 6 March 2009 21:09 (fifteen years ago) link

the ultimate example, I guess, being Edmund White reviewing Ulysses and saying "this is terrific, but seriously, all the Homeric illusions get to be kind of a chore at some point, we get it"

illusions or allusions?

what happened? I'm confused. (sarahel), Friday, 6 March 2009 21:12 (fifteen years ago) link

Wainwright makes up better melodies with a dick in his mouth

?!

straight up, you're payin' jacks just to hear me phase (M@tt He1ges0n), Friday, 6 March 2009 21:14 (fifteen years ago) link

HOW DROLL

court suggester (omar little), Friday, 6 March 2009 21:15 (fifteen years ago) link

that's how you get to be The Dean (TM) i guess

straight up, you're payin' jacks just to hear me phase (M@tt He1ges0n), Friday, 6 March 2009 21:23 (fifteen years ago) link

meant "allusions" obv

nabisco, Friday, 6 March 2009 22:23 (fifteen years ago) link


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