And there all your rock credibility went down the drain.Owyn_Merrilin said:If you honestly think Nirvana is better than Wolfmother, you aren't a fan of rock.
Did you listen to the samples? Nirvana may be more popular, but liking popular bands is not a part of rock cred -- well, at least with bands that formed after the end of the 80s.RanD00M said:And there all your rock credibility went down the drain.Owyn_Merrilin said:If you honestly think Nirvana is better than Wolfmother, you aren't a fan of rock.
3) Are these artists of hated/unpopular genres you cited groundbreaking and we're all just old fogies who can't see it? Well, yes and no, but mostly no. Its a certainly a new trend, screamy disco music. In that sense its breaking new ground, but let's all remember that innovation is not necessarily always a good thing. You can invent something bad, like thermonuclear missiles or something, and you're still an innovator. The real stuff that's progressing music forward in a positive way isn't going to be popular or on the radio. Also, let's not neglect to mention that just about everything on Top 40 radio, even the stuff that's really new is still usually a recombination of proven, "safe" elements.Jamboxdotcom said:As has already been noted, it's not the age of the music, it's the fact that it's "pop". Pop music always caters to the lowest common denominator. That's not to say there's never any good pop, but by and large, pop is garbage, regardless of what generation it's from.
Which band you like more or less has nothing to do with your rock cred going down the drain. No, what you did to kill your rock cred was to totally dismiss the fact that people have different opinions, and that Nirvana and Wolfmother are in no way in the same league of music. Nirvana is a band that broke Grunge into the mainstream and influenced a lot of bands to come. Wolfmother are a straight rock group that did nothing new but did what they did in a solid style. Saying that one is better than the other as a rock band is just wrong. Finding one better than the other is just fine.Owyn_Merrilin said:Did you listen to the samples? Nirvana may be more popular, but liking popular bands is not a part of rock cred -- well, at least with bands that formed after the end of the 80s.RanD00M said:And there all your rock credibility went down the drain.Owyn_Merrilin said:If you honestly think Nirvana is better than Wolfmother, you aren't a fan of rock.
You do get that my point is that we're on a musical upswing, right? I was saying that not only does mainstream music not suck any worse than it did 10 or 20 years ago, but that we're actually doing better than they did then. Nirvana is the direct forefather of the bland punk inspired rock that we've had to suffer through for the last 20 years, and Wolfmother is proof that we're finally moving away from that. Capiche?RanD00M said:Which band you like more or less has nothing to do with your rock cred going down the drain. No, what you did to kill your rock cred was to totally dismiss the fact that people have different opinions, and that Nirvana and Wolfmother are in no way in the same league of music. Nirvana is a band that broke Grunge into the mainstream and influenced a lot of bands to come. Wolfmother are a straight rock group that did nothing new but did what they did in a solid style. Saying that one is better than the other as a rock band is just wrong. Finding one better than the other is just fine.Owyn_Merrilin said:Did you listen to the samples? Nirvana may be more popular, but liking popular bands is not a part of rock cred -- well, at least with bands that formed after the end of the 80s.RanD00M said:And there all your rock credibility went down the drain.Owyn_Merrilin said:If you honestly think Nirvana is better than Wolfmother, you aren't a fan of rock.
And just so we're clear, I like both bands.
Only problem is that Wolfmother have been greatly forgotten by the public right now while Nirvana is still getting praised for their originality. I would also like you to point out some of that bland punk inspired rock that you mentioned.Owyn_Merrilin said:Snip
This whole thread is about opinions, so you're being pretty silly by attacking me. As for bland punk inspired bands, try Green Day, Fallout Boy, My Chemical Romance, and basically the entirety of both Pop Punk and Emo music. Even Screamo and Hardcore are nothing but punk mixed with metal. They're all descendants of punk in some form or fashion, and they all share the common ancestor of grunge.RanD00M said:Only problem is that Wolfmother have been greatly forgotten by the public right now while Nirvana is still getting praised for their originality. I would also like you to point out some of that bland punk inspired rock that you mentioned.Owyn_Merrilin said:Snip
And again you fall into the trap of opinions. Some might say that we are on a musical upswing, some down. This is all different from person to person. Now personally I would say that we are at an upswing from the late 90', early 00's, but the early 90's treated me with more good shit than today does.
Well I must say I'm surprised no one said anything about this. Please, someone inform me as to how Hurt is related to Nirvana in any way.Razada said:Nirvana is good. Hurt is a beautiful song. (Cash covered it, not the other way around.)
I did not realize that, no, though I do now seek agreement: has the cost of recording music gone down or hasn't it?Owyn_Merrilin said:Just checking here; you do know you're arguing with a recording engineer, right? I'd be more inclined to trust his judgement when it comes to what things cost the industry.Eternal-Chaplain said:Hardly, that's just the more risky aspect in terms of money (encompassing distribution as well). The actual art of the music doesn't cost anything, you just think and write and compose that, recording is cheap and everything else doesn't cost much at all because people avoid investing more than the minimum in it. The fact of the matter is, distribution of music is becoming the most expensive part.BonsaiK said:So music for you is about what art is on the front cover, and the images in the music video, not the music itself?Eternal-Chaplain said:I am speaking strictly in terms of economics. Compared to any number of decades ago, music is becoming much cheaper to make with some bands becoming completely digital and releasing music strictly online to cut the cost of compact disks (which aren't very expensive anyways compared to the vinyls music used to made on). I am not at all saying you are not risking time, one can certainly waste a lot of time on music that will never be popular, but now, remember my Lady Gaga example: anybody could make an album cover as crappy as that, the same goes for most modern music videos which are now mostly about the artists as compared to twenty years ago when music videos were nearly at their zenith and the ratio of art to artist was in a beautiful 5 to 1 proportion.BonsaiK said:Oh, how I laughed.Eternal-Chaplain said:Unfortunately, with the low cost of production, music has become a low-risk industry
Music is a higher-risk industry than ever before, and when you look at the success/failure ratio, one of the highest risk industries there is. Sure, it's easy enough to make music now, but to be part of the music industry? I can't think of any other industry with a greater failure/dropout/oops-I-ruined-my-life ratio with the possible exception of acting. Just going on percentages of the total, I certainly know more dead/permanently handicapped/mentally scarred/living in a world of complete delusion musicians than soldiers, police or firemen.
Thank you! I'm glad someone else here feels the same. Although if I just said I liked music just for the music, I would be lying, because many other aspects interest me. There are many artists I like because of the background they came from, or their attitude or appearance. For example, I really love Lady Gaga, Bjork, and Marilyn Manson's sexuality and expression through their stage personas. I still enjoy their music though, and even if I didn't, that wouldn't stop me from enjoying their personas, and vice versa.BonsaiK said:This person gets it. Music is what it is, and you can choose to be interested in music, or not. Many people who consume music in today's society consume with with a lot of codified junk on top that informs how they should feel: "oh, I can't like that band because they have a stupid dance move", "I don't like them because of their hair", "my friends don't like it", "my friends do like it, but I want to feel superior to them, so I'll like something else instead", "I don't like them because they sold out, they were on MTV, but before that they were cool because less people knew about them", etc etc... in other words, everything but the music. Many music fans aren't really music fans at all, they're culture/design junkies, like a sports fan who likes a team because the colour and shape of the logo and the location of the players appeals to him. In the meantime, other people go "hey, I like the way it sounds".
So this whole thing is you assuming people like music that older people hated when it was new? Wow. You could have put this at the start so it would be easier to disregard the rest of your post, because you didn't really say much of anything if "You probably like AC/DC, which are just like these bands you hate if you only look at the lyrics and ignore every other aspect of the music, so you should stop hating so much" is your argument here. One, you have no way of knowing if anyone here actually does like AC/DC for your very weak comparison to even hold water in the first place. And two... As I just said, it's a very weak comparison. There is indeed more to music than just the lyrics, and AC/DC sounds a hell of a lot different than that stuff in your spoiler tag.the Dept of Science said:However, I suspect many of the more vocal critics of these acts also like AC/DC, who are crass, bratty and sing about heavy drug use and promiscuous sex.*
Now, I'm going to make it clear, I don't own any music by BrokenCYDE, the Millionaires, Ke$ha or any of that lot. However, when I look back at music history and see how pretty much every new genre has been rejected by the "old fogies", I ask, are we really any better than the people that thought rock n roll would be the end of music, because they grew up listening to swing jazz?
Funny, because I could say the same thing about Nirvana, word for word -- heck, that "recorded in the basement on a tape recorder" thing was part of the appeal of grunge; it's part of why it was called "grunge."MaxPowers666 said:That they clearly know how to recognize a superior band when they see one. Wolfmother is at best a mediocre band. To top it off the first album they released was absolutely shit quality. Considering how big they were before their first album hit the stores they could have released something that didnt sound like it was recorded in the basement on a tape recorder.Owyn_Merrilin said:Note that I didn't say that Nirvana was absolutely terrible -- although I can't personally stand what their influence did to music for the last 20 years. What I said was that any fan of rock would be able to recognize that Wolfmother was better. Listen to both selections; if you honestly think the Nirvana song is better, I don't know what to say to you.
And that's exactly why I'm annoyed that people have been taking one little bit of hyperbole so far out of context. As for the sound quality, I knew exactly what you meant; Nirvana has always sounded really muddy to me.MaxPowers666 said:Which is exactly why your arguement and really any on this topic is kind of silly. Its all based on personal opinion, plenty of people absolutely love modern music and plenty more think that it is complete crap. Then there are others that dont give a shit what people think and listen to the music that they like.Owyn_Merrilin said:Funny, because I could say the same thing about Nirvana, word for word -- heck, that "recorded in the basement on a tape recorder" thing was part of the appeal of grunge; it's part of why it was called "grunge."
Its strange that you said that because I never actually purchased a nirvana album where the sound quality was absolutely terrible. By your comment though im not actually sure if you understood what I meant.
Lol yeah I just saw that. I'm a huge Nirvana fan, and... well... what?aznj03 said:Well I must say I'm surprised no one said anything about this. Please, someone inform me as to how Hurt is related to Nirvana in any way.Razada said:Nirvana is good. Hurt is a beautiful song. (Cash covered it, not the other way around.)
I agree, but I wouldn't even call it minimalism, because minimalism is usually on purpose.Iron Lightning said:Modern music sucks because of minimalism, that terrible idea that music needs only one meter repeated over and over. Modern pop just tries to hide this by putting lyrics over the top. Listen to pretty much any given modern pop song and ignore the lyrics, it's all the same. This problem seems mostly endemic to modern pop, even though it was invented shortly after the turn of the century before the previous one. Sure, some of the less popular bands are doing fantastic work, but the widespread use of minimalism has made shitty modern pop music even shittier than shitty old pop music. This is why I believe that the overall quality of music has been decreasing.
To sum, "Afternoon Delight" by the Starland Vocal Group is terrible, but I'd surely take it over anything Ke$ha or Lady Gaga has done.