SpookyNopetopus said:
What's your point, here? Are you arguing with the point of my post, or what. Because if you are, you totally proved the point that Black people can be music snobs just like everyone else on the planet. --Jesus dude you are the one carrying on about people getting mad if you are black and you like white groups. I am saying that is not always the case. Black people like what they have been exposed to who does not know The Doobie Bros, or Fame by David Bowie. I do not belive the Beatles ever had any of their music played on RnB stations it is about exposure. [Edited 5/31/17 6:00am] | |
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I think it's ridiculous to avoid certain bands and artists just because of their race my parents listened to everything from Aretha,The Beatles,Sly and Santana.It's because of them,my musical tastes are so eclectic,too. | |
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I'm saying it's what happened in /my/ case, girl. You're the one acting like you're the only one who can speak on how Black people experience life. You don't like it, that's just too damn bad, I don't care. I imagine myself inside your bedroom; oh, I imagine myself in your sky.
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SpookyNopetopus said:
I'm saying it's what happened in /my/ case, girl. You're the one acting like you're the only one who can speak on how Black people experience life. You don't like it, that's just too damn bad, I don't care. --I am not saying I speaking for all black people but if you are honest you know black people are not checking for the Beatles. In fact for some people of my generation our Beatles was Prince and the Revolution. [Edited 5/31/17 6:02am] | |
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As if I give a shit what black people are checking for, whateve the hell that even /means/, child. Since when were all black people like the same damn thing like we're the borg or some crap. I listen to them. I like them. You are free to dislike them or whatever the hell you want to do. Just stop pretending you know how all black people roll, girl, which is exactly what you're pretending right now.
ANYWAY, I'ma stop derailing this thread playing with you, chick. I imagine myself inside your bedroom; oh, I imagine myself in your sky.
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feeluupp said: Only thing worse than listening to the Beatles is Laura Richardsons constant argueing over Prince's welfare and being everyday... Nag your constant concern about what I post is pretty bad as well but carrying with your bitch fest. | |
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I don't think anyone is claiming to have never heard the Beatles. I've heard them but I've never listened to one of their albums. Some of their songs are ok but nothing I've heard has compelled me to seek out anything further. RIP | |
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Moonbeam said:
No this is where you're wrong. The Beatles didn't invent the album, I never said that, but they made it an EVENT. There's a reason why everyone brought out high concept albums after it but not before. There's a a reason why suddenly the packaging and the art were all related and part of the experience and not interrupted by adverts for other albums on the record label. Loose song collections like In the Wee Small Hours or Harry Belafonte's Calypso (the first million selling album) are fantastic but didn't have the ambition or impact of Sgt Peppers. It's not even my fav Beatles album but personally I'm sick of people trying to rewrite history and minimize the impact it had. | |
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Feel free to join in the Prince Album Poll 2018! Let'a celebrate his legacy by counting down the most beloved Prince albums, as decided by you! | |
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People have to understand what the music industry was like in 1967. We only heard about new releases through statements from record companies and AM radio, basically. We didn't have the internet or 24-hour news channels. I remember hounding record stores for new releases I had heard about. MTV didn't start until 1981! '67 was the seminal year for IMO everything and The Beatles - who came on the American scene mere months after President Kennedy was murdered - changed the world. They really did. Unless you lived it, you don't know what it was like. | |
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it was beyond whatever concept albums were before that, if there was such a term. they all changed their names for the record, changed their stories and pasts, changed their clothes, it was brilliant. also, they seemed to go through what prince went through too, not everyone liked the new music, that means white fans. My mom told me she thought it was wierd. some of the purist critics also thought they were abandoning rock and roll. | |
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This is the album that began serious music criticism.
I think we have gotten off track here with the original notion. Yes, it was one of the most influential albums of the rock era. No, black folk weren't checking for them album-wise. No, they weren't the best rock or any type of band ever. Yes they got their influences and start covering the seminal black artists of the past that are the true architects of rock n roll (and everything that means).
But, yes, they were heard by DAMN near everyone whether or not you had or didnt have their albums, whether you were black, white, red, brown, the, purple and yellow (but first I gotta ..bang bang up jump th..oh wait a minute). And to think that Prince did not hear their music as most have, only to be introduced to them by someone of The Revolution, as was stated time and again is ri-godamn-iculous.
THE END
. [Edited 5/31/17 9:34am] "Climb in my fur." | |
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that's right, i'll never believe it for a second. Yes prince may have been unfamiliar with some of their work, but no one could avoid hearing it. I grew up all around black folks, but beatles music was, I don't even know where, i just know that I'd heard it all my life. Maybe from passing cars, on store music stations, on tv, at the movie, i couldn't really tell you. All I can tell you is that once I did get into them, I recognized a lot of it. Prince, the guy who was always said to have been raised on top 40, in a city which didn't have one proper black station, surrounded and bussed to white schools, even had black friends who were into all white groups grandfunk railroad and james gang were amongst his crews faves, and groups who I couldn't tell you a single fucking song off of, Prince definitely heard some beatles. We know for a fact he was a Stones fan so how would he not be aware of the beatles. Prince hid some of his influences well, in fact, one of his earlier managers tried to say he "wanted to be Elvis" i'd been saying elvis was a main influence forever but no one believes that either. | |
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Moonbeam said:
Dark Side of the Moon came out by the time concept albums were cliche! And in no way did that album ever reach the ridiculous ear opening tidal wave that Pepper did causing the likes of Jimi Hendrix to cover the title track live right when it came out and countless other artists to cover the tunes in their own style. The equivalent would be as if One Direction started to make music with flavors and themes unheard of that was rapidly accepted and evolved the tastes of their fans into sophistication. My art book: http://www.lulu.com/spotl...ecomicskid
VIDEO WORK: http://sharadkantpatel.com MUSIC: https://soundcloud.com/ufoclub1977 | |
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ufoclub said: Moonbeam said:
Dark Side of the Moon came out by the time concept albums were cliche! And in no way did that album ever reach the ridiculous ear opening tidal wave that Pepper did causing the likes of Jimi Hendrix to cover the title track live right when it came out and countless other artists to cover the tunes in their own style. The equivalent would be as if One Direction started to make music with flavors and themes unheard of that was rapidly accepted and evolved the tastes of their fans into sophistication. It sold more copies than Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band and has comparable levels of critical acclaim. Don't get me wrong, I don't like it, but it probably is the pinnacle of the whole concept album concept. Feel free to join in the Prince Album Poll 2018! Let'a celebrate his legacy by counting down the most beloved Prince albums, as decided by you! | |
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Moonbeam said: ufoclub said: Dark Side of the Moon came out by the time concept albums were cliche! And in no way did that album ever reach the ridiculous ear opening tidal wave that Pepper did causing the likes of Jimi Hendrix to cover the title track live right when it came out and countless other artists to cover the tunes in their own style. The equivalent would be as if One Direction started to make music with flavors and themes unheard of that was rapidly accepted and evolved the tastes of their fans into sophistication. It sold more copies than Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band and has comparable levels of critical acclaim. Don't get me wrong, I don't like it, but it probably is the pinnacle of the whole concept album concept. Not in my opinion, and the album sales of Dark Side of the Moon in no way reflect its cultural or artistic impact. Just listen to the album and it's obviously not on the revolutionary level of Sgt Pepper, it's actually quite conventional 70's rock songs that are all cohesive and tied to the Pink Floyd brand as they went for a far more ear candy type sound then the experimental albums from their past. In many ways it was their 1999 with The Wall being their Purple Rain. I love the album but I know where it sits in my mind next to Sgt Peppers. After Sgt. Pepper, there rose a whole slew of concept albums that really became a staple (and now satirized) part of 70's art rock. Something like Emerson Lake and Palmer went completely nuts. In many ways Rainbow Children was a throwback to 7o's style art concept album very much with the kind of cohesiveness that Pink Floyd had, but a different genre of music flavor within. My art book: http://www.lulu.com/spotl...ecomicskid
VIDEO WORK: http://sharadkantpatel.com MUSIC: https://soundcloud.com/ufoclub1977 | |
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rdhull said: This is the album that began serious music criticism.
I think we have gotten off track here with the original notion. Yes, it was one of the most influential albums of the rock era. No, black folk weren't checking for them album-wise. No, they weren't the best rock or any type of band ever. Yes they got their influences and start covering the seminal black artists of the past that are the true architects of rock n roll (and everything that means).
But, yes, they were heard by DAMN near everyone whether or not you had or didnt have their albums, whether you were black, white, red, brown, the, purple and yellow (but first I gotta ..bang bang up jump th..oh wait a minute). And to think that Prince did not hear their music as most have, only to be introduced to them by someone of The Revolution, as was stated time and again is ri-godamn-iculous.
THE END
. [Edited 5/31/17 9:34am] yep...that pretty much sums it up properly... | |
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I remember watching a documentary on Netflix not too long ago about the evolution on Hip Hop... I think it was KRS ONE that said in the interview... "The Beatles, Evlis and Rolling Stones was for the white boys... Here in the hood no one rocked that, we had to come up with our own music, so that is why hip-hop started to emerge..." | |
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I was obviously being a bit dramatic but we wouldn't be listening to albums in the same way if it weren't for Sgt Peppers. Sure, if it hadn't come along something else would have but the point is that it did come along. And yeah, many of my favourite albums came before it but that's neither here nor there, it's not about personal taste or retrospective discoveries.
bit of a weird quote. These lads were disenfranchised with 50's and 60's white music (fair enough, can't say I blame them) so they, what, stood around for a decade and created hip hop around 1980? What happened to the entire 70's in that story? [Edited 6/3/17 15:50pm] | |
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So? DMC said he was into Zep, ACDC, Beatles and wasnt diggin James Brown etc. He wante to rock.
Yall monolith mugs kill me
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I'm not going to argue that Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band didn't have a massive impact - it quite obviously did. I just think it is a terrible album, the worst of the 3 Beatles albums I have heard and one of the most unpleasant albums I've ever sat through. I know that I'm missing out on something as it clearly has reached a lot of people. I'd say it could be a concept album thing, but I guess I think The Beatles were at their best (or least offensive, anyway), when they penned simple pop/rock tunes. If I want to go for experimental 60s stuff, I'd much rather turn to The Velvet Underground or Sun Ra or White Noise, I guess.
Feel free to join in the Prince Album Poll 2018! Let'a celebrate his legacy by counting down the most beloved Prince albums, as decided by you! | |
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That's fine - it was obviously a very influential album. I brought up Dark Side of the Moon to suggest that there were concept albums that might have been bigger and more impactful, though I wasn't around at the time either was released to say, but album sales are in Pink Floyd's favor here and critical acclaim is pretty much a wash.
I agree that it's hard to envision Prince not having heard some Beatles songs at the very least - I certainly couldn't avoid them growing up. It doesn't seem that implausible that he might not have heard any of their full-length albums until The Revolution exposed him to them, though. Feel free to join in the Prince Album Poll 2018! Let'a celebrate his legacy by counting down the most beloved Prince albums, as decided by you! | |
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kinda just dismisses all the great r&b artists, a really stupid statement.
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Rolling Stone had an article where they were insinuating that Sgt. Peppers wasn't the best psychedelic album around, they mentioned Pink Floyds' pipers at the gates of dawn as a better one, I listened to that and couldn't get into it at all. The Beatles new stuff wasn't for everyone, the purist critics and some fans didn't like it. Lots of Prince's fans from Purple Rain were alienated with ATWIAD likewise. I however, never thought of ATWIAD as a great album, never. A few good tracks but not nearly a great album.
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Interesting thread but one that, for many of the posters here, completely missed the point about music and whether something or someone is "good" and that is that it is completely subjective! If you like jazz or hip hop or heavy metal or funk etc then The Beatles are unlikely to be your taste! The influence of the Beatles MUST also take into account the context and era, ie. the 60s. Anyone claiming The Beatles were not influential is simply an idiot. They changed the face of POP music. While not unique, it was very rare in the early 1960s for bands or singers to also write their own music (and indeed play most of their own instruments). Before Sgt Pepper (actually I would argue Revolver) most (not all) artists released albums that were actually compilations of songs rather than coherent "albums". The fact that the biggest band in the planet started recording "albums" had a massive impact on artistic credibility. The other completely unarguable fact is that The Beatles are the most successful recording artist commercially ever, period. Simply by virtue of selling more records than anyone else ever means they are immensely influential! That doesn't mean you or anyone else has to like their music, far from it, but nobody who is right minded in the head can dismiss their influence and commercial success? 'I loved him then, I love him now and will love him eternally. He's with our son now.' Mayte 21st April 2016 = the saddest quote I have ever read! RIP Prince and thanks for everything. | |
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sales is also somewhat subjective, what is the measure? singles? albums? single albums? Everything? I once heard no one came close to Elvis for sales, not the Beatles or anyone. I don't know if that's true or not and it really doesn't matter too much to me. As for subjective,it's true but really, a great song is a great song but a listener has to do their part too and not be lazy or dismissive. | |
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Those who did not live and were grown enough at that time can't say much really but look from afar and opine but that's it. | |
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Mine too, but that performance with Elton was for me, terrible. | |
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No way. | |
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George Martin's son Giles is going to be on tonight's Jimmy Fallon show to talk about this box set. The episode might be on NBC's site once the show is over, or a clip on the Tonight Show's Youtube channel. 50 Years Later, Beatles' 'Sgt. Pepper' Back in Top Three . The Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band returns to the chart, re-entering at No. 3 with 75,000 units (up 2,062 percent) with 71,000 in traditional album sales (up 3,889 percent). It is the highest rank for the former No. 1 album since the Dec. 30, 1967-dated chart, when the set also placed at No. 3. You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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