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Hope everyone can appreciate the use of "edge" and "Phil Collins" in the same sentence. Thanks thread! | |
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PliablyPurple said: Hope everyone can appreciate the use of "edge" and "Phil Collins" in the same sentence. Thanks thread! You clearly have never heard Phil Collins' music outside of his hits.
Either way, he's still 100× the artist that Ed Sheeran is. [Edited 11/2/19 15:44pm] | |
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He was right | |
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PliablyPurple said: Hey, if we had to listen to an album from Carmen Elektra simply bcuz you were horny, you can deal with Katy Perry and Ed Sheeran, P!
But I think I get it. Everything is an algorithm these days. Paint by numbers to make the perfect mona lisa. Then maybe I don't. [Edited 11/3/19 11:05am] Time keeps on slipping into the future...
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I think what Prince meant with that comment was that the industry is only looking and paying for a guarenteed recipe for a "pop" hit - both in looks, and sound. Ed Sheeran is an expert at writing a catchy pop hit, and Katy Perry, Taylor Swift, Ariana Grande, et al all fit that "mold" for the female pop star. My 13 yr old daughter listens to the local "pop" station, and I can't tell one singer or song from the next, as they all sound the same these days. * Someone in an earlier post put MJ, Prince, and Madonna in that "manufactured pop" category with NSync, Backstreet Boys etc, and I have to completely disagree. MJ, Prince and Madonna were all distinguishable and created their own style and sound back in the 80's. You can easily distinguish an MJ song from a Prince song, and Madonna had her own distinct sound as well. Both Prince and Madonna were also constantly reinventing their style and sound. MJ stuck with his m/o which is why he faded out sooner - BUT he had a huge impact starting with Motown and then everywhere. * The record industry moguls are now only interested in the quick money-making hit. They are no longer patient with looking for new and/or artistic musicians to grow and build a fan base. Watch "Before The Music Dies" - excellent docu film released in 2006 which explains the downturn of the music business. There is a hilarious segment in there where they have an experienced older male songwriter (who co-wrote Jewel's big hit "Meant For Me") write a standard "pop" song, and they recruited a 17 yr old female model (who cannot sing) to record the song and make a video. The magic of auto-tune software and creative video edits turn it into what would easily become a "pop" hit today Great interviews in the film too - Erykah Badu, Questlove, Branford Marsalis, Doyle Bramhall II, Dave Matthews, etc.
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Katy Perry is irredeemably bad, IMO. Don’t know much Ed Sheeran outside of “The Shape of You”, which is ok. 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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Good point!! And thank God the Kim B recordings were never released. They are worse than the Carmen E mess | |
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Both are garbage. FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent. | |
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LOL. You're far too young to understand, hell even i'm too young, but no, Phil Collins will never be edgy. He does some interesting stuff and hip hop has loved his production for 30 odd years now but it's not cool and it never will be. On the plus side, he sold a billion more records than any edgy act ever did so he's laughing all the way to the bank. | |
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jaawwnn said:
LOL. You're far too young to understand, hell even i'm too young, but no, Phil Collins will never be edgy. He does some interesting stuff and hip hop has loved his production for 30 odd years now but it's not cool and it never will be. On the plus side, he sold a billion more records than any edgy act ever did so he's laughing all the way to the bank. Also how can you be so embraced by the hip hop community and not be cool? | |
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I never said Phil Collins was "edgy". I said he had an edge compared to Sheeran, which he most certainly does. It may not be much of a contest because I'm comparing him to Ed Sheersn of all people but still. Ah yeah, fair enough.
Also how can you be so embraced by the hip hop community and not be cool? It's one of life's mysteries, he found a way though | |
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Well, I WAS around (as a youngin) when Phil was part of Genesis, and then went out on his own. He was "edgy" early on his 1981 album with songs like In The Air Tonight, I Missed Again), but he did get into more of the "pop machine" in his older years, as most artists tend to do. However, his No Jacket Required album was HUGE in 1985 (Sussudio, One More Night), and Against All Odds went to number one in 1984 and won him the Grammy for best male vocal. * So, yes he did become the "ballad boy" through his career, but he was edgier in his earlier years. | |
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violetcrush said:
Well, I WAS around (as a youngin) when Phil was part of Genesis, and then went out on his own. He was "edgy" early on his 1981 album with songs like In The Air Tonight, I Missed Again), but he did get into more of the "pop machine" in his older years, as most artists tend to do. However, his No Jacket Required album was HUGE in 1985 (Sussudio, One More Night), and Against All Odds went to number one in 1984 and won him the Grammy for best male vocal. * So, yes he did become the "ballad boy" through his career, but he was edgier in his earlier years. | |
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MotownSubdivision said: violetcrush said:
Well, I WAS around (as a youngin) when Phil was part of Genesis, and then went out on his own. He was "edgy" early on his 1981 album with songs like In The Air Tonight, I Missed Again), but he did get into more of the "pop machine" in his older years, as most artists tend to do. However, his No Jacket Required album was HUGE in 1985 (Sussudio, One More Night), and Against All Odds went to number one in 1984 and won him the Grammy for best male vocal. * So, yes he did become the "ballad boy" through his career, but he was edgier in his earlier years. Yes, his song “In The Air Tonight” was used for the steamy subway train scene in Risky Business - the most popular film of 1983, and Tom Cruise’s breakout role. | |
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Why does music have to be "edgy"? Adult Contemporary & light rock has always been a popular seller and so was easy listening before it. Such as: 5th Dimension Mantovani Richard Clayderman Andy Williams Ray Charles Singers (not the blind Ray) Mannheim Steamroller Barry Manilow Chicago (1980s) / Peter Cetera Amy Grant Whitney Houston Luther Vandross John Tesh those chanting Monks albums from the early 1990s the many power ballad hits by 1980s rock bands/singers Celine Dion Boyz II Men Josh Groban Adele 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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Listen, far be it for me to intrude on your memories, and In the Air Tonight is a fantastic song, a wonderful piece of music and a brilliant pop single, but it's divorced dad-pop, the least cool genre . As for Genesis, they were a prog-rock band trying to push the boundaries of what's musically possible, that's a whole different thing.
[Edited 11/11/19 2:38am] | |
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. I'm sorry, but Genesis were lightyears from the boundaries of "what's musically possible" so I would say they had zero chance of reaching, let alone pushing said boundaries. . People like Arnold Schönberg, John Coltrane or Eric Dolphy were the ones pushing those boundaries, not rock bands. But if you want to limit your scope to rock, you can still find hundreds of bands way above Genesis in terms of musicianship and genuine progressiveness. Friends don't let friends clap on 1 and 3.
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Hey I never said they succeeded. | |
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. Fair enough Friends don't let friends clap on 1 and 3.
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MickyDolenz said:
Why does music have to be "edgy"? Adult Contemporary & light rock has always been a popular seller and so was easy listening before it. Such as: 5th Dimension Mantovani Richard Clayderman Andy Williams Ray Charles Singers (not the blind Ray) Mannheim Steamroller Barry Manilow Chicago (1980s) / Peter Cetera Amy Grant Whitney Houston Luther Vandross John Tesh those chanting Monks albums from the early 1990s the many power ballad hits by 1980s rock bands/singers Celine Dion Boyz II Men Josh Groban Adele | |
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You said Phil Collins has an edge that Ed Sheeran does not have and that Ed is bland. What does that have to do with anybody liking music or a performer being popular? Michael Bublé & John Legend are also popular now. Ed Sheeran is not much different than James Taylor, Neil Diamond, or Gordon Lightfoot in the 1970s and they were popular singers. Ed is no different than all of the acts before him who sold a lot with soft music. It's like smooth jazz is generally more popular than straight jazz. Smooth jazz gets radio airplay on adult R&B stations and there's The Wave radio format for it too. Those American Songbook albums by Rod Stewart sold way more than several of his records of new songs released right before them. New albums by Tony Bennett are popular today. Some of the biggest selling Christmas albums are by Johnny Mathis. During the 1960s, The Sound Of Music Soundtrack was a big hit and so were songs like Feelings, Music Box Dancer, With You I'm Born Again, & You Light Up My Life in the 1970s. John Denver had several TV specials and was recruited to act in movies. VH-1 was originally started for adult contemporary acts and country crossover that the main MTV channel did not show. That an entire channel for AC videos was created should tell you that it is popular. No matter what was hot during any time period like psychedelic rock, disco, glam metal, arena rock, etc. there were always popular adult contemporary/easy listening/light rock acts and songs. It never went out of style. People always want romantic songs to play at weddings. 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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MickyDolenz said:
You said Phil Collins has an edge that Ed Sheeran does not have and that Ed is bland. What does that have to do with anybody liking music or a performer being popular? Michael Bublé & John Legend are also popular now. Ed Sheeran is not much different than James Taylor, Neil Diamond, or Gordon Lightfoot in the 1970s and they were popular singers. Ed is no different than all of the acts before him who sold a lot with soft music. It's like smooth jazz is generally more popular than straight jazz. Smooth jazz gets radio airplay on adult R&B stations and there's The Wave radio format for it too. Those American Songbook albums by Rod Stewart sold way more than several of his records of new songs released right before them. New albums by Tony Bennett are popular today. Some of the biggest selling Christmas albums are by Johnny Mathis. During the 1960s, The Sound Of Music Soundtrack was a big hit and so were songs like Feelings, Music Box Dancer, With You I'm Born Again, & You Light Up My Life in the 1970s. John Denver had several TV specials and was recruited to act in movies. VH-1 was originally started for adult contemporary acts and country crossover that the main MTV channel did not show. That an entire channel for AC videos was created should tell you that it is popular. No matter what was hot during any time period like psychedelic rock, disco, glam metal, arena rock, etc. there were always popular adult contemporary/easy listening/light rock acts and songs. It never went out of style. People always want romantic songs to play at weddings. | |
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violetcrush said: I think what Prince meant with that comment was that the industry is only looking and paying for a guarenteed recipe for a "pop" hit - both in looks, and sound. Ed Sheeran is an expert at writing a catchy pop hit, and Katy Perry, Taylor Swift, Ariana Grande, et al all fit that "mold" for the female pop star. My 13 yr old daughter listens to the local "pop" station, and I can't tell one singer or song from the next, as they all sound the same these days. * Someone in an earlier post put MJ, Prince, and Madonna in that "manufactured pop" category with NSync, Backstreet Boys etc, and I have to completely disagree. MJ, Prince and Madonna were all distinguishable and created their own style and sound back in the 80's. You can easily distinguish an MJ song from a Prince song, and Madonna had her own distinct sound as well. Both Prince and Madonna were also constantly reinventing their style and sound. MJ stuck with his m/o which is why he faded out sooner - BUT he had a huge impact starting with Motown and then everywhere. * The record industry moguls are now only interested in the quick money-making hit. They are no longer patient with looking for new and/or artistic musicians to grow and build a fan base. Watch "Before The Music Dies" - excellent docu film released in 2006 which explains the downturn of the music business. There is a hilarious segment in there where they have an experienced older male songwriter (who co-wrote Jewel's big hit "Meant For Me") write a standard "pop" song, and they recruited a 17 yr old female model (who cannot sing) to record the song and make a video. The magic of auto-tune software and creative video edits turn it into what would easily become a "pop" hit today Great interviews in the film too - Erykah Badu, Questlove, Branford Marsalis, Doyle Bramhall II, Dave Matthews, etc.
Right. Which kind of dovetails in with the other reason why P might've taken a swipe at two popular pop artists: they get promoted because they play the game. He knows that game because he played it, won it, hated it, quit it, and burned the industry on his way out the door to life as an indie artist. And the MUSIC continues...forever... | |
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SquirrelMeat said:
Notice that I also said he's talented. It doesn't matter (to me) how proficient an instrumentalist or artist someone is skill-wise when their music is flat as paper. [Edited 11/14/19 18:53pm] | |
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I like BOTH of them, specially Ed. Prince, wherever he is, can STFU. | |
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Check out the Cross Me VIDEO (not necessarily the song) - AWESOME VFX, and theme!! | |
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What does that even mean? | |
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I do wonder whether his quote was taken slightky out of context. Ed loved Ed's first 2 albums [his lyrics would work as books of poetty IMHO] BUT subsequent music is very mcuh like ColdPLay, Adele etc ie stuck in the same grrove & virtually unidentifibale from the last album / single. What I will say though is that Ed is a bloody genuis as a musician & a seemingly a great bloke.
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