Don't be coming in here making perfectly good sense. What's wrong with u? | |
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You can't be serious. Let me address the sentence before first. Who on this site stated that just because an artist that plays an instrument automatically makes their music better than the artist that doesn't? You would be hard pressed to find one person on this site that will tell that Tyrone Brunson's music is better than Chaka Khan's(solo)music. It seems you get admiration for an artists who are skilled musicians confused with dislike for a lot of today's pop tart artists that don't. Now if you turn to this generation of artists who don't play music more often than not a large percentage of artists who are skilled musicians does have better music. The proof is in the pudding. A lot of mainstream artists today are produced by people that don't play music. They just turn knobs and push buttons. A lot of it sounds processed and lame. Now i have to call bullshit on your comment that it doesn't require any special talent to play an instrument. I've played trumpet in middle school and high school as well as piano. I was more proficient at trumpet because i stuck with it longer but it takes good breathing control and wind to play a brass instrument. You are not gonna just be great it because your band instructor shows you how to play it out of a book. As you develop you're either gonna have that it factor to be great or you will be just ordinary . Of course playing an instrument can be taught and learned but it doesn't mean you're gonna be great at it even with dedication. You can practice and work hard at a craft but it doesn't automatically put you on top. If that were the case Tim Tebow would be a starting qb in the NFL. I have several friends that play in bands. One is a piano player and can play anything at the drop of a hat because he knows chords and he can hear it before he even attempts to play it. You can practice all you want but if you don't have that innate ability to interpret sound you can't do it. You either have it or you don't. Same goes for playing guitar. I know any musician that plays for a living would take exception to the notion that playing an instrument doesn't require any skill. I've seen kids who take up playing an instrument and don't get it right even after practice. [Edited 6/25/13 14:57pm] Don't laugh at my funk
This funk is a serious joint | |
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As far as the instrument goes, I never said anything about someone becoming "great" or "ordinary" or "being at the top". I said that playing can be taught, not that everyone can do it well enough to play in an orchestra. Some people can be taught to play notes, but not necessarily become Victor Borge or create there own music. That's why I said it doesn't really take any special talent to play, hence using "special" and not just "talent" by itself. Even someone who just plays by rote or a child who learns to play Row Row Row Your Boat on a piano is playing. It's like some people can learn to do basic math like adding and subtracting, but not algebra or trigonometry. It doesn't have to be at an advanced or professional level, which is why I mentioned punk rock being about not playing well.
"Good" and "bad" music is an opinion of the listener, there is no fact about it. You can't prove someone's music is "lame". 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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So did we ever get an answer to the original question or are we still out in west hell? Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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Do you need an answer? Robin Thicke's cool but Justin Timberlake? seriously Don't laugh at my funk
This funk is a serious joint | |
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Found it... thanks AlexdeParis. Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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No. In 2006 he actually just missed being the first white male to top the R&B charts since George's "One More Try" when "My Love" stalled at #2. Thicke's "Lost Without U" achieved that goal not long after that. "Whitney was purely and simply one of a kind." ~ Clive Davis | |
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Timberlake's R & B singles chart history: "Like I Love You" Peak position # 53 (2002) "Cry Me A River" Peak position # 11 (2002) "Rock Your Body" Peak position #53 (2003) "Sexyback" Peak position #11 (2006) "My Love" Peak position # 2 (2006) "What Goes..." Peak position # 11 (2006) "Until the End..." Peak Position # 17 (2006) "Suit & Tie" Peak position # 2 (2013)
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^^Thanks again for the info...interesting, Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise. | |
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Should colour matter. All about talent 2 me & weather the song is good. | |
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Not color, CULTURE. And YES culture matters. You can't remove it from the music because it is almost always the inspiration, reflection of and culmination of it. And as I have said, this only comes up as a point in conversation when talking about African American culture. | |
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it's not so much about the genre as much as it is about the presentation of the genre and who it's geared to
I'll never forget back in 1986-1987
Maurice STarr, former manager of New Edition infamously said, and he said it, he said if he could find five white guys who could sing and dance just as the original quintet, instead of making millions, he would make hundreds of millions of dollars.....
and he meant that......and he went about the business of doing just that, he found five white teenagers, from teh same state, the same city as New Edition, and had them start performing at the Apollo Theatre during the show SHOWTIME AT THE APOLLO
that group would become known as New Kids on the Block....
not only did he craft this group in the same mold as New Edition, but the lead singer Joey McIntyre sang just like NE'S lead singer/co-lead Ralph Tresvant
and the New Kid's first hit single....PLEASE DON'T GO GIRL (1988) was essentially a carbon copy of NE'S classic IS THIS THE END (1983)...
but see the thing is, the audience New Kids would go on to cultivate NEVER knew that's where they came up w/that song....
why the omission as to the origin, how NEW KIDS came to be, because their career existed during the construct of the Pop Ascension movement which began, if one was to trace it, I would say 1987
for the movement operated on extremes because it never RECOGNIZED OR ACKNOWLEDGED CULTURE.....
undermining the very fabric of authentic expression
so what happens in 1988 and 1989, NEW KIDS get merchandizing deals out the yazoo, every time you went to the store, you saw their likeness on everything but the kitchen sink, everything, then they go on a north american tour and was the highest grossing entertainment act of 1988-1989, earning more money than Michael Jackson himself
and while they conducted their nationwide tour, they became one of the first acts (if not the first) to perform their show to exclusive prerecorded tracks, and they admitted it on Arsenio Hall show, but the fans still flocked to the arena, and that showed me that authenticity would give way to commercialization......and this wedge led to the introduction of Milliv Vanilli, as they used prerecorded tracks on top of prerecorded tracks, and STILL earned 2 grammy awards in 1990, and that's when I knew it was only a matter of time before the grammys were finished and that the industry would be destroyed
New Edition had to sit back and watch all of that as they were given the shaft. They never got the merchandising deals even as the industry knew they performed some of the most intricate dance routines on the planet.......
see, the Pop Ascension only focused on the means to the end, rather than the end to the means....
and as the movement operated in extremes, it forced acts of authenticity to respond in extremes also......as New Edition basically disbanded, Ralph went solo, so did Johnny, and Ricky Bell, Michael Bevins, and Ronnie DeVoe formed BBD, and transition from r&b to a hybrid of and hip-hop, and not just hip-hop, but a lyrical content were a number of their songs featured sexually explicit content.........
you go from MR TELEPHONE MAN/CAN U STAND THE RAIN, to DO ME BABY/POISON
and many r&b artists of the 80s travelled the same course in order to prolong their careers, and as authenticity was pushed to the brink
see, what happens, when a culture gets exploited by the establishment, those who grew up in that culture has to exert more aggressive forms of expression in order to stand out, to be noticed, TO SURVIVE...therefore, authenticity dissipates in the process for culture can no longer flourish. The attire, the style of drass (saggin), all the way to the desecration of our body stems from this exploitation, but because of the lack of accountability by the establishment, that bitterness, and exploitation becomes internalized and projected among each other..we become botht he victim and the victimizer simultaneously, and that vulnerability reflects in the lyrical content of today.
the foundation that NEW KIDS were thrusted upon as they received national acclaim, would eventually lead to major backlash some 2 years later, and even when they try to give "props" to those whose music they emulated, they still benefited from the blood sweat and tear from those who brought forth that foundation, and the heat became so intense, eventually, they stopped performing together......see, this stuff is real...the backlash occured because the audience who they would eventually be associated with never knew that the original support New Kids received were from the black record buying consumer.....
when culture withers, so does the soul of the people who gravitated to it, who contributed to it, who nurtured it, crafted it, and shaped it........it leads to a great level of bitterness, and those who are responsible never show any form of contrition
and this bitterness stems from the racial dynamic that continues to permeate this society
While it shouldn't be about race, there stands a lack of balance and genuine freedom because of proclivity and the pathological framework this country was founded on, and always takes us back to the issue of color
it's as ugly as cancer riding on the freeway, but it's all too real
[Edited 6/26/13 18:43pm] | |
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By St. Boogar and all the saints at the backside door of Purgatory! | |
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To me...it seems like music goes in "cycles" where some eras are very integrated, and some eras are very segregated. By St. Boogar and all the saints at the backside door of Purgatory! | |
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That was DEEEEEEP! But, very well put! Similar situation with Eminem. Hip-Hop really didn't explode and become acceptable by the massess until he came along and most of the black rappers who were doing their thing way before him who's coat tails he was riding on were bascially forgotten about and all of a sudden, Emieim becomes the greatest artist in a genre that was developed & and was always dominated by black men. "It's not nice to fuck with K.B.! All you haters will see!" - Kitbradley
"The only true wisdom is knowing you know nothing." - Socrates | |
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The newer version of Elvis. | |
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Not true. Run DMC popularized rap to the mainstream, and then Beastie Boys, LL Cool J, Salt N' Pepa, and DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince. Run DMC were the 1st to get regular MTV airplay, Rolling Stone cover, and other firsts. Jeff & Fresh Prince won the 1st rap Grammy, and the Fresh Prince even got a TV show (which Jazzy Jeff appeared in) from their popularity. MC Hammer had a cartoon and a doll. Fat Boys & Vanilla Ice got movies (Disorderlies/Cool As Ice) and Vanilla Ice had a doll too. They wouldn't have gotten these things if they weren't mainstream. Whodini didn't have a TV show or movie, even though they had the 1st rap album to go platinum, but they didn't cross over. Also there were several white rappers before Eminem like the Beastie Boys, 3rd Bass, Vanilla Ice, Tairrie B, Jesse Jaymes, Young Black Teenagers, House Of Pain/Everlast, Kid Rock, and others. Even Michael Jackson had a rap group called Quo in which one of the members was white. Rick Rubin started out as a rap producer and now produces acts in many genres. . It's also not true that hip hop was developed by blacks only. Even though most of the acts that actually rapped/DJ were black, there was a Latino presence from the beggining, especially with breakdancing, popping, fashion, and tagging/graffiti. [Edited 6/27/13 10:53am] 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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By St. Boogar and all the saints at the backside door of Purgatory! | |
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I was in grade school when Disco died and Hip-Hop was born and it was a music that was originated by black people. You don't have to believe me, investigate yourself. There was a Latino presence in the culture, but no where near the same as the African-American presence and influence.
[Edited 6/27/13 11:29am] "It's not nice to fuck with K.B.! All you haters will see!" - Kitbradley
"The only true wisdom is knowing you know nothing." - Socrates | |
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By St. Boogar and all the saints at the backside door of Purgatory! | |
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There was also 2 Live Crew who received lots of news and media coverage, and so older people who had no idea of rap at least knew who they were, and their records started to sell to people who just wanted to see what all of the fuss was about. The situations of Elvis Presley and Eminem are totally different. 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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I guess it depended on where you lived, as I lived in the south and I heard rap played on the R&B station, even before Run DMC. It's like Latin Freestyle was very popular locally, but apparently it was little known in other parts of the US. . Run DMC was on MTV before Walk This Way, and like the Beastie Boys, were more popular album wise than singles wise. Many of those hair metal bands weren't that popular as far as singles go, but sold lots of albums, and were played more on AOR stations than Top 40. Hit singles isn't the only way to determine popularity, look at Pink Floyd, AC/DC, Grateful Dead, KISS, and Black Sabbath who had few if any Top 40 radio hits. 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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