[Edited 12/21/14 19:53pm] will ALWAYS think of like a "ACT OF GOD"! N another realm. mean of all people who might of been aliens or angels.if found out that wasn't of this earth, would not have been that surprised. R.I.P. | |
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I noticed SNL didn't have a musical guest listed for their January return featuring Kevin Hart. Hmmm....
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Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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^^ To be fair, it doesn't sound like you gave Chinese Democracy much of a chance. Most albums take more than one listen to appreciate.
I think you'll find that a lot of folks really dug Chinese. I consider it the best rock album of the 21st century by a landslide.
Having said that, I'm not sure why we are discussing the merits of Chinese Democracy in this thread. GNR and D'angelo couldn't be further apart if they tried, it's like comparing Barbara Steisand and Metallica. [Edited 12/22/14 1:22am] | |
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Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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With regards to the whole "giving it a chance" thing... I don't know about you, but if I love an artist or a bands back catalogue, I don't expect to be blown away immediately by a new album. It always kind of makes me laugh when people dismiss albums from their favourite artists by sayiing something like "I only bothered listening to it once." Some of my favourite albums of all time I disliked on a first listen, but with repeated listens I grew to love them. If an artist/band has impressed you in the past, as a music fan don't you feel like you should at least give their latest work a couple of spins before deciding it's not for you?
Well, that's how I work anyway. Chinese Democracy in particular I grew to love more and more with repeated listens.
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Chinese Democracy does not sound or feel like anything like Appetite For Destruction. In my not-so-humble opinion, of course... Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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But GNR are more than just Appetite.
I agree with you that CD doesn't sound or feel like the same band that made AFD. But it does sound like the same band who made November Rain, Yesterdays, Civil War, Estranged etc. If you were a fan of those songs (all of which were Axl's babies) then I struggle to see how some of the stuff on CD doesn't sound like a progression of sorts. Songs like Street of Dreams, Catcher In The Rye and Madagsacar have a definite UYI feel to them imo.
[Edited 12/22/14 11:06am] | |
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Finallu had a chance to delve into this album over the weekend- a couple of long flights and stewardesses that were generous with the cocktails.
With that said, this album's incredible, especially once your get to "Prayer". From that point on for the rest of the album, D'Angelo's in God-body realm...
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Black Messiah just got SAVAGED by legendary jazz player Nicholas Payton.
http://nicholaspayton.wordpress.com/2014/12/17/will-the-real-black-messiah-please-stand-up/
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Yeah, I read that. If I might be blunt, fuck him. [Edited 12/22/14 12:31pm] Heavenly wine and roses seems to whisper to me when you smile...
Always cry for love, never cry for pain... | |
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Don't care how much of a legendary player this man is. He isn't exactly good with words, and is terrible at explaing why he thinks this album sucks. He is just emotional about his own personal opinion. Not very rational. Some musicians should stick to what they do best, play music. My Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/tundrah | |
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Well, I've developed an appreciation for D'Angelo and his music through Black Messiah. So I haven't been waiting or anticipating anything - I listened to the album and evaluated it on its own merits.
I bought Voodoo years ago and never really got into it. I listened to it again yesterday and though it's grown on me now, I still prefer Black Messiah and consider it a better album.
There are definite sonic differences between the two. Black Messiah is deeper, murkier and more guitar-driven. | |
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Militant said: Black Messiah just got SAVAGED by legendary jazz player Nicholas Payton.
http://nicholaspayton.wordpress.com/2014/12/17/will-the-real-black-messiah-please-stand-up/
Nicholas Payton ISNT a "legendary" Jazz player. Interesting read though. I think it's interesting that he complains about the Marsalis' close minded ways of thinking when he exhibits the exact same thing in that article. I think he misses the point. BLack Messiah isn't a pop record, it's not a dance record, it's not meant to be social grease or a tool to fuck, though I suppose you could use it as such. The whole "It ain't funky" thing is ridiculous too. Figures a jazz player would go on a rant about how "it's not funny/swinging/my narrow idea of what kind of groove good music should have" (and I say this as a former semi-pro Jazz player myself.) Attitudes like his are why Jazz is marginalized these days. Definitely an interesting read though. | |
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i really don't care if someone doesn't dig music that i like... but only a pretentious wanker would try and tell me why i like it
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Thanks. I could understand why folks would like or not like BM or even AOA, but i'm not going to get worked up about it. [Edited 12/22/14 14:22pm] | |
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> That's an interesting article. I'll concede to the idea that this isn't a groundbreaking album. The way Quest was talking we were all going to hear something we hadn't heard before. Even D alluded to that in that sit down interview with Nelson George. So i can see all the detractors feeling, after fourteen long years and repeated promises of release dates, totally let down. Is it one of the strongest R&B albums of the year though? Yes.
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RaspBerryGirlFriend said:
Yeah, I read that. If I might be blunt, fuck him. [Edited 12/22/14 12:31pm] I HATE when critics attempt to crawl inside my brain to tell me why I like something. Here's an idea, buddy: crawl up my ass next time. "Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
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These paragraphs were arrogant enough for me, thanks. Hey loudmouth, shut the fuck up, right? | |
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Nick Payton is a great musician, but he is not "legendary". He's controversial because of his blog which I follow and happen to like. He has a lot of interesting and insightful blog interies on race relations in America. Everyone should read it.
I'm very close to the Jazz community and I know for a fact, many of the musicians LOVE this album. The album does have more of a rock edge to it, but just because it doesn't "swing" the way HE likes it, doesn't mean it's not dope. I'm sure he probably thinks AOA is shit too.
And it's funny how you leave out the part where he says 'Prince hasn't released a great album in 25 years and he's just a parody of himself.'
My friend Marcus Strickland, "legendary" sax player, posted this on his FB
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Many, many, many listens on....this album is historic!! It just get's better and better and i hear new things each time. I haven't been this excited over an album for a long time. D has school'd us all. This Post is produced, arranged, composed and performed by WetDream | |
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WetDream said: Many, many, many listens on....this album is historic!! It just get's better and better and i hear new things each time. I haven't been this excited over an album for a long time. D has school'd us all. I agree. Black Messiah is like Parade, SOTT, Songs in the Key of Life, etc. "Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry | |
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Throwback, Voo Doo era
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^He comes back in February looking like this? | |
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^He comes back in February looking like this? | |
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Dude is in Love with his own opinion. FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent. | |
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[Edited 12/22/14 20:58pm] Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors. | |
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http://nymag.com/scienceofus/2014/12/why-dangelos-album-makes-you-want-to-have-sex.html?mid=facebook_vulture
D’Angelo and the Vanguard’s new album Black Messiah, released to the surprise of almost everyone a week ago, isn’t supposed to be about sex. Its release was bumped up, after all, in response to protests surrounding the deaths of Michael Brown and other unarmed African-American men. And yet it is a very sexy album. Just listen to it. As Ava Tunnicliffe wrote in Nylon, “If there was only one word to describe the album, it would be sexy. In three words, it's really, really sexy.” This has become something of a consensus position since the album fell from the sexy, sexy heavens, at least if numerous tweets like this one are any indication: But why is it a sexy album? It seems like a question designed to drain the very sexiness from the thing itself, but it can actually tell us some interesting things about the psychology of music and sex. So here are a few insights aboutBlack Messiah's, well, potent effects on its listeners. Musical Spontaneity Is Sexy, and Black Messiah Has It Related StoriesThis Is Apparently the World’s Catchiest SongThis Is Apparently the World’s Catchiest Song According to Tony Lemieux, a researcher at Georgia State who studies the social psychology of music, part of the reason for Black Messiah’s sexiness is its mix of well-known R&B elements with some surprising flourishes. “There’s a familiarity about the sound and the music, and yet it does some kinds of surprising and unexpected things,” he said. On parts of “Really Love,” for example, someone is whispering enticingly in the background — presumably about something sexy, though for all the listener knows they could be reciting a recipe for pound cake. And on “Betray My Heart,” there are “aspects that mix up the rhythm a little bit that kind of draw you in, that cause you to listen a bit more closely.” You do need some aspect of familiarity in pop music, explained Lemieux, and it’s not like Black Messiah isn’t operating within some well-established genres. But for songs to really deliver a visceral punch, there also have to be elements that cause people not just to bob their heads along, but to occasionally sit up straight and take notice. Black Messiah Piggybacks on Past R&B Sexiness to Create Present-Day R&B Sexiness Gordon Gallup Jr., an evolutionary psychologists at SUNY Albany who studies “embedded reproductive messages” in music, explained that lyrics are only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to a song's sexiness. Black Messiah’s lyrics aren’t all that sexy (with some notable exceptions, like “Sugah Daddy”), and it’s often hard to make them out anyway. “When you listen to it, a lot of the lyrics are unintelligible because they get masked by the instrumentation and/or the accent of the artist, and nonetheless people are profoundly affected,” said Gallup. “So what people are responding to are these nonverbal cues.” In other words, when you hear sexy music, you feel sexy. It sounds circular, if not tautological, but that’s how psychological associations work: R&B songs do tend to have more explicitly sexual lyrics than other kinds of music, Gallup explained, so after years of hearing those sorts of songs, our brains are naturally attuned to think sexy thoughts when familiar R&B elements kick in, regardless of the song in question's lyrics. We're Very Predisposed to See D'Angelo and His Music As Sexy As Lemieux pointed out, when many people think of D’Angelo, they think of this famous video: Theories of Black Messiah sexiness that don't come back to the artist himself, in other words, can only get us so far. “All of those things are certainly factoring in here, but I would definitely not discount the identity of the performer here and the associative networks that hearing him or seeing him brings up,” said Lemieux. “If you heard this and someone said ‘This is Joe Smith from Peoria,’ it’s not going to do the same thing.” Music and sexual attraction both rely on the brain’s ability to connect A to B to C — and you can’t always explain, in a reductive way, exactly why these connections take place, but once they form they can be rather formidable. So in general, while sexy albums are usually mostly about sex, Black Messiah might be an exception partially because its singer had already carved out such a sexy niche for himself. The divide between what the album is about and listeners' visceral reaction to it is an interesting one, but for now the only appropriate response I can come up with is to queue it up again.
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http://www.nylon.com/articles/dangelo-new-ablum-black-messiah
d'angelo releases his first album in 14 yearsit was worth the wait.When D’Angelo released his last album, in the year 2000, we lived in a very different time. J.Lo and Puffy Daddy were an item, and Juicy sweatpants were considered the height of fashion. Jump forward 14 years: D’Angelo is back with a new album, Black Messiah. And he's proved that he's still as relevant as he was back when the '90s were only yesterday. If there was only one word to describe the album, it would be sexy. In three words, it's really,really sexy. There is a sultry, let’s-get-it-on vibe to Black Messiah that is perfectly fitting for the '90s neo-soul sex symbol. His mumbling voice is as enchanting as ever, especially as he hits his high range on “Really Love.” D’Angelo has been working on this 12-song album since 2005 with a little help from his friends. His Soulquarina bandmates Q-Tip and Kendra Foster contributed lyrics, while Questlove and Pino Palladrino played on the record. A highlight of the album is “Sugah Daddy,” which features one of Palladrino’s funky bass line—you can’t help but tap your foot along. Black Messiah is more than just a collection of well-written songs—the album also makes a powerful statement. Inspired by the nationwide Ferguson protests, D’Angelo decided to fast-forward the release of Black Messiah, which was originally due to be out in 2015. The Questlove-produced song “The Charade” speaks blatantly to the recent backlash against police, with D’Angelo singing, “All we wanted was a chance to talk, ‘stead we only got outlined in chalk.” Mark our words: This album is about to become the stuff of legends.
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