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So you've listened to all of the albums released on every continent in the world in all languages to determine this? 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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"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato
https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0 | |
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Why are they "cornball"? I like them and have made threads about most of them. Also, how are they forgotten? There's a thread right at the top about 70's heartthrobs and Time Life has compilations sold on infomercials with many of those 1970s hits and I sometimes hear the songs in stores. Maybe they're not cool to you, but that does not mean their music is any less valid. You say that today's acts are no better or worse than the old acts and then say someone is "cornball". So you're doing the same thing as most of the other posters in this thread. 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 acknowledge that there was crap music in the 70s,but I actually don't think those artists you listed are crap."Seasons In The Sun" by Terry Jacks is a good song."You Light Up My Life" is schmaltzy but I still think it's a good song.The Osmonds,I could take or leave,but even they aren't as terrible as the crap that pollutes the airwaves right now. | |
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^^well yes,we all know that music tastes are subjective but come on now! | |
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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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"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato
https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0 | |
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[Edited 5/22/15 15:33pm] | |
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MotownSubdivision said: duccichucka said: I've randomly selected the top five songs of any given year in the 70s and the 00s/10s and I hope someone can explain why the songs in the 70s are superior to those in the 2. "Dark Horse" - Katy Perry [Edited 5/22/15 8:33am] | |
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MotownSubdivision said: duccichucka said: I've randomly selected the top five songs of any given year in the 70s and the 00s/10s and I hope someone can explain why the songs in the 70s are superior to those in the 2. "Dark Horse" - Katy Perry [Edited 5/22/15 8:33am] This. | |
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We could have an epic discussion/debate about what's better about older pop music than current, but what it comes down to in regards to todays pop music is M.O.N.E.Y. . The suits at the top of the chain don't have any artistic talent or taste. So what DO they know? They know that if you spend a shitload of money on dressing, marketing and advertising someone who's young, sounds flashy and looks flashy, people will buy into the "music". . So that's what they do. That's all they know how to do! They don't know about what comprises a finely crafted song or a great vocalist let alone a great player, but they know what a hot piece of ass looks like, so they put the funding into selling THAT. . Will those suits put their top marketing team behind someone that looks like Aretha Franklin or Stevie Wonder in 2015? NO. And we're all the worse off for the fact that these kind of c**ts are running MUSIC companies. . FUCK THEM. Music, sweet music, I wish I could caress and...kiss, kiss... | |
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nd33 said: We could have an epic discussion/debate about what's better about older pop music than current, but what it comes down to in regards to todays pop music is M.O.N.E.Y. . The suits at the top of the chain don't have any artistic talent or taste. So what DO they know? They know that if you spend a shitload of money on dressing, marketing and advertising someone who's young, sounds flashy and looks flashy, people will buy into the "music". . So that's what they do. That's all they know how to do! They don't know about what comprises a finely crafted song or a great vocalist let alone a great player, but they know what a hot piece of ass looks like, so they put the funding into selling THAT. . Will those suits put their top marketing team behind someone that looks like Aretha Franklin or Stevie Wonder in 2015? NO. And we're all the worse off for the fact that these kind of c**ts are running MUSIC companies. . FUCK THEM. ^^^^^ Don't laugh at my funk
This funk is a serious joint | |
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For me, its not about a generational thing, its not about suggesting one generation is better or lesser, its not even about what music genre is the best or least best, it's about what's really taking place in the industry and the forces of influence that has entirely changed the landscape, and how systematic it has been
There was a time where people were presented with the full range of music, u got the full gamut, thats why the artists who grew up during that realm, not only were they more versatile, but as a whole, the music was more rich, mature, and complete, people were making real music, the culture was represented, u had great black artists, great white artists, great male artists, great female artists We supported acts from all age groups All that changed and wiped out when this pop ascension hit, then the sampling ran amuck, then shock value, the sex got ramped up, it no longer about the music but the image deemed necessary to generate massive sales That formula aint cutting it anymore and the well has run dry Michael Jackson didnt just make Thriller in his sleep, it took years of talent cultuvation to make that [Edited 5/23/15 8:22am] | |
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Not really true. Music has always been segregated. Music by blacks was originally called "race music" and country & western was called "hillbilly" and was looked down on by the upper class. Jazz & ragtime was put down as jungle bunny music accused of bringing down the white race when flappers and mafia run jazz clubs became big during prohibition. Rock N Roll was said to cause juvenile delinquency. RCA & Columbia Records in their early days even had different colored labels for genres. Classical/opera records were generally sold at a higher price than the "lower class" race, hillbilly, & folk records. . Top 40 pretty much always played a certain kind of music. It never played "the full range of music". A folk or zydeco act can't get a big hit. When crooners were popular, you wouldn't hear blues singers or country music or bop jazz. Black performers generally performed at TOBA places aka chitlin' circuit. . Even later on, besides white & black performers, other races were rarely represented in the mainstream. There were a few exceptions like Don Ho, Carlos Santana, Julio Iglesias, & Gloria Estefan. Santata was a mixed race group and not fully Latino. Redbone was a Native American group that got a hit record in the 1970s. Even after Motown became popular in the 1960s, most R&B/soul did not cross over to Top 40. It generally didn't sell that big, which is the reason some acts (and the labels) wanted to crossover to get the bigger audiences and money. Kenny originally started in a rock act The First Edition. Only a few Motown acts really became popular like The Supremes & The Four Tops as that is who they promoted the most, the ones who were more likely to crossover and get the big money. African music was not really played on Top 40, unless someone like Paul Simon recorded it. Gospel & instrumental songs didn't become hits much. Heavy metal didn't get Top 40 play either, except a few "hair metal" acts in the 1980s. I don't think Iron Maiden had any hits. Prog didn't either, since the songs tended to be long and Top 40 usually stuck to short songs. Some groups like Rush & Pink Floyd were popular with albums, but not radio hits. They got some airplay on separate formats like Album Oriented Rock & "freeform FM". Freeform played long songs and even entire albums. 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:
Not really true. Music has always been segregated. Music by blacks was originally called "race music" and country & western was called "hillbilly" and was looked down on by the upper class. Jazz & ragtime was put down as jungle bunny music accused of bringing down the white race when flappers and mafia run jazz clubs became big during prohibition. Rock N Roll was said to cause juvenile delinquency. RCA & Columbia Records in their early days even had different colored labels for genres. Classical/opera records were generally sold at a higher price than the "lower class" race, hillbilly, & folk records. . Top 40 pretty much always played a certain kind of music. It never played "the full range of music". A folk or zydeco act can't get a big hit. When crooners were popular, you wouldn't hear blues singers or country music or bop jazz. Black performers generally performed at TOBA places aka chitlin' circuit. . Even later on, besides white & black performers, other races were rarely represented in the mainstream. There were a few exceptions like Don Ho, Carlos Santana, Julio Iglesias, & Gloria Estefan. Santata was a mixed race group and not fully Latino. Redbone was a Native American group that got a hit record in the 1970s. Even after Motown became popular in the 1960s, most R&B/soul did not cross over to Top 40. It generally didn't sell that big, which is the reason some acts (and the labels) wanted to crossover to get the bigger audiences and money. Kenny originally started in a rock act The First Edition. Only a few Motown acts really became popular like The Supremes & The Four Tops as that is who they promoted the most, the ones who were more likely to crossover and get the big money. African music was not really played on Top 40, unless someone like Paul Simon recorded it. Gospel & instrumental songs didn't become hits much. Heavy metal didn't get Top 40 play either, except a few "hair metal" acts in the 1980s. I don't think Iron Maiden had any hits. Prog didn't either, since the songs tended to be long and Top 40 usually stuck to short songs. Some groups like Rush & Pink Floyd were popular with albums, but not radio hits. They got some airplay on separate formats like Album Oriented Rock & "freeform FM". Freeform played long songs and even entire albums. Im very aware of the segregation pertaining to what was excluded from certain radio formats When I say the full range of music and being exposed to it, for my experience, my parents stressed it and encouraged it, other adults in my familt stressed it, then u had school teachers and music inwtructors stressed it, they would plan field trips for students to see a symphony orchestra, or an opera play performance, public access television often featured a diversity of programming, we often had to read up on luminary figures and write book reports about them, we didnt need top 40 radio to accomplish this Its not even close to being like that anymore, the industry know its running on fumes. Thw quality of music is not on the same level, its not a generational issue, its a systematic issue | |
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> All this is correct as a personal point of mission, but "level-of-culture" needs a loud, critical voice. The culture doesn't have to be important to you, but we all benefit from supposed high standards. I suppose personal preference and culture have nothing to do with each other. | |
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I look at it from the opposite end. I didn't listen 2 the fluff then and I don't listen 2 it now. That said, where is the equal of The Jacksons, Marvis Gaye, EW&F, P-Funk, Prince, The Ohio Players, Stevie Wonder, Luther.....etc in todays musical landscape? FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent. | |
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