Quote:
(From 500 Greatest Songs of All Time)
When you hear a great song,
(1) you can think of where you were when you first heard it, the sounds, the smells. It takes the emotions of a moment and holds it for years to come. It transcends time.
(2) a great song has all the key elements — melody;
(3) emotion;
(4) a strong statement that becomes part of the lexicon;
(5) and great production.
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^ Thanks for digging up the
Rolling Stone criteria,
Vegangelica; that was interesting to read, but also disappointing, I felt. Here`s what I think of their criteria:-
(1) not relevent at all because it`s all about the emotions and memory of the listener, not about the merits of the music.
(2) and (3) are ok.
(4) as you suggest, this seems to rule out anything that isn`t famous, or catchy in some way.
(5) to me, that`s like saying that a great painting must be on top-quality canvas. With no disrespect to anyone involved in music production, I don`t think there`s necessarily a strong corelation between a great song and great production.
Quote:
Originally Posted by VEGANGELICA
"Good" music to me is music I enjoy listening to, for whatever reason.
My criteria for "good" music:
(1) It holds my attention.
(2) I feel emotionally moved by it (except that it shouldn't make me annoyed *at* the song).
(3) The musician is doing something novel or conceptually clever and so the song sounds new and fresh to me.
I readily accept that other people's criteria for judging music is different than mine, and that there is no fixed "goodness" or "badness" inherent in music.
However, I don't much like the Rolling Stone Magazine's criterion that I numbered as 4: a song has "a strong statement that becomes part of the lexicon." This suggests that only famous songs can be considered "great."
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^ I think your criteria are way better than
Rolling Stone`s - in fact, I`d like to adopt them myself !
I`d probably add these, as well:-
* the music should withstand time, so that it doesn`t date too fast, but rewards repeated listening.
* as a nod to those Victorians, it should fulfill its purpose.