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10-07-2008, 02:49 PM | #31 (permalink) | |
Unrepentant Ass-Mod
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Pennsylvania
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Quote:
Let it be known that this isn't a senseless Pitchfork bashing. Although Pitchfork is one of the largest perpetrators of asinine musical taste (and prejudice), I'm trying to point out that it's not just them. At least half of the albums I'm gonna rail against came out before PF even existed. And most of these are NOT "diamonds in the rough" and certainly Interpol could never qualify as such to begin with. And actually, I was trying to make a thread that mocked the entire idea of being a hipster. The entire point of this thread is that it's not a great idea to pigeonhole your musical tastes by a collective consciousness. Just wait for later album choices...they might surprise you. But there will be blood. And soon.
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10-07-2008, 03:07 PM | #34 (permalink) |
Mate, Spawn & Die
Join Date: May 2007
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I'm going to come right out here and mention that I read Pitchfork on a pretty regular basis. Is it the end-all, be-all for me? No. But I've found some pretty good music through them over the years.
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10-07-2008, 03:18 PM | #35 (permalink) |
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9. Pink Floyd - Animals (1977) Prior to 1999, Animals was a great album. It has one of the strongest themes in music and represents a huge cry for the victims of industrialization and imperialism. It was released during an era in which people weren't sure when the end would come; Roger Waters' lyrics fall heavily upon politicians in England and across the world, and he used impressive symbolism to deliver the message. Although the album was primarily a work of Waters, Gilmour helped craft the iconoclastic "Dogs" and contributed some of his most expressive guitar work throughout the entire album. Overall, it was a fantastic album, and this alone could have immortalized Pink Floyd in the annals of musical history. And I love it. But between its release and the new millennium, there wasn't much hype for Animals. Yes, it sold well. It achieved a peak position of #2 on the US Billboard charts and stayed on for quite some time. But it came during a period of transition -- between the bittersweet Wish You Were Here and the cult classic The Wall. Not to mention the preceding success of DSOTM kind of capped its presence. It was great, but not that great.* Then, come 1999, something so blatantly uncalled for and irretrievable happened. Pitchfork reviewed it. It was a tiny review, not even four hundred words. But the author, James P. Wisdom (irony at its best), decided to usher in a new era of mind-numbing collective consciousness: he gave it a ten. By Pitchfork standards, a ten basically means that even the silence separating songs is enough to deliver an erection for the world at large. And you know what? All those people, all those sheep, the ones that loved Dark Side of the Moon and felt ambivalent towards the 1977 album, two paragraphs beforehand -- now loved Animals. That was it. That's all that happened to make this album such an icon amongst kids everywhere who happened to skim the boldfaced ratings at the top of the page. Today, I can hardly hear the beauty in Dark Side without having a brainless maggot quip about how "it's no Animals." I imagine on that fateful day, the author was sitting on a plush armchair laughing his head off. Yessss, he says. Let's make them trip over themselves. They thought Pink Floyd was good, but they never realized they were a ten! BWAHAHAHAHAHAHA! * It actually is.
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10-07-2008, 04:00 PM | #39 (permalink) |
sleepe
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: boston
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I got into PF albums other than DSOTM The Wallthrough Only Solitaire: George Starostin's Music Reviews (ie Animals, Piper, Meddle)
His opinions on melodies and songwriting are pretty similar to mine, so he got me to try a lot of of other artists I ended up liking. He does think that music went downhill after 1980 or whatever, so most of the reviews I read from him are classic rock albums. Still he's a good writer so I really enjoy reading the reviews. And I swear on my soul, I didn't even know of Pitchfork before some people here started bashing it. |
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