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10-21-2012, 04:14 AM | #1 (permalink) |
Music Addict
Join Date: Oct 2012
Posts: 84
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people complaining about post rock being all the same... read this.
Why people complain about post rock songs being similar to each other in their style so much??
there are MANY genres that are way more stagnant than post rock - like folk, punk, blues, and pentatonic scale+power-chords rock... (you know what im talking about) Post rock is more varried than those genres^ yet no one complains about them being stagnant. people are bitching only when its post rock. |
10-21-2012, 05:50 AM | #5 (permalink) |
Melancholia Eternally
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: England
Posts: 5,018
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You have to remember that the likes of blues and punk have a far greater history than post-rock. In any genre there is going to be a lot of traits that get repeated and similar artists or just straight-up copycats but in a thriving genre there will be bands that bring more to the table and continue to breathe life into it.
In post-rock there are stand-out artists that keep it interesting and although I haven't listened to a lot of it this year, I started to get tired by what I saw as the sheer number of bands popping up all doing the same thing. If the genre suddenly gives birth to a flurry of bands who all feel like taking a few risks then it will probably benefit greatly. Post-rock doesn't have 60+ years of experience to fall back on. |
10-21-2012, 05:53 AM | #6 (permalink) | |
Music Addict
Join Date: Oct 2012
Posts: 84
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Quote:
but its still not particularly samey whan you compare it to alot of diffrent genres |
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10-21-2012, 06:09 AM | #8 (permalink) |
Born to be mild
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: 404 Not Found
Posts: 26,992
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In terms of (just to pick one) blues, you also have to remember that blues is at its heart quite basic. It was the way an awful lot of great guitarists learned to play, and initially they learned because it was easy. I can't play but it's relatively well known that one of the easiest scales/progressions to play in music is the twelve-bar blues, in fact it forms the basis of an awful lot of music. If these guys (Muddy, Sonny Boy, Wolf etc) had all been trying to learn classical or jazz, chances are it would have been a lot harder (though I'm sure some of them later moved into jazz at least, and some may have been playing it, but not at the start), but blues is simple, uncomplicated and with a few chords you can make a song, so that would have been attractive to young guitarists at the time. Not to mention that, especially in Delta Blues, an acoustic guitar was all the guys had.
But blues is still being played, and improved on today. Look at Robert Cray, Eric Clapton, the late Gary Moore and Rory Gallagher ... all played blues to the highest level possible and incorporated it into their music. Sure, blues could be seen as being stagnant, but there's not the widest amount of room there for changing it. It has formed the mainstay of rock music for over seventy years now, so it's hardly fair to compare it to post-rock and say it's a stagnant genre. Love your avatar, by the way: reminds me of the fox off Glacier Mints!
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10-21-2012, 06:23 AM | #9 (permalink) |
The Aerosol in your Soul
Join Date: Jun 2012
Location: New South Wales, Australia
Posts: 1,546
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I'm guessing it's coming from listeners with very limited historical music knowledge. If you consider the contemporary string line of mainstream, current successful distribution and amount of radio play in terms of rock culture, of course they will stress on other artists with a similar sound. The industry analyses music in a general sense of taste and produce accordingly. That's business and marketing for you, and pretty much how it works in the present day.
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