|
Register | Blogging | Today's Posts | Search |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
11-04-2007, 04:33 PM | #12 (permalink) |
dontcareaboutyou
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: North Carolina
Posts: 5,188
|
There's a decline in music because a store doesn't have a certain album?
__________________
http://nakednaps.bandcamp.com/ |
11-04-2007, 06:25 PM | #13 (permalink) | |
Music Addict
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Oxford, UK
Posts: 92
|
Quote:
Nice!
__________________
http://the-poet-you-never-were.blogspot.com |
|
11-04-2007, 06:47 PM | #14 (permalink) | |
killedmyraindog
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Boston, Massachusetts
Posts: 11,172
|
Quote:
I said I can find new jazz constantly, you said you can't find a CD at a store (you're problem there might be the store by the way.) Not that it should matter, I went to our local indie chain and couldn't get Levon Helm's new CD. It happened to be sold out but there created iTunes for a reason. Burn the damn thing. Why should they have Take 5? Or any Alfred Brendel covering Beethoven? Stores are businesses. They don't stock their shelves with elitist philosophy and stand on principle, their children need to eat. If its a chain, they need to keep sales moving. Theres not going to be a music chain store that is the aural equivalent of McDonalds. For anything worth while, you have to work for it. For better quality you have to pay a little more. This is the way of the world. And the vocabulary comment wasn't aimed a jazz composers it was aimed at you. Jumping the gun their sally. I took roughly 7 years of composition theory, I played piano for 5 and I graduated college with 2 degrees in arrogant elitism (eng, polisci). If its an elitist-off that you want, you can have it, but coming at me with a text book knowledge and zero real world application isn't going to get you anywhere. And by the way, I'd put money on half of Brubeck's sales being from music teachers getting something to teach people about alternative time signatures, and the other half because when it came out it was the poppiest **** going. If you're going to complain make it about someone worth a damn like Art Tatum.
__________________
I've moved to a new address |
|
11-07-2007, 12:53 PM | #15 (permalink) |
Groupie
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 34
|
Did you know even Vladimir Horowitz liked Art Tatum. That I find hard to believe but it's a story told time and time again by jazz musicians. Vladmir Horowitz had no respect for Arthur Rubinstein yet he thought Art Tatum was one of the greatest pianists of the day. Still Art Tatum sounds like Micheal Angelo Batio on guitar. There's generally no melody just extremely fast playing. Yeah sure Take Five was the poppiest "****", and one of the most popular which is why you should still be able to find it in a damn record store like you can find any crooners entire discography. Have you been to a Jazz festival recently, There's no Jazz. In the New Orleans one they play Cajuin, Rock, Hip Hop, Zydeco, Country, Rthyhm and Blues and very little Jazz. Just take the most famous Frank Zappa quote, "Jazz isn't dead it just smells funny". I'm no more Elitist than any kid who listens to virtually any kind of music. They all think their opinon is right and so do you. I never checked for Brendel, but they sure as hell have Horowitz or Rubinstein and definatly Herbert Von Karajan even Leonard Bernstein. Leonard Berstein was the poppiest "****" around when it came out. As for the Second grade comment, and you claiming to be an English major, you know it sounded incredible racist rather than your actual point. I seriously thought it was a slur against African Americans, but I guess you just didn't get that, that was what it implied.
|
11-07-2007, 01:22 PM | #16 (permalink) | |
Atchin' Akai
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Unamerica
Posts: 8,723
|
Quote:
I'd like to know how Big3 claiming to be an English major sounded "incredibly racist". Further more I'd like to know exactly, in detail please, how you "seriously" construed it to be "a slur against African Americans", because it seems Big3 wasn't the only one who didn't get it. Incredibly...neither did I. Care to elaborate? |
|
11-07-2007, 01:35 PM | #17 (permalink) |
The Sexual Intellectual
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Somewhere cooler than you
Posts: 18,605
|
I thought it was a slur against stupid people myself.
__________________
Urb's RYM Stuff Most people sell their soul to the devil, but the devil sells his soul to Nick Cave. |
11-07-2007, 02:44 PM | #19 (permalink) | |
isfckingdead
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 18,967
|
Quote:
|
|
11-07-2007, 03:40 PM | #20 (permalink) |
Music Addict
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Sussex, UK
Posts: 90
|
Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't it classical music that uses syncopation to create dissonance, whereas in jazz it is the norm? Furthermore, isn't that irrelevant when considering the "worthiness" of a particular style of music? Syncopation is no more a difficult concept than any other element of musical theory.
This apparent snobbery, found particularly in the followers of jazz and classical music, is no different to the blind fanaticism shown by followers of all other genres and in some cases, particular artists. Truth be known, good music is good music irrespective of genre. To disregard an entire genre due to nothing but prejudice (to pre-judge) is one and the same as putting a specific genre on a pedestal. To do so implies a closed mind; one which cannot truly be enjoying music for what it is, since enjoyable music can be found everywhere. Now to the point of the thread, which seems to be asking why a particular store did not stock Dave Brubeck's Take Five. Could it not be that the album in question is so popular the store had simply sold out? The secondary point, is jazz music dying, is quite obviously nonsense. Jazz is dying no more so than classical, rock, blues and any other genre you care to mention. The majority of available music will be whatever is popular at any given time and the rest will be the best of what came before. Dave |
|