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jamesbaldwin View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote jamesbaldwin Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 30 2019 at 17:40
Originally posted by jamesbaldwin jamesbaldwin wrote:

Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:

^ I said that, although Pedro might have as well somewhere. When one sees long posts, it is easy to confuse us. And sorry Steve for writing in such a long fashion considering your vision issues.

I want people to recognise their subjectivity, instead of claiming objectivity where it exists very dubiously. I'm for explicit subjectivity and not confusing what is inherently subjective for objective truth.

I have argued for ratings to be a reflection of one's taste, which is subjective, and with reviews one can take a more balanced approach. That said, if others choose to try to be objective in their ratings, fine, but due to the subjective nature of the experience, and one's expectations of what is good, which is partially due to our inculcation, but doesn't make it truth writ large, I question how successful they will be. It becomes especially difficult when one is exposed to new forms of musical expression.

Musical enjoyment is subjective, {quoting myself from another recent topic}, we all bring our own cultural baggage and expectations, intellects, life experiences, associations and psychology to the music experience. No two people experience music in an identical way as it must be translated and interpreted by our brains..., and I think based on our limits, thinking we can we really objective about the quality of music is problematic. We can be more objective when it comes to the qualities of the music.

While I do care about how the music is described, and that needn't say anything of the perceived quality of the music, I like to hear what people think in reviews, and in posts. I'm not so keen if they come across as telling me what to think and feel about the music. Please don't expect me to feel the same, or project your biases on me, but do tell me how the music affects YOU. Some balance is a good thing. It would be boring to read a review where someone is trying not to share their opinion on the music but is just trying to describe it as best they can:

"On track one it starts with trumpet. It is a G note. Then comes in a string instrument. It is a G-string. Following those things that I mentioned, there is another sound, and then another. Then other instruments play a succession of notes. There are drums too. There is a hi-hat. Then enters electric guitar. It starts with an F minor chord. This is followed by a b minor. The singer starts singing as the guitarist plays a C chord. He sings, "I".   At this point the drumming gets faster. Right after singing "I", while the drumming is happening , he sings "Want". There is the sound of a trumpet, the guitar is still playing as are the drums, the drumming is still fast with many beats. Following "Want", at a higher pitch now, he sings "This", more bass, then he sings "Song", drums guitar and bass play in sync, then "To", there is a farting noise before it finishes with the last line of the verse, "End". Then he sings "I want this song to end" again, but not for the last time".
Now that's a review I would want to end before it even started.

EDIT: Micky once tried to make the most objective review and rating ever for an album he hated by simply copying what others said, as I recall, but in doing so I would say that he merely duplicated others subjectivity. I'd rather a sincere, and explicitly subjective rating and review -- a review that tells me something about the reviewer. In part I'm saying let's bare our subjectivity explicitly, even if it gets rated R for, um, I'm usually good with finding the right synonym for the right letter, um, I'll cheat with eccentRic.

If I write a review I will share my perspective on the album, I just won't claim that my perspective is absolute truth, even if it is a sort of subjective truth. And if I get rated X for eXentric by those who feel differently, so be it. To each his or her own tastes, one man's trash is another man's treasure, one man's fish is another man's poisson, to err is human; to purr canine, to bark; canine, my old man's a mushroom etc.


About objective and subjective evaluations, and mathematical judgement:




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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote rogerthat Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 30 2019 at 18:26
Originally posted by thief thief wrote:

I still haven't written a 5-star review, but then again I only did ~25-30 reviews. I definitely agree with the premise, 5 star rating should be awarded sparingly... But I could see some bias when it comes to dearest bands, life-chaning stuff. For example, if I were to review King Crimson's catalogue, I'd have a hard time not to give a 5 star rating to all 1969-73 releases, especially for the fact how they resonated with me in the past. Even today, I find pretty much all these albums five star worthy...

All in all, I presume there would be 30+ albums I'd grant five stars without a question, not counting stuff that shouldn't really be on Progarchives (technical extreme metal, jazz, 70s hard rock etc.)




I am a KC diehard and the only one in that period I would give all 5 to is the first album. Thereafter LTIA and Red and then Discipline. And that's a lot. Four five star albums from a single band is a lot. A general rule of thumb is if you have difficulty stopping yourself from awarding all five, you are probably not turning to the four star option often enough.

That said, this is also why the dual scale rating used by George Starostin and John McFerrin on their websites is helpful. They issue record ratings and album ratings. One rating ranks where they see the album in their collection and one rating ranks where they see it in the band's catalog. That is, an album that is essential within KC's catalog may not necessarily be essential within the entire collection of a person. When the word essential is used, imagine being on a deserted island and that you are only allowed to carry the least number of albums to the island for survival. THAT'S essential. There are lots of albums from bands j love that resonated with me and which I still didn't give all five stars. Five stars for me is usually the ONE album I would like to retain of that band if I had to give them all way.

Edited by rogerthat - October 30 2019 at 18:29
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 30 2019 at 22:14
Originally posted by kenethlevine kenethlevine wrote:

yeah I'm guessing that's one area where Pedro and I are in total agreement.  Basing a rating on the mathematical average of each song's ratings is as anti-art as you can get

Thanks ... it has been an issue for me for many years, and it started when I became a rock music fan through the long cuts and the "art-rock" (gawd I hated that! there is no "art-classical" and "art-poop"!) ... or at the very least groups that wanted to do more with music than just a rock song ... and again, what bothers me the most is people voting/rating for their favorite song, and the rest of the band is irrelevant! It's been the basis of the memememememe generation since the late 1970's when FM stations started falling off into the corporate hands!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 30 2019 at 22:35
Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:


...
Musical enjoyment is subjective, {quoting myself from another recent topic}, we all bring our own cultural baggage and expectations, intellects, life experiences, associations and psychology to the music experience. No two people experience music in an identical way as it must be translated and interpreted by our brains..., and I think based on our limits, thinking we can we really objective about the quality of music is problematic. We can be more objective when it comes to the qualities of the music.
...

But here is one problem that we forget ... there is only one truth ... the source of the music ... and that has nothing to do with the listener and all the bits you mention ... otherwise we would not even be able to enjoy Mozart, Beethoven and whatever else we do.

That "source" is basically "untouchable" in the sense that it doesn't change on its own ... it only changes in our perceptions depending on all the reasons mentioned, but again, that has NOTHING to do with the music itself. 

It's the same thing with Picasso, and my favorite example ... Guernica ... your reaction some 80 or 90 years later is still unfavorable, for most of us anyway, but the symbolic nature of the painting is even more important ... what do you think that man Picasso saw out on the streets, right in front of his eyes? The carnage, and all the things that we do not like to see ... and there it is ... all it does when you see the senseless genocide, is ... how cubistic and screwed up our own minds and vision are ... that we even do such things!

On a side note ... this is the main area where the academic side of literature and the arts is better, although I just found something rather scary with my own father's work! The contextualization of a work is the subjective part, because most writers, artists, musicians will tend to play what sounds right to their ears and follows their internal logic ... and it has NOTHING to do with what we think. So the Preface to my dad's book (The Prodigious Physician) states that dad wrote with all this political and social and all this intellectual and all this ... too much ... something that no one in his right mind could possibly do in one piece ... and it came off like a Prufrock poem ... throws you in every direction. Here is the side not as I see it ... the 50's and 60's was the time when MOVIES became huge, and what they did was take over literature ... before then, the novel or story or poem, gave you the scenery and you only had to imagine it ... now, this scenery was being given to you, and later the sitcom did away with scenery into just a living room, and this made the folks listening a serious problem ... they could no longer read the novels and appreciate the details ... because the movies were better and more fun ... guess what dad was doing ... trying to write as if it were a movie ... and of course, that shirt looks socialist, that sock looks democratic, and that look looks communistic ... and the comments are so ridiculous at times as to make the whole thing seem stupid, and me wanting to run to even bother trying to read this book!

We have lost the ability to "feel" ... and let it live on its own ... and we confuse that "feel" with our own ideas, thoughts and moments during the day ... thus creating a rather difficult process for enjoying something or other ... it can't be different, because it throws all your mind and ideas and thoughts into an upheaval that is difficult to catch up with ... and then that person calls the work bad, or not their "style".

This, with apologies to the length, is the hard part of reviewing for me, and there have been times that I wanted to write a poor review ... but I simply do not have the heart to write a poor review ... I love the medium so much, that doing so would be to hurt my own feelings towards it. I want to look in the mirror and every morning hope that I did it right and well and was fair and hopeful to the continuation of the art/arts ... and for me, this means that a rating is not as important as the details I would describe in the review, and the main reason why I do not take stock in ratings ... and sometimes the reviews as well ... it's not difficult for me to formulate my review, but reading this or that on it, tends to influence my review, and I prefer to not be influenced on my feel for artistic works that come across my life.


Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote thief Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 31 2019 at 00:35
Originally posted by Grumpyprogfan Grumpyprogfan wrote:

Lets say a reviewers favorite band has been together 40 years and has put out 20 albums. Reviewer has all the albums. Now there is no way all 20 albums can be five stars. So will the reviewer only hand pick only what they want out of the bands entire output, so they all get five stars? I don't think this is fair to those reading the reviews. There is no benchmark of what the reviewer would rate less than stellar, and that makes me cautious to trust the reviewer's opinion. 

Other have mentioned they only review what they like. What about bands that send you material you are unfamiliar with? I'm sure the more active PA reviewers receive solicitations often. Do you not review it if you don't like it? 


So I've reviewed 13 out of 22 Jethro Tull's "core" albums... And JT is very close to the top in my case, definitely TOP10 affair, even TOP5 (including all rock/metal genres). I haven't awarded 5-star rating yet, but I believe there will be four such albums in the catalogue. I invite you to check them out, any feedback would be golden! ;)
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SteveG Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 31 2019 at 04:12
Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:

^ I said that, although Pedro might have as well somewhere. When one sees long posts, it is easy to confuse us. And sorry Steve for writing in such a long fashion considering your vision issues.

I want people to recognise their subjectivity, instead of claiming objectivity where it exists very dubiously. I'm for explicit subjectivity and not confusing what is inherently subjective for objective truth.

I have argued for ratings to be a reflection of one's taste, which is subjective, and with reviews one can take a more balanced approach. That said, if others choose to try to be objective in their ratings, fine, but due to the subjective nature of the experience, and one's expectations of what is good, which is partially due to our inculcation, but doesn't make it truth writ large, I question how successful they will be. It becomes especially difficult when one is exposed to new forms of musical expression.

Musical enjoyment is subjective, {quoting myself from another recent topic}, we all bring our own cultural baggage and expectations, intellects, life experiences, associations and psychology to the music experience. No two people experience music in an identical way as it must be translated and interpreted by our brains..., and I think based on our limits, thinking we can we really objective about the quality of music is problematic. We can be more objective when it comes to the qualities of the music.

While I do care about how the music is described, and that needn't say anything of the perceived quality of the music, I like to hear what people think in reviews, and in posts. I'm not so keen if they come across as telling me what to think and feel about the music. Please don't expect me to feel the same, or project your biases on me, but do tell me how the music affects YOU. Some balance is a good thing. It would be boring to read a review where someone is trying not to share their opinion on the music but is just trying to describe it as best they can:

"On track one it starts with trumpet. It is a G note. Then comes in a string instrument. It is a G-string. Following those things that I mentioned, there is another sound, and then another. Then other instruments play a succession of notes. There are drums too. There is a hi-hat. Then enters electric guitar. It starts with an F minor chord. This is followed by a b minor. The singer starts singing as the guitarist plays a C chord. He sings, "I".   At this point the drumming gets faster. Right after singing "I", while the drumming is happening , he sings "Want". There is the sound of a trumpet, the guitar is still playing as are the drums, the drumming is still fast with many beats. Following "Want", at a higher pitch now, he sings "This", more bass, then he sings "Song", drums, guitar and bass play in sync, then "To", there is a farting noise before it finishes with the last line of the verse, "End". Then he sings "I want this song to end" again, but not for the last time".
Now that's a review I would want to end before it even started.

EDIT: Micky once tried to make the most objective review and rating ever for an album he hated by simply copying what others said, as I recall, but in doing so I would say that he merely duplicated others subjectivity. I'd rather a sincere, and explicitly subjective rating and review -- a review that tells me something about the reviewer. In part I'm saying let's bare our subjectivity explicitly, even if it gets rated R for, um, I'm usually good with finding the right synonym for the right letter, um, I'll cheat with eccentRic.

If I write a review I will share my perspective on the album, I just won't claim that my perspective is absolute truth, even if it is a sort of subjective truth. And if I get rated X for eXentric by those who feel differently, so be it. To each his or her own tastes, one man's trash is another man's treasure, one man's fish is another man's poisson, to err is human; to purr feline, to bark; canine, my old man's a mushroom etc.
I knew your view on subjectivity Greg. I was just taking the piss (putting you as well as myself on) because virtually all we speak of here, be it in discussion or argument, is subjective. Music is art, so how could we not?
 
But our rationalization or arguments of what's right or wrong in ratings should not detract from the criteria of "5 star = Essential/Masterpiece". To rate otherwise would be making up one's own rules and making all of this more of a subjective exercise then it already is. I cannot stress that more clearly.
 


Edited by SteveG - October 31 2019 at 04:14
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote moshkito Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 31 2019 at 06:50
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

... 
But our rationalization or arguments of what's right or wrong in ratings should not detract from the criteria of "5 star = Essential/Masterpiece". To rate otherwise would be making up one's own rules and making all of this more of a subjective exercise then it already is. I cannot stress that more clearly.
 

I agree, although I think that when one takes a chance and listens, to the history of music ... let's say going back to the earliest stuff that we know and is discussed in books of that history, your perception and acceptance of "rules" changes. 

I was lucky to have one of those courses in High School, also one on art (still have Jansen's History of Art book ...love it, too!), and one kinda learns the various differences, and the music one even went into the discussion of many musical terms that came to be known up front, then ... as well as even learning about the size of the performing folks, from the early duos and quartets, to the eventual 100+ folks in a Symphony!

We do not have a similar course on rock music, and it's hard to say, but it seems to me that the majority of folks "voting" are doing so for their favorite, not for their knowledge of music, or objective ability to listen to so many different things.

So in the end, the folks that removed all the money for the arts in high school are the ones that are hurting the populace the most ... they wanted them dumb, I guess, so that they would listen to what they are told ... top ten ... and not argue about anything else ... or worse, your boss will punish you, and you might lose your job these days! 

The "public", however, is not WRONG. AND it deserves a VOICE ... however, I don't know that a subjectivity is inherent in a crowd ... and therein lies another issue!

HOWEVER, these days, the arts are not meaningful and valuable like they were for a long time ... and they reflected the sentiment of many ... whereas today, the media has negated that knowledge to the point of ridiculousness, specially when they devote themselves to "stars", many of which have no talent whatsoever ... I was listening to one the other day to be fair ... and she can do notes, man she probably has one of those note things to make sure she hits them right ... but can she sing, fly, flow, and all that? NOPE. That voice for my ears was stone cold!

That's art? And it gets a high rating?
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SteveG Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 31 2019 at 07:12
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

... 
But our rationalization or arguments of what's right or wrong in ratings should not detract from the criteria of "5 star = Essential/Masterpiece". To rate otherwise would be making up one's own rules and making all of this more of a subjective exercise then it already is. I cannot stress that more clearly.
 

I agree, although I think that when one takes a chance and listens, to the history of music ... let's say going back to the earliest stuff that we know and is discussed in books of that history, your perception and acceptance of "rules" changes. 

I was lucky to have one of those courses in High School, also one on art (still have Jansen's History of Art book ...love it, too!), and one kinda learns the various differences, and the music one even went into the discussion of many musical terms that came to be known up front, then ... as well as even learning about the size of the performing folks, from the early duos and quartets, to the eventual 100+ folks in a Symphony!

We do not have a similar course on rock music, and it's hard to say, but it seems to me that the majority of folks "voting" are doing so for their favorite, not for their knowledge of music, or objective ability to listen to so many different things.

So in the end, the folks that removed all the money for the arts in high school are the ones that are hurting the populace the most ... they wanted them dumb, I guess, so that they would listen to what they are told ... top ten ... and not argue about anything else ... or worse, your boss will punish you, and you might lose your job these days! 

The "public", however, is not WRONG. AND it deserves a VOICE ... however, I don't know that a subjectivity is inherent in a crowd ... and therein lies another issue!

HOWEVER, these days, the arts are not meaningful and valuable like they were for a long time ... and they reflected the sentiment of many ... whereas today, the media has negated that knowledge to the point of ridiculousness, specially when they devote themselves to "stars", many of which have no talent whatsoever ... I was listening to one the other day to be fair ... and she can do notes, man she probably has one of those note things to make sure she hits them right ... but can she sing, fly, flow, and all that? NOPE. That voice for my ears was stone cold!

That's art? And it gets a high rating?
I hear what you're saying but luckily, so far at least, the Mona Lisa has been considered a masterpiece for hundreds of years.  Hopefully that staying power applies to music also. 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Psychedelic Paul Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 31 2019 at 07:17
I give my favourite albums five-star ratings simply because they ARE "essential masterpieces" in my own subjective opinion. Smile 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Nogbad_The_Bad Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 31 2019 at 07:29
Originally posted by Psychedelic Paul Psychedelic Paul wrote:

I give my favourite albums five-star ratings simply because they ARE "essential masterpieces" in my own subjective opinion. Smile 

I have a tough time arguing with this, a bunch of my 5 star albums wouldn't be consider universal 5 star albums.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Logan Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 31 2019 at 09:00
^ I'll posit that none of them would be would be considered universal masterpieces.

Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:


...
Musical enjoyment is subjective, {quoting myself from another recent topic}, we all bring our own cultural baggage and expectations, intellects, life experiences, associations and psychology to the music experience. No two people experience music in an identical way as it must be translated and interpreted by our brains..., and I think based on our limits, thinking we can we really objective about the quality of music is problematic. We can be more objective when it comes to the qualities of the music.


But here is one problem that we forget ... there is only one truth ... the source of the music ... and that has nothing to do with the listener and all the bits you mention ... otherwise we would not even be able to enjoy Mozart, Beethoven and whatever else we do.

That "source" is basically "untouchable" in the sense that it doesn't change on its own ... it only changes in our perceptions depending on all the reasons mentioned, but again, that has NOTHING to do with the music itself....


It even changes for the source as listener.

I haven't forgotten the importance of the source, although when we listen to Mozart and Beethoven we listen to different performances by them, with different conductors. Some recordings/ performances I enjoy more than others. With Beethoven, I favour my Herbert von Karajan as conductor CDs, but I do own various other versions.

Where I seem to disagree is that there is only one truth, the source, and that that has nothing to do with the listener. Of course without the composer we would not have the chance to experience it, but our experience will be different from the composers when they hear it or imagine it. When the composer first hears an orchestral score performed, it probably will be a different experience from what what they originally had in mind (it's a process for all). And with each new performance and over time, the composer's perceptions will also vary, as well as the audiences.

Conductors and performers bring their own interpretations into re-creating the music, and music is more than sheets and original intent, it's organised sound waves to be translated and interpreted by mind. What every individual experiences as music is different, including the composer's and even for each individual, including the composer, the experience will be somewhat different every time they hear it.

Music for the subject is the relationship between organised sound and their brains. We each bring our own meaning to the music, literature, art, and that sense of meaning and purpose may differ from the artist's intent. And that experience will differ from that of the artist, but as I said, even the artists experience of his/her own creation will differ at different times.

The artists matters, and the audience matters. Without the artist there would be no audience, and without the audience there would be no one to perceive it as art but the artist (who also is of the audience when witnessing his or her own creation come to fruition).

If a deaf composer performs music in the forest, and there's no one there to hear it, does it make a sound, and is it music? He may seem to hear it in his own head, but in a sense, no. His performance creates vibrations in the air, but sound in a sense does not exist without being heard, and ears are not enough to hear something, it requires a brain to filter and interpret the sound/ music, and brains are different.

I believe that the individual listener is important, as he/she does bring meaning to the music -- this is in the realm of audience reception aesthetics, or reception theory. The sound of music (the hills are alive with it apparently) consists of soundwaves that enter the ear and is then interpreted by a brain.   As music is more than just sound, it's an experience of organised sounds to be interpreted/ translated by a mind, each individual's experience brings individual meaning.

Not only are there physiological differences in the inner ears that affect what is heard, but our neurology and psychology affects how we interpret/ hear the music. Definitely people hear things differently, and our memories, associations, emotional state, experiences and physiology affect how we interpret the music. When we see or hear something, it is not direct, it is our mind's interpretation/ processing of information.

So, no, I don't think there is only one truth, obviously not in terms of perceived truth, and even for the creator, the perception of that truth changes. Each listener bring their own truths to the proceedings, and what is true for the creator may not be true for the beholder of the creation.

Creators matter and so do audiences. Without any audience, the creation would not hold as much value.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SteveG Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 31 2019 at 10:11
Not purposely being contrary but there's also a collective appreciation of music and art. As important as individual experience is, there is a reason why so many prog groups are loved by the masses. Genesis, Floyd, Tull , KC and Yes are almost universally loved from the old school. Same with Steven Wilson today. And with that collective appreciation, others can relate to what you and I like or dislike about music. It's not all an interior mystical experience.

Edited by SteveG - October 31 2019 at 10:16
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Logan Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 31 2019 at 11:23
^ There is a collective appreciation of the arts, and a pantheon of accepted greats within a given set. There is a relationship between the artist's music and the individual listener and sorts of relationships between the individuals who listen to and like the same music, as well as a relationship between those who accept certain music as great without necessarily being "fans" (a well-accepted canon).

I wrote several paragraphs on the pantheon of accepted greats for the above post, but then deleted it before posting as I felt my post was already too long, mostly due to the repetition, but also that I was having difficulty explaining it well. Basically, I accept composers such as Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, Brahms, and many others, as being great composers. I don't say, "I think Rachmaninoff was a good, skilled composer", I am confident that he objectively was according to well-accepted metrics, or standards. There is a consensus on such things -- a generally held opinion. I love music by all I mentioned, but I recognise a certain genius as well that others who are far more knowledgeable and skilled in music also accept. I also think the same with artists such as Leonardo da Vinci, and a particular favourite of mine, Rembrandt. I don't with very popular musical acts such as Madonna, or, at least it was, Nickelback (the drummer was my neighbour, and of course that has always been a divisive group). But for the fans, I won't negate their collective appreciation.

In terms of the history of music, while very different, I would not put Yes, Pink Floyd, Genesis or Jethro Tull on the same level as the greats of classical music, and not just because none of those mean as much to me, but I don't recognise as much compositional genius. I don't place rock on as high a pedestal as classical, but those are my biases showing (one might say apples and oranges, and such comparison is not worthwhile anyway).

I don't like most Steven Wilson music, and am no fan, but I can appreciate that many do (he is rather divisive) While not personally a fan of Yes, Tull, or Genesis (or most "Symphonic" Prog) I appreciate the significance, certainly much more than I appreciate the music

That said, for the individual, and we are all individuals (cue Monty Python), while there is a sort of collective experience, it is still an individual experience. Others share a similar experience, but no two experiences are identical.

A reason why those bands are appreciated by so many is because people are, generally, social animals, and we like to share our interests and share in other people's interests. Interest breeds more interest, and on a side-note, I would argue that popularity does not equal quality, but then quality can be so much in the ear of the behearer. There is something of a mob mentality when it comes to appreciation, and there is inculcation.

Yes, people can relate, that's part of having relationships. We aren't raised in vacuums, we are influenced by others, and influence others. We learn and develop to appreciate some things, and not appreciate other things. Some things we are more naturally evolved to appreciate than others.

Given the right social conditions, perhaps Yes, Genesis, KC, Floyd and Tull wouldn't have the same level of respect or adulation. Instead, perhaps, Magma, Can, Tangerine Dream, Amon Duul II, and Pentangle would be the big five.

I edited this but out of my last post: In terms of what music is enjoyable, a lot of that depend on culture, exposure, inculcation, and expectation as well as individual psychology (and I think there are evolutionary reasons why some types of music resonate more than others with more people aside from exposure -- so a natural inclination rather than just social constructs etc.). There are standards, so certain types of music will be be more popular generally than other types.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Psychedelic Paul Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 31 2019 at 11:26
Originally posted by Nogbad_The_Bad Nogbad_The_Bad wrote:

Originally posted by Psychedelic Paul Psychedelic Paul wrote:

I give my favourite albums five-star ratings simply because they ARE "essential masterpieces" in my own subjective opinion. Smile 

I have a tough time arguing with this, a bunch of my 5 star albums wouldn't be consider universal 5 star albums.
 
I'm not saying my favourite 5-star albums are universal masterpieces. All I'm saying is they're MY essential masterpieces in my own personal subjective opinion, and other opinions may vary. Wink
 
One of the endlessly  fascinating things about being a member of ProgArchives is seeing the wide diversity of opinions concerning our individual tastes in music. 


Edited by Psychedelic Paul - October 31 2019 at 11:27
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote SteveG Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 31 2019 at 12:18
Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:

^ There is a collective appreciation of the arts, and a pantheon of accepted greats within a given set. There is a relationship between the artist's music and the individual listener and sorts of relationships between the individuals who listen to and like the same music, as well as a relationship between those who accept certain music as great without necessarily being "fans" (a well-accepted canon).

I wrote several paragraphs on the pantheon of accepted greats for the above post, but then deleted it before posting as I felt my post was already too long, mostly due to the repetition, but also that I was having difficulty explaining it well. Basically, I accept composers such as Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, Brahms, and many others, as being great composers. I don't say, "I think Rachmaninoff was a good, skilled composer", I am confident that he objectively was according to well-accepted metrics, or standards. There is a consensus on such things -- a generally held opinion. I love music by all I mentioned, but I recognise a certain genius as well that others who are far more knowledgeable and skilled in music also accept. I also think the same with artists such as Leonardo da Vinci, and a particular favourite of mine, Rembrandt. I don't with very popular musical acts such as Madonna, or, at least it was, Nickelback (the drummer was my neighbour, and of course that has always been a divisive group). But for the fans, I won't negate their collective appreciation.

In terms of the history of music, while very different, I would not put Yes, Pink Floyd, Genesis or Jethro Tull on the same level as the greats of classical music, and not just because none of those mean as much to me, but I don't recognise as much compositional genius. I don't place rock on as high a pedestal as classical, but those are my biases showing (one might say apples and oranges, and such comparison is not worthwhile anyway).

I don't like most Steven Wilson music, and am no fan, but I can appreciate that many do (he is rather divisive) While not personally a fan of Yes, Tull, or Genesis (or most "Symphonic" Prog) I appreciate the significance, certainly much more than I appreciate the music

That said, for the individual, and we are all individuals (cue Monty Python), while there is a sort of collective experience, it is still an individual experience. Others share a similar experience, but no two experiences are identical.

A reason why those bands are appreciated by so many is because people are, generally, social animals, and we like to share our interests and share in other people's interests. Interest breeds more interest, and on a side-note, I would argue that popularity does not equal quality, but then quality can be so much in the ear of the behearer. There is something of a mob mentality when it comes to appreciation, and there is inculcation.

Yes, people can relate, that's part of having relationships. We aren't raised in vacuums, we are influenced by others, and influence others. We learn and develop to appreciate some things, and not appreciate other things. Some things we are more naturally evolved to appreciate than others.

Given the right social conditions, perhaps Yes, Genesis, KC, Floyd and Tull wouldn't have the same level of respect or adulation. Instead, perhaps, Magma, Can, Tangerine Dream, Amon Duul II, and Pentangle would be the big five.

I edited this but out of my last post: In terms of what music is enjoyable, a lot of that depend on culture, exposure, inculcation, and expectation as well as individual psychology (and I think there are evolutionary reasons why some types of music resonate more than others with more people aside from exposure -- so a natural inclination rather than just social constructs etc.). There are standards, so certain types of music will be be more popular generally than other types.
A very good post. Let's just say that like most pairs of opposites, individual and collective experiences go together. I cannot image having one without the other to some extent. Even listening to some artist, I'm aware that he/she may be well liked or be quite the cult phenomenon, even without consciously thinking about. Someone besides myself has some degree of involvement in that artist's music.

Edited by SteveG - October 31 2019 at 12:19
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote I prophesy disaster Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 01 2019 at 06:41
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

why are you into listening to "prog/progressive" music?
 
I listen to progressive rock because I enjoy its richness and the emotions it evokes. I do not listen to progressive rock because of a bohemian sense of artistic appreciation.
 
 
 
 
No, I know how to behave in the restaurant now, I don't tear at the meat with my hands. If I've become a man of the world somehow, that's not necessarily to say I'm a worldly man.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote I prophesy disaster Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 01 2019 at 08:39
For several years prior to joining PA, I spent a considerable amount of time visiting the review section of the site. But for the most part, I would read reviews of albums that I already had, often while I was listening to those albums. I wanted to read what other people thought about the albums with which I was already familiar. I didn't read reviews of albums I didn't know in order to find out what the album is like. That's what YouTube is for.
 
Nevertheless, the average ratings of albums are important to my search of music to obtain. Generally speaking, I'm only interested in one or maybe two albums from any particular artist. I'm not interested in collecting entire discographies of artists. I collect music that I like... I don't just collect music. Thus, when I somehow discover an artist to pursue, I use the ratings to determine which album to first investigate. But if possible, I actually listen to the album to see if I like it, rather than relying on the ratings or reviews.
 
 
 
 
No, I know how to behave in the restaurant now, I don't tear at the meat with my hands. If I've become a man of the world somehow, that's not necessarily to say I'm a worldly man.
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