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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 14 2012 at 00:53
Rob is right that an opinion of masterpiece is a subjective one.

I happen to agree with Jim and Rob more than Dean (unusual for me) and Ivan. This does not mean that Dean & Ivan are wrong, it just means I disagree with them. Such things will always happen when a bunch of people get together.

Also, an important point. I never, ever, take any notice whatsoever of a rating. I also take barely any notice of about 90% of reviews, just those people whom I know and trust do a good job.

We really do tend to over analyse these things. It's music. It's supposed to be fun.......man.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2012 at 21:15
Originally posted by thellama73 thellama73 wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Every artist who releases an album says in the press "This is the best thing we've ever done." And I believe they mean that - of course several years (or even months) down the line they'll change their mind (usually just before they release the next one).


Yeah, but there's a difference between "the best thing we've ever done" and "the best thing anyone has ever done." Of course you want to be improving on your previous work and producing the best product you can, but that doesn't mean you are capable of writing revolutionary masterpieces.

Maybe you're not capable, but you must believe  you are.

I have a Symphonic book almost ready for a year and haven't released it because I believe I can do it better, if I don't believe it's an important book that will help people to understand and love Symphonic Prog, I will not release it.

And if I believe I achieved that, it will deserve 5 stars for me.

Now in music,  people criticized me on a forum for giving "The Grand Illusion" 5 stars and "In the Court of the Crimson King" 2 stars

But for me the STYX album is a perfect masterpiece, may not be as brilliant as Foxtrot or Illusions on a Double Dimple, but they achieved their goal, they did a transcendental album with no weak spots  that was important for a generation, and  that deserves 5 stars in my book.

On the other hand, King Crimson where far from what they are able to do, they made an album that is complex for the sake of complexity

The word Masterpiece is overrated.

Master is simply an artist, performer, or player of consummate skill, and masterpíece for me, is music that demonstrates those specific skills

Some people believe that a masterpiece is something out of this world, I don't.


Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - November 13 2012 at 21:54
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2012 at 20:28
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by thellama73 thellama73 wrote:

But it specifically doesn't mean "one of my most favorite albums." It specifically means "Essential. A masterpiece of progressive rock music." That is the way our ratings system is set up.
Now tell that to everyone who's rated a non-masterpiece album with a 5-star rating. Including all the collabs and fat bottomed girls who rated Still The Waters as a masterpiece Wink


I don't rate my own stuff, but if I did, I'd give StW either a 3 or 4.  I love the compositions but I could have fixed a lot in the recording aspect (which I am [slowly] working on now).  I have not added the album to bandcamp yet for that reason- I am going back and making adjustments.

I genuinely think Refulgence is a solid four.  Which is what I go for.  I don't go for "five star," because I think that is something special that means I made a powerful connection with a listener.  I shoot for "excellent."  Most albums for me?  No amount of fiddling or tweaking will take it from a four to a five.  A five star rating here from me is special- it means the content of the album changed me in some powerful way.


As for those who rated my first album highly, three things:

1. I never expected to see such a reception.  I was skeptical of it myself.  Everyone who reviewed it thusly assured me they were being honest.

2. A flood of scathing reviews came in shortly thereafter.  They were more helpful to me.

3. There are other fat bottomed girls who like my music?  Shocked Heart Pig

It wasn't a criticism Rob - just making a point that people give 5-star ratings to albums they like/love for whatever reason regardless of what it says in the rating description/guideline. Those people must have noticed the production and recording and seen past that to the music itself and made that connection to what the music was conveying. Quite a few masterpieces suffer from production flaws that could be fixed, but as we have seen with some remix/remasters and re-recordings, fixing those doesn't necessarily make things better. Errors or weakneses in the composition/structure are something else - a masterpiece is a masterpiece regardless of how well it was recorded - there are good versions and bad versions of Beethoven's 9th but it's still a masterpiece.
 
Tweeking and fiddling cannot make 4-star album a 5-star album, but rethinking and revising a 4-star tune can make it a 5-star tune - Pink Floyd used to do did this all the time, "Set The Controls", "Saucerful of Secrets", "Becareful With That Axe" became 5-star live tunes after they were recorded in the studio;  "Nothing, Parts 1–24" was worked and reworked live and in the studio before it became a 5-star composition we now know as "Echoes"; "Ravin' an Droolin'" wasn't a 5-star tune but it became one after being reworked as "Sheep"; Rick Wright's "Violent Sequence" originally intended for Zabriski Point became a sublime 5-star tune as "Us And Them". 
 
Many bands' debut albums are more popular and/or successful than their sophomore releases ("that difficult second album") - there are probably dozens of conflicting reasons for this, but one of them is the first album's songs were road-tested and chosen because they work live, they'd been tweeked and honed to work on stage, whereas the second album was pushed out quickly to capitalise on their over-night success so less honing-time was given to each track and they were probably not played live until after they'd been recorded.
 
 


I think the primary flaw here lies in an understanding of "masterpiece."  If people would stop using terms like "objective review," we might have a bit more honesty.  There is no "objective masterpiece."  The word "masterpiece" is and always shall be a subjective term.  Even if we're talking about the classical definition, that just means it's a collective opinion.  An artist's masterpiece could theoretically change over the decades as new critics come into play.

But in our little context, we (mis?)use "masterpiece" to refer to any album we deem worthy of our highest honor.  I have never had a problem with that.  If the verbiage needs to be changed, fine (I would not advocate only allowing one five star per artist).  I disagree with some of the Pink Floyd pieces you mentioned being five star when reworked.  You love PF- I can make the same claim about Kansas who went through three incarnations and even have two different lineups playing some of the same material.  But you will no doubt disagree and say "Incomudro" or "Greek Structure Sunbeam" are not five star songs.

I do take umbrage at those who use ones and fives in a binary way. 

By the way, I did not view your comments as a criticism.



Edited by Epignosis - November 13 2012 at 20:30
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2012 at 20:13
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by thellama73 thellama73 wrote:

But it specifically doesn't mean "one of my most favorite albums." It specifically means "Essential. A masterpiece of progressive rock music." That is the way our ratings system is set up.
Now tell that to everyone who's rated a non-masterpiece album with a 5-star rating. Including all the collabs and fat bottomed girls who rated Still The Waters as a masterpiece Wink


I don't rate my own stuff, but if I did, I'd give StW either a 3 or 4.  I love the compositions but I could have fixed a lot in the recording aspect (which I am [slowly] working on now).  I have not added the album to bandcamp yet for that reason- I am going back and making adjustments.

I genuinely think Refulgence is a solid four.  Which is what I go for.  I don't go for "five star," because I think that is something special that means I made a powerful connection with a listener.  I shoot for "excellent."  Most albums for me?  No amount of fiddling or tweaking will take it from a four to a five.  A five star rating here from me is special- it means the content of the album changed me in some powerful way.


As for those who rated my first album highly, three things:

1. I never expected to see such a reception.  I was skeptical of it myself.  Everyone who reviewed it thusly assured me they were being honest.

2. A flood of scathing reviews came in shortly thereafter.  They were more helpful to me.

3. There are other fat bottomed girls who like my music?  Shocked Heart Pig

It wasn't a criticism Rob - just making a point that people give 5-star ratings to albums they like/love for whatever reason regardless of what it says in the rating description/guideline. Those people must have noticed the production and recording and seen past that to the music itself and made that connection to what the music was conveying. Quite a few masterpieces suffer from production flaws that could be fixed, but as we have seen with some remix/remasters and re-recordings, fixing those doesn't necessarily make things better. Errors or weakneses in the composition/structure are something else - a masterpiece is a masterpiece regardless of how well it was recorded - there are good versions and bad versions of Beethoven's 9th but it's still a masterpiece.
 
Tweeking and fiddling cannot make 4-star album a 5-star album, but rethinking and revising a 4-star tune can make it a 5-star tune - Pink Floyd used to do did this all the time, "Set The Controls", "Saucerful of Secrets", "Becareful With That Axe" became 5-star live tunes after they were recorded in the studio;  "Nothing, Parts 1–24" was worked and reworked live and in the studio before it became a 5-star composition we now know as "Echoes"; "Ravin' an Droolin'" wasn't a 5-star tune but it became one after being reworked as "Sheep"; Rick Wright's "Violent Sequence" originally intended for Zabriski Point became a sublime 5-star tune as "Us And Them". 
 
Many bands' debut albums are more popular and/or successful than their sophomore releases ("that difficult second album") - there are probably dozens of conflicting reasons for this, but one of them is the first album's songs were road-tested and chosen because they work live, they'd been tweeked and honed to work on stage, whereas the second album was pushed out quickly to capitalise on their over-night success so less honing-time was given to each track and they were probably not played live until after they'd been recorded.
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2012 at 19:16
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

There are (literally) thousands of 5-star ratings and 5-star reviews on this site - very few of them are "masterpieces" in the literal/classical sense of the word ("masterpiece" was not the best choice of word for a star-rating) - it has never meant "revolutionary masterpiece" here - it just means "this is one of my most favourite albums"

This.

It's probably impossible to determine what constitues objectively a masterpiece. This is music, the most subjective thing of all. What a huge number of people will rate 5 stars, a not so negligible number of others will rate 1. To them, it certainly doesn't feel like a masterpiece. And yet, those 1 star raters will rate other things 5 stars in all honesty, because that record means something to them, even if it's not so highly regarded, or even despised by a lot, in some cases.
It's not unreasonable to think that the rating system here is used mostly to convey personal appreciation of such or such record, but maybe not as an exercise in trying to be objective as to what can be called, or not, "an essential masterpiece".
We'd go on a limb and agree with Dean that the ratings wording is perhaps not the most accurate...

Just our 0.02€



Edited by Battlestations - November 13 2012 at 19:21
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2012 at 19:11
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by thellama73 thellama73 wrote:

But it specifically doesn't mean "one of my most favorite albums." It specifically means "Essential. A masterpiece of progressive rock music." That is the way our ratings system is set up.
Now tell that to everyone who's rated a non-masterpiece album with a 5-star rating. Including all the collabs and fat bottomed girls who rated Still The Waters as a masterpiece Wink


I don't rate my own stuff, but if I did, I'd give StW either a 3 or 4.  I love the compositions but I could have fixed a lot in the recording aspect (which I am [slowly] working on now).  I have not added the album to bandcamp yet for that reason- I am going back and making adjustments.

I genuinely think Refulgence is a solid four.  Which is what I go for.  I don't go for "five star," because I think that is something special that means I made a powerful connection with a listener.  I shoot for "excellent."  Most albums for me?  No amount of fiddling or tweaking will take it from a four to a five.  A five star rating here from me is special- it means the content of the album changed me in some powerful way.


As for those who rated my first album highly, three things:

1. I never expected to see such a reception.  I was skeptical of it myself.  Everyone who reviewed it thusly assured me they were being honest.

2. A flood of scathing reviews came in shortly thereafter.  They were more helpful to me.

3. There are other fat bottomed girls who like my music?  Shocked Heart Pig



Edited by Epignosis - November 13 2012 at 19:12
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2012 at 18:25
Originally posted by thellama73 thellama73 wrote:

But it specifically doesn't mean "one of my most favorite albums." It specifically means "Essential. A masterpiece of progressive rock music." That is the way our ratings system is set up.
Now tell that to everyone who's rated a non-masterpiece album with a 5-star rating. Including all the collabs and fat bottomed girls who rated Still The Waters as a masterpiece Wink

Edited by Dean - November 13 2012 at 18:25
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2012 at 18:06
But it specifically doesn't mean "one of my most favorite albums." It specifically means "Essential. A masterpiece of progressive rock music." That is the way our ratings system is set up.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2012 at 18:01
Originally posted by thellama73 thellama73 wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Every artist who releases an album says in the press "This is the best thing we've ever done." And I believe they mean that - of course several years (or even months) down the line they'll change their mind (usually just before they release the next one).


Yeah, but there's a difference between "the best thing we've ever done" and "the best thing anyone has ever done." Of course you want to be improving on your previous work and producing the best product you can, but that doesn't mean you are capable of writing revolutionary masterpieces.
There are (literally) thousands of 5-star ratings and 5-star reviews on this site - very few of them are "masterpieces" in the literal/classical sense of the word ("masterpiece" was not the best choice of word for a star-rating) - it has never meant "revolutionary masterpiece" here - it just means "this is one of my most favourite albums"
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2012 at 17:53
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Every artist who releases an album says in the press "This is the best thing we've ever done." And I believe they mean that - of course several years (or even months) down the line they'll change their mind (usually just before they release the next one).


Yeah, but there's a difference between "the best thing we've ever done" and "the best thing anyone has ever done." Of course you want to be improving on your previous work and producing the best product you can, but that doesn't mean you are capable of writing revolutionary masterpieces.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2012 at 17:51
Every artist who releases an album says in the press "This is the best thing we've ever done." And I believe they mean that - of course several years (or even months) down the line they'll change their mind (usually just before they release the next one).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2012 at 17:44
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Iván has a very valid point - if a band does not think their lastest album is a masterpiece then why bother releasing it? I recall making a point similar to this in a blog about self-released albums - if a band cannot make an effort to do the best they can then why should I expend any energy in listening to it.
 
Anyway, we allow artists to rate their own albums and they can give themselves any rating they like.


Because we still want to hear and enjoy the three and four star albums?  Confused

Most bands do their very best but don't produce masterpieces.  Nothing at all wrong with that.


Nah, I still can't get my head around that. If a band knows the difference between the album they've just finished and a masterpeice then it's not finished. Why do I want to hear an unfinished product?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2012 at 17:43
I'm a purely average musician....if I ever got a chance to make an album with some guys, I would do my best, and it would be special to me.  I wouldn't presume to believe and rate it as highly as I would Quadrophenia or Animals.  With luck and good fortune, I might be able to make a "good" 3 star album and that would be a nice thing. 

The idea that I would have to rate that album 5 stars because I was on it, is just bizarre.  The idea that it would have no value unless I believed it was 5 stars is even stranger.  I truly enjoy lots of 3 star albums.   I would never reject an album because the musician, if asked, felt his album was a 3 or 4 star album.  Those are fine ratings!

Very bizarre. 




Edited by Finnforest - November 13 2012 at 17:44

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2012 at 17:41
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Iván has a very valid point - if a band does not think their lastest album is a masterpiece then why bother releasing it? I recall making a point similar to this in a blog about self-released albums - if a band cannot make an effort to do the best they can then why should I expend any energy in listening to it.
 
Anyway, we allow artists to rate their own albums and they can give themselves any rating they like.


Because we still want to hear and enjoy the three and four star albums?  Confused

Most bands do their very best but don't produce masterpieces.  Nothing at all wrong with that.




Rob, do you think any of your albums are as good as Tales From Topographic Oceans?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2012 at 17:39
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Iván has a very valid point - if a band does not think their lastest album is a masterpiece then why bother releasing it? I recall making a point similar to this in a blog about self-released albums - if a band cannot make an effort to do the best they can then why should I expend any energy in listening to it.
 
Anyway, we allow artists to rate their own albums and they can give themselves any rating they like.


Because we still want to hear and enjoy the three and four star albums?  Confused

Most bands do their very best but don't produce masterpieces.  Nothing at all wrong with that.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2012 at 17:31
I agree with Jim. Very few albums are masterpieces and I think almost no band who is honest with themselves would rate their own music as good as the greats who inspired them to start playing in the first place.

Example: I write novels. I think they are pretty good. Certainly as good as anything that hack Steohen King comes out with. But my favorite novelist is Victor Hugo. I could never in my wildest dreams imagine producing a novel half as good as anything he's written. Does that mean I shouldn't produce anything at all, simply because I can't equal the greatest of all time?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2012 at 17:27
Iván has a very valid point - if a band does not think their lastest album is a masterpiece then why bother releasing it? I recall making a point similar to this in a blog about self-released albums - if a band cannot make an effort to do the best they can then why should I expend any energy in listening to it.
 
Anyway, we allow artists to rate their own albums and they can give themselves any rating they like.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2012 at 15:30
Believing in their music and being proud of it, yes.  Concretely having to believe all of their albums are 5-star masterpiece is ludicrous. 

I think I must just be misunderstanding you. 

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2012 at 15:28
I would never believe in a band which rated themselves 4 stars. What about a band which did not rate themselves, gee whiz, I ain't  listening to that stuff.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 13 2012 at 15:01
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by Finnforest Finnforest wrote:

That's silly Ivan.  A band can be objective enough to make a good album without "having to believe" it is a 5-star masterpiece, right up there with Revolver and Dark Side (or whatever one thinks is masterpiece).  Given our definition of 5-stars (that it be used sparingly, so as to have some meaning), the vast majority of releases are not 1s and 5s.   Bands needn't give their own album 5 stars automatically, but only if they feel it is right up there with the greatest albums of all time.  If they believe that, then fine.   
 
 

Respectfully disagree.

If they don't trust in their own album, I don't trust them.

Iván

I  agree  with Jim. To me what you are saying is  a bit silly.
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