
TheRealWaldo
New member
p.s., nothing against you Cyan, the attitude just rubs me the wrong way!
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Lt. Bob said:What?
Now don't mistake what I'm saying 'cause I'm a big, big fan of SLuiCe and his work. He's truly awesome but what do you listen to that makes you think he has commercial appeal? I mean.......Frank Zappa was a freakin' genius but never managed to have any commercial appeal at all. Yes....he has his followers but the very definition of commercial appeal means that the masses will like and buy it and they don't. Plus, there is absolutely no indication that the masses will ever in any large numbers support music that takes thinking to listen to and there are no examples I can think of where a commercially successful artist changes time signatures every three measures. Perhaps you might correct me on this but I bet you can't think of more than a couple...if that.
Now if by commercial appeal you mean a smallish niche market....then I'm with you. SLuiCe could certainly accomplish that. But to have the masses be discerning enough to buy his stuff in large quantities.?.....no way.
And the same goes for anything else that isn't mindless drivel.
My girlfriend is the same way.B.SABBATH said:.. Nowhere goes down a lot for whatever reason..
crawdad said:Cyan--I think you've brought up something VERY interesting, which SHOULD be discussed more. See, I bet I could pick a CD and play it for 100 people here. That 100 would probably concur as to which song is the best, if they were making a decision to release a single. Radio stations do stuff like this all the time--surveying the public to see what gets the best reaction.
In the early sixties, when the top 30 was the AM pop format, there were songs that just jumped off the radio. You didn't even have to like them, but they were singable songs and they caught the ear of the public. Me and my 12 year old pals usd to walk around the neighborhood at night singing them, cause they were so easy to remember! Chug-A-Lug, Mrs. Brown You've Got A Lovely Daughter, Sum-Sum-Summertime--Can't Explain--Big John--oh hell, I'm really dating myself!
My unscientific hunch is that the brain processes rhythm and melody in certain ways. It likes repetition--thus the incessant chant for 'hooks--give me hooks!'. There are certain structures that the human mind finds satisfying and delicious, on an audio level. The Beatles became masters of this type of music--whether by insight, gift, luck or intuition, I don't know. Definable, easily digested chunks of information which repeat.
On top of that, there is the stellar performance which pushes it over the top.
It bugs me that so few people know how to write good pop/rock songs. There is no attention paid to melodic repetition via lyric meter, or any attempt to really work a theme beyond a subjective reality which no one listening is really privy to--but thats just me, I guess. Not that I can write something great at will. Hell, man, its really HARD WORK to make something that stands out from the pack. Often, you can put the work in and still have nothing great to show.
Cyans wildcard is the one that gets you excited to hear the music. It does stuff to your mind and body and soul.
Personally, in this forum, I'd rather hear a great song done on 4 track cassette than a great recording of a lousy song. My belief is that the only way to become a great artist is to become a great writer. If you skip this step, all the studio brilliance you posess doesn't amount to anything. I encourage anybody who wants to succeed in music to write and write a lot. Then write some more. The wildcard is attained by following that road 99% of the time. Every once in a while, somebody gets beginners luck or is blessed with some heavenly gift. Usually, its somebody's passion that leads them to greatness.
Anyway, its worth talking about.
Stratomaster said:I can post songs there for free and download them in a few minutes-whats to complain about? Deleting a song I don't want to keep takes what? 5 seconds?