
SouthSIDE Glen
independentrecording.net
OK, sorry, you were talking to somebody else. My mistake. 
G.

G.
Markaholic said:For me to call it MUSIC...there has to be some instruments!
MOST ..not all....Rap/Hip-hop does not have a damn musical instrument in there whole entire peice...all synths or computer generated beats does not classify as MUSIC to me!
What about the human voice? So you don't consider acapella singing to be music?For me to call it MUSIC...there has to be some instruments!
Well, according to that, one could interpret that 2nd definition to imply thht one need only have rhythm to be considered music. By that definition, William Shakespeare's prose written with an iambic pentameter rhythm would fall under the definition of music.bdemenil said:From Merriam Webster Online...
the science or art of ordering tones or sounds in succession, in combination, and in temporal relationships to produce a composition having unity and continuity b : vocal, instrumental, or mechanical sounds having rhythm, melody, or harmony
While rhythm may be an important, maybe even essential part of music, is that alone enough to define something as music? Poetry has rhythm, but we don't refer to it as music. We refer to it as poetry because it is lacking other "musical" qualities (for want of a better term).bdemenil said:Personally, I think rhythm/timing is the most essential aspect of music. Plenty of that in Hip-Hop.
If the poetry is actually spoken in time - yeah, I think you can call that music. If it's written on a page, or spoken out of time, well....While rhythm may be an important, maybe even essential part of music, is that alone enough to define something as music? Poetry has rhythm, but we don't refer to it as music. We refer to it as poetry because it is lacking other "musical" qualities (for want of a better term).
Well, I guess in a way music is in the ears of the beholder. I'd consider the sounds of nature "music" in it's own right. But that's not quite what I'm talking about here. The fact is that not even I refer to those sounds as "music", I refer to them as "the sounds of nature", even if they have a musical quality to them.bdemenil said:If the poetry is actually spoken in time - yeah, I think you can call that music. If it's written on a page, or spoken out of time, well....
I'd certainly consider drumming to be music - tap dancing also.
- Please refer back to the dictionary definition. Hip-hop falls firmly under that definition. Nature sounds do not because they are not 'ordered', or in other words, man made*. I suppose you could say they are 'ordered' by god and are therefore a divine music - but then you are moving away from science and into mysticism.hip hop at best straddles the edge if the common definition of the word "music"
Hand them over pleaseBut I'll bet you my own eyeballs that you have never actually referred to ... tap dancing as "music"
SouthSIDE Glen said:I have nothing against hip hop or rap in general. It's not my personal cup of audio tea, but I have nothing against it as an art form.