What are you listening to at the moment?
- photekq
- Cherry Picker
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Good stuff Daniel and fifted
ne0, haven't heard that song in a year or two. Such a nice song.
ne0, haven't heard that song in a year or two. Such a nice song.
- Daniel Beardsmore
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- photekq
- Cherry Picker
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- ullr
- Location: Florida
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Wow, I guess my youth is showing. I didn't see anything I recognized until page 17 saw Anaal Narkrath (which I don't like - too cheesy IMO) and Nails.
I listened to that band "Jungbluth" and liked it. I've been going back towards emo, screamo, and post-hardcore just a little lately.
For me the name of the game is noise (power electronics, industrial), ambient, and black metal.
I was listening to the album "Total Servitude" by Akitsa when I saw this thread.
I listened to that band "Jungbluth" and liked it. I've been going back towards emo, screamo, and post-hardcore just a little lately.
For me the name of the game is noise (power electronics, industrial), ambient, and black metal.
I was listening to the album "Total Servitude" by Akitsa when I saw this thread.
I'm into black metal, noise, ambient, experimental and shoegaze, including:
I Am a Lake of Burning Orchids, Prurient, Have a Nice Life, Vegas Martyrs, Wounder, Sun Devoured Earth, hana sumai, Kristallnacht, The Antlers, Ash Pool, goreshit, Laurel Noose, My Bloody Valentine, Raspberry Bulbs, I Wrote Haikus About Cannibalism in Your Yearbook, DATING, Morose, Avellie, Joy Division, Akitsa, Dolores, Vatican Shadow, Giles Corey, Hate Forest, Deafheaven, clipping., Flourishing, Nahvalr, Liturgy, Circle of Ouroborus, Kanye West, Herukrat, Peste Noire, Drudkh, Red House Painters, Ben Frost, Yellow Swans, Fuck Buttons, Roman Cross, Lonesummer, American Football, Bone Awl, Suffocate for Fuck Sake, Prurient & Kevin Drumm, JK Flesh, Clouds Collide, Ghost Bath, Ruined Towers & Broken Bridges, Chambering, Contrepoison.
Check out my music taste: http://www.last.fm/user/hal-ullr
- photekq
- Cherry Picker
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Just got my favourite song on vinyl.
- ne0phyte
- Toast.
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I'd argue that only dumb peple say that - considering that music is 100% subjectivelyEszett wrote: ↑ the - as people say - most dumb music genre (i. e. Techno)
- Stabilized
- Location: Edinburgh
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I thought the most brilliant musician is considered to be Beethoven or Bach.Eszett wrote: ↑the - as people say - most brillant musician ever (i. e. Mozart)
Tbh the music of the Classical era is probably best defined by Haydn, who was Mozart's teacher and father of both the symphony and the string quartet.
I know Mozart is more of a name synonymous with the genre of 'classical music', but I think it's a very bold claim to say anyone was the 'most brilliant'.
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(Oh good - a classical discussion...)
"Most brilliant" would also depend on the era. Composers learned based on what had come before them and they were constrained by the "fashion" of their times. Mozart was certainly brilliant, but I don't like most of his works because of the style of his era - the "Classical" era - mostly major keys, speed/volume/mood changes, linear. I consider the previous Baroque period to be superior because it was more complex, multi-layered and keeping mood/speed/volume consistent throughout the piece.
If Mozart were born 75 years earlier, then we could better compare Mozart with Bach (imagine the awesome Baroque Mozart could have done). It's also a bit of a "popularity contest". There are amazing works by lesser known composers. Also, there are many lost compositions, destroyed by war or lost over the centuries. Possibly the real "most brilliant musician ever" was some unknown, lost to history. It's fascinating to think about.
I always think that modern musicians could certainly learn from classical music - especially multi-layered Baroque. I think that's why I can tolerate some European "modern" music - because they, unlike American "artists" (I hate that word applied to music), are more often classically trained.
"Most brilliant" would also depend on the era. Composers learned based on what had come before them and they were constrained by the "fashion" of their times. Mozart was certainly brilliant, but I don't like most of his works because of the style of his era - the "Classical" era - mostly major keys, speed/volume/mood changes, linear. I consider the previous Baroque period to be superior because it was more complex, multi-layered and keeping mood/speed/volume consistent throughout the piece.
If Mozart were born 75 years earlier, then we could better compare Mozart with Bach (imagine the awesome Baroque Mozart could have done). It's also a bit of a "popularity contest". There are amazing works by lesser known composers. Also, there are many lost compositions, destroyed by war or lost over the centuries. Possibly the real "most brilliant musician ever" was some unknown, lost to history. It's fascinating to think about.
I always think that modern musicians could certainly learn from classical music - especially multi-layered Baroque. I think that's why I can tolerate some European "modern" music - because they, unlike American "artists" (I hate that word applied to music), are more often classically trained.
- webwit
- Wild Duck
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Baroque huh? I guess we won't be music friends, because obviously its killer Beethoven stands lonely at the top.
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I like to think of Beethoven music as diamonds glittering in a pile of shit.
Actually, it's not that bad, but Beethoven is soooo inconsistent. He believed that you should convey every emotion in a piece of music. To me, that's psychotic. I think each piece should have its own emotion.
Actually, it's not that bad, but Beethoven is soooo inconsistent. He believed that you should convey every emotion in a piece of music. To me, that's psychotic. I think each piece should have its own emotion.
- webwit
- Wild Duck
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Nice, Beethoven the Psychotic. A much better rant than the usual classical music fan snobbery that Beethoven is basic stuff for beginners. Needs more layers!!
- webwit
- Wild Duck
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You can bend most music to a style. Like La Folia.
Baroque copycat: Today:
Baroque copycat: Today:
- cookie
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I love classical music, I really do but I hate the sound of harpsichords... what a terrible invention! But without them, we probably wouldn't have pianos now, which are one of my favorite instruments!
- Hypersphere
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I enjoy the harpsichord, forte piano, and piano. I'm surprised that I like the pianos, because I tend to think that strings were meant to be plucked or bowed, not struck with hammers. If I had to pick just one instrument, I think it would be the cello, but my favorite musical instrument changes at least as often as my favorite computer keyboard.cookie wrote: ↑I love classical music, I really do but I hate the sound of harpsichords... what a terrible invention! But without them, we probably wouldn't have pianos now, which are one of my favorite instruments!
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I'm not too thrilled with harpsichords either - especially solo pieces or concertos with long solos. Actually, I don't like any type of concerto with solo sections. That's why I like "concerti grossi". ("man, that concerto is gross!")cookie wrote: ↑I love classical music, I really do but I hate the sound of harpsichords... what a terrible invention!
I'd pick the cello too - or even better, its ancestor the viola da gamba.Hypersphere wrote: ↑If I had to pick just one instrument, I think it would be the cello, but my favorite musical instrument changes at least as often as my favorite computer keyboard.
- Stabilized
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I think harpsichords are great in period reproductions in an orchestra, but I couldn't put up with one playing a solo piece.mr_a500 wrote: ↑I'm not too thrilled with harpsichords either - especially solo pieces or concertos with long solos. Actually, I don't like any type of concerto with solo sections. That's why I like "concerti grossi". ("man, that concerto is gross!")cookie wrote: ↑I love classical music, I really do but I hate the sound of harpsichords... what a terrible invention!
I personally love the Viola with sympathetic strings, the Viola D'amore.mr_a500 wrote: ↑I'd pick the cello too - or even better, its ancestor the viola da gamba.