T
Travelsong
Guest
In order for communication to take place, one must first have intent or desire, secondly one must want to express that intent or desire. With respect to one playing an evil beat, what exactly is the intent or desire being communicated and how do you know?Originally posted by Aaron:
I have never said that music is like communication. Music is communication. And communication does not merely express good or evil; it is good or evil. This must be the bazillionth time I've said that.
Your quotes all referred the genre of rock n' roll as a whole, not to the beat, so I suppose that renders them all irrelevant doesn't it? Do you wish to rephrase the requirement to match what you felt was relevant enough to submit as proof, or do you concede a loss right now?Originally posted by Aaron:
For the quotes to be relevant, they must deal with the significance of the beat, not with what the artist thinks is his mission. So, knock yourself out. Let's hear a few of them. Michael Ventura certainly believes the Voodoo and the music that evolved from it is a medium to encourage, uplift, enlighten or explore the human experience, but then he believes that can only happen through sensuality. Remember, he rejects the Christian distincition between mind and body.
So, knock yourself out. Quote away O literate one, but if the quotes don't deal directly with the significance of the beat, it would indeed be a stupid response.
Why is it that I am not inspired to dance in a sexual or enticing manner when listening to rock music? If a beat truly can be evil in and of itself, should I not feel at least some compulsion to thrust my hips or strip to my birthday suit? How is it that there are so many people who are exactly the same way? On one hand you make a universal moral claim about the nature of music and rhythm based on what you can observe in the listener, yet on the other hand there are leagues of people who prove you demonstrably wrong every moment of every day. How do you account for this?Originally posted by Aaron:
The dancing that the beat invariably inspires is sexual and enticing to the lusts of the flesh. This can't be disputed. Not intelligently, anyway. That is why it is compatible with pagan religion. Pagans glory in the flesh, and this music really pumps it up.
To break it down kindergarten style, how can you tell someone is sinning if there is no evidence of it? Do you claim to know the hearts of men?
Here's another one for you: At what point does a rhythm make the transition from good to evil? 10 beats per minute? 20? 120? I heard a wood pecker outside my window this morning, and I thought 'if only that sensual creature knew just how much his pecking matched the beat of German industrial techno'. Do you think God should make wood peckers slow it down a bit to a less sensual rhythm? Because I swear, if that little bird had gone on much longer, I would have spent the day fornicating all over my neighborhood.