It is. It really is. And I am not even remotely close to be "traditional only". I spent about 5 years recently playing lead guitar in a contemporary praise and worship group. And we definetly "rocked" sometimes. It was tasteful rock, and we didnt dress like goons or lurch around like we were on drugs or anything. </font>[/QUOTE]And it's possible to perform rap without dressing like its worldly incarnation as well.Originally posted by D28guy:
EricB,
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />"I know you admit this is just your taste, but I still don't see how it could be seen as so bad even by those who are not "traditional"-only."
It just stuns me when I hear that. I've heard the "its just poetry" thing before, and it just boggles my mind to have this gang world inspired and thug promoted rap noise referred to as poetry.[.QUOTE] Once again, you confuse the modern secular use of it, with the form itself. The same things can be said about rock; just exchange sex, drugs, other forms of violence, punk lifestyle, etc, for "gang/thug".</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />"It's just talking in rhyme (poetry) for the most part, for crying out loud."
Not musically it doesnt."At least it has some kind of form,..."
Death metal style guitar playing is horrible sounding to me, but at least they are playing music, and the really popular groups have some major league musical talent going on. That high degree of talent is being used to play horrible music, in my opinion, but you cant deny that they have musical talent."...as opposed to blaring amplified guitars."
How much musical talent does it take to scratch back and forth a needle on an old LP?
How much musical talent does it take to make a "spitting" noise?
(adolescent boys must be musically brilliant when they are abour 13!)![]()
How much musical talent does it take to yell in a staccato form, with no melody, just nothing but da da....da da da da...da da da...da da...da...da da da...da da da da....da da da?
I am old enough to remember when rap noise first came on the scene. I believe about 78-79 or so. I dont recall it ever being about "awareness, self-improvement or just plain fun".
For me...just my opinion...the "sound" of it is just so very very very hidious. I can only take a few short moments of it before I just have to leave the room. I have to get out of the room and stop that noise from going into my ears.
And as a musician I can say that in the "music" world...musicians and people who love music, it is not thought of highly at all.
Its almost insulting to a musician to have spitting noises, scratching old records, and completly non-melodic staccatto yelling going on with all of these comical hoodlum poses...actually be called "music".
I call it what it is. Rap noise.
It amazes me that its popular. I think its probably the fruit of our cultures continuing moral downhill spiral into depravity.
Mike
"Spitting"? You're talking about human beat boxing. For one thing, that and mixing/scratching is not as prominent as 20 years ago. In fact, most rap today uses sampled music as the background. Still, those were just new forms of percussion.</font>
No, it technically is not "music", but the art in it is about what the words say. Now, unfortunately, in the secular scene, it may be wasted on thug-related themes, and done in a way where you can't understand all the words, but once, again, this can be said to be much better than the discordant screaming, moaning, and blaring of hard rock.
(And early raps included more positive stuff like Kurtis Blow's "the Breaks", and the popular "the Message". The thug stuff didn't come until after a good ten years after that. But you, with a broad stroke lump it all together. You sound just like Aaron, now, even concluding with that
"Culture's moral downward spiral into depravity" comment.
This is precisely what drives Aaron's point he just repeated above, about "everybody draws lines". I'm surprised he didn' jump on what you said, or include you in his references.
On one hand, you say it is your taste, but you're basically laying out universal judgments on it. Precisely Aaron's point. You are applying his view on music to rap, but only modifying it to allow for the styles of rock you like. But if "spitting", scratching and "staccato yelling" are so "depraved", then once again, the same things can be said about the elements of rock, all the way down to the backbeat all of these dorms share. After all, it all comes from that same depraved subculture that produces so much crime and immorality anyway.
So what Aaron has been trying to prove is that you do know "the standards", but only bend them to what you like, [and you've just validated his point], but if you were consistent, you would be traditional only.