Rick Derris Wrote:
Yail Bloor Wrote:
catswilleatyou Wrote:
wrong
Yeah, that post up there is the biggest bunch of bullshit I've read in a while.
<==True believer in the power of music. For life.
Not only music but the argument against the demise of painting is insanely flawed as well. I mean, how does one define "best"? History is littered with painters who never go their due in their lifetime or even their century. What ends up being "great" is usually some strange combination of chance, history, media, etc.
I'm interested in what many of the local artists are doing here. There are more indie art galleries here than ever before. About once every couple of months when I drag myself out to the record store I'll stop by one here (Youngblood gallery) and just check out what they are featuring. Some I don't get but some I find inspiring.
As for music, it just comes off like Abe Simpson. I mean, even in the digital age, Lady Gaga sold over 12 million copies of her last album and the latest one, out less than a month, is over 2 million already. Now, I'm not propping Gaga up as great but it's not "music fanatics" buying her records. It's the youth (mostly). It's just that rock doesn't currently capture the imagination of the youth like pop and hip hop does right now.
The Rock Is Dead cliche has been around for 40 years.
You've really missed the point of what I was saying.
Getting bogged down in the definition of 'best' isn't really the point. The point is art from the periods I mentioned is actually known and the reason it is known is because it was culturally important. No modern painting today is important. It's not about liking or not liking an individual painting. It's not about finding personal inspiration in something. It's about the power of art at a societal level.
I've never been a particular fan of say, for example, Jean-Jacques David's 'Oath of the Horatii', I'm sure there are modern paintings I'd choose over it, but the facts are 'Oath of the Horatii' changed society, history even, by the way it affected people. 'Guernica' is another, more modern example, but how can it be denied that in the last twenty to thirty years there has been nothing that has had that power, to actually affect the world at large? Please list the paintings over the last twenty to thirty years that are known to people, not gallery goers, actual ordinary people, that have had a societal effect and have opened up new ways of thinking, acting and altered peoples beliefs to a significant degree.
On music, I'll reiterate my point again - music is creatively and culturally exhausted. To counter this you say Lady Gaga has sold 12 million albums? Well, 12 million people probably tune in to watch quiz shows but it doesn't mean quiz shows are pushing the boundaries of human creativity and affecting societal change. Quiz shows are rubbish you watch to pass the time and Lady Gaga is nothing more than a cross between pornography and a vaudeville act. Has Lady Gaga changed the way you think about the world? Is she changing the lives of the 12 million people who bought the album? Or is it the perfect example of something that is 'just' music and nothing more? Something that can be liked and enjoyed but which has no real effect beyond that? Maybe I'm wrong and old and out of touch but I don't see groups of Lady Gaga fans seeking each out and wearing bizarre clothing and then using a common inspiration to gather a new philosophy around. Lady Gaga is an intellectually passive experience to dance, laugh and sing to. The 'youth' have not embraced the abstract art concepts Lady Gaga flashes around, most of which are 100 years old incidentally, they think it's funny and wacky and crazy and it marks her out from other pop stars that don't have telephones on their head.
In the last 20 years hardly a week has passed when I didn't buy a new release album, exactly the same period, for the most part, in which I said music had become exhausted. Was I wasting my time and money? I don't think so. I found a lot of music that I personally liked, that I'm glad I heard. Today I will play albums from this year and the year before and the 1990's and it will all be very pleasant and get my toe tapping and as far as buying new music goes I'll probably be one of the last men standing, being someone that lives by habits, a traditionalist, and a genuine music fan. However the facts are there has been no real innovation since hip-hop and electronic dance music and for the most part it has become the same old same old, and that has been recognized on a wider scale than you or me. Popular music was distinct and at the very forefront of youth culture from roughly the 1950's to the 1990's but it is no longer at the forefront and it is no longer distinct and it has been overtaken and lost its position, technology pushes society forward not art.
The difference between then and now is that then music was a white river rapid pushing everyone along with it even the people that didn't want to come along, now it is the tranquil and still pond on which individuals choose to contentedly paddle around, no doubt passing the time in a pleasing manner but not propelled or caught up in a force that took everything with it forward. Music today is benign, inert, a niche interest. It does not reflect the times, nor is it a harbinger of the near future. It is almost entirely backwards looking. That is the sense in which it is dead. Not that it will cease to exist. Not the people will cease to enjoy it. Not even in the sense that it will be personally inspiring but it has lost its societal role and it is fading away, even though it won't fade entirely.