07.12.2006, 01:21 PM | #21 | ||
invito al cielo
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 12,664
|
Quote:
Bloody typical. You just wouldn't let it lie...
__________________
Message boards are the last vestige of the spent masturbator, still intent on wasting time in some neg-heroic fashion. Be damned all who sail here. Quote:
|
||
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
07.12.2006, 01:27 PM | #22 | |||
invito al cielo
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 9,623
|
Quote:
Well, I was going to, but- Quote:
but- Quote:
|
|||
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
07.12.2006, 01:57 PM | #23 | |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Plaza de Toros
Posts: 6,731
|
Quote:
That's correct. The media do criticize the government in Britain, and in fact so does Scor Zay Zee with his lyrical content. It's not about criticizing the british public. The point is that there's no reason in pointing the finger at other countries for their flaws, when it's happening in our own back yard, Europe. You can find an article about the commotion circling the Nottingham based mc's song and what it did to the bbc for airing it here. Scor Zay Zee info http://www.discogs.com/artist/Out+Da+Ville
__________________
Anything you can /imagine is real |
|
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
07.12.2006, 02:07 PM | #24 | ||
invito al cielo
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 12,664
|
Quote:
Sure, ok. That's fine. I understand your point. There is a widespread contempt for Americans that amounts to a hollow trend in a lot of cases. I maintain that a resistance to what I (probably blithely and irrationally) see as American cultural imposition. And of course Europe, particularly Britain, is no better. I want to know why, with very few exceptions, I rarely hear music in anything other than my own language, and rarely in anything other than Anglo-American idioms. I don't think rock and its bastard offspring(s) is exclusively Anglo-American, and I love how you get mutations of said - I'm thinking Senegalese/ French hip-hop or even the more Germanic interpretations (Krautrock or the industrial movement). What concerns me, and fires my ire, is that it is a lot easier to hear a mediocre, watered down version of bad British or American music than it is to hear a good>great band from Elsewhere. My argument is probably something akin to a Hegelian other, an Adornian anxiety, a post-Marxist vulgar capitalism but whatever, I do fear the acceptance that Europe and elsewhere has for American models which are suited best to Americans. That Europe, Africa and Asia has a voice is necessary, and that we hear more of this voice is utterly paramount.
__________________
Message boards are the last vestige of the spent masturbator, still intent on wasting time in some neg-heroic fashion. Be damned all who sail here. Quote:
|
||
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
07.12.2006, 02:13 PM | #25 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: London - UK
Posts: 14,313
|
Pop/rock music,it has to be said,doesn't really have the same importance in Europe/Africa/Asia that it has in the USA/UK.That's a fact.
|
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
07.12.2006, 02:31 PM | #26 |
the destroyed room
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: brum - england
Posts: 554
|
erm,
twat. |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
07.12.2006, 02:35 PM | #27 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: London - UK
Posts: 14,313
|
???
|
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |