08.16.2007, 02:13 PM | #81 | |
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excellent post. This messageboard is interesting because Sonic Youth straddle two worlds: avant-garde/no wave/art rock and garage/punk/early hardcore. Those members with more of an interest in the former are likely to venture into new territories - which inevitably leads to uncovering stuff from all-kinds of countries. Other members, like myself, with a preference for the 60s-70s punk/garage influence, tend to be more conservative: sticking primarily to the already tried and tested. I admire the spirit of exploration that a number of the members have here. But when it comes to actually listening to most of the records they uncover, I'm often left slightly cold/bemused. Therefore, I tend to stay in my cave, listening to my Cramps albums, waiting for the next ice age. "OK, which one of you fuckers stole my Ramones Headband?" |
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08.16.2007, 03:33 PM | #82 | |
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Worth repeating over and over...they're playing in town next week, stoke! |
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08.17.2007, 04:23 AM | #83 | ||
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I was actually thinking about this last night - I generally don't think about things on this forum away from the forum - and I came to a similar conclusion. India already has an enormous trance scene - Delhi and Goa trance, which is very different to the Ministry of Sound type trance. Also, it's kind of why I mentioned Bhangra. It sells by the absolute bucket-load over here, thanks to the large British-Indian/ Pakistani populations, but so far as I know there's not much spill-over into 'mainstream' (which in this case might as well mean non-South Asian) culture. I've heard some people referring to Desi as a genre, but then others say it's just Bhangra with a different name - either way, I think I'm not alone in being horrifically ignorant of this music. India and China are at a similar point now to where Japan was earlier in the last century - growing to be a large player in global economics. It really wouldn't suprise me if either country suddenly became the hot spot for exciting music; it wouldn't surprise me if they already are. But then, it could also be the case that everyone jumps on Senegalese hip-hop (which is already, as far as I can make out, splitting quite majorly with its American template). Actually, in the latter case, I think a lot of French chaps are jumping on African hip-hop in French and it's doing big business. Couldn't be sure though. So yeah, those are some thoughts. Edit: I forgot to mention - I think you can only really suggest America/ UK as having the 'best' music if you're referring to rock/ pop. If you're into Dance music, in whatever form it comes, I think it's incredibly unlikely you'd look to Britain, unlikely you'd look to the US since the early-90s and much more likely you'd be looking towards South-American countries or continental Europe. The old rock slant of the forum in full effect in this thread.
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08.17.2007, 04:42 AM | #84 | |
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The local takes on hip hop have been around for quite some time now, with a varying degree of success depending on the size and marketability of a particular country. A Chinese take on hip hop is bound to beat any competition by the sheer amount of prospective output, population and the never-seen-before-pace that their economy grows at. This without mentioning the large Chinese immigrant population that exists outside the country itself. I'd be careful about comparing the situation in Japan last century to the current state of affairs in China, because the economical growth in this country is about 10 times as speedy of that any other has experienced before, including the USA. That means quicker turnover of ideas and their replacement with what can be perceived as better. |
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08.17.2007, 04:46 AM | #85 | |
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Aye, fair point. I'd like to point out that the Chinese hip-hop I've heard has been, without exception, appalling.
Chinese hip-hop .
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08.17.2007, 04:53 AM | #86 |
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With a name like MC HotDog, it has to be good.
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08.17.2007, 04:58 AM | #87 | |
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Of course the size of the country also means that the turds produced are bigger. I'll get to upload some pretty good and interesting Chinese music at one point. ps: I love Hang On The Box, by the way. Their take on pop punk in broken English is not original but thrilling all the same. |
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08.17.2007, 05:21 AM | #88 | |
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MC Hot Dog
LMF (I actually quite like this one) MC Sha Zhou - this is, brilliantly, called straight outta Qingdao.
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08.17.2007, 05:23 AM | #89 |
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I don't have anything else to contribute to this thread except to say that Hang on the Box is fucking amazing. NO SEXY!!!!!!!!!!!
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08.17.2007, 05:44 AM | #90 | |
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Check this out. It's a superb record, and I think it was reviewed on The Wire a while ago, but I'll have to check past issues at home: http://www.post-concrete.com/005/index.html# edit - I was right, the cd was reviewed by The Wire. |
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08.17.2007, 08:05 AM | #91 | |
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Yes, but there's more to Led Zeppelin than blues. They also have Celtic and Eastern influences (which is why I like them, they're no fucking AC/DC or Ten Years After). |
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08.17.2007, 11:05 AM | #92 |
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i've seen those bhangra clun night posters (or at least that's what i presume they are) around london but i've never heard a note of the music, i keep meaning to look that stuff up on the internet.
if chinese hiphop is anything like japanese hiphop then it probably stinks, generally i can't get into people rapping in foreign languages anyway though. |
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08.18.2007, 05:45 AM | #93 | |
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Let alone other languages (never heard a single hip hop crew that rapped in other languages that I like) , I find it real hard to like hip hop that isn't american. |
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08.19.2007, 09:14 PM | #94 | |
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Huh, I've heard quite a lot of French hip hop that sounded pretty cool to me. Admitedly, nothing that I've come to follow, but then I'm not a hip hop fanatic, to begin with. As for which side of the pond, both and neither. Music is becoming less geographic by the second, and mostly, I think this is a good thing. |
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08.19.2007, 09:54 PM | #95 |
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Some foreign lang Rap is Ok. I mean I've listened to a lot of it from America and Britain where I haven't understood a bloody word, and still enjoyed it. As for Grime, that could've baffled the nazis with the density of its codes.
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08.20.2007, 12:46 AM | #96 | |
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I've been really getting into the album Absence by Dalek and the rapping is so burried in the mix below all the noise that I often can't make out what he's saying. The words are just rhythm in it's purest form. Granted, there's a lyric sheet, and the lyrics are quite good. That kind of brings the whole trip back for me to the old hardcore punk experience of needing to read the lyric sheet to know what the fuck the singer was on about. |
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08.22.2007, 08:02 PM | #97 | |
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08.22.2007, 09:18 PM | #98 |
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Europe had Mozart.
enough said. haha. |
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08.22.2007, 10:10 PM | #99 |
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"Leck mich am Arsch" was the first ever punk tune.
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