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Re: Party album of the CENTURY
You are overthinking it, you are supposed to feel this music with your ass.
I got my big box of Girl Talk CD's in the mail today and half of them are already gone. This music seems to appeal to just about everyone who is into pop music, which is most people I know. I know dirty has never been pop central, but I'm glad at least one or two of you are feeling it. And yeah, you with the garbage letters, I've heard a fair bit of Girl Talk's older stuff since my brother is a fan... it was more chopped up and weird before, less dancefloor-oriented, and I think that change in approach really took his style to the next level with the new album. His song Pure Magic is really pretty excellent though, I love the Lil Scrappy loop at the beginning and the extremely brief Jay-Z sample... I think you can still get that from his myspace page. I agree that the My Humps sample is a little hard on the ears, because what an awful song... but I like how he used it and I got over it pretty quickly. Also, that Nickelback mp3 was hilarious, but I don't think that's really what he's going for... |
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Are you suggesting we apply this rigor to half the disco tracks out there? Music meant to be little more than "catchy?" I might be simple minded but I assume most pop music is written to get people laid or feeling good. Which means the only possible aesthetic standard you can use against is the number of times you got laid and how good you feel But I concede that means you can't take Girl Talk's own manifesto nonsense any more seriously. The idea that it's "illicit" music carries the pretense that it's underground and making a bold statement as such, as opposed to a dangerous lack of intellectual property. I'm sure it could allow him to think of himself as some kind of musical outlaw with all the romance the image conjures. But in reality he's not defying the system any more than Public Enemy really needed all the toy guns on stage. If this music is to be appreciated at all its to be on a very gut level, god willing with lots and lots of alcohol, no more no less |
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EDIT: However, I think it is quite valid to consider pop and dance music with "conceptual rigor", as it were. Good music inspires thought, no matter its first intent. But that brings me back to why I'd rather not think too hard about Girl Talk.... ;) :D :D Sorry.... |
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You can hold things to any standard that's relevant is true, but I was arguing the contrapositive here. If its not relevant to it, you can't apply the standard. what am I not understanding here? |
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I don't think your analogy to Sundance/home movies makes any more sense, either. Of course, I wouldn't suggest them taking a look at my home movies, but there's no reason that anyone's home movies can't be discussed in aesthetic terms. I'm sure there's unintentionally beautiful home movies. The "unintentionally" portion does not change the "beautiful" portion. See also: Capturing the Friedmans. I'm trying to say: it's not necessary to discuss them in higher terms, but that's a big step from "not possible," which is what you said. |
Re: Party album of the CENTURY
yah that's a good point, seriously.
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Re: Party album of the CENTURY
The internet isn't for agreeing!
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