Cesium5Hz@aol.com wrote:
quoted 36 lines In a message dated 21/12/99 10:03:19 kent@avalon.net writes:
> In a message dated 21/12/99 10:03:19 kent@avalon.net writes:
>
> > You know I got into Electronic music in a big way in the early 90s with
> > the rise of 'IDM' (aphex twin, black dog, FSOL, Orb), but over the years
> > I've gained a real appreciation of 'real' (presumably 'stupid' by
> comparison)
> >
> > dance music. If you really study on it, even stuff like Chicago booty
> > house has a unique character and a host of people working at the top of
> > their form. Real dance music induces real dancing, instead of the
> occasional
> > head nod and chin stroke.
> >
> > Now more than ever, I think that people need to really examine the whole
> > idea of IDM, because a lot of stuff coming out seems pretty barren of the
> things
> > that initially drew me to the form -- emotional depth, and some sort of
> > rhythmic groove that compels you to move your body. And people need to
> > widen their horizons a little. Just listening to one style of music is
> > ultimately a limiting factor to your musical enjoyment. Everything we
> > think of as our music succeeds or fails by how well it can incorporate
> > and retranslate other musics. I don't think it's possible to fully
> > understand and appreciate Selected Ambient Works by Aphex Twin unless you
> know
> > the work of Raymond Scott and Eric Satie.
>
> I don't seem to realise that anyone here at all talk about house music which
> exquisitely intelligent listening music and not made specifically for the
> dancefloor. Artist such as Larry Heard, Chris Gray, Ron Trent, Anthony
> Nicholson, Carl Craig et al. all come to mind. And what's also interesting is
> that a lot of dance/ deep house records always have at least a track on the
> flip side which is for listening (after dancing). Is it just me or do I
> perceive most idm listers as just concentrating on music made by Caucasian
> American/ Europeans, and not enough on the Afro Population. Perhaps we do
> need to re-assess our perception of idm.
>
I agree wholeheartedly, but don't want to get into a debate with people I could
have biologically fathered :-). IDM-heads tend to think house music is entirely
bomp-bomp for idiots who are entry level or disco revivalists. One of the
problems of the list is that it sometimes tends to be so far up its own behind as
to be provincial and closed minded. I recall making a post about influences 2-3
years ago and having to explain why James Brown qualifies as a precursor to the
sense of funk which predominated the breaks in some of the Drum-n-Bass,
Drill-n-Bass and sort of sterile funk which was coming across back then. I was
kind of stunned that this needed explanation. I don't think this whole thing is
so much a matter of race, but rather exposure - and, of course, sometimes just
personal taste. People are coming to the table here from all kinds of
backgrounds...industrial, goth, alternative, dance, whatever. Some of us are just
music junkies who have phased through most of whatever has been happening
whenever. I grew up listening to Detroit radio and am 43...I had a sister 14
years older and a brother 7 years older, so I cut my teeth on <<early>> rock and
went from there. While I never liked the diva house or real cheesy stuff, deep
house and 313 sounds great to my ears : I hear my roots there. Right now I'm
making myself cdrs from my UR vinyl so I can play them in my car.
Maybe it comes from being older, but I've never had a problem digging out my
copy of Patsy Cline's Greatest Hits or The Beatles' White Album (although Patsy
is more likely these days with the advent of those horrible oldies stations I
have forced on my at work), next to SAW or V/vm and washing it down with "Let's
Get It On".
That BleepBloop cdr mix *just* might be what's on New Years, Irene :-)
jeff
"10,000 people all screaming the same thing at the same time are wrong, even if
they're right."
dancing/about/architecture "...with wandering steps and slow..." ICQ904008
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