Moderator: Community Team
Inserted rubber soul into the poll. Of course, that means the poll resets, but it's only been an hour or so.riskllama wrote:i think mine's rubber soul.
I don''t get the joke...Metsfanmax wrote:Imagine
Ugh. Respect level dropped. Or it would if I cared what you listened to.Metsfanmax wrote:Imagine
Lennon albumMetsfanmax wrote:Imagine

The joke is the Beatles. It is 2014 folks, stop jizzing over a half decent band from the 60s who were only popular because of a bunch of prepubescent girls who didn't know what musical talent actually is.dario2099 wrote:I don''t get the joke...Metsfanmax wrote:Imagine
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
KoolBak wrote:Is that a band?

That comment betrays total ignorance. The teen girls may have driven the Beatlemania of 1963 to 1965, but after that it became steadily less of a factor. The later Beatles were actually less popular with the teen crowd, but they were ever more respected both as musical innovators and as social activists.Metsfanmax wrote:The joke is the Beatles. It is 2014 folks, stop jizzing over a half decent band from the 60s who were only popular because of a bunch of prepubescent girls who didn't know what musical talent actually is.dario2099 wrote:I don''t get the joke...Metsfanmax wrote:Imagine
I disagree vehemently. Sorry, did I spit on you a bit there?TA1LGUNN3R wrote:There's no way an educated person would call them innovative. They were fortuitous in that they were in the right place at the right time and had the right appeal. That's marketing, not musical innovation.
-TG

Jimi is God.notyou2 wrote:I disagree vehemently. Sorry, did I spit on you a bit there?TA1LGUNN3R wrote:There's no way an educated person would call them innovative. They were fortuitous in that they were in the right place at the right time and had the right appeal. That's marketing, not musical innovation.
-TG
The Beatles changed rock and roll far more than any other group of their era and probably since. Timing had little if anything to do with it. Lennon McCartney are probably the best song writing duo of all time.
You also probably believe there are better guitarists than Jimi Hendrix.
That was the point. I am sure that One Direction now has some adult fans too, but that doesn't mean that they're popular now, or became popular, because of the over-40 crowd.Dukasaur wrote:That comment betrays total ignorance. The teen girls may have driven the Beatlemania of 1963 to 1965Metsfanmax wrote:The joke is the Beatles. It is 2014 folks, stop jizzing over a half decent band from the 60s who were only popular because of a bunch of prepubescent girls who didn't know what musical talent actually is.dario2099 wrote:I don''t get the joke...Metsfanmax wrote:Imagine
I know that people "respect" them as musical "innovators." That does not mean I have to respect or enjoy their music. If you take it out of its historical context, no one today would listen to it over any number of contemporary bands. They're famous because they (sort of) did it first, not because their music is particularly listenable. Contrast this with Led Zeppelin, say, who were both innovators and also have remained essentially unmatched to this day.but they were ever more respected both as musical innovators and as social activists.
Sshhhh, you will summon the ghost of Juan_Bottom who will show you with graphs, charts and links how Led Zeppelin stole everything they did.Metsfanmax wrote:That was the point. I am sure that One Direction now has some adult fans too, but that doesn't mean that they're popular now, or became popular, because of the over-40 crowd.Dukasaur wrote:That comment betrays total ignorance. The teen girls may have driven the Beatlemania of 1963 to 1965Metsfanmax wrote:The joke is the Beatles. It is 2014 folks, stop jizzing over a half decent band from the 60s who were only popular because of a bunch of prepubescent girls who didn't know what musical talent actually is.dario2099 wrote:I don''t get the joke...Metsfanmax wrote:Imagine
I know that people "respect" them as musical "innovators." That does not mean I have to respect or enjoy their music. If you take it out of its historical context, no one today would listen to it over any number of contemporary bands. They're famous because they (sort of) did it first, not because their music is particularly listenable. Contrast this with Led Zeppelin, say, who were both innovators and also have remained essentially unmatched to this day.but they were ever more respected both as musical innovators and as social activists.

They did steal most of their stuff. In fact, everyone back then did. You weren't taken seriously in the rock scene back then unless you were really heavily listening to the old blues records. LZ were nevertheless innovators in terms of the sound they produced.notyou2 wrote: Sshhhh, you will summon the ghost of Juan_Bottom who will show you with graphs, charts and links how Led Zeppelin stole everything they did.
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
Again, just like metsfan's post, your criticism is valid, but only for the early (pre-1965) Beatles. Those were pretty much straight rockabilly tunes -- either explicit covers or original-but-heavily-influenced tunes taken from the (mostly black) world of 1950 rock and roll.TA1LGUNN3R wrote:Jimi is God.notyou2 wrote:I disagree vehemently. Sorry, did I spit on you a bit there?TA1LGUNN3R wrote:There's no way an educated person would call them innovative. They were fortuitous in that they were in the right place at the right time and had the right appeal. That's marketing, not musical innovation.
-TG
The Beatles changed rock and roll far more than any other group of their era and probably since. Timing had little if anything to do with it. Lennon McCartney are probably the best song writing duo of all time.
You also probably believe there are better guitarists than Jimi Hendrix.
What I'm saying is don't attribute the Beatles' influence on pop music as actual innovation of music. Sure, they brought the style to a wider population (as good looking, white Englishmen), but they sure didn't bring anything new. Pretty much all they did was expand on what Elvis was doing by being nice white guys playing black music.
I'd agree that Led Zep were somewhat innovative, but (and I know I'm in the minority here) I wouldn't put them in the same league as the Beatles. Really, they took what was already happening in hard rock and put a unique flavour on it, but it was like adding habanero sauce to goldfish stew. It really didn't change the underlying nature of the meal.Metsfanmax wrote:They did steal most of their stuff. In fact, everyone back then did. You weren't taken seriously in the rock scene back then unless you were really heavily listening to the old blues records. LZ were nevertheless innovators in terms of the sound they produced.notyou2 wrote: Sshhhh, you will summon the ghost of Juan_Bottom who will show you with graphs, charts and links how Led Zeppelin stole everything they did.