B. Brian Brunzell 0 Report post Posted July 25, 2005 Death-Reggae. It's a fucking GOLDMINE. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
5_moves_of_doom 0 Report post Posted July 25, 2005 We can't let this discussion turn into a comedy competition where everyone sees if they can come up with the wackiest genre-combination. Please. We all know that ambient big-band surf music backing layers upon layers of Tuvan throat singing is going to be the next big thing, anyway. But on a serious note, Inc -- are you going to propose a solution to the problem that you've shed light on, or did you just bring it up to depress us all? I've thought it over many-a-time, and I've never truly come up with something that meets every single standard of a possible "giant innovation"... PLAGIARISM! is probably right. Musical heroin is the only way out of this mess. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
snuffbox 0 Report post Posted July 25, 2005 Matisyahu. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nighthawk 0 Report post Posted July 25, 2005 Innovations don't happen very often. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ant_7000 0 Report post Posted July 25, 2005 Raggaeton? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Shooting Star 0 Report post Posted July 25, 2005 Yes reggaeton is the most innovative music genre right now. A style of music originated in La Perla Puerto Rico in 92(Some say Panama but panamains were doing spanish reggae which people confuse with reggaeton because of the name)It sort of makes me mad that this style of music I have been listening to since I was little and everyone hated is now liked by most people in Latin America and in the American East Coast. It used to be exclusive to the Metro Area in P.R but now there's even Mexicans listening to reggaeton...a genre they called the trash of P.R and now suddenly it's a genre for "all spanish speakers" screw them... Anyway here is one of the most popular songs of this genre..it's called Guasa Guasa by Tego Calderon...you may have seen him at the Source Awards or in Lean Back video. http://s61.yousendit.com/d.php?id=3IVZ1CQCOJEOW3JOND254YUAS4 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Giuseppe Zangara 0 Report post Posted July 25, 2005 But on a serious note, Inc -- are you going to propose a solution to the problem that you've shed light on, or did you just bring it up to depress us all? I've thought it over many-a-time, and I've never truly come up with something that meets every single standard of a possible "giant innovation"... PLAGIARISM! is probably right. Musical heroin is the only way out of this mess. <{POST_SNAPBACK}> Just an observation, based on a discussion I recently had with some friends of mine. It wasn't my intent to "depress" people. And reggeaton is some of the worst shit. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Shooting Star 0 Report post Posted July 25, 2005 I guess I respect your opinion since you're american...but Reggaeton is one of the best genres to dance to AND it has great lyrics. I think you know spanish because I have seen you translate stuff before so read this lyrics...Lito y Polaco -Mirate al Espejo De chamaquito yo... Capiaba y enrolaba Camino a la escuela fumaba Y me arrebataba Así janguiaba En el salón yo la formaba Un día el maestro nebuleo y lo figue con mi navaja Que tonto fue, se busco su fin Ni que meterse con el gran Charlie Motin Yo no se que rayos pensaba Pero el maestro no me iba poder quitar mi ranking Empezé a meterme a residenciales Empezé a cojerle el gusto A los metales Me hice hermanito de los anormales Y ese fue el comienzo de todos mis males No soportaba andar pelao Y de guardia disfrazao Deje pa'l de puntos pegao Eso fue un foul Con el vacilon Ya yo no estaba tan rankiao Y yo guerrie, Guerra tras guerra Y yo viví Muerte tras muerte Y consumí Droga tras droga De la escuela callejera me gradué con to y diploma Los dejaba en coma Si salía y los cazaba en mi Sonoma Les pasaba por encima y le chillaba gomas Pai no es broma Si y en la semana, fumando marihuana Mataba al que me daba la gana Meses pasaron y todo empeoro Pues en la calle se regó que era un abusador Y con honor por hay capiaba No me importaba, abusaba y mucha mierda que hablaban Se cansaron, chotiaron Y me rastrearon Y mientras yo dormía los de C.I.C. entraron Me trancaron Y saliendo de admisiones En la sillita me sentaron Ay papi, yo no sabia Que un día Charlie Motin A este hoyo me caería Mientras lo oía yo lo sentía Que me quitaron la vida Fueron como doce hombres que flores me hundían Fue culpa mía Sabia que esto llegaría Mi trayectoria como abusador Así como no perdone No me quisieron dar perdón Padre, mírate al espejo Y que ves? Como destruyes tu familia Por tu andar bebiendo, fumando, tripiando En la calle janguiando Padre, mírate al espejo Y que ves? Como se llevan a tu hijo Y vas a verlo preso O muerto en uno de esos funerales Padre, mírate al espejo Y que ves? Como destruyes tu familia Por tu andar bebiendo, fumando, tripiando En la calle janguiando Padre, mírate al espejo Y que ves? Como se llevan a tu hijo Y vas a verlo preso O muerto en uno de esos funerales ¿Y que ves? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Corey_Lazarus 0 Report post Posted July 25, 2005 ENGLISH, motherfucker, DO YOU SPEAK IT?! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
The Czech Republic 0 Report post Posted July 26, 2005 The lyricist of the song must not! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
The Czech Republic 0 Report post Posted July 26, 2005 Fuck it. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ant_7000 0 Report post Posted July 26, 2005 Reggaeton is not my thing. I understand jamicans and reggae/dancehall fans are pissed by the genre. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
thecitythesky 0 Report post Posted July 27, 2005 But the poetry is exactly what makes it an innovation. Rapping doesn't involve standing there and saying a bunch of things that rhyme; there's breath control, lyrical flow, etc. EDIT: So what I'm saying is that even a seemingly minor modification can create something totally new. <{POST_SNAPBACK}> The problem I have with the bulk of this thread is that, somehow, you are exempting hip-hop from the regression in which you've avoided any claim to refute your own. Namely, that something like Endtroducing... is merely expanding on the foundations laid before it. Now, while it seems obvious that there exists a timeline between DJ Shadow's collage work on the record and the infant stages of electronic music; the means of delivery were dramatically different in the presence of emerging technology and the medium/idiom was being explored and delivered in a wholly different way. You acknowledge that hip-hop has its basis in funk/disco/r&b/what-have-you, but claim actual unique innovation due to a small change in presentation. The earliest incarnations of hip-hop saw it as party music, dance music, wherein the MC's cadance and "flow" were not as recognized or invested in as they are in these modern times. I think if you are to place the weight of regression on other genre's you cannot simply let hip-hop off the hook because it fits with the thread starting statement. Also, the greatest turning points in the timeline of hip-hop are due to an influx of tonal or textural cues from other genres. Glitchier production on recent underground releases taken from lap-pop and idm producers. A return to down-tempo and old jazz releases from a world still recovering from the sample-mania of the aforementioned Endtroducing.... Non-linear lyrical delivery from post-modern/slam poetry. Gangsta rap as a direct extension of the punk rock ideal into inner city black american culture. In the cases were hip-hop has shined the brightest it was in the presence and with the acknowledgment of its inability (or of any genre's for that matter) to exist as a unique and prevaling entity in its own right. No man is an island, so to speak; and these great things that seem to come out of nowhere are merely the work of exceptional craftsmen standing on the shoulders of giants. (note: that, in spite of not being originary; hip-hop certainly qualifies as an innovation. but, by that same token, so do a few of the things lists that were/or would be otherwise dismissed.) Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Red Baron 0 Report post Posted July 27, 2005 Though not a major innovation in commercial terms, but Industrial is probably the last musical inovation there is? Right? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Agent of Oblivion Report post Posted July 27, 2005 Definitely not. That can be traced back to the early-mid 70's easily. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Your Paragon of Virtue 0 Report post Posted July 27, 2005 How about that shoegazing noise stuff? Sonic Youth did some of that and My Bloody Valentine as well. I don't recall hearing much stuff like that before those two. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
PLAGIARISM! 0 Report post Posted July 27, 2005 The Stooges did the chaotic noise thing before those, and I don't think they were really the first either. In any case, when Dave Davis took a knife to his amp in the 60s he pioneered distortion, (I'm not absolutely sure he 'invented' it) and those bands were just furthering his approach, not really innovating. Edit: Suicide have a good case for a considerable innovation. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Gary Floyd 0 Report post Posted July 27, 2005 Musical innovations in my eyes -My Bloody Valentine (sure, their were other shoegazer bands, but none of them captured the brillience of "Isn't Anything" and "Loveless" in my eyes) -Suicide -Merzbow -The Silver Apples -Dub -Krautrock -Electro Acoustic -The No Wave scene in New York -Musique Concrete -The early Industrial scene (I mean artists like Throbbing Gristle, Nocturnal Emissions, SPK, Clock DVA, Test Dept, Einsturzende Neubauten, and of course, Cabaret Voltaire) while hip hop is a major musical innovation, it's not the only one. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nighthawk 0 Report post Posted July 27, 2005 I credit Kraftwerk for most of electronic. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Gary Floyd 0 Report post Posted July 28, 2005 I credit Kraftwerk for most of electronic. <{POST_SNAPBACK}> So do I. I also credit Tangerine Dream, Cluster, the Silver Apples, and Wendy Carlos. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Shooting Star 0 Report post Posted July 28, 2005 Reggaeton is not my thing. I understand jamicans and reggae/dancehall fans are pissed by the genre. <{POST_SNAPBACK}> Jamaican dancehall artists have even done collaborations with the Puerto Rican Reggaeton ones...like Mr. Vegas did a song with Luny Tunes. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Giuseppe Zangara 0 Report post Posted July 28, 2005 thecitythesky sure took up a lot of space to miss the point completely. And maybe the rest of you have a different understanding of "major" than I, but I think a major innovation of music MUST have a part in changing the landscape of music completely. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Giuseppe Zangara 0 Report post Posted July 28, 2005 For instance, "industrial" is just an offshoot of electronic music, which, as I mentioned earlier in the thread, can conceivably be traced back to the 50s (the works of composer Karlheinz Stockhausen), but mostly has its roots in the 70s (Kraftwerk). Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Shooting Star 0 Report post Posted July 28, 2005 Scalp your tickets and buy her something nice. <{POST_SNAPBACK}> That's what you should do, but you are an asshole so I don't think you will. <{POST_SNAPBACK}> Maybe Americans don't like Reggaeton but it's the biggest genre of music right now in the rest of the contient and Europe(not Including U.K) and it's pretty innovative. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
PLAGIARISM! 0 Report post Posted July 28, 2005 For instance, "industrial" is just an offshoot of electronic music, which, as I mentioned earlier in the thread, can conceivably be traced back to the 50s (the works of composer Karlheinz Stockhausen), but mostly has its roots in the 70s (Kraftwerk). <{POST_SNAPBACK}> I agree with your point, but whilst Electronic music was around before Suicide and they did something old in a new way, I still think they changed the landscape of music more significantly than most. I won't call them a major innovator on the level of hip-hop, but I just think they did a lot more than they get credit for, even now. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kinetic 0 Report post Posted August 2, 2005 I'm willing to bet that this thread will look awfully trite once the third Strokes record is released. And, beyond that, the next major musical innovation will obviously be composed by aboriginal Australians and will consist entirely of cut-up segments of cellphone ringtones. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kinetic 0 Report post Posted August 2, 2005 And, actually, could I get a list of all of the previous major innovations in popular music, just so I know what sort of criteria we're working with here? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Red Baron 0 Report post Posted August 2, 2005 I'm willing to bet that this thread will look awfully trite once the third Strokes record is released. And, beyond that, the next major musical innovation will obviously be composed by aboriginal Australians and will consist entirely of cut-up segments of cellphone ringtones. <{POST_SNAPBACK}> So the next Jet album then? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Derek Bailey Report post Posted August 3, 2005 There hasn't been a major innovation in music since the birth of musique concrète. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites