I laughed until I pissed myself, and then I cried.
Re: I laughed until I pissed myself, and then I cried.
Ugh, Pitchfork is pretty shit. The premise of this article is dumb. It's referring to "maximalism", which is totally made up, in a derogatory way. And like others have said, exciting music preceded this age of information. Electronic music in general is really progressive right now and becoming more musical and exciting. It's not becoming excessive or overloading. It's taking previous music and breaking its cliches and redeveloping its ideas. I love that and support it.
An idea that crosses my mind from time to time, is that this "extra, more, and above and beyond" trend in music is because of the proliferation of cheaper and increasingly powerful production tools (software). I think that makes a lot more sense than this "era of overstimulus" metaphor.
An idea that crosses my mind from time to time, is that this "extra, more, and above and beyond" trend in music is because of the proliferation of cheaper and increasingly powerful production tools (software). I think that makes a lot more sense than this "era of overstimulus" metaphor.
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Re: I laughed until I pissed myself, and then I cried.
This.Pal XIII wrote:Electronic music in general is really progressive right now and becoming more musical and exciting. It's not becoming excessive or overloading. It's taking previous music and breaking its cliches and redeveloping its ideas. I love that and support it.
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Re: I laughed until I pissed myself, and then I cried.
The article talks about the influence of production software on music too, right near the beginning. If anything, I think that's part of the same trend. Compared to the 90s where you would have had to save up to buy a sampler and things, then work around the limitations of your gear, today's music software is another example of everything being available all the time.Pal XIII wrote:Ugh, Pitchfork is pretty shit. The premise of this article is dumb. It's referring to "maximalism", which is totally made up, in a derogatory way. And like others have said, exciting music preceded this age of information. Electronic music in general is really progressive right now and becoming more musical and exciting. It's not becoming excessive or overloading. It's taking previous music and breaking its cliches and redeveloping its ideas. I love that and support it.
An idea that crosses my mind from time to time, is that this "extra, more, and above and beyond" trend in music is because of the proliferation of cheaper and increasingly powerful production tools (software). I think that makes a lot more sense than this "era of overstimulus" metaphor.
Also I don't know why you think he's using 'maximalism' in a derogatory way. He makes it pretty clear that he likes the album:
And the author seems to be excited about it like you are:Glass Swords, one of the year's great albums
This is is his definition of maximalism: "there are a hell of a lot of inputs here, in terms of influences and sources, and a hell of a lot of outputs, in terms of density, scale, structural convolution, and sheer majesty". What about that is derogatory?That's the emotion that Rustie's Glass Swords instills: giddy buoyancy, the euphoria of gliding frictionlessly across the datascape.
Re: I laughed until I pissed myself, and then I cried.
Didn't see that. Information overload ha.makerowner wrote:
The article talks about the influence of production software on music too, right near the beginning.
I skimmed through it. I wasn't talking about the comments on the album per se; there were some other bits in there that seemed deride 'maximalism'.Also I don't know why you think he's using 'maximalism' in a derogatory way. He makes it pretty clear that he likes the album:And the author seems to be excited about it like you are:Glass Swords, one of the year's great albumsThis is is his definition of maximalism: "there are a hell of a lot of inputs here, in terms of influences and sources, and a hell of a lot of outputs, in terms of density, scale, structural convolution, and sheer majesty". What about that is derogatory?That's the emotion that Rustie's Glass Swords instills: giddy buoyancy, the euphoria of gliding frictionlessly across the datascape.
"Another effect of this post-historical electronic overload is a super-intensified sense of artificiality and plastic-ness. Glass Swords' sound-world is utterly denatured."
Also the word choices. "Excess, overload, hyperactivity" etc. all these words have negative connotations.
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Re: I laughed until I pissed myself, and then I cried.
Only cause you put the negative connotation on it.
"Maximalism" isn't a new term, either.
"Maximalism" isn't a new term, either.
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Re: I laughed until I pissed myself, and then I cried.
What no, that's not how connotations work.AllNightDayDream wrote:Only cause you put the negative connotation on it.
"Maximalism" isn't a new term, either.
But in the context of music it is.
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Re: I laughed until I pissed myself, and then I cried.
wobbles wrote:I don't knowwhat any of you guys are even talking about
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Re: I laughed until I pissed myself, and then I cried.
No, it's up to your interpretation. If you think excessive hyperactive tracks are inherently a bad thing, that's on you.Pal XIII wrote:What no, that's not how connotations work.AllNightDayDream wrote:Only cause you put the negative connotation on it.
"Maximalism" isn't a new term, either.
But in the context of music it is.
For at least a few years, lorin Ashton has classified his music as maximalism.
Re: I laughed until I pissed myself, and then I cried.
Oh, I didn't know that.AllNightDayDream wrote:No, it's up to your interpretation. If you think excessive hyperactive tracks are inherently a bad thing, that's on you.Pal XIII wrote:What no, that's not how connotations work.AllNightDayDream wrote:Only cause you put the negative connotation on it.
"Maximalism" isn't a new term, either.
But in the context of music it is.
For at least a few years, lorin Ashton has classified his music as maximalism.
But I think you misunderstood what I said. I was saying that "excess, overload, hyperactivity" are words that have negative connotations, and because those words were used to describe well-produced music (that I like, by the way), I felt the article was deriding the maximalist trend.
Re: I laughed until I pissed myself, and then I cried.
what hipsters usually fail at is seeing similarities in the essence things have, in the nature of things when looked towards thru their context of evolution...
kraftwerk was VERY CERTAINLY not dark and minimal... at the time it was HUGE...
the same people totally miss the point that coltrane' and his contemporaries solo saxing was a rockstar move.. electric guitars were as weird as turntables when they came out and especially when people started using feedback, grimy rap sounded lush and expensive to the average 80's rapper's ear...
things have always been very dark and digital, AND very "vertical" (lol)...
software has its idiosyncrasies... so did hardware... and the loudness war is a thing... but LOL @ rustie being more maximal then Beethoven
kraftwerk was VERY CERTAINLY not dark and minimal... at the time it was HUGE...
the same people totally miss the point that coltrane' and his contemporaries solo saxing was a rockstar move.. electric guitars were as weird as turntables when they came out and especially when people started using feedback, grimy rap sounded lush and expensive to the average 80's rapper's ear...
things have always been very dark and digital, AND very "vertical" (lol)...
software has its idiosyncrasies... so did hardware... and the loudness war is a thing... but LOL @ rustie being more maximal then Beethoven

Sharmaji wrote:2011: the year of the calloused-from-overuse facepalm
Re: I laughed until I pissed myself, and then I cried.
that's really crazy, must be really talented to play like that!extremesociety wrote:I like Rustie, I think he's super musical. Haha, he makes even more sense to me after I read that he loves Holdsworth:
EDIT: hell of a craaazy melody
Re: I laughed until I pissed myself, and then I cried.
i love non moody jazz
Sharmaji wrote:2011: the year of the calloused-from-overuse facepalm
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