is everyone here really into foo fighters that much? like really?
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
It's rock music man, don't bring jazz into this because they are quite different both in composition and delivery (fwiw I played in a couple jazz bands for eight years or so, and teach jazz theory to my bass students). It's like comparing apples to oranges. I happen to like both apples and oranges.Uzique wrote:
i love a gig with live instruments but foo fighters wouldn't be anywhere near my top choice. generic rock music as an example of fine live instruments? really? i'd sooner go to a jazz lounge than stand in a stadium watching dave grohl play three chords.
Last edited by Uzique (2011-12-15 15:28:39)
I wouldn't say we're behind the world at all when it comes to music in a general sense, but our geographical location and population makes it a lot less likely for artists to make the trek out this way (but if this is what you are implying then yes, I do agree). It's obviously much easier for a touring artist/band to do a European tour to dozens of cities and a much larger audience than it is to tour Australia (which getting here alone costs much more) and then tour 4-5 cities. Glow stick raves were about ten years ago so we're not all that far behind the 8-ball, but we do only really attract more mainstream and/or globally successful artists out this way. And I think it's recognised globally (at least from my observations) that UK and EU really is the hub of electronic music. That's why Pendulum left my home town of Fremantle years ago, changed their style and are now a huge band internationally (and based in the UK obviously). They were smart with their business sense AND make good music.Uzique wrote:
australia and nz are years behind the rest of the world in music though (no offence) so it doesn't surprise me ^ about electronic scene. you're probably still having a glow-stick rave period like england had in 92 and america had in 98 or something. i guess a lot of music taste is geographically-dictated, even today in the age of the internet; live gigs just exemplify this. living in london (and europe, generally) the electronic music scene is fantastic, at both the dance and experimental ends of the scale. you don't really get that in the states (except for a small scene in los angeles and the usual chicago/detroit stuff - even new york is pitiful) so you definitely wouldn't get it in aussie land. if all i could attend were shitty raves and crappy dance events i'd probably not be into dance music, either. i guess on the rock gig front, the uk had its 'britpop' phase and then 'uk indie' rebirth a few years ago, pretty much when i was going from the age of 13-18, so i feel pretty burnt out on the whole arty/indie/metal/shoegaze live gig scene. it all seems a bit pantomime to me nowadays.
Unfortunately this is true, we don't have a 'scene' where electronic artists can prosper in this country. Most of them are resigned to being smaller acts or taking a seriously long time to gain popularity. Here electronica is a fringe genre of music, whereas in Europe (from what I understand) it's more accepted.Uzique wrote:
australia and nz are years behind the rest of the world in music though (no offence) so it doesn't surprise me ^ about electronic scene. you're probably still having a glow-stick rave period like england had in 92 and america had in 98 or something. i guess a lot of music taste is geographically-dictated, even today in the age of the internet; live gigs just exemplify this. living in london (and europe, generally) the electronic music scene is fantastic, at both the dance and experimental ends of the scale.
the case for an aussie/nz act to blow up in the rest of the world is incredibly rare though, and pendulum are actually a testament to the thing im talking about with australia always being several years behind. pendulum built their own local scene in breakbeat music (was it in melbourne? brisbane? i don't know much about pendulum, surprisingly) - breakbeat being a kind of music that was ooooold news in europe, who were by that stage well over the whole dnb/breaks/jungle thing. but it was still relevant in australia. then all of a sudden you have pendulum blowing up in europe and america with this sound that is, in a weird sense, a complete revival-- at that time the most popular d&b in europe was probably liquid d&b, which is like a late jazz/lounge-music phase of d&b with all of the real club energy sucked out of it. pendulum came along and reintroduced a breakbeat-dominated sound and everyone went nuts for it again. their popularity is an exception to the rule, though, but their stylistic and generic example is a good one of what i'm talking about, here.Jaekus wrote:
I wouldn't say we're behind the world at all when it comes to music in a general sense, but our geographical location and population makes it a lot less likely for artists to make the trek out this way (but if this is what you are implying then yes, I do agree). It's obviously much easier for a touring artist/band to do a European tour to dozens of cities and a much larger audience than it is to tour Australia (which getting here alone costs much more) and then tour 4-5 cities. Glow stick raves were about ten years ago so we're not all that far behind the 8-ball, but we do only really attract more mainstream and/or globally successful artists out this way. And I think it's recognised globally (at least from my observations) that UK and EU really is the hub of electronic music. That's why Pendulum left my home town of Fremantle years ago, changed their style and are now a huge band internationally (and based in the UK obviously). They were smart with their business sense AND make good music.Uzique wrote:
australia and nz are years behind the rest of the world in music though (no offence) so it doesn't surprise me ^ about electronic scene. you're probably still having a glow-stick rave period like england had in 92 and america had in 98 or something. i guess a lot of music taste is geographically-dictated, even today in the age of the internet; live gigs just exemplify this. living in london (and europe, generally) the electronic music scene is fantastic, at both the dance and experimental ends of the scale. you don't really get that in the states (except for a small scene in los angeles and the usual chicago/detroit stuff - even new york is pitiful) so you definitely wouldn't get it in aussie land. if all i could attend were shitty raves and crappy dance events i'd probably not be into dance music, either. i guess on the rock gig front, the uk had its 'britpop' phase and then 'uk indie' rebirth a few years ago, pretty much when i was going from the age of 13-18, so i feel pretty burnt out on the whole arty/indie/metal/shoegaze live gig scene. it all seems a bit pantomime to me nowadays.
Last edited by Uzique (2011-12-17 04:13:10)
mentioning "hard trance" in the timespan of "a few years ago"... in europe you had better be talking about a decade, cause hard trance is some cheesy shit over here. unless you're dutch. for some reason - even though they're completely geographically located and are actually in between london and berlin (the world's two premier electronic cities, arguably) - the dutch are still absolutely fucking obsessed with trance, hardcore, rave, jump-up, etc. all this extreme end of the rave spectrum that was but a flash in the mdma-sick drenched pan in the 90's. fuck knows, i think the entire music-critic establishment scratches their heads when it comes to the netherlands. mind you, they still consider dressing people in shoe polish and calling them 'negro pete' a key part of their christmas festivities, so that shows you just how modern they are. bloody savages.Jaekus wrote:
I think with electronic music the good stuff can be harder to find here. That said I did once go to Winter Enchanted in Adelaide some years ago. 12 hours of drum n bass and hard trance at an indoor skate park with some 7,000 people in attendance. Can't remember names of acts but there were quite a few EU and UK djs, it was wicked!
Last edited by Uzique (2011-12-17 04:14:26)
hahahahahahaha.Uzique wrote:
mentioning "hard trance" in the timespan of "a few years ago"... in europe you had better be talking about a decade, cause hard trance is some cheesy shit over here. unless you're dutch. for some reason - even though they're completely geographically located and are actually in between london and berlin (the world's two premier electronic cities, arguably) - the dutch are still absolutely fucking obsessed with trance, hardcore, rave, jump-up, etc. all this extreme end of the rave spectrum that was but a flash in the mdma-sick drenched pan in the 90's. fuck knows, i think the entire music-critic establishment scratches their heads when it comes to the netherlands. mind you, they still consider dressing people in shoe polish and calling them 'negro pete' a key part of their christmas festivities, so that shows you just how modern they are. bloody savages.Jaekus wrote:
I think with electronic music the good stuff can be harder to find here. That said I did once go to Winter Enchanted in Adelaide some years ago. 12 hours of drum n bass and hard trance at an indoor skate park with some 7,000 people in attendance. Can't remember names of acts but there were quite a few EU and UK djs, it was wicked!
It was in 2004 and I wasn't exactly in with the scene by any stretch, I just got more and more exposed to it. Friends of mine had been into it a good few more years than me - maybe 5 or so more.Uzique wrote:
mentioning "hard trance" in the timespan of "a few years ago"... in europe you had better be talking about a decade, cause hard trance is some cheesy shit over here. unless you're dutch. for some reason - even though they're completely geographically located and are actually in between london and berlin (the world's two premier electronic cities, arguably) - the dutch are still absolutely fucking obsessed with trance, hardcore, rave, jump-up, etc. all this extreme end of the rave spectrum that was but a flash in the mdma-sick drenched pan in the 90's. fuck knows, i think the entire music-critic establishment scratches their heads when it comes to the netherlands. mind you, they still consider dressing people in shoe polish and calling them 'negro pete' a key part of their christmas festivities, so that shows you just how modern they are. bloody savages.Jaekus wrote:
I think with electronic music the good stuff can be harder to find here. That said I did once go to Winter Enchanted in Adelaide some years ago. 12 hours of drum n bass and hard trance at an indoor skate park with some 7,000 people in attendance. Can't remember names of acts but there were quite a few EU and UK djs, it was wicked!
I think you mean the John Butler Trio? First time I saw them play was in 2000 or 2001, just when they were breaking. I was well over them by 2004 as they get played to death.Uzique wrote:
the case for an aussie/nz act to blow up in the rest of the world is incredibly rare though, and pendulum are actually a testament to the thing im talking about with australia always being several years behind. pendulum built their own local scene in breakbeat music (was it in melbourne? brisbane? i don't know much about pendulum, surprisingly) - breakbeat being a kind of music that was ooooold news in europe, who were by that stage well over the whole dnb/breaks/jungle thing. but it was still relevant in australia. then all of a sudden you have pendulum blowing up in europe and america with this sound that is, in a weird sense, a complete revival-- at that time the most popular d&b in europe was probably liquid d&b, which is like a late jazz/lounge-music phase of d&b with all of the real club energy sucked out of it. pendulum came along and reintroduced a breakbeat-dominated sound and everyone went nuts for it again. their popularity is an exception to the rule, though, but their stylistic and generic example is a good one of what i'm talking about, here.Jaekus wrote:
I wouldn't say we're behind the world at all when it comes to music in a general sense, but our geographical location and population makes it a lot less likely for artists to make the trek out this way (but if this is what you are implying then yes, I do agree). It's obviously much easier for a touring artist/band to do a European tour to dozens of cities and a much larger audience than it is to tour Australia (which getting here alone costs much more) and then tour 4-5 cities. Glow stick raves were about ten years ago so we're not all that far behind the 8-ball, but we do only really attract more mainstream and/or globally successful artists out this way. And I think it's recognised globally (at least from my observations) that UK and EU really is the hub of electronic music. That's why Pendulum left my home town of Fremantle years ago, changed their style and are now a huge band internationally (and based in the UK obviously). They were smart with their business sense AND make good music.Uzique wrote:
australia and nz are years behind the rest of the world in music though (no offence) so it doesn't surprise me ^ about electronic scene. you're probably still having a glow-stick rave period like england had in 92 and america had in 98 or something. i guess a lot of music taste is geographically-dictated, even today in the age of the internet; live gigs just exemplify this. living in london (and europe, generally) the electronic music scene is fantastic, at both the dance and experimental ends of the scale. you don't really get that in the states (except for a small scene in los angeles and the usual chicago/detroit stuff - even new york is pitiful) so you definitely wouldn't get it in aussie land. if all i could attend were shitty raves and crappy dance events i'd probably not be into dance music, either. i guess on the rock gig front, the uk had its 'britpop' phase and then 'uk indie' rebirth a few years ago, pretty much when i was going from the age of 13-18, so i feel pretty burnt out on the whole arty/indie/metal/shoegaze live gig scene. it all seems a bit pantomime to me nowadays.
another example (though only anecdotal) is that my friend spent a few weeks in NZ after graduating and then came back talking about all the 'big' songs out there... you know, the tracks that get infinite radioplay loop on 'rock' stations, or whatever. one of them was basically this reggae/surfer type acoustic deal with a singer/band (can't remember which) that are simply massive out there. it also had this really corny feel-good message in its lyrics, and a really sentimental over-done music video to suit. didn't america have its corporate surfer-rock thing like 10 years ago? and reggae based rhythms/sounds? really? none of this stuff would sell in europe in this day and age, it's all been done. as you said the isolationism is definitely the key factor here... almost like island gigantism for music: you end up with an extremely closed off, magnified music scene of your own (e.g. think of ty posting links to rockbands that he considers to be 'giants' down under - nobody else in the rest of the world has ever heard or read of them literally once), and you are also largely oblivious to 'current' trends in electronic music. it wouldn't surprise me if right now you're having some sort of 'dubstep' vogue in the worst way possible, i.e. the north american way. even though over here dubstep was a done-thing and nobody wanted to talk about it and artists/dj's vehemently denied wanting to even be associated with it in like... 2009.