Categories
Rant

The World of Music

Sara definitely called me on my “harsh stereotype of indie rock”.  I agree.  It was a little off the wall but I attribute it to the Monday morning talking.  Really, I enjoy indie rock and it should not receive such a blatant accusation as I have given them.  I retract that statement.

But I hate, hate, hate the label of indie rock.  As Sara pointed out in her comment, the only distinguishing feature of ‘indie’ is that the band is not signed to a major label.  Well, what does ‘indie rock’ have to do with the musical label associated with it?  You can’t honestly tell me that if my band is indie rock, that we will sound the same as the other dude who is labeled indie rock who sounds nothing like us but is still deemed indie rock because they are not signed to a label.

Somewhere, some long time ago, someone went a little haywire with the musical genre naming convention.  It most likely started with ‘alternative’.  Let’s go to Wikipedia for its all knowing source of knowledge:

Alternative rock (also called alternative music, alt-rock or simply alternative; known primarily in the UK as indie) is a genre of rock music that emerged in the 1980s and became widely popular in the 1990s. The term “alternative” was coined in the 1980s to describe punk rock-inspired bands on independent record labels that did not fit into the mainstream genres of the time.[1] As a musical genre, alternative rock consists of various subgenres that have emerged from the independent music scene since the 1980s, such as grunge, Britpop, gothic rock, and indie pop. These genres are unified by their collective debt to the style and/or ethos of punk, which laid the groundwork for alternative music in the 1970s.[2]

Let’s talk about this for a bit, shall we?  Back in the nineties, if you said you were into Alternative music, chances are you liked the heavy guitars associated with grunge, or something of that form.  But then in a few years after, rock just morphed its way from being the hair metal rock that we all know and love, to some decent music coming out of the Britpop scene or just straight out rock that just didn’t fit into the 80s scene.  It started getting wishy-washy.  Then alternative became this weird term…”Do you really like the alternative music (the underground) or do you like the alternative music on the radio (Oh, Nirvana, how the mighty have fallen).

Take a look at the definition of alternative in the UK.  So is their indie music the same as our indie music?

Wikipedia says that in the United States (Indie):

During the first half of the 1990s, alternative music, led by grunge bands such as Alice in Chains, Soundgarden, Pearl Jam and Nirvana broke into the mainstream, achieving commercial chart success and widespread exposure. Shortly thereafter the alternative genre became commercialized as mainstream success attracted major-label investment and commercially-oriented or manufactured acts with a formulaic, conservative approach. With this, the meaning of the label “alternative” changed away from its original, more counter-cultural meaning to refer to alternative music that achieved mainstream success and the term “indie rock” was used to refer to the bands and genres that remained underground.

So I guess the bands I used to listen to in the 90s were indie rock, but as soon as they signed to a major label, they just shifted to Alternative, or in my case, grunge rock.  Fine.  At least I knew what I was getting into if someone told me I was listening to grunge, although I sure hope no one labeled The Smashing Pumpkins as such.

So now we are in here in the year 2008 and the music genre naming convention is a mess.  Look at some of the terms found in Wikipedia under indie rock: post-punk, garage rock, no wave, baroque pop, new prog, post-rock, dance-punk, post-punk revival, post-post rock, psych folk, post-post-post rock.  Is there no end?  Even Indie rock doesn’t even know what the heck it is anymore in terms of definition.  So why the heck are we still using these really nonsensical terms to describe a type of music?

When someone asks me what The National is like, I really can’t pinpoint it.  I suppose there’s a beauty in that considering not all music has to be the same (unless you want it on the radio of course!) but it does make it hard to define.  I would not define The National as indie rock as the other bands which form my general stereotype of that musical genre are definitely different than The National.

Is anyone else out there frustrated with the naming conventions of musical genres?  Or are you loving the fact that in this day in age, everything flies and in the end, they are beyond naming conventions and when it comes down to it, it’s all about the music, man.

Categories
Uncategorized

Def Leppard Postponed

The rock gods must have been looking down on Vero this past weekend as she had to give up her Def Leppard tickets because she was in her play this past weekend and would have finished around 10PM.  This was a bad scene altogether considering Def Leppard could be classified as her favourite band ever.  At least we found someone to purchase her $93 ticket.  But on Friday night as I was sipping a beer I got a phone call from Mike who said he had bad news.  Visions of someone breaking into our house danced in my head and I was relieved when he said that Def Leppard had postponed their upcoming shows as Joe Elliot has fallen ill.  I can’t say that I was disappointed at the postponement as it gives Vero another chance to see them!

This also opened up a little more time for me to study for my Quantitative Research Methods exam which is happening on Tuesday.  I have a good grasp of the material so I didn’t know how much I needed to study.  It turns out that I was well on my way by Saturday afternoon and decided to go out to celebrate Krista’s birthday.  In fact, we also squeezed a little game of Settlers of Catan (we’re hooked!  This game is incredible!) before going to bowling.

Krista’s birthday was celebrated in my old neck of the woods…down in Westboro.  We went to the bowling lanes and had a few good rounds.  Actually, I did incredibly well in the first game with a score of 162 but then failed miserably in the second game and had something like 92.  We then headed out to the Carleton Tavern which is actually a good time…no cover charge, decent band, and a bunch of old-timers.  You can’t go wrong.  I can’t believe I had never been there before in my life.  It reminded me of the Chateau Kap or the Sunshine Tavern back home.  I ended up leaving soon after arriving to head over to Vero’s and left the party so they could continue their peanut races (which involved dropping a peanut into a beer and the last one to float back to the top had to be chugged.  Interesting.

Vero and I had a bite to eat at the Newport Restaurant with Matt and Karilee on Sunday afternoon.  The Moe’s World Famous Newport Restaurant is quite the amazing restaurant.  It’s the World Headquarters for the Elvis Sighting Society and the place is full of memorabilia.  They have this great Montreal style pizza which has tomato sauce, mustard, pickles and ham.  At first this seemed disgusting but after trying it I realized that you should always try something before denouncing it.  Yum!

The rest of the afternoon had me studying as well as Mike gallantly offering his services to fix Vero’s computer (which Matt had supplied a motherboard for).  He got all the hardware working but Windows has a hard time handling an entire new hardware setup and had a hard time booting up.  So, we realized that we had only got one step closer to fixing Vero’s computer and I decided for the time being that we should just put her hard drive into my old PC and give her that until we can have more time to fix hers properly.  At least she will have it so she can search for a job on the Internet.  She is getting quite frustrated with the job search as she has not had any permanent work since before Christmas.  The media industry doesn’t have a lot of jobs it seems.

Categories
Reviews

Album Mini-Reviews

Here’s a recap on some albums I’ve picked up over the past while:

41h1r6qx15l_sl500_aa240_.jpgRolling Stones – Let It Bleed: This year may be the year of the Rolling Stones for me.  One of the bands I’ve been meaning to get into over the years…I decided to take a look at some of the top picks from the Stones and time and time again 1969’s ‘Let it Bleed’ made it onto the list.  So far, so good.  I’ve listened to it a few times and I must say that the classic rock universe is an interesting one in that there seems to be less killer albums from front to back (with smash hits and whatnot) but they form a more cohesive package, hence an album.  That’s the way I feel with Let It Bleed (a play on The Beatles Let It Be of that year)…there’s a few songs that are really hard hitting but the rest are fairly lowkey to me but the whole album has a great feel to it.  That’s what I want to accomplish when creating an album.  Back in the day, you had more albums coming out faster also…one a year (if not two a year like Zeppelin!).

413bae7x8el_sl500_aa240_.jpgNine Inch Nails: Ghosts I-IV: Trent Reznor and company have released an instrumental album.  After hearing a preview of Ghosts I (the two disc set is split into four mini-albums entitled Ghosts but really, it’s just a hodge-podge of instrumental noise), I realized that the album would not have full out instrumental tracks like A Warm Place from The Downward Spiral.  Instead, it’s a bunch of instrumentals strung together that are erratic and really don’t form an entire piece of art.  But in that, he may have accomplished a piece of art which resembles our daydreams (a comparison he was trying to do) considering daydreams stray from one thought to the other.  While I am not turned off by the album, I realize that I won’t actively want to listen to Track X off of Disc 2.  It will be more of a ‘I want some background music while I study one night.”  Interestingly enough, he probably cleared a million bucks off of making instrumental noise and laying it on in album form.  Man, I wish I could do that.

51exxgx0ol_sl500_aa240_.jpgVampire Weekend – Vampire Weekend: Maren suggested this one as a killer album that her and Allan-Paul listened to the entire time they down in Florida.  I downloaded it to give it a try before picking it up (a process I seem to be doing more and more over time after getting burned from mediocre purchases) and I would have to say that it is some catchy music but hasn’t caught me in a stranglehold yet.  It’s got this indie/reggae flair to it and it definitely something that can be deemed summer music.  I enjoy the different song structures and instrumentation on the album but we’ll have to see if it stands the test of time on the iPod.  I would recommend that everyone give it a listen though…some people may end up loving it!

51ewz6pkdyl_sl500_aa240_.jpgTheory of a Deadman – Scars and Souvenirs: All right!  New Theory album!  Highly anticipated after their great sophomore effort Gasoline.  However, after a few listens, I am on the fence with their third album.  They have followed the same formula as their last (hard rock coupled with ballads, which is definitely a good rock formula) and the music is great but it’s the lyrics that have put a sour look on my face.  They really harp on points like having girlfriends who cheat on them (at least three songs on the album) and then there’s this one song called I Hate My Life which is cringe-worthy just because it talks about how much his job is awful or his wife’s nagging is getting on his nerves and then there’s this one line about lifting your middle finger to the world and I’m thinking was put in there just to have a great rock and roll concert moment with the entire crowd lifting that one appendage in unison.  It just seems…contrived.  But I really like the music and I would say 65% of the album has decent lyrics.  It’s just a shame that 35% put a bad taste in my mouth.  Theory – Get out of the working man lyrics and bring us some old gems.

51dok6efipl_sl500_aa240_.jpgThe National – Boxer: I’ve saved the best for last.  I was reading an extensive interview with Raine Maida and they brought up this one band called The National and how Boxer was a beautiful album.  Intrigued to get into some new music, I downloaded it and fell in love.  The baritone vocals, the piano, horns and guitars bring you to this other level.  The drumming is an amazing part of the album…it just brings the songs up a level.  I really fell in love with this album and went out to pick it up in physical form the week after.  It is a worthwhile purchase.  There’s something moving about the music….it’s not rocking in the guitar rock kind of sense.  I can’t even think of a comparison…Wikipedia says they are indie rock but that term is getting WAY overused.  When I think of indie rock I think of guys who can’t really play their guitars well but know how to write a good riff and they drink Labatt 50.  I wouldn’t say they are indie rock….they are on tour with R.E.M. this summer so I recommend you give them a listen.

Up next on deck to listen to a little more before a proper review: Rolling Stones – Exile on Main Street, Wintersleep – Welcome To The Night Sky, Boys Like Girls – Boys Like Girls, Ashes dIVIDE – Keep Telling Myself It’s Alright