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  3. What is this generations Nirvana, Limp Bizkit, Tupac, or Rage against the machine?

What is this generations Nirvana, Limp Bizkit, Tupac, or Rage against the machine?

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asklemmy
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  • H [email protected]

    Holy shit, your band is fucking fire!

    Edit: I listened to your whole album and it's great. Reminds me of the early 2000s Fat Wreck Chords era when punk was honest and real, but also fun. Like some NoFX/MXPX stuff plus shades of this band named King Kong but louder. Thanks for linking to it!

    swab148@lemmy.dbzer0.comS This user is from outside of this forum
    swab148@lemmy.dbzer0.comS This user is from outside of this forum
    [email protected]
    wrote last edited by
    #64

    Then you might be surprised to learn that there is no band, just me! I played and sang all the parts except for drums, those I made with Hydrogen. I did all of that using mostly open-source tools, all in my living room!

    H 1 Reply Last reply
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    • cm0002@lemmy.worldC [email protected]

      I feel global political oppression or global wars usually produce great music but Macklemore might be the peak.

      Nothing against him, some of his songs are good, but I expected real rage inducing stuff with everything going on. Or is this just the state of music as a whole?

      OQB @[email protected]

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      wrote last edited by
      #65

      Zeal and Ardor.

      An absolute top tier band that stand for human rights and who's lyrics reflect their beliefs.

      Created by a black metal artist from Sweden who made one of the best black metal albums of the past 5 years, who have since released banger after banger.

      https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/racist-4chan-comment-album/

      Also seconded/thirded on Run the Jewels. "Close your eyes and count to fuck" is on the forever playlist.

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • R [email protected]

        You're making a lot of bold assumptions, none of which are true.

        Keyword being “local”. We had no record stores. Which ones were there stocked mostly overpriced Beatles represses. They still do to this day.

        So you had them, and they were shitty. Not quite the same thing as not having them. Did you ever ask if they could special order? The store I used to go to carried music zines that catered to a variety of tastes, and they would talk about any number of new albums and bands that were doing the rounds. If a band we saw live had a new release listed in one of them, we would go to the store and order it.

        We too, and the DJ had dogshit taste and played random generic autotune rap.

        So they had a single DJ that worked 24/7? And since you mention autotune, which doesn't become prominent until the 2000s, you clearly have no clue, because it was already possible to discover new music then without having to hunt it down.

        Ah yes, the small and indie bands that could afford to checks notes - press on actual honest to god vinyl.

        There was, let me check notes.... cassettes. Bands used to record music in their living room with a cheap 4 track, and put them on cassette.

        And we had these really cool dual cassette radios, which you could one button copy to a blank cassette. So many of my music collection that I bought from bands I saw came from the band using one of these to copy their tapes.

        https://u-mercari-images.mercdn.net/photos/m83247247555_1.jpg

        I had probably a half dozen carrying cases full of albums of various music.

        No, you had clubs. We had fuckall and a half and what was there was for the bourgeoisie cisheteronormative folks to listen to bland dance music in and fry out their brains on molly that was 90% caffeine and 10% undiscovered synthetic that will kill you.

        Just because you lived in a shitty place, doesn't mean your experience was universal. The city I lived in was so small, we had a single bar that catered to everything outside of mainstream. Gay, goth, punk and metalheads... all in the same place. It was not uncommon to hear a Sepultra song, followed by Bauhaus or the Pet Shop Boys or Skinny Puppy.

        If you lived in some kind of fantastical Life Is Strange-esque world - I’m happy for you, really, truly, and I’d like to hear more stories, but most of us didn’t, at least not those of us born after '97.

        In 1997, I was downloading music from the Internet from IRC. From album releases to bootlegs some guy at a show made holding up a tape recorder. You could also take CDs out from libraries and rip them to mp3 for long term storage. I would keep CDs full of mps, that I would then burn to CDs (because MP3 players didn't exist yet) so we could listen to them. If you were lucky, you would get 128kbit, 44khz, but we would settle for 64kbit or 96 if it was what we could get.

        If you were born after 1997 and you couldn't find music you liked, that was a you problem. It was out there if you went looking for it.

        Nowadays discovering music is really quite a lot simpler, there’s no one you gotta know, there’s no place you have to know to go to, there’s no subcultures you gotta be part of, there’s nowhere you have to be to know specific artists.

        And if you were born after 1997, that's been true your entire life. As long as the Internet has existed, there have been people putting music outside of the mainstream online. I used to DJ for an Internet radio station. We started in 2001 (and is still going), and went out of our way to discover new music. The founder was a musician himself, and wanted to spotlight lesser known music. We played anything from any drama, and had a robust request engine that people used to request music. We pre-recorded podcasts for play so long ago, it pre-dated the term podcast.

        You’re completely unbound by your immediate geography, whether you’re in Pakistan or one of those places ‘Jesus of Suburbia’ was about or a dense European city, all you need is an internet connection, which even in extreme poverty is much more affordable than going much of anywhere IRL.

        Even if I lived in ye olden times, there’s no way in hell I would’ve known about even bands from the time like Cleaners from Venus or like 13th Floor Elevators, and in my own time I wouldn’t have known about Sweet Trip or Cats Millionaire, and I love how much there is and how much more is left to discover, all without needing to be part of something or being somewhere, it’s more democratic, and more fitting for a global world.

        It's awesome you mention Cleaners from Venus, because they distributed their music on cassettes by mail order from listings in zines and word of mouth.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassette_culture

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        L This user is from outside of this forum
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        wrote last edited by [email protected]
        #66

        I'm not really going to respond to all that because I'd just be restating the same thing over and over. I'll focus on one point:

        Yes I'm more than aware of how Cleaners of Venus distributed their music.

        That's my entire point - they're a very much niche band essentially unknown in their time - and I would have never, in a million years - known about their distribution method, or known of them at all, if it wasn't on Wikipedia and on the internet and their music wasn't easily torrented or streamed.

        Even if they were less niche, and sold their records in stores: stores are very very expensive, anything meatspace is very very expensive due to rent costs of the actual precious physical space, they have to make their stock count, and that means catering to the mass market.

        If such stores even exist - which they essentially don't and when they did they were few and far between and not exactly record stores - more something like HMV, they catered to the mass market first because they are giant mega corps and dgaf about anything but the bottom line.

        The internet - anyone could post anything there. Any music, any news about any new music, and anyone could access it from anywhere.

        So If you literally believe that finding music is easier via counting on random zines and special orders in magical vinyl record stores that exist as far as I'm concerned - in fiction only, and when most countries in the world didn't even have such a concept, than via the internet which is available everywhere at all times to everyone globally, you're insane and I can't help you.

        That is an insane, obviously incorrect position to hold and if you can't see that, you can't be made to see it with any arguments anyone could present.

        I think that must be it because you made another truly psychotic claim here:

        There was, let me check notes.... cassettes. Bands used to record music in their living room with a cheap 4 track, and put them on cassette.

        Cleaners from Venus have 261k monthly listeners on Spotify. That means they'd need 216,000 cassettes. They'd also need the logistics and distribution to ship them all over the world to simply even come close to the reach they have now, to even be hypothetically obtainable.

        Just because you lived in a shitty place, doesn't mean your experience was universal. The city I lived in was so small, we had a single bar that catered to everything outside of mainstream. Gay, goth, punk and metalheads... all in the same place. It was not uncommon to hear a Sepultra song, followed by Bauhaus or the Pet Shop Boys or Skinny Puppy.

        Of course it's not universal. But it is more universal, because most of the world are not in one of like, three-ish Western European countries and the 10 or so sane cities in the United States. I'm sorry that causes your narrative of the world and how things used to be and/or are to be incorrect, but it's the simple truth.

        What was universal? Top 40 hits played on TV and Radio. That was pretty much everywhere. That is - until the internet and now you could be a Wavves fan in Russia, and I'm sorry the thought is so offensive to you.

        R 1 Reply Last reply
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        • M [email protected]

          Kneecap

          https://youtu.be/h1J_DVutL-w

          Bob Vylan

          https://youtu.be/urV4yjHUBIw

          Both got in trouble for speaking out about the Palestinian genocide.

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          wrote last edited by
          #67

          100% agree with you.

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          • B [email protected]

            Rage against the Machine are very explicitly leftist. Like pretty much every song.

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            wrote last edited by [email protected]
            #68

            Rage Against The Machine is ok, but they are to me utterly eclipsed by the thousands of leftist artists before and after them that make far more poignant and interesting music both lyrically and musically.

            Maybe I just haven't tried the right material or listened to them enough, I have nothing against them but they just don't grab me in the way every other leftist music artist has grabbed me, the ending song from The Matrix for instance while a cool mic drop in the film, I find just not very interesting.

            I've listed some in my original comment, but if you're curious I can list many many more.

            I actually maintain a playlist here:

            https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5rYZABdJf5H8XmliZ9ZTIW?pi=KIskSDh8T--mY

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            • B [email protected]

              Most people don't pay attention to lyrics at all, and don't have the literacy skills to try to understand them.

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              wrote last edited by
              #69

              That's true and quite unfortunate, but to be fair Anti-Flag was still fairly popular from what I understand, and their lyrics are much more politically charged.

              I think Rage Against The Machine just doesn't grab the same way, at least for me personally.

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • L [email protected]

                I'm not really going to respond to all that because I'd just be restating the same thing over and over. I'll focus on one point:

                Yes I'm more than aware of how Cleaners of Venus distributed their music.

                That's my entire point - they're a very much niche band essentially unknown in their time - and I would have never, in a million years - known about their distribution method, or known of them at all, if it wasn't on Wikipedia and on the internet and their music wasn't easily torrented or streamed.

                Even if they were less niche, and sold their records in stores: stores are very very expensive, anything meatspace is very very expensive due to rent costs of the actual precious physical space, they have to make their stock count, and that means catering to the mass market.

                If such stores even exist - which they essentially don't and when they did they were few and far between and not exactly record stores - more something like HMV, they catered to the mass market first because they are giant mega corps and dgaf about anything but the bottom line.

                The internet - anyone could post anything there. Any music, any news about any new music, and anyone could access it from anywhere.

                So If you literally believe that finding music is easier via counting on random zines and special orders in magical vinyl record stores that exist as far as I'm concerned - in fiction only, and when most countries in the world didn't even have such a concept, than via the internet which is available everywhere at all times to everyone globally, you're insane and I can't help you.

                That is an insane, obviously incorrect position to hold and if you can't see that, you can't be made to see it with any arguments anyone could present.

                I think that must be it because you made another truly psychotic claim here:

                There was, let me check notes.... cassettes. Bands used to record music in their living room with a cheap 4 track, and put them on cassette.

                Cleaners from Venus have 261k monthly listeners on Spotify. That means they'd need 216,000 cassettes. They'd also need the logistics and distribution to ship them all over the world to simply even come close to the reach they have now, to even be hypothetically obtainable.

                Just because you lived in a shitty place, doesn't mean your experience was universal. The city I lived in was so small, we had a single bar that catered to everything outside of mainstream. Gay, goth, punk and metalheads... all in the same place. It was not uncommon to hear a Sepultra song, followed by Bauhaus or the Pet Shop Boys or Skinny Puppy.

                Of course it's not universal. But it is more universal, because most of the world are not in one of like, three-ish Western European countries and the 10 or so sane cities in the United States. I'm sorry that causes your narrative of the world and how things used to be and/or are to be incorrect, but it's the simple truth.

                What was universal? Top 40 hits played on TV and Radio. That was pretty much everywhere. That is - until the internet and now you could be a Wavves fan in Russia, and I'm sorry the thought is so offensive to you.

                R This user is from outside of this forum
                R This user is from outside of this forum
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                wrote last edited by
                #70

                Did you completely miss the point that I was talking about pre-internet days? In my first response to you, I literally talked about an album release in the 90s.

                Maybe your entire experience in life isn't as old as the pants I'm wearing right now, but the world existed before you did.

                L 1 Reply Last reply
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                • H [email protected]

                  Do not cite the Deep Magic to me, Witch! I was there when MP3s were new. If it wasn't for a HD crash in 2003, I would still have MP3s from the 90s.

                  Plus, I was agreeing with you. WTF?

                  I'm not talking about sharing in particular, I'm talking about friction involved in discovery. You have to know someone to share the link, even today. So someone is out there spending 10 hours a day listening to random stuff on YT just to get something to share, not waiting around for the algorithm to give them music.

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                  wrote last edited by
                  #71

                  If it wasn't for a HD crash in 2003, I would still have MP3s from the 90s.

                  You just made me sad thinking about the huge music library I used to have. I've recently started downloading again, but my tastes were so different back then I don't think I'll ever remember it all.

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                  • H [email protected]

                    Absolutely fair point, and I agree with you to some degree. I imagine that it's somewhere in the middle, where bands have flooded the space so that if no technical means exists for discovery, we've traded off friction points. Instead of the 90's version where people would drive 40 minutes to the cool reord store in the next town over, now discerning listeners looking for gems have to wade through more and more bands they don't like. It's no one's fault, it's just how it is.

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                    wrote last edited by
                    #72

                    the ’90s* version

                    1 Reply Last reply
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                    • R [email protected]

                      Did you completely miss the point that I was talking about pre-internet days? In my first response to you, I literally talked about an album release in the 90s.

                      Maybe your entire experience in life isn't as old as the pants I'm wearing right now, but the world existed before you did.

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                      wrote last edited by
                      #73

                      Yes you demented moron I think I am aware that the world existed before the internet and before I did, especially since I mention music that was made before I was born? Stop huffing the asbestos for a moment and read and re-read my post until you understand it, you absolute cretin.

                      R 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • L [email protected]

                        Yes you demented moron I think I am aware that the world existed before the internet and before I did, especially since I mention music that was made before I was born? Stop huffing the asbestos for a moment and read and re-read my post until you understand it, you absolute cretin.

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                        wrote last edited by
                        #74

                        Ad hominems. The last gasp from the confused or clueless who just can't admit when they are wrong.

                        Did you have anything of substance at all to add? I assume not, since several posts now not doing so.

                        1 Reply Last reply
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                        • T [email protected]

                          The "algorithm" is not some conspiranoic mastermind, it just serves whatever retains the most attention and generates clicks for advertisers. It's users who don't want to listen to <insert your favorite rebel> because they prefer bland pop or whatever kids listen to these days.

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                          wrote last edited by
                          #75

                          Algorithms are definitely biased to push whatever agenda they want.

                          T 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • D [email protected]

                            Algorithms are definitely biased to push whatever agenda they want.

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                            wrote last edited by
                            #76

                            That's what I said. The agenda they want just happens to be "money", not whatever political conspiracy every political group comes up with.

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                            0
                            • swab148@lemmy.dbzer0.comS [email protected]

                              Then you might be surprised to learn that there is no band, just me! I played and sang all the parts except for drums, those I made with Hydrogen. I did all of that using mostly open-source tools, all in my living room!

                              H This user is from outside of this forum
                              H This user is from outside of this forum
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                              wrote last edited by
                              #77

                              Yeah, I was wondering about the drums part in the credits for each song, because it seemed odd to have different names for each drum set. Is it just a different setup and you give it a name?

                              swab148@lemmy.dbzer0.comS 1 Reply Last reply
                              1
                              • H [email protected]

                                Yeah, I was wondering about the drums part in the credits for each song, because it seemed odd to have different names for each drum set. Is it just a different setup and you give it a name?

                                swab148@lemmy.dbzer0.comS This user is from outside of this forum
                                swab148@lemmy.dbzer0.comS This user is from outside of this forum
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                                wrote last edited by
                                #78

                                It's a different virtual drumkit, and I swapped some pieces here and there when I felt like one or the other sounded better for a specific song. The names were set by the creator of the drumkit, and I didn't really know how to credit them so I might have gone overboard with it lol

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