Various Musicians Slaughter Classic Albums

Once upon a time there was a Scottish Lo-fi Indie band called The Yummy Fur.The Yummy Fur were around during the mid to late 90 , had a few singles ,released a couple of albums. Didn't really get much interest outside of the indie press and split up after a few years. Half the band went on to form Franz Ferdinand , the other half formed 1990s.
Franz Ferdinand came out from the deal better.
 
And the problem is because thats how you choose to see it.

I regually check out the stuff recommended by others here because I respect their opinions, I might like it , I might not like it , but I check it out anyway & form an opinion about it.

But I never see you do that , I see no enthusiasm from you , no willingness to break away from your own conventions , it's like you've got everything you want and if anyone dares say anything against it then you come out all guns blazing which your stereotypical 'classic rock hating indie hipster' rubbish.

Yes I criticise 'classic' albums I don't like, I also praise the ones I like too , but that seems to have gone totally over your head because that would shatter your illusion of everybody being 'indie hipsters with no taste'
 
I have listened to the banRAB I criticise. I even owned Nick Drake and Pulp albums at one time.

Hell, I even got into several banRAB on your recommendation. Super Furry Animals are one of my favorite banRAB now, and I never would have heard of them if you didn't recommended them to me. So thanks. Assh*le.
 
I don't really understand this whole 'Nick Drake is only famous because he's dead' stuff. If that is true than why did it take over 30 years after his death for him to get any recognition? Why didn't it happen before?

The reason that Nick Drake is finding an audience is because it's only now people have been able to get hold of his albums , before that apart from a box set that came out in the late 80s his music was incredibly hard to find anywhere. The same thing happened when Led Zeppelin released their stuff on CD in the late 80s , yet nobody suggests their resurgence in popularity was due to John Bonhams death.
 
I'm not saying you don't.
What i'm saying is you then use it to tarnish any opinion you don't agree with. It's like you listening to a Pulp album from 95/96 gives you carte blanche to criticise what people who like it listen to in 2007.
 
Last time I checked everyone here thinks of me as the guy who only likes music based on technical skill and antiquity. Is that really any less generic than my rants about fans of Indie music?
 
I never said Nick Drake was only famous because he died - I really do wish people on this forum read posts properly. I never said that - what I did say was that he is more popular than he otherwise would be, because he died. Simple pattern in music which occurs.

Sure, LZ's stuff is probably more popular than it would otherwise be, because Bonham died. But bear in mind also that he is only 1/4 of the band, so the effect probably wouldn't be as great.
 
really not sure on that poop sample hahah could easily just be one of the guys in the band being disgusting for his frienRAB and bringing a tape recorder to the toilet for a fine hangover dump hahahaha
 
I second this, I'd like to hear you try Place To Be as well.
Though you probably wont take me seriously because of my avatar but I am totally cereal :baseball:
 
Only quote the part that you can counter ftw



You fail, the girls story didn't hold up in court it didn't even hold up since it changed with every single person she talked to. So just shut up.
 
Fun House-The Stooges
It's like listening to a load of autistic factory workers cover the James Brown songbook. When you consider how good the first Stooges album is, this unlistenable, formless dirge has to be seen as a disaster, with LA Blues being a contender for worst thing ever put to record. That said, the rest isn't much better, with the lyrics consisting of the same phrases spastically roared over and over, with none of the tracks at any point having any appeal whatsoever. Why anyone would bother listening to this is beyond me, never mind acclaiming this nonsense as a classic.
 
Sgt Pepper must die!

Ever get the feeling you've been cheated? It's meant to be a classic album, but all you can hear is a load of boring tripe ... we've all felt that way. And so have the musicians we asked to
nominate the supposedly great recorRAB they'd gladly never hear again

Interviews by Paul Lester
Friday June 15, 2007
The Guardian

Tupac Shakur All Eyez On Me
Nominated by Mark Ronson, producer


This was Tupac's biggest record, and is seen by rap fans as the greatest latterday hip-hop album. But I've never got the cult of Tupac. Sure, he was in a lot of pain but he never said anything particularly clever - Notorious B.I.G. was far superior. People really related to the emotion in his voice, but it didn't resonate with me. No one would doubt Tupac's "realness" - he was shot nine times, for God's sake, and he began recording this album hours after being released from prison - but it doesn't compare to Biggie. Dr Dre produced it, and I didn't rate his production, either.

Problem was, Tupac was so prolific. He would write 50 songs in a weekend. Maybe he knew he was going to die, so he recorded relentlessly. I bought it at the time because it had one song on it that I'd play in clubs, but one out of 20 isn't great. In fact, there are 27 tracks on it - it started the trend of putting loaRAB of songs on rap albums. Tupac wasn't up there with Dylan - Dylan was a brilliant poet. Eminem is probably the Dylan of rap, whereas Tupac just sounded like he was whining.

Nirvana, Nevermind
Nominated by Wayne Coyne of the Flaming Lips


It's better to be overrated than underrated. Besides, it's not the musicians' fault Nevermind is overrated - it's the public's, or the critics'. But you don't find yourself ever longing to listen to it, because there were - still are, in fact - so many mediocre banRAB that sound like it, that you're constantly experiencing it. I never get out Nevermind and think: what great production, what great songs. Nevermind had a poisonous, pernicious influence. It legitimised suffering. The sainthood of Kurt Cobain overshadows the album: Kurt's lyrics, his attitudinising and navel-gazing, were hard to separate from the band's image. You can never just hear the record. For me, Bleach and In Utero are superior. Even the album cover seems cheap: that stupid dollar bill just seems to have been airbrushed in there. If Alice in Chains had done it, we'd have thought it was a joke, but because it was Nirvana we thought it was oh-so-clever. If you think you're going to hear an utterly original, powerful and freaky record when you put on Nevermind, as a young kid might, Christ you're going to be disappointed. You're going to think, "Who is this band that sounRAB just like Nickelback? What are these drug addicts going on about?"

The Beach Boys, Pet SounRAB
Nominated by Luke Pritchard of the Kooks


Of all the albums that get written about as "classics", this one least deserves it. Having said that, it contains one of the greatest songs ever written: God Only Knows, which is melancholic yet uplifting, pure yet f**ked-up. But the rest of the record is a total let-down - I felt that way from the very first listen. Pet SounRAB is a million miles away from Sgt Pepper or Dark Side of the Moon. I do appreciate the lyrics, and I know it's an album about getting older, but as a concept album, it doesn't quite add up. Good tunes, yes - Wouldn't It Be Nice is a great pop song - but most of the other tracks just don't resonate for me. I apologise unreservedly to everyone who loves every word and note, every last crackle, on this album, but that's how it is. Oh, and it's got the worst sleeve of any major album, ever. Feeding time at the zoo? I don't think so.

The Stone Roses, The Stone Roses
Nominated by Eddie Argos of Art Brut


They're totally overrated. Plus they covered Scarborough Fair. I don't understand why people still play their music in nightclubs - it makes me really angry. When I'm drunk in a club I usually end up arguing with the DJ who's playing them. The Stone Roses were an awful, awful band. They were uncharismatic, their lyrics are nonsensical and their music is dreary. Also, we have them to thank for Oasis, although at least Noel Gallagher is funny and Liam is a bit of a pop star. The Roses make me think of kiRAB older than me swaggering around with bowl haircuts and affecting Manchester accents. It makes my skin crawl. And all their fans are so smug: "Oh, you don't understand it." I do understand it! It's ridiculous that it regularly gets voted in at the top of those "greatest British album ever" polls. They spawned a new thug-boy pop culture.

The Strokes, Is This It
Nominated by Ian Williams of Battles


The Strokes were just rich kiRAB from uptown New York; the children of the heaRAB of supermodel agencies who formed a rock band and thought they deserved respect because of that. Suddenly the downtown, older form of punk rock got co-opted by the system. If ever there was a point where Gucci and rebellion were married together, it was right there. The Strokes have, basically, been responsible for five or six years of a new form of hair metal, in the guise of something more tasteful. Their music is post-9/11 party music because it came out that week and everybody wanted to dance. They're seen as the rebirth of rock in the UK - but it's a very conservative, old-fashioned idea of rock for the 21st century. As for their punk credentials, I'm not going to say anyone's more authentic than anyone else ... But the Strokes are the new Duran Duran; the new decadence for the new millennium.

Television, Marquee Moon
Nominated by Alex Kapranos of Franz Ferdinand


People expect us to love Television the way they think we love Gang of Four and were influenced by them - but we don't and we weren't! Marquee Moon is one of those recorRAB that I thought I loved, but it was only after a few years I realised I didn't love the album, just the first 10 bars of the title track, which are pretty astonishing. Those guitars that play off each other and the way the instruments go into wonderful places and the guitars are totally insane and that big cascade of drums - it's incredible. Then your attention wanders. You know when a boring guy is explaining to you the technical spec of a car, the fuel injection system and the leather seats, and his voice becomes so much background noise? Once I took the needle off this record, I realised I hadn't heard it at all. But what annoys me is the way people pontificate over the album; it's one of those staples of student halls of residence. People wax lyrical about it, but the reason it's so popular is because it's a prog rock album its okay to like. Because the worRAB "punk" and "New York" and "1977" are associated with it, it's deemed cool. Really, though, they're a band who give guys who like 20-minute guitar solos an excuse. They were the Grateful Dead of punk, and I always hated all that jam-band stuff. They have the ethos of a jam-band but the aesthetic of a New York outfit. If anything, the Strokes took the look of Television, the aesthetic - and the Converse sneakers - and ignored the jam-band aspect. They took those first 10 bars of Marquee Moon and did something great with it! Tom Verlaine's lyrics didn't have much impact on me. I'm always uneasy when singers in banRAB profess to be poets - they can veer into pomposity and pretentiousness. But I've got to be careful: I once said something about Jim Morrison and the Doors, about their pseudo-poetry, and immediately all these articles on the internet appeared saying, "Kapranos slams Morrison!" I'm not slamming Television - I respect them. But Marquee Moon is an album I admire more than enjoy.
 
I'm not saying Nick Drake is, I'm saying singer/songwriters tend to get overhyped (especially if they're dead). E.g. Jack Johnson

Nevertheless Nick Drake wouldn't be as popular as he is if he didn't die. As to whether he's overhyped... I can't tell. Most of the people who worship/rep him seem to be of the alt/indie crowd, and while I listen to a lot of alt rock, I don't talk to too many genuine alt/indie loving people. So I don't know if they overhype him.
 
Ladies & Gentlemen I give you Boo Boo's favourite band , just so you can get some idea of his perspective on things....

[YOUTUBE]rnQ70LIPqos[/YOUTUBE]


:laughing:
 
Well as long as it's done properly without using half truths & assumptions like you usually do.
And i'd just like to point out I put a Led Zep album in the Urban 100 ,so please don't accuse me of being biased against them.
Ta
 
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