Where to begin?BulletMagnet wrote:Not to bust in on this too much, but I'm curious about a couple of things you've said, Pa...I really don't listen to the type of stuff mentioned in this thread, so I'm not really in tune with "contemporary rock" or whatever you'd care to call it, but some of the stuff you mentioned caught my attention, mainly your preference of shorter songs and less "flowery and trumped up" music in general, and saying that "ballads" (I guess songs that don't fit the above descriptions fit under there?) aren't really "rock." I have no problem with your preferences, but if nothing else it seems that you have a rather narrow definition, not just of music you like (again, no problem with that, I'm much the same), but of "rock" as well...it sounds like you'd only consider 2-minute power-chord-fests as "real" rock, and anything more lengthy or complex than that as something else. Those sorts of credentials would seem to really limit what the genre would be able to do, if they were applied more widely...they seem vaguely reminiscent of the play/movie Amadeus, wherein the "experts" criticize Mozart for having "too many notes" in his work.
Again, I'm not criticizing your tastes here, I'm just curious if something along the lines of the above is actually what you mean when you talk about "rock" according to your own definition.
Well, I love Mozart first thing. That guy was a beast and he's my favorite of the clasical guys. While I do like simplicity in rock and would criticize many a rock band past and present for shoehorning too many notes, Mozart is off the hook.
Ballad:
bal·lad
n.
1 a. A narrative poem, often of folk origin and intended to be sung, consisting of simple stanzas and usually having a refrain.
b. The music for such a poem.
2 A popular song especially of a romantic or sentimental nature.
I got no problem with some songs that fit the first definition. AC/DC, Fu Manchu and many others have made songs that fit that bill and they came out just fine.
It's the second definition that I was throwing around. So much "rock" music now comes with these lyrics just sound like the sappy blog of some crybaby ADD kid. It is pure antirock as far as I'm concerned. Rock was never designed to support whining.
As far as what, exactly, I consider rock n roll to be... That's pretty tough. I know it when I hear it. Power chords are not mandatory, though I sure do like 'em

It's easier for me to just scratch bands/songs/albums off the list than it is to define what it takes to be on the list. I'm the same way with videogames. I know what I do and don't like and can detect those things quickly but that's about as far as it goes in the cognitive reasoning department.
Pa