Why not?Farmer John wrote:Leatherman is one of my favourites, but is it one of their best songs? No.
Dig down on this line of thinking enough and you'll see how it doesn't actually make a ton of sense
Why not?Farmer John wrote:Leatherman is one of my favourites, but is it one of their best songs? No.
Anders wrote:I do not have a «neoliberal assessment of geopolitics», so please stop writing that I do.
Ok, but then dig down even deeper from there and it will once again make perfect sense.theplatypus wrote:Why not?Farmer John wrote:Leatherman is one of my favourites, but is it one of their best songs? No.
Dig down on this line of thinking enough and you'll see how it doesn't actually make a ton of sense
Why don't you consider "Leatherman" one of their best songs if it's one of your favorites?Farmer John wrote:Ok, but then dig down even deeper from there and it will once again make perfect sense.theplatypus wrote:Why not?Farmer John wrote:Leatherman is one of my favourites, but is it one of their best songs? No.
Dig down on this line of thinking enough and you'll see how it doesn't actually make a ton of sense
Anders wrote:I do not have a «neoliberal assessment of geopolitics», so please stop writing that I do.
This is the obvious answer. I bet we all understand the thinking (feeling) behind the "I love this song but it's not their best." But there really is never a "best."theplatypus wrote:There is no good way to objectively determine "best".
I'm struggling to come up with a good answer to that, so you might be right.theplatypus wrote:Why don't you consider "Leatherman" one of their best songs if it's one of your favorites?Farmer John wrote:Ok, but then dig down even deeper from there and it will once again make perfect sense.theplatypus wrote:Why not?Farmer John wrote:Leatherman is one of my favourites, but is it one of their best songs? No.
Dig down on this line of thinking enough and you'll see how it doesn't actually make a ton of sense
The word best is the problem. It actually paints to broad of a stroke and be used multiple ways. Craft as Stip said is a part of it no doubt. In fact it may be said or need to be said in more of a descriptive sentence.Farmer John wrote:I'm struggling to come up with a good answer to that, so you might be right.theplatypus wrote:Why don't you consider "Leatherman" one of their best songs if it's one of your favorites?Farmer John wrote:Ok, but then dig down even deeper from there and it will once again make perfect sense.theplatypus wrote:Why not?Farmer John wrote:Leatherman is one of my favourites, but is it one of their best songs? No.
Dig down on this line of thinking enough and you'll see how it doesn't actually make a ton of sense
I would probably have it in my top 20 personal "favourite" Pearl Jam songs, but it just doesn't feel like a song that should be on a list of the very best Pearl Jam songs.
"Best" might be a bit extreme, but surely we all have guilty pleasures...be it movies, books, music, stuff that we kinda know is shit, but still manages to entertain.Rob wrote:This is the obvious answer. I bet we all understand the thinking (feeling) behind the "I love this song but it's not their best." But there really is never a "best."theplatypus wrote:There is no good way to objectively determine "best".
But I would say the measure of the subjective quality of any kind of art is how it moves the individual, and that is going to inevitably vary person to person. What other criteria could you use? Technical prowess? Influence? Commercial success? Like I said, there is no good way to determine this in an objective level, and so this experiment falls apartTj wrote:The word best is the problem. It actually paints to broad of a stroke and be used multiple ways. Craft as Stip said is a part of it no doubt. In fact it may be said or need to be said in more of a descriptive sentence.Farmer John wrote:I'm struggling to come up with a good answer to that, so you might be right.theplatypus wrote:Why don't you consider "Leatherman" one of their best songs if it's one of your favorites?Farmer John wrote:Ok, but then dig down even deeper from there and it will once again make perfect sense.theplatypus wrote:Why not?Farmer John wrote:Leatherman is one of my favourites, but is it one of their best songs? No.
Dig down on this line of thinking enough and you'll see how it doesn't actually make a ton of sense
I would probably have it in my top 20 personal "favourite" Pearl Jam songs, but it just doesn't feel like a song that should be on a list of the very best Pearl Jam songs.
Pearl Jam songs that I enjoy the most, because they move me in some way.
Pearl Jam songsthat I feel reach the highest levels of the bands collective abilities as artists.
Anders wrote:I do not have a «neoliberal assessment of geopolitics», so please stop writing that I do.
I know exactly what you mean but I think what this reflects is a kind of insecurity, deferring to consensus and the popular narratives driven by hegemonic tastemakers and cultural gatekeepers that we've all collectively internalized over decades. It's not actually... realThurman Murman wrote:"Best" might be a bit extreme, but surely we all have guilty pleasures...be it movies, books, music, stuff that we kinda know is shit, but still manages to entertain.Rob wrote:This is the obvious answer. I bet we all understand the thinking (feeling) behind the "I love this song but it's not their best." But there really is never a "best."theplatypus wrote:There is no good way to objectively determine "best".
Anders wrote:I do not have a «neoliberal assessment of geopolitics», so please stop writing that I do.
I am willing to watch The Phantom Menace much more often than i am willing to watch Schindler's List. I get a greater enjoyment out of it. But no way do i think its a better movie.theplatypus wrote:I know exactly what you mean but I think what this reflects is a kind of insecurity, deferring to consensus and the popular narratives driven by hegemonic tastemakers and cultural gatekeepers that we've all collectively internalized over decades. It's not actually... realThurman Murman wrote:"Best" might be a bit extreme, but surely we all have guilty pleasures...be it movies, books, music, stuff that we kinda know is shit, but still manages to entertain.Rob wrote:This is the obvious answer. I bet we all understand the thinking (feeling) behind the "I love this song but it's not their best." But there really is never a "best."theplatypus wrote:There is no good way to objectively determine "best".
If you enjoy it more, then you like it better and thus it is better to you. I don't understand this need to constantly kowtow to critical consensus. It is silly. Like the movie equivalent to rockismThurman Murman wrote:I am willing to watch The Phantom Menace much more often than i am willing to watch Schindler's List. I get a greater enjoyment out of it. But no way do i think its a better movie.theplatypus wrote:I know exactly what you mean but I think what this reflects is a kind of insecurity, deferring to consensus and the popular narratives driven by hegemonic tastemakers and cultural gatekeepers that we've all collectively internalized over decades. It's not actually... realThurman Murman wrote:"Best" might be a bit extreme, but surely we all have guilty pleasures...be it movies, books, music, stuff that we kinda know is shit, but still manages to entertain.Rob wrote:This is the obvious answer. I bet we all understand the thinking (feeling) behind the "I love this song but it's not their best." But there really is never a "best."theplatypus wrote:There is no good way to objectively determine "best".
Anders wrote:I do not have a «neoliberal assessment of geopolitics», so please stop writing that I do.
I am generally with theplatypus in this thread, but I get Thurman on this. I think the bottom line is that it's all subjective, and that subjectivity can be broken down into categories. I too would watch The Phantom Menace far more than Schindler's List, a movie I may never watch again but which had a profound effect on my life. The reason for the difference in frequency has to do with being in the right headspace for each. That's a big deal. The Phantom Menace is very good pop media, and thus easy to ingest. Schindler's List is very intense political historical art, and how often are people in the mood for that? I don't know if I could even say which is better at what they are doing.theplatypus wrote:If you enjoy it more, then you like it better and thus it is better to you. I don't understand this need to constantly kowtow to critical consensus. It is silly. Like the movie equivalent to rockismThurman Murman wrote:I am willing to watch The Phantom Menace much more often than i am willing to watch Schindler's List. I get a greater enjoyment out of it. But no way do i think its a better movie.
That was my point. Thank you.durdencommatyler wrote:theplatypus wrote:There is no meaningful distinction between "favorite" and "best". There is no good way to objectively determine "best".
Definitely. If the "quality" of art is completely subjective, then we start to fall into "anything is art." Some people are okay with "anything is art" and some people are not. Personally, I don't think anything is art. If anything is art, then is art really anything at all? Art seems to become simply anything that can illicit some kind of emotional response from anybody. Is ingesting something that fucks up your chemical balance in your brain, thus creating an emotional response, art? I don't think so.Kevin Davis wrote:I think what the OP is talking about is the difference between enjoyment and admiration of craftsmanship. There is a lot of music that I can appreciate as a construction -- Tool, Eminem, most classical music, etc. -- but which I derive no pleasure from listening to. By the same token, there are other things that I don't think are particularly special in any musical, lyrical, or artistic sense, but have managed to hit a sweet spot with me for one reason or another (lots of music from my childhood/adolescence is this way). So I agree that it's finally all subjective, but I do think it's possible to look at a piece of work and acknowledge virtues or shortfalls it possesses that are separate from the gut response you get from it.