I would have included them if they ended with Ronnie Van Zant and Steve Gaines death.MattA75 wrote:they're not #1, but Skynyrd should be mentioned as well as at least part of the conversation
How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
Think I’m going to try being kind to everyone a chance.
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
It's interesting learning what people use as their criteria and what they deem as influential.
Van Halen versus R.E.M., it's a little like Risky Business versus Breakfast Club. One is throwing a big party and inviting you in and wants you to participate in their lifestyle. The other is about looking inward and accepting that alt/geek in you. Van Halen promoted a lifestyle and inviting people to their party. R.E.M. were more like shephards (at first at least) that attracted like minded individuals who accepted and appreciated that part within themselves that was attracted to R.E.M.'s music. It was alternative and wasn't looking to invite those from outside that club in. They slowly expanded their sound and accepted more people in but don't think there was ever the open invitation like Van Halen was throwing out. Whatever it is, two highly gifted bands that gave us some great albums with vastly different aesthetics and merits.
Van Halen versus R.E.M., it's a little like Risky Business versus Breakfast Club. One is throwing a big party and inviting you in and wants you to participate in their lifestyle. The other is about looking inward and accepting that alt/geek in you. Van Halen promoted a lifestyle and inviting people to their party. R.E.M. were more like shephards (at first at least) that attracted like minded individuals who accepted and appreciated that part within themselves that was attracted to R.E.M.'s music. It was alternative and wasn't looking to invite those from outside that club in. They slowly expanded their sound and accepted more people in but don't think there was ever the open invitation like Van Halen was throwing out. Whatever it is, two highly gifted bands that gave us some great albums with vastly different aesthetics and merits.
Think I’m going to try being kind to everyone a chance.
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MattA75
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
I just think that on this board in particular, you're in for a hard row to hoe with anything Van Halensurfndestroy wrote:It's interesting learning what people use as their criteria and what they deem as influential.
Van Halen versus R.E.M., it's a little like Risky Business versus Breakfast Club. One is throwing a big party and inviting you in and wants you to participate in their lifestyle. The other is about looking inward and accepting that alt/geek in you. Van Halen promoted a lifestyle and inviting people to their party. R.E.M. were more like shephards (at first at least) that attracted like minded individuals who accepted and appreciated that part within themselves that was attracted to R.E.M.'s music. It was alternative and wasn't looking to invite those from outside that club in. They slowly expanded their sound and accepted more people in but don't think there was ever the open invitation like Van Halen was throwing out. Whatever it is, two highly gifted bands that gave us some great albums with vastly different aesthetics and merits.
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
This reads like that Rolling Stone review of Binaural, comparing Pearl Jam with Matchbox 20.surfndestroy wrote:It's interesting learning what people use as their criteria and what they deem as influential.
Van Halen versus R.E.M., it's a little like Risky Business versus Breakfast Club. One is throwing a big party and inviting you in and wants you to participate in their lifestyle. The other is about looking inward and accepting that alt/geek in you. Van Halen promoted a lifestyle and inviting people to their party. R.E.M. were more like shephards (at first at least) that attracted like minded individuals who accepted and appreciated that part within themselves that was attracted to R.E.M.'s music. It was alternative and wasn't looking to invite those from outside that club in. They slowly expanded their sound and accepted more people in but don't think there was ever the open invitation like Van Halen was throwing out. Whatever it is, two highly gifted bands that gave us some great albums with vastly different aesthetics and merits.
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
Van Halen aren't my fave either, I'd go with Aerosmith. If you're a rock band in the US, Areosmith has been influential on you. If you're a two guitar band, Aerosmith has been hugely influential, even if it's been filtered through a generation of bands. Much in the same way Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, John Lee Hooker and few others have been hugely influential on rock still to this day.MattA75 wrote:I just think that on this board in particular, you're in for a hard row to hoe with anything Van Halensurfndestroy wrote:It's interesting learning what people use as their criteria and what they deem as influential.
Van Halen versus R.E.M., it's a little like Risky Business versus Breakfast Club. One is throwing a big party and inviting you in and wants you to participate in their lifestyle. The other is about looking inward and accepting that alt/geek in you. Van Halen promoted a lifestyle and inviting people to their party. R.E.M. were more like shephards (at first at least) that attracted like minded individuals who accepted and appreciated that part within themselves that was attracted to R.E.M.'s music. It was alternative and wasn't looking to invite those from outside that club in. They slowly expanded their sound and accepted more people in but don't think there was ever the open invitation like Van Halen was throwing out. Whatever it is, two highly gifted bands that gave us some great albums with vastly different aesthetics and merits.
Think I’m going to try being kind to everyone a chance.
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
That wasn't really my point. So long as you're committed to the style, I don't think it's terribly difficult to sound like Van Halen. This is evidenced by the legion of '80's hard-rock bands who...sound like Van Halen. R.E.M. has the paradoxical distinction of being both a massively influential entity and a band that sounds like no one else. I'll concede that Roth and co. have probably had the greater commercial impact, but that strikes me as suspicious criteria for judging how good a band is and how much their music has mattered on an artistic level. It seems like, by your logic, Nickelback would be considered a Great (capital g) band, and that kind of makes my brain hurt.surfndestroy wrote:I fully agree that on artistic merit R.E.M. is the better band but I think it's a copout to say they are as influential but the influence just can't be seen.Blaine Ryan wrote:R.E.M.'s influence has been as widespread as any rock band's of the last 30 years, though I don't think it's necessarily always discernible. They didn't invent jangle-pop (or however you want to classify it) but they certainly popularized it, and there have been hundreds of bands who have co-opted the style from them since. This is still going on in today's indie-rock scene--Real Estate's self-titled and Days albums are two examples, off the top of my head. Hell, I liked The Decemberists' The King is Dead largely because it sounded like R.E.M. (at times, that is), which according to Colin Meloy--and considering Peter Buck guests on the record--isn't a coincidence. And Stephen Malkmus dedicated an entire song to how the band has impacted him (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0DvVYwXqFEE).
Their influence in populist circles has been just as vast. Groups like Counting Crows, U2, Coldplay, Nirvana, and, yes, Pearl Jam have cited the band's effect on them. Again, you couldn't necessarily deduce this from the music these bands make, at least not all of the time, but I think that largely has to do with how difficult it is to create a genuine facsimile of the R.E.M. sound. Regardless of which era of their career you're talking about, nobody has ever nor will ever sound like R.E.M. beyond a superficial resemblance, just as nobody will ever sound like the Beatles beyond a superficial resemblance, and in my mind that's far more indicative of greatness than selling 95 million albums or the fact that Eddie Van Halen is your guitarist.
I think just alone on having two 10x platinum albums that VH's infleunce is going to be greater. That's twice that they pretty much captured the public's focus and imagination. At that level of saturation their influence is going far beyond just rock audiences and cross-pollinating into multiple genres for a generation to come. It becomes part of the DNA of music and influences pretty much everything after, acknowledged or not. Even if the influence on U2 is the Edge saying, well I can't do that so I'll go in another direction.
On a different note, surprised I haven't seen The Beastie Boys be mentioned.
Ultimately, I just think Van Halen and Aerosmith are terrible bands who have spawned equally terrible niche aesthetics. I realize this is completely subjective, but I shudder to think what it says about our culture if America's greatest musical accomplishment truly is the dudes who wrote "Hot for Teacher."
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MattA75
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
I don't think anyone is saying that commercial success automatically equates to how good your band is, but to pretend like commercial success doesn't matter at all when having a discussion about the greatest rock band is just sort of silly...then again I just think the general attitude towards the Aerosmiths and Van Halens on this board are sort of over the top negative anyway...like there's no room for a fun rock band that knows how to put on a show and write a catchy tune about getting laid or partying or whatever...just strikes me as being full of pretension...life doesn't have to be so serious all the time, and neither does musicBlaine Ryan wrote:That wasn't really my point. So long as you're committed to the style, I don't think it's terribly difficult to sound like Van Halen. This is evidenced by the legion of '80's hard-rock bands who...sound like Van Halen. R.E.M. has the paradoxical distinction of being both a massively influential entity and a band that sounds like no one else. I'll concede that Roth and co. have probably had the greater commercial impact, but that strikes me as suspicious criteria for judging how good a band is and how much their music has mattered on an artistic level. It seems like, by your logic, Nickelback would be considered a Great (capital g) band, and that kind of makes my brain hurt.surfndestroy wrote:I fully agree that on artistic merit R.E.M. is the better band but I think it's a copout to say they are as influential but the influence just can't be seen.Blaine Ryan wrote:R.E.M.'s influence has been as widespread as any rock band's of the last 30 years, though I don't think it's necessarily always discernible. They didn't invent jangle-pop (or however you want to classify it) but they certainly popularized it, and there have been hundreds of bands who have co-opted the style from them since. This is still going on in today's indie-rock scene--Real Estate's self-titled and Days albums are two examples, off the top of my head. Hell, I liked The Decemberists' The King is Dead largely because it sounded like R.E.M. (at times, that is), which according to Colin Meloy--and considering Peter Buck guests on the record--isn't a coincidence. And Stephen Malkmus dedicated an entire song to how the band has impacted him (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0DvVYwXqFEE).
Their influence in populist circles has been just as vast. Groups like Counting Crows, U2, Coldplay, Nirvana, and, yes, Pearl Jam have cited the band's effect on them. Again, you couldn't necessarily deduce this from the music these bands make, at least not all of the time, but I think that largely has to do with how difficult it is to create a genuine facsimile of the R.E.M. sound. Regardless of which era of their career you're talking about, nobody has ever nor will ever sound like R.E.M. beyond a superficial resemblance, just as nobody will ever sound like the Beatles beyond a superficial resemblance, and in my mind that's far more indicative of greatness than selling 95 million albums or the fact that Eddie Van Halen is your guitarist.
I think just alone on having two 10x platinum albums that VH's infleunce is going to be greater. That's twice that they pretty much captured the public's focus and imagination. At that level of saturation their influence is going far beyond just rock audiences and cross-pollinating into multiple genres for a generation to come. It becomes part of the DNA of music and influences pretty much everything after, acknowledged or not. Even if the influence on U2 is the Edge saying, well I can't do that so I'll go in another direction.
On a different note, surprised I haven't seen The Beastie Boys be mentioned.
Ultimately, I just think Van Halen and Aerosmith are terrible bands who have spawned equally terrible niche aesthetics. I realize this is completely subjective, but I shudder to think what it says about our culture if America's greatest musical accomplishment truly is the dudes who wrote "Hot for Teacher."
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
The Beastie Boys aren't rock and roll to me, as much as I love them. ZZ Top is completely irrelevant now and KISS is fucking terrible. KISS came to mind but man...they're just terrible. I know they were influential in their day but Aerosmith did it better in every single way.surfndestroy wrote:If you're a guitarist, there is before and after Eddie Van Halen and Van Halen l. I can't imagine being much more influential than that.matt reeder wrote:That is taking into account influence, longevity and output. Van Halen probably belongs but they only released 2 albums that I think are classics. I discounted Guns & Roses because they only released 1 classic album and half of another.
Same could be said for Appetite For Destruction. That album changed the industry for a decade. I do not think that Nirvana and/or grunge would have had the popularity they did without GnR paving the way sonically and bringing raw guitars to the public domain again.
I think Beastie Boys should be included on your list. ZZ Top should consider some mention, and your list is definitely missing KISS. I dislike them but I can't deny them their due.
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
absurdmatt reeder wrote:The Beastie Boys aren't rock and roll to me
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
ZZ Top is still a functioning, recording and touring band. 40 plus year career with the same three members the whole time. Over 25 million sales in the US, one 10 million+ selling album, 4 more platinum+ albums and 7 top 40 singles. They basically wrote the book on making videos. I'm not sure how they can be dismissed as irrelevant now.matt reeder wrote:ZZ Top is completely irrelevant now.
Think I’m going to try being kind to everyone a chance.
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
ZZ tops first 5 or 6 albums before they hit it big are very good..basically anything before eliminatorsurfndestroy wrote:ZZ Top is still a functioning, recording and touring band. 40 plus year career with the same three members the whole time. Over 25 million sales in the US, one 10 million+ selling album, 4 more platinum+ albums and 7 top 40 singles. They basically wrote the book on making videos. I'm not sure how they can be dismissed as irrelevant now.matt reeder wrote:ZZ Top is completely irrelevant now.
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
That's exactly how I feel about R.E.M.doug rr wrote:ZZ tops first 5 or 6 albums before they hit it big are very good..basically anything before eliminatorsurfndestroy wrote:ZZ Top is still a functioning, recording and touring band. 40 plus year career with the same three members the whole time. Over 25 million sales in the US, one 10 million+ selling album, 4 more platinum+ albums and 7 top 40 singles. They basically wrote the book on making videos. I'm not sure how they can be dismissed as irrelevant now.matt reeder wrote:ZZ Top is completely irrelevant now.
Think I’m going to try being kind to everyone a chance.
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
Given that the vast majority of guitar players I've met can't shut up about Van Halen, I'd say they are massively influential. Maybe not the best influence, but influence is influence.
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
Eh. I always classified them as hip-hop. They're somewhere in between.cutuphalfdead wrote:absurdmatt reeder wrote:The Beastie Boys aren't rock and roll to me
Anyway, isn't this a thread about REM?
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
There's no one left to take the lead,matt reeder wrote:Eh. I always classified them as hip-hop. They're somewhere in between.cutuphalfdead wrote:absurdmatt reeder wrote:The Beastie Boys aren't rock and roll to me
Anyway, isn't this a thread about REM?
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
I was just going to make an Air Supply joke, but it turns out they're Australian. Huh.
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
Rock & Roll has always been about blurring genres.matt reeder wrote:Eh. I always classified them as hip-hop. They're somewhere in between.cutuphalfdead wrote:absurdmatt reeder wrote:The Beastie Boys aren't rock and roll to me
Anyway, isn't this a thread about REM?
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
I took the Hagar years seriously. 5150 rules.
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
oh so you were the onebada wrote:I took the Hagar years seriously. 5150 rules.
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Re: How The West Was Won And Where It Got Us: An REM Thread
only on RM can a thread about REM turn into a Van Halen / Kiss shitfest
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