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Post by mintyjackhole on Aug 22, 2019 1:14:53 GMT
forums.stevehoffman.tv/threads/when-will-popular-music-move-away-from-working-class-urban-influences.872231/Gill-Man "It seems popular music has been very strongly influenced musically and culturally by the urban working class. It has even influenced country. When do we think we will see popular music shift away from that? I’m not talking rock vs pop or the prominence of certain genres over another. These musical and cultural influences have found their way into all genres. At some point that should be expected to shift but when?" People question what he is on about. So Gill-Man clarifies. He doesn't like people singing like darkies. "It seems like every genre has been influenced at least in part by R&B styled vocals, production, etc for example." People explain the influence has always been there. You can tell you are indeed a stupid racist when Gnrat dunks on you. But Gill-Man persists in his quest for good, uh... middle class music. Gill-Man: "It may have been there a bit but there was still a lot of the early recorded music without it. As years went by it there was plenty of popular recorded music without it. Now it has found its way into every genre at the same time at various degrees. It’s harder to find popular new music without it." Oops... thread is already gone, but Synthfreak got in the last punchline saying he could recommend a ton of current music unsullied by urban working class influences. I'm sure he can.
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Post by AnalogRearEnd on Aug 22, 2019 2:49:26 GMT
That's not a dog whistle, that's a fog horn.
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Post by mintyjackhole on Aug 22, 2019 2:56:43 GMT
That's not a dog whistle, that's a fog horn. It was developing as I was writing the post, and I didn't change the initial title. Thread didn't even last a full page.
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Post by FabGear Prophylactic on Aug 22, 2019 3:34:38 GMT
I do realize this asshole means "when will white people take over again as God and Dick Clark intended"; but let me take him seriously for a moment:
The fucking dumbass in question hasn't noticed the de-population of most rural areas of N. America. It's true here in s-w Ontario and presumably elsewhere, too. The 250-acre subsistence family farm of 1965 is today's 1500-acre+ 'agribusiness'. If he could do the math arithmetic he'd see the reduced possibility for a *non-urban* market to bring forth the next "Singing Brakeman" or whatever-the-fuck he's looking for. And it's not as if the displaced poor end up in nearby one-horse towns -- within a generation or two, they're off to the city to look for, at least, some modicum of social welfare/benefits, if not an actual paying job. (Lots of little ghost towns/villages where i grew up. Again, I reckon that's true in Illinois, and Oklahoma, etc.)
Sorry for the tl;dr. It's just that, nowadays, these alt-right white supremacist scum posit themselves as the "Friend of the People" when they don't know anything and care even less about the rural poor they allegedly *support*. I hate hate hate to see them getting away with it, even in an example as trivial as this.
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Post by Holly Diver on Aug 22, 2019 12:44:15 GMT
forums.stevehoffman.tv/threads/when-will-popular-music-move-away-from-working-class-urban-influences.872231/Gill-Man "It seems popular music has been very strongly influenced musically and culturally by the urban working class. It has even influenced country. When do we think we will see popular music shift away from that? I’m not talking rock vs pop or the prominence of certain genres over another. These musical and cultural influences have found their way into all genres. At some point that should be expected to shift but when?" People question what he is on about. So Gill-Man clarifies. He doesn't like people singing like darkies. "It seems like every genre has been influenced at least in part by R&B styled vocals, production, etc for example." People explain the influence has always been there. You can tell you are indeed a stupid racist when Gnrat dunks on you. But Gill-Man persists in his quest for good, uh... middle class music. Gill-Man: "It may have been there a bit but there was still a lot of the early recorded music without it. As years went by it there was plenty of popular recorded music without it. Now it has found its way into every genre at the same time at various degrees. It’s harder to find popular new music without it." Oops... thread is already gone, but Synthfreak got in the last punchline saying he could recommend a ton of current music unsullied by urban working class influences. I'm sure he can. Synthfreek was replying to Gnart who claimed that neither punk rock nor new wave music showed any influence from the darkies.
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Post by mintyjackhole on Aug 22, 2019 12:59:57 GMT
forums.stevehoffman.tv/threads/when-will-popular-music-move-away-from-working-class-urban-influences.872231/Gill-Man "It seems popular music has been very strongly influenced musically and culturally by the urban working class. It has even influenced country. When do we think we will see popular music shift away from that? I’m not talking rock vs pop or the prominence of certain genres over another. These musical and cultural influences have found their way into all genres. At some point that should be expected to shift but when?" People question what he is on about. So Gill-Man clarifies. He doesn't like people singing like darkies. "It seems like every genre has been influenced at least in part by R&B styled vocals, production, etc for example." People explain the influence has always been there. You can tell you are indeed a stupid racist when Gnrat dunks on you. But Gill-Man persists in his quest for good, uh... middle class music. Gill-Man: "It may have been there a bit but there was still a lot of the early recorded music without it. As years went by it there was plenty of popular recorded music without it. Now it has found its way into every genre at the same time at various degrees. It’s harder to find popular new music without it." Oops... thread is already gone, but Synthfreak got in the last punchline saying he could recommend a ton of current music unsullied by urban working class influences. I'm sure he can. Synthfreek was replying tto Gnart who claimed that neither punk rock nor new wave music showed any influence from the darkies. Oh... in that case, erm... well done Synthfreak!
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Post by bad gateway on Aug 22, 2019 19:11:20 GMT
Did Brad manage to get in a plug for John Ashcroft?
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Post by Ginuwine on Aug 24, 2019 19:24:59 GMT
GORTED
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bradman
Better than Steve
Posts: 5,116
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Post by bradman on Aug 24, 2019 19:41:18 GMT
*POOF*
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Post by Brick Wall on Aug 25, 2019 13:27:48 GMT
Did anyone manage to point out (before the thread was scrubbed) that their rock & roll heroes covered music by the urban working class Negrahs? Money, Twist and Shout, Roll Over Beethoven, Anna (Go to Him), Please Mister Postman, You Really Got a Hold on Me, DipSHiTEs.
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Post by hoffa_nagila on Aug 25, 2019 14:35:49 GMT
Did anyone manage to point out (before the thread was scrubbed) that their rock & roll heroes covered music by the urban working class Negrahs? Money, Twist and Shout, Roll Over Beethoven, Anna (Go to Him), Please Mister Postman, You Really Got a Hold on Me, DipSHiTEs. That's different though. Nothing wrong with hearing those songs after they've been sanitized and whitified. Just so long as the record sections are segregated.
Speaking of which, how many of your top fifty favorite artists are black?
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Post by mintyjackhole on Aug 25, 2019 16:43:49 GMT
I don't know if I have 50, but off the top of my head: 1. Black Sabbath 2. Cilla Black 3. The Black Keys 4. Jack Black
Does Johnny Cash count? He was known as The Man in Black. If so, he's #1!
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Felonious Spunk
Grant
Digitals downstairs to push the anal logs upstairs
Posts: 1,192
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Post by Felonious Spunk on Aug 25, 2019 17:01:43 GMT
I don't know if I have 50, but off the top of my head: 1. Black Sabbath 2. Cilla Black 3. The Black Keys 4. Jack Black Does Johnny Cash count? He was known as The Man in Black. If so, he's #1! No Black Oak Arkansas, no sale!
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Post by Brick Wall on Aug 25, 2019 18:13:32 GMT
Fookin' fook, fookers!
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Post by FabGear Prophylactic on Aug 30, 2019 0:49:31 GMT
Hey! It's Black Monk Time!!!
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