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Sherbet Head wrote:I watched a quick clip of him reacting to the album in real time, on a live-stream while texting people and chatting to followers between each track. Clearly the optimum listening experience that BoC intended.
Widmerpool wrote:It is already below 4... but I wouldn't take any RateYourMusic's average ratings too seriously, a site renowned for its fitful and extremely biased activity which translates itself to bloated and outrageous and overall unfair scores. Some of them stink to high heaven whereas others feel suspiciously high, more often than not the byproduct of vested interests and echo chambers. What bugs me isn't the system's shortcomings but the filtering aspect, the fact that an increasing number of so-called music fans treats their average score as oracular of a given album's quality and only then is tempted to listen to it in earnest, much like how Metacritic operates with other media.
So, yeah. RYM. Useful enough for discovering purposes and little else.
akirako wrote:for instance, classifying P-Model's early albums, with their extremely bitter, political, lyrics, as whimsical, quirky, polka-dot Zolo fare seems very weird to me
Gazebo4 wrote:Sherbet Head wrote:I watched a quick clip of him reacting to the album in real time, on a live-stream while texting people and chatting to followers between each track. Clearly the optimum listening experience that BoC intended.
Haha have not seen the review but I saw this with some other first listen reviews. Just shows that a lot of people don't really listen. Their attention is not fully present and for me that completely invalidates anything people will say about it. Might sound a bit harsh but I cba to listen to people that don't really listen.
boredoms wrote:These "music nerds" (as opposed to actual critics) seem to regard their profession as akin to Pokemon - "gotta catch 'em all." It's all about meaningless statistics, about cateloging and rating. And so all they care about is being completionists, in being able to say "yes I've listened to every single song Bob Dylan has released, and here's how I rate them all on a scale of 1 to 10!"
You see this attitude a lot browsing RYM (a very useful site but one with limitations). But you shouldn't see it as one of the guiding principles of a professional music critic, let alone potentially the most well-known one on the internet today like Fantano. And yet, alas... (Another issue with such people is the creeping influence of poptimism, of "let people enjoy things!" culture, where Beyonce and Taylor Swift are just as meaningful as Dylan and Bowie, where Charli XCX is just as great an artist as any other).
All in all, it's a sad state of affairs, and the result is that music criticism as it used to exist is essentially dead. In its place we have people who will say anything for views and clicks, who will pan an album just to get those views. So it's not just that Fantano gave Inferno a 6 after listening to it half-heartedly while multi-multi-tasking. It's that the whole system of YouTuber music criticism is a joke, and he just happens to be the main clown.
boredoms wrote:I just don't see the appeal of Fantano; he isn't a very insightful music critic at all. He doesn't have some kind of fresh angle or real-life experience that would give his takes a special edge. But is he funny? No. Is he charismatic or charming or attractive? No... So, uh, yeah, I remain baffled that there are people out there who hold his opinion in such high esteem that RYM scores will often instantly go down or up if he pans or praises a certain album. Now THAT's cult mentality stuff right there.
It's a shame; music criticism used to be a real thing. We used to have Lester Bangs, or Robert Christgau (still around admittedly but not nearly as influential), or Charles Shaar Murray or Ian MacDonald (my favorite - check out his incredible Beatles book, Revolution In the Head, if you haven't already). What the best critics often did was place a certain record or band in its proper context -- it wasn't just about the music itself, not only that anyway. There was also the sociopolitical climate, the circumstances of how/when a record was made, etc. And when it came to the music, these critics often knew their stuff -- they knew music theory, they knew basic terms like "middle eight," they were eloquent and well-studied and not just music "nerds" who sit in a room and go through an artist's discography while distractedly chatting with 100 different people on some stream. These "music nerds" (as opposed to actual critics) seem to regard their profession as akin to Pokemon - "gotta catch 'em all." It's all about meaningless statistics, about cateloging and rating. And so all they care about is being completionists, in being able to say "yes I've listened to every single song Bob Dylan has released, and here's how I rate them all on a scale of 1 to 10!"
You see this attitude a lot browsing RYM (a very useful site but one with limitations). But you shouldn't see it as one of the guiding principles of a professional music critic, let alone potentially the most well-known one on the internet today like Fantano. And yet, alas... (Another issue with such people is the creeping influence of poptimism, of "let people enjoy things!" culture, where Beyonce and Taylor Swift are just as meaningful as Dylan and Bowie, where Charli XCX is just as great an artist as any other).
All in all, it's a sad state of affairs, and the result is that music criticism as it used to exist is essentially dead. In its place we have people who will say anything for views and clicks, who will pan an album just to get those views. So it's not just that Fantano gave Inferno a 6 after listening to it half-heartedly while multi-multi-tasking. It's that the whole system of YouTuber music criticism is a joke, and he just happens to be the main clown.
boredoms wrote:These "music nerds" (as opposed to actual critics) seem to regard their profession as akin to Pokemon - "gotta catch 'em all."
Den wrote:Reddit exemplifies “the internet is evil, wake up.”
Den wrote:Reddit exemplifies “the internet is evil, wake up.”
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