Bit of a thought-bubble on a Tuesday lunchtime...
For want of a better way to phrase this, here's an example:
As a horror fan, I realised I'd never actually read any Stephen King until recently.
Why? Well here's an analogy: He's the Bob Marley of horror. He is pretty much considered the greatest in his field.
And yet there's always been something so obvious and prevalent about him that I'd somehow ended up avoiding his work in favour of authors like Thomas Ligotti, Clive Barker, Paul Tremblay, and countless other renowned but lesser-celebrated authors.
It's only recently that I told myself how ridiculous it was that I'd spent so long not reading King. So I got a copy of Pet Sematary, and lo and behold it's fantastic! Why should I be surprised?
And I think the Bob Marley analogy works: I've spent the last 25 years immersed in reggae and Caribbean music. And as a fan of Jamaican music, when it comes to Bob Marley, have I listened to all his albums? Do I even know much about his work? No. I mean, I've absorbed the whole of Legend through pure osmosis, and at one point or another I think I've heard Exodus and Natty Dread, but somehow when it comes to the King of Reggae, this absolute titan, I know comparatively little.
And why is that? When I put on a Bob Marley record, I'm nonetheless blown away by the quality of the music. So why am I opting to listen to lesser-known singers like Horace Andy or Johnny Osbourne instead of the guy whos' largely considered the best?
Likely answer: Snobbery. Or at least, it's the feeling that if an artist or author is the biggest selling and most critically acclaimed in their fields, then the rule must be that their oeuvre must somehow be dissipated through the lens of commerciality: a watered-down or defanged version of the "real thing".
It happens a lot elsewhere: "True" rock fans commonly tend to dismiss such major-selling acts as Foo Fighters, Nickelback, Coldplay etc, for a reason: They're making bops for mainstreamers and part-timers - not for the true afficionados etc...
So what other artists, authors, bands etc could be said to come under the Stephen King / Bob Marley category of being at once the most commonly-regarded example in their field, but also live-up to those stakes?
― DLC Soundsystem (dog latin), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 11:17 (one week ago)
There is an entire list of obvious names here: Aretha Franklin, Stevie Wonder, James Brown, Miles Davis, Ella Fitzgerald, The Beatles, The Beach Boys, Led Zepplin, Marvin Gaye, Chuck Berry… pick pretty much any well-known legacy artist who has really been enshrined in the pantheon and listen to them without your preconceived notions of what they are doing and by and large you will be astounded by them. It’s hard to imagine a world where they aren’t the default answer of many to “who is the greatest ___ of all-time” because that is what we’ve grown up with. Remove that and think about how wild it must have been to have these artists putting this music out there that strikes us as almost invisible because it’s so baked into the cultural fabric BEFORE they were the obvious choices.
― my favorite herbs are fennel and Drake (DJP), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 11:30 (one week ago)
Steven Spielberg
― Saxophone Of Futility (Michael B), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 11:30 (one week ago)
As I get older, this is one thing that irritates me about the “new is always better” mindset; I strongly disagree with the idea that you get diminishing returns from listening to something you already know. In fact, deeply engaging with things you already know sometimes highlights facets of the the performance or arrangement that deepen your understanding of the music. I feel music as a general thing we invite into our lives is important enough that we should strive to approach it with a “fresh ears” mindset regardless of how many times we’ve heard it before.
― my favorite herbs are fennel and Drake (DJP), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 11:37 (one week ago)
sondheim
― ivy., Tuesday, 29 April 2025 11:43 (one week ago)
I think Spielberg is a good answer to what I'm thinking here. Unlike, say, Stanley Kubrick, his commerciality often prevents him from being rated as one of the all-time great movie directors by "serious" cinema fans. It would almost be like a music critic saying The Beatles are their favourite band: It might be true, but do you want people to think you're that basic?
― DLC Soundsystem (dog latin), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 11:44 (one week ago)
Shakespeare?
― Kung Fu Gift Shop (Boring, Maryland), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 12:01 (one week ago)
Works for sport too, by the way.
― Blake the Messenger (Tom D.), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 12:09 (one week ago)
I don't agree that King is the best in his field at all! But I get what you're going for and will concede that he is an important figure and it sort of works (in which case Foo Fighters, Nickleback and Coldplay don't work at all - I don't know that many people would argue they're the best at what they do).
Shakespeare works despite me not really liking much of his oeuvre, got to allow that. Maybe Agatha Christie for mystery novels?
― emil.y, Tuesday, 29 April 2025 13:04 (one week ago)
*Nickelback, I do apologise.
As to why, yes, there's definitely snobbery at play. There's also saturation - you feel like you know it already so you don't have to spend as much time on it.
― emil.y, Tuesday, 29 April 2025 13:07 (one week ago)
The thing about Nickelback is that “How You Remind Me” is great and I think that song has buoyed the rest of their career
― my favorite herbs are fennel and Drake (DJP), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 13:17 (one week ago)
Stevie Wonder was the first that comes to mind
was also thinking in terms of guitar players, Eddie Van Halen?
― frogbs, Tuesday, 29 April 2025 13:29 (one week ago)
I have definitely argued that the "big names" in Krautrock are in fact the best Krautrock acts - you're much better off listening to Can or Faust than Wallenstein or Emtidi, but I'm not sure that it's quite the same thing as the initial thread premise. Maybe a bit too micro-level, or that I'm not arguing for a single act's supremacy? Also the fact that I insist that La Düsseldorf are my favourites might fuck up the argument... yeah, probably doesn't work.
― emil.y, Tuesday, 29 April 2025 13:46 (one week ago)
... no, I almost made the exact same post! I've been saying it for years, including on ILM.
― Blake the Messenger (Tom D.), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 13:50 (one week ago)
No, that's what I mean - the latter bunch are more common examples of multi-million selling artists who are absolutely middle-of-the-road and most serious people wouldn't consider the best. Whereas I don't think it would be controversial to call Stephen King one of the best horror writers of all time: even if you might personally prefer other people, it would be weird to leave him off of a top ten or even top five list.
― DLC Soundsystem (dog latin), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 14:19 (one week ago)
There's also saturation - you feel like you know it already so you don't have to spend as much time on it.
Yeah exactly. I didn't watch Alien for so many years because I'd seen so many parodies and pastiches over the years, "Yeah I know what happens, chestbursters, people trapped in webbed ziplocks etc", but until I actually sat down and watched it I just had no idea what a tremendous film it was.
Similarly, while I did grow up listening to Nirvana a lot, their legacy became so all-encompassing, and the sheer amount of times Unplugged got wheeled out following Kurt's death - that I would often forget how much they ROCKED! If I'm going to listen to music from that era these days, I'm much more likely to listen to Alice In Chains, Soundgarden, Screaming Trees or whatever because, well, do I need to listen to Nevermind again? But then I do listen to Nirvana and I'm kind of blown away by how great it sounds
― DLC Soundsystem (dog latin), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 14:25 (one week ago)
I have definitely argued that the "big names" in Krautrock are in fact the best Krautrock acts - you're much better off listening to Can or Faust than Wallenstein or Emtidi, but I'm not sure that it's quite the same thing as the initial thread premise. Maybe a bit too micro-level, or that I'm not arguing for a single act's supremacy? Also the fact that I insist that La Düsseldorf are my favourites might fuck up the argument... yeah, probably doesn't work.― emil.y, Tuesday, 29 April 2025 14:46 (thirty-eight minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
― emil.y, Tuesday, 29 April 2025 14:46 (thirty-eight minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
I think you're onto that here - like, you can dig deeper if you love that sound, but it would take a special kind of contrarian to tell someone who's interested in Krautrock not to listen to Can.
― DLC Soundsystem (dog latin), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 14:27 (one week ago)
Like, with the Bob Marley thing, I'm still much more likely to listen to, and recommend, other reggae music. But there is something undeniable and even transcendent about his music that sets him apart and arguably above the genre his associated genre. There's a reason he's revered, and it's not because it's necessarily a sop to mainstream audiences (there are definite rock influences in some of his music, but it doesn't feel watered down)
― DLC Soundsystem (dog latin), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 14:31 (one week ago)
Eno's ambient series
― H.P, Tuesday, 29 April 2025 14:34 (one week ago)
(xps) Years ago I dug very deep and came to the conclusion that I never want to listen to another crummy prog/jazz rock outfit, even if they do come from Baden-Wurttemberg.
― Blake the Messenger (Tom D.), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 14:36 (one week ago)
the latter bunch are more common examples of multi-million selling artists who are absolutely middle-of-the-road and most serious people wouldn't consider the best. Whereas I don't think it would be controversial to call Stephen King one of the best horror writers of all time: even if you might personally prefer other people, it would be weird to leave him off of a top ten
Oh, ha, sorry for misreading that. My brain is weird today. I can agree with all of this.
― emil.y, Tuesday, 29 April 2025 14:37 (one week ago)
Aretha Franklin, Stevie Wonder, James Brown, Miles Davis, Ella Fitzgerald, The Beatles, The Beach Boys, Led Zeppelin, Marvin Gaye, Chuck Berry
It's hard for me to imagine any afficionado of the genres these acts represent suggesting a potential listener "skip" them...except I can imagine some real psychedelic snob suggesting Mutantes or something over the Beatles. I'm sure there are jazz, R&B, rock fans who wouldn't name these acts as their favourites, but in most cases they would be doing that from a position of (over-)familiarity.
― Halfway there but for you, Tuesday, 29 April 2025 14:46 (one week ago)
― my favorite herbs are fennel and Drake (DJP), Tuesday, April 29, 2025 7:37 AM (three hours ago) bookmarkflaglink
DJP I love youThis is basically my credo for music listening
― duolingo ate my baby (Jon not Jon), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 14:50 (one week ago)
Wasn't the whole thing with Marley not so much about the quality of the music but that when international fame began he stopped paying attention to what was going on in Jamaica and as such his records felt a bit "behind", like if bands were still doing British Invasion style pop in 1968?
― a ZX spectrum is haunting Europe (Daniel_Rf), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 14:50 (one week ago)
Yeah I do feel that Bob Marley is a bit unadventurous, when you think about everything else that went on with reggae in the 70s, he instead went in this roots singer songwriter direction, which, yes, often made for great music, but "the best" seems like a stretch.
― zoloft keeps liftin' me (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 15:00 (one week ago)
xxp That said, even on ILM, a lot of people like to snipe on The Beatles. I can imagine a situation where, if asked the question "Who was the best band of the 60s", answering "The Beatles" would elicit a few groans. But just because someone might prefer The Byrds or Os Mutantes doesn't really mean The Beatles weren't worthy of their place as simultaneously a huge-selling act and objectively one of the best acts of their time.
On the other hand, Miles Davis is unquestionably one of the greatest jazz artists of all time, if not the greatest. But in terms of commerciality he is rivalled by people like Norah Jones and Kenny G: The former is well-regarded in certain ways but not usually held up as a ne plus ultra example of great jazz. The latter is considered a bit of a punchline, akin to Thomas Kinkade as an artist
― DLC Soundsystem (dog latin), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 15:01 (one week ago)
A few years ago I dove deep into Louis Armstrong's catalog after only knowing "What A Wonderful World" and his 1920s recordings with the Hot Five and Hot Seven. I was amazed by the records he made in the 1950s. Albums like Satch Plays Fats and Louis Armstrong Plays W.C. Handy are some of the greatest music you'll ever hear in your life. And while it's common knowledge that he was an incredible trumpet player, when you actually listen, you can't believe what he's doing. Flawless execution, impeccable melodic sense, and raw power. Armstrong was a Bach-level composer in terms of how his solos fit together, and he was doing it on the fly. Just incredible. And the live recordings from the mid-50s are as good as the studio albums, often even better.
― Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 15:05 (one week ago)
People might call it "basic" if a reggae or jazz critic said their favourite record was Legend or Kind of Blue, but less so if they said "the early Wailers singles" or Miles Smiles, etc.
― Halfway there but for you, Tuesday, 29 April 2025 15:05 (one week ago)
It's much easier now to start your discovery of a genre with obscure artists without that having been a conscious decision, partic if you're delving into less well known stuff - like if I was getting into Tropicália now there's artists that are absolute huge million sellers (Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil), artists that are not as well known but have a high profile (Marcos Valle, Hermeto Pascoal) and total obscurities like Spectrum, and all these would be theoretically equally easy to get on streaming or download.
― a ZX spectrum is haunting Europe (Daniel_Rf), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 15:19 (one week ago)
I can imagine a situation where, if asked the question "Who was the best band of the 60s", answering "The Beatles" would elicit a few groans.
Not really that hard to imagine tbh.
― Blake the Messenger (Tom D.), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 15:26 (one week ago)
bad bunny is by far the most popular musica urbano artist of the past decade or so and probably also the best one, tho i am sure aficionados might disagree. nobody else from his generation (or previous generations, tbh) has his level of commercial success and critical acclaim
― gestures broadly at...everything (voodoo chili), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 15:35 (one week ago)
nobody else from his generation (or previous generations, tbh) has his level of commercial success and critical acclaim
Cynic that I am, I think the second followed the first. "Oh wow, this guy rapping and singing in a language none of us speak is selling a fuckton of records! We better start raving about him so people don't think we're out of touch."
― Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 15:47 (one week ago)
there are plenty of others who sell a lot of records and don't get that level of critical acclaim, simply because they are not as good
― gestures broadly at...everything (voodoo chili), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 15:57 (one week ago)
"Oh wow, this guy rapping and singing in a language none of us speak is selling a fuckton of records! We better start raving about him so people don't think we're out of touch."
― Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Tuesday, April 29, 2025 11:47 AM (ten minutes ago)
i think there is a seed of non-cynical truth in this statement insofar as journalists aim to cover stories/subjects that matter to the public, and i think a general music publication that turned a blind eye to the explosion of latin music would rightly be seen as out of touch, or at least derelict of duty. even putting the language barrier aside i find bad bunny's music inscrutable so i don't have much of an opinion on the merits of the critical acclaim but i do think this cynicism -- that white editors lavished praise on an artist for cool points -- actually misses the more interesting truth, which is that endeavors to diversify staffing across journalism publications led to latin music/pop culture journalists having an actual voice inside white editorial spaces for basically the first time, and because (for various reasons) these staffers tended to be young, a lot of authentic love and admiration for bad bunny was pushed to the forefront of latin music coverage. now, whether the white editors in question allowed such admiration to pass their desks w/o the same level of critical thinking they might apply to artists moreso in their wheelhouse i guess is an open question, but to construct a narrative about bad bunny's critical acclaim and not tie it to obvious efforts to diversify staffing and bylines is, to put it kindly, really missing the forest for the trees, and, perhaps less kindly, white-centric myopia that says more about the person making the argument than anything else
― slob wizard (J0rdan S.), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 16:22 (one week ago)
To me when the best also happens to be the most popular (and also someone whose best output is well in the past), that's kind of an indictment on the genre. King's Dark Tower series is well received, maybe even an essential King read, but you wouldn't call him the Bob Marley of Fantasy.It's a little disconcerting since I'd prefer reading horror to fantasy but to be honest can't remember ever reading a horror book that wasn't King.
― Philip Nunez, Tuesday, 29 April 2025 16:24 (one week ago)
No mention of Hendrix yet?
Someone like Ansel Adams, maybe?
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 29 April 2025 16:27 (one week ago)
Van Gogh might be a good example. Seeing his paintings at a museum is so compelling. But we’re all more likely to see poor resolution reproductions that he fades into the wallpaper. And he’s kind of universally popular so not the cool choice for fave artist
― that's not my post, Tuesday, 29 April 2025 16:27 (one week ago)
(I'm thinking of a lot of dorm art here, lol)
haven't seen any rappers mentioned ... biggie and tupac are perhaps the two most famous/iconic/revered etc names in the genre and if you polled 10 million people on the greatest rappers of all time they'd probably finish 1-2 in some order
― slob wizard (J0rdan S.), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 16:29 (one week ago)
endeavors to diversify staffing across journalism publications led to latin music/pop culture journalists having an actual voice inside white editorial spaces for basically the first time
This is true but not to the degree it should be — you're basically talking about one or two writers at Pitchfork and Rolling Stone. The overall landscape is still white and monolingual, and the assigning editors almost all are (Puja Patel at Pitchfork was a huge and very welcome exception, but she's gone now).
― Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 16:29 (one week ago)
Chaplin maybe?
― Blake the Messenger (Tom D.), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 16:30 (one week ago)
or to break it down even further if you polled people on the greatest new york and LA rappers of all time biggie and tupac would each finish no 1 and though there are many other great rappers from either city that one could reasonably argue are a bit better, nobody sane would say that you're wrong for putting those two at the top respectively
― slob wizard (J0rdan S.), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 16:30 (one week ago)
So is this also kind of a monoculture discussion?
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 29 April 2025 16:31 (one week ago)
you're basically talking about one or two writers at Pitchfork and Rolling Stone.
well sure but that's because there's like five music publications left that employ like 10 people full time so.....
― slob wizard (J0rdan S.), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 16:31 (one week ago)
Sergio Leone for spaghetti westerns. I’ve never known a serious spaghetti fan to disparage Leone, but such a person probably doesn’t spend that much time watching Leone simply because there are five Leone spaghettis and hundreds of non-Leone ones.
― Josefa, Tuesday, 29 April 2025 16:40 (one week ago)
bruce lee.
kind of thinking that answers to this question are basically whoever is on those posters of people playing pool in heaven.
― five six seven, eight nine ten, begin (map), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 16:43 (one week ago)
― slob wizard (J0rdan S.), Tuesday, April 29, 2025 11:29 AM (seventeen minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink
yeah but i guess the answer for "most commercially successful" rapper would prob be someone like eminem or drake
― gestures broadly at...everything (voodoo chili), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 16:47 (one week ago)
dr. dre would likely be in any layperson's list of top 3 or so rap producers of all-time and is probably the most commercially successful rap producer who didn't fully crossover to pure pop or r&b like timbaland or neptunes
― gestures broadly at...everything (voodoo chili), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 16:50 (one week ago)
xxp "playing pool in heaven" OTM
― DLC Soundsystem (dog latin), Tuesday, 29 April 2025 16:51 (one week ago)
dreadlights
― tuah dé danann (darraghmac), Wednesday, 30 April 2025 22:03 (six days ago)
When I was young two of the biggest pop stars in the world were Michael Jackson and Madonna. They were fantastic! They both had a run of classic pop singles and pretty decent albums as well. One of my earliest memories is the video of "Billie Jean", with the steps lighting up.
One thing that struck me was that there were plenty of other pop stars, and plenty of other pop stars who had been moulded by their record label to sound like other pop stars, but there was no-one quite like those two. You'd think there would have been floods of Michael Jackson clones in the 1980s, but there weren't.
Ditto Madonna. The closest "clone" was Cyndi Lauper, but she was really completely different and their paths never directly crossed. In the case of Michael Jackson you could say that he was so good at his job that making a clone would have been the pop equivalent of the Manhattan Project, but the major criticisms levelled at Madonna were her ordinary voice and simplistic songwriting. I realise this is a bit circular - "Madonna was the best at being Madonna" - but in both cases I can't think of another artist who scratched the same itch in the same way.
It must have felt odd to be a fan of either one of them at the time. It would have been like supporting oxygen or food. There's a kind of underdog element to being a fan which didn't work at all in their case. Imagine circa 1985 saying that your favourite musician was Michael Jackson. People would either think that you weren't interested in pop music at all or that you were plain. Although I note that the NME rated it as the fifth-best album of 1983 so presumably it wasn't pooh-poohed too much by early-80s hipsters.
I suppose the video game equivalent would be someone like Shigeru Miyamoto. Super Mario Bros was hugely popular, it was great fun, it looked good, it has aged well, widely cited as one of the best games of its year and all time. Saying that you're a fan of the Mario games feels too easy. But what's so bad about relaxing and letting the alien bodysnatchers take over your mind? What's so bad about being part of an immortal collective that isn't ruled by lust and anger?
― Ashley Pomeroy, Wednesday, 30 April 2025 22:04 (six days ago)
Imagine circa 1985 saying that your favourite musician was Michael Jackson. People would either think that you weren't interested in pop music at all or that you were plain.
By and large what actually happened is people said “me too!” and then everyone sang the chorus to “Beat It”
― my favorite herbs are fennel and Drake (DJP), Wednesday, 30 April 2025 22:09 (six days ago)
Merzbow
Heino
― llurk, Wednesday, 30 April 2025 22:20 (six days ago)
Maybe Metal Machine Music as example of pisstakes that are considered the best of the field?
― Philip Nunez, Wednesday, 30 April 2025 22:29 (six days ago)
Widening out the thesis to other restaurants/food, I guess what seems potentially wrong with the thesis to me is that its dangerously close to saying: "I had a McDonalds, after realised that I'd unconsciously avoiding it all these years, and you know what it was great! If you're in the mood for a fast hamburger and fries anywhere across the world - it's great. Is it snobbery that has been keeping me from eating at McDonalds all these years?".
Answer: Maybe, maybe not. There's also a factor that you desire variety and being surprised by new experiences.
― Bob Six, Wednesday, 30 April 2025 22:48 (six days ago)
― ian, Wednesday, 30 April 2025 22:56 (six days ago)
isa a merbow beef? pulse yr demon
Jimi Marshall Hendrix
― llurk, Wednesday, 30 April 2025 23:23 (six days ago)
Keith Haring seems like an artist who was devoted to confronting the violence and marginalization faced by LGBTQ+ individuals by presenting the public with cartoon/cutout artwork that many people initially saw as simplistic, but which became really iconic
It is interesting to read about his life
― Dan S, Wednesday, 30 April 2025 23:39 (six days ago)
The closest clones to Madonna in her early days were really Alisha with “Baby Talk” and Regina with “Baby Love.” Sorry for the history lesson. This was talked about back then.
― Josefa, Thursday, 1 May 2025 02:30 (five days ago)
Comics: Crumb for undergrounds, Tezuka for manga, Herge for BD, Kirby for superheroes, Schulz and Watterson for comic strips, Clowes and Ware for alt/indie.Obviously this can be broken down further. Gilbert Shelton in his prime was probably as popular as Crumb and Freak Bros, Wonder Warthog are still funny. The big names of shojo manga like Moto Hagio are best-sellers and considered the pinnacle of their field.In anime, Miyazaki.― gjoon1, Wednesday, 30 April 2025 00:27 (yesterday)
Obviously this can be broken down further. Gilbert Shelton in his prime was probably as popular as Crumb and Freak Bros, Wonder Warthog are still funny. The big names of shojo manga like Moto Hagio are best-sellers and considered the pinnacle of their field.
In anime, Miyazaki.
― gjoon1, Wednesday, 30 April 2025 00:27 (yesterday)
Obv. Walt Disney & Pixar, too.
And Maus really is a masterpiece.
― dinnerboat, Thursday, 1 May 2025 02:33 (five days ago)
I would like to suggest politely that dog latin stop speculating on why Black Americans like things unless he would like for me to start rudely suggesting he stop― my favorite herbs are fennel and Drake (DJP), Wednesday, 30 April 2025 18:49 (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink
― my favorite herbs are fennel and Drake (DJP), Wednesday, 30 April 2025 18:49 (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink
Apologies - it was a poorly thought-through post, and I regreted posting it after.
― DLC Soundsystem (dog latin), Thursday, 1 May 2025 08:56 (five days ago)
In fact this whole thread was thinly-conceived and should have been thought about a bit better before I posted it - more a "something I'm kicking about in my head but not really sure what it is" thought-bubble than something with a tight question around it. I'm glad we've done with it as we will though; some interesting stuff came out of it at least
― DLC Soundsystem (dog latin), Thursday, 1 May 2025 08:59 (five days ago)
Off - topic, but I just wanted to vent that I recently saw Dave Robinson, co-founder of Stiff records and music industry figure, having the incredible cheek to complain the he doesn’t get a royalty for the “Legend” album which he apparently compiled when he was briefly heading up Island Records in the early 80s.
― Bob Six, Thursday, 1 May 2025 12:41 (five days ago)
magine circa 1985 saying that your favourite musician was Michael Jackson. People would either think that you weren't interested in pop music at all or that you were plain.
This is bollocks -- unless you wrote a typo and meant "1995."
― the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 1 May 2025 12:50 (five days ago)
In the UK, at least, the biggest selling acts in 1985 included Band Aid, Dire Straits, Foreigner, Paul McCartney Frog Chorus and Shakin Stevens
― DLC Soundsystem (dog latin), Thursday, 1 May 2025 12:58 (five days ago)
Has anyone mentioned Michael Jordan as an example?
Someone asked a rhetorical question of a bunch of us the other day: who had a bigger impact on the world, Michael Jackson or Michael Jordan? Almost everyone said "Michael Jackson," but when asked, who would you rather be, everyone said "Michael Jordan."
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 1 May 2025 13:06 (five days ago)
But in 1985 was MJ on the outs critically in the UK?
― the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 1 May 2025 13:07 (five days ago)
Josh, I can't think of many celebrities I wouldn't rather be, dude had an objectively horrible life. I'd rather be Shakin' Stevens, even.
― a ZX spectrum is haunting Europe (Daniel_Rf), Thursday, 1 May 2025 13:10 (five days ago)
I can't speak for anywhere else in the world but Michael Jackson definitely had a exponentially bigger impact in the UK than Michael Jordan!
― Blake the Messenger (Tom D.), Thursday, 1 May 2025 13:27 (five days ago)
Do people wear Jordan gear there?
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 1 May 2025 13:30 (five days ago)
It exists! And people know who Michael Jordan is. And yeah, people wear a lot of sportswear, so they'll be wearing that. But basketball is still a relatively niche sport here, strictly speaking
― DLC Soundsystem (dog latin), Thursday, 1 May 2025 13:58 (five days ago)
It is a niche sport, not relatively a niche sport. He is definitely well known for a basketball player but he's not a household name or anything.
― Blake the Messenger (Tom D.), Thursday, 1 May 2025 14:14 (five days ago)
he isnt?
― tuah dé danann (darraghmac), Thursday, 1 May 2025 17:52 (five days ago)
I don't think so.
― Blake the Messenger (Tom D.), Thursday, 1 May 2025 17:52 (five days ago)
I wonder if he took that personally...
― Philip Nunez, Thursday, 1 May 2025 18:18 (five days ago)
Michael Jordan has got to be the most internationally known athlete in American sports though (football, baseball, basketball, hockey), it's probably not even particularly close
― frogbs, Thursday, 1 May 2025 18:21 (five days ago)
Oh no doubt about that.
― Blake the Messenger (Tom D.), Thursday, 1 May 2025 18:29 (five days ago)
https://static.wikia.nocookie.net/animations/images/5/55/Prostars_title_card.png/revision/latest?cb=20150926164706
I'm from the UK and I knew who Michael Jordan was because this early 90s animated series that featured him, Bo Jackson and Wayne Gretzky as superheroes, and later Space Jam.
(I also knew who Super Dave Osborne was because they made a Super Dave cartoon. It feels like the early 90s was a singular period where they would make kids cartoons based on anything, or maybe they still do but I'm just not part of the target demographic anymore?)
― Platinum Penguin Pavilion (soref), Thursday, 1 May 2025 18:31 (five days ago)
I'm amazed at how often I encounter Chicago Bulls gear around the world, and it sure isn't because of who is on the team these days.
― Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 1 May 2025 18:32 (five days ago)
That's fashion though surely?
― Blake the Messenger (Tom D.), Thursday, 1 May 2025 18:35 (five days ago)
Michael Jordan has got to be the most internationally known athlete in American sports
Over O.J. Simpson?
― Halfway there but for you, Thursday, 1 May 2025 18:39 (five days ago)
whenever I go to an NBA game there always seems to be several 90s throwback elements present. both on the jumbotron and with the music they play during breaks. they play a lot of 90s dance music that you basically dont hear anywhere else these days. always got the sense the NBA thought of the 90s as its 'golden era', which I'm pretty sure is directly related to that being the Jordan championship run. it doesn't really seem possible for an athelete to get that big here again
― frogbs, Thursday, 1 May 2025 18:40 (five days ago)
Living athletes, I assume, otherwise there's only one winner.
― Blake the Messenger (Tom D.), Thursday, 1 May 2025 18:42 (five days ago)
The pride of Chicago
https://i.imgur.com/ScI5k1G.png
― imperial frfr (Steve Shasta), Thursday, 1 May 2025 18:43 (five days ago)
"Is it snobbery that has been keeping me from eating at McDonalds all these years?"
I think there's a generational aspect. I'm old enough to remember when my town got its first McDonalds. It was a major event. It wasn't all that long ago that having a McDonalds was unusual. I learn from the BBC that there were only 100 restaurants in the UK in 1983 and that British people had never associated happiness with meals before. I remember my first taste of a Big Mac. The beautiful, indefinable taste of the sauce. The gherkins. I remember thinking that one day I would share this with the internet.
Well, dear readers. The time is now.
My point about Michael Jackson is that none of the "tribes" in my school would have admitted to liking him. The heavy metal fans weren't interested. The NME-reading hipsters ignored him completely. Non-aligned factions didn't have anything to say about pop music. Grown-ups rated proper musicians such as Bruce Springsteen and Dire Straits. It would be like saying that you like the colour blue or enjoy breathing. That goes without saying. I have the impression that the people who wrote the NME admired him but they were not teenage kids circa 1985.
That reminds me of something - it's the worst thing ever. It's a clip of the Brit Awards from 1985 where Frankie Goes to Hollywood won the "best newcomer" award, but for reasons known only unto himself Steve Wright decided to introduce the band with the least funny comedy routine of all time, including a falsetto Michael Jackson impersonation:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tXRcsxBsW7Y
― Ashley Pomeroy, Thursday, 1 May 2025 21:49 (five days ago)
That was the worst thing ever
― DLC Soundsystem (dog latin), Thursday, 1 May 2025 22:10 (five days ago)
Did you not know any Black people or women when you were a teenager
― my favorite herbs are fennel and Drake (DJP), Thursday, 1 May 2025 23:34 (five days ago)
British people had never associated happiness with meals before.
lol
― the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 1 May 2025 23:35 (five days ago)
Elite opinion:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NYDhjuq08Fg
Not knowing any black people when you're a teenager is the norm in most of the UK tbf.
― Blake the Messenger (Tom D.), Friday, 2 May 2025 06:43 (four days ago)
There's another interesting idea in the original question though: one of things that King is most known for (and one of the things that's tarnished his reputation) is that he became too big to edit at the same time his books became to big not to need editing. If you're talking about bands / film-makers / writers who get to the point where they can put out anything they want, some will just keep doing what got them there, and some will head to "well Paul's been taking acid, and John's been hanging out with some art people, and George's been studying under Ravi Shankar, and Ringo says he's up for whatever, let's make a record!."
For a while the advice (or the advice I received) was that if you wanted to get into Stephen King, to stick to the short story collections or the Dark Tower series (though that went off the rails as well by the end) or the stories published as Richard Bachman books. The Bachman Books are amazing, mean and lean, and in the intro he talks about hearing an interview with Paul McCartney, who said that at some point after the Beatles became world famous, they considered recording or even touring under another name, Johnny and the Juices or something. And the interviewer asked "wouldn't people recognise your voice?" and McCartney seemed embarrassed that he didn't think of that. And then at the end of the intro King mentions that as soon as the first Bachman story came out, people wrote in to ask if it was actually him.
Also lol I just watched a trailer for The Life of Chuck, which includes a section on how it's from STEPHEN KING, LEGENDARY AUTHOR OF THE GREEN MILE, THE SHAWSHANK REDEMPTION, STAND BY ME, and he's that guy too.
― Andrew Farrell, Friday, 2 May 2025 07:47 (four days ago)
Though the reason he was writing as Richard Bachman wasn't so much that he wanted a new outlet so much as his publisher didn't want to put out more than one book by him per year!
― Andrew Farrell, Friday, 2 May 2025 07:55 (four days ago)
> they would make kids cartoons based on anything ... maybe they still do
ch4 late is currently showing some mike tyson supernatural detective agency thing, voiced by him.
― koogs, Friday, 2 May 2025 09:48 (four days ago)
If you're talking about bands / film-makers / writers who get to the point where they can put out anything they want, some will just keep doing what got them there, and some will head to "well Paul's been taking acid, and John's been hanging out with some art people, and George's been studying under Ravi Shankar, and Ringo says he's up for whatever, let's make a record!."
You might say they have massive success and are given a blank check to make whatever crazy passion projects they want. Sometimes those checks clear and sometimes they bounce, baby!
― a ZX spectrum is haunting Europe (Daniel_Rf), Friday, 2 May 2025 10:14 (four days ago)
xp that Mike Tyson show is more of a spoof aimed at adults though, I feel like there was this weird period in the early 1990's where the success of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles had made people realize that you could make money off kids cartoons adapted from unlikely source material, so you had this boom of short lived Saturday morning cartoons based on MC Hammer or Attack of the Killer Tomatoes or whatever
― Platinum Penguin Pavilion (soref), Friday, 2 May 2025 10:44 (four days ago)
If the original concept is ever developed further, perhaps it could also cover how the ilx pantheon is agreed by consensus, how it relates to “most common denominators”, and if it’s in a holding pattern.
― Bob Six, Friday, 2 May 2025 11:38 (four days ago)
Bob Marley is widely considered the Bob Marley of reggae.
― LocalGarda, Friday, 2 May 2025 11:41 (four days ago)
― Philip Nunez, Wednesday, 30 April 2025 bookmarkflaglink
This is a thread about the big boys selling big and being big. Let's not consider MMM on here.
― xyzzzz__, Friday, 2 May 2025 13:58 (four days ago)
Hm... Lou Reed's a big boy, and I'm guessing it sold about as much as any noise record, why not crown him the Bob Marley of noise?
― Philip Nunez, Friday, 2 May 2025 15:16 (four days ago)