pointing and laughing at dance music part 4912

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well Diddy's a hip hop superstar and they're the most notorious of all for sensationalised news stories, but yeah i guess rather like the article this thread is not really telling us anything new either (as Matt DC pointed out, the git ;)

stevem (blueski), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 13:13 (twenty years ago) link

I'm sorry but whoever writes an article like that deserves to be berated, it's not ok to say oh leave it it's swells, at least if you care about the subject matter it's not anyway.

Ronan (Ronan), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 16:19 (twenty years ago) link

'ee's not wurth it!'

stevem (blueski), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 16:45 (twenty years ago) link

ronan, why does it matter what the rock press think of dance music? why is the acceptance of the rock press of any importance or relevance?

gareth (gareth), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 17:15 (twenty years ago) link

it's not what the rock press think, it's the fact that the serious press IS always the rock press and the "serious" music is always rock music.

Ronan (Ronan), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 19:43 (twenty years ago) link

possibly the worst part is how he attempts to paint himself as someone who became disillusioned with dance music when he really has no fucking idea.

who exactly slated ride on time?

Ronan (Ronan), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 20:05 (twenty years ago) link

but why does it matter if dance music is treated seriously by the serious press (rock or not)? the serious press has always had trouble with dance music, whether a tokenistic inability to take it on its own terms, or 'controversial' pieces like the above. i dont see why dance music should fall into the remit of either the serious or rock press, unless its a longer piece taking a particular aspect and running with it.

to me this is like when rock in the 60s vainly courted the opinions of the serious/classical tastemakers "see, we can use strings too" etc etc, why was it important to them to chase after that validity/acceptance? and why does anyone in dance need that validity or acceptance from the serious press either.

although to be honest, i dont really know what the serious press is, on the one hand you could be talking about the broadsheets, but who would want to read about music in a broadsheet? which only leaves the rock press, which is necessarily oriented towards indie and more performative based genres, i dont know why their acceptance is of any consequence.

side question: why is it important for the music you like to be taken seriously? and seriously by who exactly?

gareth (gareth), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 22:33 (twenty years ago) link

'Ride On Time' isn't that great anyway - i never liked it at that time but i was 11 so i'm not sure you could really accuse me of snobbery or fun-hating (hmmm, then again...), i like the Loleatta Holloway track it plunders though (now).

anyway, i think dance music enthusiasts who take the medium seriously are looking for all other people to take it seriously too - not just the rock-biased press, but it has to be accepted on it's own terms too and for what it is (not fit it into a rock or pop dynamic - square peg in round hole style) - why? it seems natural to me. if you discover what you consider to be a great thing you want to share it with people and you want them to think it's great too. why SHOULD the rock-biased press be 'necessarily oriented towards indie and more performative-based genres (not sure i agree with this - i think i'd rather watch Royksopp or Ladytron live than Travis for example...but yeah Travis are far more popular, but i'm not sure WHY this should be really)?' where does this assumption come from? why is it more popular? can't that be challenged? should it be challenged? it appears to be easier (or lazier) to criticise dance music for what it isn't rather than to praise it for what it is. but Swells did point out that the DJs who also made good records were more deserving of praise, or rather more deserving of praise for when they were making records rather than just playing them - fair enough but why negate the 'art' of DJing itself? 'Just playing records'? Are guitarists just plucking strings?

Why do I care? Like I say, it's a natural reaction for me to call it out when somebody - whoever - attacks something in a way I disagree with. I care what people think because I know how influential that can be.

stevem (blueski), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 23:01 (twenty years ago) link

Morrissey described Ride On Time as 'really excellent', I seem to recall.

It's true that the 'serious' press has never really got to grips with dance music but I don't think it's that it disapproves of it. It's just that it's intimidated by it and doesn't know how to judge it. It knows that it's far cooler than rock music. Even now that it's supposedly out of fashion.

N. (nickdastoor), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 23:11 (twenty years ago) link

but hip hop is considered the coolest thing, EVERYONE seems to like it to some extent now, and although hip hop struggled for acceptance in the 80s in some quarters, the rock-biased press (well NME at least) seemed to embrace it and take it very seriously. I mean if hip hop is the most popular thing out there then why doesn't/didn't NME focus on that more and de-prioritise rock more (seeing as Kerrang! outsells NME as it is)?

stevem (blueski), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 23:17 (twenty years ago) link

Again, it doesn't really understand it. I may be projecting myself onto the 'serious' rock press here.

N. (nickdastoor), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 23:23 (twenty years ago) link

I think Swells is suffering from the slings and arrows of fortune that arise when one identifies one's self with a genre of music. Their sense of existing rises and falls with that genre. When he exults in the (highly alleged) death of the DJ, what he means is that he himself is coming alive again. He is relevant again, because (he believes), Morrissey is relevant again. It's a song of personal triumph he's singing, which may or may not be partially a mental projection of his fantasy world, the world where everyone likes exactly what he likes.

As for the future, dance music has been dying and rebirthing daily since it was born, as has music in general. Change rules as usual. Why have some journalists started to claim that dance music is dying? Perhaps it masy be that they identify the rise and fall of musical styles primarily from the rise and fall of print media interests covering those styles.

colin s barrow (colin s barrow), Wednesday, 27 August 2003 23:45 (twenty years ago) link

I'm not convinced by the notion that "the serious press" has "always had a problem" with dance music. I remember reams and reams of positive dance music writing in the NME throughout the 90s, it had its own dedicated section, dance records were regularly awarded Single Of The Week etc etc.

If anything, the dismissive tone is something that's emerged over the past three or so years... since all this New Rock Revolution bollocks rendered any notion of musical progress passé.

Incidentally, why is Swells pretending to like Morrissey all of a sudden, when from what I know of his taste he'd almost certainly like the majority of RonanHouse records far more?

Matt DC (Matt DC), Thursday, 28 August 2003 09:18 (twenty years ago) link

Gareth is asking good questions here.

There is very little writing anywhere about Soca, on the web at least, and even mags like Gargamel don't give it very much coverage. I've been trying to find some in order to help me refute Tracer's broadside on NYLPM!

Tom (Groke), Thursday, 28 August 2003 09:21 (twenty years ago) link

side question: why is it important for the music you like to be taken seriously? and seriously by who exactly?

Because I am trying to write about it for a living.

Ronan (Ronan), Thursday, 28 August 2003 09:24 (twenty years ago) link

non hack answer, there are loads of reasons why it is important that dance music is taken seriously, the first of which being that if it isn't it is never documented properly and loads of good records evaporate into history.

It really bugs me to see people saying who cares if dance is taken seriously, especially people who like it. Don't you see what a lazy easy option it is to take digs at dance music? Wouldn't you rather it wasn't that way? It just feels like peoples brains slotting back into a comfy niche and it's annoying.

Also if you've any experience of trying to write then it's doubly annoying, reviews sectioned off in the "dance page" just in case anyone reads them, constant misunderstanding of the basic ideas of dance music, total lack of comprehension of the volume and amount of dance music that exists, or the differences between it all.

And this isn't at all about "courting opinions", I feel passionate in such a cliched way here when really this just makes perfect sense, no need to be passionate about, it's just logic. It's not courting opinions to want dance music to be given a fair rap, I'm not saying dance music should change to be given respect, I'm saying that dance music should be given respect, it's almost the exact opposite.

I think Gareth's answer is proof enough of the extent of the problem, people who like dance music don't even think it's worth talking about. Either that or it's just a question of why bother writing about music, which is as good/bad a question here as ever.

Dance music doesn't need the validity, but crap writing is crap writing and crap writing about dance music isn't worth letting go. I don't understand how this isn't so obvious.

Matt may have a point about dance getting praised but lets face it DJ culture and 12 inch culture has long been a whipping boy for the usual hoary old earthy rants likening it to big macs or capitalism, or basically moaning cos the performers look a bit swish.

And I'm fairly sure "dance music is fine in a club" is about as far as the acceptance goes.

Ronan (Ronan), Thursday, 28 August 2003 09:46 (twenty years ago) link

with an "oh and the chemical brothers/orbital/underworld (daft punk and the jaxx if we're feeling liberal" are great.

Ronan (Ronan), Thursday, 28 August 2003 09:55 (twenty years ago) link

there are loads of reasons why it is important that dance music is taken seriously, the first of which being that if it isn't it is never documented properly and loads of good records evaporate into history.

Surely this doesn't just apply to dance music though? Actually, you could argue it applies to rock music just as much (excluding the 30 or so favoured bands of the moment). But if dance music isn't being documented properly then the blame lies at the door of the dance press, not the rock press.

(x-post)

But how do you do it? I mean, generally speaking writing about dance music is still really fucking hard. Do you review every record that comes out regardless of whether there is actually anything to say about it or anything you can say in print that would actually differentiate from the hundreds of similar records to the listener? Or do you only review the distinctive/outstanding records, in which case you're back to 90s NME Square One.

I think the basic premise of this is that dance music fans, unlike rock fans, don't NEED a press to get exposure to the music. That's what clubs are for, surely?

Matt DC (Matt DC), Thursday, 28 August 2003 09:57 (twenty years ago) link

''who's to say Paul Oakenfold didn't deserve a £10,000 cheque for 6 hours work but Premiership footballers do?''

NOBODY deserves that much money for six hours work.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Thursday, 28 August 2003 09:59 (twenty years ago) link

Arguably, you do if the club/venue is pulling in ten times that amount through using you as a selling point.

Matt DC (Matt DC), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:01 (twenty years ago) link

But if dance music isn't being documented properly then the blame lies at the door of the dance press, not the rock press.

It doesn't solely, the dance press itself is constantly in second place because it writes about dance music. Rock music is the critical centre of the universe to such a great degree, if singles were given the prominence they deserve both pop and dance would benefit, it's no excuse that they're only played in clubs or whatever when indie acts who never play anywhere are being sought out.

Also a major part of this is the bare truth that no magazine anywhere ever would print an article mocking rock music. And alot more people would attack it too, someone hating rock music is eternally a bitter reactionary who loves another genre, someone hating dance music has some intellectual ground to walk on. Ie its not seen as possible to dislike rock music because it's engrained in you.

The above is not something which can ever change I accept, but that doesn't mean it's ok either, and small victories are possible.

Ronan (Ronan), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:08 (twenty years ago) link

i can't even be bothered to comment here...

Dave Stelfox (Dave Stelfox), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:10 (twenty years ago) link

I knew Dave wouldn't let me down

Ronan (Ronan), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:12 (twenty years ago) link

''at least if dave q had written this it would've been funny''

yeah, but i also think there were some funny moments in this. This article is not even asking to be taken seriously and in fact he's always written (funny) shit abt dance music and lots of stuff I like such as psych or whatever.

I mean, its so damn cartoonish.

There should be writing abt everything even if its 'hard' to do there are ppl out there who like a challenge.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:12 (twenty years ago) link

I was wondering why dave hadn't appeared until now.

(actually wasn't nowhere near as funny as his anti-NME rant that was linked to here a few weeks ago by DJ martian).

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:13 (twenty years ago) link

Dance may not need press for exposure to fans but what about non fans? Look at the canon today, do you think any non rock music has really broken into it? Will it ever? This is why it's not ok to just accept crap like that from anyone, well known agitator or otherwise. It reeks of someone whinging for soma anyway, the jokes only back that up.

Ronan (Ronan), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:14 (twenty years ago) link

It doesn't solely, the dance press itself is constantly in second place because it writes about dance music.

B-b-but... it ISN'T. Or at least, it wasn't. For YEARS the UK dance press completely oldsold NME, Kerrang, etc.

if singles were given the prominence they deserve both pop and dance would benefit

How would you like them to be given more prominence? What is the radio/MTV for if not to publicise singles? Why aren't you lambasting Radio 1 for not playlisting more dance music?

I get the feeling you're vastly overestimating the influence of the rock press, or the music press in general, and there are tons of failed NME Great White Hopes to back this up.

I'm also getting the feeling that everyday musical culture is far more rock-biased in Ireland than it is in the UK.

Matt DC (Matt DC), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:15 (twenty years ago) link

Ie if you stick a free CD of dance music on the front of the News of the World, it's influence is going to vastly outweigh any number of lazily dismissive articles written by bored rock hacks.

Also, laying the blame on the rock press is a very convenient way of avoiding the question of WHY dance music is less popular than it used to be (if it is).

Matt DC (Matt DC), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:18 (twenty years ago) link

Or is your problem that NME/Q/Bang etc persist in pretending that they report fairly on all kinds music when just a cursory glance at any of the above proves that this isn't the case? Because this is a bugbear of mine, it must admit. If they were more honest about their rock bias it wouldn't annoy me in the slightest (ie Kerrang!)

Matt DC (Matt DC), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:25 (twenty years ago) link

dance ATE rock

dave q, Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:28 (twenty years ago) link

I don't mean in terms of sales! It doesn't matter a crap about sales as the constant disrespect of pop illustrates. My point is that the mags themselves are barely credible.

I think the rock press are what look back and say "this is what happened" and you know well it's always going to be rock acts. Why put a dance act there when you can't continue to mention weirdo depressive singers, political movements, brilliant guitar licks, cliched "attitude" quotes to interviewers etc etc etc.


By prominence I mean if a great single was given more praise than a 4 line review, there's no ability but also no desire in the press for talking at length about anything except rock music. I've listened to my favourite singles of last year more than any of the albums, whatever way you look at it.

It may be about everday culture being more biased here, but it does go way beyond that too.

Why dance is less popular? No dance act is making dance music for rock fans.

Ronan (Ronan), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:29 (twenty years ago) link

or albums, or touring it, or getting indie vocalists in.

Ronan (Ronan), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:29 (twenty years ago) link

Also it's not a question of blaming rock music, it's a question of establishing that dance music is discriminated against regularly, like all nonrock music, it's hard to disprove, we're only debating the level of discrimination really.

Ronan (Ronan), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:31 (twenty years ago) link

It suddenly strikes me that the ability of rock to be more successfully captured in prose has done it a hell of a lot of harm (or maybe points up its intrinsic weakness).

Tom (Groke), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:32 (twenty years ago) link

But there aren't that many rock fans! The press doesn't matter that much! This is my point! You only have to walk down your average high street and listen to the sounds coming from all over the place and I'll bet you that you'll hear far more house/trance/garage/hip-hop than rock.

In fact, I'm willing to walk down Oxford Street at lunchtime purely to test this.

Matt DC (Matt DC), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:34 (twenty years ago) link

I think Gareth's answer is proof enough of the extent of the problem, people who like dance music don't even think it's worth talking about.

when did i ever say this?

upthread i said im very interested in reading stuff abuot dance music, but i dont know why it matters about it being in bang or the independent or mojo. i'm not sure those publications are suited to dance music, unless it is of album/artist based stuff that can give outsiders a way in, or possibly from a cultural/sociological angle (though of course this is the angle that gives us lazy dance is dead pieces like the one linked in this thread). i dont think non-specialist press has ever successfully managed to engage with ground-up based musics.

gareth (gareth), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:35 (twenty years ago) link

Equally, no one in the real world gives a shit about the canon. I mean, maybe in terms of the Beatles or whoever but play the MC5 or Joy Division to your average bus queue and you'll be met with blank stares.

Matt DC (Matt DC), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:36 (twenty years ago) link

It's about respect, not fans.

Ronan (Ronan), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:38 (twenty years ago) link

Can a music matter if its fans don't especially want to read about it?

what if some kinds of music progressively adapt themselves to favour the aspects which GET written about (well/at all) and other kinds of music adapt themselves to favour aspects which are hard to write about/elusive/rebarbatively jargonish?

mark s (mark s), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:39 (twenty years ago) link

maybe respect is a chimera? i crave the disrespect of certain people (actually this is not true as i am not that tuff but you know what i mean)

mark s (mark s), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:40 (twenty years ago) link

but respect from who ronan? that means we are right back to courting acceptance/validity/credibility from...from who exactly? the serious press? why the desire for ossification?

gareth (gareth), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:41 (twenty years ago) link

gareth are you happy with the mojo or q way being what is later accepted as how things were in 96 or whatever. does it ever reflect sales? going beyond dance music does it?

the serious press should be the dance press should be the pop press, it's not getting wells to love dance, it's getting dance to love dance.

Ronan (Ronan), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:42 (twenty years ago) link

Maybe rock music gets more 'respect' because its big generation of fans are now The Establishment (example, that Queen's Jubilee gig last summer). I suspect the majority of people were very sniffy indeed about it back in the 60s and 70s. What will happen when dance music, and dance music fans, hit middle age?

Matt DC (Matt DC), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:44 (twenty years ago) link

but most people have never heard of mojo!

gareth (gareth), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:44 (twenty years ago) link

and the dance press are worse anyhow, they were the ones that were sniffy about hardcore, ragga-jungle and speed garage!

gareth (gareth), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:45 (twenty years ago) link

ok ronan but cf my question: it's about getting dance to love writing which loves dance!!

maybe these ideas like "canon" and "respect" (and "history"?) are intrinsically anti-dance?

mark s (mark s), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:46 (twenty years ago) link

That's because dance music has it's own canon which pretty much excludes the above genres, surely? I mean, it's obvious which dance genres get the most respect, and they sure as hell are NOT the ones which sound like rock music.

Matt DC (Matt DC), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:46 (twenty years ago) link

By which I mean the dance canon is all about Detroit techno/dnb/house and not Big Beat.

Matt DC (Matt DC), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:48 (twenty years ago) link

well the dance canon is full of shit anyway, because of the hierarchies in dance genres, and the fact that the dance press often repeats the rock press's disparagement onto the sub-genres it is ashamed of

gareth (gareth), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:50 (twenty years ago) link

rock is 20 + years older than dance. jazz is another 30 + years older and then classical...and then why would you want dance albs to enter the canon. Its not like ppl will forget it or reissues of old records will stop.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Thursday, 28 August 2003 10:50 (twenty years ago) link

To have spread across Eastern Europe with no mass media or mechanical reproduction to help it to the extent that it is still cited in 21st Century Interweb discussions = of course it did.

Matt DC (Matt DC), Thursday, 28 August 2003 11:56 (twenty years ago) link

i don't at all have a problem w.the idea that a mutal adaptation is at work, provided that isn't just a way of going back to ignoring the not-negligeable pressure that THINGS WE LIKE TO READ ABOUT must surely have on MUSIC FOR PEOPLE WHO ALSO LIKE TO READ

(And then there's the matter of of music for people who don't like to read.)

mark s (mark s), Thursday, 28 August 2003 11:57 (twenty years ago) link

mark i think writing is very, very very important, even bad writing - in may cases especially bad writing, coz that's what gets read the most. i'm just bored with 15 years of picking holes in swells' work. it's not very rewarding.

Dave Stelfox (Dave Stelfox), Thursday, 28 August 2003 11:58 (twenty years ago) link

Where does tabloid music writing fall into this?

Matt DC (Matt DC), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:00 (twenty years ago) link

And then there's the matter of of music for people who don't like to read.)

dancehall massive to thread!

Dave Stelfox (Dave Stelfox), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:00 (twenty years ago) link

Where does tabloid music writing fall into this?

it doesn't really... i don't know of any tabloid that really bother with it much, not counting the daily mail (and coverage there is just plain daft/bad)

Dave Stelfox (Dave Stelfox), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:02 (twenty years ago) link

actually i think mechanical reproduction intervened quite heavily w.polka: a lot of record companies in the teens and twenties (and long after) based a significant part of their sales on servicing "old country" ethnic tastes

BUT it always stayed below the radar of mainstream music writing (i'm surely there were also specialist magazines actually) and has tended to fall out of the ambit of routine histories of popular music (except when novelty crossover was achieved)

(rock is basically a local/ethnic music which achieved novelty crossover, except the novelty went on to eat the world)

mark s (mark s), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:03 (twenty years ago) link

haha dave s, i didn't even bother reading swellsy's piece: he and i are friends/enemies of 20 yrs standing

mark s (mark s), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:04 (twenty years ago) link

was only talking abt polka to an american friend (with polish roots) last night! weird...

Dave Stelfox (Dave Stelfox), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:05 (twenty years ago) link

Also - Mark's point re: The Velvet Underground - but they were pretentious arty academic types who made music for other pretentious arty academic types who (generalising wildly) read loads therefore print media = to an extent, the entire centre of the scene.

This is not the case to the same extent with dancehall or soca or hardcore or any music made prior to about 1900 except classical.

If the tabloids WERE writing more about a certain type of music, would more people be listening to it? (I am fully aware that tabloids are followers rather than leaders in terms of cultural trends, BUT...)

Matt DC (Matt DC), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:05 (twenty years ago) link

i remember a pice in the daily mail blaming yardie gun violence on jimmy cliff in the harder they come!

Dave Stelfox (Dave Stelfox), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:12 (twenty years ago) link

last year!!!

Dave Stelfox (Dave Stelfox), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:13 (twenty years ago) link

matt that's the point i'm making, that music "as a whole" has basically had to accommodate a central claque of MILITANT READERS who prefer (and thereby conjure up) music which suits their aesthetic preferences/judgments/prejudices

tabloids didn't write abt popstars or pop AT ALL until the late 80s, really => i (seriously) think reality TV makeover pop was a cultural reaction against the entrapment of the fun of celebrity in the web of tabloid writing (obviously it failed)

in the last two or three years we've begin to see music-makers once again taking up the baton of that web as a challenge (taTu = most obvious), though no one's been as effective as the pistols momentarily were (at tremendous cost to themselves)

mark s (mark s), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:15 (twenty years ago) link

Dave, stop reading the Daily Mail!

stevem (blueski), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:20 (twenty years ago) link

what you will get in the tabloids e.g. the Bizarre column in The Sun is a casual throwaway remark about 'dance being dead' or 'in the descendant now rock is back in the ascendant', influenced purely by what they read in NME or wherever (maybe they read Playlouder too who knows?)

stevem (blueski), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:23 (twenty years ago) link

Dave, stop reading the Daily Mail!

i used to work there < / potentially devastating confessional >

Dave Stelfox (Dave Stelfox), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:24 (twenty years ago) link

'in the descendant now rock is back in the ascendant'

this sentence has never been in th bizarre column! sean paul is the new shaggy tho, apparently...

Dave Stelfox (Dave Stelfox), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:26 (twenty years ago) link

actually the shaping effect of the tabloids on music shd be its own thread really i think - not that i have time to contribute :(

ans = of COURSE it has an effect and not all "bad" either (necessarily)

actually the fact that eg the nme is paid unquestioning attention by eg bizarre columnists (and radio one djs) is an even more extreme example of HE GOT WHAT HE WANTED BUT HE LOST WHAT HE HAD

mark s (mark s), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:31 (twenty years ago) link

this sentence has never been in th bizarre column! sean paul is the new shaggy tho, apparently...

ha ha, sorry - add the word 'Jordan' in there somewhere

stevem (blueski), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:32 (twenty years ago) link

The Faust thing is interesting yes but also kind of bleak, does it mean when the scene is vibrant the writing never is?

It reminds me of a thread I started last year "is dance music starting to have a heritage every bit as irritating as that of rock music".

I am a bit lost here because I went to lunch and then had work to do. Matt's point about broadening what's written about is good but I'm not sure people understand DJ sets enough.

On reflection Gareth's questions were getting at one thing I was thinking about at lunchtime, sort of why doesn't one (or don't I) just write about dance for dance people. It feels like preaching to the converted I guess, I'd rather be working towards something rather than just doing the job.

And yeah I see the obvious "but if you achieve it you'd have nothing to do" thing but that's true of any life.

Ronan (Ronan), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:40 (twenty years ago) link

why doesn't one (or don't I) just write about dance for dance people. It feels like preaching to the converted I guess

But I thought your whole rationale behind this was stopping all these great records you've heard from disappearing? In which case, surely writing for an audience you KNOW would like them is perfect?

Matt DC (Matt DC), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:42 (twenty years ago) link

i think it means the quest is more rewarding than the achieved goal

but also there's tom's point that unless you think quite hard about what the achieved goal is to be, you may end up with something you can't bear

mark s (mark s), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:44 (twenty years ago) link

yeah but writing in the dance press is barely documenting them at all is it? due to what I said earlier and the enforced racing tips style etc.

Ronan (Ronan), Thursday, 28 August 2003 12:48 (twenty years ago) link

quest = "good writing abt dance" = actually working out/developing/inventing a new (but also workable*) kind of "good" for dance writing to be (which eg IS GOOD FOR DANCE ITSELF??)

(*ie not publishable only in slim volumes of poetry handprinted in vilnius)

mark s (mark s), Thursday, 28 August 2003 13:00 (twenty years ago) link

the racing tips style is good. there's nothing wrong with it, but for places to think that, unless you're simon reynolds, you can't do good holistic scene/theme-based pieces sucks... tony marcus used to do great pieces like this, i've done a couple of nice ones and am currently working on another, so it can work you just need to be given the room to make these manoeuvres... unfortunately where a lot of rock writers aren't great, the vast majority of dance music writers currently in print absolutely stink and are NOT capaple of anything beyong regurgitating a press release. also a lot of editors probably take/took their cues from this, coupled with their own professional inadequacies, to reinforce bad writing in the dance music press.

Dave Stelfox (Dave Stelfox), Thursday, 28 August 2003 13:01 (twenty years ago) link

think the racing tips style can be very lame, if they mention an influence or who it sounds like the entire rest of the review is sunk by its impact.

need to be given room to make these manoeuvres

What are the chances though eh? At least in print anyway.

Ronan (Ronan), Thursday, 28 August 2003 13:07 (twenty years ago) link

it can be - particularly when the tips in question are bollocks...

What are the chances though eh? At least in print anyway.

you need to write for american magazines who don't pay!

Dave Stelfox (Dave Stelfox), Thursday, 28 August 2003 13:11 (twenty years ago) link

Might over reliance on racing tips style be the reason that the majority of dance writers stink

Ricardo (RickyT), Thursday, 28 August 2003 13:12 (twenty years ago) link

What abt stuff like this? http://www.akai-sampler.com/

dave q, Thursday, 28 August 2003 13:15 (twenty years ago) link

Akais? how quaint!

stevem (blueski), Thursday, 28 August 2003 17:55 (twenty years ago) link

like 'dance music' apparently!

dave q, Thursday, 28 August 2003 19:02 (twenty years ago) link

two years pass...
''who's to say Paul Oakenfold didn't deserve a £10,000 cheque for 6 hours work but Premiership footballers do?''

NOBODY deserves that much money for six hours work.

Nobody deserves than money for 1 months work.

Chewshabadoo (Chewshabadoo), Tuesday, 27 September 2005 14:30 (eighteen years ago) link

''who's to say Paul Oakenfold didn't deserve a £10,000 cheque for 6 hours work but Premiership footballers do?''

NOBODY deserves that much money for six hours work.

Nobody deserves that money for 1 months work.

Chewshabadoo (Chewshabadoo), Tuesday, 27 September 2005 14:30 (eighteen years ago) link

I DO, DAMMIT

The Ghost of Black Elegance (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 27 September 2005 14:42 (eighteen years ago) link

So if the top-paid person in Britain grosses 119,999 a year, then ... let's see ... adjust the pay scale ... carry the one ... you make 16p an hour, sorry.

nabiscothingy, Tuesday, 27 September 2005 14:47 (eighteen years ago) link


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