Pat Metheny?jancivil wrote:well, I wonder if anyone likes Kenny G less than do I.
I think it's just a product of musical development: people stop at different points. You can see it in the development of childrens' musical tastes: nursery rhymes, chirpy TV songs, Britney and boybands, and then separation into rock, R&B, trance etc.jancivil wrote:I think that people who buy that shit think it's real music but just haven't heard very much of it to get any perspective on (instrumental) music.
Western music itself has been right through that evolution in something like 1500 years. It's gone all the way from pentatonic (probably first discovered about 10,000 years ago) through tonal music to atonal and jazz and into microtonal. Some don't really get that much further than the pentatonic melodies of nursery rhymes.
It's the word 'lyric' that I can't get behind. Human voice, yes. Lyric per se, I'm sceptical. I can't help thinking that if it were really about lyrics, poets would be a lot richer than they are (and most of them can't write successful lyrics for toffee). Where a lyric really works, then yes, it plays a key part. But as pointed out above, a lot of people can't remember more than a few lines at most. I bet if you recited Smells Like Teen Spirit to a bunch of 30-40 year-olds as though it were a poem, hardly anybody would recognise the lines. I'm pretty sure I wouldn't and yet I can hear Kurt Cobain in my head right now singing "Here we are now, entertain us." (Actually, looking at the lyrics with the "hello, hello, hello, how low?" passage, I'm thinking it might be a bad example but I'm going to stick with it).jancivil wrote:I think our disagreement per necessity of lyrics is a matter of degrees rather than a fundamental one.
I think a good melody stands a better chance, regardless; which would support your point more than mine. But I could be SO wrong in that thought, so I'm sticking with skepticism and my broad stroke of, 'they need lyrics, most of 'em'. "Commercial music biz exists because of lyrics" fits that. And I think that's a harder one to argue against.
But our hearing is very well attuned to the human voice: it's probably why our hearing is so sensitive in the 1k-3kHz region. Two of three main formants in the voice are in that region. Vowels have most of their energy below 1kHz, but the percussive consonants will come through loud and clear in that range. And with a voice you can convey a lot of rhythmic information - that's arguably the secret of rap's success.
I think David Byrne is right: songs generally need singers. And you can certainly get away with a simpler melody with a vocal. But I think that has a lot to do with the way that the voice works and how it's used in music, and how we hear the voice.
