Just because he is a pioneer, and got more gear than any one of you ever will manage to get hold of, doesn't mean you have to diss him does it?Ridan wrote:Gotta say I'm on the same boat with chaosWyrM, chk071, and aMUSEd on this one.
IMHO
- KVRAF
- 25849 posts since 20 Jan, 2008 from a star near where you are
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- KVRAF
- 3506 posts since 12 May, 2011
If I had to pick just one it would be TangerineDream's Rubycon. 
- KVRAF
- 37500 posts since 14 Sep, 2002 from In teh net
I've never really understood why he's seen as a pioneer, his music was just a simplification and commercialisation of what others were doing already.Numanoid wrote:Just because he is a pioneer, and got more gear than any one of you ever will manage to get hold of, doesn't mean you have to diss him does it?Ridan wrote:Gotta say I'm on the same boat with chaosWyrM, chk071, and aMUSEd on this one.
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- KVRAF
- 3506 posts since 12 May, 2011
Expressing dislike is not dissing, surely? (Despite both words containing "dis")Numanoid wrote:Just because he is a pioneer, and got more gear than any one of you ever will manage to get hold of, doesn't mean you have to diss him does it?Ridan wrote:Gotta say I'm on the same boat with chaosWyrM, chk071, and aMUSEd on this one.
- KVRAF
- 25849 posts since 20 Jan, 2008 from a star near where you are
Just like The Beatles thenaMUSEd wrote:I've never really understood why he's seen as a pioneer, his music was just a simplification and commercialisation of what others were doing already.
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- KVRAF
- 35687 posts since 11 Apr, 2010 from Germany
Can't see how a diss (disrespect) would equal to disagreeing that "Equinoxe 4" is "The best ever piece of electronic music". I don't disrespect the guy, i just don't care for his music.Numanoid wrote:Just because he is a pioneer, and got more gear than any one of you ever will manage to get hold of, doesn't mean you have to diss him does it?Ridan wrote:Gotta say I'm on the same boat with chaosWyrM, chk071, and aMUSEd on this one.
- KVRAF
- 37500 posts since 14 Sep, 2002 from In teh net
Well I don't like them much either. He's not a pioneer, at least not of electronic music. It was already well established.Numanoid wrote:Just like The Beatles thenaMUSEd wrote:I've never really understood why he's seen as a pioneer, his music was just a simplification and commercialisation of what others were doing already.
- KVRAF
- 25849 posts since 20 Jan, 2008 from a star near where you are
- KVRAF
- 25849 posts since 20 Jan, 2008 from a star near where you are
You mean the big EDM stars started out already in the '60s ?aMUSEd wrote:He's not a pioneer, at least not of electronic music. It was already well established.
Electronic music was for the most part seen as novelty with the like of W. Carlos until Jean Michelle came along to sell it to the masses
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- KVRAF
- 7540 posts since 7 Aug, 2003 from San Francisco Bay Area
Fixed that for you.Numanoid wrote:You mean the big EDM stars started out already in the '60s ?aMUSEd wrote:He's not a pioneer, at least not of electronic music. It was already well established.
Electronic music was for the most part seen as novelty with the like of W. Carlos and Jean Michelle until Kraftwerk came along to sell it to the masses
Incomplete list of my gear: 1/8" audio input jack.
- KVRAF
- 37500 posts since 14 Sep, 2002 from In teh net
Yeah, I was around at that time and had been listening to electronic music for years (not Carlos but ELP, Floyd, prog, Gong, Tangerine Dream, Annette peacock, Krautrock, Henry Cow, experimental, moden classical etc) so when JMC came along it just seemed pretty banal and uninteresting. I think the bigger influences on EDM were people like Moroder and late 70's synthpop (which also was less influenced by JMC and more by Bowie, Roxy Music, Kraftwork and the likes)Numanoid wrote:You mean the big EDM stars started out already in the '60s ?aMUSEd wrote:He's not a pioneer, at least not of electronic music. It was already well established.
Electronic music was for the most part seen as novelty with the like of W. Carlos until Jean Michelle came along to sell it to the masses
Last edited by aMUSEd on Sat Apr 09, 2016 11:12 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- KVRAF
- 25849 posts since 20 Jan, 2008 from a star near where you are
Kraftwerk is krautrock though, not really proper electronic music ala Jean Michelledeastman wrote:Fixed that for you.Numanoid wrote:You mean the big EDM stars started out already in the '60s ?aMUSEd wrote:He's not a pioneer, at least not of electronic music. It was already well established.
Electronic music was for the most part seen as novelty with the like of W. Carlos and Jean Michelle until Kraftwerk came along to sell it to the masses
- KVRian
- 943 posts since 11 Dec, 2014 from one rocky mountain to another
"The best ever piece of electronic music has to be Jarre's 'Equinoxe 4'Numanoid wrote:IMHO = In My Humble Opinion
So take the OP or leave it alone
Agree? - Disagree?"
Just stating why i disagreed. Don't have anything against Jarre's music in particular. Whether he is a pioneer of "EDM" or not doesn't matter much.
No worries.
- KVRAF
- 25849 posts since 20 Jan, 2008 from a star near where you are
ELP, Pink Floyd and Henry Cow is as electronic musically as Dwight Yoakam if you ask meaMUSEd wrote:Yeah, I was around at that time and had been listening to electronic music for years (not Carlos but ELP, Floyd, Tangerine Dream, Annette peacock, Krautrock, Henry Cow, experimental, moden classical etc) so when JMC came along it just seemed pretty banal and uninteresting. I think the bigger influences on EDM were people like Moroder and late 70's synthpop (which also was less influenced by JMC and more by Bowie, Roxy Music, Kraftwork and the likes)Numanoid wrote:You mean the big EDM stars started out already in the '60s ?aMUSEd wrote:He's not a pioneer, at least not of electronic music. It was already well established.
Electronic music was for the most part seen as novelty with the like of W. Carlos until Jean Michelle came along to sell it to the masses
Whatever Jean Michelle did, he took some inspiration, and distilled that into something far more potent
- KVRAF
- 37500 posts since 14 Sep, 2002 from In teh net
Nonsense - they incorporated lots of electronics into their music (synths and samples, field recordings etc). I very much doubt JMC influenced early synth based bands in the mid 70's that much given that many were already experimenting with synth based music when he brought out Oxygene. It was bands like Kraftwork, Roxy's/Eno and Bowie they were following. And Moroder for the poppier stuff.Numanoid wrote:ELP, Pink Floyd and Henry Cow is as electronic musically as Dwight Yoakam if you ask meaMUSEd wrote:Yeah, I was around at that time and had been listening to electronic music for years (not Carlos but ELP, Floyd, Tangerine Dream, Annette peacock, Krautrock, Henry Cow, experimental, moden classical etc) so when JMC came along it just seemed pretty banal and uninteresting. I think the bigger influences on EDM were people like Moroder and late 70's synthpop (which also was less influenced by JMC and more by Bowie, Roxy Music, Kraftwork and the likes)Numanoid wrote:You mean the big EDM stars started out already in the '60s ?aMUSEd wrote:He's not a pioneer, at least not of electronic music. It was already well established.
Electronic music was for the most part seen as novelty with the like of W. Carlos until Jean Michelle came along to sell it to the masses