Sure, but, let's drop the word "sure" because it leads down a rabbit hole of a discussion. Maybe the Shaggs were genius and knew exactly what they were doing. I don't think so. There is ample evidence to the contrary. So if you accept that it was unintentional, then to me, it questions the label of genius. Then again, maybe the word is simply a bad choice because it isn't precise enough.Zombie Queen wrote:Could you be sure, how much unintentional it was? Was punk fully intentional?ghettosynth wrote:Can it be genius when is unintentional?
That doesn't mean that I don't think that it's interesting. I think that even with respect to originality, it isn't, per se, original. I mean that in the following sense. As someone in the youtube comments points out, they wrote songs like that when they were five. Ok, I'm not taking that poster's claim at face value, but, I do think that a lot of children write bad music that is simply lost to history.
This is unique in that the strange ramblings of children is backed by the neurotic delusion and financial resources of a parent. It's certainly not the only time that this has happened, e.g. Rebecca Black and clones, but, it was certainly more challenging to actually make a record from those ramblings in 1969.
Still, it's fascinating and if we suppose that there's some recipe for that kind of originality, can we achieve that without abusing children? That kind of isolation and control can't be healthy.
Anyway, I've rambled too much, I want to hear what other people think about originality, delusion, naivety, and harnessing/channeling those ideas as a more experienced artist?