11-10-2009, 10:55 AM | #11 |
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11-10-2009, 10:55 AM | #12 |
Letzroll
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11-10-2009, 11:02 AM | #13 | |
DefenderOfTheBuelliverse
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I dont know that they ever were, really. I mean Joe Perry is a bad ass guitar player, but over all the band was never great.
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11-10-2009, 01:03 PM | #14 |
Crotch Rocket Curmudgeon
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Hmm. Couple of comments about their relevance today. Interesting (and not very insightful).
One of the great problems with a band that influences current music so much, is that they become universal, and thus transparent. I'm a bassist, and this argument, as it applies to Jaco Pastorius, a revolutionary bassist, seems to come up often among young bass players just arriving on the scene: "Gee, I don't like Jaco, I can't see how his music is even relevant to mine, what's all the fuss about this guy?" Of course, the fuss is because bass players played one way before he existed, and almost everyone played (like it or not) differently in their approach afterward, as he influenced so many. The same can be said about bassist James Jamerson. He changed things even more in his day. Even if you didn't like Motown, before Motown the bass was barely heard, and afterward it was the most powerful instrument in the mix, as loud as the vocal, thus forever changing almost all music. The Beatles were a game changer, and everyone was influenced. It's safe to say that this is true of Zepplin, Aerosmith, Hendrix, and even Elvis. They may be hard to understand anymore, because their "distance" from what everyone else is doing has been reduced due to the fact that everyone else has been influenced by them so much. Of course, the "antidote" to this, as a musician, is to "reinvent" yourself periodically - or maybe just hide out for a while, and make a "comeback"...that seems to work too (kidding, but not really). Of course, reinventing yourself usually pisses off your core audience, who expect you to regurgitate their favorite song ad-infinitem. So it's a no-win any way you slice it. Smart musicians keep changing, and smart listeners try to keep up...but everyone needs to make a living. This is the Yin and the Yang of the music biz at its essence, I suppose.
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11-10-2009, 02:01 PM | #15 | |
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11-10-2009, 02:10 PM | #16 | ||
DefenderOfTheBuelliverse
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11-10-2009, 02:14 PM | #17 | |
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11-10-2009, 02:52 PM | #18 |
Ornery, scandalous & evil
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11-10-2009, 02:57 PM | #19 |
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How about:
Slash and Axl Rose? Vince Neil and Nikki Sixx? James Hetfield? Vernon Reid? Tommy Caradonna? All have at one or another point claimed Aerosmith as one of their main influences in music. IMO, in their early years, Aerosmith were the American version of the Rolling Stones . |
11-10-2009, 03:05 PM | #20 |
Crotch Rocket Curmudgeon
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Yeah, and lest we forget, they brought Rap to MTV, and popular attention.
Wait; KILL THEM.
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