Artists who bang on about Bush... | xltronic messageboard
 
You are not logged in!

F.A.Q
Log in

Register
  
 
  
 
Now online (1)
recycle
...and 411 guests

Last 5 registered
Oplandisks
nothingstar
N_loop
yipe
foxtrotromeo

Browse members...
  
 
Members 8025
Messages 2614110
Today 7
Topics 127542
  
 
Messageboard index
Artists who bang on about Bush...
 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2006-09-22 07:49 [#01975610]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag



...don't half get on my tits. Yes, the man is a
child-killing fuckwit with the intellectual prowess of a
root vegetable. We know this. You don't need to keep on
mentioning it in every fucking song. Seriously, it comes
across as if you've signed up to his "if you're not with us
you're against us" way of thinking and must voice your
displeasure with him frequently, or else people might think
you support him.

Thank God for instrumental music.

"Lolzorz, but Ceri, they're just talking about things that
are important to them."

Yes, sure, they aren't just jumping on (an already extremely
tedious) bandwagon. Mocking Bush is about as hard as giving
a paralytic a good kicking. It's not difficult and it's not
something to be proud of.


 

offline epohs from )C: on 2006-09-22 07:51 [#01975613]
Points: 17620 Status: Lurker



i thought this was gonna be about bang bus


 

offline epohs from )C: on 2006-09-22 07:58 [#01975618]
Points: 17620 Status: Lurker



To get on topic, I agree, however it does take talent to
write a political song that isn't just preaching to the
choir though. and i reckon it is possible.


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2006-09-22 08:04 [#01975621]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to epohs: #01975618 | Show recordbag



Yes. You can cleverly and subtley voice your political
concerns without shouting "Bush is a prick" 4 times as your
chorus line. Take something like Nena's 99 Red Balloons. A
great pop song, catchy and with a message. Not a
cringe-inducing protest song.

Lets be frank, not many lifelong Bush supporters are going
to buy or listen to someone slating Bush and should they
hear it at a party or on the radio, it's unlikely they'll
suddenly say, "You know what? I was wrong, the man is
a fool..."


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2006-09-22 08:12 [#01975626]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to Ceri JC: #01975621 | Show recordbag



why would anyone want to subtly voice political concerns,
though? I agree that it's bad that artists keep doing it
(but for other reasons than yours.. I'll probably get to
it), but I'm also quite opposed to the notion of
"discussing" things through "art" when the discussion or
opinion isn't crystal clear (meaning that it is actually
written in plain text somewhere on the piece of art);
ambiguity isn't your friend in political debate or
critique.

The reason why I don't like it when certain artists
voice their opinions in a song is that they quite often can
actually devalue an opinion by doing so; I'm often inclined
to think that anything Bono does, for instance, is a lump of
wank even though I may some times agree with his views. It's
also the fact that if you do it, like some random punk band,
with "humour," you end up just making "fun" of the whole
thing. The main point is that there are proper channels for
political debate and critique, and popular music isn't one
of them due to the heavy focus on the person over the
opinion.


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2006-09-22 08:17 [#01975630]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01975626 | Show recordbag



...although, I suppose you could argue that seeing as most
teenage girls seem to form their political opinions solely
on whatever Bono says, it's a good tool for getting (dim)
"floating voters" to your side.


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2006-09-22 08:20 [#01975632]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to Ceri JC: #01975630 | Show recordbag



it'll ruin it even for them; don't you think many of your
adolescent views were a bit too simple, etc? that's because
of bono.


 

offline epohs from )C: on 2006-09-22 08:20 [#01975633]
Points: 17620 Status: Lurker



it's art. if done well it can be powerful.

but, it can also be incredibly embarrassingly bad. most over
the top political sap falls into the later category.


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2006-09-22 08:22 [#01975634]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to epohs: #01975633 | Show recordbag



art only ever inspires debate about the status and state of
art, not politics.


 

offline redrum from the allman brothers band (Ireland) on 2006-09-22 08:31 [#01975638]
Points: 12878 Status: Addict | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01975634



oh dear


 

offline i_x_ten from arsemuncher on 2006-09-22 08:36 [#01975643]
Points: 10031 Status: Regular



its just another tired idea thats been done to death.
preaching to the converted. anyone who gets it has already
got it and anyone who dont wont.


 

offline FlyAgaric from the discovery (Africa) on 2006-09-22 10:55 [#01975714]
Points: 5776 Status: Regular



hey you guys, or jeri cc. any specific songs out there you
might be referring to? i'd love to hear this 'bush is a
prick' song. it would undoubtably inspire a chuckle.


 

offline Anus_Presley on 2006-09-22 10:57 [#01975715]
Points: 23472 Status: Lurker



I honestly can't think of any songs that you'rre talking
about.


 

offline Anus_Presley on 2006-09-22 10:58 [#01975716]
Points: 23472 Status: Lurker



Lucky forr me I guess.


 

offline Phresch from fucking Trondheim (Norway) on 2006-09-22 10:58 [#01975717]
Points: 9989 Status: Lurker | Followup to epohs: #01975613 | Show recordbag



haha, same here.



 

offline Anus_Presley on 2006-09-22 11:00 [#01975718]
Points: 23472 Status: Lurker | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01975626



why would anyone want to subtly voice political concerns,

though? I agree that it's bad that artists keep doing it
(but for other reasons than yours.. I'll probably get to
it), but I'm also quite opposed to the notion of
"discussing" things through "art" when the discussion or
opinion isn't crystal clear (meaning that it is actually
written in plain text somewhere on the piece of art);
ambiguity isn't your friend in political debate or
critique.


I disagrree with that almost 100%, but I won't get into.


 

offline Anus_Presley on 2006-09-22 11:07 [#01975722]
Points: 23472 Status: Lurker | Followup to redrum: #01975638



Yes!!!!


 

offline uviol from United States on 2006-09-22 11:26 [#01975727]
Points: 2496 Status: Lurker



Fully agreed.

Although I have a general distaste for political music/bands
in general. It's the wrong venue for that type of
expression, in my opinion. Crooning about political
problems in a song never really changes anything.. it's just
a way for bands to be able to tell themselves they're doing
something 'good' for society.

So maybe the collective effect of the youth of America
listening to that music is shaping their future beliefs?
Maybe.. on some level, but I don't think that's what the
bands who make this kind of music have in mind.. and big
political decisions are not going to be determined by 300
shitty punk bands rocking against Bush or any other
ultimately hopeless cause.


 

offline J198 from Maastricht (Netherlands, The) on 2006-09-22 11:43 [#01975735]
Points: 7342 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



lets talk about green day's 'american idiot'.

sincere or not? too commercial to be taken seriously or
not?

I like the song and i think they mean well.

google ad 'the white house mafia' :D


 

offline clint from Silencio... (United Kingdom) on 2006-09-22 11:46 [#01975737]
Points: 3447 Status: Lurker



There is a place for music with a political message, though.
Its just that there are so many posery bands who feign such
and such a stance, and make the whole notion of writing
'protest songs' seem trashy.

I haven't noticed it so much recently though, what sort of
bands are you referrin tto Ceri?

I guess Thom Yorke etc is very much that way inclined but I
think he's a freethinker.


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2006-09-22 11:48 [#01975738]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to Anus_Presley: #01975718 | Show recordbag



why beat around the bush (HA!) if you mean something? art is
good, but art is emotion.


 

offline clint from Silencio... (United Kingdom) on 2006-09-22 11:48 [#01975739]
Points: 3447 Status: Lurker | Followup to J198: #01975735



Of course, Green Day...


 

offline epohs from )C: on 2006-09-22 12:00 [#01975741]
Points: 17620 Status: Lurker | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01975738



are you saying art can't carry meaning? i kinda don't even
know where to begin disagreeing.


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2006-09-22 12:04 [#01975744]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to epohs: #01975741 | Show recordbag



it can, but it isn't very good for it unless the
meaning is explicit.


 

offline epohs from )C: on 2006-09-22 12:15 [#01975748]
Points: 17620 Status: Lurker



yeh, there's more consice & exact means to conveying
information than say a song or a peice of music.. but, maybe
not more powerful..

..oh hell, i don't know. :)

/me quits talking out of his ass


 

offline redrum from the allman brothers band (Ireland) on 2006-09-22 12:17 [#01975749]
Points: 12878 Status: Addict | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01975744



it's almost like you're saying art should have no subtext
because people are stupid and if you want to make a point
you should just shout it.

that's pretty much the complete opposite of what art is
meant to be, to me anyway.. it's meant to inspire thought on
the part of the spectator, and be open to interpretation.


 

offline redrum from the allman brothers band (Ireland) on 2006-09-22 12:19 [#01975750]
Points: 12878 Status: Addict



href="http://www.terra.es/personal/asg00003/picasso/grguer2
art only ever inspires debate about the status
and state of
art, not politics.


-- Prof. Drunken Mastah


 

offline redrum from the allman brothers band (Ireland) on 2006-09-22 12:20 [#01975751]
Points: 12878 Status: Addict




art only ever inspires debate about the status and stat...


jesus christ, somebody please fucking fix this messageboard.


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2006-09-22 12:29 [#01975753]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to redrum: #01975751 | Show recordbag



well, yes, some pieces, obviously, but these are always more
explicit and nearing on the less ambiguous character of
normal language (though language in no way is unambiguous)
and similar impact could just as easily (or maybe even more
easily) have been created through normal channels.


 

offline redrum from the allman brothers band (Ireland) on 2006-09-22 12:32 [#01975754]
Points: 12878 Status: Addict | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01975753



why would the artist who is concerned with these matters
think like that?

"Oh, i'll leave it to the writers, newspaper editors and
philosophers, they'll deal with it better and make a bigger
or equal impact, and i can just paint some still life or
something nice like that."



 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2006-09-22 12:33 [#01975755]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to epohs: #01975748 | Show recordbag



the power of art fades away in the fact that it is mostly
more ambiguous than what is desireable when criticising
something. people need to be more straight forward about
what they mean, but that doesn't mean art should be more
straight forward; I like the ambiguity in it, but it isn't
purposeful for conveying specific meaning.


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2006-09-22 12:36 [#01975756]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to redrum: #01975754 | Show recordbag



the artist can make whatever he wants to make as long as he
doesn't pretend everyone will have the same interpretation
of it unless he makes it explicit.


 

offline redrum from the allman brothers band (Ireland) on 2006-09-22 12:39 [#01975757]
Points: 12878 Status: Addict



drunken mastah lays down the rules, love it


 

offline dog_belch from Netherlands, The on 2006-09-22 12:39 [#01975758]
Points: 15098 Status: Addict | Show recordbag



Extract from the forthcoming book "Barking up the wrong
garden path: In conversation with dog_belch"


Interviewer: You've often stated that you feel mired in
depression, find little joy in contemporary culture, and
regard most things as rubbish. How do you find the strength
to carry on, what's left to motivate you?

dog_belch: Everytime I feel I've reached the very bottom,
that things can't get any worse or duller, I remind myself
I am not one of drunken_mastah's longwinded opinions.


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2006-09-22 12:43 [#01975759]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to redrum: #01975757 | Show recordbag



I don't care whatever senseless affection people seem to
have towards art; it is a good thing, sure, but not a
proper arena for actual critique of anything unless it is
explicit; if you mean something you should just say it
straight out.

hang on I'll paint a picture to illustrate what I mean.


 

offline dog_belch from Netherlands, The on 2006-09-22 12:49 [#01975763]
Points: 15098 Status: Addict | Show recordbag



If a picture paints only a thousand words, at least it'd
shut you up a bit.


 

offline Rostasky from United States on 2006-09-22 12:50 [#01975764]
Points: 1572 Status: Lurker | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01975759



Well, sure it is. You have to differentiate from literary
and abstract art though. They are both art.


 

offline epohs from )C: on 2006-09-22 12:50 [#01975765]
Points: 17620 Status: Lurker



i don't think anyone here is proposing that official
treatise or legal documents should be painted by pointilists
or sung in opera houses..


 

offline thatne from United States on 2006-09-22 12:52 [#01975767]
Points: 3026 Status: Lurker



enemies deserve special subdivisions
of time. you should vituperate against
them as frequently as possible even if
it means retrospective introtemporality.


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2006-09-22 12:54 [#01975770]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



I'd never create art intending to say anything; I just
create what I feel like and say what I think.

however, you may have pointed out an analogy to the problem;
if there are a thousand likely interpretations of an object
within the same setting, that is hardly purposeful
for communication, now, is it?


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2006-09-22 12:58 [#01975771]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to Rostasky: #01975764 | Show recordbag



sure, but embedding meaning in a song or a picture is still
a more roundabout way and thus not very purposeful (what's
the short word for that again? unpurposeful?).


 

offline epohs from )C: on 2006-09-22 13:03 [#01975772]
Points: 17620 Status: Lurker



hehe, actually that'd be pretty awesome if like, you had to
get your land surveyed for tax purposes, so you go down to
the court house and have your deed sung to you by a big
fatass opera singer lady with a leather horned viking cap
on.


 

offline Rostasky from United States on 2006-09-22 13:04 [#01975773]
Points: 1572 Status: Lurker



This is getting increasingly ambiguous, partially because we
are jumping around a continuum.

From:

Information--------------------------------------Art

Most art and most information falls somewhere in between
these. Its just, at what point do you say "This is ART!"


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2006-09-22 13:04 [#01975774]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to epohs: #01975765 | Show recordbag



no, of course not, but if people can't even read what I'm
saying here, imagine what it'd be like if I made a painting
to illustrate it with even more ambiguity than normal words.
I've been trying to say that art is not a very good
way
of expressing specific meaning unless you are very
explicit, and sometimes even being explicit, like when the
artist says what the painting is about in an interview, it
is in fact not the painting conveying the meaning, but the
artist actually saying straight out what he means which he
could've just done from the start.

I'm not saying artistic output can't or shouldn't be
inspired by meanings, but: it's not very
purposeful
and not something desireable in proper
debate. people are being silly with their roundabout ways.


 

offline Rostasky from United States on 2006-09-22 13:07 [#01975775]
Points: 1572 Status: Lurker | Followup to Drunken Mastah: #01975774



"but: it's not very purposeful
and not something desireable in proper debate.
people are being silly with their roundabout ways. "

Is that a poem?


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2006-09-22 13:10 [#01975777]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to Rostasky: #01975773 | Show recordbag



well.. I don't think one solid definition will ever hold for
when you say "this is art!" (people would always disagree)
but we all have rather vague conceptions of it which we are
able to apply when deciding that what we are looking at is
art. in this case, though, the main point is opinions and
how to best convey them. art is not a good way of conveying
them and unless you're explicit about it, I'd even say it's
pretty pointless to even try.


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2006-09-22 13:12 [#01975779]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to Rostasky: #01975775 | Show recordbag



as I just said you know the difference before even asking
the question, but we wouldn't want to ever set the limit as
being there.


 

offline Rostasky from United States on 2006-09-22 13:28 [#01975787]
Points: 1572 Status: Lurker



I just can think of so many things that I think are huge
breaches of the boundary between opinion and art that I
consider to be great.

What about the Sistine Chapel?
Diego Rivera's Crossroads?
Animal Farm?

I can't imagine that you would discredit these, if you do, I
can understand, but if not, then what is the point of
separating art and opinion if the art is all that matters in
the end or can overshadow the opinion.
I feel like I am missing one of your points though or
getting ahead of myself or something. : /


 

offline Drunken Mastah from OPPERKLASSESVIN!!! (Norway) on 2006-09-22 13:37 [#01975789]
Points: 35867 Status: Lurker | Followup to Rostasky: #01975787 | Show recordbag



well, yes, people are kind of misunderstanding me here even
though I've written time and time again that art isn't
purposeful for expressing opinions, it's just a bad
roundabout way of going about it. even animal farm with its
rather clear allegories isn't clear enough to be a
purposeful means of expressing the views one can interpret
it as expressing. I'm not too familiar with the other two
unless the sistine is a misspelling of sixtine (I don't
know, it could be some later piece of art attempting to
criticise something).


 

offline epohs from )C: on 2006-09-22 14:11 [#01975803]
Points: 17620 Status: Lurker



yeah, i am definitely misunderstanding the point you're
debating.

it kinda seems like you're setting up a straw man argument
and debunking a point that isn't being made.


 


Messageboard index