S_M_Cumberworth
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 114
- Location
- Japan, formerly Los Angeles
I cannot stand the Rolling Stones, and I think that the Animals are dull at best. I really like the Beatles, although I think that John Lennon was a joke. He was a mediocre musician and a sub par poet who would have gone nowhere without the melodies of Paul McCartney. That said, George Harrison was the best.
I do like Elvis though. Not saying he was original, I just like his voice. Not huge on Sinatra, love Dean Martin. I wish that people still wrote such great songs, so that Michael Bublé would not have to continue to sing 60 year old material.
On to concert music.
I rather like Wagner.
I think that Shoenberg was one of the worst things that happened to western music (not that his was terrible, it just set a bad precedent.)
It is a shame that more people did not imitate and build on the style of Gershwin.
John Cage does not deserve to be called a composer.
Puccini may be the Andrew Lloyd Webber of opera, but he gets me everytime (by the way, Webber is a bit of a guilty pleasure of mine).
I may be starting to like Donizetti.
Ah! I always love finding someone who appreciates McCartney over Lennon. I think Lennon had some great stuff, but the quality of his output diminished greatly with time. I can't stomach any of his solo records.
Puccini really was the Andrew Lloyd Webber of opera — and I hate Andrew Lloyd Webber. I'd rather not talk about Donizetti. There's something about 19th and 20th century Italian opera in general that I don't like.
I don't have a problem with Schoenberg per se, only what he spawned. That said, I've always preferred some of his contemporaries to him. I think the harmonic and melodic textures of, say, Janáček, Kodály, and Bartók were more interesting than any of his own tonal experiments.