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F-ES Sitecore wrote: he'd have had far more success than he actually had.
Because 140 million records sold and 5 US platinum albums, a place in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, two Grammy awards, a Commander of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres, and having a spider named after him, demonstrate what a minor figure he was, for sure. Plonker!
I am not a number. I am a ... no, wait!
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I would answer your comments but I see you like to throw in personal insults so I know you'll simply outclass anything I have to say.
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F-ES Sitecore wrote: It won't be remembered in 3-4 years time. Bullshit. I, for one, will still play his music in 3-4 years time. And I'm not a fan at all. The media hype will have passed, but his music will still be listened to.
We still listen to fairly recently deceased Michael Jackson and Amy Winehouse, but also to the not-so-recently deceased Kurt Cobain, Freddie Mercury, and Jim Morrison. Even less-mainstream musicians like 2Pac and Biggie (both rappers) are still remembered!
3-4 is laughable, 300-400 years I can't say, but the next 30-40? Yeah, no doubt about it!
F-ES Sitecore wrote: He's just another musician who died early from a drug-fuelled life. No big deal. He also changed lives. I'm pretty sure people will remember exactly where they were when Bowie died 25 years from now. To them, and his loved ones, it is kind of a big deal.
And we also still have Labyrinth!
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For sure he'll still have fans and they'll still listen to his music for the years to come, as will the fans of Winehouse etc. But will he have enduring success? Be considered a classic? I don't think so. Even as a fan you must surely admit that he is being hyped a little too much right now? You'd think he walked on water the way the media is talking about him, and that kind of interest will fade in time and the only people listening to him were people that were fans of him already. When that generation is gone he'll just be an also-ran, as will Jackson etc.
In 40 years time people will be having this very conversation about Harry Styles and those people will be like "Bowie who?" *shrug*
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F-ES Sitecore wrote: When that generation is gone he'll just be an also-ran, as will Jackson etc. Don't forget that David Bowie, Michael Jackson, Kurt Cobain, Freddie Mercury, John Lennon, 2Pac, and who have you, are icons. They've helped in the development of pop music and as such they must be mentioned when talking about this history. They may not be known to the masses, but music fans will know them and their music cannot be forgotten.
And newer generations don't automatically dismiss old music. Bands such as The Rolling Stones and Iron Maiden have commented that they are surprised and happy to see people of all ages at their concerts, not just for their newer work, but also singing along to the classics. And as a music lover myself I can say I do enjoy music from the 60's and 70's as much as recent dubstep, trap, dance, and deep house.
Also don't forget that much of what we now accept as "higher (or highbrow) art" was once considered popular, sometimes even vulgar, amusement for the masses. I'm talking about operetta (von Suppé, Straus, Lehár, Millöcker...), waltz (most notably the Strauss family, also Lanner and others), and even Shakespeare. When Elvis first began shaking his hips he was considered vulgar, surely this was the end of the world. He is now considered to be in good taste. Same goes for The Beatles, and The Stones. Times change, as does the way we look at music, and art in general.
Again, I cannot say where Bowie will be in 400 years, or even 50. But don't be so quick to dismiss him as a trend. Surely he's a "trend" that has lasted for about a 40 years already, quite an unusual longevity for any trend!
F-ES Sitecore wrote: In 40 years time people will be having this very conversation about Harry Styles and those people will be like "Bowie who?" *shrug* Kanye West did a song with Paul McCartney and the Kanye fans praised Kanye for doing a song with, and helping, an unknown artist.
People are idiots, and yes, they say things
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TBH it's too early to say who is going to be remembered for what, but you need to bear in mind that we are still in an age of nostalgia for some bands and music, which is common when the band has passed but the generation that liked them is current or a single iteration away. Let's be honest...Elvis was rubbish. The Beatles were rubbish. Rolling Stones, rubbish, Queen, rubbish. When looked at analytically these were not good artists, and while you might spit your cereal out at the thought today, I think that in a few generations time those bands will not be looked on particularly fondly.
Maybe you'll be proven right, maybe I'll be proven right, but I don't think either of us will be alive long enough to truly find out.
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F-ES Sitecore wrote: Let's be honest...Elvis was rubbish. The Beatles were rubbish. Rolling Stones, rubbish, Queen, rubbish. When looked at analytically these were not good artists Because it is totally possible to analyze art and label it "good" or "bad". Beauty is in the eye (or ear) of the beholder.
Many people would consider Beethoven, Mozart, and Bach rubbish. And let's be honest, they couldn't even write a simple Beatles song!
Did you know Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake was deemed a failure in its own time? Tchaikovsky then wrote the Nutcracker instead, but hated it. The people loved the Nutcracker. Now both are considered among his best works!
Many old paintings that are still considered classic masterpieces today totally suck because they couldn't even get the perspective right!
An actual urinal was hung in a museum hall and they called it art.
Etc. etc.
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Sander Rossel wrote: Because it is totally possible to analyze art and label it "good" or "bad".
To an extent, it is. I don't like Mozart but I appreciate it for the skill and talent it took. "Yellow Submarine" by the Beatles? Um...no. I don't like fine art but I can look at a painting by Constable and appreciate the skill and talent. "My Bed" by Tracry Emin? Um...no.
I think a reasonable person can look at contemporary art and have a fair idea what is going to be a future classic ("good") and what is just a case of the Emperor's New Clothes ("bad").
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That's a weird thing you say there.
You don't like Mozart, but recognize it as being "good" music.
How many people like Mozart, and how many people like The Beatles?
I think The Beatles win by a few miles.
So you're saying our collective taste is just really bad, because clearly Mozart writes the better music?
Or are you confusing "better" with "complicated"?
Because, to me, the sheer brilliance of The Beatles is exactly their simplicity. To top it off they did something no one else ever did before. What they did was literally and metaphorically unheard of!
Compare that to Mozart who wrote complex music that adheres to strict rules and theory.
I'm not saying one is better than the other, because clearly they are completely different things.
The Beatles couldn't write Mozart, but Mozart couldn't write The Beatles either.
As for "My Bed", it raised great media attention. Clearly the work moved people and as such it's a successful piece of art worth over £2.000.000,-!
That's a whole lot of money for a work of art that, according to you (and according to any "reasonable person" according to you), is just Emperor's New Clothes, or "bad".
Somehow very rich (and possibly smart) people see something in the work that you, as reasonable person, fail to see.
And yet again, I say to you, beauty is in the eye of the beholder
P.S. I have a Bachelors degree in Common Art- and Cultural Sciences. I've had this discussion a million times over
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Sander Rossel wrote: That's a weird thing you say there.
You don't like Mozart, but recognize it as being "good" music.
How many people like Mozart, and how many people like The Beatles?
I think The Beatles win by a few miles.
So you're saying our collective taste is just really bad, because clearly Mozart writes the better music?
Or are you confusing "better" with "complicated"?
It's seems you're confusing "good" with "popular". People's taste *is* bad - 98% of everything is rubbish. 98% of music, films, books...you name it, it's rubbish. The population tends toward the 98% and tends toward more simplistic, faddish tastes that change sharply over time to reflect whatever is "popular now". That's why the big interest in Bowie right now...he's "in". Never had a US #1 Album in his whole career, he had to die to get that so how popular was he really?
Sander Rossel wrote: Because, to me, the sheer brilliance of The Beatles is exactly their simplicity
Do you hold the same opinions of The Spice Girls? One Direction? Justin Bieber? Cos their music is rubbish too....massively popular, very simplistic...but rubbish.
Sander Rossel wrote: As for "My Bed", it raised great media attention. Clearly the work moved people and as such it's a successful piece of art worth over £2.000.000,-!
Now you're confusing "good" with "financially successful". The Spice Girls, One Direction...all very successful financially. It is no reflection on the quality or durability of their work.
Sander Rossel wrote: P.S. I have a Bachelors degree in Common Art- and Cultural Sciences
That's nice, I have a PhD in Always Being Right
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F-ES Sitecore wrote: It's seems you're confusing "good" with "popular". People's taste *is* bad - 98% of everything is rubbish. 98% of music, films, books...you name it, it's rubbish. The population tends toward the 98% and tends toward more simplistic, faddish tastes that change sharply over time to reflect whatever is "popular now". If rubbish is the new norm then nothing is rubbish
F-ES Sitecore wrote: Do you hold the same opinions of The Spice Girls? One Direction? Justin Bieber? They didn't do anything new. Their music is written by people who somehow know how to write a hit. They're machines. Yet I won't say they're not good, but I'll tell you... WHAT I WANT WHAT I REALLY REALLY WANT!
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I believe Elvis Presley has the potential to be remembered for 300-400 years when he dies.
Sander Rossel wrote: Even less-mainstream musicians like 2Pac and Biggie
Who?
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F-ES Sitecore wrote: It won't be remembered in 3-4 years time.
Considering some of his most popular work was created 45 years ago some would consider that already disproven.
F-ES Sitecore wrote: he'd have had far more success than he actually had.
No 140 million albums sold does not quite put him up with the Beatles or Elvis.
F-ES Sitecore wrote: He's just another musician who died early from a drug-fuelled life.
At 69?
Peter Wasser
"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts." - Bertrand Russell
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F-ES Sitecore wrote: He's just another musician who died early from a drug-fuelled life. No big deal.
Like, say, that Beethoven chap who drank himself to death in his fifties?
Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them.
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F-ES Sitecore wrote: He's just another musician who died early from a drug-fuelled life. No big deal. He died from cancer, not a drug overdose.
/ravi
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I didn't say he died from a drug overdose.
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F-ES Sitecore wrote: It won't be remembered in 3-4 years time.
So, those who have been David Bowie fans all along will stop listening to his music in 3-4 years?
How long do you listen to music for?
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Display Name Taken wrote: I wonder if his music will be remembered in 3-400 years time like some "classical" music is?
Who is he again?
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Having had problems with an unlicensed copy of Win8 that was installed on a new machine I bought a few years ago, I purchased a pukka copy of Win10 Home and installed it. I must say I like it very much, including Edge. However, I get unusual things happening from time to time. They are usually not that important. Things like desktop icons of automatically started programs suddenly start disappearing off the desktop only to re-appear perhaps a week later. Last night, however, I thought the system had gone.
My wife called me for dinner so I just left the system as it was and went down to join her. When I had finished, I went back to my office and the screen was off, as I would have expected after such a time period. I twiddled the mouse expecting the screen to display the last desktop image. However, I got a message indicating that it was trying to boot from a non-bootable disc partition. I did a restart and went into the BIOS and checked the boot order. I have 3 separate hard drives installed and the order had indeed changed. Having reset it, the machine then restarted without any problems.
This has never happened to me before on all the systems way back to Win XP, and it is rather worrying. It suggests something may happen that I won't be able to recover from. Has anyone else experienced unexpected behaviour with Win10?
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The damn thing switches my toolbar from my Portrait monitor to my primary (Landscape) monitor with horrible frequency, one of the updates disabled my LAN connection, it won't leave my wallpapers alone, it's ugly as heck, Edge is useless, and Cortana can't understand me at all (which is a bonus since it can't find anything anyway unless you use unrelated words).
I'd strongly suggest that you take good, solid backups (AOMEI are very good for that) onto off-line storage if anything is playing with your boot order - it may not be Win10 but a sign of something much nastier!
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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I'm already using AOMEI to backup onto a USB-connected hard drive. I have 3 hard drives installed: one for the system, the other two for data, so hopefully I'm not going to lose much data. Unless they get cooked, of course.
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OriginalGriff wrote: Cortana can't understand me at all
Nobody can understand you, and we don't have to try to decipher your accent!
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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I don't have an accent - it's all you other buggers!
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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Quote: it's all you other buggers
Yes - when we first moved to the USA, I told my wife: "I've never seen so many people with an American accent!"
How do we preserve the wisdom men will need,
when their violent passions are spent?
- The Lost Horizon
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I have all manner of problems getting WPF programs to run on Win 10 - sometimes they work, sometimes they don't, sometimes they run but don't display everything correctly (or at all)
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