

Bollocks. Bieber is a clone, just like 99% of all other pop "stars".Animavore wrote:I am in my shite being bloody minded. They transformed pop music, big whoop. So did Justin Bieber. To which, by the way, there is a logical pathway from The Beatles.Audley Strange wrote: fair enough, I think your being bloody minded though.
Sir Figg Newton wrote:If I have seen further than others, it is only because I am surrounded by midgets.
IDMD2Cormac wrote:Doom predictors have been with humans right through our history. They are like the proverbial stopped clock - right twice a day, but not due to the efficacy of their prescience.
Yep. Have you not seen all the derivatives since?Rum wrote:Justin Bieber transformed pop music?![]()
Animavore wrote:Nope. Have you not seen all the clones before and since?Rum wrote:Justin Bieber transformed pop music?![]()
'Nuff said.
Sir Figg Newton wrote:If I have seen further than others, it is only because I am surrounded by midgets.
IDMD2Cormac wrote:Doom predictors have been with humans right through our history. They are like the proverbial stopped clock - right twice a day, but not due to the efficacy of their prescience.
Utter bollocks. Screaming girl fans go way back to Frank Sinatra's early days. Even some classical composers had girly fans!Animavore wrote:Yep. Have you not seen all the derivatives since?Rum wrote:Justin Bieber transformed pop music?![]()
It's quite simple to me. I look at a Beatles concert and what do I see? A crowd of screaming girls in hysterics (in the literal sense). I then cast my eye to a Bieber concert and the same fans are screaming and in hysterics.
This is not the type of concert I'd be caught dead at. Those are not the type of women I would want to associate with. And as a corollary; that is not the type of music I would rate.
Similar fans to the Beatles today can also be found at X-Factor.
'Nuff said.
And The Beatles were clones of The Crickets, Elvis and Cliff Richard. And later clones of just about everyone else around them so I don't see your point. Are you trying to claim The Beatles exploded out of some bubble unrelated to anything else? That's creationism right there.Mysturji wrote:Animavore wrote:Nope. Have you not seen all the clones before and since?Rum wrote:Justin Bieber transformed pop music?![]()
'Nuff said.
No they didn't. You can't get your head around your bias at all. Probably because you were there and I'm sure you have lots of fond memories when you listen to them but to anyone else that's has a more retrospective position this just isn't the case at all.Rum wrote:Utter bollocks. Screaming girl fans go way back to Frank Sinatra's early days. Even some classical composers had girly fans!Animavore wrote:Yep. Have you not seen all the derivatives since?Rum wrote:Justin Bieber transformed pop music?![]()
It's quite simple to me. I look at a Beatles concert and what do I see? A crowd of screaming girls in hysterics (in the literal sense). I then cast my eye to a Bieber concert and the same fans are screaming and in hysterics.
This is not the type of concert I'd be caught dead at. Those are not the type of women I would want to associate with. And as a corollary; that is not the type of music I would rate.
Similar fans to the Beatles today can also be found at X-Factor.
'Nuff said.
In terms of popular music and more significantly singer songwriter/self expression the Beatles changed the way almost everything was done.
Mysturji wrote:e.g. How would this (incidentally, IMHO, the greatest intro in rock music ever. Turn it up.) have been possible...
How would a song which begins as almost a rip-off of another song exist if the song it ripped-off didn't exist in the first place?Mysturji wrote: ... without this?
Nope. Rolling Stone vote Beatles the best band ever and then invite famous person to write about them.Animavore wrote:Beatle fan writes favourably about The Beatles. Surprise, surprise.
No. I'm not. I've heard it all before about other bands and scenes from various documentaries. "It was a Golden era", "It was like nothing before", "they exploded on the scene", "it was new and exctiing"... etc. Costello's article is no different to countless I've come across on artists like The Sex Pistols or Bowie and many more all, coincidently, by people who "were there".Rum wrote:Nope. Rolling Stone vote Beatles the best band ever and then invite famous person to write about them.Animavore wrote:Beatle fan writes favourably about The Beatles. Surprise, surprise.
You are clearly having trouble facing reality sir.
My confirmation bias? You're the one pulling out articles and polls which confirm your views. Not me.Rum wrote:So that disqualifies those opinions? I think you should check your confirmation bias!
OK - keep struggling with this if you like. I have to go shopping!
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