Showing posts with label Apple. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Apple. Show all posts

Monday, November 7, 2011

Five Reasons Why The Beatles Suck

Exposing Irrefutable Proof that the “Fab Four” were the Most Overrated Musicians of All-Time

It was the '60s. Nobody knew everything they liked sucked.

Is it possible to discriminate against people and simultaneously enforce a status quo opinion via pop cultural tastes?

It sounds really stupid and unlikely, but I think I’ve uncovered a key example of such homogenized group ideal enforcement in modern music with something I like to call “The Exclusionary Beatles Principle.”

“The Exclusionary Beatles Principle” is this: no matter who you are or where you live, you MUST admit that the Beatles were either among the greatest musicians of all time OR they were the absolute most important ever. You must also admit that they were indelibly influential artists, extremely important social philosophizing poets and without question men of incredible ethics and values.

The social code I’ve observed in the western world is this: if you break away from “The Exclusionary Beatles Principle,” you are WRONG. The Beatles, for whatever reason, are a band that you MUST not only like, but give an incredible amount of reverence to. While it’s OK to crap on Lady Gaga, Michael Jackson (up until 2009, anyway) and Justin Bieber, not only is Beatles criticism frowned upon, it’s seen as a perversion of cultural thinking. If you don’t have a great deal of respect for the group, then you are considered guilty of non-group thought, which in turn, allows those within the same thought-group to fallaciously discredit and disbar you in just about every other domain, as well.

Well, old Jimbo here has never been one to refuse to barbecue a sacred cow, and I’m just going to come out and say it:

The Beatles sucked. I mean, hard.

Blasphemy, you say? Unfounded conjecture, you protest? Not so fast, amigo, because I’ve outline five SCIENTIFICALLY AND HISTORICALLY INDISPUTABLE reasons as to why not only are The Beatles EXTREMELY OVERRATED, but a downright crappy band of musicians AND human beings.

You say you want a revolution, man? Well, here’s a paradigm shift for you:

FIVE IRREFUTABLE REASONS WHY THE BEATLES SUCKED

"..imagine no possessions..."
  
REASON NUMBER ONE: THEY WERE MEDIA CREATIONS

When people refer to Brian Epstein as the “fifth Beatle,” they’re WAY more accurate than they probably think. Not only did Epstein serve as the band’s original manager, he’s pretty much the Svengali that transformed the four mop-headed racket-makers from Nazi-dive playing scoundrels into the N*Sync of their day.

As part of Epstein’s “marketing strategy” for the band, he advised the group to make a few changes to their act - namely, everything. Not only did he force the kids to change their appearance (that’s where the suits and haircuts came in), he also advised/threatened them to play more “radio-friendly” tunes, which resulted in all of those Lou Pearlman-esque bubblegum songs making their way across the pond.

“Beatlemania,” in reality, was a heavily produced marketing ploy by Epstein and the bigwigs at Vee-Jay Records, who were willing to dump tons of payola to score themselves a Motown like sensation for the label, so that they could use The Beatles as a bargaining chip for a highly lucrative Capitol Records deal in the States.

In short, the term “Fab Four” actually is pretty fitting regarding the group - although if we wanted to steer closer to reality, that “fab” connotes not “fabulous,” but “fabricated.

REASON NUMBER TWO: THEY WERE RIP-OFFS

Quick question: what exactly did The Beatles do differently as musicians?

The short answer? Absolutely nothing.

The Beatles early recordings might as well be admitted plagiarizations of countless American artists, from Carl Perkins to the Supremes to Roy Orbison to especially Buddy Holly. . .in fact, the name of the group is a direct nod to the name of Holly’s band, The Crickets. And that’s not even counting the groups’ countrymen, including the Dave Clark Five, whom the Beatles “borrowed” tons of inspiration from for their post-“Rubber Soul” albums. 

As far as their much revered later work goes, just remember this: The Beatles didn’t exactly pioneer the art, or crunching guitar overlap, Bengali interludes or orchestrated feedback in popular music, either.

Think “Helter Skelter” was the first heavy metal song ever recorded? Too bad Arthur Brown, Budgie and Blue Cheer were already established acts by the time the song was released, and completely ignore the fact that the first Jimi Hendrix album came out a full year before the “The White Album.”

The Beatles were FAR from being the first pop act to interject sitars into their sound, either. (Ravi Shankar, your table is waiting.)

Think “Revolution 9” was the first instance of a musical group getting all “industrial” on our asses? Well, it would be, if not for the fact that tons of bands like Cromagnon, The Monks, The Fugs and The Godz had already begun exploring fuzz and distortion years earlier.

Even The New York Times called the group out on their lifting of other bands’ sounds, which prompted John Lennon to write a nasty reply in 1971 in which he said that the Beatles’ music wasn’t a rip-off, but a love-in.

And in case you were wondering, the Beatles were successfully sued for those love-ins on THREE separate occasions, as Chuck Berry, Joe Garlandand the Chiffons all filed – and won –suits against the band for ripping off their music.

REASON NUMBER THREE: THEIR ALBUMS WERE RIDICULOUSLY OVERPRODUCED

Odds are, you hear Beatles songs a lot. You hear them on the oldies station and you hear them on a perpetual loop at Starbucks. You’ve probably heard their number one singles a million billion times, but answer me this - just how many times have you heard a live recording of The Beatles performing?

Outside of the Ed Sullivan tapings, most people have never HEARD a live Beatles song, and that’s for a good reason: The Beatles were a TERRIBLE live act, that’s why.
...and you thought the Beach Boys were 
the only group famous for 
hanging out with psychopaths?

Earlier, I said that the Beatles didn’t pioneer anything new in music. Well, the closest they got to being innovators for pop music was the fact that they were the first band that necessitated overproduction in their recordings. Listening to “The White Album” or “Sgt. Pepper’s” is basically the equivalent of listening to the work of a hundred people, because there’s so much post work and audio tweaking on the tracks that there’s hardly anything organic about the compositions at all.

Here’s just a few criticisms about The Beatles overproduced albums that I’ve stumbled across on the Web:

“John Lennon and Paul McCartney are not writing together, haven't been for two years, and you can see the whole thing falling apart in Let It Be …there are only two songs which get anywhere and we have heard these so much they have lost their lustre…the rest of the album is hackneyed, originally supposed to signify the Beatles attempt to get back to rock and roll, to where they once performed live. This album is a sad attempt to recreate the days when they played before actual people and not George Martin and millions of dollars of sound equipment. There is a photograph of the group buried in their equipment, performing before cameras. The result was nothing live at all but a group of very famous people, heroes of our time simulating live performance…. Let It Be is a disparate album, going all sorts of different places at once, never unified… it reflects not the many sides of the Beatles in the act of creation, but the dissonance that precedes the fall.

“Flawed, botched, and overproduced by Phil Spector…”
 
“Let It Be is a grim reminder that there is nothing so depressing as the sound of breaking up. A salvage effort by Spector renders the LP's few worthy tunes unlistenable with lush strings and choirs.”



Heck, even the people that like The Beatles admit that they went overboard with the post-production. Just listen to this fanboy talk about the faults and foibles of “Sgt. Pepper”: 

“There is something wrong with Sgt Pepper, and it is by far the most overrated album in the Beatles catalog, and possibly the most overrated album of all time. Here are the arguments…the stereo effects are way too exaggerated, with vocals or other sounds panned all the way to the left or right, indicating a wild overuse of the Beatles newfound opportunity to mix a record in multitrack stereo. Albums since then, even Beatles albums subsequently produced, do not make use of such gimmicky stereo panning unless the effect is designed to be extreme. In the case of some of the tunes on Sgt Pepper, the extreme panning serves as a distraction instead of an enhancement.”

…and that tells you just about everything you need to know, don’t it?

REASON NUMBER FOUR: THEY WEREN’T GREAT MUSICIANS BY ANY STRECH

Pic courtesy of some awesome guy named 
Steven Howard.
Say what you will about John Lennon’s lyrics (which he, by the way, thought were pretty pointless himself), the reality is unavoidable: none of the Beatles were remarkably talented at what they did. Yeah, Lennon and McCartney could play the piano, but if you made a list of the top one hundred pianists of the 20th century, you would have to be an absolute mongoloid to include them on the countdown. If you can name ANY bassists or drummers out there that cite McCartney or Ringo as direct influences on them, please let me know, because I haven’t heard such praise in all of my 25 years on the planet.

George Harrison was probably the most talented of the Beatles, but let’s face the facts: would anybody feel comfortable in naming him one of the greatest guitar players of all time? Was anything he did on par with the work of Hendrix, or Van Halen, or Stevie Ray Vaughn, or even a Scott Ian? In all reality, that dude  from Limp Bizkit was more impressive as a guitarist than he was.

The Beatles may have been adequate singers and writers of mildly above average poetry, but that’s about it as far as their musical dexterity goes.

REASON NUMBER FIVE: THEY WERE ALL HYPOCRITES

For whatever reason, people seem to equate John Lennon and the music of the Beatles as symbolic of the peace and human rights movement of the 1960s.

The only problem? John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and George Harrison were all a bunch of duplicitous, insincere a-holes.

McCartney and Harrison both went on and on about the ills of consumption and commercialization, but what do you know? Both guys spent the rest of their lives living in luxurious mansions, collecting gargantuan royalty checks that they spent on such humanitarian efforts as themselves. Ever one to note the value of the musical art form, McCartney celebrated the medium by doing what any connoisseur of art would - he bought up thelicensing rights to more songs than anybody on the planet, so that he couldmake a profit every time other people’s work was used for commercial purposes.

Julian and Cynthia Lennon, seen 
here paying respects to 
the man that gave peace 
a chance/ ruined their lives.
And then, there’s John Lennon, the “martyr” that just wanted us “to give peace a chance.” Here’s a quote about Mr. Lennon that you’ve probably never heard amidst all of that vaunting and praise he is perennially showered with:

"I have to say that, from my point of view, I felt he was a hypocrite…[he]could talk about peace and love out loud to the world but he could never show it to the people who supposedly meant the most to him…how can you talk about peace and love and have a family in bits and pieces - no communication, adultery, divorce? You can't do it, not if you're being true and honest with yourself."

At first, that sounds like your run of the mill case of the sour grapes, until you realize this: the above words were written by John Lennon’s own son


And that, in a nutshell, summarizes the innate hypocrisy behind those oh-so virtuous Beatles. You claim to promote all of these ideals that wins you a legion of fans, and what do you know? You do the exact opposite as soon as you’re off stage or out of the plain view of a camera.

I mean, what could possibly be more hypocritical than a guy that sang “imagine no possessions” dying with about $150 million in his bank account?

So what have we learned here today? Well, a lot, hopefully, key among them the fact that opinion is opinion and anybody that wants to enforce such as a cultural dictate is a grade-A despotic bung hole.

I’ve brought up the “Great Man” myth several times before, but it deserves another mention here. Throughout history, certain people are showered with praise for their “achievements,” even if they a.) really didn’t do what everyone claims they did or b.) they were absolute pricks in real-life that did horrible, horrible things that, for some reason, gets filtered out of the mainstream pool of cultural knowledge, despite tons of records existing on the matter.

A lot of the accolades thrown towards the Beatles are undeserved, the same way just about EVERYONE and EVERYTHING that has been or ever will be popular has. The important thing here is that you go beyond the fan boy and girl-ism of your cohorts and decide FOR YOURSELF what’s individually great or meaningful. . .

. . .because the moment you give up that inquisitive mindset, and especially if you just buy into the herd mentality without a smidge of skepticism, you’re pretty much setting yourself up for a lifetime of aimless following.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

And In Case You Forgot, Steve Jobs Was a Real Jerk, Too.

Remembering the life and times of Steve Jobs (by the way, he was kind of an a-hole)


As the world (and by "world," I mean a mass gaggle of techno-nerd hipsters that seem to equate consumer penchant with tactile values and personality traits) mourns the somewhat unexpected passing of Steve "Big Daddy" Jobs, I too, feel as if we should take the time to reflect on the life and times of the Apple mastermind...

...primarily, the fact that he was one of the biggest jerks that has ever lived. Ever.

Odds, are you'll probably be hearing a whole heck of a lot about the iPod and the iPad and MacBook today, but you probably won't be hearing too much about the OTHER Steve Jobs. . .you know, the bipolar maniupulator that wasn't above doing home invasions and holding employees hostage to get a point across. (And oh yeah, there's a strong likelihood that he stole some dude's liver, too, in case you haven't heard about it.)

Whoa, hold on, amigo. I'm not saying all of that just to ruffle a few feathers (lest the upset spill their $7 dollar Starbuck$ mocha-frappa-crapp-achino on their $700 dollar laptop, of course), but just parroting the words of one Alan Deutschman, whose 2000 book "The Second Coming of Steve Jobs" pretty much told us what we all suspected (OK, knew for a fact) about the Jobster.

Here are a just few choice cuts from Deutcshman's eleven year old character assassination/hatchet job/big, fat dosage of truth:



So later on this evening, when you hear some "in-the-know" tech-savvy consumer-crat go on and on about how much of a "visionary" and "genius" Jobs was, just remind them that behind the "Great Man myth," there was a guy that was, for all intents and purposes, a major league butt hole. Hey, you might as well get your shots in early, since it looks like we're destined for the biggest maelstrom of retroactive, post-mortem public adulation since a certain uni-gloved, monkey-owning alleged sex-offender bought the farm a couple of years back. . . 


R.I.P, Steven Paul Jobs (02-24-1955 - 10-05-11)

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Is Google+ Really A Googol-Pus?

Is the Social Networking Service Innovative, or a 10^100-Armed Octopus? 


Every day, it seems, you hear another story about Google that makes you wonder if the California-based company is on the fast track to complete global domination

In late September, the company announced that it was opening three data centers in Hong Kong, Taiwan and Singapore. Right after it was through opening up one in London, that is. And just for good measure, one in Oklahoma, just in case Texas just up and disappears one evening, I imagine. 

That same month, it was announced that the company’s web browser Chrome would eclipse Mozilla Firefox as the web’s second most utilized service. By then, the company had already put in a mega-huge bid to purchase Motorola, and earlier in the month, the company purchased Zagat for a measly $125 million.

And oh yeah, the firm is investing in housing subsidies, solar energy, potentially unwanted face tracking programs, and publication of archaic (and to some, sacrosanct) literature. And also, they have some minor plans to eliminate tangible cash spending by consumers before the end of the decade. Nothing major, really, as far as aspirations go

As of the current, the two major happenings going down for the Goog involve A.) accusations of monopolization in congressional antitrust hearings, and B.) the absolutely MASSIVE success of the recently “open to the public” social networking service Google+. . . and these two, I assure you, probably have more to do with one another than Old Schmidt-Head would want you to believe

The following is a quote taken from a WebProNews article written by Chris Crum entitled “The Ever-Changing World of Social Media.” I want you to pay real close attention to the wording here, and tell me if it sounds even vaguely familiar. 

“Essentially, the point is that Google as a whole – it’s portfolio of products – is the network. Your Google account, regardless of whether you use Google+ itself, makes you a user, because it’s all connected, and will be connected in many more ways as time progresses. Google+ – the streams, circles, hangouts, etc. are simply features of the greater Google social network.”

If that quote rings a certain bell, it’s because you probably heard this line circa 1991:

"In three years, Cyberdyne will become the largest supplier of military computer systems. All stealth bombers are upgraded with Cyberdyne computers, becoming fully unmanned. Afterwards, they fly with a perfect operational record. The Skynet Funding Bill is passed. The system goes online on August 4th, 1997. Human decisions are removed from strategic defense. Skynet begins to learn at a geometric rate. It becomes self-aware 2:14 AM, Eastern time, August 29th. "

Now, I'm not necessarily saying that Google+ will lead us into nuclear Armageddon, but the reality the the Google leviathan is COMPLETELY changing the technological infrastructure of not only U.S., but global culture simply cannot be ignored. At this juncture, you really can't call Google industrial leaders anymore, since there's virtually zero competition for the ever-growing multi-platform juggernaut to trample (unless the name of your company bears the moniker of a certain red and/or green fruit, anyway.)

And as fate would have it, as Google did unto Yahoo, it now looks to do unto Facebook. The thing is, Google has also proven to be the good times killer for scores of other industries, as well. One look at the list of Google holdings lets you know that the organizations intents rest well beyond the domain of online services: not only has Google turned into the largest software baron since Microsoft in the mid '90s, it's probably an even more omnipresent force (or threat?) than the mighty MS could ever dare dream of. 

You go online? Your inbox is maintained by Google. You want to watch streaming videos? Well, you're going to do so on Google's watch. . .literally. Hell, if you want to find anything via the Internet, odds are, you'll have to go through Google, in some manifestation, first. With the success of the Droid O/S, you cannot even escape Google's presence away from the World Wide Web now. As such, Google+ is the natural extension of the company's hyper expansive, hyper aggressive business strategy: apparently, these guys are ripping pages from Bill Gates' old playbook, right down to the antitrust litigation.

The question now is just how much personal information we're giving up to the Goog by signing up for Google+. Being a part of just one Google cog is enough to reel you into the rest of the system: the next time you're on Google+, try opening up a second window and heading to YouTube, or Blogger, or even the Google homepage.

What do you see? Well, what you see is. . .well, you. By accessing and signing up for Google's myriad web services, you pretty much (perhaps unknowingly) create a public portfolio connecting all of your social media profiles together.

In other (and far more dramatic phrasing), Google has become freakin' Skynet

As we all know by now, Google's supposed business motto is "Don't be evil." Now, to some, "intrusion" may not exactly be synonymous with inhumanity (and even less with "robot war," but come 2020, that might all change), but la verdad es las verdad here.

You know, for a worldwide-recognized business, a shockingly few number of people know exactly what the term "Google" actually means. For those not in the know, it's derived from the term "googol," which is the numerical term for one followed by one hundred zeroes.

Mathematicians says that there's no practical use for such a gargantuan number. Methinks if Google keeps on keeping on, we may just have to use 10^100 to list the number of ways the unstoppable Goog permeates our lives, online and off.