obeythepenguin wrote:Kramerguy wrote:In the last 6 months, I've been turned onto some really great new music, and the radio stations are finally playing it- My cover band has been focused on learning new stuff and its killing at gigs.
Bands like:
Black Keys, Fun, Foster the People, Grouplove, Goteye, Neon Trees, Killers, Death Cab for Cutie, M83, Mumford & Sons, Of Monsters and Men, Metric, the Shins, Young The Giant, Cage the Elephant... the list goes on and on. [...]
So many young original artists today think they are gifted and just try to jump right into it. Sure, they may be able to write a decent hook, but more often than not, it's not a "great" hook. A good hook is what we called "filler" songs on albums back in the day. These young original artists write song after song, almost always in 4/4 and almost always follow the same arrangement format: I/V/C/V/C/B/C/O
Many also stick to 2-3 different keys, usually in the comfort zone with D/G/C, D/A/B, A/C/E.. you get the picture. All songs are 3 and 4 note yawners. The cream that generally rises in this group are the ones who happen to be more gifted singers, but that really doesn't excuse the piss-poor music writing.
Foster the People's biggest hit uses four chords in straight 4/4 time for the entire song. Lyrically it's V/C/V/C..., where the last chorus just repeats until the fadeout. The bassline, while obscenely catchy, is just a simple ascending scale in Fm with the odd fill thrown in here and there. It takes more time to play than to learn, because once you know the first four chords and the lyrics, you literally know the entire song.
Likewise, Gotye's biggest hit is just three chords, and the last one (Bb) only shows up about halfway into the song. The arrangement certainly stands out, but more for the clever production than any real musicality. I get the impression he listened to a lot of Peter Gabriel records, since he does a decent job aping Gabriel's singing voice and off-beat aesthetic, but didn't pick up on anything deeper than that.
Musically speaking, those "really great new" bands you like aren't doing anything more sophisticated than the "young original artists" with their three-chord progressions and simplistic song structures. Don't get me wrong, they've got some talent, but mostly it's just better production and vastly better marketing.
Hey- apples and oranges to the point I was making about singer/songwriters, but hey- I'll bite.
So yes, I am aware those songs are 3 or 4 chords, in 4/4, etc. You stated it well that the big difference is the production.. although I think the marketing aspect is a moot point, every band has their own story on how they got to where they are.
So Let's use Goteye as the discussion piece- 3 chords. Not even a lot in the way of vocal variances, yet it still has something that others don't. What is that? I'm thinking production, obviously, but how much credit do you give towards production vs. songwriting? With the Goteye song, there's a LOT of complex rhythms going on in the background. Almost any great song you can pull out your azz will always break down to a simple 3-4 chord bass/root notes.. adding 9-10 root notes won't make any song on the planet any better. Like Nirvana, the Beatles, and many others- Simplicity sells, but the magic bullet for most of these bands is that they have their own "sound".. a sound that sets them apart from other bands and is usually an integral part of their chord and vocal phrasing. Singer/songwriters on guitars don't have those luxuries and unfortunately will fall in obscurity when they try to copycat other singer songwriters who DID manage to find their own "sound" with just an acoustic guitar and a mic.
Digging deeper into things, look at the Black Keys.. OMG- simple music.. yet take a good listen to their phrasing.. it's still got a tone and complexity that creates their own sound.. some of which clearly borrowed from 70's hard rock, mixed with today. But in the end, it's vastly separated from the level of singer-songwriter I was referring to.