The point of these threads, Spork-haters aren't bad people but a generally vitriolic folk, they cannot bear individualism, people expressing fun and joy, art that questions their narrative, for they are insecure, depressed and deserve pity. They are quick to pigeonhole those artists they take offense with and try to make their fans look bad with glib rhetoric based on stereotyping. Essentially they care about fitting in, their music taste is geared towards projecting an air of "maturity" or “coolness” which are arbitrary norms sporkcore challenges. Spork-fans are aware of the nature of Popular Music: not just its musical content but its styles and the cult(ure) they propagate are what makes this musical tradition important. They are educated in postmodern thought and appreciate the philosophical implications of Sporkcore, which plays with and between those styles. They can appreciate music on a technical level, its creativity for its own sake, without the narrow lense of any particular subculture and the idea of stylistic (or racial) purity those may hold. They have an optimistic, cosmopolitan attitude towards life. So either raise that spork or shove it up yours!
>Spork-haters aren't bad people but a generally vitriolic folk, they cannot bear individualism, people expressing fun and joy, art that questions their narrative, for they are insecure, depressed and deserve pity. They are quick to pigeonhole those artists they take offense with and try to make their fans look bad with glib rhetoric based on stereotyping. Essentially they care about fitting in, their music taste is geared towards projecting an air of "maturity" or “coolness” which are arbitrary norms sporkcore challenges. >Spork-fans are aware of the nature of Popular Music: not just its musical content but its styles and the cult(ure) they propagate are what makes this musical tradition important. They are educated in postmodern thought and appreciate the philosophical implications of Sporkcore, which plays with and between those styles. They can appreciate music on a technical level, its creativity for its own sake, without the narrow lense of any particular subculture and the idea of stylistic (or racial) purity those may hold. They have an optimistic, cosmopolitan attitude towards life. >So either raise that spork or shove it up yours!
Lists of my favorite non-musical aspects of human existence [TBD] Favorite Videogames Favorite Visual Art Favorite Aspects of Life Favorite Album Covers Favorite Sciences Favorite YouTube Videos Favorite Toys/Games/Puzzles Favorite Food and Dishes (including fictional) Favorite Dance Favorite Animals, Plants, etc Favorite Physical Appearance (Humans, Semi-Humans, Non-Humans) etc
lool
Jason Russell
>camping music Six Organs of Admittance - Dark Noontide James Blackshaw - The Glass Bead Game Big Blood - Fight for Your Dinner Vol. I Jim Jam - Halfway to a Threeway Songs: Ohia - The Magnolia Electric Co. Alexander Tucker - Furrowed Brow >LSD Music คณะ รุ่งทวี - แห่สดดนตรีพื้นบ้านหนองโก ชุดที่ 8 + 9 on loop >2017 Eric Taxxon - The Anthill Amnesia Scanner - AS Truth Mordan Jaikel - True History PF - PF$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
Jackson Collins
oh those will never actually get done but it would be cool anyways
Nicholas Flores
sequel will fix it! if it ever comes out or completely fuck it up but there's a slim chance didn't that already happen with Eva 3.0+1.0? aww no that's still being worked on but it could be good!
(memes aside rebellion was pretty alright)
Jordan Johnson
trick question, you should listen to Populuxxe
Tyler Thompson
>sequel will fix it! i didnt know they were making one it was a pretty movie though
Dylan Rivera
Anything harsher than this and someone wants you to be in pain. Moon Duo could be good trip music too, come to think of it...
Juan Ramirez
the lyrics on that track are fuckin genius fwiw still good deus. melodies are great
ykno what sucks about both of these tho? it's so short but it could still be cut by a minute or so because the bridge adds nothing to the song and the last chorus sounds exactly like all the others. it doesn't really _lose_ any of its appeal doing that but i like pop songs that change it up for the last chorus, even just a little bit, is that too much to ask? The Only Difference has that outro at least but meh
yeah they released a little 4 minute trailer "concept movie" 2 years ago
Dylan Harris
yee Krätze is one of the best black metal songs of all time
Isaac Hill
eh dont really think so, just a more general psych influence
Metal Machine Music
Evan Ross
can't tell if this is actually you
Xavier Cruz
actually right im listening to it in a minute
Mason Torres
i don't get how people can so severely hate on a fever u can't sweat out its full of them catchy pop hooks >could still be cut by a minute or so because the bridge adds nothing to the song i guess i dont notice/mind because it's already so short
David Rivera
Here's some of mine
>Favourite Videogames Haven't played videogames in a long time so this will show my inexperience. 1. Oblivion 2. Half Life 2 3. Splinter Cell: Conviction 3. Portal 2 5. Team Fortress 2
>Favourite Visual Art 1. Thomas Cole - The Course of Empire (1836) 2. Hieronymus Bosch - The Garden of Earthly Delights (1510) 3. Jan Brueghel the Elder - Great Fish Market (1603) 4. Titian - Bacchus and Ariadne (1523) 5. Claude Monet - Woman with a Parasol (1875)
>Favourite Aspects of Life 1. Friends 2. Appreciation (of art, music, great food, etc) 3. Learning 4. Comfort 5. Memory
>Favourite Sciences (I won't imply I know much about any of these) 1. Anthropology 2. Natural Science 3. Sociology 4. Computer Science 5. Genetics
This album epitomises a characteristic that some artists like to apply to their music, regardless of the genre: we've seen Peter Sotos, Big Black and Mayhem all convey horrific imagery through words, but what I think is special about Burning Hell is that it tries quite hard to accurately pair that imagery with the sound of the instruments accompanying it. And so, from the first track onwards, the violent lyrics are almost buried beneath typical noise rock riffs that are distorted even further with the low fidelity production. The music is mixed so that the bass has a heavy prominence, and the way it sometimes carries the music reminds me of some no wave music. However, rather than the angular and disjointed rhythms of no wave music, Brainbombs' performances on this album don't have as much of a structure to stick to; this does result in a common musical flaw, in that the album gets a bit tired about halfway through when the band have already established their sound and struggle to go on providing innovations upon it. Due to this fact, my favourite tracks would be the first track, Burning Hell – because it comes before the music has had a chance to get tired and is therefore the most impactful – and the fifth track named After Acid, because it adds a bit of psychedelic influence to the record, along with a different style of vocal delivery.
Burning Hell certainly shows Brainbombs to be capable of producing rock music that is particularly noisy and shocking, but once we become used to this timbre (which isn't particularly hard, seeing as there are a lot of classic albums that use it) and the gory lyrics that accompany it, there isn't a lot of innovation or originality left on the album.
Jaxson Campbell
shower thought: will toledo stole the chord progression to "cosmic hero" from "decades"
Aaron Price
morning jangle, what Cale you listening to?
Oliver Davis
...
Carter Cook
wasn't a negative although he is a sellout
Isaiah Stewart
Is this worth checking out if I thought Obey was a boring piece of shit? That track you linked sounded a bit more interesting anyway but still not great.
Christian Turner
5 recs, go easy
Adam Reed
>Favorite YouTube Videos this wasn't easy, probably forgetting some
I'm afraid I don't know, this is the first Brainbombs release I've heard. If I were to guess.. save it til later, not worth checking out any time soon.
Robert Taylor
Fragments of a Rainy Season, nice stripped down live recordings of some of his best songs.
Had to choose from ~900 favorites but this is an alright list. My YT acct is old as sin and I legit think these vids had a significant impact on who I am (for better or worse).
>Favorite Food and Dishes (including fictional) how tf do you list a fictional food. How do you fucking taste it.
>Favorite Dance Quan
>Favorite Animals, Plants, etc DOG
>Favorite Physical Appearance (Humans, Semi-Humans, Non-Humans) ASS
YT and VG are normie af but good list otherwise
good list and trips. Walldog was about to be on mine
Chega de saudade
Dylan Reed
Mutant was super interesting. I'm not really all that experienced with IDM but it had some really cool concepts. The title track, Gratitud and Front Load were all awesome. Gonna be revisiting it this week for sure.
I'd have a tough time ranking these, ngl
Mornin dude. If I've never heard Cale before, what album should I start with?
Jose Stewart
Insides - Clear Skin Wind - Seasons
Cameron Williams
cool, Obey is pretty much straight (average) garage rock with the edgy lyrics so the extra bit of psych does sound better.
sounds nice, I've listened to very little Cale for how much I love TVU, just his drone stuff and Music For a New Society.
Adrian Ramirez
just saw the first two videos and I'm fucking dead. Third video looks promising too. If the rest are this good I'm watching the rest.
Easton Lopez
lmao yeah I play the Kid From Brooklyn all the time in plug, and even if you don't watch everything today, you should definitely at least put the rest in your "watch later".
Ian Myers
if you made the favourite playlist public you'd make my day
Liam Morris
>If I've never heard Cale before, what album should I start with? Fear for sure.
His style of rock/pop is incredibly unique and he's a very talented musician, would recommend giving at least Fear and Vintage Violence a listen.
Grayson Rodriguez
switch Streethawk with Your Blues, Rubies, Kaputt, or Trouble in Dreams
I played that Macho Man vid for my whole spanish class in HS once. No idea how it lead to that.
We watched that Coltrane vid in Jazz class where we talked about nothing but Coltrane for two days. Listened to the Entirety of A Love Supreme too.
Wait, did you seriously audiobook the whole Infinite Jest? What was it like? Haven't advanced past 100 pages yet :/
FOKIN TREPS
do an album made by someone on /daily/. Either Yamir's s/t or Ethy's album.
Hudson Murphy
fuck those hacks do A Girl Named Faye
Sebastian Lee
I didn't audiobook the whole thing, have /just/ started reading it
audiobooked the whole of Ulysses though, read along with it
Jack Brooks
Fish knows what's up. Also this is for your trip? I made you a chart of ideas for a trip, a lot of which don't get tossed around here. No acknowledgement? See
Jason Green
definitely an all time great
Evan Lopez
wait what, I've had this trip since late 2015
Michael Wood
How was audiobooking along with reading Ulysses? You think doing the same for IJ would be a good idea?
Maybe it's because I'm a bit hungover but I've read this post like four times and have no idea what you're saying mang
Adam Wright
Not cool, tuco
Parker Ward
we are on the same wavelength now, just saw the chart
Carson Long
See the context. Tuco is taking drugs
Gavin Hernandez
With IJ they don't read the endnotes Ulysses is faaaar easier when you are reading with the audiobook due to the changing perspectives being represented
Gabriel Jackson
...
Xavier Cooper
OOOOH I thought you were talking about a Sup Forums trip, not tripping on drugs lmao
I could always pause and just go to the footnotes? Nevermind I'm not gonna but audiobooks do interest me.
Parker Richardson
i rec drinking cyanide
Cameron Green
...
Jason Fisher
Too much stuff, if you want to know thoughts on something in particular (pro tip: you don't), ask away.