by Tdarcos » Sun Jul 27, 2014 8:22 pm
Ice Cream Jonsey wrote:Welcome to Jolt Country Music! Music done right!
Joy Division was a band that was active from 1976-1980.
Stop right there. You have no business calling a band that only lasted four years "the greatest band ever." I would say a band has to be around (lots) longer than that to be considered a great band, or has to produce awesome material consistently over a shorter period to fall in that range. It's like "best of the best," which means 90th or 95th percentile, depending on whom you ask.
Just like with software packages, especially open source, most of these projects only get really good after they've been out in the world being used and banged on, and regularly updated to fix bugs, add features, and improvements, for at least ten years.
I guess the thing that sort of amazes me about them is that, in their own right, each piece of the four-member band can play their instruments:
1) Well
2) In the classically-trained style that you hope for
3) In ways that nobody else was doing
The one thing I really don't know about them is where the name came from. Lots of their music is about depression, isolation and a desire to end it all... weird that they made up "Joy Division" for it, haha!
Here's one of their songs, an official video from Rhino Rwcords. It's not bad, it's okay and parts of the song remind me of others. (The "whistle" part, about 18 seconds in, reminds me of "Where the Streets Have No Name") hey're probably a reasonably good band but no where near a "great" one.
[youtube]
[/youtube]
Organization names can come from anywhere. I was going to create a company that provided quality certifications of cleanliness, and I filed the paperwork for "Restroom Inspection Commission of Northern Virginia, Inc," Unfortunately the State Corporation Commission informs me the name isn't acceptable because private organizations can't use the word "commission" in their name. So thinking of the patch Spock put on Kirk in the Star Trek film "The Undiscovered Country," before he and McCoy beam down to be tied on Klingon over the murders, I resubmitted a new name, "Viridian Development Corporation," and that's where my company got its name. (Technically the word "viridian" is a shade of green.)
Lipps, Inc. (most famous for "Funkytown") was going to call itself "Lip Sync," but someone else was using that.
[quote="Ice Cream Jonsey"]Welcome to Jolt Country Music! Music done right!
Joy Division was a band that was active from 1976-1980.[/quote]
Stop right there. You have no business calling a band that only lasted four years "the greatest band ever." I would say a band has to be around (lots) longer than that to be considered a great band, or has to produce awesome material consistently over a shorter period to fall in that range. It's like "best of the best," which means 90th or 95th percentile, depending on whom you ask.
Just like with software packages, especially open source, most of these projects only get really good after they've been out in the world being used and banged on, and regularly updated to fix bugs, add features, and improvements, for at least ten years.
[quote]I guess the thing that sort of amazes me about them is that, in their own right, each piece of the four-member band can play their instruments:
1) Well
2) In the classically-trained style that you hope for
3) In ways that nobody else was doing
The one thing I really don't know about them is where the name came from. Lots of their music is about depression, isolation and a desire to end it all... weird that they made up "Joy Division" for it, haha![/quote]
Here's one of their songs, an official video from Rhino Rwcords. It's not bad, it's okay and parts of the song remind me of others. (The "whistle" part, about 18 seconds in, reminds me of "Where the Streets Have No Name") hey're probably a reasonably good band but no where near a "great" one.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zuuObGsB0No[/youtube]
Organization names can come from anywhere. I was going to create a company that provided quality certifications of cleanliness, and I filed the paperwork for "Restroom Inspection Commission of Northern Virginia, Inc," Unfortunately the State Corporation Commission informs me the name isn't acceptable because private organizations can't use the word "commission" in their name. So thinking of the patch Spock put on Kirk in the Star Trek film "The Undiscovered Country," before he and McCoy beam down to be tied on Klingon over the murders, I resubmitted a new name, "Viridian Development Corporation," and that's where my company got its name. (Technically the word "viridian" is a shade of green.)
Lipps, Inc. (most famous for "Funkytown") was going to call itself "Lip Sync," but someone else was using that.