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			Blundering Through Modern Music 
			By Mike Fak 
			
     
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            [January 12, 2011] 
            In all honesty, I 
			don't understand music anymore. Actually, I never did. I certainly 
			didn't as a young man, because even then I realized most music was 
			goofy. I think I was the only teenager in America who realized that 
			"Love Me Do" by the Beatles, was a poor grammatical foray into 
			telling a girl you have affection for her and would appreciate 
			reciprocity if plausible. 
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            Most music of every generation actually stinks if you look at it. In 
			the 50's you could understand what a person was singing but the 
			words were primarily stupid. "You Ain't Nothin but a Hound Dog" or "Splish 
			Splash I was Takin a Bath" rests my case on that. 
			 
			The 60's were full of upheaval in the country and so was the music. 
			The music and words, usually claiming to be honked off at somebody, 
			might have made sense, except they usually were droned out by band 
			members enamored with their new electric guitars. The Vietnam War 
			made many a dope smoking, song writer famous but I don't remember 
			for sure if the songs were any good since I was sitting next to them 
			smoking dope at the time.
			
			  
			 
			The 70's and 80's brought about thousands of artists who had one 
			good song in them, but refused to then quit while ahead. They then 
			drowned us with album after album of pure garbage. It was during 
			this time that the most insidious of all music genres hit the 
			charts. Disco was king for a while just when I was at the age of 
			wanting to hold a girl close on the dance floor but couldn't. I 
			couldn't because everyone was lining up doing stupid gyrations 
			together without getting within ten feet of each other. I had so 
			many good first lines to tell a girl that disco never let me say. I 
			was too busy spinning or twirling or dipping when all I wanted to do 
			was grab the girl around the waist and tell her she was magnificent. 
			To this day my perception of Hell has disco music piped into the 
			rooms filled with fire and brimstone just in case the latter isn't 
			enough to make one miserable 
			 
			The 90's till now of course, have been primarily Hip Hop or Rap 
			music. I'm sorry, but people who can't sing become rappers. Now I 
			was a huge fan of the Temptations, and Diana Ross and the Supremes, 
			and Otis Redding and Sam Cooke and Smokey Robinson. I could go on 
			and on, but the point is none of those artists did rap music. It 
			wasn't because it hadn't been invented yet. None of the great 
			artists of the past did rap because they didn't have to. They could 
			actually sing. So they did. 
			 
			Rap music is like abstract art. If you can't do something right, 
			then do it so bad, with such confidence, that you can fool people 
			into believing you actually are good. It's sort of like my writing. 
			 
			I find myself gravitating towards Country Music these past few 
			years. I do like the women who sing country music and not because 
			most of them are good looking, although that never hurts. The women 
			of country; like Faith Hill, Martina McBride, Carrie Underwood, and 
			let's not forget Reba and perhaps as many as a dozen more, actually 
			have world class singing voices. The songs they sing often are a 
			beautiful blend of vocals and music and message which is missing in 
			the other genres of music right now. 
  
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			I don't think the same about the male country vocalists however. I 
			think most country songs offered by the males are goofy. I do have 
			to admit I don't like most male country singers because of their 
			stupid hats. Now maybe some of them have ranches and ride horses 
			often, but that doesn't mean they have to wear those goofy hats 
			everyday, everywhere. 
  
			There are 
			people in the national guard that from time to time wear a steel 
			helmet, but you don't see them walking around all day wearing one as 
			they go to the grocery store or when they go out to eat. 
			Construction workers have to wear a hardhat on the job but they 
			don't wear them to their kid's graduation. If one of those "cowboys" 
			had walked into my Irish grandma's house with their hat still on, 
			she would have lectured them about taking their hat off in the house 
			all the while she was beating the crap out of them, of course. 
			 
			I firmly believe the reason Country Music has their own separate 
			awards events is because most people, including musicians in other 
			disciplines, wouldn't put up with not being able to see the stage 
			because some scrawny male singer sitting in front of them, showing 
			off his 10 inch biceps, won't remove his cowboy hat. It will never 
			happen, but if there are ever "joint" music awards and a fight 
			breaks out, I'll bet on the rappers. 
			 
			It appears I digressed a little. As I was saying, I don't think the 
			male country vocalists are anywhere near as good as their female 
			counterparts. Their voices for one thing aren't very good, with many 
			of them having a twangy kind of voice that sounds like a beer truck 
			hitting the brakes on a wet pavement. 
			
			 
			 
			The male singers also don't offer songs anywhere near the quality 
			offered by the Females. For every "Independence Day" by Martina 
			McBride or "I Feel Like a Woman" by Shania Twain or "Breathe" by 
			Faith Hill, the males offer up such outstanding repartees as "I 
			Spent my Paycheck at the Girlie Bar" or "My Wife Kicked me out fer 
			Spittin Terbacky Juice in the Goldfish Bowl". 
			 
			Like I said: I don’t understand modern music 
			 
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