Often after a critic has given their thoughts on some album they will
then summarize their impressions with a numerical rating. 8/10. 5
stars. Four SadDogs™ out of five. You're familiar with this sort of
thing I'm sure. This system is great for consumers (or whatever else
you'd call us) as it gives them an instant and quantifiable way of
knowing whether something is good or not. But how useful is this number
when you consider that they are judging art?
I'm sure most of you
are guilty of having gone online when your most favouritest band ever
released their new album so that you could see what kind of scores
critics gave it. You might also recall feeling angry or confused when
your favourite thing didn't get a high score. But notice the terminology
there: "high score". If this is a normal way for people to talk about
art then what does this imply about the way we view art? Should we be
worried that people are more preoccupied with the numbers music is given
than what people actually have to say about them?
From the
perspective of a critic/review type person it's understandable why
they'd make use of this system. Not only does it give people a clear
idea of how good they thought the album was but gives people a reason to
click on their site. I'm heavily under the impression that there are a
lot of people out there who check review sites just to see the scores
with no interest of actually reading the reasoning behind them.
Therefore it is in the critics interest to include scores so that more
people check their sites, increased traffic, increased revenue, etc etc
etc.
But if the opinions of popular critics are held in high
esteem and their opinions are measured and compared with numeric scores
then it it follows that they are deciding for you what you should or
shouldn't like. While it is ones own responsibility to decide for
themselves what they do or don't like it must be considered how easily a
person can be influenced now with how accessible the opinions of
critics and others are.
One other thing you might be familiar with
is the abundance of "pretty high but not perfect" type of scores where
you get a lot of 8-9/10 scores with very few scores below 6/10. I think
the amount this happens is different between different mediums (music,
movies, video games etc) but it's still prevalent all over the place. I
can't imagine what the cause of this might be. Maybe it has something to
do with not rocking the boat. Or perhaps some critics just have a very
positive impression of everything they review? Regardless, the result of
this is not useful to consumers who the reviews are supposedly written
for if everything is either a 8 or 9 out of ten. Now people just treat 8
as "alright", 9 as "pretty good" and 10 as "non-existent". These
critics sure must be cynical, maybe they are doing their job after all.
That's all I guess. If anyone reads this I'd love to hear what you think about the issue.
To summarize: I think we like having scores over not having scores but I'm not sure if it's a good thing.
P.S. SadDogs™ is not real
P.P.S. as far as I know
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Popular Posts
-
Feels like: cold, quiet, slow, relaxing, somber, mysterious, magical, lonely This is an album that I found today by Andrew Lahiff who ...
-
Feels like: gloomy, introverted, fun, spacey, dreamy, dark, upbeat This is a wicked electronic, sort-of-dancey EP I bumped into on Ban...
-
Feels like: relaxed, calm, mysterious, introspective, spacious, solemn This is an interesting album that took my fancy by meshing the id...
-
Feels like: cool, stylish, chill, witty, humorous, soulful, compassionate This album is a collaboration between beat producer Budamunk ...
-
Often after a critic has given their thoughts on some album they will then summarize their impressions with a numerical rating. 8/10. 5 st...
-
Feels like: cool, maximal, chill, noon, stylish, soulful, young This is an album that I initially took interest to based on a really g...
-
Feels like: angsty, young, energetic, gritty, clumsy, angry, melancholy This extremely brief 3 track, 8 minute long, debut from Shinpai...
-
Feels like: relaxing, spring, warm, nostalgic, contemporary, cool, noon, cute This debut album by bedroom sample slicer Iyashikei is a...
-
Feels like: gloom, fun, in the city, strange, innocent, introspective, personal EP001 offers us a rather short but very inspired and sw...
Blog Archive
-
▼
2014
(9)
-
▼
September
(9)
- Discussion: Artistic Work and The Numerical Rating...
- Budamunk & Joe Styles - Soul Quest
- Impressions on: Ludique - The Road
- Impressions on: Vanilla - Sweet Talk
- Impressions on: Shinpainai - Idle
- Impressions on: York Morgan - EP001
- Impressions on: Andrew Lahiff - Intangible Imbrica...
- Impressions on: Iyashikei - Iyashikei
- Impressions on: Christopher Laidler - This Is A Test
-
▼
September
(9)
0 comments:
Post a Comment