I like the music, and I like the friendly osmenog covered with eyes, but the lyrics cause me a certain problem, and I was even ready to register in order to point out a few flaws. I will try to explain this further: I once saw a good idea here- a song about rationalism should be like a song about a butterfly. In my lands, "optimization" is a dirty word because of the popularity of "effective" management, acting on the principle "the most profitable way to improve profits for a quarter is to sell the plant and lease the premises for 500 years ahead" and the concept of rationalism would have to be explained for a long time every time or sound like a strange nerd. Which takes a long time to explain. My friends will probably listen to me because the weight of our friendship is higher than the weight of momentary boredom, but they will hardly be interested or impressed.
I'm saying this because when I saw about these songs, I wondered if I could send this to my friends. Will they say "this is a beautiful song about something interesting" or will they say "this song looks like an attempt to sing a textbook", will they see some kind of propaganda of ideas under the guise of a song? And for most of the examples here, I say: yes, they will see.
I have some good requirements for a good song. It's nice to listen to her, she tells a story, she does it organically and beautifully. An example is the songs of the Russian band Complex Numbers (and later "Viktor Argonov Project", although later they became worse for my taste. At the level of "write the self-canceling phrase "electronic music for intellectuals" on your website)
In this case, I liked the music and the picture, as I said before, but I was hoping for something like that. Musical parables, stories, songs about ideals - not the repeated singing of slogans or a few key lines. Some of them sound like songs - a couple of them. But for the most part? Now I want to try to do it myself, and I don't care that my English works on a translator and my free subscription to suno will require centuries of generations. Maybe it will be as lyrical as a Death Metal song.And they will also be autonomous to the context (I like the San Francisco song, but I only understand from the construction of the song what the meaning of the places in question is)
I like the music, and I like the friendly osmenog covered with eyes, but the lyrics cause me a certain problem, and I was even ready to register in order to point out a few flaws.
I will try to explain this further:
I once saw a good idea here- a song about rationalism should be like a song about a butterfly.
In my lands, "optimization" is a dirty word because of the popularity of "effective" management, acting on the principle "the most profitable way to improve profits for a quarter is to sell the plant and lease the premises for 500 years ahead" and the concept of rationalism would have to be explained for a long time every time or sound like a strange nerd. Which takes a long time to explain. My friends will probably listen to me because the weight of our friendship is higher than the weight of momentary boredom, but they will hardly be interested or impressed.
I'm saying this because when I saw about these songs, I wondered if I could send this to my friends. Will they say "this is a beautiful song about something interesting" or will they say "this song looks like an attempt to sing a textbook", will they see some kind of propaganda of ideas under the guise of a song? And for most of the examples here, I say: yes, they will see.
I have some good requirements for a good song. It's nice to listen to her, she tells a story, she does it organically and beautifully. An example is the songs of the Russian band Complex Numbers (and later "Viktor Argonov Project", although later they became worse for my taste. At the level of "write the self-canceling phrase "electronic music for intellectuals" on your website)
In this case, I liked the music and the picture, as I said before, but I was hoping for something like that. Musical parables, stories, songs about ideals - not the repeated singing of slogans or a few key lines. Some of them sound like songs - a couple of them. But for the most part? Now I want to try to do it myself, and I don't care that my English works on a translator and my free subscription to suno will require centuries of generations. Maybe it will be as lyrical as a Death Metal song.And they will also be autonomous to the context (I like the San Francisco song, but I only understand from the construction of the song what the meaning of the places in question is)