Hippasus
1,9,45,165,495,1287,
Rating: 475
200: distasteful and pathetic
300: mediocre or subpar
400: average, but decent
500: very good
600: superb
700: transcendental
Damn, didn't realize this thread got buried so deep. Some things I tried pretty aimlessly:
Music For Nine Post Cards by Hiroshi Yoshimura - 3.5 (Great)
Green by Hiroshi Yoshimura - 3.0 (Very Good)
Wet Land by Hiroshi Yoshimura - 2.5 (Good)
Been in a music-discovery lull for years now, where stuff I like feels pretty established and every attempt to get into new stuff results in zero returns, but recently got into this and liked it a fair bit. A bit Ambient-1-era-Brian-Eno, and in the later albums, started weirdly giving me Tunic videogame vibes (albeit, I like this better). Very public-space-museum-exhibit-y ambient/minimalism, but more evocative than just a clinical feel. This seems to be the genre that I still have the most success with these days. Thinking of getting into his lesser known albums now, because these were all successes for me.
New Age of Earth by Ashra - 1.5 or 2.0 (Neutral/Positive)
Enjoyable with a lot of the types of sounds that work for me, but unremarkable and dated in a not so great way.
So Tonight That I Might See by Mazzy Star - 1.5 or 2.0 (Neutral/Positive)
Wasn't particularly impressed by the lyricism, but the vocalist is very good, it's pretty cohesive, and they're really successful at hitting that Velvet Underground vibe that many attempt but fail at, in my opinion. Enough to keep it filed away in my mind, but didn't feel too much beyond that. (weirdly, I'm pretty sure I've tried this album a bunch of times before, but it only "went online" on this attempt for me, enough to have an opinion about it)
Sleep by Max Richter - 1.0 (Negative)
I watched The Leftovers a while back and in retrospect, I bought into the hype/praise way too prematurely and allowed myself to be too impressionable (probably from desperation to find something new that's good). One thing I didn't like about it was how overbearing, melodramatic, and cheesy everything felt (felt that way about Lost as well, so it's probably just Lindelof's sensibilities as a whole that I dislike), and I think the soundtrack was a big contributor to that. Didn't realize this was the same composer, but it checks out-- I had very much the same type of distaste for it.
Somewhere between 0.0 and 1.5 (Just Didn't Care):
Eureka by Kinoko Teikoku
Uzu Ni Naru by Kinoko Teikoku
Raise by Swervedriver
They Spent Their Wild Youthful Days in The Glittering World of The Salons by Swirlies
Glitter by Pasteboard
Highlights:
The Olivia Tremor Control - Singles and Beyond. Obviously very uneven. Still some great stuff. 6/10
The English version of that K-Pop Cupid song from Fifty Fifty always struck me as way more of an earworm than whatever I've ever heard from American or Canadian bubblegum pop.
The only other ones that came close are Someone to Call my Lover by Janet Jackson and Love at First Sight by Kylie Minogue.
With that said, one terrible turn that bubblegum has taken is how personal they try to make it seem. The only times it works is when it's incredibly impersonal.
In terms of what I'd actually advocate for as genuine greatness that I discovered recently: