Country or Contemporary?

methodistgirl

New member
Are you guys tired of just country or contempory styled stuff?
I remember when I was growing up you had the modern look or the
natural look. I just loved the Hi Tech look of the 80s. Why can't
we look hi tech today since we are at least in another century and
it's past the year 2000! Everything where I live either looks like
it survived the victorian era or the pioneer days! What do you have
to say about what styles you see?
judy tooley
 

Corno Dolce

Admiral Honkenwheezenpooferspieler
Hi Judy,

Give me Country Music over Contemporary Music anyday of the week. :grin::grin::grin:

Cheers,

Corno Dolce
 

methodistgirl

New member
Wow! An answer that quick! I don't really like contempory that much
either. Just give me the dance craze music I loved as a teen and that's
disco! I also liked the natural sounds of blue grass music over what
country music they stamp out of Nashville these days!:rolleyes: The sounds
of Kentucky is almost extinct except for the movie scores of O' Brother
Where art Thou. To me it's as much a classic as Beethoven's Song
of Joy. Some of us southerners kinda miss some of it. I also like Cajun
music. Now that to me is blue grass with a dance beat!
judy tooley
 

Krummhorn

Administrator
Staff member
ADMINISTRATOR
Contemporary music of today is soooo depressing for me. Seems everything is written in a minor key ... can't contemporary be happy, I mean why all the sadness and dirge like sounds. Most of our contemporary service hymns are all in minor keys ... give me a good rousing Lutheran hymn over this contemporary crap ... especially rap crap!

Country music ... love it ... good foot stompin' stuff ... long live the Grand Ole Opry!!
 

methodistgirl

New member
Thanks Krummhorn! Guys, I'm not talking about the music, I'm talking about
the style people are wearing and as well buildings. Music is not the only
thing that is contempory.
 

Corno Dolce

Admiral Honkenwheezenpooferspieler
Hear, hear Krummhorn - I do too love a rousing Lutheran Hymn over the mealy-mouthed pap being peddled as music in many protestant churches.
 

Krummhorn

Administrator
Staff member
ADMINISTRATOR
Oops ... sorry Judy ...

Ok ... clothing: contemporary seems a bit too revealing. No wonder there are more sex crimes than before - nothing much is left to the imagination anymore.

Contemporary buildings: these are really neat to see, although I appreciate the efforts of many preserving the old traditional buildings. They seem more proactive in this in Europe - when I was in Rome in 1992, there were constant refurbishing efforts ongoing on lots of the centuries old buildings - this was so nice to see. Seems here in the US, we simply demolish an old building to either make more roads (and more traffic jams) or just another parking lot. We, in the US, are destroying history ... Europe gets along fine and will enjoy these historic places for future centuries and still move people about as they have done for many years.
 

Corno Dolce

Admiral Honkenwheezenpooferspieler
Contemporary style, Judy, leaves me wondering what they teach in all the design academies these days.

Cheers,

Corno Dolce
 

Krummhorn

Administrator
Staff member
ADMINISTRATOR
Contemporary style, Judy, leaves me wondering what they teach in all the design academies these days.

Cheers,

Corno Dolce

Right on, Corno Dolce ... sometimes I get the impression that all someone needs these days to design contemporary clothing is saran wrap, tin foil and a hot glue gun ... lol ...:crazy:
 

Sybarite

New member
Oops ... sorry Judy ...

Ok ... clothing: contemporary seems a bit too revealing. No wonder there are more sex crimes than before - nothing much is left to the imagination anymore.

That's contentious, Krummhorn.

Are you suggesting that women are responsible for crimes of a sexual nature and that they should wear a burka so that they don't 'tempt' those men who just can't control themselves? :)

Personally, I would hate to go back to the days of corsets and miles of skirts. No freedom of movement – how difficult just to do ordinary things?

On buildings – in the UK over the years, we've been close to criminally negligent in terms of neglecting old buildings. Hopefully this is improving – and we do now have some super new buildings. But I was in Paris just over a week ago and one of the pleasures of that place is that it is essentially a 19th-century city.

So as far as I am concerned, there's a place for the old and for the new. After all, I wouldn't want to choose between this



and this

 

Corno Dolce

Admiral Honkenwheezenpooferspieler
Ummm, Sybarite, Ummm - most respectfully, methinks Krummhorn was not advocating that we turn back the clock to 19th clothing styles :grin:;):):smirk:

Cheers,

Corno Dolce
 

methodistgirl

New member
Sybarite I can do that too! I go to a church that is inside a 83 year old
building and it's really an antique work of art. The last church I went
to was only about ten years old and it looked like a barn the way it
was designed. Look at my collection of buildings when you look up the
art gallery.
judy tooley
 

Sybarite

New member
Ummm, Sybarite, Ummm - most respectfully, methinks Krummhorn was not advocating that we turn back the clock to 19th clothing styles :grin:;):):smirk:

Cheers,

Corno Dolce

Corno Dolce,

I'm as sure as I can be that your analysis is absolutely correct – but, in my best philosophical mode, I was attempting to show what could be read into what Krummhorn had posted.

So, in this case, if you link clothing styles with sexual crimes, then you imply that someone is 'asking for it' (a phrase used many times in the UK) if they dress in a fashion that 'provokes'. Once you go down that road, then the inevitable consequence, it seems to me, is that you reach a point where you say that it is the responsibility of the potential victim to dress in such a way as to completely dissuade assault. Therefore, you end up with one of the arguments for the burka.

I do hope that nobody – and most particularly Krummhorn in this case – thinks that I was having a go at them, because that was certainly not my intent. But since the issue has been raised, it is an interesting philosophical question and I do think that the old philosophical technique of taking something to its 'logical' extreme to show it up for what it is has value here. :)
 

Corno Dolce

Admiral Honkenwheezenpooferspieler
Understood and acknowleged, Sybarite. Methinks Krummhorn has a thick hide, which comes with the territory when one has served as an organist in a Church for a long time like he has - sorta like callouses on one's hands one gets after much manual labor with pick and shovel or hammer and chisel.
:smirk::angel::whistle:
 

Krummhorn

Administrator
Staff member
ADMINISTRATOR
. . . I do hope that nobody – and most particularly Krummhorn in this case – thinks that I was having a go at them, because that was certainly not my intent. But since the issue has been raised, it is an interesting philosophical question and I do think that the old philosophical technique of taking something to its 'logical' extreme to show it up for what it is has value here. :)

Hi Sybarite,

No offense taken ... I enjoy the casual debate ... and I certainly have lots of respect for your opinions as well.

It is as Corno Dolce stated ... and I'm also "old school" in the way I was reared as a child. I was only using the saran wrap and hot glue as an illustration point as to the lack of ingenuity on the part of present day clothes designers.
 

rojo

(Ret)
Krummhorn said:
Ok ... clothing: contemporary seems a bit too revealing. No wonder there are more sex crimes than before - nothing much is left to the imagination anymore.
If somebody hadn't already objected to this post, I would have. But Sybarite beat me to it...

Personally, I like many different styles; they all have their merits, and I would be loathe to pick just one. I do think I see a certain 'uniformity' of dress these days, which I find rather dull. Perhaps this tendency is normal; there are always fashion trends that predominate. I guess I just don't follow fashion trends.

I find it nice to keep old buildings too, if possible.

:)
 

methodistgirl

New member
Right on, Corno Dolce ... sometimes I get the impression that all someone needs these days to design contemporary clothing is saran wrap, tin foil and a hot glue gun ... lol ...:crazy:

Very funny!:grin: What cloths that are on the modesty scale looks tacky.
I wouldn't be cought dead in some of these boring plain cloths that
are modest. They have no style and it doesn't matter if it is Macy's
or Wall mart cloths. The expensive outfit is made just as cheep and
boring as the cloths that only cost about ten dollars for the same
outfit.
judy tooley
 
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