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Russell Arben Fox's avatar

This is brilliant, Damon; I love it when you apply the sharp distinctions which mind searches for to pop culture. The examples of films or novels that run on too long are probably just as prevalent as they are in music (though books have the saving grace of having to have a physical manifestation, meaning weight and shipping costs come into play, so that probably obliges at least some brakes to be applied sometime, even though--as my wife, a longtime bookseller, will rant about at length--book editing is mostly dead as well). I would only add one wrinkle to your analysis: what about the artists who are very, very fiercely curatorial in regards to particular parts of songs...but for the rest will just throw in any old riff to get to the 3 (or more) minutes the parameters of the genre demand? I'm thinking primarily of Paul McCartney here, an artist who, all the way up to his most recent releases, has shown a vicious willingness to hammer on certain chord changes or melodies, leaving all sorts of alternative versions on the cutting room floor, but then once he gets that one bit to sound like what's in his head, is content to let any kind of filler round out the song. Hence you get Egypt Station with 16 tracks, every one of which includes something brilliant, but all except a few of which really needed some more polishing before seeing the light of day.

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Kip🎗️'s avatar

Ryan Adams used to be like this. He still may be, I don’t really follow him anymore. He released so many albums back in the 1999-2010 or so period it seemed to dilute the quality. Most had some great songs, some had almost all great songs (Cold Roses, a double album; or Gold, before that); but there was a lot of filler that diluted the catalog, IMO.

I also felt Radiohead’s Kid A and Amnesiac would’ve worked better as a single, longer album with just a couple songs edited out.

The space constraints of the formative rock n roll era probably had a lot more to do with the quality, pacing and overall experience of many classic albums than I probably realized at the time.

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