Au$tin
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Post by Au$tin on Nov 17, 2019 17:44:09 GMT -5
Khalid's new track seems to be a big flop. Is it promoted as a single? I believe so, but it may be retaliation to Talk being one of the most annoyingly overplayed songs in recent memory, I donβt know a single person who can stand that song any more. Get outside your bubble then.
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Choco
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Post by Choco on Nov 17, 2019 17:57:42 GMT -5
The two singles post "Talk" are a bore. I'd say that has a lot to do with the cold reception.
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dremolus - solarpunk
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Post by dremolus - solarpunk on Nov 17, 2019 21:10:26 GMT -5
Lil Nas X is not a OHW, regardless of "cultural impact and perception". This isn't a PSY situation where he got another Top 10 hit for Gentleman because people remembered Gangnam Style, Panini is one of the biggest songs of the year. It's the same case with Vanilla Ice, Marky Mark, Carly Rae Jepsen, MC Hammer, and every other act sloppily thrown the One Hit Wonder category despite having other hits stateside.
One hit means ONE HIT.
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jenglisbe
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Post by jenglisbe on Nov 17, 2019 21:14:33 GMT -5
When will chart watchers realize that OHW status is more about perception and cultural impact NOT actual chart performance. When will some people realize there are multiple ways to view the same thing? For some people, one hit wonder is a technical matter related to the charts. That's a valid view, even if others are valid as well. That Mariah example also doesnβt make sense because 1. I may be wrong, but I donβt think there was any one particular song early in her career that she was known for much more than any other. And 2. People who are known as one hit wonders dont typically have 28 top 10s over 20+ some years.... The point about the Mariah example was to say that just because not all of her hits are remembered, it doesn't mean she didn't have 28 top 10s.
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Au$tin
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Post by Au$tin on Nov 17, 2019 21:39:48 GMT -5
Lil Nas X is not a OHW, regardless of "cultural impact and perception". This isn't a PSY situation where he got another Top 10 hit for Gentleman because people remembered Gangnam Style, Panini is one of the biggest songs of the year. It's the same case with Vanilla Ice, Marky Mark, Carly Rae Jepsen, MC Hammer, and every other act sloppily thrown the One Hit Wonder category despite having other hits stateside. One hit means ONE HIT.Wait, so are you calling Psy a one hit wonder even though you admitted to him having two hits and shaming anyone who does the same for Lil Nas X?
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kierz7
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Post by kierz7 on Nov 17, 2019 22:03:49 GMT -5
Lil Nas X is a βOne Hit Wonderβ and itβs that simple.
The fact that certain users think heβs going to have a lucrative Hip-Hop/Pop career with longevity is hilarious. Heβll be lucky to see half the success that Flo Rida and Pitbull did at their peaks.
Soulja Boy and Fetty Wap both had a mere handful of minor hits following their biggest (Soulja Boy had: βKiss Me Thru The Phone, Turn My Swag Onβ etc. & Fetty Wap had: β679, My Wayβ) but still are mostly known for βCrank That...β and βTrap Queenβ in every capacity.
βOld Town Roadβ was a commercial and cultural behemoth, but so was βCanβt Touch Thisβ and βIce Ice Babyβ, and it ends there.
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Post by Fat Ass Kelly Price on Nov 17, 2019 22:11:54 GMT -5
When will chart watchers realize that OHW status is more about perception and cultural impact NOT actual chart performance. When will some people realize there are multiple ways to view the same thing? For some people, one hit wonder is a technical matter related to the charts. That's a valid view, even if others are valid as well. Because some things have actual predominant definitions. If youβre someone whoβs wringing necks over whether or not Lil Nas X is a OHW because of Panini, by your logic theyβre also subscribing to a belief that thereβs only one valid, working definition of a OHW. At the end of the day, either definition you use is subjective. Thereβs no objective, technical definition of what constitutes a hit. Sure, there may be a worthy conversation or discussion that could be had, but it mostly revolves into people shouting about how X isnβt a 1 hit wonder because they had a second hit that peaked at 87 on the Hot 100. Thereβs a more nuanced discussion that can and should be had, but I guarantee you Iβve never seen it take place on this board.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 17, 2019 22:14:53 GMT -5
I think the big question is if lorde is consider a OHW or was team big enough
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 17, 2019 22:16:00 GMT -5
Lil Nas X is a βOne Hit Wonderβ and itβs that simple. The fact that certain users think heβs going to have a lucrative Hip-Hop/Pop career with longevity is hilarious. Heβll be lucky to see half the success that Flo Rida and Pitbull did at their peaks. Soulja Boy and Fetty Wap both had a mere handful of minor hits following their biggest (Soulja Boy had: βKiss Me Thru The Phone, Turn My Swag Onβ etc. & Fetty Wap had: β679, My Wayβ) but still are mostly known for βCrank That...β and βTrap Queenβ in every capacity. βOld Town Roadβ was a commercial and cultural behemoth, but so was βCanβt Touch Thisβ and βIce Ice Babyβ, and it ends there. π
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You're psycho if you think people don't remember Kiss Me Thru The Phone
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lurker2
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Post by lurker2 on Nov 17, 2019 22:17:53 GMT -5
When will some people realize there are multiple ways to view the same thing? For some people, one hit wonder is a technical matter related to the charts. That's a valid view, even if others are valid as well. Because some things have actual predominant definitions. If youβre someone whoβs wringing necks over whether or not Lil Nas X is a OHW because of Panini, by your logic theyβre also subscribing to a belief that thereβs only one valid, working definition of a OHW. At the end of the day, either definition you use is subjective. Thereβs no objective, technical definition of what constitutes a hit. Sure, there may be a worthy conversation or discussion that could be had, but it mostly revolves into people shouting about how X isnβt a 1 hit wonder because they had a second hit that peaked at 87 on the Hot 100. Thereβs a more nuanced discussion that can and should be had, but I guarantee you Iβve never seen it take place on this board. I wouldnβt call Pitbull or Flo Rida OHWs. Timber was his biggest but I can remember a bunch of other Pitbull stuff (if not by name), and I distinctly remember Whistle.
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gabe
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Post by gabe on Nov 17, 2019 22:25:09 GMT -5
I think the big question is if lorde is consider a OHW or was team big enough #6 hot 100, #2 pop, #2 rock, #2 alt, #7 rhythmic, #18 year end.. i think it was big enough
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Post by Fat Ass Kelly Price on Nov 17, 2019 22:31:14 GMT -5
Itβs a conversation that can get very granular because regardless of which definition you employ, thereβs quite a deal of subjectivity. For example, the person who mentioned Rick Astley before. In the opposite direction, what defines a hit? Are we only citing the Billboard Hot 100 or any Billboard chart? Whatβs the word of god? How do we account for changes in Hot 100 methodology that may have resulted in βhitβ songs not charting that would have otherwise post-methodology change? Do we count hits on genre-specific charts or not if they didnβt chart on the Hot 100 (or not very high)? Are we only considering the US. The UK? Canada? France? Bolivia? WW? Minnesota? Los Angeles? I could go on further. Thereβs a great deal of subjectivity there.
The subjectivity of the cultural definition is clear, but that of a more prescriptivist take is less commonly discussed. Thereβs no clear etymology of the term in relation to music, so itβs hard to say what itβs creator fully intended to define. And while a term may have one intention, ultimately languageβs users are who shape and continue to shape its meaning.
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kierz7
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Post by kierz7 on Nov 17, 2019 22:31:31 GMT -5
Flo Rida is FAR from being a βOne Hit Wonderβ and could never be considered such in any way, shape or form.
He was a legitimate βHot 100 Darlingβ between 2008-2012, where he went on to score 10 top ten hits (he has 12 overall), including three number one singles.
Following βLowβ, βRight Roundβ went on to break first-week Digital records (630K+ units moved) which wasnβt surpassed until Adeleβs βHelloβ in 2015.
βLowβ may be his biggest hit overall, however βRight Round; Good Feeling; Wild Ones; Whistle; My Houseβ are still very remembered (even if a little dated in sound) and are Club/Dance festival staples.
Moreover, heβs only second to Drake as the Rapper with the most number one hits of the 2010βs and he isnβt far off from Nicki Minajβs overall top ten count which says a lot.
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jenglisbe
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Post by jenglisbe on Nov 17, 2019 22:32:02 GMT -5
When will some people realize there are multiple ways to view the same thing? For some people, one hit wonder is a technical matter related to the charts. That's a valid view, even if others are valid as well. Because some things have actual predominant definitions. If youβre someone whoβs wringing necks over whether or not Lil Nas X is a OHW because of Panini, by your logic theyβre also subscribing to a belief that thereβs only one valid, working definition of a OHW. At the end of the day, either definition you use is subjective. Thereβs no objective, technical definition of what constitutes a hit. Sure, there may be a worthy conversation or discussion that could be had, but it mostly revolves into people shouting about how X isnβt a 1 hit wonder because they had a second hit that peaked at 87 on the Hot 100. Thereβs a more nuanced discussion that can and should be had, but I guarantee you Iβve never seen it take place on this board. Ha well I don't know about this, but in this current discussion people have been discussing artists like Marky Mark, Vanilla Ice, Lil Nas X who all had multiple top 10 hits. I think the big question is if lorde is consider a OHW or was team big enough #6 hot 100, #2 pop, #2 rock, #2 alt, #7 rhythmic, #18 year end.. i think it was big enough On its own, yes, but some people are arguing that if a song isn't remembered it's not a hit. That's what, to them, makes someone like Marky Mark a OHW since his second top 10 isn't remembered. So, for Lorde, since "Royals" is remembered but "Team" is not, I guess she's a OHW for some. I find it odd. To get back to the point @antigonerising was making, do some of y'all consider acts who had top 10 hits that aren't remembered to be no hit wonders?
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Post by Fat Ass Kelly Price on Nov 17, 2019 22:45:05 GMT -5
Itβs not that theyβre not hits because theyβre not remembered. Itβs that one hit overshadowed the artistβs follow up hit(s). Whenever someone has a fairly limited number of hits in a short span, itβs the big hit that will overshadow the rest. Since the artist tends to not have sustained success, all that sticks with the general public is that huge hit.
To answer your question, they would be considered one hit wonders. Not no hit wonders.
Iβm going to be honest and admit that I didnβt fully read all of the posts that preceded mine, so Iβm not sure where the idea that a hit isnβt a hit if it isnβt remembered comes from. Thatβs not the case. I just think thatβs a consequence of conflating a term thatβs been prevalently used in a fairly subjective way to fit a quantifiable landscape. Itβs a flawed premise.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 17, 2019 22:46:31 GMT -5
Because some things have actual predominant definitions. If youβre someone whoβs wringing necks over whether or not Lil Nas X is a OHW because of Panini, by your logic theyβre also subscribing to a belief that thereβs only one valid, working definition of a OHW. At the end of the day, either definition you use is subjective. Thereβs no objective, technical definition of what constitutes a hit. Sure, there may be a worthy conversation or discussion that could be had, but it mostly revolves into people shouting about how X isnβt a 1 hit wonder because they had a second hit that peaked at 87 on the Hot 100. Thereβs a more nuanced discussion that can and should be had, but I guarantee you Iβve never seen it take place on this board. Ha well I don't know about this, but in this current discussion people have been discussing artists like Marky Mark, Vanilla Ice, Lil Nas X who all had multiple top 10 hits. #6 hot 100, #2 pop, #2 rock, #2 alt, #7 rhythmic, #18 year end.. i think it was big enough On its own, yes, but some people are arguing that if a song isn't remembered it's not a hit. That's what, to them, makes someone like Marky Mark a OHW since his second top 10 isn't remembered. So, for Lorde, since "Royals" is remembered but "Team" is not, I guess she's a OHW for some. I find it odd. To get back to the point @antigonerising was making, do some of y'all consider acts who had top 10 hits that aren't remembered to be no hit wonders? Is team not remembered ?
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sirskimask
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Post by sirskimask on Nov 17, 2019 22:46:53 GMT -5
Lorde is not a OHW regardless because she's not someone who was forgotten about. Most people still know who Lorde is and she still has a large enough fanbase.
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Post by Rose "Payola" Nylund on Nov 17, 2019 22:49:18 GMT -5
Lil Nas X is not a OHW, regardless of "cultural impact and perception". This isn't a PSY situation where he got another Top 10 hit for Gentleman because people remembered Gangnam Style, Panini is one of the biggest songs of the year. It's the same case with Vanilla Ice, Marky Mark, Carly Rae Jepsen, MC Hammer, and every other act sloppily thrown the One Hit Wonder category despite having other hits stateside. One hit means ONE HIT.No it doesn't.
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Post by Rose "Payola" Nylund on Nov 17, 2019 22:50:26 GMT -5
When will chart watchers realize that OHW status is more about perception and cultural impact NOT actual chart performance. They won't because they lack the ability to see perception and can only rely on hard solid numbers. I chalk it up to not getting out enough or seeing the world beyond the own limited viewpoints.
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Post by Rose "Payola" Nylund on Nov 17, 2019 22:54:25 GMT -5
The term "one hit wonder" simply isn't meant to be taken literally. In essence, it's become a "genre" in and of itself that includes artists who are mainly known or remembered (in a collective sense) for one hit and nothing else. And in this case, "hit" would be defined as something that penetrated mainstream pop culture beyond a simple chart stat.
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Raccoon
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Post by Raccoon on Nov 17, 2019 23:10:56 GMT -5
I think it comes down to this. I think Old Town Road is bigger than Lil Nas X. The artist has to be bigger than the song. Unfortunately the song was so big idk if he will be able to continue his success.
Cardi B is bigger than Bodak Yellow, for instance ?
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korbel16
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Post by korbel16 on Nov 17, 2019 23:31:24 GMT -5
Gotye has entered the chat
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Abbaschand
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Post by Abbaschand on Nov 18, 2019 1:17:06 GMT -5
Everyone talking about one-hit wonders and they all forget the biggest one. Lindana with her song "I'm Lindana and I Wanna Have Fun".
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π‘πππππ€
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Post by π‘πππππ€ on Nov 18, 2019 3:14:29 GMT -5
Everyone talking about one-hit wonders and they all forget the biggest one. Lindana with her song "I'm Lindana and I Wanna Have Fun". Whatever happened to Lindana? Disappearing after releasing such a banger is unacceptable. She totally couldβve blown up.
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kierz7
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Post by kierz7 on Nov 18, 2019 4:22:14 GMT -5
Everyone talking about one-hit wonders and they all forget the biggest one. Lindana with her song "I'm Lindana and I Wanna Have Fun". βIβm Lindana and I Wanna Have Funβ is a POP CLASSIC, and wouldβve been a Digital SMASH-HIT if actually released. The fact that Iβve been to several Gay clubs over the years where Twinks have actually requested it. π
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Abbaschand
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Post by Abbaschand on Nov 18, 2019 4:37:48 GMT -5
Everyone talking about one-hit wonders and they all forget the biggest one. Lindana with her song "I'm Lindana and I Wanna Have Fun". Whatever happened to Lindana? Disappearing after releasing such a banger is unacceptable. She totally couldβve blown up. I've heard she's having kids now. And apparently, their kids are also talented singers.
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dremolus - solarpunk
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Post by dremolus - solarpunk on Nov 18, 2019 4:55:19 GMT -5
Lil Nas X is not a OHW, regardless of "cultural impact and perception". This isn't a PSY situation where he got another Top 10 hit for Gentleman because people remembered Gangnam Style, Panini is one of the biggest songs of the year. It's the same case with Vanilla Ice, Marky Mark, Carly Rae Jepsen, MC Hammer, and every other act sloppily thrown the One Hit Wonder category despite having other hits stateside. One hit means ONE HIT.Wait, so are you calling Psy a one hit wonder even though you admitted to him having two hits and shaming anyone who does the same for Lil Nas X? Gentleman is a hit in the same way #SELFIE was a hit or even 'Earth' were "hits": viral for a few weeks but no actual staying power. It'd be like saying the 2010 We are the World remix was a hit, or Filthy or We Might Be Dead Tomorrow. Panini is a hit. 20+ weeks on the charts, with 8+ weeks spent in the Top 10. And going back to Gentleman, it was barely on any year-end lists; wasn't on the UK or Canada or Australia, whereas Panini is expected to place in the top half of the year end list for 2019. Cultural perception shouldn't be the be-all end-all for deciding OHW, otherwise bands like Third Eye Blind and The Goo Goo Dolls may be lazily labeled as such just because the public only remembers one song.
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Au$tin
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Post by Au$tin on Nov 18, 2019 6:50:16 GMT -5
Wait, so are you calling Psy a one hit wonder even though you admitted to him having two hits and shaming anyone who does the same for Lil Nas X? Gentleman isΒ a hit in the same way #SELFIE wasΒ a hit or even 'Earth' were "hits": viral forΒ a few weeks but no actual staying power. It'd be like saying the 2010 WeΒ are the World remix wasΒ a hit, or Filthy or We Might Be Dead Tomorrow. Panini isΒ a hit. 20+ weeks on the charts, with 8+ weeks spent in the Top 10. And going back to Gentleman, it wasΒ barely onΒ any year-end lists; wasn't on the UK or Canada or Australia, whereas Panini is expected to place in the top half of the year end list for 2019. Cultural perception shouldn't be the be-all end-all for deciding OHW, otherwise bands likeΒ Third Eye BlindΒ and The Goo Goo Dolls may be lazily labeledΒ as such just because the public only remembers one song. That's a long winded post to say "yes." Because, you see, what I'm getting from this post is "I decide what a hit is, and I arbitrarily assign it to songs I think deserve it and the public perception doesn't at all factor in to me because I live in a bubble and refuse to leave it and accept other people perceive music differently." If you have to scream chart stats at a random person to convince them a song they've never heard, never experienced, and that has had zero impact on their life, then clearly the charts aren't relevant to the discussion and you fundamentally miss what BOTH the term and what a chart implies. We really need to stop putting so much damn weight on them. Charts can and only ever will be snapshots of songs in relation to each other in an arbitrary length of time. It doesn't matter if a song was a multi week #1 hit in November 1982 if it wouldn't even register inside the top 10000 most notable songs right now. Because the culture we live in right now is different than it was then. Things change. Songs are forgotten. Songs come back into public consciousness. Pop culture is fickle. "Hit" does not and will not ever refer to an exact chart stat. It does and always will refer to how the public perceives a song. You could grab 100 random people off the street and they will all list a different set of songs they think are popular and I guarantee several of those won't even be charting right now or have ever reached a certain criteria to be defined as "hit" by you or I. Why is this such a hard concept for y'all to grasp? I know charts are fun, exciting, concrete, but reality is abstract. It's not as simple as that. Do you know how many people don't even know who Billie Eilish is? That Lil Nas X is a person and not an energy drink? We're chart watcher and music lovers. We're analytical and see things unfold in the industry. Your average person is not these things. Your average person is only going to remember the songs they've managed to hear and like enough to not forget it once the airwaves and streaming playlists drop it or the songs that they hated so much they left their mark. Songs that make impact on their life in deep ways. That could be "Old Town Road" or it could be the latest Korn single that never hits the Hot 100. And only time will tell what songs remain collectively remembered, the "hits," and what songs have been lost to time.
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dremolus - solarpunk
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Post by dremolus - solarpunk on Nov 18, 2019 7:10:38 GMT -5
Gentleman is a hit in the same way #SELFIE was a hit or even 'Earth' were "hits": viral for a few weeks but no actual staying power. It'd be like saying the 2010 We are the World remix was a hit, or Filthy or We Might Be Dead Tomorrow. Cultural perception shouldn't be the be-all end-all for deciding OHW, otherwise bands like Third Eye Blind and The Goo Goo Dolls may be lazily labeled as such just because the public only remembers one song. That's a long winded post to say "yes." Because, you see, what I'm getting from this post is "I decide what a hit is, and I arbitrarily assign it to songs I think deserve it and the public perception doesn't at all factor in to me because I live in a bubble and refuse to leave it and accept other people perceive music differently." That's not what I'm saying. I never said public perception should be disregarded entirely; I clearly said it "shouldn't be the be-all, end-all". Public perception clearly plays a part, otherwise bands like The Killers or Nirvana could be labeled as one-hit wonders. But by labelling the artist who started this whole debate, Lil Nas X, as a one-hit wonder, it's dismissing the success he's having right now. When people think OHW, they tend to think artists with fluke hits or artists who were never heard off again but that's not the case with him, we're hearing from him and if pushed right, we could still be hearing from him a few months from now. Yeah, Old Town Road might eclipse him but a song eclipsing an artist, that can happen to any artist regardless of successful they are.
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Post by Rose "Payola" Nylund on Nov 18, 2019 7:32:16 GMT -5
Cultural perception shouldn't be the be-all end-all for deciding OHW, otherwise bands like Third Eye Blind and The Goo Goo Dolls may be lazily labeled as such just because the public only remembers one song. Except in those cases, even if they donβt remember their string of hits, theyβre still remembered as having multiple hits.
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