playboy wrote:This is amphetamine logic....
So, if a great majority of the fans are or were gay, it meant that Andrew is gay? And, of course, Robbie Williams is actually a woman since the great majority of his fans are girls..
amphetamine logic maybe, but at least it makes sense. your comparisons are not valid in the slightest.
if a band have 300,000 fans and 280,000 of them are goths, the band may as well be a goth band. you might be one of the 20,000 that aren't goths, but as far as the whole world is concerned They Are A Goth Band.
and outside of these hallowed walls it really doesn't matter how the hell a self-important singer in a band with diminishing popularity chooses to describe his band's music.
if the whole world thinks it looks like a duck and sounds like a duck, it may as well be a duck.
and it would be better served by stopping pretending to be a f*cking penguin and embrace it's inner duckness.
if you see what i mean.
it's about perception: how a band is perceived by the majority of the world.
labels you assign to yourself don't really matter in the grand scheme of things. they influence nothing and in the end, when you leave the room, they will count for nothing in the minds of those left in that room.
only those labels assigned by everyone else will stick.
what i'm saying is they might not want to be be a goth band, but they may as well be a goth band, for all the difference their protestations make.
playboy wrote:No, the fans does not make a band anything. At all.
Goths just have difficulties in moving on. If Andrew made a jazzalbum I am sure the goths would buy the album anyway. But it does not meen that jazz suddenly is goth.
but it would bring the genre to a new audience
bix beiderbecke and the chorus of vengeance, anyone?