• @niktemadur
      link
      53 months ago

      Ship Of Theseus does completely sound like an album title that fits the band name of Styx.

  • @jordanlund
    link
    9
    edit-2
    3 months ago

    Good question…

    I’d argue this…

    Let’s say you have 4 band members:

    John, Paul, George, and Ringo

    John drops out, is replaced by George^2.
    Ringo drops out, replaced by Pete.
    Paul drops out, replaced by Brian.
    George drops out, replaced by Billy.

    George^2, Pete, Brian, Billy.

    You could argue they are still the same band as 3/4 of them each played with original members. Billy is the first to have never played with any of them.

    Now… if George^2, Pete, and Brian get replaced, no, it’s not the same band.

    • young_broccoli
      link
      fedilink
      53 months ago

      I would add that also there should also be a connection between the art/music for them to be considered the same band

      For example: Black Sabbath only changed their vocalist and they sound like two, quite, different bands. On the other hand, Iron Maiden also changed their vocalist and they sound like the same band with both Dickinson and Di’anno.

      • @jordanlund
        link
        53 months ago

        Or you look at Pink Floyd, Syd Barret, Roger Waters, Dave Gilmour, all vastly different sounds, yet all Floyd.

        • young_broccoli
          link
          fedilink
          23 months ago

          Are they really? Im not too familiar with pink floyd but they dont sound that different to me I even have trouble telling which “era” their songs are.

    • The Pantser
      link
      43 months ago

      But you have a pot of soup and at the end of the day you have a little left and so you add more ingredients and fill the pot back up. You do this for years. Is it still the same pot of soup?

        • The Snark Urge
          link
          English
          33 months ago

          Art is a conversation, and a study of choice. It’s hard to see how treating a band as something fixed or essential rather than a collective voice or viewpoint that can change over time can add clarity to anything.

        • The Pantser
          link
          13 months ago

          So then as a band are they a perpetual band? Are there any famous bands that basically did that? Like from the start just randomly changing members including the vocals? Something like the band is the lyrics and music not the performers, just like a symphony.

      • @LemmyKnowsBest
        link
        13 months ago

        That soup is going to develop bacteria and make everyone ill.

        No joke, it’s probably a fair analogy for replacing band members after the original band members have all died over the past 50 years.

  • @HootinNHollerin
    link
    8
    edit-2
    3 months ago

    I saw them for free last year and it was pretty whack with so much flag waiving super the troops patriotism shit and none of the members. Time to wrap it up

  • @BoxOfFeet
    link
    33 months ago

    What about when they split and multiply? Like Saliva.

  • @Hikermick
    link
    23 months ago

    What counts as an original member? By the time the first recording is released there may have been multiple line up changes

  • @niktemadur
    link
    13 months ago

    Reminds me of that time in the early-70s when David Bowie was swooning backstage while meeting The Velvet Underground, only to be informed a little later that he’d been talking to Doug Yule, who replaced John Cale then took over as frontman when Lou Reed quit the band, and if I’m not mistaken with the timeline, even guitarist Sterling Morrison and drummer Moe Tucker had already also split.