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10 May 2006

What is the musical equivalent of "jumping the shark?" [More:]By which I don't mean when has a band sold out. I'm more thinking of the point at which one can tell it's all downhill from here.

I've talked with a couple friends about this, and we haven't come to a definitive answer on this one. The closest we've come was when the greatest hits collection is released, but so many bands jump long before that.
Three Words: Double Live Album.
posted by jonmc 10 May | 13:48
I don't think that quite covers it, jon, although it's definitely an advanced sign. Not enough bands do one.
posted by me3dia 10 May | 13:49
The last album by Moby or REM fit nicely in this category.
posted by Lipstick Thespian 10 May | 13:50
Concept Album Involving Costumes is another bad sign. Remember Kilroy Was Here?
posted by jonmc 10 May | 13:51
The driving creative force type member enters rehab?
posted by rainbaby 10 May | 13:52
One might say it's when they begin to remake their own songs (like Aerosmith), but then, how about after their best song ever was recorded? Well that doesn't quite work either. Hmm. That's a tough one. Bands don't jump the shark, because "jump the shark" jumped the shark? Maybe. Tough question.

There are some songs that are so transcendently good that they render an band's entire catalog superfluous, even if the subsequent songs are all incredible. (Weezer's "Buddy Holly," Everclear's "Santa Monica," Radiohead's "Creep" come to mind [and believe me, I dig Weezer and Radiohead]).

Did Nelly jump the shark? Because if he did, why does he have "the song of the summer" every year for the last god knows how many?

Nice stumper, me3dia. Great questions ask more questions than they answer.
posted by Hugh Janus 10 May | 13:55
When one of the members marries a model.
posted by iconomy 10 May | 13:56
Maybe when they release a song/album about how fucking hard it is to be famous?
posted by Capn 10 May | 13:58
Getting MTV play?
posted by AlexReynolds 10 May | 13:58
Often it's when they start releasing tunes with an orchestra mixed into the background.
posted by reflecked 10 May | 14:01
Concept album?
posted by kmellis 10 May | 14:10
About the only times when bands do covers is when they're just starting out or they're coming to an end.

Cover albums are an especially bad sign that the party's over (Bowie is the only exception I can think of).

The other bad sign for a band is the "going back to our roots" album. Another sign that the ideas train has already left the station.

Another interesting phenomenon is when a band starts shedding members. I remember Eric Burdon talking about how The Animals fell apart and said that once they lost the guys from their home town and took on flashy musicians from London they lost their roots. You can see something like this happened with Oasis.
posted by dodgygeezer 10 May | 14:13
Ooh, good one, reflecked.

I'm guessing that there isn't just one thing. There are so many more variables with music compared to TV -- genre, the differences in workflow (periodic albums vs. weekly series}, musical taste -- that it's hard to pinpoint a commonality.


On preview: concept album can't be it, because some bands are very successful with concept albums: Radiohead (OK Computer), Pink Floyd (The Wall), The Who (Tommy) and Green Day (American Idiot) for instance.
posted by me3dia 10 May | 14:15
I don't think this concept works as well for music acts as it does for TV shows.
posted by mullacc 10 May | 14:20
Children's choir. Full horn section, where there was none before.
posted by interrobang 10 May | 14:29
I don't think this concept works as well for music acts as it does for TV shows.
C'mon, course it does.

For example when do you think REM jumped the shark? Shiny Happy People? Monster? Green?
posted by dodgygeezer 10 May | 14:39
That's easy. Right after Fables.
posted by Hugh Janus 10 May | 14:42
Doing or contributing to a Christmas album.
posted by ericb 10 May | 14:48
I'd say REM's decline happened in the mid-early 90's, but they always have at least one unforgettable song on each of their albums, EXCEPT FOR THIS LAST ONE, Around The Sun. That was just bad from the first song on. So, IMHO, Around the Sun is REM's final moment of Shark-Jumpage.

Of course, knowing these guys, their next one will be some porchswing, quiet gem that will floor everyone while they trot off into the sunset.

I can dream, can't I? Sigh....

posted by Lipstick Thespian 10 May | 15:04
starting to take yourself too seriously and badmouthing your own past (awesome) work (cf Boys, Beastie)

also either of the following words in any context:

free
Tibet
posted by drjimmy11 10 May | 15:20
I thing the wheels really fell off somewhere around "Up" or "New Adventures In Hi-Fi".

Of course, I'm the only person in the world who actually likes Monster, so make of that what you will.
posted by Capn 10 May | 15:20
I liked a couple of songs off Monster, and would have burned it and sold it back had it been a different era. Instead I just sold it back. But I do like Up. Ultimately, I think REM has had far too many JtS moments to be relevant anymore.

There's a definite point at which Radiohead jumped for a lot of people -- somewhere between Amnesiac and Hail to the Thief. Couldn't put my finger on exactly what -- maybe just the fact that HttF was a single album with a double album's worth of song titles. Wankery like that will make ya jump, jump.
posted by me3dia 10 May | 15:29
I think it's always a different reason with TV shows too (or at least there are several), there's just a common phrase for when it happens.
So, for music, how about "Kilroyed"?, after Kilroy Was Here. Something that's a good example of a band that just blew it at the height of their popularity.

Or just "jumped the shark".
posted by Hellbient 10 May | 15:40
I like it, hellbient. "Kilroyed" it is.
posted by me3dia 10 May | 15:52
Or "they really took off the makeup with that release", after Kiss.

It just doesn't work when you consciously try to make up catch phrases, does it?

From this I Love Music thread:
You've jumped the shark when the lead single from your new album (or new greatest-hits album) is a cover.
posted by Hellbient 10 May | 15:52
I think we're going to need regular kilroy threads. This shark has legs.
posted by dodgygeezer 10 May | 16:26
Absolutely, dodgy.
posted by me3dia 10 May | 16:40
What AlexReynolds said.
posted by scarabic 10 May | 18:13
When they write a song with "rock" or "rock and roll" in the chorus.
posted by LarryC 10 May | 19:19
When you can see it in their eyes.
posted by safetyfork 11 May | 06:20
Ask mecha: How do you get out of a slump? || Realization:

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