Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pazz_&_Jop> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 32 of
32
with 100 items per page.
- Pazz_&_Jop abstract "Pazz & Jop is an annual poll of musical releases compiled by American newspaper The Village Voice. The poll is tabulated from the submitted year-end top ten lists of hundreds of music critics. Pazz & Jop was introduced by The Village Voice in 1974 as an album-only poll, but was expanded to include votes for singles in 1979. Throughout the years, other minor lists have been elicited from poll respondents for releases such as extended plays, music videos, album re-issues, and compilation albums—all of which have since been discontinued. The Pazz & Jop albums poll utilizes a points system in formulating list rankings. Participating critics assign a number of points to each of the albums on their top ten list, with the minimum being five and the maximum being thirty; all ten albums total one-hundred points. Singles lists, however, have always been unweighted.English rock band The Who topped the first Pazz & Jop albums poll with Who's Next (1971), while English singer Ian Dury and his band the Blockheads topped the first singles poll with "Hit Me with Your Rhythm Stick" (1979). Bob Dylan and Kanye West have topped the albums poll the most number of times, with four number-one albums each. West in addition won the singles poll of 2005. Music critic Robert Christgau ran the Pazz & Jop poll for more than thirty years; he also wrote an accompanying essay that discussed the poll's contents. Christgau's tenure as Pazz & Jop overseer came to an abrupt end when he was controversially fired from The Village Voice after a company buy-out in August 2006. In response to his dismissal, several prominent critics publicly announced that they would no longer be turning in their lists for the poll; Sasha Frere-Jones of The New Yorker described Christgau's firing as "a slap in the face to so many of us [critics] in so many ways." Regardless, The Village Voice has continued to run the feature, with Rob Harvilla succeeding Christgau as music editor and overseer of the poll. Christgau's annual Pazz & Jop overview essay was discontinued and substituted with multiple retrospective articles of the year's music written by a selection of critics.".
- Pazz_&_Jop thumbnail Robert_Christgau_02.jpg?width=300.
- Pazz_&_Jop wikiPageExternalLink index.php.
- Pazz_&_Jop wikiPageExternalLink pazznjop.
- Pazz_&_Jop wikiPageID "1629941".
- Pazz_&_Jop wikiPageRevisionID "606812110".
- Pazz_&_Jop hasPhotoCollection Pazz_&_Jop.
- Pazz_&_Jop subject Category:1971_introductions.
- Pazz_&_Jop subject Category:Lists_of_albums.
- Pazz_&_Jop subject Category:Lists_of_music_videos.
- Pazz_&_Jop subject Category:Lists_of_songs.
- Pazz_&_Jop subject Category:Opinion_polling_in_the_United_States.
- Pazz_&_Jop subject Category:The_Village_Voice.
- Pazz_&_Jop type Abstraction100002137.
- Pazz_&_Jop type AmericanMusicAwards.
- Pazz_&_Jop type Award106696483.
- Pazz_&_Jop type Communication100033020.
- Pazz_&_Jop type Signal106791372.
- Pazz_&_Jop type Symbol106806469.
- Pazz_&_Jop comment "Pazz & Jop is an annual poll of musical releases compiled by American newspaper The Village Voice. The poll is tabulated from the submitted year-end top ten lists of hundreds of music critics. Pazz & Jop was introduced by The Village Voice in 1974 as an album-only poll, but was expanded to include votes for singles in 1979.".
- Pazz_&_Jop label "Pazz & Jop".
- Pazz_&_Jop label "Pazz & Jop".
- Pazz_&_Jop label "Village Voice Pazz & Jop".
- Pazz_&_Jop sameAs Village_Voice_Pazz_&_Jop.
- Pazz_&_Jop sameAs m.05h_qz.
- Pazz_&_Jop sameAs Q4046553.
- Pazz_&_Jop sameAs Q4046553.
- Pazz_&_Jop sameAs Pazz_&_Jop.
- Pazz_&_Jop wasDerivedFrom Pazz_&_Jop?oldid=606812110.
- Pazz_&_Jop depiction Robert_Christgau_02.jpg.
- Pazz_&_Jop homepage pazznjop.
- Pazz_&_Jop isPrimaryTopicOf Pazz_&_Jop.