Connecting with Music [message #92964] |
Sat, 16 January 2021 23:53 |
Souldude
Messages: 72 Registered: January 2021
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Viscount |
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My playlist contains more songs from the early 2000s than recent ones and updating it doesn't occur to me. Well, the music industry is changing along with the style of some artists, since others are more focus on music videos. I was wondering if you guys can relate more to old music than new ones. In some aspects, it seems like old music has more feeling to it.
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Re: Connecting with Music [message #92967 is a reply to message #92964] |
Sun, 17 January 2021 09:31 |
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Wayne Parham
Messages: 18789 Registered: January 2001
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Illuminati (33rd Degree) |
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I find certain eras sort of resonate with me. For example, the fifties music was fun and catchy, but none of it was favorites for me. Just fun stuff. Same in the early 1960s. Be-bop "boy chases girl" music. But I really loved the late 1960s and early 1970s. That's the first era that really resonated with me. Some of the music seemed so deep and powerful. And then by the late seventies to early 1980s, it was back to being just catchy little ditties. Lots of weird stuff, lots of even garbage. What wasn't trash was just catchy. Nothing really powerful, just maybe danceable, through the early 1990s. But then the mid to late 1990s started to resonate with me again. Music that was deep and powerful. By the early aughts, I was unimpressed again. Just like the 1980s, it was mostly terrible trash, bad to maybe decent, but almost nothing I'd call good. In the early to mid 2010s, it had swung back to a few things I liked but by after maybe 2016, it was junk again. For the last two years or so, when I hear the radio, the music coming out is total trash. Can't say I've heard one new song in the last couple years I even liked.
So it seems cyclical for my tastes.
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Re: Connecting with Music [message #92974 is a reply to message #92967] |
Mon, 18 January 2021 02:54 |
Souldude
Messages: 72 Registered: January 2021
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Viscount |
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Wayne Parham wrote on Sun, 17 January 2021 09:31
I find certain eras sort of resonate with me. For example, the fifties music was fun and catchy, but none of it was favorites for me. Just fun stuff. Same in the early 1960s. Be-bop "boy chases girl" music. But I really loved the late 1960s and early 1970s. That's the first era that really resonated with me. Some of the music seemed so deep and powerful. And then by the late seventies to early 1980s, it was back to being just catchy little ditties. Lots of weird stuff, lots of even garbage. What wasn't trash was just catchy. Nothing really powerful, just maybe danceable, through the early 1990s. But then the mid to late 1990s started to resonate with me again. Music that was deep and powerful. By the early aughts, I was unimpressed again. Just like the 1980s, it was mostly terrible trash, bad to maybe decent, but almost nothing I'd call good. In the early to mid 2010s, it had swung back to a few things I liked but by after maybe 2016, it was junk again. For the last two years or so, when I hear the radio, the music coming out is total trash. Can't say I've heard one new song in the last couple years I even liked.
So it seems cyclical for my tastes.
Wow, those are really specific preferences. Some music are praised for being high-pitched while there are works that are noteworthy for its lyrics. Is your taste for music mainly affected by lyrics or do you like it depending on its tone?
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Re: Connecting with Music [message #92975 is a reply to message #92974] |
Tue, 19 January 2021 10:34 |
Rusty
Messages: 1192 Registered: May 2018 Location: Kansas City Missouri
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Illuminati (3rd Degree) |
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When music gets produced in formulaic fashion, regardless the decade, but seemingly full throttle currently. The soul of it collapses. There's a youtube video that gets into the dynamics of todays commercial pop music and the way it's produced.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oVME_l4IwII
I've been a bit of a archivist in my collection of music. Having turned my attention to the past or off the beaten path with my tastes. Liking many different genres. They all seem to have their golden periods from my archival perspective. Jazz seemed most inventive from the 40's through the 60's, with a sweet spot in the 50's. Rock, from it's nostalgic infancy in the 50's, the 60's soul and protest influences to the 70's crafting what now is heralded as classic rock. Sub genres like rockabilly, blues, reggae, country for me have their peaks as well that all favor the past in my collection. With exception of some notable and desirable revivalist influences in them that brought them back from obscurity.
These days, the ability to explore musical genres are more available than ever before. But what accounts as popular music or pop music I find to have turned into a puree of sound. Bland and non nourishing to the ears. Not to say pockets of good music isn't produced. Because there has been and there always will be people that do it for the joy it gives to them. That is the art that can't be formulated no matter what the algorithm made to replicate it is.
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Re: Connecting with Music [message #93212 is a reply to message #92964] |
Thu, 25 February 2021 10:15 |
Vaiger
Messages: 102 Registered: December 2012
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Viscount |
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What I listen to makes the terms "old music" and "new music" obsolete in the context it's usually given. I like listening to the new music that older artists put out. Artists that have been around since the '70s and '80s.
Many people I've met think that if John Cougar Mellencamp put out hugely popular pop hits in the '80s, that he still puts out pop music. Nothing could be farther from the truth. At least in his case.
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