Coming back to Op's title, with benefit of hindsight I am not surprised that old music is more prevalent than new music simply because there is far less original material in new music (its all been done before). Early indicators of this trend is when some time ago a few 'Rap' artists would use old hits to put in their own lyrics (or is it speech?), obviously no new originality. There was 'Grunge Rock' which really was a poor man's version of Rock, I have more regard to Punk which tried to be more 'to the point' music without the frills, but the Punk artists fell in the trend of the time of trying to be offensive, bad boys and totally radical (sadly just an act). There is a lot of modern 'good' music about, not original but certainly musical gems. However music companies trying to nurture and invest in young talent have long gone. Now focus is on more 'what will make it go viral' on internet. Think of a tune which will 'hook' the listener on first time because otherwise listener will be instantly bored and has the instant access to other tunes. Also there is a growing trend of artists just doing their own websites selling their own music without any band involvement eg Justin Johnson. He is very talented guitarists but eventually the listener will get bored just listening him on his own doing eg remake of Stairways To heaven. On rare situations when he does play in the band; musically it gets far more interesting!
Is Old Music Killing New Music?
I ran across this Atlantic magazine article on another music forum. It asks the question if old music is killing new music. I didn't realize that older music represents 70% of the music market according to this article. I know I use Qobuz and Tidal to find new music and new artists for my collection, but I don't know how common that actually is for most people. I think that a lot of people that listen to services like Spotify and Apple Music probably don't keep track of what the algorithms are queuing up in their playlists. Perhaps it's all becoming elevator music.
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- 167 posts total
- 167 posts total