Another Music Direct Catalog observation


I didn't want to hijack an existing thread about the current catalog's Joni cover so I started this one.

You know, I was thinking about this after I received my catalog and how burned out I was on "boomer music". I know as a Gen Xer, I've been saturated by Boomer culture since I came of age in the 80's, and my appreciation for these artists has waned in part because of their saturation in audiophile circles.

Yes, the MD catalog does pay lip service to contemporary artists, but its adherence to a musical paradigm that peaked 45 years ago or so is symptomatic of the undeniable waning of "hi-fi" as a hobby.
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To "pile on" bdp24 (!), I saw Dylan and the Hawks in 1966 in Honolulu on their way to Australia...the first concert in that arena (or anywhere else in Hawaii at that time) where a large pile of Altec A7s was used for the PA system (also the first time I'd seen Leslie cabinets). It was mind blowing seeing Bob do a brilliant acoustic set (Desolation Row...man...), take a short break, and then come out and absolutely kick butt...my 15 year old self never got over that one.
@mijostyn  +1 on Kate Bush! I am just about to clean a recently acquired Harvest/Capitol LP of The Kick Inside! I have been following her since 1979! She is a top-rank British singer/songwriter!
Great choices oreganpapa!  I'm a boomer, mostly listen to all of the jazz great vocalists from the era of your posted videos.  Also a big Joni Mitchell fan.  Admitedly, I don't listen to a lot of current artists, but I do own Ed Sheran vinyl.  I've never understood locking one's listening into one genre.  There's way too much great music out there!  Country, classic rock, jazz, opera and on!
oregonpappa, it is not dead either. Check out Cecile Mclorin Salvant and Esperanza Spaulding. 
robertjerman you can find a great documentary on Kate on youtube. She is most definitely an original. Most singer/songwriters sing about their experiences (Joni Mitchell). Kate sings about what she imagines so she becomes a singing fetus in the womb or a Russian babushka or lost at sea. Most don't know this but Dave Gilmour (Pink Floyd) discovered her.
He played a solo version of The Man With the Child in his Eyes for EMI and they put her under contract at the age of 16. 
Wolf, yup quite a band. They were supposed to be the American Beatles but they self destructed. Omaha. I think only Michael Bloomfield flipped me out as much in the Paul Butterfield  Band and Electric Flag. Another self destruct story.