total-recoil
Well-Known Member
Here I go on my customary rant: I'll get straight to the point and lay my cards out on the table. Modern music is a serious decline from the standards of the past. The other day someone showed me a supposedly top rank pop star of today singing around a video setting and then he told me this guy was brilliant and so on. I listened for a bit and my reply was, sure, he did have a good voice and a degree of talent but the whole thing looked fake, staged and shallow. This was probably a song that had been "engineered" on the basis of market appeal with a lot of audio enhancement to the single. Even worse, the music was saying nothing.
I'll go even further. When I'm out walking my dog very often a car will speed past and you hear a car stereo on loud and 80 per cent of the track is beat. I mean, bang, bang, bang and maybe a few profanities voiced to the beat. Might as well be honest as what goes through my head is not flattering. I consider it marketed, shallow, "all sounds the same" semi garbage.
So, what's the problem? Well, musicians especially in the sixties were actually creative and definitely didn't do their music on the basis of what they think might sell (dictated by record companies). Music was done for the love of it and as a means of expression of ideas, trends and concepts. Bob Dylan came along with his poetic folk which attracted a whole movement around him, The Stones were shocking people with their blues and Rock influences and The Beatles practically led the alternative counter culture with lots and lots of diverse, even experimental material. And then you had Jimmy Hendrix, Brian Wilson, Jefferson Airplane and Santana. Now, all I can say to people is listen to all of these bands and do they all sound the same like today's bands? Nope! They were all doing their own thing and kind of unique and they all had their own followers.
Go to the so-called stagnant seventies and really it was still pretty good. Abba were a bit tame but still great and Queen were technically brilliant and had a unique sound. Plus, the funky dance groove scene was also good fun.
Seems to me have really gone downhill since the mid nineties. I can only guess what happened is that somehow groups stopped forming and playing because they wanted to become proper bands and then record companies managed to engineer material they thought people would understand easier and just buy. Now, this has happened before like with the Monkees in the U.S.A. (a kind of faked group to provide an American Beatles). However, today it has somehow strangled genuine bands except those who are under kind of obscure Indie labels making peanuts.
What I'd like to see is real bands, doing real live singing without all the autotune and excessive electronic backing but playing a few real instruments to a real beat. I'd also like to see new trends, new ideas, the return of music as means to challenge the status quo and the system as well as genuine sex appeal. In the past I have been accused of being closed minded to modern music but still maintain 90 per cent of it does nothing for me at all.
I'll go even further. When I'm out walking my dog very often a car will speed past and you hear a car stereo on loud and 80 per cent of the track is beat. I mean, bang, bang, bang and maybe a few profanities voiced to the beat. Might as well be honest as what goes through my head is not flattering. I consider it marketed, shallow, "all sounds the same" semi garbage.
So, what's the problem? Well, musicians especially in the sixties were actually creative and definitely didn't do their music on the basis of what they think might sell (dictated by record companies). Music was done for the love of it and as a means of expression of ideas, trends and concepts. Bob Dylan came along with his poetic folk which attracted a whole movement around him, The Stones were shocking people with their blues and Rock influences and The Beatles practically led the alternative counter culture with lots and lots of diverse, even experimental material. And then you had Jimmy Hendrix, Brian Wilson, Jefferson Airplane and Santana. Now, all I can say to people is listen to all of these bands and do they all sound the same like today's bands? Nope! They were all doing their own thing and kind of unique and they all had their own followers.
Go to the so-called stagnant seventies and really it was still pretty good. Abba were a bit tame but still great and Queen were technically brilliant and had a unique sound. Plus, the funky dance groove scene was also good fun.
Seems to me have really gone downhill since the mid nineties. I can only guess what happened is that somehow groups stopped forming and playing because they wanted to become proper bands and then record companies managed to engineer material they thought people would understand easier and just buy. Now, this has happened before like with the Monkees in the U.S.A. (a kind of faked group to provide an American Beatles). However, today it has somehow strangled genuine bands except those who are under kind of obscure Indie labels making peanuts.
What I'd like to see is real bands, doing real live singing without all the autotune and excessive electronic backing but playing a few real instruments to a real beat. I'd also like to see new trends, new ideas, the return of music as means to challenge the status quo and the system as well as genuine sex appeal. In the past I have been accused of being closed minded to modern music but still maintain 90 per cent of it does nothing for me at all.