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Why do old people hate new music?
The Clarksvillian ^ | December 2, 2021 | Frank T. McAndrew

Posted on 12/02/2021 7:26:02 AM PST by dmam2011

As I’ve grown older, I’ll often hear people my age say things like “they just don’t make good music like they used to.”

Why does this happen?

Luckily, my background as a psychologist has given me some insights into this puzzle.

We know that musical tastes begin to crystallize as early as age 13 or 14. By the time we’re in our early 20s, these tastes get locked into place pretty firmly.

In fact, studies have found that by the time we turn 33, most of us have stopped listening to new music. Meanwhile, popular songs released when you’re in your early teens are likely to remain quite popular among your age group for the rest of your life.

(Excerpt) Read more at clarksvillian.com ...


TOPICS: Chit/Chat; Music/Entertainment; Society; Weird Stuff
KEYWORDS: badmusic; classic; devilsmusic; homosexualagenda; music; noise; radio; rock
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To: Dr. Sivana
I’ve gone the other way, learning to appreciate the music from my parents’ era

That’s generally been my trend as well. I’m occasionally forced to listen to ‘new music’ due to grandkids and other relatives. I find modern music variously chaotic, non melodious, boring, sounding to ‘processed’, or just plain vulgar. Various combinations there of.

101 posted on 12/02/2021 8:31:42 AM PST by sjmjax
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To: dmam2011
We know that musical tastes begin to crystallize as early as age 13 or 14. By the time we’re in our early 20s, these tastes get locked into place pretty firmly.

I attended my first opera when I was 25. Prior to that I turned the radio off on Saturday afternoons when the opera was broadcast. Now I listen almost exclusively to opera, and have attended as many as 20 Metropolitan Opera performances in a year.

ML/NJ

102 posted on 12/02/2021 8:33:56 AM PST by ml/nj ("If the Representatives of the People betray their Constituents ..." Federalist #28; READ IT!)
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There is no shortage of new music that is awesome and with modern tech it is not hard to find. It is just not what the powers that be push as “popular”. There are still lots of bands that actually know how to play actual instruments


103 posted on 12/02/2021 8:35:09 AM PST by dsrtsage ( Complexity is just simple lacking imagination)
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To: ProtectOurFreedom
My musical tastes have evolved a lot. I just don’t enjoy listening to the hard rock / psychedelic rock I enjoyed as a teen.

Same here, the good thing thing is rediscovering bands that I largely ignored back in the day like Hall & Oats and Hughey Luis and the News.

I instantly switch stations when a Pink Floyd song comes on and I was a big fan.

104 posted on 12/02/2021 8:35:11 AM PST by usurper
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To: qam1
But I was amazed that the vast majority of songs they played at these parties were contemporary songs from the 70’s, 80’s and 90’s. I didn’t hear too many new songs.

The playlists were not much different from the playlist you would have heard at my High School Graduation party 30+ years ago

That's really interesting. I've long thought that the songs of today have nothing in particular to make them memorable, and that they won't have any endurance in the marketplace.

BTW, I happened to hear Olivia Newton-John's song Something Better To Do last night, for the first time in probably 40 years. Even though I never liked the song that much, I marveled at the superb musicianship of ONJ and the other musicians who accompanied her.

Olivia Newton-John - Something Better To Do.

No Autotune used at all. The recording studio and engineering is top-notch though.

Song composed and produced by ONJ's long-time collaborator John Farrar.

105 posted on 12/02/2021 8:35:19 AM PST by Steely Tom ([Voter Fraud] == [Civil War])
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To: central_va

A great album.

These days, you might just wear it out playing it so often. :-)


106 posted on 12/02/2021 8:35:21 AM PST by kosciusko51
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To: dmam2011
Why?

Auto-Tune.
Sampling.
Rap.
Synthetic drums.

The list is long.

107 posted on 12/02/2021 8:35:21 AM PST by Bloody Sam Roberts (Imagine, if you will, a vaccine so safe you have to be threatened to take it. )
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To: dmam2011

Music is more than a cacophony of sound with unintelligible lyrics screamed into a microphone.

What passes for music these days is abysmal.


108 posted on 12/02/2021 8:37:03 AM PST by metmom (...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith)
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To: rlmorel
Most modern American pop is a toxic raging dumpster fire. Utter trash, full of anger (at what, precisely, is hard to kmow), misogyny, and discordant screaming.

But then you have groups like Swedish Sabaton, whose work focuses on the history of human conflict and war. Their music is muscular, epic, melodic and often heart rending as they remind us of the history that so many are trying to erase or falsify.

En Livstid I Krig, or A Lifetime in War is a moving account of one soldier's perspective of the Thirty Years War. Almost any of their work is worth listening to. Check out their "A Christmas Truce," or "The last Stand"

Then,there's a Finnish outfit called Nightwish. Basically the poetry of band leader Tuomas Holopainen set to what's called symphonic metal. The Greatest Show on Earth is a 21 minute masterpiece of composition. All the Works of Nature Which Adorn the World is another 31 minute purely symphonic masterpiece well worth hearing.

109 posted on 12/02/2021 8:37:17 AM PST by Noumenon (Black American flag time. KTF)
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To: kosciusko51

Love the sax.


110 posted on 12/02/2021 8:38:05 AM PST by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: dmam2011

auto-tune? all sounds the same?? it’s woke/lame???


111 posted on 12/02/2021 8:39:57 AM PST by Chode (there is no fall back position, there's no rally point, there is no LZ... we're on our own. #FJB)
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Comment #112 Removed by Moderator

To: Olog-hai

Autotune papers over a lack of talent. Rap is little more than animal grunting.


113 posted on 12/02/2021 8:41:57 AM PST by Noumenon (Black American flag time. KTF)
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To: dmam2011

Gads, that is really broad statement in that title. If the definition of “New Music” is current pop music, then the reason is that it is so overproduced that it is easily disposable twaddle. There is plenty of new music that is not part of the current pop mainstream (especially the current US mainstream) that is listenable, even good - you do have to go looking for it, though.


114 posted on 12/02/2021 8:42:42 AM PST by Army Air Corps (Four Fried Chickens and a Coke)
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To: Bloody Sam Roberts

Bingo.


115 posted on 12/02/2021 8:44:07 AM PST by Army Air Corps (Four Fried Chickens and a Coke)
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To: real saxophonist
The vast majority of commercial/pop music these days is not even intended as music. It is a manufactured product.

Bingo. Mass-produced McMusic. Much like fast-food, the music industry can sell a lot of processed noise as an alternative to silence.

It's the same with television and movies. They can make more money with less risk selling a lot of low cost / low quality products instead of hiring real script writers, directors, actors, and crews to make fewer but really good movies.

From Wikipedia: The theory of the Least Objectionable Program (LOP) ...developed in the 1960s by then executive of audience measurement at NBC, Paul L. Klein ...viewers consume the medium of television rather than television shows, treating the medium as the end of their consumption itself rather than using the set as a means to access specific programs ...Since the introduction of television, the same percentage of sets are in use on, say, a Thursday evening at a certain hour, year after year, regardless of what content is broadcast ...The result was an often mass-produced, bland output of popular culture focused on leisure, targeting the American middle class.

116 posted on 12/02/2021 8:46:01 AM PST by T.B. Yoits
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To: SoCal Pubbie

Because it sucks and you are right on target! You can usually judge the mood of a population by the music common people listen to and what we hear now is pretty much nothing but disjointed jive and noise. Not to mention that in the past you could at least remember a tune as it may have stuck with you, but today hardly. Where are the days of Moody Blues, The Beatles or Pink Floyd etc. The sounds we hear today is pretty much a reflection of what’s going in government, and we see on the street of big cities, nothing but mayhem and discord.


117 posted on 12/02/2021 8:47:18 AM PST by saintgermaine (Saintgermain the time traveler)
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Comment #118 Removed by Moderator

To: Flash Bazbeaux

LOL. Yes indeed. That song was my response to everyone that wished me a happy birthday this year.


119 posted on 12/02/2021 8:48:02 AM PST by fidelis (Ecce Crucem Domini! Fugite partes adversae! Vicit Leo de tribu Juda, Radix David! Alleluia! )
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To: dmam2011

I am donning my flameproof suit, and waiting for the mortars to drop.

The so-called generation gap and cultural music issues came around because of the radio and the TV.

Prior to these, most people listened to the same music as their parents and had the same likes and dislikes. Radio changed that due to pressure to get people to follow something different.

Gospel music is proof of this. Young or old, generation or not, most people like the same music that the previous generations for several hundred years have liked. Amazing Grace from 1772 is still sung be every generation and loved by every generation. Good or bad they might sing it, Hallelujah Chorus (1741) still thrills. My Jesus I Love Thee (1862) is still understood, its melody can be heard in a dozen languages. Open up a new hymnbook or an old, it’s pages will still cover several hundred songs sung by every congregation worldwide.

In Jesus Christ there is no age, no divide, and what the older generations loved, the new ones love too. The church triumphant erases all those divides.


120 posted on 12/02/2021 8:48:48 AM PST by wbarmy (I chose to be a sheepdog once I saw what happens to the sheep.)
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