Posted on 11/03/2012 1:38:09 PM PDT by OddLane
Its often said that art appreciation is wholly subjective. Aesthetic tastes naturally differ, de gustibus non est disputandem, etc And if art is a matter of taste, and not subject to critical scrutiny, then so it is with music, which is simply a subset of art. In one sense, the people who posit this argument are correct. Theres no objective, non-arbitrary measure by which you can judge the quality of a musical composition, artist, or genre. In another sense, these people are completely wrong.
I hew to the Adam Carolla theory of musical appreciation. That is, there is a distinct, unmistakable cleavage between music that is good and music which, for lack of a better word, sucks. The problem is that today, for a variety of reasons, many cannot distinguish between the two. It explains why, whenever you enter a club, a bar, or a misguided friends party, your ears are bombarded with an unremitting stream of reggaeton, dub step, and execrable Top 40 hip hop and pop.
Its why you will never hear a single by Iris DeMent, John Wesley Harding, the Carolina Chocolate Drops or any other musician/band who doesnt make you long for the sweet release of death.
(Excerpt) Read more at nyctalking.com ...
Somebody left the c off the front.
Max Stalling. Thanks, another discovery.
Complaining about “the music today” is one of signs of growing old. Your parents compained, now you do. It’s always been like it. My Fakebook “friends”, all post links to some bands of yesteryear, most of those links quite pedestrian, thank you, that is to say showing the same old, same old, by the same old, same old, no discoveries, no hidden gems. Nostalgia. I don’t miss nostalgia, sorry.
In the meantime, there is plenty of great music out there, and it is relatively easy to find via the Internet. As a reviewer in the WSJ wrote a few weeks ago, the two genres of popular music in great shape today are Americana and electronic. I can’t say anything about the latter, but as far as the former, I cannot keep up with the artists I have discovered in the past year, there are so many.
Check out this up and coming diva: http://brookeannibale.com/Final/watch.html
My car radio stays on Deep Tracks 95+% of the time. I have a self-seeded Deep Tracks-like Pandora channel I listen to in my home office and in my wife’s car via streaming it from my iPhone.
Good god, Ce-Lo Green ripping off the Ramones’ Blitzkrieg Bop. Just shoot me now, you were so right.
Yeah, Steve and the Deep Canyon Rangers are certainly worth checking out.
I like the Old Crow Medicine Show as well, in that general space.
Interesting. That's about the time I quit listening to pop music. And I agree with you that today's "music" has no melody. It's just crap.
My theory is that all the good song-writers are dead and have been for decades.
There's nothing out today that I would bother listening to.
Google Darrell Scott.
For some reason I thought that I was posting to a person who noted that he or she had quit listening to popular music in 1970 and who made the referenced comments on songs. Oh well, I’ll try to excuse it by claiming old age.
Does this Mr. Scott write songs on the level of, say, “Hello Young Lovers” or hell, “Sixteen Candles”?
Click the picture for a jukebox to preview...
But with all due respect, it is not the same genre...
Music, as it’s defined in western culture, contains melody, harmony, and rhythm.
If a piece of aural art is missing any one of the above three components, it’s not music.
But with all due respect, it is not the same genre...
I love their music.
Tom Petty’s Buried Treasure reminds me of some of the things Detroit DJ’s could do with their station’s libraries. I remember a program called “Seventh Day” on either WABX or WWWW (W4). It featured 7 albums, back-to-back, every Sunday starting in the afternoon and ending in the early evening.
You mean that indescribable audible noise I hear on the radio is music?
Had a rental car recently with XM Radio and found myself listening to Deep Tracks a lot.
I was too lazy to look up Mr. Scott’s music (sorry).
My tastes are pretty eclectic though they lean heavily to Broadway and movie show tunes and the rock and roll era of the mid and late 1950s and all of the 1960s, but I also enjoy some country and western, so I might like his music. Thanks for the reference.
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