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Thread started 03/15/12 12:56pm

Terrib3Towel

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Question for those of you that hate todays music..

I'm not talking to you younguns that prefer old music. I'm talking to the older people who witnessed the change in music firsthand.

At what point did you guys say "screw it" and turned the radio off for good and decided to just play your old records? When did u realize music wasn't gonna get any better?

I'm curious is all. biggrin
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Reply #1 posted 03/15/12 12:59pm

smoothcriminal
12

Youngun here, but just wanna say.

Music didn't change for better or for worse.

That's all.

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Reply #2 posted 03/15/12 12:59pm

Empress

Terrib3Towel said:

I'm not talking to you younguns that prefer old music. I'm talking to the older people who witnessed the change in music firsthand. At what point did you guys say "screw it" and turned the radio off for good and decided to just play your old records? When did u realize music wasn't gonna get any better? I'm curious is all. biggrin

For me, it was about 4-5 years ago. I just got so sick of all the junk out there and how the real musicians were being ignored. I still listen to the radio from time to time, but I listen to the oldies like classic rock or 60's and 70's soul.

I do like some newer music, but not a lot. I love all my old records and I can really appreciate just how talented some of these folks were and still are today.

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Reply #3 posted 03/15/12 1:06pm

TheDigitalGard
ener

Terrib3Towel said:

I'm not talking to you younguns that prefer old music. I'm talking to the older people who witnessed the change in music firsthand. At what point did you guys say "screw it" and turned the radio off for good and decided to just play your old records? When did u realize music wasn't gonna get any better? I'm curious is all. biggrin

I never turned the radio off, I just changed to a different station.

There are some amazing current buns making music in 2012. Music does not begin and end with what is in the top 40/100/whatever.

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Reply #4 posted 03/15/12 1:15pm

TheResistor

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I've never listened to the radio but I think I stopped getting excited about new music about ten years ago. It wasn't this big decision. One day I just realized I was completely out of the loop with any new artist. And even though I still got to live shows and check out the occassional new band the last artist that gave me any kind of excitement was Robyn, and that was after I saw her live.

rainbow

"...literal people are scary, man
literal people scare me
out there trying to rid the world of its poetry
while getting it wrong fundamentally
down at the church of "look, it says right here, see!" - ani difranco
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Reply #5 posted 03/15/12 1:28pm

Terrib3Towel

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smoothcriminal12 said:

Youngun here, but just wanna say.



Music didn't change for better or for worse.



That's all.



I'm young myself and I agree. I enjoy new and old music. I'm just curious as to what these old geezers have to say lol
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Reply #6 posted 03/15/12 1:30pm

smoothcriminal
12

Terrib3Towel said:

smoothcriminal12 said:

Youngun here, but just wanna say.

Music didn't change for better or for worse.

That's all.

I'm young myself and I agree. I enjoy new and old music. I'm just curious as to what these old geezers have to say lol

Don't expect much beyond the usual. lol

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Reply #7 posted 03/15/12 1:32pm

SoulAlive

It was in the early 90s when I began to realize that,the music I grew up with (in the 70s and 80s) was so much better than the crap I was hearing on the radio.

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Reply #8 posted 03/15/12 1:34pm

TheDigitalGard
ener

smoothcriminal12 said:

Terrib3Towel said:

smoothcriminal12 said: I'm young myself and I agree. I enjoy new and old music. I'm just curious as to what these old geezers have to say lol

Don't expect much beyond the usual. lol

What do you think the OP should expect?

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Reply #9 posted 03/15/12 1:37pm

Vendetta1

Terrib3Towel said:

I'm not talking to you younguns that prefer old music. I'm talking to the older people who witnessed the change in music firsthand. At what point did you guys say "screw it" and turned the radio off for good and decided to just play your old records? When did u realize music wasn't gonna get any better? I'm curious is all. biggrin

prbably 2000.

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Reply #10 posted 03/15/12 1:38pm

Vendetta1

smoothcriminal12 said:

Youngun here, but just wanna say.

Music didn't change for better or for worse.

That's all.

Tha hell it didn't. Real instruments then. Fake instruments and autotune now.

Come on now. I have such high hopes for you. lol

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Reply #11 posted 03/15/12 1:46pm

ReddishBrownOn
e

Growing up there was always'oldies' (50's,60's70's) radio on in the house, so perhaps I was conditioned to think that the old stuff is always better.

I came of age musically - that is to say I reached that age where one typically starts trying to find ones 'own' music - around 1999-2000. That was perhaps the worst time for mainstream pop and rock, or at least it was here in the UK. For those who can't remeber, the charts were wall to wall boy and girl groups, commercial Eurodance and UK Garage, whilst the hot 'Rock' sound was nu-metal. Oh, the horror! chainsaw

Even my tiny teenaged mind could tell that this stuff was no god, so I started delving into classic rock and soul, and haven't looked back.

It's been too long since you've had your ass kicked properly:


http://www.facebook.com/p...9196044697

My band - listen and 'like' us, if you please
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Reply #12 posted 03/15/12 1:49pm

JoeTyler

like cinema, music has nothing new to offer...

another form of art that, from now on, will survive just because people likes it

but make no mistake, the evolution that popular music started during the late-40s ended during the mid-00s...some would say during the late-90s...

[Edited 3/15/12 13:50pm]

tinkerbell
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Reply #13 posted 03/15/12 1:50pm

Timmy84

smoothcriminal12 said:

Youngun here, but just wanna say.

Music didn't change for better or for worse.

That's all.

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Reply #14 posted 03/15/12 1:59pm

MickyDolenz

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Vendetta1 said:

Real instruments then. Fake instruments and autotune now.

I hear no autotune here, and it's current music:

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #15 posted 03/15/12 2:53pm

TD3

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MickyDolenz said:

Vendetta1 said:

Real instruments then. Fake instruments and autotune now.

I hear no autotune here, and it's current music:

Ivy and I live in the same city. Have you heard any of these artist on Chicago radio?

She'll get back with us but till then I'll answer for her. lol lol lol

NO.

============

[Edited 3/15/12 16:57pm]

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Reply #16 posted 03/15/12 3:02pm

TD3

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Granted the music business is a trickey place and you never know who the audience will embrace. Even so, in the 60's, 70's and I think the early eighties, Sharon Jones would've been heard somewhere on the radio in Chicago. Not now, none of the artist you've posted have the "look" and may be considered too old for mainstream radio. Terrible3Towel did ask when did we shut off the damn radio.

I shut off the radio in the 90's early 90's. Maybe before I drop died, the digital revolution will weed out the bullshit and will get back to good, fun, substantive music being produced by people who have some fucking talent. I doubt it tho'.

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Reply #17 posted 03/15/12 3:24pm

MickyDolenz

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^^Where I live, there's a college radio station that plays jazz and another station that plays southern soul and zydeco. So they are on the radio. Maybe the OP is not listening to the right station.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #18 posted 03/15/12 3:24pm

iloveannie

1980s. No wait, that was my dad. 1960'something. All those stupid haircuts and rock and roll. No, wait that was my grandad. Oh about 1945. All those doo wop bands not singing real songs. Sorry that was my great granddad.

Seriously though I can't believe you asked such a naive question.
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Reply #19 posted 03/15/12 3:30pm

RKJCNE

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Doesn't every generation hate the next's music? My uncle hated the beatles, he thinks they ruined music.

2012: The Queen Returns
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Reply #20 posted 03/15/12 3:32pm

iloveannie

There are some truly fantastic bands and musicians today. More so than at any other time. It's on the individual to find yhem and be open to them. However if it's pop music you are referring to... well that's always been always been fickle and disposable.
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Reply #21 posted 03/15/12 3:36pm

lezama

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I still listen to tons of new music. Just not mainstream new music.

Change it one more time..
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Reply #22 posted 03/15/12 3:56pm

leecappella

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Terrib3Towel said:

I'm not talking to you younguns that prefer old music. I'm talking to the older people who witnessed the change in music firsthand. At what point did you guys say "screw it" and turned the radio off for good and decided to just play your old records? When did u realize music wasn't gonna get any better? I'm curious is all. biggrin

Truth be told, I haven't listened to music on the radio as a habit in years. I used to listen most during the 80's. If I knew Donna Summer had released something new, I would listen for it on the radio. And, it was during the 80's that I really enjoyed music most as well. I like some of today's music, but, for the most part, not much. In today's world of Ipods, Zunes, and smartphones, one can listen to their very own music collection as if it were their own personal radio station with no commercials and often, not too much song changing. At least, not for me. I have a few records, but I refer mp3s and cds. I never thought music wasn't going to get any better. Whether or not music is good or bad is a matter of personal opinion. One man's jam is another man's junk. I simply choos not to listen to radio music because most stations, it seems, just play the same songs over and over and over within the same hour and a half of airtime. Some stations only play "the hits". That is, the Top 40, which is why repeat songs are heard so much because what stations play is limited to just the well known songs which gets boring when they are played continuously throughout the day. If I were a radio dj and I could play by my own rules, I would play all genres of music whether the song was released or a b-side, if I could do so legally. That's why I listen to my Zune HD on shuffle the majority of the time with a few requests thrown in:)

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Reply #23 posted 03/15/12 4:05pm

MickyDolenz

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leecappella said:

If I were a radio dj and I could play by my own rules, I would play all genres of music whether the song was released or a b-side, if I could do so legally.

As long as there isn't any profanity and maybe certain kinds of subjects, you can play whatever you like on your station. There is no law that says you can only play singles. Whether or not you can fund it through companies advertising on it or that it'll get a huge audience is a different story.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #24 posted 03/15/12 4:43pm

Vendetta1

TD3 said:

MickyDolenz said:

I hear no autotune here, and it's current music:

Ivy and I live in the same city. Have you heard any of these artist on Chicago radio?

She get back with us but till then I'll answer for her. lol lol lol

NO.

============

[Edited 3/15/12 14:53pm]

highfive

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Reply #25 posted 03/15/12 6:07pm

popgodazipa

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I can't pin point the date. But it was sometime after the falll of the neo soul music. There was still an organic dynamic feel to music making during that era (93-97ish). You could actually listen to the radio or see a video of an artist and felt like you had discovered something special and unique. Soon after that radio stopped playing or breaking diverse artist..and they just began to bombard us with non stop gutter music. There use to be a time when certain songs (hard core rap) wouldn't get played during drive home hours...when kids would be more likely to listen after school. I think when I heard the ying yang twins Wait to You See My D%!K at like 330 on a Tuesday I was pretty much done.

1 over Jordan...the greatest since
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Reply #26 posted 03/15/12 7:01pm

Harlepolis

The so-called neo soul movement.

I loved what I heard from Jaguar, Erykah, D, and them. But since they themselves revere the era of their musical forefathers/mothers, I decided to go back to my old folks' crates and see what I was missing.

Chaka Khan hit me in the chest and I haven't turned on the radio eversince. That was 2002, I was 20. I was content then as I am now, there's ALWAYS new "old" music to discover.

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Reply #27 posted 03/15/12 7:08pm

CrabalockerFis
hwife

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I, too believe that there is great music out there that just isn't mainstream popular, but I, and many others have trouble finding it, so I'd appreciate it if anybody claiming there's still great new music out there could share some examples to show the "geezers" that they're wrong. smile

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Reply #28 posted 03/15/12 7:09pm

aardvark15

TheDigitalGardener said:

smoothcriminal12 said:

Don't expect much beyond the usual. lol

What do you think the OP should expect?

Back when I was young yadayadayada artist had talent yadayadayada robots weren't taking over yadayadayada. I'm just screwing with you guys, but seriously, expect nothing less.

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Reply #29 posted 03/15/12 7:10pm

aardvark15

Vendetta1 said:

smoothcriminal12 said:

Youngun here, but just wanna say.

Music didn't change for better or for worse.

That's all.

Tha hell it didn't. Real instruments then. Fake instruments and autotune now.

Come on now. I have such high hopes for you. lol

You really must hate Cher

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