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Thread started 09/29/15 3:48pm

purplethunder3
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Music's Guilty Pleasures Are Dead…And Bigger Than Ever

Music's Guilty Pleasures Are Dead…And Bigger Than Ever

CoolioAccording to some recent data, the prevalence of streamingmeans that music listeners are no longer forced to publicly purchase their trashy pop favorites, with the result that these guilty pleasures are seeing a massive resurgence.

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Guest Post by Jack Isquith on Digital Music Insider

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Irving Berlin said, “Popular music is popular because a lot of people like it.”

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Recently the metrics meets storytelling site polygraph (poly-graph.co) published a piece by Matt Daniels on the most timeless songs from the 1990’s. More specifically, using Spotify plays as a yardstick, Daniels took a look at how resilient songs from the 1990’s were for today’s all-the-worlds-music-at-my-fingertips streaming music listeners.

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As you might expect cultural clarion calls like Nirvana’s Smells like Teen Spirit, Red Hot Chili Pepper’s Under The Bridge, Radiohead’s Creep, and Eminem’s My Name Is dominated. These songs are all different…or are they? After all, they’re all personal declarations of adolescent pain. The kind of pain that has fueled much of the great rock and hip hop of the last 30 years. These songs are variations on “I am hurting, the world is a mess, it’s in my kiss deal with it”.

nirvana_102512

The 60’s gave us My Generation, we were Comfortably Numb in the 70’s, The Smiths and songs like Heaven Knows I’m Miserable Now helped define the 80’s, and then came the 90’s. For every Smells Like Teen Spirit or Creep, there were hundreds more where they came from. Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Smashing Pumpkins, and a legion of downcast “complaint rock” bands ruled MTV and radio in the era. Apparently, in the 1990’s it was hip to be bummed.

goth coloring book

OK then. Through the ages, teenage angst has been constant in pop music. But when listeners are not bummed out, and they can listen to any song they want from the anonymity of their smart phone and headphones, what else do today’s streamers want to hear?

Apparently, they want to hear…crap.

britney-spears-young-britney-young-628858491

The kind of “crap” that in the pre-Napster Rock era (1964–2000) you had to be ashamed to buy. Or more charitably…a concentrated set of incredibly catchy, sometimes dopey, wonderfully catchy pop songs, formerly known as Guilty Pleasures.

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You see, streaming music sites like Spotify, Pandora and Slacker have done more than open up the catalogue of all music to anyone with broadband — they have killed Guilty Pleasures. This has happened gradually but surely over the last ten years. No one needs to know exactly what you are listening to in those headphones, and even if they did judge you for your momentary dalliance with Roxette or Bryan Adams, it was just momentary. There are a million other songs just a click away, so what’s the big deal? It’s not like you’re going to get a Spin Doctors Two Princes tattoo, right

Contrast our present day ease of entry, ease of escape with the 1990’s. Can you imagine the walk of shame for a 16 year old Gen X’er as she ambled up to the Tower Records counter with a CD or two from Britney or The Spice Girls along with her Sonic Youth and Nirvana masterpieces? That was simply not going to happen.

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spice girls

Guilty Pleasure pop like Britney’s Baby One More Time and The Spice Girls Wannabee were mortal enemies before streaming. Now they are playlist kissing cousins. These songs dominate the catalogue spins across the streaming services.

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Songs like Collio’s Gangsta’s Paradise, Celine Dion’s My Hear Will Go On,Blackstreet’s No Diggitty and Natalie Imbruglia’s Torn are no longer Guilty Pleasures at all. They are simply fun oldies. Perfect for your Songs That You Think Sucked…But Don’t playlist, or Wussiest Songs Ever station or Yes I’m Listening To Li..., So What.

On a revenue level, these are massive catalogue streaming hits, generating huge market share gains for their labels.

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Perhaps there are cultural and personal economic forces at play here too. The path to employment isn’t an easy one for millenials. Student loans, 24/7 connectivity and the resulting social media pressure have created a perfect sociological storm for disposable pop. Maybe impending adulthood sounds like crap a lot more than a Coolio song ever could. I’ll leave that one for the social scientists.

Financially, these songs are most certainly not crap. Thanks to streaming, these former Guilty Pleasures are now simply songs we love. Gangsta’s Paradise, Wannabee, and Britney’s hits are the new catalogue smashes. These are great pop songs ready for your “Hipster Karaoke”, “Stadium-Singalong”, or “Yacht-Rock Party”. Whatever your station or playlist is called, these songs are perfect.

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Guilty Pleasures are dead. They’re also bigger than ever.

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #1 posted 09/30/15 5:36pm

214

What's wrong with Baby One more Time?

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Reply #2 posted 09/30/15 5:44pm

purplethunder3
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214 said:

What's wrong with Baby One more Time?

lol

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #3 posted 09/30/15 5:49pm

214

purplethunder3121 said:

214 said:

What's wrong with Baby One more Time?

lol

What's wrong with you my brother

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Reply #4 posted 10/07/15 5:58pm

TonyVanDam

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If music's guilty pleasures are dead, when why some people are still listening to Katy Perry's I Kiss A Girl, Carly Rae Jespen's Call Me Maybe, and The Weeked's Can't Feel My Face?

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Reply #5 posted 10/09/15 9:52am

Empress

TonyVanDam said:

If music's guilty pleasures are dead, when why some people are still listening to Katy Perry's I Kiss A Girl, Carly Rae Jespen's Call Me Maybe, and The Weeked's Can't Feel My Face?

Because they have terrible taste in music razz lol

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Reply #6 posted 10/09/15 10:58am

sexton

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214 said:

What's wrong with Baby One more Time?


I still have the cassette single so the "guilty" part of guilty pleasures never worked on me.

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Reply #7 posted 10/09/15 2:11pm

Cinny

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This would make sense if their point was that those guilty pleasures never sold, or flopped commercially in their day. Likely they are being listened to by people who remember them as the (now) classics they are. It is certainly reinforced by radio, who loves throwing back to those pop songs as opposed to more acclaimed music.

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Reply #8 posted 10/09/15 3:58pm

TonyVanDam

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Empress said:

TonyVanDam said:

If music's guilty pleasures are dead, when why some people are still listening to Katy Perry's I Kiss A Girl, Carly Rae Jespen's Call Me Maybe, and The Weeked's Can't Feel My Face?


Because they have terrible taste in music razz lol


Fair enough. lol

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Reply #9 posted 10/11/15 2:56pm

214

nahh i love Baby one more time, i do not care is a pleasure as itself ad no guilty i find

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Reply #10 posted 10/11/15 5:52pm

Hamad

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There's no such thing as guilty pleasure.

Every saint has a past, and every sinner has a future...

Twitter: https://twitter.com/QLH82
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Reply #11 posted 10/11/15 8:34pm

sexton

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Cinny said:

This would make sense if their point was that those guilty pleasures never sold, or flopped commercially in their day. Likely they are being listened to by people who remember them as the (now) classics they are. It is certainly reinforced by radio, who loves throwing back to those pop songs as opposed to more acclaimed music.


Or maybe the point is these light-hearted pop songs from the past are streaming at a higher rate than other more serious hits from the same time period?

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Reply #12 posted 10/16/15 7:56am

Cinny

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sexton said:

Cinny said:

This would make sense if their point was that those guilty pleasures never sold, or flopped commercially in their day. Likely they are being listened to by people who remember them as the (now) classics they are. It is certainly reinforced by radio, who loves throwing back to those pop songs as opposed to more acclaimed music.


Or maybe the point is these light-hearted pop songs from the past are streaming at a higher rate than other more serious hits from the same time period?

Okay, but I am sure even the "serious" side of the Spice Girls gets more burn. wink

Can't we all just agree that we're done with Korn and Rage Against The Machine? biggrin

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Reply #13 posted 10/16/15 10:11am

sexton

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Cinny said:

sexton said:


Or maybe the point is these light-hearted pop songs from the past are streaming at a higher rate than other more serious hits from the same time period?

Okay, but I am sure even the "serious" side of the Spice Girls gets more burn. wink

Can't we all just agree that we're done with Korn and Rage Against The Machine? biggrin


Wrong choice of words on my part. It's true that it's all about the artists and not the songs. I can't imagine many people distancing themselves from "Wannabe" yet readily embracing "Viva Forever". lol

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Reply #14 posted 10/16/15 11:07am

Cinny

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sexton said:

Cinny said:

Okay, but I am sure even the "serious" side of the Spice Girls gets more burn. wink

Can't we all just agree that we're done with Korn and Rage Against The Machine? biggrin


Wrong choice of words on my part. It's true that it's all about the artists and not the songs. I can't imagine many people distancing themselves from "Wannabe" yet readily embracing "Viva Forever". lol

Yeah, haha lol
typing whistle Good byyyye, my friennnnnd

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