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12-08-2009, 02:44 PM | #51 (permalink) | |
Account Disabled
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 4,538
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Quote:
I think musical movements have simply found their niche in the online world instead of the physical one. This is what I'd like to see come of this decade, which to me seems more revolutionary than any of the previous... Most people discover music online, which I think it'll eventually lead to a more eclectic society of music fans not nessicarily associated with any one particular movement... instead, they'll leave movement and genre breeding to the musicians and they'll become exactly that - musical styles, rather than any particular fashion or attitude along with them. |
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12-08-2009, 02:58 PM | #54 (permalink) | |
Let it drip
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 5,430
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Quote:
This is beginning to veer off topic, i agree with you in that i think the whole notion of genre and 'era' is blurring because of the internet. Movements and periods in musical history have been dictated by the relationships with the status Quo (charts, mainstream TV etc), even in what is dominating the masses or in what is eschewing them altogether as alternative, 'underground' and subverting. These days people are just illegally downloading songs and albums for free, you wont have the documented history to fall back on soon. |
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12-08-2009, 03:53 PM | #56 (permalink) | |
nothing
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: everywhere
Posts: 4,315
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Quote:
Goldfrapp was way WAY cooler than Lady Gaga, and Add N to (X) demolishes anything i've heard from the current electropop 'craze' |
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