Outside_Lookin_in
G45 Legend
- Joined
- Jul 1, 2014
A good explanation of how music has declined since the sixties.
No need to close this down. I like the video because the narrator tries to prove his point using objective metrics. Having said that, the reality isn't as black and white as he makes out: it's more of a trend. We've had payola since the fifties, so the mere-exposure effect has long been relevant. We've had compression at least since the seventies, and not all modern music is compressed or timbrally flat. Also, you can't fully trust someone who can't pronounce timbre.
Personally, in my insatiable quest for novelty and variety, I listen to music from every decade beyond the fifties. Not much from the seventies though, as that is the decade with the most compression, followed by the eighties. Garage will always be my favourite genre however. If I have to give an explanation for that, it's hard to be objective, and all I can offer is that garage has a much higher emotional content; I've got an anti-commercial / anti-establishment gene in my genome; and I generally tire less of garage songs than I do of songs in other genres. Some of those reasons may be explicable in terms of what is said in the above video.
The "right" kind of compression in the recording chain can be pretty cool...ever hear a Joe Meek record?
The main thing I hate about modern music is the way it sounds. The actual sound quality. I hate that even worse than the songs or lyrics. Here is an example of a modern recording which I think is brilliant, but it's brilliant because it doesn't use any modern recording methods. It's pure analog tape. If only more records could be made this way. It's an instrumental, 60s style but recorded relatively recently. Sound quality = as good as anything from the 60s. And it has great style and energy for what it is.
I can only assume the analog recorder and other analog gear used for this must have been impeccably maintained.
even one Abba song...aah those sweet memories of youth.
I think sixties music came from the heart and a need to express freedom from the fifties. And the eagerness to experiment in latter days. Nowadays it's super commercial and no thanks to Pro Tools everyone can sing in tune, all one needs is a great looking bod.
Though I have to admit that the seventies hold some guilty pleasures for me, even one Abba song...aah those sweet memories of youth.
I think sixties music came from the heart and a need to express freedom from the fifties. And the eagerness to experiment in latter days. Nowadays it's super commercial and no thanks to Pro Tools everyone can sing in tune, all one needs is a great looking bod.
Though I have to admit that the seventies hold some guilty pleasures for me, even one Abba song...aah those sweet memories of youth.
Nope I don't need "a man after midnight"Gimme! Gimme! Gimme!?
Nope I don't need "a man after midnight"![]()