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Post by MysteryLamb on Dec 20, 2021 1:00:06 GMT
Here's my posit.
There hasn't been a truly new style of music, a truly groundbreaking new sound since hip hop.
Everything since has just been variations upon what has gone before.
I understand that all music is born out of what comes before it. Jazz and blues feeds into rock. Dance feeds into hip hop. Heavy metal from punk and with punk etc. They all feed and influence each other in a beautiful orgy and the coherent or marketable noises become zeitgeist.
Garage, Crunk, Pop, Gaffa, Sallad-ballad, Haze, Louise Mensch, New Country, Speed garage, dope slack, Armistice denial, zonal, Twitch-rock, or Scar etc. None of it is new.
The narrative used to be that every generation invents its own style and rebels. Did the music industry kill that or is there just nowhere left for music to go?
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Post by MysteryLamb on Dec 20, 2021 1:08:41 GMT
Nothing new I hear these days would have been out of place 20 years ago.
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MolarAm🔵
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Post by MolarAm🔵 on Dec 20, 2021 1:15:03 GMT
Uh... what does this have to do with the thread title
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Dec 20, 2021 1:25:27 GMT
Uh... what does this have to do with the thread title Those God-given talents entertainers have? God went and took them away. I don't know either, but the main point about there not being new genres of music anymore is valid And the title's been edited so my post doesn't make sense anymore. Oh well!
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MolarAm🔵
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Post by MolarAm🔵 on Dec 20, 2021 1:30:36 GMT
I agree with the post content! Just thought the thread title didn't relate to it at all. But it's been changed now, so now I'm the one who looks insane.
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Lizard
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Post by Lizard on Dec 20, 2021 4:57:01 GMT
I think by those standards even hip hop isn't groundbreaking, just another evolutionary branch like the others you mention.
Perhaps the real change was in the 'invention' of popular music and the related industry, charts etc. It's just been spinning out variants on a theme since then.
Old thread title was pure Stefansson.
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MolarAm🔵
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Post by MolarAm🔵 on Dec 20, 2021 6:30:48 GMT
Actually, after thinking about it I'm not sure I do agree with the OP.
Most (if not all) new styles mix with, react to, and build upon what has come before, and that's been true for a very, very long time. They don't just come out of nowhere. Maybe, in that way, there never really was new music.
That and categorising music into "styles" is pretty (and necessarily) arbitrary.
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Post by blizeh on Dec 20, 2021 7:00:06 GMT
New music doesn’t exi- youtube.com/watch?v=6KASn2C_rMYI mean you’re right that they’re just building on what’s come before but I’ve been listening to heavy music for 20 years and have never heard anything like this. I’m sure there are other artists doing it in other genres too. I’m not a fan myself but things like Scarlxrd sounds pretty new to me too
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Post by Reviewer on Dec 20, 2021 7:36:14 GMT
There’s new music but it’s unlikely you’re going to get new genres that are at all listenable.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 20, 2021 7:44:01 GMT
There’s new music but it’s unlikely you’re going to get new genres that are at all listenable. You're thinking Stefansen's last Opus aren't you. My ears told me they'd never heard anything like it before, but they also told me it wasn't music.
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cubby
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Post by cubby on Dec 20, 2021 7:53:15 GMT
Is this one of those "troll" threads I hear so much about, there's new music released every week. How else would they have anything to play on Top of the Pops?
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Lizard
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Post by Lizard on Dec 20, 2021 7:59:29 GMT
I think what MysteryLamb is trying to say is that all 'new' music is derivative in some way.
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hedben
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Post by hedben on Dec 20, 2021 8:06:01 GMT
Nothing new I hear these days would have been out of place 20 years ago. This is because music used to be able to spawn new genres with new technology. Synthesisers, samplers and studio equipment kept advancing from the 70s to the 00s, and you got new music across many genres- including Hip Hop, dance, even Indie (where the effect of technology was more subtle but it still had a sound that would have been harder to produce 10 years earlier). But the tech hit a peak where musical style was no longer limited by it, and basically you could produce any sound you could imagine. Sometimes there's a thing within an existing genre that takes off and spawns its own genre that feels new (Dubstep spawned off Breakbeat for example). Whether you think that counts as new, or just rehashed sounds getting popular, is arbitrary. FWIW, the last time I remember thinking something was really new was microsampling, eg: youtu.be/MpSRnwZM2bYBut that ended up only being used by particular artists who were still classed as House or Dance. Not sure where I was going with this, but I feel like these days new music is more closely correlated with particular artists rather than entire genres.
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Post by drhickman1983 on Dec 20, 2021 8:10:12 GMT
I hear plenty of shit that would definitely not sound in place 20 years ago.
There's a lot that wouldn't sound of of place, to be fair, but you could go to any decade of modern music and say the same.
Things are much the same as they've ever been. New music has always evolved rather than suddenly appeared out of nowhere and that's how it's always been.
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Post by RadicalRex on Dec 20, 2021 8:11:33 GMT
A few artists like Trent Reznor and Bjork have repeatedly pushed boundaries, but that never ushered in a new genre of course. In fact, the latest genre-spawning thing I can think of is Korn's debut album.
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Post by Tonka (🐑,🪤) on Dec 20, 2021 8:21:31 GMT
A lot of the hip hop that's being made today is VERY different from the RUN DMC days. Different enough to be new types all together in my humble opinion.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 20, 2021 8:30:24 GMT
The question requires one answer.
Stefansen
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Lizard
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Post by Lizard on Dec 20, 2021 8:33:05 GMT
But how much of it is truly groundbreaking? For all the technological and stylistic developments popular music (in the broadest sense of the term) still largely conforms to compositional elements (time signatures, song structures) familiar for centuries. Breakthroughs tend to be at a stylistic level.
Sound has physical attributes that define music: certain combinations of notes are consonant, others dissonant, this doesn't really change. People have written entirely dissonant or atonal music, but often hew to traditional arrangements, structures and musicianship. Even most musos' favourite yak-fronted avant-garde polyrhythmic electronic emo-rap djent bands stick, to a greater or lesser extent, to the hallmarks that make something recognisable as popular music.
I may be missing the point of the thread if it's meant to be more about genres etc.
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Post by elstoof on Dec 20, 2021 8:48:13 GMT
Who needs new music, you can still buy Sinatra albums
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Rich
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Post by Rich on Dec 20, 2021 8:50:37 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Dec 20, 2021 9:39:01 GMT
It's all been downhill since this
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dogbot
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Post by dogbot on Dec 20, 2021 11:15:22 GMT
I feel like I've been hearing/reading this discussion since the 80s. "Nothing is innovative/new music isn't as good as the old, etc".
If people still find contemporary stuff to enjoy, does it even matter if it's "groundbreaking"?
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Post by Bill in the rain on Dec 20, 2021 12:27:05 GMT
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Post by Aunt Alison on Dec 20, 2021 12:33:28 GMT
Didn't we just have Eurovision?
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hedben
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Post by hedben on Dec 20, 2021 12:38:07 GMT
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Post by Aunt Alison on Dec 20, 2021 12:42:24 GMT
Generally I quite admire dancing but for some reason I find the Fortnite emotes universally obnoxious
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hedben
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Post by hedben on Dec 20, 2021 12:45:56 GMT
Generally I quite admire dancing but for some reason I find the Fortnite emotes universally obnoxious They have their moments- the one for Never Gonna Give You Up is perfectly, unmistakably, dad dancing. I bought* it purely to wind my kids up. *with battle pass Vbux, not actual money
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Post by Bill in the rain on Dec 21, 2021 2:33:44 GMT
Now that we have reached perfection with Bim Bam Toi, there's not really anywhere else to go.
I think it's probably foolish to try and evaluate current music, because we're too close to it. Stuff that seemed really significant when I was a teen, turned out to really not be. Bands that seemed like they'd make an impact turned out to be one album wonders.
My pet theory is that when you're young you're really 'close up' to music, so it seems like everything is dramatically different, and deeply important and meaningful, and your parents are really uncool because they say it all sounds and looks the same, when it's clearly totally different! Plus everything seems new, because you haven't seen it before.
But when you get older and get less closely invested in the minutiae and trends, your taste broadens and you get more of a high level view of music. The little differences between bands in a genre become less visible because you're now comparing them to all genres and all decades. But this isn't considered as valid, because the music industry is largely targeted at teens.
Tech used to make big sudden leaps, but these days all the smart people who might work for a decade to create some big technological leap are making their smartphone apps, which results in many tiny iterative improvements rather than big leaps. I feel like music has gone the same. Anyone can make music now. Anyone can mix and remix and create their own thing and put it on Bandcamp or whatever. This means the changes are much more gradual and less clearly mapable.
If you think of musical genres as like a tree, that keeps branching off, in the early days you had one genre branching into two, or two branching into 4, which was much easier to take note of. These days you have 100 genres each splitting into 2-3 subgenres, and we're nearer the leaves of the tree, which makes the changes much less noticeable. Unless you're highly focused on that particular genre on a very micro level.
It seems to me that the main 'evolution' of the past few years has been Collaboration and cross-pollination between genres. Check the charts and some days everything in the top 10 has at least 2 artists on it. BTS with Coldplay. Ariana Grande with Coldplay. Ariana Grande with Cardi B, Cardi B with... everyone ever, etc..
TLDR: there are no genres anymore and with Bim Bam Toi they are no longer needed.
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Post by gammonbanter on Dec 27, 2021 12:17:43 GMT
Aren't there billions of different combinations of keys and cords, now how many of these would be pleasurable to us is another question.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 27, 2021 13:18:22 GMT
Premise of the thread is flawed. Who counts hip hop as music?
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