I guess it doesn't bother me that much if the young people of today aren't listening to oldies bands like Firehouse and Dangerous Toys.
Death? No... but sales are down.
If anything is dying a slow death, it's the music industry.
Yup, your personal righting back then and I would have been 6 or 7 years old, around their I firsthand a tiny desire to learn to play guitar. But I yeah most people I know aren't interested in playing as more than a hobby, I'll be waiting until I'm 30 tomorrow a Band this rate, but I blame my gen for that.ithappened before 90s kidsgrew up, but 90s kids dropped the ball almost completely.I am astonished that people are only noticing this now. I had this feeling when I started playing back in 2002! Even then it was obvious to me that nothing truly new was being done on the instrument, at least not in mainstream contexts. I really hate to say this, because people are going to take it the wrong way, but it seems to me this has been coming since alternative replaced metal in the mainstream in the early 90s. There might be resurgences yet, but by now it seems to me at least that the days of the instrument are obviously numbered.
And that is of course fine: the instrument will find its niche and survive as an eccentric pastime and in books on music history. Should anybody 50 years from now be interested in it, there will be an enormous repertoire to choose from, and there will probably be a ton of cheap instruments out there. But yes, in the larger scheme of things it is going the same road the gamba, the ophicleide, the concertina and any number of other instruments.
Why do I feel like this describes half the people I know, but more with pop music? I have no problem with music that is so soft it's considered pop, but when polis all there is, the same thing described with hip hop takes place.Every generation that grew up listening to hip hop has had their ability to appreciate any other type of music truncated. Their brains never developed the ability to hear things like harmony or counterpoint. It's sort of like color blindness. Lacking exposure to more complex musical forms has left them incapable of appreciating them now that those parts of their brains have stopped developing.
Not that it would be impossible for individuals to work to developed an appreciation for more complex forms of music. But it's unlikely that most of them would undertake the effort.
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I wish it wasn't,it's cool it stuck so long, but I wish it could continue,oh well I probably will continue.We should keep one thing in mind, though: the guitar has been an enormously long-lived fad, during a period where fads have grown shorter and shorter. Now THAT is something!
I don't know popular stuff today is vaginally the same 4 songs in a different key, I want music to be played not fabricated, it's music not wood that were cutting to play music on, but music.
I knew it was heavily influenced, but your right, they've watered down both into some synthesized mixture.In case you haven't noticed, "pop" music became synonymous with hip hop about 20 or so years ago. It's certainly nothing like what it was from the 50's through the 70's. The 80's were when the change started to occur with the British synth pop.
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I need to double check my typos.
I need to double check my typos.
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