2020-02-05 at 9:17 AM UTC
People wonder why the 2010s was such a bad decade for music, it's because of the spread of piracy.
There used to be a time when an artist had to go through so many hoops to make and release an album, so they put do much effort into the production.
Now anyone can easily make an album in their home and release it instantly.
This creates a culture of music consumption where people will experience music in a simialr way to how they consume jpgs and youtube videos, they'll listen to an album or some songs then move on to the next thing, they no longer develop an attachment to the music and albums, this mentally of instant gratification has diluted the art and spirit of music.
It used to be you had to go to a record store or order an album through a catalog, now days piracy and streaming has opened the floodgates to casuals like krotz that have a superficial appreciation of music, actual lovers of albums and music are dwindling and now the focus is on satisfying the masses with temporary entertainment.
The way you can combat this is to avoid piracy and buy the albums of the bands you listen to.
If enough people start doing this they'll be more inclined to put more effort into their production.
Compare something on a real label to a net label or bandcamp musician, you can hear the difference.
It's sad.
It's basically the state of radio only worse.
People listening to a song on soundcloud or YouTube, move on to the next new thing, the artists catering to this type of consumption.
In a couple decades you're going to see adults who never owned an album physically, maybe they've never even listened to a full album,
2020-02-05 at 9:38 AM UTC
So what your saying is you support the jedis
The following users say it would be alright if the author of this
post didn't die in a fire!
2020-02-05 at 10:12 AM UTC
Narc
Naturally Camouflaged
[connect my yokel-like scolytidae]
The record labels ruined music by taking over the artists ability to create, and make it all about fulfilling contracts and using formulas to create music that would most likely sell to the masses based on previous successes. In short they got the producers and A&R men to turn artists into glorified karaoke singers.
.
The following users say it would be alright if the author of this
post didn't die in a fire!
2020-02-05 at 10:15 AM UTC
music ceased to good when greed over tooked these 'artists' and they becamed sound prostitutes.
2020-02-05 at 10:48 AM UTC
Narc
Naturally Camouflaged
[connect my yokel-like scolytidae]
You're that hikkifag aren't you? you argued with me a while back that post millennium music was better than anything else, now you're saying the complete opposite. You're a moron who doesn't know what the fuck you're on about from one day to the next.
.
2020-02-05 at 11:11 AM UTC
Also go listen to Access to Arasaka, that's better than any of that poser cheese from the 80s and 90s
2020-02-05 at 11:20 AM UTC
Originally posted by Corona-chan
Music made by hobbyists vs music made for a living.
If soundcloud bedroom music is your thing fine, but I prefer to hear albums made by people who invest their lives into the music.
music needs to be made with heart. money motivates heartless musics. heartless music = trash.
The following users say it would be alright if the author of this
post didn't die in a fire!
2020-02-05 at 12:34 PM UTC
Didn't read due to OP being a joo lover
2020-02-05 at 1:24 PM UTC
Narc
Naturally Camouflaged
[connect my yokel-like scolytidae]
Music is art, not a commodity.
.
2020-02-05 at 8:23 PM UTC
Narc
Naturally Camouflaged
[connect my yokel-like scolytidae]
There being a commercial side to obtaining and owning artwork isn't the same as art 'being' a commodity. Its like saying a home is not a commodity, the house itself is a commodity, but the home you make inside the house is something different.
.
The following users say it would be alright if the author of this
post didn't die in a fire!
2020-02-06 at 1:54 AM UTC
Piracy and streaming reduces music to a form of disposable entertainment.
Back when you had to buy an album you cherished what you had more, now days people share and listen to albums like they do youtube links or meme images.
I stopped pirating recently because I wish to return to how I used to experience music,back in the early to mid 2010s I was a huge piratefag with over a hundred thousand songs, constantly listening to something new and only returning to my absolute favs, what I found was the special feeling of having an album was gone and my overall appreciation for the music was weaning.
Think of it like this, imagine it's 1999 and someone hands you a vhs they recorded of various music videos, you would cherish that tape and develop a special emotional attachment to those videos, in 2020 a teen with unlimited access to videos via youtube would not be able to experience that.
Less is more and scarcity makes things more special.
2020-02-06 at 2:01 AM UTC
Music died when the flannel suits in the recording industry killed it in the late 70's.