When Britain refused to listen
May. 31st, 2006 01:50 pm'Not heard it' is one of the more common comments read when the Top 40 polls are posted. Which is perhaps the most unsatisfying answer that can be given. Lots of people can say they've heard every single in the Top 40, provided they'd listened to JK & Joel that particular week. Although they may not necessarily remember all of them the next day...
But, if you 'haven't heard it', bloody why not?! I personally stopped listening to the Top 40 countdown in full around the same time as I started University - some ten years ago now. As you grow up it seems life gets more and more in the way, preventing you from having the same ease of control you may have previously enjoyed when it comes to making choices as a young viewer or listener. So far so obvious, and it seems this is the real reason why the Poptimists electorate are often at a loss to decide whether a recent Top 40 hit is good or bad based on how it sounds. There are other factors too such as the nature in which media has changed since then - dedicated music video channels, t'internet (esp. portals/filters/resources such as youtube and itunes) and downloading facilities...all things intended to make the pursuit of hearing music easier. But, it's not really working that well is it? At least, not for 'people old enough to know better' who seem to be ageing faster than the technology is progressing, and that's pretty terrifyingly fast. It's all too much. But, really, aren't these just excuses? Is this sort of reasoning good enough? Should we take it as a given that the charts are reasonably constant in terms of quality (regardless of the ebb and flow of sales figures)? Should a Poptimist be putting more effort in? It's not meant to be a chore after all.
I'm interested in any serious views people may have about the whole thing, so the question(s) be as follows:
What is your current attitude to pop (however you define it) and new music? Are you keen to hear as much of it as you can or do you prefer to revel in nostalgia (or perhaps some healthy balance of both)? Where do you turn to, specifically, now to find out about new music anyway? If you DO know every song in the top 40 any given week does this just make you a Chart Geek rather than a Pop Lover now? Do you even care about music or are you just one of those disgusting poll-fetishists I've heard about?
EH?
But, if you 'haven't heard it', bloody why not?! I personally stopped listening to the Top 40 countdown in full around the same time as I started University - some ten years ago now. As you grow up it seems life gets more and more in the way, preventing you from having the same ease of control you may have previously enjoyed when it comes to making choices as a young viewer or listener. So far so obvious, and it seems this is the real reason why the Poptimists electorate are often at a loss to decide whether a recent Top 40 hit is good or bad based on how it sounds. There are other factors too such as the nature in which media has changed since then - dedicated music video channels, t'internet (esp. portals/filters/resources such as youtube and itunes) and downloading facilities...all things intended to make the pursuit of hearing music easier. But, it's not really working that well is it? At least, not for 'people old enough to know better' who seem to be ageing faster than the technology is progressing, and that's pretty terrifyingly fast. It's all too much. But, really, aren't these just excuses? Is this sort of reasoning good enough? Should we take it as a given that the charts are reasonably constant in terms of quality (regardless of the ebb and flow of sales figures)? Should a Poptimist be putting more effort in? It's not meant to be a chore after all.
I'm interested in any serious views people may have about the whole thing, so the question(s) be as follows:
What is your current attitude to pop (however you define it) and new music? Are you keen to hear as much of it as you can or do you prefer to revel in nostalgia (or perhaps some healthy balance of both)? Where do you turn to, specifically, now to find out about new music anyway? If you DO know every song in the top 40 any given week does this just make you a Chart Geek rather than a Pop Lover now? Do you even care about music or are you just one of those disgusting poll-fetishists I've heard about?
EH?
I BLAME THE ABSENCE OF POPTIMISM
Date: 2006-05-31 01:21 pm (UTC)Re: I BLAME THE ABSENCE OF POPTIMISM
From:Re: I BLAME THE ABSENCE OF POPTIMISM
From:CARSMILE ROCKISM ALERT
From:Re: I BLAME THE ABSENCE OF POPTIMISM
From:who let the orcs out! (man!) (flesh!)
From:Re: I BLAME THE ABSENCE OF POPTIMISM
From:Re: I BLAME THE ABSENCE OF POPTIMISM
From:Re: I BLAME THE ABSENCE OF POPTIMISM
From:Re: I BLAME THE ABSENCE OF POPTIMISM
From:Re: I BLAME THE ABSENCE OF POPTIMISM
From:Re: I BLAME THE ABSENCE OF POPTIMISM
From:Re: I BLAME THE ABSENCE OF POPTIMISM
From:Re: I BLAME THE ABSENCE OF POPTIMISM
From:Re: I BLAME THE ABSENCE OF POPTIMISM
From:i have a huge massive giant deferral problem...
Date: 2006-05-31 01:21 pm (UTC)I AM HEGEL IT SUX :(
no subject
Date: 2006-05-31 01:23 pm (UTC)- since working in an office where we have the radio on my urge to chase down and hear new chartpop has dwindled, because I hear a lot anyway but (as I keep saying) the fvcking DJs never tell you what anything is nowadays.
- WRT video channels, youtube etc, I am a very non-visual person I think, for whatever reason I just don't pay much attention to videos. I don't think I've ever followed a link to a video, I just wait for the MP3 instead. This makes me a very non-typical pop consumer, even more so than age/gender/buying habits might.
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:more dialectical mentalism
Date: 2006-05-31 01:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-31 01:28 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2006-05-31 01:28 pm (UTC)Also, I guess, a lot of poptimists listens to tonnes'o exciting new music - from microhouse to indie to folk or whatever - that never gets within a sniff of the charts.
Also the freeview pop channels - Ver Hits and TMF - seem to present a pretty skewed view of what is actually in the charts. I imagine they are both heavily riddled w/payola. (Actually E4 music may be the best - but it seems to have been replaced for live streaming of BB).
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2006-05-31 01:32 pm (UTC)Ding ding ding!
no subject
Date: 2006-05-31 01:38 pm (UTC)- no internet
Those are the basic reasons, as they're the places where I used to be able to keep up (I never listen to the radio anyway). BUT ever since the top 40 went completely irrelevant (which I trace back to Will S stopping the top 40 columns - also the internationalism of the jukebox hasn't helped) it's become quite hard to track what actually gets in it and mop up any interesting-looking ones which had passed me by.
The reasons which have cropped up in the past few months which probably mean that even with internet and TV I'd find it hard to keep up with the charts:
- spending all the time I do allocate to tracking stuff down on hott new electrohouse bobbins
- am on more and more PR mailing lists and even cursory listens to new stuff are hard to fit in
- since CD singles became more or less irrelevant it seems that the amount of interesting-looking stuff in the charts has also diminished somewhat
- also since the Britrock revival
Narrow playlists
Date: 2006-05-31 01:39 pm (UTC)Radio stations don't have huge playlists either so unless you listen lots you'll miss out too.
Plus - the interwebs have made it much easier to listen to all kinds of new music from all over the world, much of which never gets anywhere near the chart. Thanks to that I feel like I'm in the rather off position of listening to more new music now than I ever have done in my life and yet still end up knowing less of the chart than ever - and it's not that my tastes are significantly less pop, just that UK chart pop is a decreasing proportion of the total pop I get to hear.
Re: Narrow playlists
From:Re: Narrow playlists
From:no subject
Date: 2006-05-31 01:39 pm (UTC)My notion of poptimism does not revolve around a slavish devotion to fashion, and I have a deeply conflicted position with regard to contemporary opinion and popular culture -- I tend to react against it, while being aware that it's not exactly wrong. I will not apologise for it, since this seems to me to replicate patterns of response to something like the public realm of chatter found in almost all of the modern (i.e. post-romantic, i.e. post-Rousseau) intellectuals I admire.
I don't watch much TV and we only have free video channels and I hate adverts so tend to turn them off; I often see videos on MTV in the gym but I would rather listen to my ipod there so can't always connect music to pictures (this happened with the Fallout Boy single).
I think the idea -- which I think you're half joking about -- that we all ought to be obliged to spend 'enough' time chasing the cultural forth of capital is insane and deeply unpleasant; I'm repeating myself I know, but I take poptimism to be as applicable to someone who only listens to 70s prog rock or only likes hair metal and Mozart, as it is to someone who gets all indie about the charts. The cult of the new, the attempt to be 'with it', 'up with the latest trends', 'down with the scene' etc. seems to me a bit wearing. One of the good things about the web communities I've interacted with is the way they generate their own cultural world based on a combination of new and old things. The polls presumably build in to this, but I see them more as an excuse for a natter than anything in themselves. (Heresy! I've never been as into lists and formulae as
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:Hmmm
From:Re: Hmmm
From:Best...Ever
From:Re: Best...Ever
From:Re: Best...Ever
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:That banner in full!
From:Re: That banner in full!
From:Re: That banner in full!
From:PAGIN MR NIETZSCHE
From:Re: That banner in full!
From:Re: That banner in full!
From:Re: That banner in full!
From:Re: That banner in full!
From:Re: That banner in full!
From:Re: That banner in full!
From:Re: That banner in full!
From:L4M4CQ CAN SVCK MY C0CK TILL I CVM BL00D
Date: 2006-05-31 01:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-31 02:03 pm (UTC)The splintering of media might make hearing new music, or music new to you, easier, but I think it's adversely affecting this thing 'chart pop', which kind of needs to be a monolith in order to work.
So instead I go to the backlog on iTunes, things I've bought and not listened to in full yet or downloaded and not listened to yet, or things I've listened to but not since I got the powerbook, in genres which aren't current chart pop, and I almost feel guilty for listening to 2hour dj sets (or bach partitas xd) when I could be getting through a couple of albums, and I barely ever listen to an album more than one time in a week, and I check my audioscrobbler profile to see if the weekly chart's updated, and...
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:Poptimists Participation Probe
Date: 2006-05-31 02:12 pm (UTC)# of members: 99
# of participants in canons: up to 45-50
# of participants in Shine/Now polls: up to 40-45 (some Shine polls get voters bussed in from brane's monster friendlist)
# of participants in singles polls: about 25
# of participants in Pop World Cup: around 11-15 :(
This says something about the relative amounts of work involved in liking a band/nostalgia/being up to date/listening to new foreign music, I guess.
Re: Poptimists Participation Probe
From:Re: Poptimists Participation Probe
From:Re: Poptimists Participation Probe
From:hungry probing alien tongues
From:Re: Poptimists Participation Probe
From:Re: Poptimists Participation Probe
From:Re: Poptimists Participation Probe
From:Re: That banner in full!
From:Re: That banner in full!
From:Re: Poptimists Participation Probe
From:Re: Poptimists Participation Probe
From:no subject
Date: 2006-05-31 02:14 pm (UTC)If my werk firewall didn't block youtube/myspace I would be on there all the time listening to new stuff. As it is I spend quite a lot of time on artist websites and juno/beatport. I want to hear this SuperJupiter song but I CAN'T GET TO IT. GET ONE NEW JOB KAT.
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2006-05-31 02:23 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:my personal pop-picking rounds
Date: 2006-05-31 02:28 pm (UTC)- I feel this is too limited a range of sources and am looking to expand it
Homechoice digital TV music service lets you view all the latest videos (it adds more on the fly, every few days) in sequence if you choose. I love doing this, even thought for 25 or so videos there'll only be a couple I like in any given fortnight.
No magazines read or radio shows listened to at the mo. I still think of this as a bad thing - I'm not looking to free myself of this guilt, interestingly.
I think TOTP has really lost it's thrill even though Pop hasn't, for me. But as I've said before I would absolutely love to see an exciting new format of The Chart Show - much more befitting of the times potentially I think. More insightful documentation and reportage of Pop Music on TV (not this cheap cheerful cosy fishbowl style of Popworld) would be more inspiring too I really think.
Re: my personal pop-picking rounds
From:Re: my personal pop-picking rounds
From:MP3s
Date: 2006-05-31 02:40 pm (UTC)Of course I wouldn't be able to contribute more than 1 in 5 of these, probably no more than 1 in 10. But is it a good idea or is this place best kept free of the MP3 Blog taint?
Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:Re: MP3s
From:the revolution will not be non-podcast
From:Re: the revolution will not be non-podcast
From:Re: MP3s
From:problems with podcast idea:
From:Re: problems with podcast idea:
From:Re: problems with podcast idea:
From:Re: problems with podcast idea:
From:Re: problems with podcast idea:
From:Re: MP3s
From:no subject
Date: 2006-05-31 03:00 pm (UTC)I like to consume as much as possible. But I have no computer at home (and have to use a communal stand alone PC to d/l stuff at work) so ability to make use of online sources is accordingly limited. Also radio at work = out of the question.
Similarly, TV viewing is currently limited to what's available on the free channels. So e.g. no MTV.
I listen to the last hour of the Sunday Top 40 show on R1 when I remember to. But I agree w/ others that current presenters have made it almost unlistenable.
Consequently, most exposure to new music is still the result of buying stuff. I still purchase about 2-3 CDs a week on average. A mixture of new and old stuff.
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:inevitable...
From:Re: inevitable...
From:Re: inevitable...
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2006-05-31 03:50 pm (UTC)(1) Live in a foreign country
(2) Am dysfunctional and therefore can't afford broadband
(3) Launch Yahoo blocks me from seeing/listening to the British tracks (but for some reason lets me do Germany and Italy)
(4) Yes, I know this thing called "streaming" but... [tries to think of some excuse]
(5) Compulsive aversion to Shayne Ward
(6) DJs don't give song titles
(7) Smash Hits stream doesn't give song titles. This is really irritating since all they've got to do is put the title, they don't have to say anything, what the fuck is their problem? To find titles I have to pluck lyrics while listening and do a lightning-fast google.
(8) Other stuff to listen to.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-31 03:55 pm (UTC)But surely what makes us the way we are is:
(1) "What are you guys going on about?... [grumble grumble] [sotto voce:] guess I've got to listen to it."
(2) Are in contact with more than one other human being.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-31 04:01 pm (UTC)What is your current attitude to pop (however you define it) and new music? Are you keen to hear as much of it as you can or do you prefer to revel in nostalgia (or perhaps some healthy balance of both)? Where do you turn to, specifically, now to find out about new music anyway?
I never listen to the radio, partially because I get very frustrated with presenters, repetition, commercials, etc. (Even in the car, I listen to news/talk radio!)
I haven't watched MTV (except in random passing, e.g., video comes on for song I already like and I watch for 20 minutes) for years. But even when TOTP was terrible, I still watched reasonably regularly, partially to hear things I wouldn't normally listen to, and partially because even couple of weeks there would be something I didn't know. My main complaints had more to do with the way charts worked - no surprises of people working their way up the charts, and too much Kyle/Madonna/Beyonce/Robbie on EVERY EFFING week.
Fundamentally, though, I am still constantly on the listen for new thing, and my discoveries are through the usual online sources (e.g., yesterday i listened to Ellen Allien).
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2006-05-31 05:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-31 08:26 pm (UTC)- last fm and pandora
- support bands
- podcasts
These tend to rarely correspondend with traditional "pop" though
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2006-05-31 08:28 pm (UTC)I had a quick look and didn't see anyone else pointing this out, but they can't. Or at least, they could in many cases only have heard a five second clip talked over patronisingly - I would listen to the top 40 every week when they played every song, and even up to the point where they just played every new entry (ie until JK and Joel took over), but it's now strictly a Radio 1-approved only zone and isn't really worth bothering with.
Much the same thing has happened at around the same times to TOTP actually (which used to pretty much have the six highest new entries of the week), which is maybe interesting with respect to attitudes towards the charts in general.
(no subject)
From:Answers to your questions...
Date: 2006-06-01 08:25 am (UTC)I know what I like, but I’m not limited to this.
Are you keen to hear as much of it as you can or do you prefer to revel in nostalgia (or perhaps some healthy balance of both)?
I’m keen to hear new music. Though, in the past couple of years I’ve been completing collections – Alice Cooper, Helloween, Iron Maiden, Megadeth, Metallica , Bon Jovi etc.
Where do you turn to, specifically, now to find out about new music anyway?
I watch music channels now and again, free CD’s from Metal Hammer (that’s where I got into a load of newish metal bands), checking the websites of record labels I like (elefant, monika, morr). Just browsing around in record shops/Amazon recommends, flicking through magazines. Album art still has a hold over me. I sort of just take things in…
If you DO know every song in the top 40 any given week does this just make you a Chart Geek rather than a Pop Lover now?
It means you are dedicated to knowing what’s in the Top 40.
Do you even care about music or are you just one of those disgusting poll-fetishists I've heard about?
Of course I care about music!