ext_281244 ([identity profile] freakytigger.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] poptimists2007-09-11 10:26 am

Better late than never

This was my latest Pitchfork column, which was of great relevance to some things we were discussing 3 weeks ago but which also got published the day I went on holiday! The column was written in a pinch and is kind of a request-filler for something [livejournal.com profile] byebyepride wanted me to write a while ago.

It inspired an interesting discussion here by someone I don't know, and ALSO my first proper SLATING here. Sniping at P4k on my blog was how I got my gig in the first place so I can hardly begrudge them their venom!

[identity profile] lockedintheatti.livejournal.com 2007-09-11 01:54 pm (UTC)(link)
I had an unconscious purge like the one referred to in your first link - I had my entire CD collection stolen when I was 25 (except it was a lot more than 200 CDs, closer to 600). My first response was to go back and try and buy them back, but I'd lost so many favourites I didn't know where to start (as I couldn't afford to buy that many at the time). So instead I resolved not to buy any of them back and start from scratch. It wasn't a conscious decision to broaden my taste, but I started browsing more widely, reading more widely, listening to the radio more in an attempt to find new music (rather than just defaulting to buying new releases from artists I already liked, as I'd settled into by then), and found to my surprise that my tastes were much wider.

Eventually, after 3 or 4 years (thanks to downloading & having more cash for old CDs) I got most of my old favourites back, but since then my tastes have stayed much broader than they were before the break. I think the problem in my case was that university had ossified my tastes in one specific area, and I needed the break to get back to the broader listening patterns I'd had when I first got into music in my early teens.