ext_57446 (
piratemoggy.livejournal.com) wrote in
poptimists2009-08-13 11:42 am
an amorous party at a farm
Courtesy of
freakytigger and indeed FreakyTrigger, apparently we have all resolved our generational difficulties and become one big happy Radio Two family since 1966. Blimes.
Arbitrary Woodstock reference WTF
Of course you can't have an innaccurate and limited poll carried out without
poptimists getting involved, with our great experience in POLL SCIENCE and superior democratic methods. Err. Anyway, I'm clearly not the best mod for this task but away we go.
[Poll #1443342]
It would be more thorough but I appear to be experiencing mild 'stealing wireless fail' so thought I'd just shove it out here quick.
Arbitrary Woodstock reference WTF
Of course you can't have an innaccurate and limited poll carried out without
[Poll #1443342]
It would be more thorough but I appear to be experiencing mild 'stealing wireless fail' so thought I'd just shove it out here quick.

no subject
no subject
Of course the problem of why on EARTH they only chose seven genres to poll people regarding and had 'Spanish Guitar' as one of them is just ...yeah, I wish I'd had more time to make this poll. Also I forgot to mention that my plan was to have a GENRECANON or something where we worked out what seven genres were the most important tomorrow, since err, I'll be at work?
And err. I am writing like three things at the same time as this so I've totally forgotten what my point was. Fail by me there. Oh yes! I was going to put in a 'what's yr occupation' q in the poll to see if there is a difference between students of all ages and working people or whether the retired enjoy more post-hardcore or well. I don't know. In the spirit of the Pew poll I haven't thought this through very well have I?
(incidentally I am not picking on Lex in the poll; as is well-known, neither him nor me knows any music pre-2000
BECAUSE IT IS ALL RUBBISH.)no subject
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
"being in Somerset there weren't any gigs to go to"
Re: "being in Somerset there weren't any gigs to go to"
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
no subject
no subject
And my parents like the Chemical Brothers, who bore me rigid.
no subject
*nb: I was RONG about Bloc Party, who are actually grebt. 'Intimacy' is a proper goth thing & the Burial remix of 'Where Is Home' is ridiculously gorgeous.
(no subject)
i forgot i forgot
This unites us all -- by dividing us.
Re: i forgot i forgot
Genrephobe and proud
Re: Genrephobe and proud
BRAINFIZZ
I suppose there are a lot of people younger than me who think Nirvana are the bestestthingevar and perfectly relevant to their lives, when really even I'm much too young to remember much of Kurt Cobain being alive.
Still: I'm always going to have a, basically rational but not necessarily proportionate, fondness for Eels and Marilyn Manson whereas ye kidz of today might like... well I have no idea. Actually tbh Marilyn Manson is v. age-determinate isn't he?
Why am I only talking about rock music? It is like the difference between TAKE THAT and MCFLY is what I mean. Except either way, I'm *NSync but nevermind, nevermind.
edit: I really have lost the ability to make a blind bit of sense, assuming I ever had it. Move along, citizens.
Re: BRAINFIZZ
bob dylan); I remember this gang of kids three years younger than me suddenly having a collective Kurt Cobain moment and being wtffed out of my mind over it, all "how can this person be so personally important to you when everything you know about him is older people telling you what he's supposed to mean"which brings me onto-- i think there is a thing people don't remember, because we are intent on seeing teenagerhood as a cutting edge of fashionable taste, which is the moment when the arc of the fourteen-year-old and the thirty-five-year-old meet, as one is growing into "being down w/ the kids" and the other is growing out of. I remember when everyone I knew was decrying coldplay as boring music for thirtysomethings and i thought: but i just met a kid i used to babysit and he's immensely excited about coldplay, and in a year's time he's going to be pretending he never liked them, and five years later he'll be like "yeah but shiver was a classic". And I think that can mess up any linear sense of how music tastes shift generationally.
Re: BRAINFIZZ
Re: BRAINFIZZ
Re: BRAINFIZZ
"embarrassed by yr prev self"
Re: "embarrassed by yr prev self"
Re: "embarrassed by yr prev self"
Re: BRAINFIZZ
Re: BRAINFIZZ
Re: BRAINFIZZ
Re: BRAINFIZZ
Re: BRAINFIZZ
(no subject)
Re: BRAINFIZZ
I dunno, I think I'm a bit older than you and my fondness for MM has gone up and down over the years, but I remember getting quite excited about why he might be important when I read about Trent Reznor working on their first album in Kerrang!
no subject
0 (0.0%)
Oh dere. Time we packed it in?
no subject
...no wate hang on that would have been, err, three years ago. NEVERMIND.
(no subject)
(no subject)
there was a dog! he had two bones!
Back catalogues being theoretically ultra-available on the universal jukebox of the internet is great and all but it doesn't mean I'm actively going to seek out any music from the vast unfamiliar tundra of the 1970s.
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
I once used it to listen to the Trina back catalogue. I dunno, I may be coming at this from a sideways angle because a lot of my formative music friends were metallers and for some reason completism is VERY IMPORTANT to Iron Maiden fans, so I sort of assume The Kidz are doing that? Only with Mp3s not, like, tapes or whatever.
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
(no subject)
(no subject)
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
no i get this a lot too. i wish they'd expand their portal page more, listing more new releases and playlists.
i made a list of 09 albums to listen to thru it tho so have been working thru those. was supposed to be going thru pitchfork's top 100 albums of the 70s too but seem to have stalled there.
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Re: there was a dog! he had two bones!
Found it!
no subject
And that is my big hippie thought for the day. It's ok, no one will see it down here so my street cred will be preserved...
no subject
no subject
I am still waiting for Taipei/HK/Beijing indie to produce something truly original, mind (as opposed to a few good bands).
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
I meant this to mean it's mythical NOW; the part at the end was suggesting that the Gen Gap was probably realer in many ways (in music, at least) in the 60's. But that's also because now there are much much much more significant generational gaps -- internet use, LGBT politics, other basic policy stuff. I'm guessing that there are bigger disparities between childrens' views v. parents' views now than there even were in the 60's, actually -- anecdotally speaking, I think you can find plenty of young people in the U.S. who, e.g., are generally homophobic or gay-unfriendly who still oppose anti-gay-marriage legislation, which aligns them socially with their parents (homophobia and gay-unfriendliness) but politically directly opposed to them (not wanting to write laws to that effect).
no subject
Divided not by age or genre but by function
I think about this mostly in relation to dance music. Dance music, when it shows up in the charts and is therefore in the faces of people who do not go to clubs and dance, is often dismissed as so much undifferentiated noise. What's the problem? Well, you're not supposed to sit on your sofa and LISTEN to it, is what. Dance music makes sense at a dance venue!
Functions aren't necessarily as discrete. I usually thing about the purpose of songs in an emotional sense: angry music, sad music, happy music, sexy music. Each has its place in my life.
Much of the extent of generational differences is purely differences in what functions one needs at different times in their lives. I listened to a lot more angry music in my teens!
The rest is largely a matter of simple salience - the music came out at a time while you were receptive, you were exposed, you made it part of your brain. Critical consensus elevates some artists to "timeless" status, which keeps them salient, and in currency, and thus in people's brains.
Grandpa speaks
Sorry, oh yes, um, generation gap! Hah! You want to talk about generation gap! I'll tell ya, in my day, we had generation gaps, subgeneration gaps, prenatal generation gaps, postcoital generation gaps, and every other kind of gap as well, I tell you...
Well, let's start with 1963. In 1963, oh, there was... oh, "Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh," "Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport," "Those Lazy Hazy Crazy Days of Summer," "The End Of The World," "I Love You Because," "I Will Follow Him," "My Boyfriend's Back," "It's My Party"... songs that had almost nothing in common except one thing [gazes into the air]... got bored with pop in '63, I'll say, stopped listening, became a folkie at age 9, got scared and stayed a folkie, I'll tell you, winkling and ripping my van right up to 1966 when... I was saying, about those songs from 1963, those "Surf City"s and those "Mecca"'s. They had zilch and nada in common except for one thing: absolutely nothing remotely like them made it onto the Top 40 in 1966. Other than an anomalous Sinatra and a WTF Lorne Greene, there was nothing. The past was cinders. Talk about gaps, this was a chasm, an abyss, a schism, a gulf. Past was gone, a world of fear ahead.
In 1966 there was no Elvis.
In 1966 there were no Shangri-Las.
In 1966 there were no Shirelles.
In 1966 there was no Nat King Cole.
In 1966 there was hate, like this:
no subject
no subject