- Messages
- 48,001
- Reaction score
- 27,922
I don't claim to be any sort of music industry commentator or anything...but you look at top-selling lists of current music and where are the bands?
I don't claim to be any sort of music industry commentator or anything...but you look at top-selling lists of current music and where are the bands?
Music in general has been ruined by capitalism.
The 'M' stands for money now, not music.
Those top-selling lists have someone who can't sing, on a song they didn't write, with music played by people they don't know.
As long as it sells.
![]()
i've been running an internet radio station since 1999. you have to work to find it now cause FM is dead and CD's are on life support if not already dead. find iheartradio or some other app for your phone outside spotify and give other stations a chance on your tablet or phone. there's great music out there but you now have to go find it, it won't come to you. what does, isn't worth it.
nah, iceberg.![]()
I mean do u like dr dog
you look at top-selling lists of current music
never heard of him.
iceberg is my dj name and ive been "pimping" unsigned music for over 15 years. i've turned off my yamaha, marantz and other "tuners" for how i listen to music cause they play FM. AM. Line In.
i'm disappointed that people today listen to music on a phone.
there's a reason i bought DCM/Cerwin Vega 3 way speakers.
there's a reason people used to put a ton of money into their car stereos.
people today listen to music off a ****ty phone speaker and feel like they discovered something. i'm not after justifying yesterday, i'm trying to understand tomorrow. reading an album cover was cool. it got compressed to cassette. then cd.
now it's an afterthought and the art of music is "does it fit on my phone".
there is simply no direction to the music industry today cause they're still trying to figure out how to make money, not music.
but the industry today i link back to the 60s and 70s. those putting put music today do it out of love. not a superbowl appearance.
the problem is that people are lazy and they want to be told what to listen to.
then again, they did in the 80s also, but through more established means.
the IGS i coined long long ago isn't about the cowboys, it's about our culture.
we have to be willing to work for what we want or we'll forever complain we don't know what we want.
you either see the difference, or you're a ****ing idiot.
people today listen to music off a ****ty phone speaker and feel like they discovered something. i'm not after justifying yesterday, i'm trying to understand tomorrow. reading an album cover was cool. it got compressed to cassette. then cd.
There are a ton of factors - mostly having to do with the idea that record companies no longer "discover" talent as much as they "manufacture" it. If they can find someone with a modicum of it, they can get that person some songs written, then use Pro Tools and make them sound great with a band they've never met, and as long as the product is bland and largely inoffensive to as many people as possible, it'll be radio-friendly, and terrestrial radio is right there to push it as hard as possible and it's a system that seems to work for them.
Why go through the trouble of sending AR guys to dive bars to try to find the next big band, when you can take a pretty, photogenic girl and make her a pop-country music star? The bands are out there, they're just not on the radio because there's no money in it for the radio stations.
Terrestrial radio stations are also just about all corporate entities now, and they all follow the same rules and play the same stuff without any regard for regional or local flavors. They don't take chances on a band that a significant number of people might hate - they would rather take a chance on a band that a few people might really like, and most people think is just mediocre and don't care about.
This is why the only bands you see who sell anymore are guys like Nickleback and Rascal Flatts - bland, radio-friendly, and all sounds the same, and it sells because that's all people really have ready access to.
Dr dog is a band - they get more play on non-commercial listener support radio. They are from the philadelphia suburbs. They have some albums and are starting to get noticed. My daughter really likes them so i learned about the band from her then i sterted to hear them on the listener support type stations. But people throughout the northeast area seem to know about them and like them.
From what i have heard they are ok - but im a blues fan so you dont really get much of that unless you listen to old stuff.
BTW - i do listen to pandorra radio sometimes and I have been guilty of using the I-Phone at work or other places to listen - i like that you can create your own radio station on pandorra radio. I made a Buddy Guy station and i love it, nothing but serious blues music. But the sound quality does suck. Still, better than nothing at work.
That's a massive misconception. Its no different than it ever was before. The only difference now is that the "rebellious music acts"....whatever that actually means, haven't transitioned to the mainstream as visibly. But I actually think you could make the argument that Lady Gaga is rebellious in the same way that Madonna was, songs with folk backgrounds are hitting the tops of the charts (Mumford), and guys like Avicii are doing stuff that has never really been done before. The only difference now is that a lot of stuff is less angry, unlike the 90's grunge and 80's punk.You really nailed it dead on.
I think most of it has to do with Generation Y and the millenials. From the 50's to the 90's there was always a strong current of rebellious music acts. There was mainstream and then a strong fan following of that which rebels against mainstream. In the 90's (god bless that decade), the rebellious music acts became the mainstream. Since then, Generation Y and the millenials just seem to enjoy nothing more than safe, pop music. There's still rebellious music acts out there, but they are typically well underground.
never heard of him.
iceberg is my dj name and ive been "pimping" unsigned music for over 15 years. i've turned off my yamaha, marantz and other "tuners" for how i listen to music cause they play FM. AM. Line In.
i'm disappointed that people today listen to music on a phone.
there's a reason i bought DCM/Cerwin Vega 3 way speakers.
there's a reason people used to put a ton of money into their car stereos.
people today listen to music off a ****ty phone speaker and feel like they discovered something. i'm not after justifying yesterday, i'm trying to understand tomorrow. reading an album cover was cool. it got compressed to cassette. then cd.
now it's an afterthought and the art of music is "does it fit on my phone".
there is simply no direction to the music industry today cause they're still trying to figure out how to make money, not music.