Why Is
Most Music So Bad Today? An Op-Ed
© 2006 ClickitTicket
"Everything that can be invented has been
invented." ~ Charles H. Duell, Commissioner
of the US Patent Office in 1899.
"Children nowadays are tyrants. They contradict
their parents, gobble their food and tyrannize
their teachers." ~ Socrates
Why is popular music so bad today? I mean, I'm
not that old, but jeez, the music of today, with
only a few rare exceptions, kinda stinks. Some
would say that when New Year's Eve 1979 ended,
we were ushered into an era of lame music that
we still haven't escaped from today.
I grew up in the 80's and remember listening
to the Beatles, John Lennon, Simon
& Garfunkel, Roger
Waters and Pink Floyd, the Rolling
Stones, Bob
Marley, and David Bowie, to name a few, with
my brothers or my dad. I remember seeing album
covers strewn about my brother's bedroom. Albums,
not CD's. (If you're a really young reader, albums
are like CD's in that they're flat and round,
but black, and a lot bigger. The get scratched
and don't work just like CD's though).
Some say that the 60's were a turbulent time
in the U.S. and the world and thus created a perfect
environment and culture for innovative and creative
music. But let's face it. These days are pretty
turbulent as well. So where's the Crosby,
Still, Nash and Young of today to sing about
our involvement in Iraq? Or where is the Paul
Simon of today to protest the government's
stance on stem cell research? All we've gotten
recently is the new Paris Hilton CD. Paris Hilton?
Isn't she just famous for being famous? And her
new CD actually got some good reviews.
Before anyone accuses me of painting a broad
brush stroke condemning all music after the 70's,
let me say that in more recent times there has
been a small amount of good stuff like Phish or
Midnite, and even politically-minded music such
as U2, but no where near the creative amount of
earlier times.
I remember when the Dixi
Chicks came out against President Bush and
the Iraq war. While not a bad band, they're hardly
going to achieve iconic status. And they paid
dearly at the hands of big business for their
outspoken views. That's a far cry from the politically-charged
days of Woodstock where many artists were speaking
out, and changing things.
If you think about it, there are only a select
few artists or bands that can regularly sell out
huge arenas today. These are the icons. And the
vast majority of those artists are bands from
before the 80's! Between last summer and this
summer, here are some of the really big concert
ticket sellers: The
Rolling Stones, Roger Waters of Pink Floyd,
Paul McCartney, Barbra
Streisand, Eric
Clapton and The
Eagles.
I recently read an article that suggested that
music and tour promoters, large venue owners and
ticket companies are all worried about concert
sales taking a plunge after the legendary artists
stop touring. They realize it's going to be hard
to sell out big arenas after the dinosaurs become
extinct. Who are the artists of today who will
reach that status tomorrow?
In a recent interview with Joe Walsh on Sirius
Radio Joe said there is not nearly as much improvisational
rock anymore. And I agree. When asked what bands
he thought were decent these days, he couldn't
think of any for a while, and then finally said
he thought the Goo
Goo Dolls were good. Hmmm.
Maybe I'm some kind of curmudgeon, but Top 40
today is just not as good as it used to be. Is
Kevin Federline really talented? I just found
out recently that his nickname is K-Fed. How about
fed up? I think K-Fed, J-Lo, X-tina (Christina
Aguilera, no joke) and A-Rod all need to get together
ASAP and rethink their feeble nicknames, just
an FYI.
Here are the top 5 songs right now in the Summer
of 2006:
- Fergie - London Bridge
- Gnarls Barkley - Crazy
- Nelly Furtado Featuring Timbaland - Promiscuous
- The Pussycat Dolls Featuring Snoop Dogg - Buttons
- Panic!
At The Disco - I Write Sins Not Tragedies
And here were the top 5 albums of 2005:
- Mariah
Carey - The Emancipation of Mimi
- 50
Cent - The Massacre
- Kelly
Clarkson - Breakaway
- Green Day - American Idiot
- The
Black Eyed Peas - Monkey Business
Here are the top 5 albums of 1976:
- Peter Frampton - Frampton Comes Alive
- Fleetwood Mac - Fleetwood Mac
- Wings - Wings At The Speed Of Sound
- Eagles - Eagles Greatest Hits 1971-1975
- Chicago - Chicago IX Greatest Hits
And here are the top 5 albums of 1966
- Original Soundtrack The Sound Of Music
- The Beatles - Revolver
- The Beatles - Rubber Soul
- The
Rolling Stones - Aftermath
- The Beach Boys - Pet Sounds
Is it just me, or is there a glaring difference
between the two 21st Century lists and the second
two 20th Century lists? To be fair, I actually
own Monkey Business and I like it. Also, Green
Day is decent. Admittedly, Wings isn't the best
Paul
McCartney music around, but it is Sir Paul
after all, and Chicago and The Beach Boys are
a little weak. But overall, the lists just don't
compare.
The music industry itself has changed so drastically
that I think that is one of the main reasons there
is such a chasm between today's music and the
creations of yesteryear. Like sports and medicine,
music in another industry that has been a casualty
of big business and American capitalism.
No longer does the actual music quality drive
the industry. Instead, the people with the money
and power at the record companies notice some
bad music selling well to young people for example,
and therefore decide that from then on they're
only going to find and promote that type of bad
music since it made a few bucks. They've totally
stopped listening to the music and instead only
listen to the dollars.
No longer does the music they create determine
the success of a band. Instead, entertainment
conglomerates tell fans what to listen to, and
that determines the success. They do this because
they have such a strangle hold on the media. We
only have the illusion of choice now. A vicious
circle has begun where the whole industry is inexorably
spinning down, unable to find purchase on the
sides of some slimy corporate funnel, circling
downward uncontrollably into the abyss of painfully
bad music.
Some bands occasionally slip through the vortex
relatively intact, sidestepping the almost institutionalized
process of "making it" set in place
by music executives. Phish is a great example
of this. They became hugely successful in spite
of the music industry. Because they were so good
and so tenacious in touring and jamming, they
attracted a large fan base. The sheer numbers
of eventual fans Phish had gave them a power that
most artists today can't have. Most other artists
have to do what the people with the purse strings
tell them to do. And that often makes for bad
music. Unfortunately, Phish isn't even together
any more. But they're a rare exception in that
they came after the 70's and were highly creative
and improvisational.
Another thing that contributes to the poor music
of today is technology. These days, Hollywood
actors who can't sing can have singing careers.
The engineers touch up their voices, and use every
digital sound technique there is to make an average
product sellable, just like the magazines airbrush
the models and actresses, trimming years off to
complete the illusion. There are many ways in
which the music engineers can do this in the studio
and even for artists on tour.
Ashlee
Simpson is a good example of this. First,
we saw her on Saturday Night Live getting caught
lip-sinking. Then I heard a recent interview where
Joe Walsh's daughter, Lucy Walsh, admitted that
as Ashlee's keyboard player, she always doubled
Ashlee's voice while on tour.
I know that in any era there's going to be silly
music acts like Ashlee Simpson, Kevin Federline
and Paris Hilton. I realize that during Bob
Dylan's time there were lots of feeble yet
famous music artists then too. My complaint is
that it seems like in any other era there was
at least enough really fantastic and original
music being created to balance things out.
Let's go backwards. We've looked at the popular
music of the 21st Century a little in the lists
above and I don't see any really original music
in there at all. Some may argue that the grunge
era of the 90's produced some great and original
music. I argue that almost all of that music was
so heavily influenced by the rock of the 60's
and 70's that it really wasn't that original at
all.
The music of the 80's matched the hair and clothes
of the time, lame. The synthesizer was new then,
but the music was reasonably bad, and certainly
not timeless. But then we come to the 70's and
60's. Those are the decades that last held any
hope for people like me who long for fresh, original,
creative and improvisational music.
In 1899 the Commissioner of the US Patent Office
wrote "Everything that can be invented has
been invented." Alright, maybe he was a little
off. But in a way, everything that seems new is
really just new combinations of existing things.
Music is no different. I'm hoping that we return
to the days when the combinations of beats, rhythms,
harmonies and melodies become as creative as they
were in the 60's and 70's.
But maybe things haven't changed much since even
Socrates' times. He thought kids were tyrants,
as if his generation was the last of a dying breed
of angelic children. Maybe he just didn't understand
the kids of his era, and maybe I'm the same way.
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© 2006 ClickitTicket
By Jason OConnor
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