Interesting study by Spanish researchers spanning 50 years of pop music confirms what many of us have thought for a long time.
"Modern music really does sound the same"
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Without having re-read this, I understood the point was that Pop music has become in the last fifty years more and more similar. The unstated corollary might be that in the fifties and sixties, there was greater diversity. I thought it an interesting piece of research - but I'm afraid that the thread title does it an injustice.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostWithout having re-read this, I understood the point was that Pop music has become in the last fifty years more and more similar. The unstated corollary might be that in the fifties and sixties, there was greater diversity. I thought it an interesting piece of research - but I'm afraid that the thread title does it an injustice.
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Interesting reflections, S_A.
I started listening to pop around 1956. Recently revisiting (via Youtube) some of the tracks I knew back then I've been struck by the transition from the ballads that were dominant then to what I believe you refer to as 'blues-based' - 8 bar? - forms.
I'm thinking of crooners like Pat Boone, Perry Como, Tab Hunter - still recording in that 'Cole Porter' style? around 56-57 - who were pushed aside by Bill Haley, Elvis and black artists in the US (and also by Lonnie Donegan here), and then later by the Beatles, Stones and others. This is a transition not mentioned in your interesting post.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostInteresting reflections, S_A.
I started listening to pop around 1956. Recently revisiting (via Youtube) some of the tracks I knew back then I've been struck by the transition from the ballads that were dominant then to what I believe you refer to as 'blues-based' - 8 bar? - forms.
I'm thinking of crooners like Pat Boone, Perry Como, Tab Hunter - still recording in that 'Cole Porter' style? around 56-57 - who were pushed aside by Bill Haley, Elvis and black artists in the US (and also by Lonnie Donegan here), and then later by the Beatles, Stones and others. This is a transition not mentioned in your interesting post.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostInteresting reflections, S_A.
I started listening to pop around 1956. Recently revisiting (via Youtube) some of the tracks I knew back then I've been struck by the transition from the ballads that were dominant then to what I believe you refer to as 'blues-based' - 8 bar? - forms.
I'm thinking of crooners like Pat Boone, Perry Como, Tab Hunter - still recording in that 'Cole Porter' style? around 56-57 - who were pushed aside by Bill Haley, Elvis and black artists in the US (and also by Lonnie Donegan here), and then later by the Beatles, Stones and others. This is a transition not mentioned in your interesting post.
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Of course, silly me, I meant 12-bar (I'm not a musician, as you'll have gathered ).
What I missed out in an attempt to be brief was that the article referred to in the OP confirmed for me an (admittedly fogeyish) view that all current pop sounds the same. I can't name bands, because they don't really interest me, but when I'm getting my hair cut the ladies have on a station such as Virgin (or whatever it's now called) and a lot of the music sounds to me very restricted in both melody and harmony.
The crooners I mentioned above now seem to belong more to the forties than to the sixties - but melody (and too the lyrics) was really an important part of the record.
So I'm saying that the scientific analysis quoted in that article suggest that my fogeyish view is justified!
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I was expecting something from top gear
Isnt Virgin a "ROCK" staton. I can't think of anything worse. I wouldn't mind never hearing a straight a 12 or 8 bar blues again (unless it's a recording by a historical great like Howlin Wolf, or is a jazz version with outstanding interplay and improvisation.) I PREFER to hear modern pop/dance music to that.
There's a rock hegemony among the modern establisment that dislikes anything without guitars, ethnic - except for long dead soul singers (Plus Bob Marley!!), this in a very patronising way, or anything "old-timey" like Crooning, and there often seems a macho element to the distaste as well. "Disco is for Women Gays and Blacks" being the most obvious prejudice. By chance I heard a programme hosted by Bon Jovi who played a few modern rock bands Britpop, Post Punk, Indie etc and the influences were overwhelming, it wasn't even old stuff brought up to date, (maybe not quite of the order of bits of old songs crudely grafted on to each other like with Oasis), nothing would have jarred on R1 in the mid 80s, Stones, The Who, 'London Calling' era Clash, U2, Springsteen etc. I have a nightmare that a band like this could include Boris, Cam The Jam fan and B-liar.
Kylie's got nuffin to worry about!Last edited by burning dog; 28-07-12, 18:14.
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Resurrection Man
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