FartmingerFuckwadCheesest
"Oh, no, incoming fart attack!"
- Joined
- Apr 26, 2025
- Messages
- 1,100
Physical media is dead outside of collection value and faux nostalgia of young people; i.e., vinyls more than cassettes and CDs in Japan.
Leaving streaming and other digital means (pirating) to be the predominant way of consuming music, this, however, comes with its own consequences, though, as it upheaves the old industry model and flips it on its head. This applies to television and movies as well, but this is a thread about music, so shut up.
But the biggest change overall is that you forge your own individual tastes now; you are not a part of a collective culture anymore, and you are able to freely decide for yourself what you like, from whatever era you like. The monoculture is dead and is likely to remain dead for the foreseeable future.
This is both a really good thing, but it has some really negative consequences, like the death of proper indie culture and subcultures.
You need a sense of collectivism for both pop and alt culture to exist; individuality leaves everything weak and splintered with no way of gaining any big traction unless by a fluke, say through a social campaign or internet meme or of course, TikTok, like with Barbenheimer or Morbius or Charli XCX's album 'Brat'.
<[pleb placement here]
Indie culture and subcultures act as a way to push music forward, the greatest method of innovation within the past sixty years, so without it, what the fuck do you do now?
This question has perplexed me for quite some time, because I often feel lost when trying to assess the current state of the music industry and the birth of potential new subcultures. It also doesn't help that a lot of zoomers (no fault of their own) have been brainwashed into a drunk love for a faux version of the past with superficial and shallow obsessions with "Y2K", "Frutiger Aero", and other bullshit.
Meaning, we're likely only going to get nostalgiabait retreads of previous genres, genres that haven't been popular in twenty years like Haddaway-era Europop or trance music, instead of actual subcultures that drive the medium forward.
<[pleb placement here]
TL;DR I think it's over, the robots killed music, o algo.
[Thread Theme]:
Leaving streaming and other digital means (pirating) to be the predominant way of consuming music, this, however, comes with its own consequences, though, as it upheaves the old industry model and flips it on its head. This applies to television and movies as well, but this is a thread about music, so shut up.
But the biggest change overall is that you forge your own individual tastes now; you are not a part of a collective culture anymore, and you are able to freely decide for yourself what you like, from whatever era you like. The monoculture is dead and is likely to remain dead for the foreseeable future.
This is both a really good thing, but it has some really negative consequences, like the death of proper indie culture and subcultures.
You need a sense of collectivism for both pop and alt culture to exist; individuality leaves everything weak and splintered with no way of gaining any big traction unless by a fluke, say through a social campaign or internet meme or of course, TikTok, like with Barbenheimer or Morbius or Charli XCX's album 'Brat'.
<[pleb placement here]
Indie culture and subcultures act as a way to push music forward, the greatest method of innovation within the past sixty years, so without it, what the fuck do you do now?
This question has perplexed me for quite some time, because I often feel lost when trying to assess the current state of the music industry and the birth of potential new subcultures. It also doesn't help that a lot of zoomers (no fault of their own) have been brainwashed into a drunk love for a faux version of the past with superficial and shallow obsessions with "Y2K", "Frutiger Aero", and other bullshit.
Meaning, we're likely only going to get nostalgiabait retreads of previous genres, genres that haven't been popular in twenty years like Haddaway-era Europop or trance music, instead of actual subcultures that drive the medium forward.
<[pleb placement here]
TL;DR I think it's over, the robots killed music, o algo.
[Thread Theme]: