Has the Era of Ground-Breaking Entertainment Run it's Sell-by-Date??

in #music4 years ago

Being a child of the 80s through to the 90s, I can honestly say, hand on heart, that I wouldn't change a thing. Those two magical decades brought with it an explosion of creativity and undiluted talent and genius. Musicians cared about their works like they were their own children. Time, passion and heart went into producing songs, albums and even music videos. How I miss those times. I truly believe I witnessed a revolutionary time period in terms of all-out innovation and progression in the entertainment industry. However, just because these are my own personal experiences, would they translate the same way for others?

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That's an interesting question. I believe age and memory plays a huge play in that. Many a time have I scoffed at the latest musical trends to hit the airwaves, dismissing anything "new" as being a repackaged cheap knock-off of something that was produced years past but so much better. Although I must also be aware that the younger generation are living through a time in their lives where their "own" life's soundtrack in being created on-the-fly, without the same referential points I have documented down for myself. I can have my uniquely formulated and distinctive comparative stance on things such as pop culture, movies and television that someones two decades my junior would not.

Therefore, I realise are seeing the world through a set of fresh, young and innocent eyes. How can I possibly explain the insane rush I felt hearing Guns 'n' Roses for the first time or watching the world premiere of Micheal Jackson's Thriller? It would seem an impossible and fruitless task, given the masses of aural and visual content the new generation are exposed to on a daily basis. Media in general has become so disposable, that even proper raw talent will most likely go down the drain with it. It's a sad state of affairs for me as this "overload of information" has, in turn, also decreased attentions spans. To the point where any newly birthed content already has an affixed expiration date stamped onto it. No artist or track is "timeless" anymore.

I remember the pure adrenaline rush of going to a record store, in anticipation of the latest release from one of my favourite artists. The journey to the shop, posters in the windows, holding a physical copy of said album, reading through the cover sleeve (front and back), marvelling at the hypnotic effects of that almost psychedelic shiny new CD disc. These are incredible experiences that will be all but lost to our new generation of teens and 20 somethings. However, I do consider myself extremely lucky to have been part of a society and culture, that offered up such memorable treasures for me. These fond reflections of the past hold such great importance to me.

What is the point I'm trying to get across here? I suppose a humbling "respect" I'll always have for one of the most precious time periods of my life. I mean, those epic moments of bliss caused by the dizzying quality of artists back in the day, as well as the medium they were presented on. Can the young of today replicate those same feelings of elation that myself and my peers felt? Or is the music entertainment sector as a whole really just considered one mass passing fad in today fast-paced lifestyle and culture?

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Hope you enjoyed this post, please look out for more on the way... (author: @ezzy)


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@ezzy I believe music nowadays doesn't pass the right messages they needed to unlike the old musics, nowadays, nudes and all sorts glaze the screen and doesn't make the songs evergreen and worth listening to. I still listen to songs of some great musical artist in Nigeria who sang the song in 1978 but they are quality and full of good messages.
Regards

Couldn't agree more, mate. To me anyways, the oldies were the goodies.:)

I think a lot of it is that as we grow and age we tend to not see the same things we saw as a 20 something year old. I am not sure the music industry has changed so much, there were always, (pre virus days), sold out tickets to concerts.

Generation wise is there really any difference, every generation goes through their wars, shortages, and governmental screw ups, nothing has really changed other than we have aged and forgot to make the changes we dreamed of as we grew older.

I guess age plays a part in it. However, I still have a problem wrapping my head around what we have on offer today versus yesteryear. I mean, Bieber and Cypus and One Direction or Michael Jackson, Dr. Dre and Guns 'n' Roses. Genres were being defined and created back then.

Everything now seems cut and pasted to appeal to mass markets. Anyone can be a star these days. There is no disconnect anymore, which is sad, to say the least.

I wonder if a part of that was due to the regionalism of the various music artist. London, Paris, East Coast of America, California, Seattle, and even Japan, Sweden, The Netherlands, Germany. It has all been kind of homogenized now, all blended up spit out and meets the needs of the mass media world. The sound is now the same no matter where you go.

Perhaps dsound, dtube, 3speak, and block chain can change that and bring the artist back to the stage.

Certainly hope that's the case, buddy. :)

I saw the Thriller tour in Knoxville, Tennessee at Neyland Stadium in August 84'. I won't forget that. Music rocked in 80s and 90s

Oh man, that must have been dope! How I regret not seeing the man himself in concert when I had the chance.