http://in.reuters.com/article/2012/0...86P0R820120726
I hate to sound like an crotchety old man, but I agree with this study and have been very disappointed in today's pop music. Keep in mind, that doesn't mean all of today's music is bad, but the vast majority of pop music by Katy Perry, Pink, and anything else you'd hear on a Top-40 station just annoys the hell out of me.
Gone are the days of powerful guitar solos, amazing instrumental bridges, and lyrics more thoughtful than "I get off on you getting off on me" or "I'm talking about pedicure on my toes, toes".
It's not just the sound that irks me, although there have been many times I'd be hearing a song and say, "Ugh, another [Katy Perry|Pink|Taylor Swift] song" only to be corrected that it's, in fact, some other artist who sounds exactly like Katy Perry, but the content of the music is So. Fucking. Shallow. Most songs on top-40 are either about sex, drinking, or partying. That's it!
Music about those subjects is fine, don't get me wrong, but is that really all there is to sing about nowadays? There's the occasional song that, love it or hate it, at least tries to be different in sound and subject but that seems to becoming the exception to the rule more and more.
I just feel like, overall, pop music is declining in substance rapidly. Where one used to win a Grammy for singing about God, one fears even mentioning God for fear of screaming from the "OMG RELIGIONS ARE BAD" crowd. Songs about African hunger and simply being generally happy have been replaced with refusing rehab and getting drunk in Vegas.
I understand there's obviously songs today, many of which never make the airwaves and are more "Alternative Rock" than pop, which are thought provoking, artistic, and original, but the labels always promote the most shallow songs, both lyrically and instrumentally.
Pop music has always sort of been overhyped, and there's no doubt every decade has had its share of banal songs, but it just seems to me that it's getting even more and more homogeneous and unoriginal than ever before, as this study concludes.
I hate to sound like an crotchety old man, but I agree with this study and have been very disappointed in today's pop music. Keep in mind, that doesn't mean all of today's music is bad, but the vast majority of pop music by Katy Perry, Pink, and anything else you'd hear on a Top-40 station just annoys the hell out of me.
Gone are the days of powerful guitar solos, amazing instrumental bridges, and lyrics more thoughtful than "I get off on you getting off on me" or "I'm talking about pedicure on my toes, toes".
It's not just the sound that irks me, although there have been many times I'd be hearing a song and say, "Ugh, another [Katy Perry|Pink|Taylor Swift] song" only to be corrected that it's, in fact, some other artist who sounds exactly like Katy Perry, but the content of the music is So. Fucking. Shallow. Most songs on top-40 are either about sex, drinking, or partying. That's it!
Music about those subjects is fine, don't get me wrong, but is that really all there is to sing about nowadays? There's the occasional song that, love it or hate it, at least tries to be different in sound and subject but that seems to becoming the exception to the rule more and more.
I just feel like, overall, pop music is declining in substance rapidly. Where one used to win a Grammy for singing about God, one fears even mentioning God for fear of screaming from the "OMG RELIGIONS ARE BAD" crowd. Songs about African hunger and simply being generally happy have been replaced with refusing rehab and getting drunk in Vegas.
I understand there's obviously songs today, many of which never make the airwaves and are more "Alternative Rock" than pop, which are thought provoking, artistic, and original, but the labels always promote the most shallow songs, both lyrically and instrumentally.
Pop music has always sort of been overhyped, and there's no doubt every decade has had its share of banal songs, but it just seems to me that it's getting even more and more homogeneous and unoriginal than ever before, as this study concludes.
Comment