music sucks
@nyx very true, a bunch of genres briefly became huge and then basically died from overexposure, homogenization, elavated mediocrity etc.
around the same time the music industry basically devoured itself and stopped taking risks altogeher why mainstream music is primarily artists who have been around 10+ years ( used to be rare for a musician to stay relevant for more than a few albums )
Something about late capitalists culture industry accelleration or something
and yet there’s nostalgia for that period, like white guys are still like “Eminem is the greatest rapper of all time” and it’s like, his good shit doesn’t even hold up lol
re: music sucks
re: music sucks
“Culture on pause” is a good way to say it,
To get into the economics a bit more, I think old record labels and movie studios never really adapted to internet, Netflix and Spotify filled a niche so that they didn’t have to change, the label’s and studios just kind of defer to big tech and make money thru licensing, but in other ways they’re are stuck in time.
I mean, why can’t we just stream movies directly from Warner Bros, or Universal? Or download Albums directly from Record Lables? it’s because they’re fucking idiots.
The rise of the internet coincided with concentration/monopolization, of basically everything but especially hollywood and music industries. It became impossible to afford to operate an independant video/record store at about the time the internet destroyed the demand for them.
I haven’t bought a CD in many years, but when i was a kid a new CD was around $20, and I think it’s still about that price. Today $20 is too much, more so in 2003. This is amonopoly price, it is a price arbitrary set by executives, and having it so expensive means only the superstars can expect to sell CD’s, so why even sign an artist that isn’t garunteed to go platinum?
Same with movies, how much is a movie ticket these days? too expensive, not to mention the exorbitant popcorn/soda prices, which again are the result of big finance monopolizing the threatre industry. So there’s no small theatre’s showing Eraserehead at midnight, they’re only going to show blockbusters because whose going to waste all that money going to the theatre at all unless it’s garunteed to be a good time? DVD sales used to provide a cousine for indie movies but these days those are even more niche than CD’s.
But increasingly albums and ticket sales are secondary to copyright rent-seeking. And this has all kinds of consequences, better to milk as much out of existing IP’s as possible ( this include Drake, Taylor Swift, Star Wars etc. ) They’re all brands, properties, content.
Along with putting all their money into safe properties, part of this rent seeking is an obsession with making content unavailable, only releasing certain Movies to stream at different times, so you have to pay for multiple streaming services to get a decent selection, making old movies impossible to find legally.
re: music sucks
re: internet history
Yeah the internet generated a major crisis of Value in many ways, probably why there was such a cultural explosion in the 2000’s – you might not remember but there were a lot of edgy young cable channels like MTV2, Current, Fuse, G4, catering to the exiting new internet culture, which in retrospect were the death throws of a dying medium.
the Metallica / napster shit, was the music industry flailing, trying to use state terror to protect copyright claims, but it couldn’t put the genie in the bottle. The old Media Barons no idea what to do about piracy, but it did lay the foundation of a new copyright regime we’re stealing dealing with.
Naturally Big Tech stepped in with a more elegant solution, iTunes is brilliantly evil, it’s not finger wagging, no, having an ipod is cool, now it’s cool to pay for music. With that then Spotify, there’s a social dimension. Amazon too, understanding the role of gatekeeper, mass consumerism that’s also infinitely personalized.
Disney is much more forward thinking that other studios, while they’re the vanguard of nastalgia milking they also understood the value of controlling the medium and not just the content.
Web 2.0, and the smart phone really nailed the coffin shut tho. The previous internet required a certain level of technical education, even Myspace encouraged people to learn a bit of HTML. So Limewire or torrenting wasn’t much different than doing anything else on the internet: browsing forums, chatrooms, porn sites, with exeption of google and wikipedia, there were very few central hubs.
With Web 2, Facebook/twitter/ youtube, and smartphones, everything is an app and everything is mediated by the gatekeepers. There’s an entire ideological indoctrination that goes along with it, the app teaches you how to use the internet and everything outside of the app is scary.