If I rep you and agree that this is a cool track will you stop smack talking my man Phil?

If I rep you and agree that this is a cool track will you stop smack talking my man Phil?
Comment wins the internet.
Depends whether you mean older "metal" as actual older metal or "hard rock".
You won't catch me listening to AC/DC, but I challenge you to name any strictly "metal" modern acts that blow Pantera out the water.
I think it's very hard to tell with modern music whether it'll become 'classic' or not.
First off, there has been a huge shift in genres thanks to the invention and availability of electronic instruments, not to mention the music sharing prowess of the internet. Whereas in the 1960s, guitar music was just about the most exciting thing out there because it was very new and some of it quite rebellious, compared to now where vast amounts of people play guitar and just about every sound/genre has been played to death.
Basically, if you compare punk in the '70s to punk now you won't get an accurate comparison because the musical landscape is totally different and punk today has very little to do with punk in the '70s. Funnily enough, I've seen more and more respected musicians and musical figures now likening certain modern hip hop artists to the original punk movement and the ethos of breaking rules and pushing musical boundaries.
Secondly, and possibly more importantly, time itself also changes musical context. Many artists release an album or two before their creativity fades and they disappear again. When I look back at bands and musicians that I would consider truly exceptional, it's mostly bands with 10/20/30 years of quality music. Often times, their earlier stuff is rough and the audio is very poor quality, but I love it and it all makes sense in the context of that amazing band/musician and everything that is now known about them. With modern music, there's very little way to tell which band will still be amazing in 2030 and which one will release something crap next year that will forever ruin them for us. (Incidentally, I was a big fan of the Arctic Monkeys until they released AM. Now, whenever I hear them, I just can't help associate with an album that I personally consider to be a few steps above Britney Spears).
So, in a way, I think that the extra choice of instruments and musical styles today is kind of balanced out compared to the amount of untrodden ground that existed in decades past. One thing's for sure, I definitely don't envy anyone trying to make creative guitar music in 2018.
(looking back, I really hope my rant is coherent)
You have begun to hear one fraction of a tiny bit of a percentage of modern music. Such statements are just... yeah. FWIW: Level of musicianship is much, much higher now than it ever was. Not because current generations are better, but because more people than ever have access to decent instruments. In the 60s, only a tiny group of people could afford synths, and access to electric guitars, pianos and such was super limited as well. Nowadays anyone could basically pick an instrument and get a good quality model for a price most of us can easily afford.
It has resulted in unrivaled creativity, diversity and general awesomeness. The music industry is struggling with it, so you'll have to turn off the radio if you want to find them. Or just listen to the stuff you listened to when you were younger.![]()
You have begun to hear one fraction of a tiny bit of a percentage of modern music. Such statements are just... yeah. FWIW: Level of musicianship is much, much higher now than it ever was. Not because current generations are better, but because more people than ever have access to decent instruments. In the 60s, only a tiny group of people could afford synths, and access to electric guitars, pianos and such was super limited as well. Nowadays anyone could basically pick an instrument and get a good quality model for a price most of us can easily afford.
It has resulted in unrivaled creativity, diversity and general awesomeness. The music industry is struggling with it, so you'll have to turn off the radio if you want to find them. Or just listen to the stuff you listened to when you were younger.![]()
I agree that generalized statements like "I don't like modern music" make about as much sense as saying "I don't like food"
One can dislike many particular kinds of food, but hardly all of it.![]()
The level of musicianship - I agree with you on that. There's a shed load of brilliant guitarists out there, for instance. Better instruments - definitely, and basic instruments and cheap amplification have come a long way.
But have these two things really resulted in 'general awesomeness'? I think not. I don't think you can connect these two together with general awesomeness. Where are the great songs? Music's primarily for pleasing people, not for pleasing musicians. People wanna hear great songs.
like, why? I`m pretty sure I heard same song like 1000 times already every summer... and the video... ugh
I hate anything that isn't metal enough. But nothing is metal enough.
Ok everyone, what happens in Off Topic stays in Off Topic, right?
In that case I have a confession to make: I love Taytay.
Hit play, then just sit back, relax, and absorb the awesome:
https://youtu.be/E1o-NWNmQLM
I hate anything that isn't metal enough. But nothing is metal enough.
The level of musicianship - I agree with you on that. There's a shed load of brilliant guitarists out there, for instance. Better instruments - definitely, and basic instruments and cheap amplification have come a long way.
But have these two things really resulted in 'general awesomeness'? I think not. I don't think you can connect these two together with general awesomeness. Where are the great songs? Music's primarily for pleasing people, not for pleasing musicians. People wanna hear great songs.
If someone has 'begun to hear one fraction of a tiny bit of a percentage of modern music', and you suggest 'turning off the radio', then basically you are saying they have to look for this general awesomeness without a roadmap, spend a lot of time panning for gold, and maybe, maybe find a niche band that they like who are actually a load of bollox and aren't a patch on something done better many years before (I'm excluding electronic stuff, as sometimes I hear something pretty darn good, and my knowledge of modern heavy metal isn't great, so I'll pass at that - but we're talking generally, aren't we). Hey, at least they can pretend to be cooler than anyone else. That's what it's all about.
General awesomeness should be beating a path down to your door: your radio. It ain't. Bands like U2 embarrassingly potter about when they should have retired years ago. Other bands should have made them retire. They're not good enough to, which is really tragic.
The music industry isn't struggling with this 'unrivalled creativity, diversity and general awesomeness!' It's struggling with only one question - how to make as much money as quickly as possible. Same as it ever was.
Not the greatest analogy IMO: people are conditioned to like/prefer some food; they eat it at least twice a day for every day of their lives! If we didn't like food the species would die. If we don't like modern music...nah.
Better saying "I don't like the modern music that I've heard of". Even better; equate "I don't like modern music" to "I don't like fast food"?
Great... I now want to roll my sleeves up and take my socks off....
Nobody wants to see that.