I've used this a lot.
https://www.gnoosic.com/
I might have been a teen in the last days of DJs who programmed their own music... in Ontario that is.sturginho wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 2:51 pmRadio stations are worse than ever! You have "oldies" stations which play songs from the 80s or 90s which despite having a decade worth of music to choose from, repeat the same songs over and over.Niegs wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 1:32 pm I agree with those saying some elements are nothing new... like the industry has, at least since ww2, chased bands that sounded like the most popular bands and maybe fringe DJs and your gig going buddy promoted those outside that window, but it's easier now than ever to find outliers (I regularly listen to synthwave acts from France, Italy and Germany all discovered via youtube).
What I'd be interested in is a service that explores bands that were on the periphery or simply have been forgotten in previous eras. Like 'oldies' stations here not only stick to the same handful of bands, but also just a few (or even one!) songs from those bands. What ELSE was on the radio, or college/indie/pirate radio back in 1983, 1975, 1962, 1958? Maybe Spotify does that now, but for all the looking back on the past, old guys tend to have a narrow view of what was great. Maybe the rest wasn't so good? (Though I constantly think there's a potential 'favourite' track or even band for me time has forgot...)
Back in our day we had MTV, nowadays MTV doesnt have any music, and other music TV channels are not worth bothering with. Least of all Kerrang TV who only seem to have 3 songs
(oh no, am I turning into Rick?)
Thanks all. I will try some of these things.
The state of "mainstream" radio stations is appalling. On the drive to work last week, I heard in succession:
This must be a global thing then... and it's fucked.Uncle fester wrote: ↑Sun Jun 30, 2024 12:37 amThe state of "mainstream" radio stations is appalling. On the drive to work last week, I heard in succession:
The killers
Keane
Kings of Leon
All of which are over twenty years old.
Pop/MOR music has always been samey and unchallanging but you wouldn't have heard stations in the 90's playing 70's music as their go to.
Forgot to thank you for this - thanks!!
Our local stations are exactly the same. I always assumed that they’re just plain stingy and this is a royalties/ cost thing with less for the station to pay somehow?Uncle fester wrote: ↑Sun Jun 30, 2024 12:37 amThe state of "mainstream" radio stations is appalling. On the drive to work last week, I heard in succession:
The killers
Keane
Kings of Leon
All of which are over twenty years old.
Pop/MOR music has always been samey and unchallanging but you wouldn't have heard stations in the 90's playing 70's music as their go to.
They have easier access because of YouTube or one of the music apps on their smart phones. I was exposed to older music through my parents and older siblings, tapes and then CD's were pretty expensive so couldn't buy many if them. That also feeds into his point of how music is consumed has changed. Easier for it to become part of the background if you're listening to it on your phone compared to records, tapes or CDsrobmatic wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 5:38 pmI think they have better access to the older music now because of streaming. It takes much less effort to go back to the source of what current bands are just repackaging.Calculon wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 1:11 pmIn my youth and we listened to, and enjoyed a mix of older and new music. The difference is many kids today are pretty disparaging of current music and prefer the older stuffSandstorm wrote: ↑Thu Jun 27, 2024 12:03 pm
It's always been this way. When I was young, some people sought out new and obscure music by diving into back-alley record stores & really broadened their horizons. Others just listened to the Top 40 and bought the next U2 album.
These days it's much easier to go find new stuff, but some people are just lazy/disinterested. And Joshua Tree is still a classic.
I'm older than you and I liked it first.Insane_Homer wrote: ↑Sun Jun 30, 2024 10:48 am I'm 52 in a month and I'd just like to say the new Billie Eilish album is rather good.
Didn't that used to be the Town & Country? It's not a bad venue, nice pub nearbysockwithaticket wrote: ↑Tue Jul 02, 2024 11:17 pmOccasionally I'll go see someone at a spot like the 02 Forum in Kentish Town (I remember when it was simply th Kentish Town Forum), but at over 2,000 it's getting on the side of too big.
Ha, I was in high school in the late 00s and we listened to the exact same stuff. I would say that among anyone more than casually into music back then, classic rock ruled the day. If you included casuals, i.e. those who only “listened” to music in the car or at social events, then the “most popular” genre was probably hip hop (and to be fair the genre still had some vitality at the time, though nowadays it’s just as much a spent force as rock), but there were waaaay more people that were deeply into (classic) rock than deeply into hip hop.
Yes, very much this. And this rolls into why so many a youngster turn to the classic bands. The fact of the matter is that if you want to hear music that is:Mr Tim Buktoo wrote: ↑Tue Jul 02, 2024 8:28 pm Rick is right.
I think at the end of the day what he is saying is that we are badly missing rock n roll. Big stadium bands. Guitar bands. Its utter shit in that regard these days.
Oasis were probably the last. You could say foo fighters or green day but they have had their day.
Does classic rock really have balls? I always found the likes of Led Zep, Hendrix, Thin Lizzy to be fine, but a bit anemic. There again, rock, actual rock rather an offshoot like pop punk, was in fairly short supply in the 00s when I was finding my musical identity. A lot of it like Foo Fighters, Audioslave and Velvet Revolver was made up of members from broken up older bands or simply was still the older bands like Red Hot Chili Peppers and whoever was still standing from the grunge era. There was, I suppose, that separate category of bands the music press could never quite decide what to call (nu-grunge seemed to come up a lot) like Creed, Staind, Puddle of Mudd and Nickelback.Fonz wrote: ↑Fri Jul 05, 2024 4:00 pmYes, very much this. And this rolls into why so many a youngster turn to the classic bands. The fact of the matter is that if you want to hear music that is:Mr Tim Buktoo wrote: ↑Tue Jul 02, 2024 8:28 pm Rick is right.
I think at the end of the day what he is saying is that we are badly missing rock n roll. Big stadium bands. Guitar bands. Its utter shit in that regard these days.
Oasis were probably the last. You could say foo fighters or green day but they have had their day.
1) musical, i.e. actually features people playing musical instruments,
2) ambitious,
3) thoughtful/intelligent,
4) popular,
5) resonates with your typical (read, yes, white) kid, and
6) has balls
What the fuck else is he supposed to listen to?
I’m a big lover of metal but even I can admit its credible range of expression is fairly limited (and its attempts to go beyond its niche have a habit of only demonstrating this point). Plus many will always be alienated by the vocals and broader aesthetic (if I had a dollar for every time I’d play some metal and people would say “yeah I kinda like the music, but they should get a guy who actually sings” to which I’d respond “believe it or not you’re not the first person to think of that, there’s an entire genre created by tasteless Eurotrash that does this called power metal and it fucking SUCKS”)
Radiohead was the last great hope of what the amusing and acerbic critic Robert Christgau dubbed “intelligent guitar toting white guys” (that were commercially viable), and though I’m your typical Radiohead worshipping twat I wouldn’t dispute that they don’t satisfy prong 6 above.
No one else is even attempting to seize the mantle.
According to wiki, yes. I've only been there since it was the Forum and after it's mid-00s refurb + capacity increase. Before that I feel like most gigs I wanted to see ended up at The Astoria or the slightly smaller, bang next door Mean Fiddler (both sadly sacrificed for Crossrail).epwc wrote: ↑Wed Jul 03, 2024 2:57 pmDidn't that used to be the Town & Country? It's not a bad venue, nice pub nearbysockwithaticket wrote: ↑Tue Jul 02, 2024 11:17 pmOccasionally I'll go see someone at a spot like the 02 Forum in Kentish Town (I remember when it was simply th Kentish Town Forum), but at over 2,000 it's getting on the side of too big.
I mean, I would say so. I’ll give you Plant’s somewhat androgynous voice, but Page’s bluesy riffage over Bonham’s heavy handed drumming? I think that surely pushes it over the line. Ditto Hendrix. Granted, if we cast a broader net to include, say, Queen or Roundabout-era Yes, the question becomes a bit more complicated…sockwithaticket wrote: ↑Fri Jul 05, 2024 4:19 pmDoes classic rock really have balls? I always found the likes of Led Zep, Hendrix, Thin Lizzy to be fine, but a bit anemic. There again, rock, actual rock rather an offshoot like pop punk, was in fairly short supply in the 00s when I was finding my musical identity. A lot of it like Foo Fighters, Audioslave and Velvet Revolver was made up of members from broken up older bands or simply was still the older bands like Red Hot Chili Peppers and whoever was still standing from the grunge era. There was, I suppose, that separate category of bands the music press could never quite decide what to call (nu-grunge seemed to come up a lot) like Creed, Staind, Puddle of Mudd and Nickelback.Fonz wrote: ↑Fri Jul 05, 2024 4:00 pmYes, very much this. And this rolls into why so many a youngster turn to the classic bands. The fact of the matter is that if you want to hear music that is:Mr Tim Buktoo wrote: ↑Tue Jul 02, 2024 8:28 pm Rick is right.
I think at the end of the day what he is saying is that we are badly missing rock n roll. Big stadium bands. Guitar bands. Its utter shit in that regard these days.
Oasis were probably the last. You could say foo fighters or green day but they have had their day.
1) musical, i.e. actually features people playing musical instruments,
2) ambitious,
3) thoughtful/intelligent,
4) popular,
5) resonates with your typical (read, yes, white) kid, and
6) has balls
What the fuck else is he supposed to listen to?
I’m a big lover of metal but even I can admit its credible range of expression is fairly limited (and its attempts to go beyond its niche have a habit of only demonstrating this point). Plus many will always be alienated by the vocals and broader aesthetic (if I had a dollar for every time I’d play some metal and people would say “yeah I kinda like the music, but they should get a guy who actually sings” to which I’d respond “believe it or not you’re not the first person to think of that, there’s an entire genre created by tasteless Eurotrash that does this called power metal and it fucking SUCKS”)
Radiohead was the last great hope of what the amusing and acerbic critic Robert Christgau dubbed “intelligent guitar toting white guys” (that were commercially viable), and though I’m your typical Radiohead worshipping twat I wouldn’t dispute that they don’t satisfy prong 6 above.
No one else is even attempting to seize the mantle.
And admittedly I am, like you, a bit of an outlier, my preferences lie in the scream and shouty. Went to see The Acacia Strain last night (along with Fuming Mouth, Judiciary and Splitknuckle) and they're probably at the 'mainstream' end of my taste (mainstream being a relative term). I spent the 00s focusing on hardcore and metalcore bands like Converge, Zao, This Is Hell and Every Time I Die rather than what the rock world. Perhaps most people do find that stuff to have balls.