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Tuesday the 13 of February 1883 was the day the music truly died.![]()
I'm still a rock-and-roller at heart. That genre was fun, a lot of it was high-energy, and the music was generally all about having a good time. Where possible I was trying hard to follow punk-rock in the early 1980s (not really having "found it" yet in its real heyday of the 1977-1980 era), but it was rather elusive by being strictly limited to a couple college radio stations near me, and again the challenge of poor announcing already in place on those stations where they might play 17 songs in a row before saying anything. Nowadays, there is very little rock-and-roll in current music, not to mention that the subject matter has shifted.I haven't even tuned into a Top 40 station since the very early 90s...I have no idea what has been on the charts for the past 30 years.
Current music "died" for me during the last half of the 1980s, when nearly all radio stations completely stopped announcing any music anymore. To follow music at all, my mind NEEDS labels - I simply don't retain songs if I don't know what they're called or who's doing them.
Where I was, all the "countdown" shows, which would have helped, were INVARIABLY on Sunday mornings, or on Sunday night when there was something I wanted to watch on TV instead. Sunday mornings were inaccessible to me, because I've been on a night schedule for decades.
An example of how bad it gets: Only four or five years ago did I FINALLY find out what this song was called and who did it, that I probably heard more than one thousand times over the decades, without hearing it announced:
And, even this, I had to CALL the radio station and ask what the song was, because I was sick and tired of trying to find out for decades.
There are countless other songs like that, and I have long since codified the point of lowered expectations that, even if something is announced, I miss it now and it doesn't register.
I'm still a rock-and-roller at heart. That genre was fun, a lot of it was high-energy, and the music was generally all about having a good time. Where possible I was trying hard to follow punk-rock in the early 1980s (not really having "found it" yet in its real heyday of the 1977-1980 era), but it was rather elusive by being strictly limited to a couple college radio stations near me, and again the challenge of poor announcing already in place on those stations where they might play 17 songs in a row before saying anything. Nowadays, there is very little rock-and-roll in current music, not to mention that the subject matter has shifted.
Years ago I saw an article comparing the "Top Ten" from a week in 1972, with I think a week in 2000, with the article describing the subject matter of the Top Ten songs. In 1972 it was stuff like a day at the lake, heartbreak, dancing to the beat, going to a party, a great relationship. In 2000 (?) the subject matter was stuff like drive-by shootings, drug abuse, gangs, and an overall feel of negativity and despair.
I have tuned into "Top 40 stations" once in a while when I had no other options, most notably when I've flown somewhere and I'm in a rental car. Generally in my own, which is well over 90% of all my driving, I have my own radio with the Sirius XM service and I go back and forth between a number of music channels (50s/60s/70s/80s, Underground Garage, and half a dozen others), or I'm playing my mix-cassette tapes which are truly Free Form in music genre. (I've moved mostly away from Underground Garage since it's gone away from formerly playing a lot of COOL 90s/00s/10s music, to becoming almost "just another oldies channel.") My most recent heavy exposure to "Top 40" stations was two years ago in Australia, and I was hearing some pretty cool current stuff; this was the song I definitely noticed and may be my favorite song in the "new" Century so far:
[video]https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=lunchmoney+lewis+bills+lyrics[/video]
Not sure why this doesn't show up as an instant link because I did nothing differently here than I did with Mr. Mister. Interestingly, this song was barely noticed in the USA, though it was Top Five across Australia when I was there.
Current music "died" for me during the last half of the 1980s, when nearly all radio stations completely stopped announcing any music anymore. To follow music at all, my mind NEEDS labels - I simply don't retain songs if I don't know what they're called or who's doing them.
