Thank you for posting this; I believe this perspective is too often lost when we think of the 1960's as "the olden days." The period in which recordings have been the primary mechanism through which people experience music has been extremely brief relative to the thousands of years when music was not a spectator sport for the most part. Before the great expanding maw of consumerism hit the world, the idea of "buying" or "owning" music would have been laughable. Making music used to be a very normal family or community activity. There are plenty of styles of music I've experienced (e.g., Ojibwe dance/drumming, West African social musics, drum circles, singalongs) that can't be recorded and mass produced without doing great violence to the whole concept of the music. Turning music into a replicable product to be consumed by non-participants is not human nature by any means, it's a cultural phenomenon of the modern age.Cordelia wrote:Why such a focus on result instead of process, anyway? We live in a time when millions of people get to explore the arts and feel the joy of creating. Who could be grumpy about that?
The real question to me is, how many people sing a song or play an instrument at least once a week? That's a sign of how "healthy" music is.
The idea that you can buy a $100 Gibson guitar knockoff at Target is thrilling beyond belief to me. The more that people are engaged in music production activities, the better off we are because we're reclaiming the creative impulse from the A&R department at Sony. The democratization of music to a point where products are rejected in favor of participation is not an aberration, it's a return to normality.
