all i'm getting here is that you're in that 'in my day, things were better' place, and if that works for you, am glad for you.CrystalWizard wrote: Sat Jan 24, 2026 11:10 pmThat is exactly my point when i say swamped. As you say, the scale has changed , exponentially i would add. When i was younger and went to shows in the City every night, listened to WFMU, WKCR, WNEW, WBGO, the amount of music i really liked was a fairly high percentage of what i was exposed to. And i was extremely fortunate to have that large of an exposure. How does some kid (of any age) find the stuff that moves them to the level of a jimi hendrix or syd barett era PF? It's like the proverbial needle in a haystack. I have a network of friends and they tell me about stuff i'd like. I hear a lot of cool stuff here in the music cafe, on that other VI forum, then follow up on similar musics, a large network of fellow noisemaker friends from years of networking, tape trading, playing live, and bandcamp and soundcloud accounts.fisherKing wrote: Sat Jan 24, 2026 9:29 pmreally, tho, how is that different from any other era? i'd suggest that the scale has changed, ie from thousands of songs a year to millions, but the percentage of 'great music' (and, to be fair, that plays differently for all of us) is still similarly tiny...CrystalWizard wrote: Sat Jan 24, 2026 2:17 am
With my addition of one word, i would mostly agree. There IS tons of good, new music out there but it's swamped by crap.
My 18 yr old friend doesn't. He has told me that most of his friends don't really care that much to dig up music, they "listen" to the pop pablum on YT, Spotify, etc. They don't really listen according to him- which checks perfectly with my interactions and observations and second hand accounts of most teenagers. It's mostly just background noise. Kids don't have access to shelves of LP owned by their young stepfather, crates of LPs from a older brother who went off to Uni, and more LPs and later CDs, owned by their jazz drummer new bandmates. They can't even read the liner notes on a physical cardboard LP and follow up on musicians listed (which is how i discovered Brian Eno, which then led to hundreds of other artists.
more TL:DR old guy noise
but any human being who is, for example, 17, lives in the moment they live in, and their pop culture matters. and your single 18-year-old friend is one person.
personally, i believe that the moment that matters the most is the current one, and i'd rather be listening to geese, or turnstile, than, say, the doors or green day. just my opinions, of course

