What's your music taste?

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All very nice!
I'll share more of mine:

Porter Robinson
Coldplay
Daft Punk
Sam Gellaitry
The Midnight (I even remixed one of their songs)
WRLD
M83
Pendulum

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audiojunkie wrote: Tue Jul 14, 2026 8:04 pm In my past, I've listened to probably most everything (especially all of the various branches and sub-genres of New Wave and Alternative, covering everything from goth, punk, and post-punk, to ambient, classical, and downtempo). For the last decade though, I've been mainly into Dream-pop, Shoegaze, Indie, Dub, and Post-rock. I'm especially interested in foreign unheard-of independent bands that no one else has heard of. Over all though, I'm really open minded. :)
Ah, very open-minded!
Love your proboscis monkey profile btw.

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VOODOO U wrote: Wed Jul 15, 2026 12:29 am No A.I.

Yeah. That's a real musician performing in a minor key with their hand. Should be right up Jamcat's alley.

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Hipster Bales wrote: Wed Jul 15, 2026 5:05 am
audiojunkie wrote: Tue Jul 14, 2026 8:04 pm In my past, I've listened to probably most everything (especially all of the various branches and sub-genres of New Wave and Alternative, covering everything from goth, punk, and post-punk, to ambient, classical, and downtempo). For the last decade though, I've been mainly into Dream-pop, Shoegaze, Indie, Dub, and Post-rock. I'm especially interested in foreign unheard-of independent bands that no one else has heard of. Over all though, I'm really open minded. :)
Ah, very open-minded!
Love your proboscis monkey profile btw.
Thanks! 🙂
Vendor‑Dependent Copy Protection: Customers lose. Pirates win.:mad:
(Also: I'm Accused of lying about Linux—it boots, runs my pro audio workflow, stays stable, updates--though yearly dismissed as “niche”. Yet I'm the deluded one.)
:roll:

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I find that there no longer are "scenes". Once upon a time (even before my time) you'd get "rockers", "metalheads", "punks", people into electronic music, casual listeners who only listened to anything without an overt distorted guitar, jazz aficionados, etc.

Homogenisation has meant that "everybody listens to a bit of everything", even the young ones. Which really means "whatever is in the mainstream". In fact, I deplore the people who confidently declare that there has never been a better time for independent music and niches. It's just not true and I feel they don't actually believe what they're saying either. To stress the point, there has never been a time when "old music" was as popular as it is today. People are no longer chasing the latest releases, there is no excitement whatsoever but rather dejection and disillusionment. The kids that once upon a time would have embraced some kind of subculture are mostly either going back to Pink Floyd or they have no real passion for music.

The only two scenes that still exist are the metal and jazz scenes, and even the jazz scene is watered down nowadays.

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ampetrosillo wrote: Wed Jul 15, 2026 3:00 pm I find that there no longer are "scenes". Once upon a time (even before my time) you'd get "rockers", "metalheads", "punks", people into electronic music, casual listeners who only listened to anything without an overt distorted guitar, jazz aficionados, etc.

Homogenisation has meant that "everybody listens to a bit of everything", even the young ones. Which really means "whatever is in the mainstream". In fact, I deplore the people who confidently declare that there has never been a better time for independent music and niches. It's just not true and I feel they don't actually believe what they're saying either. To stress the point, there has never been a time when "old music" was as popular as it is today. People are no longer chasing the latest releases, there is no excitement whatsoever but rather dejection and disillusionment. The kids that once upon a time would have embraced some kind of subculture are mostly either going back to Pink Floyd or they have no real passion for music.

The only two scenes that still exist are the metal and jazz scenes, and even the jazz scene is watered down nowadays.
The Dream pop/Shoegaze scene is alive and very well. About the only time it was really underground, was when it originally started and was over-shadowed by Grunge. Since then, it has been very much alive and well, and as healthy as ever. :)
Vendor‑Dependent Copy Protection: Customers lose. Pirates win.:mad:
(Also: I'm Accused of lying about Linux—it boots, runs my pro audio workflow, stays stable, updates--though yearly dismissed as “niche”. Yet I'm the deluded one.)
:roll:

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ampetrosillo wrote: Wed Jul 15, 2026 3:00 pm Homogenisation has meant that "everybody listens to a bit of everything", even the young ones. Which really means "whatever is in the mainstream". In fact, I deplore the people who confidently declare that there has never been a better time for independent music and niches.
I can't imagine listening to one genre of music exclusively. I've been like that more or less since I was a teenager, but my tastes have broadened over the years.

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audiojunkie wrote: Wed Jul 15, 2026 3:07 pm
ampetrosillo wrote: Wed Jul 15, 2026 3:00 pm I find that there no longer are "scenes". Once upon a time (even before my time) you'd get "rockers", "metalheads", "punks", people into electronic music, casual listeners who only listened to anything without an overt distorted guitar, jazz aficionados, etc.

Homogenisation has meant that "everybody listens to a bit of everything", even the young ones. Which really means "whatever is in the mainstream". In fact, I deplore the people who confidently declare that there has never been a better time for independent music and niches. It's just not true and I feel they don't actually believe what they're saying either. To stress the point, there has never been a time when "old music" was as popular as it is today. People are no longer chasing the latest releases, there is no excitement whatsoever but rather dejection and disillusionment. The kids that once upon a time would have embraced some kind of subculture are mostly either going back to Pink Floyd or they have no real passion for music.

The only two scenes that still exist are the metal and jazz scenes, and even the jazz scene is watered down nowadays.
The Dream pop/Shoegaze scene is alive and very well. About the only time it was really underground, was when it originally started and was over-shadowed by Grunge. Since then, it has been very much alive and well, and as healthy as ever. :)
Shoegaze and dream pop were actually not that popular back then. Slowdive were unfairly maligned by the press and their peers as middle class tripe. Middle class they may have been, but I wouldn't say it was tripe. Anyway, they only started drawing in their biggest crowds, like, twenty years later.

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For now
Bjork
Frank Ocean
Barry Can't Swim
Gorillaz
Hiatus Kaiyote
serpentwithfeet
Thievery Corporation/solos
and all things Bent & Simon Mills related

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slackhead wrote: Wed Jul 15, 2026 5:30 am
VOODOO U wrote: Wed Jul 15, 2026 12:29 am No A.I.

Yeah. That's a real musician performing in a minor key with their hand. Should be right up Jamcat's alley.
And it's not like A.I. where it's the same output over and over again. Very passionate even with the utilization of music scales.

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Depends on mood. My main preference is for stuff with a dreamy, spacey, introspective feel. So dreampunk/ambient dreampunk, chillwave, indie, shoegaze, basically anything with that kind of soundscape: Rashida Prime, Night Tapes, CMD094, Pinkshinyultrablast, 2814, Voyage, Metahesh, Martin Sturtzer, The Microgram. I also like dark gritty stuff by people like Lorn, Axius Link, Filmmaker, LONOWN, Rivoices, X1-Y2.

Since I was a kid I've been into electro. Too many artists to mention, but definitely everything by Gerald Donald and James Stinson, as collaborators and individual artists (Dopplereffekt, Drexciya, etc).

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