Is Old Music Killing New Music?


I ran across this Atlantic magazine article on another music forum. It asks the question if old music is killing new music. I didn't realize that older music represents 70% of the music market according to this article. I know I use Qobuz and Tidal to find new music and new artists for my collection, but I don't know how common that actually is for most people. I think that a lot of people that listen to services like Spotify and Apple Music probably don't keep track of what the algorithms are queuing up in their playlists. Perhaps it's all becoming elevator music. 

Is Old Music Killing New Music? - The Atlantic

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@larsman I know it sounds crazy that I had no idea of Steven Wilson until about 5 years ago. I actually grew up listening to Pink Floyd, Yes, ELP, King Crimson and Genesis. I loved browsing record stores and even worked in one to get myself through college. When music switched to an on-line process it lost a lot of the appeal to me. I was so used to learning about new bands from coworkers and friends. That all stopped when it switched. Also, life happened and there was a long time when I couldn't afford buying music. 

Thank you for letting me know about the ticket sales. The last time he came through a town near my home I was 8,000 miles away working. Maybe I will get to see him this time. 

@ Larsman, 

    I don't agree that arranged or improvised sounds that contain only one element of music, e.g. rhythm, qualifiies as music.  Is spoken word with rhythmic accompaniment "music'?  Then what is the difference between poetry, which has rhythm, and music?  It's like Justice Stewart's definition of pornography; it may be difficult to define, but "I know it when I see it."  Is John Cage's "4:33" music?  I personally do not think so.  It is interesting, philosophically, ONCE, but that's about all.  It pretty clearly established the limits of human patience with bs and the dividing line between "music" and "not music", imo.

   There appeared to be a bass player and musicians at the Super Bowl, which implies a modicum of tonality.  It was inaudible, and seemed to be just for show.

    Some percussion pieces can be considered "music"; in addition to rhythm, they can contain tonality, melody and harmony. .Are drums used for signaling "music"?  They could convey emotion, they are communicative, but they lack harmony and melody and so on that we associate with "music". Is a drum solo "music"? Usually not; it is an interlude between musical sections.  Gives the musicians a chance to rest and everyone else a chance to get a drink..

   Even most Mid-20th century 12-tone, Schoenberg, for example, barely qualifies as "music" (but it does; it has multiple elements of "music" one would include in any reasonable definition.)  They tried, it pushed  boundaries.  It can be interesting.  It was a reasonable experiment.  Like 4:33, it was an interesting intellectual exercise. But it was a dead end that didn't pan out, and hardly anyone wants to listen to it now. (I'd sell my lp collection of 12-tone stuff cheap!) 

   I'd concede that rap, hiphop etc. can be poetic, tribal, danceable, whatever.   Imho, regardless whether people like or enjoy it, it is not music.  

   Look, up in the sky, is it a bird? is it a plane? is randomized sound without rhythm or melody, "music"?  No, it is Yoko Ono.

@lloydc - thanks for your explanation! I still disagree, but nothing wrong with that, the world would be boring if everybody had the same opinions. 

The numbers say no.

Source: The New Old Guard article (Billboard Magazine March 2022, Page 21)