@mahgister
Murder Most Foul (+Tempest) are 2 obvious candidates for recent songs that will endure for a very long time to come.
@tylermunns
Making movies or making music has nearly always been about primarily making money.
Lasting works of art in these fields tend to be more accidental than planned in my opinion. Especially when you consider how the business side of them both work. It’s no exaggeration to add that sometimes the business side becomes more interesting than the product side.
How could it not when you have characters such as Louis B Mayer, Harry Cohn, Howard Hughes etc all involved?
And it was little different when Stan Lee was ordered by Marvel Comics publisher (his uncle Martin Goodman) to try to come up with something to match DCs Justice League of America.
A swift change of direction saw Marvel move from churning out westerns, romances, horrors into churning out superheroes.
At no point was Lee instructed to produce great works of art.
Here’s comics historian Barry Pearl writing on the matter for the Crivens! Comics & Stuff! website.
"No matter what fans want to think, producing comics is a business - the art and story come second. Stan’s job was to make money for Marvel, produce comics on time, and increase sales, something which he did very well.
Even Jack Kirby said that his job was to "sell magazines" - not necessarily to create good ones, but to sell them.
In 1960 Marvel was selling 16,000,000 copies a year. By 1966, Steve Ditko had left and, even though he was no longer on Spider-Man and Dr. Strange, Marvel was selling 35,000,000 comics a year."
https://kidr77.blogspot.com/?m=1
Is any of it art?
Well, that’s usually down to the eye and ear of the beholder, isn’t it?