«Today’s Lyrics Are Pathetically Bad» Rick Beato


He know better than me. He is a musician and i am not.  I dont listen contemporary lyrics anyway, they are not all bad for sure, but what is good enough  is few waves in an ocean of bad to worst...

I will never dare to claim it because i am old, not a musician anyway,  i listen classical old music and world music and Jazz...

And old very old lyrics from Franco-Flemish school to Léo Ferré and to the genius  Bob Dylan Dylan...

Just write what you think about Beato informed opinion...

I like him because he spoke bluntly and is enthusiast musician ...

 

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mQoWUtsVFV0

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Maybe people who listen to the radio wouldn't listen to oldies stations if there was anything better on the new music stations.

In your previous comment you mentioned Lucinda, Timmins, and Earle, but as great as the are they're all in their 60s. I don't think they're the ones we're talking about when we discuss modern songwriters.

An era cannot be defined by his geniuses nor his geniuses can be explained by the era where they are born...

I believe in a synchronisation between the genius and his era...

Bob Dylan was made by his era and he contribute to his era make-off , they were synchronised...

 

It is well explained by Richard Tarnas in "Cosmos and Psyche" ...

 

Our era is an era of corporates control to a level never seen in human history, than education, medias, arts, are conditioned at birth and all along to satisfy "the owners" and we are not these owners...

It is no surprize that for the last decades the spirit of the era was the mechanization of the minds...

How can a poet sing against A.I. as Dylan did against vietnam and the Beatles ?

Is there no motives to sing a rebel song now ?

The social fabric has been pulverized to pieces. Protestations are now expressions of divisions and not a union against our masters ...

Music, lyrics, cannot go where our mind did not go... They comply ...

And a cry which cannot be heard is never launched...

A cry can made a beautiful poetical moving lyric if it is not just a refusal cry but a cry of hope too...

I dont see much hope ...

We dont lack geniuses , in music or poetry, we lack the grip on our own destiny and in our social fabric...

 There is nowhere in history great works of art without a firm grip by man in his social fabric...

Technocracy is not expression of a firm grip on the social fabric by the people but by very few  and not to serve people but their own survival...

Maybe people who listen to the radio wouldn’t listen to oldies stations if there was anything better on the new music stations.

Maybe. However, although I don’t listen to the radio much at all these days, going back a few (or even several) years when I did, but still in the 2000s, I remember that I thought that Brandi Carlile and Ryan Bingham and Josh Ritter and Justin Townes Earle were writing some good stuff. I realize that they are probably all in their 40s now (and I think Justin Earle would be in his 40s if he were still alive) but it is 2025 after all, meaning that they were probably in their 20s at the turn of the century.

But still, it’s hard to compete with the likes of ". . . hang on Sloopy, Sloopy hang on . . .".

 

Rodney Crowell's The Houston Kid is my favorite album so far this century. Buddy Miller is my favorite living musician/producer, Iris DeMent my favorite living songwriter. But there are plenty of others plowing the same field---great songs, great singing, great musicianship. This is in fact a golden age of great music, better imo than the 1960's. Sacrilege!

 

This is in fact a golden age of great music, better imo than the 1960's. Sacrilege!

Puh-leeze!  How could it ever possibly get any better than this here:

"When the moon is in the Seventh House, and Jupiter aligns with Mars. . ."

?