I live in NYC and I go to London fairly frequently for my job. I spend most of my spare time "soaking in" the atmosphere at the big music retailers (Virgin, Tower, etc.). I feel that the Brits "get it right" when it comes to selling music and in NYC, we have missed the boat entirely. There is a vibe and an aliveness in the UK shops and the US shops feel dead by comparison. 15 years ago, the US shops had a similar vibe to them ... Friday night at Tower would be like a party ... people would congregate at Tower after Thanksgiving and on New Year's Day. Not even close today.
For the most part, the US pop culture takes pride in having attitude and being angry and nowhere is this more evident than in our pop music. And granted the US pop scene goes through its cycles, but I also feel fairly comfortable saying that pop music is also the exclusive property of the young. Most people over 35 or so, don't connect with the pop culture. It's pretty much a "get with it" statement that pop music sends out, not a "how do I include you" invitation. And this is not just felt by the aging rock fans from the 70's ... speak to your lite jazz fans, who were the R&B fans from the 70's.
I agree with Ben that the UK covers the music scene in a more vibrant way ... I would add better, but there is also more mainstream acceptance in the UK, at least on the surface, of more styles of music. Maybe it's a regional or socio-economic thing ... more country in the South ... more R&B in the cities. There's not a lot of crossover though. "No Depression" a magazine that initially covered alt-country (which covers a lot of ground) is hung up, at least editorially, on protest music. "Blender" tried to cover the best in each non-classical genre, but seems hung up on hip-hop/R&B.
What I have not mentioned is the role that economics plays in all this (most of the big music retailers are slowly dying in the US), as well as our addiction to all things video. Most people are glued to the big screen TV at night and not to their stereos. Also, FM radio, as a primary source for the best music in each genre, is pretty much history these days ... so the primary way to hear new music for free is not utilized. Maybe satellite radio will change this, as I find myself listening to radio a lot more these days ... but at $12.95 a month it may be a non-choice for most.
There is a connection in the way that music is presented and sold to the public, that either enrolls people to want to come and get it or stay where they are and listen to what they have always listened to.
Great idea for a thread Lush.
Regards, Rich
For the most part, the US pop culture takes pride in having attitude and being angry and nowhere is this more evident than in our pop music. And granted the US pop scene goes through its cycles, but I also feel fairly comfortable saying that pop music is also the exclusive property of the young. Most people over 35 or so, don't connect with the pop culture. It's pretty much a "get with it" statement that pop music sends out, not a "how do I include you" invitation. And this is not just felt by the aging rock fans from the 70's ... speak to your lite jazz fans, who were the R&B fans from the 70's.
I agree with Ben that the UK covers the music scene in a more vibrant way ... I would add better, but there is also more mainstream acceptance in the UK, at least on the surface, of more styles of music. Maybe it's a regional or socio-economic thing ... more country in the South ... more R&B in the cities. There's not a lot of crossover though. "No Depression" a magazine that initially covered alt-country (which covers a lot of ground) is hung up, at least editorially, on protest music. "Blender" tried to cover the best in each non-classical genre, but seems hung up on hip-hop/R&B.
What I have not mentioned is the role that economics plays in all this (most of the big music retailers are slowly dying in the US), as well as our addiction to all things video. Most people are glued to the big screen TV at night and not to their stereos. Also, FM radio, as a primary source for the best music in each genre, is pretty much history these days ... so the primary way to hear new music for free is not utilized. Maybe satellite radio will change this, as I find myself listening to radio a lot more these days ... but at $12.95 a month it may be a non-choice for most.
There is a connection in the way that music is presented and sold to the public, that either enrolls people to want to come and get it or stay where they are and listen to what they have always listened to.
Great idea for a thread Lush.
Regards, Rich