Gildermershina wrote:
I get what you're saying, but I disagree strongly. To clarify, I'm not suggesting listening to music cannot be a background task, in fact, I often listen to music in the background, but the point is that I really listen, and I choose what I'm going to listen to. I specifically pick something based on my mood, an album, and listen to it in the intended order, where possible, in one sitting.
It's not so much about attention paid, although that is an important aspect, it's more about the perceived place of music in our lives, and the value attributed to it. If all the music ever recorded is available to steal almost instantaneously at any time, then who has the time to actually sit through an album? How do you decide which one? Especially if you're trying to keep up with all the music ever.
Beyond that even, something I've heard occasionally on last.fm, something which made me extremely angry, was in response to the idea that this guy who didn't like an album should listen to it more, to which he said something along the lines of "If you don't like something at first and you have to keep listening until you do, then you're just forcing it." That is the exact opposite of everything I believe about music. Most of the music I listen to I did not get immediately, but neither did I force myself to like anything I did not like. When I hear something new for the first time, I know going in it's not going to be like listening to an old favourite, so I'm looking for potential, something that I know will grow on me. The albums I enjoy the most are ones that I can listen to over and over and still hear new things, discover more and more.
It seems to me like if you download stuff for free, almost everything you actually listen to, it's like an audition, to see if it grabs you, and if it doesn't move onto the next thing right away. No maturation period. It also leads to people making ridiculous snap judgements about a new album so quickly, and so far in advance of its actual release. Since the music is going through this auditioning process all the time, that seems to breed an attitude of easily dismissing albums. Same fucking thing with movies. People will review new movies based on shitty quality rips they watched on their computer, windowed, while surfing the net. Music deserves your respect and your attention.
A lot of the time, a person really gets attached to the first release that they heard by a beloved band, so a new album is always always facing up to an insurmountable weight of expectation, and when you're in the mindset of making these snap judgements, there's no way you can decide in the space of 2 days that an album is shit compared to the old one that you love, and have been listening to for three years. And if you're making these binary judgements, you're likely also the sort of person who express opinion as fact. It's not that "I don't like the new album" it's that "the new album is shit, they used to be great, but now they sound like <insert unfashionably popular band here>", and because they then don't listen to that release again, further down the line that turns into "this band has been shit since album X, and if you like the new albums you're not a proper fan." Fuck that shit.
That is the devaluation I'm talking about.
Okay, so people may make snap judgements about music but my argument is it's not hindering your enjoyment of listening to music. If someone else decide they dislike Suede after only listening to 'Animal Nitrate', yeah I guess I'll get a little peeved, but that's only because I think they're missing out on something by not giving it a proper go. However just because they dislike the song doesn't mean it's any less important to me and doesn't mean I'll enjoy it any less.
Agreeably, it's a shame the charts are mostly filled with recycled, boring, pop one hit wonders and no one really digs any deeper into the undergrowth - however finding brilliant music, like was said in a different thread, is getting far easier with the development of the internet and things like Last.fm and Spotify. So I think it's simply down to a personal choice. If people decide they want to just keep to their one song they like and not listen to the entire album, that's up to them - but if they do want to dig deeper then they can do that to far easier than they used to be able to.
You talk about the masses of music being available as being a bad thing, I think the opposite completely because that can only be a good thing if you DO want to expand your musical horizons because you can access everything so much easier now. The only problem I see with people making, as you called them, snap judgements is that THEY'LL be the ones missing out on it and as long as I have the music I want to listen to and as long as I can find the music I want to listen to it doesn't bother me.
I agree that people do give bands new releases not enough time because of the expectation of the album, obviously. However that doesn't happen an awful lot in mainstream music with people like Ne-Yo and Rihanna. I mean even if the new album is a heap of shit and nothing compared to their first album it will still sell bazzillions because it's almost a fashion accessory, which is what
I think is devauling music. I don't think it's the way people make judgements or the way people find the music, it's the way they only like it because it's the
in thing. But as I've repeatadly say, as long as I get the music I want you can all do what you want and listen to what you want because I'll be having fun, the artists will be having fun, and everyone else will be having fun - possibly each for different reasons, but even if you do only listen to Chris Browns new song because it's 'cool' then that's a personal choice you can make and it's up to you if you don't want to try new things out.
TheCDs wrote:I would argue that the artists intended for the album to be heard from start to finish in order and in their entirety so anything other than that is really using it in a way the artist had not intended.
The problem with this statement is that maybe the artists did intend it to be listened to like that, however the kind of bands who usually bother with coming up with conceptual ideas and actually planning the placement of songs in depth are rarely top ten artists, hell they're rarely even top fifty so the kind of people who will listen to them will often listen to it all the way through, but if they DON'T listen to it all the way through then that's they're way of listening to it and it's what they want to do with it so people should have the power to do that. The band provides the music and the listener listens to it how he/she wants to listen to it. The artist shouldn't dictate how they intend for it to be listened to and the listener shouldn't dictate how they provide it.