I've just finished reading Simon Reynolds 'Retromania'. A book about the
modern world's obsession with it's recent past, the way that future
technology is used mainly as a tool for looking back and the effect this
is having on the music of today.
Reynolds tries to explain why the music scene has plateaued since the
2000's with no new genres created and nothing groundbreaking produced.
He partly credits it to the fact that all music ever recorded is now
readily available for listening/sampling/copying and thinks that the
glut of influences is having an adverse affect and causing the
creativity of today's music makers to stagnate.
He compares the viewing habits of David Bowie's alien Thomas Jerome
Newton in 'The Man Who Fell to Earth', who watches hundreds of different TV channels at once, to the way music and culture is consumed in the
modern age and suggests that if we were to hear the music created by
Newton it would sound something like Rustie or Hudson Mohawke,
electronic artists who throw a bit of everything into the mix giving us
a sound that is on first listen rich and exciting but ultimately nauseating and bewildering to most.
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