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Post by 10slover on Mar 19, 2022 0:03:25 GMT 10
Sorry for the rambling but I need to vent a little. But oh my god do I hate baby boomers when they comment on contemporary music. I'm sorry but if you're clearly out-of-touch with nowadays' music, I don't think you should comment what you consider sounding modern or not. The context is that I follow a blog that reviews hits from the past, and TLC's "Creep" from 1994 popped up at some point, and a bunch of boomers were arguing that that song sounds very modern and could have easily been released today and how surprisingly minimal the differences between 1995's music and 2022's are. I mean really? Those shuffle beats, that funky baseline, those turntable scratches, that muted trumpet sample, it hardly sounds like a R&B song you'd hear nowadays, which are all about airy synths, deep basses and drawn-out vocals. Ugh! I see these kind of comments everywhere on YouTube, specially on throwback songs But i once saw someone saying that about a very obviously dated electropop song from the early 10s
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Post by dudewitdausername on Mar 19, 2022 2:18:43 GMT 10
Sorry for the rambling but I need to vent a little. But oh my god do I hate baby boomers when they comment on contemporary music. I'm sorry but if you're clearly out-of-touch with nowadays' music, I don't think you should comment what you consider sounding modern or not. The context is that I follow a blog that reviews hits from the past, and TLC's "Creep" from 1994 popped up at some point, and a bunch of boomers were arguing that that song sounds very modern and could have easily been released today and how surprisingly minimal the differences between 1995's music and 2022's are. I mean really? Those shuffle beats, that funky baseline, those turntable scratches, that muted trumpet sample, it hardly sounds like a R&B song you'd hear nowadays, which are all about airy synths, deep basses and drawn-out vocals. Ugh! ima be honest it's super crazy that 1995 is closer to 1969 than today
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