Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Dec 9, 2021 10:17:26 GMT 10
I’m thinking maybe in between the mid to late 1990s because that’s when the internet became mainstream. I’m also thinking maybe somewhere in the 2000s, especially when Myspace and YouTube got popular giving underground musicians some exposure. The 2010s seem to be the first full decade with an underground internet music scene.
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Post by 10slover on Dec 9, 2021 11:17:35 GMT 10
Prolly late 90s around the time music piracy became popular
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Post by slashpop on Dec 9, 2021 11:36:25 GMT 10
I’m thinking maybe in between the mid to late 1990s because that’s when the internet became mainstream. I’m also thinking maybe somewhere in the 2000s, especially when Myspace and YouTube got popular giving underground musicians some exposure. The 2010s seem to be the first full decade with an underground internet music scene. 1994 - All music/Underground Internet Music Archive allowed smaller 100s of bands to list their tracks via mp2s files and bios. Also in the 80s you had digital music being made on computers and shared online based on midi or Sid chip ( Commodore 64) people were exchanging files cracker groups would make or remix their own intros and upload it to a Bulletin Board ( online network before modern internet) where people could download the games and intros. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crack_introHere’s a sample
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Post by slashpop on Dec 10, 2021 17:18:36 GMT 10
1994 - All music/Underground Internet Music Archive allowed smaller 100s of bands to list their tracks via mp2s files and bios. Also in the 80s you had digital music being made on computers and shared online based on midi or Sid chip ( Commodore 64) people were exchanging files cracker groups would make or remix their own intros and upload it to a Bulletin Board ( online network before modern internet) where people could download the games and intros. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crack_introHere’s a sample Woah that’s so cool! Did DJ-ing on a computer became a thing at that time too? No I don't think so.
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