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Post by Deleted on Apr 5, 2022 11:48:36 GMT 10
I want to forget it even exists. Maybe the 2020s aren't so great afterall if it gave birth to this ear-bleeding genre.
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Post by John Titor on Apr 5, 2022 11:49:53 GMT 10
I want to forget it even exists. Maybe the 2020s aren't so great afterall if it gave birth to this ear-bleeding genre. Came out in the 2010s, well evolved ever so slightly from PC Music
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Post by nightmarefarm on Apr 5, 2022 11:55:54 GMT 10
Still better than most 2010s hits
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Post by Deleted on Apr 5, 2022 12:09:36 GMT 10
Still better than most 2010s hits Even 2010s trap is more tolerable. And everyone knows how much I hate trap.
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Post by Telso on Apr 5, 2022 13:14:56 GMT 10
Charli XCX has made some good tunes in this style, but otherwise I don't follow it that much
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Post by 10slover on Apr 5, 2022 21:16:30 GMT 10
Hyper pop is not a genre.
And even if it was one, i would be very far from the worst genre (hipster acoustic music)
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Post by astropoug on Apr 6, 2022 9:16:58 GMT 10
Hyper pop is not a genre. And even if it was one, i would be very far from the worst genre (hipster acoustic music) John Titor approves your comment
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Post by Deleted on Apr 6, 2022 11:26:12 GMT 10
If hyper pop becomes the mainstream sound in the mid '20s, I will give up on popular music and officially declare the early '20s as the last era of good music.
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Post by John Titor on Apr 6, 2022 11:33:38 GMT 10
If hyper pop becomes the mainstream sound in the mid '20s, I will give up on popular music and officially declare the early '20s as the last era of good music. It wont, I will delete my account on Popedia if it does, that is how confident I can tell you it wont lol
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Post by crystalmetheny0428 on Apr 6, 2022 11:39:58 GMT 10
i don’t actually know anyone who listens to hyperpop it’s mainly 13 year old nonbinary types
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Post by Deleted on Apr 6, 2022 11:54:51 GMT 10
If hyper pop becomes the mainstream sound in the mid '20s, I will give up on popular music and officially declare the early '20s as the last era of good music. It wont, I will delete my account on Popedia if it does, that is how confident I can tell you it wont lol I would delete my account as well.
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Post by xamo on Apr 6, 2022 16:20:43 GMT 10
Hyperpop isn't a genre, it's more of a bunch of internet-based music scenes that are loosely connected to each other (discord, instagram, queer/nonbinary, etc). And luckily for hyperpop haters, 2021 will probably remain the peak of that scene. The artists who are associated with that scene have all fled the stereotypical sound, opting for either guitar based music, or club music. Pretty much most of the hyper pop artists are doing either club music or alternative/experimental pop now. I think this current wave of Y2K is on its way out now actually, at least with the innovators of pop culture, who are now switching to maximalist Japanese/Shibuya-Kei aesthetics, indie sleaze/club glam, or apocalyptic/distressed stuff. Being terminally online isn't cool anymore, so this "pandemic" influenced hyperpop scene could never make it past 2022 anyways. If by some weird miracle hyperpop does manage to gain even more popularity (despite the fact that its most influential contributors are fleeing the scene like the occupants of the titanic), I'll upload a video of me eating my shirt.
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Post by John Titor on Apr 7, 2022 1:26:37 GMT 10
Hyperpop isn't a genre, it's more of a bunch of internet-based music scenes that are loosely connected to each other (discord, instagram, queer/nonbinary, etc). And luckily for hyperpop haters, 2021 will probably remain the peak of that scene. The artists who are associated with that scene have all fled the stereotypical sound, opting for either guitar based music, or club music. Pretty much most of the hyper pop artists are doing either club music or alternative/experimental pop now. I think this current wave of Y2K is on its way out now actually, at least with the innovators of pop culture, who are now switching to maximalist Japanese/Shibuya-Kei aesthetics, indie sleaze/club glam, or apocalyptic/distressed stuff. Being terminally online isn't cool anymore, so this "pandemic" influenced hyperpop scene could never make it past 2022 anyways. If by some weird miracle hyperpop does manage to gain even more popularity (despite the fact that its most influential contributors are fleeing the scene like the occupants of the titanic), I'll upload a video of me eating my shirt. Indie Sleaze is not going to catch on, it's just a bunch of websites kept reposting what a tik toker said and thought it was going to be a wave. This happens a ton in media where things are just reposted and people take it as having validity. Vice even tho I hate the website put it perfectly www.vice.com/en/article/jgmkdp/the-indie-sleaze-revival-isnt-real-its-just-an-echo-chamber"There has been an inundation of articles embracing the trend’s return: Dazed Digital poses, “WTF is Indie Sleaze and is it actually making a comeback?”; Marie Claire describes, “How The Indie Sleaze Aesthetic Made Its Triumphant Return”; GQ says, “Here's what the rise of ‘Indie Sleaze’ means for your wardrobe”; Vogue asks, “Are You Ready For The Return Of Indie Sleaze?”; and yes, VICE divulges: “Here’s What Indie Sleaze Was Really Like At The Time”
"Numerous outlets claim the revival of indie sleaze without pointing to any real evidence or discourse other than “this TikTokker says so”. There’s great interest in defining “what indie sleaze is” and a huge draw in the nostalgia supplied by these images of a barely-forgotten time.
It’s a symptom of media in the 2020s. An idea has the propensity to go viral without having any basis in reality. As they say, “If people are talking about it, it’s worth writing about”
As of 2022 right now there are no 2023 collection from Chanel, Dior, Givenchy, Prada, YSL that are implementing Indie Sleaze. That Tik Toker Mandy Lee that claimed Indie Sleaze is a thing ( the source all the other websites were quoting) now gets laughed at for making up trends and seeing if something sticks. She attempted to claim SuperFlat Pop as her own a few months ago with a different name lol, last year she said Elf Core was the new buzzword despite Goblin Core already being an established thing lol
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Post by xamo on Apr 7, 2022 4:56:39 GMT 10
Hyperpop isn't a genre, it's more of a bunch of internet-based music scenes that are loosely connected to each other (discord, instagram, queer/nonbinary, etc). And luckily for hyperpop haters, 2021 will probably remain the peak of that scene. The artists who are associated with that scene have all fled the stereotypical sound, opting for either guitar based music, or club music. Pretty much most of the hyper pop artists are doing either club music or alternative/experimental pop now. I think this current wave of Y2K is on its way out now actually, at least with the innovators of pop culture, who are now switching to maximalist Japanese/Shibuya-Kei aesthetics, indie sleaze/club glam, or apocalyptic/distressed stuff. Being terminally online isn't cool anymore, so this "pandemic" influenced hyperpop scene could never make it past 2022 anyways. If by some weird miracle hyperpop does manage to gain even more popularity (despite the fact that its most influential contributors are fleeing the scene like the occupants of the titanic), I'll upload a video of me eating my shirt. Indie Sleaze is not going to catch on, it's just a bunch of websites kept reposting what a tik toker said and thought it was going to be a wave. This happens a ton in media where things are just reposted and people take it as having validity. Vice even tho I hate the website put it perfectly www.vice.com/en/article/jgmkdp/the-indie-sleaze-revival-isnt-real-its-just-an-echo-chamber"There has been an inundation of articles embracing the trend’s return: Dazed Digital poses, “WTF is Indie Sleaze and is it actually making a comeback?”; Marie Claire describes, “How The Indie Sleaze Aesthetic Made Its Triumphant Return”; GQ says, “Here's what the rise of ‘Indie Sleaze’ means for your wardrobe”; Vogue asks, “Are You Ready For The Return Of Indie Sleaze?”; and yes, VICE divulges: “Here’s What Indie Sleaze Was Really Like At The Time”
"Numerous outlets claim the revival of indie sleaze without pointing to any real evidence or discourse other than “this TikTokker says so”. There’s great interest in defining “what indie sleaze is” and a huge draw in the nostalgia supplied by these images of a barely-forgotten time.
It’s a symptom of media in the 2020s. An idea has the propensity to go viral without having any basis in reality. As they say, “If people are talking about it, it’s worth writing about”
As of 2022 right now there are no 2023 collection from Chanel, Dior, Givenchy, Prada, YSL that are implementing Indie Sleaze. That Tik Toker Mandy Lee that claimed Indie Sleaze is a thing ( the source all the other websites were quoting) now gets laughed at for making up trends and seeing if something sticks. She attempted to claim SuperFlat Pop as her own a few months ago with a different name lol, last year she said Elf Core was the new buzzword despite Goblin Core already being an established thing lol Ugh I don't like that tik toker. She was caught stealing from CARI and other archive/aesthetic groups and she continuously attempts to pass them off as her own. They pretty much banned her from ever entering that. I think I meant to say bloghouse-esque stuff and 2000s club culture was catching on especially in NYC rave/club circles, but that could just be a local Brooklyn trend. Not anything like 2011 Cobrasnake.
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Post by John Titor on Apr 7, 2022 5:03:55 GMT 10
Indie Sleaze is not going to catch on, it's just a bunch of websites kept reposting what a tik toker said and thought it was going to be a wave. This happens a ton in media where things are just reposted and people take it as having validity. Vice even tho I hate the website put it perfectly www.vice.com/en/article/jgmkdp/the-indie-sleaze-revival-isnt-real-its-just-an-echo-chamber"There has been an inundation of articles embracing the trend’s return: Dazed Digital poses, “WTF is Indie Sleaze and is it actually making a comeback?”; Marie Claire describes, “How The Indie Sleaze Aesthetic Made Its Triumphant Return”; GQ says, “Here's what the rise of ‘Indie Sleaze’ means for your wardrobe”; Vogue asks, “Are You Ready For The Return Of Indie Sleaze?”; and yes, VICE divulges: “Here’s What Indie Sleaze Was Really Like At The Time”
"Numerous outlets claim the revival of indie sleaze without pointing to any real evidence or discourse other than “this TikTokker says so”. There’s great interest in defining “what indie sleaze is” and a huge draw in the nostalgia supplied by these images of a barely-forgotten time.
It’s a symptom of media in the 2020s. An idea has the propensity to go viral without having any basis in reality. As they say, “If people are talking about it, it’s worth writing about”
As of 2022 right now there are no 2023 collection from Chanel, Dior, Givenchy, Prada, YSL that are implementing Indie Sleaze. That Tik Toker Mandy Lee that claimed Indie Sleaze is a thing ( the source all the other websites were quoting) now gets laughed at for making up trends and seeing if something sticks. She attempted to claim SuperFlat Pop as her own a few months ago with a different name lol, last year she said Elf Core was the new buzzword despite Goblin Core already being an established thing lol Ugh I don't like that tik toker. She was caught stealing from CARI and other archive/aesthetic groups and she continuously attempts to pass them off as her own. They pretty much banned her from ever entering that. I think I meant to say bloghouse-esque stuff and 2000s club culture was catching on especially in NYC rave/club circles, but that could just be a local Brooklyn trend. Not anything like 2011 Cobrasnake. def on the same page with you, that woman is a fraud lol, She posted a video last year like "Pancake pop" I was like WTF this is Super Flat pop LMAO. I hope her channel gets deleted.
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