What opinion just makes you look like you aged 30 years

  • Hellfire103@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    I have three:

    • They don’t make things like they used to
    • We don’t need all these damned computers in everything
    • Modern music sounds like crap

    I’m 17.

    • nodiet@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      I think two out of those believes stem from survivorship bias. You think of old music and consumer products as superior because the only ones that “survived” are the good ones. No one remembers bad music from 50 years ago, and for every old thermos flask/blender/knife that you see around there are dozens that broke years ago.

      • ccunix@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        There was song from the 60s (supposedly the best music everyone tells me) called “7 little girls”. The chorus went “7 little girls sitting the back seat kissing and hugging with Fred”

        Thankfully a mostly forgotten song now, but a clear example of how bloody awful pop music is not a new phenomenon.

      • comfy@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        I say yes for the music one, maybe not for the first. There are literally different materials being used and increasingly optimised-for-profit-to-effort-ratio processes. Many things are just straight up made more cheaply because we have the technology to do that.

        Although for the music one, a relevant lyric comes to mind:

        Hip hop? Buddy, don’t get me started

        So how do you get yourself charted?

        Kids love this stuff 'cause it’s so new

        Put in a sample from a pop song too

        You’ve got a hit, how come it sold?

        The melody and it’s 30 years old!

        • JillyB@beehaw.org
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          1 year ago

          Hip hop is pretty mainstream now but it started as counter culture. And I don’t think a sample in a song makes it similar to the sampled song. A lot of tracks that rely on samples completely create something new. Look at J Dilla who relied almost entirely on samples. His music isn’t a collection of old songs, it’s entirely new songs. I guess this thread is for boomer takes.

          • ccunix@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            Or the Prodigy, who relied almost entirely on samples yet made some of the most exciting music we had ever heard.

    • weebs@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      My theory on the first one is that it’s usually hard to make things cheap and consistent, so it often starts off as bad, then good but expensive, and then trends towards and past “good enough”

      Modern music is fire when you know where to look but I’ve always felt like pop music has been taking a very slow weird turn. It seems like 1970s and earlier it was mostly good, and mostly good after, but at this point I’m just confused