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This title thread refers to pop FM top 40.
But... The internet has changed everything. Some of the very young musicians can make a study of their inspirations so easily nowdays. I would argue that the level of musicianship is reaching new heights because of that. If you can find it. People have just as much passion for music as they ever did. Victor Wooten impressed me as much as any bass player I am familiar with and he isn't done yet. I remember having my head turned by Stanley Jordan because he played like nobody I had seen before. Now it isn't quite as unique. Evidence...https://youtu.be/sMbW4sptVnEhttps://youtu.be/sMbW4sptVnE
I think you make an interesting point here, although I'm not sure that this level of virtuosity is any less unique inasmuch as it is just more visible these days, due to the fact that any kid can post a video on Youtube and be seen worldwide. I didn't know anything about Vittorio Camardese until recently:https://youtu.be/UmTQYquqxSYObviously Dr. Camardese was a very gifted individual who most likely had no reference to this technique beforehand that became almost ubiquitous many years later after Eddie Van Halen. And even Eddie was very critical of the imitators who came after him, accusing them of sounding like typewriters with AM radio tone. Music as an athletic sport rather than artistic expression can be a downside too, to this kind of a trend.As for Hendrix, this kind of points to the other side of the argument. He is often cited as the greatest guitarist ever, and I think even he would have disagreed with that. I think Jimi was obsessed with getting the sounds out of his head into the world, by any means necessary, and for him it was usually due to having a guitar in his hand. And the guitar has been such a lead focused instrument for so long now that people forget what a great rhythm player Jimi, and Eddie, both were. You can even go back further in time to hear Barrios playing his own music on Youtube, and of course the Youtube commentators reply with numerous objections to his technique. But he was a composer with a guitar (who hasn't been alive since 1944), not a technician looking to be the next circus act. Anyway that's way OT. Let's hope the new generation of musicians will inspire us as serious listeners instead of being mere spectators.
Can you explain what the difference is between pop FM top 40 and pop AM top 40, or just "top 40"? As far as I can tell, they are all exactly the same.Today they are all the same crap, but in the 80/90s AM used to play country music and FM international music and easy listening.
Maybe the 90s was the worse era for good music in FM as a huge wave of screaming radio speakers man and woman took over the urban FMs in my country, this harmful influence came from the US radios, so some 10 years ago I noticed that on the Internet this had disappeared or diminished.
I think the title of this thread should be renamed from "The Real Reason Why Modern Day Music Is So Awful" to "The Real Reason Why Modern Day Radio Stations Suck So Bad". And the link I posted before perfectly explains this. Telecommunications Act of 1996.
It is said that the guilty of Break Dance creation was Herbie Hankook and his Head Hunters album released 1973 but I fail to listen how:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3m3qOD-hhrQ