It’s fire rn y’all nikkas just old as fukk and don’t know how to find music apparently
no she didn'tSza just dropped a classic
Absolutely did. Fire front to back. Relatable music for men and women also.no she didn't
The “soul” in black music is gone.
Because the average consumer has no standards, no preference. They listen to whatever comes out. Let's say you run a company and your product becomes worse quality wise, you hire worse specialists but you still sell well. And then a lot of musicians who were great and were capable of protecting the art form from losing its value so drastically actually did nothing at all.
A lot of the music is either bad quality or it tries to emulate a successful formula from the past and it sounds like something you heard many times before.
Who are the next artists that have a huge star power and make a music we haven't heard before? Someone who would influence the next generation of great artists?
It’s fire rn y’all nikkas just old as fukk and don’t know how to find music apparently

There is definitely a way to gauge the quality of art.There's no way to quantify this though because there's no real consensus on good or bad music because it's art. Two people could be listening to the same song and walk away with different opinions.
The only real information we have to justify quality is the numbers. Nobody actually buys music any more and that's been the case since 2014. Everything is about streaming now and even with streaming, it's a lot of decades old music that is out streaming new music. There's albums that have spent an entire decade on the charts. This was never the case before.
Blame the Telecommunication Act and the mergers that created these giga mega media corporations.Modern music is run by corporations, and their primary interest is making the most money possible with the least risk possible. As a result, modern music is extremely formulaic and tends to follow generic, low-brow trends which they know come with a guarantied audience.
Of course, corporations have always ran shyt. But in the past they didn't have the formulas down so clearly. That meant they had to guess a lot more, which resulted in variety, and executives spent a lot more time promoting their personal favorites, with some executives being good at recognizing real talent. Modern music executives don't push their personal favorites or actually talented artists anymore unless they fit a particular formula that they know will result in profits.
Mainstream is trash, I know it’s bad when I’m listening to a white dude who can rap better than most of these wack ass mainstream acts. Underground is where he quality is at.
Sometimes it's quite obvious when someone can't sing or rap on beat, things like that. Or if someone just made bunch of chaotic sounds. I remember skrillex era from like 12 years ago. It sucked, it sounded like bunch of old printer noises mixed with dial up connection sounds. Thankfully that era did not go for too long, Unfortunately we have a whole bunch of other wack shyt nowadays anyway.There's no way to quantify this though because there's no real consensus on good or bad music because it's art. Two people could be listening to the same song and walk away with different opinions.
The only real information we have to justify quality is the numbers. Nobody actually buys music any more and that's been the case since 2014. Everything is about streaming now and even with streaming, it's a lot of decades old music that is out streaming new music. There's albums that have spent an entire decade on the charts. This was never the case before.
This has ALWAYS been the case though. Nothing has changed in that regard.
There was always a science to it. Watch a documentary on Motown and look at what went into getting the music to the masses. Music is an industry for a reason.
Blame the Telecommunication Act and the mergers that created these giga mega media corporations.
Blame capitalism.
This is partly true. I saw a tweet talking about how afro beats doesn't refer to women derogatorily.Afrobeats artists don't make vulgar music, they make music that your whole family can listen to
Even rnb artists are just cringe worthy to listen to now, everyone wants to curse and act like the rap artists do.
Spot on!Modern music is run by corporations, and their primary interest is making the most money possible with the least risk possible. As a result, modern music is extremely formulaic and tends to follow generic, low-brow trends which they know come with a guarantied audience.
Of course, corporations have always ran shyt. But in the past they didn't have the formulas down so clearly. That meant they had to guess a lot more, which resulted in variety, and executives spent a lot more time promoting their personal favorites, with some executives being good at recognizing real talent. Modern music executives don't push their personal favorites or actually talented artists anymore unless they fit a particular formula that they know will result in profits.