Keeping Up With Music

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I am listening to music chronologically, currently up to 1937, I devote December each year to new music. Don't know if this is a good idea TBH, makes me too reliant on end of year lists, which have various issues.

Anti-Cop Ponceortium (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Thursday, 2 July 2020 09:25 (three years ago) link

classic ECM boring bastard jazz would be like idk Jan Gabarek or something. not Don Cherry!!

fp'ed plax for dissing Horace Tapscott. Fucking disgraceful posting!

calzino, Thursday, 2 July 2020 09:41 (three years ago) link

thread was always destined to turn into ignorantly taking a shit on music I'm not inclined to investigate space!

calzino, Thursday, 2 July 2020 09:44 (three years ago) link

listen to The Dark Tree while kneeling on hard rice on a stone floor as a penance

calzino, Thursday, 2 July 2020 09:50 (three years ago) link

Does anybody else feel the sudden and enormous profusion of music even compared to a few years ago?

imago, Thursday, 2 July 2020 10:01 (three years ago) link

Most certainly. And to answer your original question: there is no way to keep up. Over the past ten years I'd say I've gradually found it harder to keep up, whilst simultaneously seeing that what I would like to keep up with growing exponentially. There really is only one way to somewhat come to terms with this, to not implode or go insane trying to keep up while you know you can't, and that is to stop worrying and love as much music as you can.

Like one individual can't keep up with everything, communties can't either. But a small community like ILM is doing a hell of a lot of heavy lifting, covering pretty much all shades of music; whether not always as deep as sub-communities, it does cover nearly all the bases. I don't believe bigger communities do a better job: RYM, or Reddit, or what have you, may be bigger in numbers but that has its own downsides. Of flattening out niches, for one; of having to learn the specific social norms and vagaries.

Music has really gotten much, due to technical advancements, the internet as a place to network, share and collaborate, the demise of the Big Labels etc. These are all very good things. The only way I can cope is acknowledging I'll miss out on stuff, all the time, as there's not enough time to read about, track down, and yes, listen to everything. I'm here for the ride, and treasuring what I can, it's a beautiful ride.

Scampidocio (Le Bateau Ivre), Thursday, 2 July 2020 10:42 (three years ago) link

fp'ed plax for dissing Horace Tapscott. Fucking disgraceful posting!

― calzino, Thursday, 2 July 2020 09:41 (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink

Lol I didn't mean this as a diss of tapscott, it was intended more as a mea culpa for wasting these records on my fairly half assed low level engagement.

plax (ico), Thursday, 2 July 2020 10:53 (three years ago) link

I appreciate the sentiment of yr post however

plax (ico), Thursday, 2 July 2020 10:54 (three years ago) link

I know I can't keep up so I mostly listen to older releases I haven't heard yet by artists I already like or well-known artists/well-regarded albums that I've wanted to check out. I know that a lot of music I would love slips through my grasp with this approach - I basically never listen to new releases unless they are by artists I already love. but I reliably find a lot of great music this way. the past two years I've had more time than usual to listen to music so I have heard a few of the more hyped releases as they come out (like Dua Lipa - very good!)

Vinnie, Thursday, 2 July 2020 11:02 (three years ago) link

I would expect at least some drop off in quantity of some kinds of music (i.e. those involving muktiple people rehearsing or recording in small rooms) in the second half of this year.

Noel Emits, Thursday, 2 July 2020 11:06 (three years ago) link

oh god, they're so gifted!

imago, Thursday, 2 July 2020 11:09 (three years ago) link

The future is infinite singer songwriters playing "lockdown" albums live on Zoom to nobody. And chiptunes. Always chiptunes. Until the EMP event anyway.

Noel Emits, Thursday, 2 July 2020 11:18 (three years ago) link

I feel weirdly guilty having given up almost entirely on new music. I feel like I have to justify it to myself!

thomasintrouble, Thursday, 2 July 2020 11:53 (three years ago) link

According to Discogs, there have been 144,527 ambient albums alone released in the 2010s, with 7437 releases so far in 2020. God knows how many for more popular genres.

mirostones, Thursday, 2 July 2020 12:00 (three years ago) link

1,112,782 rock albums in 2010s.

mirostones, Thursday, 2 July 2020 12:02 (three years ago) link

Ilm is probably the best curator we could hope for. A body with a hundred heads

calstars, Thursday, 2 July 2020 12:02 (three years ago) link

I've always felt the presence of all the stuff I didn't know and found it energising. as my tastes have broadened, so have the boundaries of my ignorance. it's great!

rumpy riser (ogmor), Thursday, 2 July 2020 12:15 (three years ago) link

I also think it's fine to treat 2020 as a hiatus of sorts, because most of the music that's coming out doesn't exist in any societal context out there bar those imposed by lockdowns, which is kind of interesting in its own right but there's a wider question of what new music means when it can't be properly performed, or experienced in the usual ways, when people can't throw parties, when they can't go out and dance.

Matt DC, Thursday, 2 July 2020 12:34 (three years ago) link

sorry for Geir but partying and dancing are tbah a very specific and not at all predominant mode of music consumption imo

imago, Thursday, 2 July 2020 12:49 (three years ago) link

having Despacito on in the background is hardly listening to music anyway

imago, Thursday, 2 July 2020 12:49 (three years ago) link

My takeaway from this thread: there's a new Hail Spirit Noir, and it's probably rad

handsome boy modelling software (bernard snowy), Thursday, 2 July 2020 12:52 (three years ago) link

partying and dancing are tbah a very specific and not at all predominant mode of music consumption imo

^^^

For me, a show is more appealing when it's not tied to an album, when it's "If you don't come down, you'll have missed out." For example, I saw a band at the beginning of this year deliver an awesome show at the Jazz Gallery - three tenor saxophonists (one of whom doubled on soprano, and another on baritone), bass, and drums - and I know they're never going to make an album; they just came together to play that music, two sets a night for two nights, done and gone. If you weren't there, you missed it, period. That's the appeal of in-person music for me now.

but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 2 July 2020 12:54 (three years ago) link

partying and dancing are tbah a very specific and not at all predominant mode of music consumption imo

This is absolute nonsense fwiw, if you were to write any kind of serious history of popular music, including jazz, then dancing and social functions would be absolutely central to it. There's the personal, private side as well obviously, but most forms of music are rooted in people being able to congregate together in social situations.

Matt DC, Thursday, 2 July 2020 13:05 (three years ago) link

The meaning of what is and isn't social has changed in the last decade or so but the sudden removal of in-person social contact is as profound a contextual change as anything that has happened in the history of pop, even if the sonic results by and large haven't reached our ears yet.

Matt DC, Thursday, 2 July 2020 13:09 (three years ago) link

xp I took a class on history of American popular music during my undergrad, and one of our assigned texts was Elijah Wald's excellent How the Beatles Destroyed Rock & Roll, which some people on this board are doubtless familiar with. It does a very good job of highlighting how histories of popular music (jazz, rock) have been distorted by the biases of collectors and critics, who overvalue records and a small subset of 'innovative' artists, and give short shrift to the 'business-as-usual' of the working bands playing crowd-pleasing music in ballrooms, on radio and TV broadcasts, etc.

handsome boy modelling software (bernard snowy), Thursday, 2 July 2020 13:15 (three years ago) link

Over the last couple of years I've definitely developed a decision paralysis due to the insane amount of new music available, and have simultaneously lost a lot of trust in the recommendations of most online publications that are supposed to spotlight the best of it. As a result I haven't kept up with new music very much since maybe 2017 or 2018. I'm mainly spending my time discovering 'new to me' old music, and learning a lot more about the history of pop music in the process. I don't particularly feel like I'm missing out, and I trust that the best stuff will find me eventually.

The time I most enjoy listening to new music is when the end of year polls happen here. There's no place I trust more for directing me towards new music, but I find that ILM throughout the year is a bit of a jumble. There's too many threads to keep up with, and I feel like I need more than just one person to say something is good before I'll invest the time in checking it out.

triggercut, Thursday, 2 July 2020 13:17 (three years ago) link

I made an effort to be up-to-the-minute and right on the cutting edge of music through like maybe 2005 and then slowly relinquished that tendency to the point where I'm lucky at any given point if I've heard more than three albums that were released in the last five years. I've gone deep into the crates wrt the music of the past, tho.

Well, that's a fine howdy adieu! (Old Lunch), Thursday, 2 July 2020 13:21 (three years ago) link

histories of popular music (jazz, rock) have been distorted by the biases of collectors and critics, who overvalue records and a small subset of 'innovative' artists, and give short shrift to the 'business-as-usual' of the working bands playing crowd-pleasing music in ballrooms, on radio and TV broadcasts, etc.

The Wald book is very good; a decent companion piece (for me, and potentially others) is Bob Porter's Soul Jazz, which studies jazz acts that were popular in Harlem and Newark during the 1940s-1970s, as opposed to the (largely white) critic-approved artists who played the Greenwich Village clubs.

but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 2 July 2020 13:41 (three years ago) link

The meaning of what is and isn't social has changed in the last decade or so but the sudden removal of in-person social contact is as profound a contextual change as anything that has happened in the history of pop, even if the sonic results by and large haven't reached our ears yet.

Music doesn't magically appear though, it still has to be made. What is heard in a social context might have been made a year ago or more!

And most likely made in isolation just as before. Has creation-time context changed?

saer, Thursday, 2 July 2020 13:50 (three years ago) link

Yeah that's true, question is what things sound like in six months to a year. But for now anything involving multiple instrumentalists in a studio is probably out, one person on a computer is a different thing entirely.

Matt DC, Thursday, 2 July 2020 13:53 (three years ago) link

popular music in general has been moving away from communal production and towards ppl individually beavering away at computers for a long time, lockdown inevitably fucks up all sorts of logistics but I think it's less disruptive to musicians in 2020 than it would have been at any other year in memory

rumpy riser (ogmor), Thursday, 2 July 2020 13:55 (three years ago) link

^^^

i wasn't talking about the loss of live performance, which is a totally different thing (and thread)

imago, Thursday, 2 July 2020 14:10 (three years ago) link

Isolation is a social context

plax (ico), Thursday, 2 July 2020 14:11 (three years ago) link

I find it particularly difficult as over the years my sensitivity to music has grown an awful lot. I don't find it easy to just have music on in the background, listening takes a lot out of me and I don't have much energy. Having something like a radio show to do focuses me, so that's been really good for me. Very much missing the live scene, though, not so much for the 'going out and seeing people' element, as I have embraced hermit-dom, but for the access to new DIY stuff.

I basically never listen to new releases unless they are by artists I already love.
― Vinnie

This is pretty much the opposite to me, I'm often much more interested in hearing someone new than another record by an artist I've already heard. I'll be super-excited about a second release from an artist, but by the third, unless they've established themselves as an artist whose records will all explore very different sounds, I'm kind of 'been there, done that' about it.

emil.y, Thursday, 2 July 2020 14:14 (three years ago) link

Yeah that's true, question is what things sound like in six months to a year. But for now anything involving multiple instrumentalists in a studio is probably out, one person on a computer is a different thing entirely.

― Matt DC, Thursday, July 2, 2020 8:53 AM (twenty-one minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink

i've seen a good number of bands isolating together. maybe we'll have a few hundred new trout mask replicas at the end of this thing.

ACABincalifornia (voodoo chili), Thursday, 2 July 2020 14:15 (three years ago) link

really envious of bands that live together with home studios

mellon collie and the infinite bradness (BradNelson), Thursday, 2 July 2020 14:19 (three years ago) link

Yeah I don't think we really know what kind of music people will want to both make and listen to in a year or so, it would feel bizarre for things to just restart and carry on in more or less the same way, but it might happen.

Still feels like, while there have been plenty of great records released in the last few weeks, there isn't very much happening out there right now so it's as good a time as ever to take the pressure off yourself to stay up to date.

Matt DC, Thursday, 2 July 2020 14:21 (three years ago) link

It’s a good time to be a one-man black metal band.

pomenitul, Thursday, 2 July 2020 14:22 (three years ago) link

really envious of bands that live together with home studios

― mellon collie and the infinite bradness (BradNelson), Thursday, July 2, 2020 9:19 AM (six minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink

yeah, home studio is definitely not the norm lol. but all these bands have some type of recording equipment and can do a 'songs from a room' type thing.

ACABincalifornia (voodoo chili), Thursday, 2 July 2020 14:28 (three years ago) link

xp to emil.y I still listen to probably 50% music by new-to-me artists (*checks Spotify queue* almost exactly!) but they just aren't 2020 releases typically. My knowledge of music, even canonical stuff, is pretty limited compared to a lot of ilxors, so there's still lots of very well-known, well-regarded albums I've never heard, and I tend to like a lot of them. Like triggercut, I love the end-of-year polls, especially tracks, because I often love a lot of what places. whereas it's too overwhelming to follow the many music threads here through the year

Vinnie, Thursday, 2 July 2020 15:45 (three years ago) link

Have the streaming platforms (or anyone) been setting up venues that allow bands to stream live shows? You'd think that would be a thing but I haven't heard much. The Oranssi Pazuzu show was really well done and that seems like the midland if template that could work.

Picasso visita el planeta de los shitposteros (Noel Emits), Thursday, 2 July 2020 16:03 (three years ago) link

Fuck. Midland if = kind of.

Picasso visita el planeta de los shitposteros (Noel Emits), Thursday, 2 July 2020 16:04 (three years ago) link

have the streaming platforms (or anyone) been setting up venues that allow bands to stream live shows?

I've seen a few shows like this on various platforms whose names escape me right now, where you buy a 'ticket' and get a link to a private stream or something.

turn the jawhatthefuckever on (One Eye Open), Thursday, 2 July 2020 16:12 (three years ago) link

Of course. I mean physical venues / studios for streaming shows.

Picasso visita el planeta de los shitposteros (Noel Emits), Thursday, 2 July 2020 16:15 (three years ago) link

This should really be on a "communal music in the time of plague" thread, I realise.

Picasso visita el planeta de los shitposteros (Noel Emits), Thursday, 2 July 2020 16:19 (three years ago) link

Ah I see, yeah I havent heard about any venues setting that up on their own. Although maybe some will start to once they realize that opening back up at 20% capacity wont be sustainable.

Re:the thread question, I used to spend a lot of time haunting RYM & slsk chatrooms & stuff trying to keep up with new music in a systematic/comprehensive way. I gave up on it when I realized it was resulting in me spending a lot of time listening to music that I didn't like (and often didn't expect to like), and it seemed like a perverse situation that was worsening the problem it was supposed to solve. Now I take the organic approach, follow my own tastes and interests completely, and don't stress about it. Good music that's new to me still manages to cross my path, probably at the same rate as before tbh, but I also spend 100% less time listening to stuff I'm not interested in out of some feeling of obligation or FOMO. (Also getting out of writing about music & film has done wonders for my abilities to enjoy both of those things.)

Being OK with ignoring music is a v liberating feeling, my only regret is feeling like I may have wasted some good listening years slogging through shit I didn't care about.

turn the jawhatthefuckever on (One Eye Open), Thursday, 2 July 2020 16:33 (three years ago) link

Being OK with ignoring music is a v liberating feeling, my only regret is feeling like I may have wasted some good listening years slogging through shit I didn't care about.

Feeling very seen rn.

pomenitul, Thursday, 2 July 2020 16:37 (three years ago) link

I havent heard about any venues setting that up on their own. Although maybe some will start to once they realize that opening back up at 20% capacity wont be sustainable.

The Village Vanguard, Smalls, and the Jazz Gallery in NYC are all doing this to some degree, and on the "new music"/modern composition side, so is National Sawdust. The Vanguard charges $7 to watch a show; I don't know what the others are charging.

but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 2 July 2020 16:49 (three years ago) link

xpost When I stopped regularly writing about music the first thing that fell off was keeping up with new stuff. On one hand, it's weird to look at lists of new releases or a year-end thing and not recognize anything. On the other, I figure if it's good enough it will get to me one way or the other. And regardless, the bazilions of albums I've listened to and loved all my life I don't listen to or love any less.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 2 July 2020 16:53 (three years ago) link

This is absolutely the first year I can remember where not only did I struggle to keep up with music, but I totally forgot about albums I liked from bands that I love. For example, I totally forgot that X released a good record this year. Or, the Dua/Jessie/Roisin glossy nu-disco trio, for example, all albums I really enjoyed and enjoy listening to yet keep forgetting to play. Or Fiona Apple and Kathleen Edwards, two artists I love that released great new comebacks that I love that I just keep forgetting to play. Looking over year-end lists, there is just so much I haven't heard or even heard of, and of the stuff I have heard it's just downright impossible for me to keep straight in my brain, let alone fore of mind. So much music!

Weirdly, I wonder if this has been inadvertently pandemic related. My family is around all the time, but I'm a speaker guy, not a headphone guy, and just haven't been free to blast stuff on the stereo when the mood strikes. Hmm ...

― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 15 December 2020 21:59 (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink

I feel this post. I was reminded yesterday of the existence of the Eddie Chacon album, which I loved when I first heard it and then promptly forgot about. Dylan too!

I think this year I have listened to as much new music as ever, but in the same way that I struggle a bit to keep track of what happened in which month this year (like, all the jokes that currently it's the 247th of March or whatever), almost all experiences of music have felt more transient, and less amenable to ordering and recollection.

Tim F, Tuesday, 15 December 2020 23:58 (three years ago) link

one of the reasons i think tiktok has struck such a nerve and created so many big hits this year is that it helps people create those associations with songs that they aren't having in IRL

la table sur la table (voodoo chili), Wednesday, 16 December 2020 00:04 (three years ago) link

Right!

Including that we can't dance to these songs at a club but we can perform/watch tiktok dances.

Dancing at bars, albeit in small numbers, is starting to be allowed again in Australia for the first time since mid-March, and it's amusing to see teh-gays in particular express this sense of pent-up release at finally being able to dance in public to the broadly-recognised gay anthems of 2020 ("Physical", "Rain on Me", "WAP"), almost as if the very existence of these songs and their impact was somehow quasi-spectral until it could be properly acknowledged in that way.

Tim F, Wednesday, 16 December 2020 00:15 (three years ago) link

my real name rhymes with and has the exact same number of syllables as "a savage" and the fact I haven't been able to do a karaoke performance of Megan & Beyoncè with my personal spin on it is killing me

boxedjoy, Wednesday, 16 December 2020 00:45 (three years ago) link

xp great post, Tim

good karma, my aesthetic (morrisp), Wednesday, 16 December 2020 01:17 (three years ago) link

this year, probably more than any other, i've listened to the same 10-12 new or new-to-me albums hundreds of times. they were all very good at giving me what i needed in particular moments, and i kept coming back to them. i just didn't feel the need to adopt more, though i did scan through a few new releases here and there. my music listening experience is more and more becoming this reader response thing where every time i listen to the same thing my experience is a little different but no less rich. but the thing has to have sort of passed a few tests for it to get there, lol.

Dancing at bars, albeit in small numbers, is starting to be allowed again in Australia for the first time since mid-March, and it's amusing to see teh-gays in particular express this sense of pent-up release at finally being able to dance in public to the broadly-recognised gay anthems of 2020 ("Physical", "Rain on Me", "WAP"), almost as if the very existence of these songs and their impact was somehow quasi-spectral until it could be properly acknowledged in that way.

very jealous, i miss hearing music in a room with friends. some music just needs to be embodied and shared in social, physical space.

cosmic vision | bleak epiphany | erotic email (map), Wednesday, 16 December 2020 02:01 (three years ago) link

one of the reasons i think tiktok has struck such a nerve and created so many big hits this year is that it helps people create those associations with songs that they aren't having in IRL

Possibly the first thing I've read that's helped me understand tik tok!

Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 16 December 2020 04:02 (three years ago) link


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