Benj96         
         
Joshs         
         With the amount of data being provided by apps like Spotify and iTunes, along with the development of auto tune, it seems these days that song writing has become ever more of a formula/algorithm and singers are more often selected based on their physical attraction/charm or social standing rather than their raw singing ability. Is musical originality dying? Artists certainly are not as rare as they used to be. — Benj96
Joshs         
         Maybe consider this. I heard your argument being presented in similar terms 40 years ago; 30 years ago; 20 years ago... — Tom Storm
Fooloso4         
         
Tom Storm         
         
Banno         
         
Noble Dust         
         
Wayfarer         
         
Joshs         
         Writing and making music overlaps with but is not the same thing as entertainment. There may be original music we have never heard because it lacks what is regarded as entertainment value. Making music and listening to or purchasing music are not the same. — Fooloso4
Noble Dust         
         I learned to use LogicPro — Wayfarer
Joshs         
         Musical artistry can exist independently from the music industry. Musical artists like myself who still have day jobs can still create authentic music and share it with a few people. — Noble Dust
Wayfarer         
         
Joshs         
         
I recall reading that one of the things that drove Coltrane to his early death from heart attack was the requirement to keep creating something entirely new. Jazz at the time was in a period of frenetic evolution, with a handful of supremely talented individuals constantly trying to come up with the next big thing. Maybe the quest for novelty is one of the faces of the 'creative destruction' that characterises modern culture. — Wayfarer
Wayfarer         
         
Banno         
         
Janus         
         
Banno         
         Seeking novelty for its own sake paves the road to mediocrity. — Janus
Fooloso4         
         . Even the juxtaposition evident in this thread between performer and audience has a corrupting influence. — Banno
Janus         
         But an undue emphasis on "authenticity" will do exactly the same thing. — Banno
Joshs         
         I don't buy the idea that music and the arts in general are stagnating because everything has already been done, or we're not coming up with revolutionary worldviews The idea that there must be a continual evolution of new forms in art and music grows out of a simplistic view of quality in the arts being a matter of originality. Authenticity is more to the point; meaning finding your own voice or vision rather than imitating or comparing yourself with others. There is not endless scope for formal originality, but there is endless scope for authenticity. — Janus
Joshs         
         I don't buy the idea that music and the arts in general are stagnating because everything has already been done,
— Janus
And first nations Australians dance the same dance they have done for the last forty thousand years!
Long live stagnation! — Banno
Noble Dust         
         
Metaphysician Undercover         
         
Agent Smith         
         
180 Proof         
         
Noble Dust         
         I think our perception of originality in music (or whatever art form) is often just a projection unto the external world of our own experience of being exposed to new music. As we age, new music or art seems less original because it doesn't match our past seminal experiences of newness. We tend to chase that first "hit" of a perception-altering musical or artistic experience in the same way an addict chases that first high. — Noble Dust
Tom Storm         
         Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.