Music That Will Never Die - Page 2
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  1. #11
    Tech Guru 3heads's Avatar
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    It's not really dependent on genre, imo. The good stuff will always prevail. That said: I do agree on the notion of classic Chicago house. One of the nicest parties I attended this year was an oldschool house night at Panorama Bar. Cece Rogers singing live and people like Martin Landsky playing all those classic house tunes made for a brilliant night to be remembered.
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  2. #12
    Tech Guru Ross's Avatar
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    Jungle.
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  3. #13
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    I believe funk as a genre will live on for a long time. Still cooperating funk tunes into my house sets
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  4. #14
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    Music that will "never" die...???

    Beethoven seems to have some staying power. Everything else seems a "flash in the pan." Heck, I can't even think of the last time I heard something from the 1930's...and that was just 80 short years ago.

    That said, I have no idea what songs the Roman legions marched along to.
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  5. #15
    Tech Mentor UncleFunky's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by soundinmotiondj View Post
    Music that will "never" die...???

    Beethoven seems to have some staying power. Everything else seems a "flash in the pan." Heck, I can't even think of the last time I heard something from the 1930's...and that was just 80 short years ago.
    Louis Armstrong music from the 30's has survived, as have a few of his jazzy contemporaries. People also pay big dollar for blues from that period, but most wouldn't be interested.

    But you hit the nail on the head, very little has, so far, survived the passing of the generation that produced it. That said, recorded music doesn't have a long history, so Martha and the Vandellas might still get an audience jumping in a hundred years time.

    Stuff will always be relevant if you DJ to the generation who were around when it was produced. But, I guess, it's harder to play older stuff to late teens and twenty somethings.

  6. #16
    Tech Guru SirReal's Avatar
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    The Beatles seem to have some staying power and a special place in my Rubber Soul.
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  7. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by Cook View Post
    Northern soul.
    *like*

    I know a bunch of cats that quit their full time jobs to dj and sell Northern Soul records. It's a crazy scene.

    I'm a drum and bass guy. I have no idea what happens with other genres. Dnb is full of tunes that are absolutely "timeless."

  8. #18
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    There's plenty of songs from the 30's and 40's that are still around, especially thanks to games like Bioshock and Fallout that reminded everyone how good they are.

    Also Daft Punk's Discovery and Gorillaz's eponymous debut, also the Arctic Monkey's first album are all classics.
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  9. #19
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    This...

    Quote Originally Posted by UncleFunky View Post
    Louis Armstrong music from the 30's has survived, as have a few of his jazzy contemporaries. People also pay big dollar for blues from that period, but most wouldn't be interested.
    And this...

    Quote Originally Posted by Sambo View Post
    There's plenty of songs from the 30's and 40's that are still around, especially thanks to games like Bioshock and Fallout that reminded everyone how good they are.
    Perhaps I should have used the example "...I can't even name a single tune the Romans whistled while they marched to the corners of the empire and brought civilization (and plumbing) to Europe..."

    I am by no means a Lindy Hop DJ....but I certainly do know that there is recorded music from the 1930's that survives to this day. The overwhelming majority of my collection of "early blues" comes from the post-WWII 1940's...there were HUGE advances in recording technology that make those recordings nicer to listen to.

    I am glad to see that my larger point was not lost.

    Quote Originally Posted by UncleFunky View Post
    But you hit the nail on the head, very little has, so far, survived the passing of the generation that produced it. That said, recorded music doesn't have a long history, so Martha and the Vandellas might still get an audience jumping in a hundred years time.

    Stuff will always be relevant if you DJ to the generation who were around when it was produced. But, I guess, it's harder to play older stuff to late teens and twenty somethings.
    This. (Had I more time when I posted originally, I was going to make these exact points.)

    The advent of "modern notation" means that an ENORMOUS amount of classical music survives to today. That is awesome. We may not have "period tuning" on modern symphonies...but we really don't need it (anymore than we need "period dentistry"...and for much the same reason).

    I have a fair collection of recordings that pre-date the 1940's...and while I love listening to them....it puts me in a very different head space than more modern recordings. It is a bit like watching silent movies...those early recordings feel "campy" and "quaint" rather than like "inspired master pieces". I "know" that is unfair...but I can not listen without hearing the limitations of the recording tech. By the late 1940's the tech was good enough that I am able to "ignore" it and instead focus on the music.

    It remains to be seen how much of this recorded music will stand the test of time. The "100 Best Ever" lists are (almost) exclusively focused on western music, American music (or at least music released in the American market), and 20th Century music. I am not clear if those view points will stand the test of time either...but they do dominate the discussions we have today.

    By the 1950's the Jukebox allowed people to hear music on demand...and that means that a LOT of the songs that made it into the jukebox also made it in to the collective memory of that generation. Aside....in modern American life a "tradition" seems to be anything that happened to a Baby Boomer more than once before they were 20. The general idea is that in order for music to remain "fresh" a piece of music needs to recall an emotional reaction.

    I was exposed to music from the 50's onward by my parents...they still listened to the music of their childhood & young adult hood when I was living at home. I play a lot of that same music for my kids. BUT...as time marches on, kids will "start" their music education based on music from the 60's, then 70's, then 80's...and the emotional imprints from earlier music will be lost.
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  10. #20
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    just some Artists that will still be played on ipods 50 yrs from now....

    Led Zeppelin
    Beatles
    Daft Punk
    KC and the Sunshine Band
    Most classic rock and Classic Disco, you cant go wrong.

    As for house music, alot of it never dies, but people do forget about it, for a few years at a time then old stuff gets popular again.

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