Well for one thing most music is a product of its time, and very rarely stays relevant for much longer than a few years. Why isn't ragtime piano music or 1920's organ music still popular on the radio today?
Some music just tends to get used more because it was just that good and enough people heard it, so it sticks around. A lot of it to me is luck as much it is composition prowess.
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I would say that '80s music is pretty popular, especially with people that were alive at the time.
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Most of the stuff you hear on the radio nowadays are just rehashes of popular 80s music with modern twists.
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quote:Originally posted by BlackBlade: Some music just tends to get used more because it was just that good and enough people heard it, so it sticks around. A lot of it to me is luck as much it is composition prowess.
Meh, neither. People want to believe it's luck because they don't understand why music that is demonstrably good is forgotten, and the obviously bad is sometimes remembered. But it's mostly marketing- nothing to do with luck really. If there was one factor in the music business that I would say is the *least* relevant, it's luck. Nobody at the top of the game is lucky- not in the sense I think you mean.
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Frontiers was the first vinyl album I ever bought with my own money.
I was such a fan of Journey that I created a party in Wizardry: Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord using the band member's names. Yes, there were only five... it wasn't easy to beat the game a player short, but I did!
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In a conversation about the 80's Dune film, a friend told me that the essence of all 80's culture is taking one's self too seriously. Discuss.
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