two sides of the same coin. My point was moreso a zealous attitude towards technology which would align with power, control, and going against the government as the Grimes song suggests.
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Nah, not two sides of the same coin at all. Anti-fascists in punk music don't want to create an authoritarian government and kill off people based on their ethnicity etc.
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I'm ending the my side of the conversation here. Shouldn't have started talking about it in the first place.
- The boundaries between radio-oriented pop and radio-oriented r&b will become increasingly blurry.
Yep. Western pop music will keep getting worse. As much as I can't stand people like Justin Bieber, Taylor Swift, Ariana Grande, and Maroon 5, I suspect that much worse artists are just around the corner.
- There will be a country rap album that gets good reviews within the next decade.
- We will think of trap rap as a broader movement with a variety of distinct sub-genres within the next decade.
- Bubblegum bass will continue infiltrating mainstream pop for a least a few more years.
- More music is going to made for and consumed within social network-specific formats. Think music within Vine (R.I.P.), Tik Tok, and unknown future social networks with adjacent concepts. Don't know if this will spur a new genre, but it's possible.
- LGBTQ culture will produce at least one significant genre that does not currently exist.
- The boundaries between radio-oriented pop and radio-oriented r&b will become increasingly blurry.
This is genuinely the only way I can see it going down. To a fucking tee. Add Latin music having more of a mainstream pull and you’re perfect. _________________ Some RYM paraphernalia:
Mistah FAB's last record was damn good. Unfortunately, that does not make him relevant to anybody under the age of 25. _________________ 2021 in full effect. Come drop me some recs. Y'all know what I like.
- There will be a country rap album that gets good reviews within the next decade.
- We will think of trap rap as a broader movement with a variety of distinct sub-genres within the next decade.
- Bubblegum bass will continue infiltrating mainstream pop for a least a few more years.
- More music is going to made for and consumed within social network-specific formats. Think music within Vine (R.I.P.), Tik Tok, and unknown future social networks with adjacent concepts. Don't know if this will spur a new genre, but it's possible.
- LGBTQ culture will produce at least one significant genre that does not currently exist.
- The boundaries between radio-oriented pop and radio-oriented r&b will become increasingly blurry.
Right on the money.
While we're on the topic, two things that surprised me about the 2010s were the increasing influence of electronic music on the R&B genre and the ascent of K-pop as a global commodity. The first I appreciated, the latter not so much, but I suspect that's just me getting old.
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