DO YOU HAVE TIME FOR ‘NEW’ MUSIC?

December 29, 2019 – 8:42 am

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If you take 1948 as the year Rock and Roll was born, it’s now 71 years old. Can two generations, of 30 years each, share the same taste in music? By Paul Sinclair of Super Deluxe Edition.

As the year end approaches everyone starts to consider what their ‘albums of the year’ are.

I can tell you that over the festive period I will be publishing various SDE posts summarising some 2019 highlights, but I have to admit that when it comes to new albums, this year has been a bit of a struggle for me. I see people publishing lists of their ‘top 25’ new albums of 2019 and, in true sitcom fashion, end up spluttering into my SDE cup of tea. I’m struggling to recall 10 new albums I really liked.

Why? Well, I’m now in my fifties (13 days in, to be precise), have a busy family life (two teenage daughters), a demanding job (you know the one…) and can hardly find the time to listen to life-changing albums I’ve loved for decades, never mind checking out something brand new. And, of course, you have to factor in all the new box sets and deluxe editions that have come out - that it’s my job to digest. There are ‘previously unreleased demos’ to be listened to, 5.1 mixes to be ‘immersed’ in and so on.

SDE is primarily about reissues, so professionally it’s not exactly crucial that I stay abreast of new stuff, but I do like to try and keep my hand in and I would acknowledge that LOVING some new album, or discovering a fantastic new artist generates a buzz that is hard to beat. But with a shortage of valuable free time to properly listen to music, are you going to try to ‘get into’ the last Cranberries record or put on Innervisions? I’ve heard good things about that Cranberries album, by the way, but the reality is that it’s WAY down my list of priorities.

It’s rather like going to the cinema. If you only manage to get out with your other half once every couple of months, do you take a risk with the acclaimed but ‘challenging’ subtitled European drama or do just go and see the new Star Wars?* (*delete as appropriate and insert similar ‘franchise’ movie here).

I’m struggling to recall 10 new albums I really liked.

Life changes. When I was young (late teens, and all of my twenties) music was everything. Yes, I was into The Beatles, getting into Neil Young, etc, but there was so much more focus on the new, the current. In 1993 I was 23 years old and listening a lot to NEW albums like Blur’s Modern Life Is Rubbish, Crowded House’s Together Alone, Terence Trent D’Arby’s Symphony Or Damn, The The’s Dusk, INXS’s Welcome To Wherever You Are, Jellyfish’s Spilt Milk, The Auteurs New Wave, Duran Duran’s ‘Wedding Album’, Sting’s Ten Summoner’s Tales, Suede’s debut, David Bowie’s Black Tie White Noise (and The Buddha of Suburbia), Tears For Fears’ Elemental, Manic Street Preachers‘ Gold Against The Soul, U2’s Zooropa, Bjork’s Debut, Paul Weller’s Wildwood, Sheryl Crow’s Tuesday Night Music Club, a-ha’s Memorial Beach and Nirvana’s In Utero.

That’s some list and many of those records stayed with me for a lifetime. In terms of reissues, I remember enjoying The Police’s Message in a Box, and Prince’s The Hits/The B-Sides, but let’s be honest, the industry was almost 30 years younger than it is now and there simply wasn’t as much focus on the past.

Without wanting to sound like an old fart (failed, I know…), it’s impossible for me to imagine 2019 was full of such quality and variety. And even if it was, with virtually no music coverage on TV in the UK how do you find out about it? In theory, it’s never been easier. I had to physically BUY all those albums, spending £12.99 or more for a CD (I wasn’t earning much, so that was a big deal), but in 2019 you just open up Spotify (or another streaming service) and off you go. If I look at ‘new releases’ in Spotify today I find the following artists being ‘promoted’ at the very top: Stormzy, Popcaan, KAYTRANADA, Ms Banks, Sody, Camilia Cabello, Celeste, Bugzy Malone, Geko, French Montana, Jack Vallier, etc. Okay, I know Stormzy, but in general my reaction is WHO ARE THESE PEOPLE?

They are presumably connecting with millennials and generating massive amounts of streams via social media, YouTube, etc. I feel old. Nearly 30 years ago there was room for new and established acts in the mainstream pop charts. Suede, Blur, The Auteurs, Nirvana, Sheryl Crow were rubbing shoulders with Sting, U2, Duran Duran, INXS and Tears For Fears. ‘Old’ acts were still innovating, with U2 and INXS arguably producing some of the best records of their career between 1991 and 1993. It wasn’t a one-or-the-other scenario.

If I look at ‘new releases’ in Spotify today I find the following artists being ‘promoted’ at the very top: Stormzy, Popcaan, KAYTRANADA, Ms Banks, Sody, Camilia Cabello, Celeste, Bugzy Malone, Geko, French Montana, Jack Vallier, etc. Okay, I know Stormzy, but in general my reaction is WHO ARE THESE PEOPLE?

Last week, I read that a song called ‘Dance Monkey’ by an artist called ‘Tones and I’ had been at the top of the UK chart for 11 weeks!! The first female artist to spend more than 10 weeks at number one (Whitney Houston’s ‘I Will Always Love You’ was at the top for 10 weeks). I had no awareness of what the UK number one single was, and had no idea that this one track had enjoyed a record breaking run. I HAVEN’T EVEN HEARD THE SONG, which maybe tells you everything you need to know.

In the ‘old days’ massive chart runs (think Bryan Adams, Wet Wet Wet) were high in the public consciousness. People were talking about it. You’d moan in the post office queue or at the ‘water cooler’ at work about being sick of ‘that song’. The event became general knowledge, and a fact written on a future Trivial Pursuit question card. EVERYONE knew that ‘Love Is All Around’ was one week short of matching the 16-week run of ‘(Everything I Do) I Do It For You’. If you didn’t know, then hang your head in shame. Turns out ‘Tones and I’ is an Australian artist called Toni Watson. This is her second single and no one had heard of her 12 months ago. Sigh.

I’m not a complete old fogey. In 2016 I was really enjoying new music from Swedish musician singer and songwriter Skott. Her first few singles were amazing: ‘Porcelain’, ‘Amelia’, ‘Glitter & Gloss’ and ‘Lack of Emotion’. I’ve seen her live a few times. Nearly four years later and we’re still waiting for the first album and I’m starting to lose a bit of interest, to be honest. She was signed to Chess Club records in the UK, and even released a few seven-inch singles early on, but now seems in a rut of collaborations and constantly ‘dropping’ new songs. So even when – against the odds - you do find and engage with a new up-and-coming artist with apparent real talent - they still don’t deliver what you want. A 10-track CD or vinyl record that you can play.

Note: This essay by Paul Sinclair was first published on his website Super Deluxe Edition.

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  1. 6 Responses to “DO YOU HAVE TIME FOR ‘NEW’ MUSIC?”

  2. Great article. While I’d admit that there is certainly nowhere near the amount of great artists today as their were back in the 70’s (my high school and college years), there is and continues to be a number of great new artists out there. The difference today is that the real talent and creative artists are NOT in the mainstream. You have to look for them. Big O is a great source, along with spotify and youtube etc. Try listening to The Revivalists, The Suffers, Larkin Poe, The Explorers Club, Lake Street Dive, Cage the Elephant, The Manchester Orchestra, Vintage Trouble, Kurt Vile, The National, The Record Company, Father John Misty, Vampire Weekend, Niko Case, Samantha Fish, Spoon, Broken Social Scene, The War on Drugs, Parquet Courts and so many more. Now, I’m 63 years old. Most of my friends stopped listening to anything new in 1985. I however have had no problem finding good new music. It’s not what it was and a lot of new artists don’t have the longevity, but it’s out there. You just have to look for it.

    By Beanzalo on Dec 29, 2019

  3. Right on the spot what you wrote. I’m an ardent music fan of 61 years and I feel the same. I put it down to getting older (maturer??)and the realization that my parents could not cope with the music I liked in the seventies. I am happy with de deluxe and anniversary editions that come out every year. Imagine that all these outtakes and live concerts were still in the vaults?

    Please keep up the good work at SDE, I love the website!!

    Fred

    By Fred on Dec 30, 2019

  4. I love both old music and new music. I’m 63 years old. Love new acts like The Revivalists, Samantha Fish, Marc Broussard, Larkin Poe, the Suffers, Lake Street Dive, Father John Misty, Niko Case, Allman Betts Band, Tesheski Trucks Band, Cage the Elephant, The Foo Fighters, The Black Keys, Kings of Leon, Panic at the Disco, Death Cab for Cutie, The National, The Alabama Shakes, Spoon, Greta Van Fleet (total 70’s sound). I agree that the POP artists that dominate the airwaves are totally boring. Many of the new artists I like, you have to look for. They don’t get airplay unless you listen to college radio or dig for them on Spotify. Big O usually posts some new artists. I love the 70’s and 80’s, even the 60’s but my thirst for new music brings many wonderful songs to my daily playlist. You’re never too old to grow and love a new artist.

    By Beanzalo on Dec 30, 2019

  5. I’m 69. Saw The Who open for The Doors and Joplin open for Hendricks in 1968. I agree, there is some interesting music out there. I like Larkin Poe, Cage the Elephant, Father John Misty, Samantha Fish, The War on Drugs, The Black Keys, Kings of Leon, Alabama Shakes and Greta Van Fleet. I’ve seen Kurt Vile, Vampire Weekend (twice), Death Cab for Cutie (three times), Parquet Courts, Niko Case,The National,The Foo Fighters. I liked them all, except I hated The National. They were boring and left early. Love Foo Fighters. They are awesome live. There’s also Green Day. Their shows are amazing.

    By Sneadhurn on Feb 2, 2020

  6. Grime, rap, techno, etc are NOT music. Total shite.

    By Paddy on Feb 3, 2020

  7. “Joplin open for Hendricks” really!

    By Ping Pong Bob on Mar 10, 2020

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