Kreshna Aryaguna Nurzaman wrote:But how about the percentage of the good music against crappy ones? Do the crappy ones are actually getting bigger share and become more acceptable these days, or am I just wrong?
If you go by what they play on the radio and MTV or MuchMusic, then the crappy artists are definitely getting a bigger share these days. Unfortunately with modern consumer habits this translates to huge sales for crappy music which people get drilled into their heads by TV & radio. Looking at the overall ratio of good bands to crap bands instead of sales numbers, I think it's pretty much the same today as it's always been.
I think the main difference these days is that bands never get a chance to develop a career, they get one, maybe 2 hit records and they're done, record companies do the big push and then dump them for the next band. With this kind of business model, it's nearly impossible for a musician to develop a career and have any lasting influence, and the artists with the talent to do so tend to get stuck on smaller labels so they never get the exposure to create influence beyond their local areas.
I doubt we'll see another band like Nirvana or U2 in this decade, let alone the goodness that is Led Zeppelin, not that they don't exist, but because they're stuck on the local or at best national scene. The ones who achieve international success are usually the "band of the week" type, whoever the record companies feel is a "trend" at the time.
The Tea Party (go buy "Tangents", NOW) for instance has been compared to a modern day Led Zeppelin by many, but they're unknown outside of Canada and even here they're overshadowed by Avril Lavigne.
SancheztheWhaler wrote:As a result, people give Avril Lavigne more credit than they do to Britney Spears, because Avril writes her own songs.
I just need to correct this one for the record. Until her latest album, Avril did not write her own songs, unless you count changing a word or 2 in the lyrics which other people had written for her as "songwriting". All the songs on her latest album were co-written by Chantal Kreviazuk & her husband Raine Maida, the former's a well known (in Canada) singer/songwriter and the other's the lead singer & songwriter in a well known Canadian rock band.