Genre Burnout???
Big_Stacks
"I don't worry about hittin' power, cause I don't give 'em nuttin' to hit." 4,670 Posts
Hey Guys,
Do any of you ever experience what I call "genre burnout"? This is when you have listened to music in a particular genre so much (or so long, as in my case) that it doesn't move you anymore. I have sort of fallen into burnout with bop jazz. I don't know when was the last time I listened to a bop LP. I guess it's maybe about musical progression where it takes more musically to get you high, sort of like tolerance in drug addictions. What are you guy's thoughts on the matter?
Peace,
Big Stacks from Kakalak
Do any of you ever experience what I call "genre burnout"? This is when you have listened to music in a particular genre so much (or so long, as in my case) that it doesn't move you anymore. I have sort of fallen into burnout with bop jazz. I don't know when was the last time I listened to a bop LP. I guess it's maybe about musical progression where it takes more musically to get you high, sort of like tolerance in drug addictions. What are you guy's thoughts on the matter?
Peace,
Big Stacks from Kakalak
Comments
Are you burned out on a particular genre of music?
Peace,
Big Stacks from Kakalak
My problem is that I grew up on bop, so I've heard so much of it that I'm not surprised anymore. Too predictable. I'm leaning now more toward music (and jazz in particular) that's more far "afield" than straight-ahead bop. That probably explains why guys like Herbie Hancock, Miles Davis, and others did experimental things in other genres cause they tired of playing and being confined by bop.
Peace,
Big Stacks from Kakalak
Send all to me, plaese.
my listening is mixed by 10 different genres at all times.
its the only way to fly.
deeper genres include...
classical and symphonic music
soul music
singer songwriter
shits deep for me.
listen to kenny rankin live bootleg 1973.
radical.
ap
Sub-Question: Did the phonograph and recording lead to the eventual demise of music?
Can you explain this further. Do you really think music is "dead"?
Music may not be dead, but if ring tones are supposed to be the next big thing, then its slipping away.
yes & no, before recordings, more people had & played musical instruments,
family gatherings & parties would center around people
playing & singing "standards", you would go to a "music store"
to buy the sheet music, different music culture
recordings made the musical world smaller,
exposure of different musical genres & styles,
so geographic & social barriers could be crossed thru recordings
recordings did lead to the demise of old time family/party music culture
during my former career, i went thru 2 long periods of total reggae burnout
and now, thanks to a recent dale watson concert & my new used grip having a tape/cd deck,
i'm officialee burned out on modern crap pop country radio
What is it called? Is that out on vinyl?
plaese send it to me when you're done.
i can't listen to any of the follwing these days:
late 80's - mid nineties indy rock / alternative
nineties / turn of the milenium - IDM
hip hop between 83 - 2000
underground hip hop / backpacker / blazing downtempo
60's psych
hard bop / modal jazz / free jazz
Take jazz for instance - most folks on here don't really dig it because it's not 'funky' enough. But if you DO actually like it for what it is, how can you burn out? I can understand burning out on average/crap records... but the whole genre? Huge genre with literally thousands of different, experimental, interesting records. From the pedestrian to the way out. If you're burned out, maybe getting rid of the Groove Holmes and fucking eighteen Horace Silver records you don't need and Jimmy Smith and fucking anything on Verve will help. Stick to "The Phantom", "The Quest", "Musart", "Elevator To The Gallows", and shit that is different/unique. Funky jazz blows goat nuts too.
I think as I've refined the collection over the years I've gotten rid of the garbagio, the mediocre, the 'nothing special' type records in every genre, so that I won't one day say "I just can't listen to bossa anymore!"
That's like, when you should quit, or something
Clearly the only reason anyone gets tired of a genre is because their records aren't as good as yours.
Yo Paycheck,
Come on man, you know hard bop tends toward sameness. If you've listened to a genre for over 30 years, you mean to tell me burnout isn't possible. Just because a particular genre is "predictable" doesn't make it "crap music". It just means that you are more likely to grow tired of it than something that is more experimental and/or interesting. That's how I cope with burnout, I buy more "far out" stuff. That still doesn't make me want to trade my "Schizophrenia" LP. As much as I try to be agreeable with people on here, I find you to be one arrogant and condescending mofo. When you're all that, there's no need to sweat your own dick.
Peace,
Big Stacks from Kakalak
In my case, I was discussing a sub-genre of jazz: Bop. Actually, I've been buying a lot of European stuff lately which really moves me.
Peace,
Big Stacks from Kakalak
it really raises the question of what is listening ?
my father is the opposite he can listen to the same song for months on end. he is more musically inclined than me (he can play songs on the guitar or piano just by ear) and he tells me he is listening to the chords and the changes and the melody and harmony. these are things i don't listen for. i listen for things that move me on a more raw gut level than intellectually.
AHEM.
I can relate to this. Often it is the raw/gut level that attracts me to a song/genre, but the melody/harmony/progressions/theory is what deepens my appreciation for said song/genre.
YES and YES.
I think it's less a question of the inevitability of burnout than it is of fusion and big-band soul-jazz both being pretty crap genres.
I don't really sympathize with the genre burnout at all. If you focus on the best of the genre, it shouldn't be an issue--it's only gonna be an issue if you go indiscriminately accquiring records from a given genre just to have them, because you're inevitably gonna end up with a large number of the weaker and more derivative exemplars of that genre. Getting burnt out on rap I find especially baffling, although I suppose if I spent my days listening to Sha-Na-Na style tribute groups to the early nineties like Little Brother and PUTS, then I would hate rap by now, too.
Frankly, I wish I had more time to familiarize myself with the music that I have, to really get inside a record the way I used to back when I was fourteen and only bought an album or so a week and so would listen to the same things over and over.