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Predict the next music fad
Looking back to the previous decade and a half, we can notice trends in music. Early 90's with its grunge, late 90's with boy bands, early 2000's with its revival garage music and so on.
What trends could you predict for the next years to come? My guess is that bling bling is here to stay (if this is good or not I don't know, I enjoy the occasional club hit) I also predict pop records with dub and reggae influences, just listen the Paris Hilton piece of Shit. I also predict at least another 2 years of New Wave revival. Discutan, perras. Jam it back in, in the dark. |
It had better be metal.
I mean, come on, Lordi wins Eurovision, Hammerfall might be in it next year, crappy acts like Dragonforce and Trivium are starting to prevail over nu-metal garbage - Could the 80s be coming back to life? I hope so! There's nowhere I can't reach. |
Electro-crap (as in a cunning mix of electro and crap). To be honest I think that the future of music fads is so obscure at the moment that maybe an obscure genre like that would classify it. I don't know where else music can go now, and I'm not sure that a revisit to a previous genre will be the next step.
This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. ![]() ![]() |
Emo Rap.
I gots no cheese/ I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? |
I think Trance music is going to expand further and further. Its HUGE in Europe, and I think its going to continue to get bigger and more widespread.
Based on how much it has grown in popularity, trance music is going to get BIG. I was speaking idiomatically. |
LOL FAG! |
Well I am hoping for something new to be honest. The 00's have been a total pharce for music, as it has all just been recycled stuff that we have all heard before. Its gonna be interesting to see what the next step is, because if I hear one more recycled RnB shittyness, or another Dance tune that is a remix of ANYTHING I will hunt down the creators and cut off their extremeties with barbed wire. You have been warned.
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FELIPE NO |
Well it seems to be already happening. Lamb of God's new album debuted at number 8. Many other metal or -core bands debuted at least in the top 200. Dimmu Borgir sold over 100,000 records, a first for the band and for Nuclear Blast. In Flames charted its highest ever with Come Clarity. Shadows Fall sold over 250,000 of its last album. So yeah, at least metalcore might be the next fad. What, you don't want my bikini-clad body? |
early 90's was all rap yo, with the whole east cost vs west cost thing, tupac, snoop, dre, biggie all those big names totally took over the scene.
no homo |
Another thing I wouldn't mind would be the return of a Generation X-style culture. Mid-90s mainstream music wasn't bad at all.
There's nowhere I can't reach. |
I agree that trance/electronica is probably going to explode in the US, and we're going to get a lot of new styles out of it. A hope of mine is that more bands akin to Idiot Pilot will emerge, with refreshingly unique blends of uncommonly-blended types of music.
I think along with trance we'll get an influx of neo-classical, as well, which will spur a revival of other more musical genres, and within the next 20-40 years, we'll be seeing more and more MUSIC and less and less CRAP. How ya doing, buddy? ![]() |
"Garage music" cannot be revived, only shat upon, just like R&B and Rock.
I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? ![]()
Last edited by Misogynyst Gynecologist; Oct 22, 2006 at 06:47 PM.
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Techno kinda hit it's stride a few years back and fizzled, just like Ska and just like what will happen with Emo. Pop music is ALWAYS pop music, but reinvented and 'dressed' in a different stylistic attire. i.e. the underlying structure of the music is pretty much the same while on the surface, it plagiarizes from different stylistic dialects. Of course it is impossible to accurately predict which undercurrent will taint the pop music scene next, but I'm not holding my breath for anything revolutionary. This being said, the one thing I have noticed is that 2 or 3 years before a certain 'sound' comes into vogue, it becomes intensely popular within the musical underground. Go into community centers, dusty smokey bars, and basements across the country and listen to what the edgier, less trendy teenagers are listening to. What bands they like, what music they play. Chances are, that is what will be big in the next few years, I was speaking idiomatically. ![]() ![]() |
I really don't care what happens next in music fads and styles... I'll just be listening to the same stuff that I have on my computer
What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now? |
(that sounds SO much like how my dad is now!) FELIPE NO ![]() ![]() |
I suppose in order to be totally clear we'd have to have explicit definitions of "techno" and "trance" that we all agree on, but I think of "trance" as synonymous with artists such as Rob Dougan, E.S. Posthumus, and especially with his most recent album, BT. Which is probably a completely inaccurate description of trance, but be that as it may, it's good to see some excellent music being made, and sad that it still remains in the ugly shadow of the trash that's piled up around us. Still, there are signs of this being a possibility. More and more live bands are popping up - and by bands, I'm talking big band, jazz, blues, some even classical - and are becoming more and more in demand. "Lounge" and "crooner" singers are broadening their niche (look at Paul Anka, Michael Buble, Harry Connick Jr., etc.) and aside from some exceptions, we're starting to see the music industry get a little more picky about the quality of music they distribute to the public. Or perhaps that's just blind optimism. What, you don't want my bikini-clad body? ![]() |
![]() Jam it back in, in the dark.
"We are all the sum of our tears. Too little, and the ground is not fertile and nothing can grow there. Too much – the best of us is washed away…" - G'Kar
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I am curious with the rising popularity of Cascada. I think this is where music will be heading (more Electronica based music).
This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. |