Twangasaurus wrote:I suppose I would like to say some things on a couple points of discussion.
1. Anybody who can't find music they like in this day and age is either lazy, boring or both.
2. I think Bellamy and Muse are pretty laborious but I will forever like the fact that a prog band can still find mainstream success to the extent that they have achieved.
3. Anyone who thinks Skrillex is representative of dubstep is a silly and anyone who digs stoner/doom might find they like dubstep if they gave it a shot. Sit down, have a smoke and check out some of the more dub influenced dubstep like Liquid Stranger
http://interchill.bandcamp.com/album/the-arcane-terrain.
4. I like strong psychedelics a fair amount. They have been good to me, are ultimately responsible for parts of myself that I like quite a bit and they undoubtedly had some influence on my taste in music. However, they definitely don't define my musical experience as a whole (in fact it's a fairly small corner) nor do they effect how I write or play music and I would never bother writing under the influence because it would be rubbish. I can say that this is true for pretty much all my drug taking musician friends (who are in the majority). Not saying some people can't and do write under the influence (Simon Posford or Steven Drozd for example) but I think for most people it makes the process "messy" and not in a good way.
As for the future of music

. If you asked me at the end of the last decade when I was a bit more straight rock focused I would have said maybe we were in a bit of trouble but now... eh. Plenty of great material coming out faster than I can consume it. It's a good time to be alive.
Rush were as popular as Muse are and were a Prog band. Pink Floyd were even bigger and were also highly progressive.
And I mentioned Skrillex because, like Justin Bieber and pop music, he almost single-handedly controls the market. Is Skrillex the epitome of Dub-Step? I have no idea, I don't listen to it. Is Justin Bieber the epitome of Pop music? Fuck no, but he's still one of the most popular artists within that genre. I'm talking popularity here, not skill, adeptness, and integrity.
I had a listen Liquid Stranger and didn't like it that much. The influence of Reggae wsan't my cup of tea, and neither was the deep and syrupy bass. It was definitely nothing like Skrillex though.
jrmy wrote:All right, here's a noggin-scratcher for you alls. And I'm not saying I have an answer (or that there is one), because I sure as shit don't, but:
Does art need progress?
And further, what constitutes progress in art? Is it improvements in technique? Juxtaposition of unusual elements? Making things louder? Making things shinier?
Please note that I fully admit that "progress" is a loaded term implying an agenda or set path or understandable way forward.
Again, just talkin' smack.
Awesome question.
The psychology of art is not something I'm aware of. I've never studied or invested personal hours researching it. But I think art in general is like a wave in an ocean. It's controlled by something beyond our means, at least on an atomic level. The only way to impact it is to work as a unit—an enormous unit. That is why so many people think that if they downloaded an artist's album it won't affect the industry as it's just a drop in a bucket. But if everyone thinks that then it will affect the industry. In other words, art will only change if everyone decides it's time to. And for the most part, this will be done subconsciously over a very long period time, like the Theory of Evolution.
Does it to need progress? Only if society as a whole decides so. Music and film has needed to adapt and evolve in the last five to ten years due to illegal piracy and the integration of the world wide web. But is that really an artistic evolution? No, because it was caused by something entirely uncreative and unartistic.
Art is arguably louder than it used to be. There is more contrast and clarity. The reproduction of art has improved, but the original artistry and design hasn't, in my opinion. It's probably decreased in quality. There are still some amazingly creative artists out there doing incomparable and clever work, but it's not nearly as widely acceptable as unique art used to be. But that could be wrong. As I said, I haven't art history before.