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ITT: Predictions you have about the future of music

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>noise rock will become a huge trend
>rap will start incorporating some prog elements
>music will become more album-oriented
>>
>>74150979
>noise rock will become a huge trend
no.
>rap will start incorporating some prog elements
already been done

>music will become more album-oriented

opposite bud
>>
>>74150979
I can see the noise rock thing happening but the other ones will never happen because normies.
>>
>>74150979
>noise rock will become a huge trend
if it will become a trend it won't be a mainstream one
>>rap will start incorporating some prog elements
what is that even supposed to mean. what "elements" are you talking about
>>music will become more album-oriented
since most people only listen to playlists i won't see this happening
>>
>noise rock will become a huge trend
it came kinda close with grunge
>rap will start incorporating some prog elements
deltron 3030
>music will become more album-oriented
nah
>>
>>74150994
>already been done
when? give me one example
>>
>>74150979
>>noise rock will become a huge trend
no because counterculture is dead
>>rap will start incorporating some prog elements
already did
>>music will become more album-oriented
exact opposite, music is more and more about digital singles.

not bad op, was this your first thread? welcome to mu, now get the fuck out
>>
>rap will start incorporating some prog elements
please let this happen
>>
>>74150979
>noise rock will become a huge trend
next big hipster genre is glitch pop
>>
>more mainstream rap will start including elements of ambient, noise, post-industrial, and avant garde shit in general
>hypnagogic pop will become mainstream
>every album will be labeled a playlist, score, double album, triple album etc to side step the normal album label.
>>
With Tyler The Creators new album, I'm starting to wonder if this new style of rap will eventually just morph into R&B and Frank Ocean will be seen as really ahead of his time. But yeah I see R&B being more fleshed out in the future
>>
>>74151171
>>more mainstream rap will start including elements of ambient, noise, post-industrial, and avant garde shit in general
do people actually believe this
>>
>>74151191
rap has been getting more melodic recently, i can see this happening
>>
>>74151191
it already was a decade ago.
>>
>>74151132
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v6YJjkO7F5A
>>
>>74151100
oops this is for you>>74151291
>>
>>74151132
Not really, check the Boston noise/noiserock scene.
>>
>>74151223
Clipping, clouddead(old but still is a part of the progression), death grips, prefuse 73, dalek, Vince staples new album was sort of weird, Kanye West, Tonedeff,trust me babe.
>>
That's actually a pretty good question, now that I think of it. Gen Z's first wave is starting to hit the music world en masse (Gen Z being 1996 onwards); and it's the first generation in a long while to go on a world where rock wasn't the most popular genre during their adolescence. In fact, at best you have some dadrock by late "born in the wrong generation" kids, and then some stuff. It's not even a generation that could've gotten into it through fucking Guitar Hero or Rock Band. On top of that, the great majority of their parents are either Gen X or really early Millenials, whose main musical contribution is the 90's music scene with some 80's and late 70's influence. Post-punk and synthpop effectively dad/mom music for most; and for some, it borders on alternative rock, gangsta rap and even fucking drum and bass being dad/mom music. One of the running themes of this generation, even if in a very subtle kind of way seems to be a wish to go back to idealized, safer times; it's a generation that barely had time to live in a comprehensible world before the Twin Towers, and how that pretty much just affected the world in a ridiculously large scale. Look at the latest trends ever since they started maturing. From vaporwave to lo-fi hip hop beats, there's a desire for this sense of going back to a time of less chaos. As for other things, I can't really say.

I do think that R&B will become big. Kanye did it some time ago and now nearly everyone from Drake to Tyler the Creator has taken a bit from it, and it's definitely popular. It'll be unlikely for underground shit to start happening because it's a post-Internet generation. What this means is that you won't have the grunge phenomenon happen where Seattle developed a scene that was almost entirely independent from whatever was happening elsewhere.

I feel we might get noise rock coming back even a bit, but that's just a guess. And not through the first wave of noise rock, it comes from influences from other genres.
>>
>>74151465
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>mainstream
>>
>>74151465
vince rapping off jimmy edgar beats is weird now?
huh really makes me thin
>>
>>74151476
I'd argue that it's the opposite. Gen Y and Gen X wanting comfort look to the past for safety, hence all the REMEMBER THIS SOUND? I feel like Gen Z also desires that same comfort, but I suspect that idealization will come more in an idealized vision of the future a la the 60's and retrofuturism, but in some new way.
>>
> Predictions you have about the future of music

it'll get worse. nobody talented makes music anymore. you got shitheads like tame impala and grimes getting praised just because they know how to use ableton live and record by themselves
>>
90's nostalgia incoming
>>
>>74150979
I predict that websites will begin cultivating their own scenes. We already see this to a degree with Brockhampton coming from a Kanye fansite but I see this happening with even places like /mu/. I predict that certain "meme sounds" will catch on in subcultures on Tumblr, Reddit, and 4chan that are removed from the mainstream underground movements in the same way that Seattle underground movements in the 80's created grunge as we know it today.

In other words, "Tumblr-core" and "/mu/-core" will start to become prescriptive rather than descriptive.
>>
>>74151476
>From vaporwave to lo-fi hip hop beats, there's a desire for this sense of going back to a time of less chaos.

i feel like those were just dumbed down natural progressions of already popular music genres like grunge rock? (postpunk/synthpop, and hip hop)

>wish to go back to idealized, safer times
do you have any other observations to back that up? I feel that way but i'm '94- it seemed to me like the "Cool" thing is to be hip to current events and pc culture etc and the kids who don't like that are in the minority, retreating to 4chan trp mgtow and other more "controversial" regressive places
>>
>>74151568
Yeah, I feel they will try to get back to that same idealized, safer times of the 90's, but not by trying to go back to the 90's; just the atmosphere.

If this makes any sense, it's a generation that will try to make their children capable of writing something like American Football's first album which as much as I enjoy it can be really just defined as "really good music about experiences of white suburban teens in the 90s in the midwest of America". And that's completely fine, but they want to create a world where they can have their petty conflicts and be alright with that.

>>74151597
Eh... not really? People born in 2000 will hit 18 next year. They barely had time to register things of the early 2000s, much less the 90s.

>>74151656
I graduated last year (18 here) and my little sister is still in high school. Surprisingly that wasn't the most common thing. It's more of a millenial thing. There's a surprising amount of conservatives and perhaps even more surprisingly libertarians (the latter especially moved by general distrust of the government). The one thing that I generally noticed that was the undercurrent of all groups was a desire to make a safer future not only for themselves beyond just socially, but also for other people - the one thing they didn't agree at all was the how to do it; but in their eyes the future had to be safer; taking to a ridiculous extreme, they kind of want to have kids playing on the streets again, which Gen Z never really had.
>>
>>74151746
>the one thing they didn't agree at all was the how to do it; but in their eyes the future had to be safer

that's kind of what everybody wants. a lot of this has more to do with where you grew up as well.
>>
>>74151746
>they kind of want to have kids playing on the streets again, which Gen Z never really had.
never going to happen kiddo.
>>
>>74151790
>Brazil on the middle of a metropolis with over 12 million people in the metropolis proper and 20 million in the metropolitan zone

Oh yeah, that definitely has some effect. Can't really deny it.

>>74151828
>ridiculous extreme
Essentially, it's the almost utopic point. So, yeah, not gonna happen. But that's the general idea.
>>
>>74151746
Gen Z-fag here, I feel that too. Generally speaking Gen X were rebellious slackers who grew into overprotective helicopters in a time when shit in the real world started to get a bit too crazy. As a result Gen Z, as generations tend to do, desire a rebellion against "craziness", whether you define it as sexism or you define it as PC culture. Everybody wants things to tone down a few notches, in their own personal ways.
>>
>>74151878
>>74151882
i don't see why u gen-z kids like to pretend you want everything nice.
majority of your generation is on youtube. following pewdiepie and filthyfrank. telling ppl to kill themselves

not forgetting h3h3 who somehow makes a living doing shitty reaction videos.
>>
>>74151882
Gen X really wasn't overprotective helicopter, it was described as "stealth fighter parents" (dealing swiftly with issue they considered very very big rather than dealing with every minor issue surrounding the kid), helicopter parents being something else entirely (more Baby Boomer to Millenial). The social climate of craziness that permeated Gen Z's adolescence is mostly due to the rise of Millenials in the social climate. Combine that with Gen Z being a generation which is post-Internet so it has been constantly bombarded with information from a young age and you kinda get a generation that really just wants everything to sort of be toned down in terms of pace. Now, what that means to every kid is something else entirely.

>>74151925
It's more of a reaction as to the percieved "craziness", really. Of course that affects people in different ways; for some it might be things like FilthyFrank and PewDiePie and h3h3, for others it might be constant activism against sexism on the internet.

It's just a really odd generation, honestly. It's not going to be a "nice" one, in fact it's more of a hypercompetitive generation.
>>
>>74151647
I can honestly see this sort of thing happening. Thanks to the internet, culture is no longer completely dictated by where you grew up and what ethnicity you are and shit.

It sort of happened to an extent with myspace back in 2008 which was heavily associated with its own distinct style of emo/scene music and culture.
>>
>>74152050
I'm thinking about how you can look at a picture and say "this artist was raised on Deviantart" or "this work looks so tumblr" because of the little quirks that get spread throughout interwoven internet communities, but for music. I'd imagine that /mu/-core: The Genre would be somewhat experimental folksy noise rock, while Tubmlrcore: The Genre would be very synth heavy dream pop.
>>
>>74152152
That does make a lot of sense, there is a big example of it in the "tumblr nose" that happened a while ago. Still don't know how it will actually happen, but I reckon that we'll get a lot of noise rock and shoegaze influences drifting into other genres in /mu/core, but very rarely pure noise rock or shoegaze.
>>
>>74151476
Just wanna say, '96 kiddo here, definitely played Rock Band and Guitar Hero, and knew pretty much every song on the games thanks to a father that did nothing but play Doors, Steve Miller Band, Rush, Pink Floyd, Van Halen, Black Sabbath and all other degrees of dadrock. I'd argue you'd want to say it's kids born 2000 and after.
>>
>>74152626
>exceptions prove the norm
>>
>>74152626
'99 kid, definitely played those two as well, it's just that they were on the downfall during our adolescence. Hell, Rock Band 3 is from 2010; it's definitely towards the end of its influence. There's a very small margin of kids whose taste might've been influenced by it in the whole of Gen Z. It's just not going to be a huge thing for this generation, I feel.
>>
>>74151139
>>74151100
They already listed Deltron 3030, but also
Madvillainy had a gentle giant sample:
https://youtu.be/uSxlZQUqVPY
https://youtu.be/Oq4b3nMsyyE
De La Soul and Ritual by Yes
https://youtu.be/7GBx4HJKU7s
https://youtu.be/xQaYwTRLdCM
Busdriver and CTTE
https://youtu.be/x4Yn6XEbV7g
https://youtu.be/51oPKLSuyQY
Kanye and King Crimson
https://youtu.be/nfef5WqC85A
https://youtu.be/wlKf8WoLyJI
Kanye and Mike Oldfield(With Vocals of Jon Anderson of Yes)
https://youtu.be/lUSJ_MeX4Io
https://youtu.be/AofUt0TQyf0
Kanye and Can
https://youtu.be/oFEGb42Wlds
https://youtu.be/3VmM8qRRLwU
>>
>>74153027
>>
>>74153672
https://youtu.be/QaPrQa3oMy0
https://youtu.be/yUpREizsftU
El-P is based
>>
>>74151100
gorillaz made a pseudo krautrock song
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=36DCuT1KxM4
>>
>>74151476

96'er here
Being born in that year I can see a huge gap between my older brother (5 years older) and my younger friends/ friend's siblings. Which is also pretty cool, as I was experience a bit of both (part of my childhood without internet or cellphones)
>>
>>74155005
Gap between my bro and me and younger people*
able to experience*

Fix'd
>>
>>74155005
You're really on the verge, but yeah, it's not only about communications but also it's about what stuff you grew up with and the social climate you grew up with. You might find easier to relate to someone born in 1998 to someone born in 1994, for example, which I find very interesting.
>>
>>74150979
>>music will become more album-oriented

No, what i will think that we will see is artists just sporadically releasing single tracks when they are done with them.
Thread posts: 47
Thread images: 2


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