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Discussion: Then / Now
Member Since: 8/12/2012
Posts: 13,665
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Then/Now-It’s Better Today Edition
Quote:
THEN
We had to drive to the record store on Tuesday to buy the new releases.
NOW
The new releases are available at midnight on the internet.
THEN
If you didn’t get to the store early enough, the new release sold out. Or never came into the store to begin with.
NOW
Music never gets delayed in shipment and there’s an infinite supply.
THEN
Every record store had different inventory.
NOW
All internet sites have essentially the same inventory.
THEN
You’d drive from store to store searching for a catalog item.
NOW
All the catalog is available at your fingertips on the internet.
THEN
You had to go to the bookstore to get the new release.
NOW
The new release is available at midnight, usually on Tuesday, like with music everything’s available and there’s an endless supply.
THEN
You were sour grapes, saying you couldn’t get a deal and no one could buy your music.
NOW
You can make your tunes available for next to nothing via CDBaby and Tunecore. If no one buys them, the onus is on you.
THEN
You had to buy it to hear it.
NOW
Everything is available to hear for free, whether on YouTube or streaming music services like Spotify.
THEN
It was expensive to record.
NOW
It’s cheap to record.
THEN
There were three network TV channels.
NOW
There are five hundred channels and there’s always something on.
THEN
You had to catch it live.
NOW
You can get it On Demand or record it for later viewing on your DVR.
THEN
You were limited to the radio stations in your market.
NOW
You not only get terrestrial stations in your market, the entire world’s radio is available online, usually for free. And you’ve got algorithm-based services like Pandora and no ad, hand-curated radio like Sirius XM.
THEN
You had to pay a lot of money to get pristine sound.
NOW
Stereo is good and cheap.
THEN
There were skips and other defects.
NOW
The sound is pristine.
THEN
You didn’t know about the new releases unless you went to the store or religiously read the music press.
NOW
New release schedules are plentiful and free.
THEN
Your car broke down.
NOW
Your car never breaks down.
THEN
You had cathode ray TV.
NOW
You’ve got hi-def flat panel TV.
THEN
There were limited news sources.
NOW
There are seemingly unlimited news sources. You can read various opinions and make up your own mind.
THEN
Cancer was a death sentence.
NOW
More and more people survive cancer.
THEN
Everything was expensive.
NOW
Everything is cheap. And powerful. You get a hand-held computer for under $200, oftentimes free with a mobile contract.
THEN
You needed an expensive desktop computer.
NOW
You only need a tablet and a smartphone.
THEN
Your computer crashed.
NOW
Your computer doesn’t crash, at least not Macs!
THEN
Shopping was limited to your neighborhood.
NOW
A cornucopia of goods from all over the world is available at your fingertips.
THEN
Music cost a different amount at every store.
NOW
Music costs the same everywhere, and it’s cheap. You can’t charge more than your competitors because their store is just a click away.
THEN
Ignorance was hard to prove.
NOW
Google reveals facts instantly.
THEN
You were limited to the courses at your school.
NOW
You can take courses from all over the world, even the Ivys, frequently for free.
THEN
Automobiles were notorious pollution devices.
NOW
Cars put out fewer emisisons than ever and hybrids and electrics are a viable alternative.
THEN
Start-ups failed because they had no reach.
NOW
Your potential audience is the world. You can create something that changes society and makes you rich in the confines of your own home.
THEN
Talking heads had credibility on TV news.
NOW
Every field has an expert online who really knows the score, unlike the nitwit newsreaders on televsion.
THEN
You could pull the wool over the public’s eyes. George Bush’s administration could say that Iraq had WMD and there was no counterbalance of truth.
NOW
The gotcha web dig deeps and pulls out truth. If you’re a lying, cheating scumbag, everybody’s gonna know.
THEN
People only knew the two-dimensional cardboard you.
NOW
Everybody’s three-dimensional as a result of a plethora of information about them online.
THEN
You lost touch with those you grew up with.
NOW
You never lose touch with anybody you ever had contact with.
THEN
Long distance phone calls were expensive.
NOW
Long distance phone calls cost no more than local, and they can even be completely free.
THEN
Videophones were the future.
NOW
Videophones are here and free, via Skype and Facetime.
THEN
Dumb was cool.
NOW
Smart is cool.
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http://lefsetz.com/wordpress/index.p...today-edition/
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Member Since: 4/30/2012
Posts: 2,327
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Member Since: 6/28/2010
Posts: 7,399
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People never appreciate what we have.
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Member Since: 6/21/2012
Posts: 18,849
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Wasn't alive for most of the THEN's, but knew what it was like. Everything seems so much different now.
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Member Since: 8/12/2012
Posts: 13,665
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Then/Now-Niche Edition
Quote:
THEN
Howard Stern left terrestrial too early, he became societally marginalized.
NOW
Howard is king of his niche and reaches a larger audience than any of the late night talk shows. Reminds me of Bryan Adams recording “(Everything I Do) I Do It For You.” AOR considered him a sell-out. Soon AOR was toast and Adams had a career as a crooner.
THEN
If you were all over the press, everybody had heard your music.
NOW
Almost no one has heard Amanda Palmer’s music.
THEN
If you had a tiny core audience, you were financially challenged.
NOW
If you have a tiny core audience, you can raise enough money to make your album on Kickstarter, and own the copyright to boot. Just don’t think since you raised all that cash anybody other than the core is going to be interested in what you produce.
THEN
Albums all cost the same price.
NOW
Hard core fans will pay for special packages, delivered most famously by Topspin. If you’re not tapping the deep pockets of your hard core fans, you’re leaving money on the table.
THEN
You put out one album every three years, it took that long to reach every potential audience member.
NOW
You release music constantly, to satiate the core, no one beyond it cares. In the old days, your favorite act released an album when you were in high school and when the next one came out you were married and had babies. Now, if an act waits until the summer to follow up their fall release, it’s too long.
THEN
Music was scarce, so when we bought albums we played them.
NOW
Music is plentiful. Only the hard core wants to go beyond the hits. Are you playing to the core or to the masses who don’t care?
THEN
You were on late night TV and everybody knew your name.
NOW
You’re on late night TV and all you get is a stinking high-priced video.
THEN
If you opened for a major act, you believed you’d made it.
NOW
You play the festival and you’re forgotten within the year.
THEN
Marketing was top-down. You spent a lot of money and convinced everybody they should pay attention. I.e. Mariah Carey.
NOW
Marketing is from the ground up and Tommy Mottola is out of work and Mariah Carey is on a TV show that no one talks about anymore.
THEN
Major labels were interested in careers.
NOW
Major labels are interested in hit singles. They’ve got to make the quarterly numbers, for their bonuses. Short term corporate thinking hasn’t only hurt the industrial companies.
THEN
The Police traveled around the world, breaking their music, playing wherever their visionary manager had been with his CIA father.
NOW
You create YouTube videos at home, all in search of virality.
THEN
It was about the music.
NOW
It’s about the marketing. Just because you know how to use Final Cut Pro and can create an interesting visual, that does not mean anybody wants to listen to your music.
THEN
There was a bar. Either you were signed to a major label or were irrelevant.
NOW
There is no bar, everybody gets to play. And the public is so overwhelmed in this chaotic world that it’s hard to get anybody to even listen to your music.
THEN
There were record reviews in magazines and newspapers and they meant something.
NOW
Everybody’s got a blog and believes they’re a writer and the audience is so overwhelmed with opinions that they pay attention to almost none of them.
THEN
If you had a hit, it could not be escaped. They played it at the game, in public spaces…
NOW
They play classic rock in public places. You think your number one record is known by everybody, but you’re sorely mistaken.
THEN
The mainstream media was self-satisfied, believed it was in charge.
NOW
The mainstream media is self-satisfied, believes it’s in charge, when the truth is most people trust narrow but deep websites more than the smorgasbord of news in the mainstream.
THEN
The mainstream blanded itself out ever further to not alienate anybody and gain viewers.
NOW
Bland network TV has sinking ratings, sometimes eclipsed by what’s on cable, which has to be edgy to survive.
THEN
Your song was written by Diane Warren.
NOW
Your song is written by you, otherwise no one cares. The essence of success is honesty.
THEN
The Top Forty divas use more outside songwriters and producers than ever before.
NOW
The day your hits dry up you can’t sell a ticket and the nobodies no one knows continue to ply the boards and earn a living.
THEN
There were stadium shows.
NOW
Only Taylor Swift can sell out a stadium.
THEN
You could live off the money from your record deal.
NOW
If you even have a deal, compensation is low, you’re dependent on the promoter to keep you alive.
THEN
The most powerful person in the music business was the head of the label.
NOW
The most powerful person in the music business is the promoter. Lucian Grainge gets all the ink, but Michael Rapino has all the money. And he with the money triumphs. Universal folds and people still make music. Promoters go under and artists starve.
THEN
You had to buy the record to listen to it. And it was expensive. So if you bought it, you played it and became a fan.
NOW
All music is free. And if it’s not exceptional, you don’t play it, even if the act is a superstar or coming off a number one record.
THEN
We were interested in what classic rock artists had to say.
NOW
We don’t think any classic rock artist has anything to say worth hearing. We don’t want to hear any new material, only the old stuff. Meanwhile, the artists are delusional, they think their new stuff is just as good.
THEN
Bands were rigid, solo albums were rare.
NOW
Everybody’s got a solo project, everybody’s putting covers up on YouTube. We’re in a heyday of creativity.
THEN
You couldn’t get enough music news.
NOW
There’s more music news than anyone can read, and most of it is playing to the lowest common denominator so you ignore it.
THEN
You had no idea what people thought of you and your music.
NOW
People are hating and loving you all over the web at the same time. If you don’t believe in yourself, you become paralyzed and irrelevant.
THEN
Taking chances could kill careers.
NOW
If what you do doesn’t resonate, you just create something new. Now, more than ever, is the time to take an artistic risk.
THEN
What you wore was important.
NOW
Most people have no idea what you look like. Your music is paramount. Ignore the Top Forty wonders, they’re two-dimensional, time-stamped ciphers.
THEN
Being the first to use a new computer technique got you kudos, from Michael Jackson employing morphing technology in the “Black Or White” video to Aerosmith releasing the first digital single to…
NOW
We’ve got future shock. There are so many new technologies that we’re drawn to basics, i.e. music.
THEN
We had universal anthems, like “Stairway To Heaven” and “Free Bird.”
NOW
Nothing lasts.
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http://lefsetz.com/wordpress/index.p...niche-edition/
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Member Since: 1/8/2012
Posts: 11,352
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Quote:
THEN
Dumb was cool.
NOW
Smart is cool.
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Really?
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Member Since: 8/12/2012
Posts: 13,665
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Quote:
Originally posted by WFL
Really?
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He referred probably to Generation X
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