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Jason the Argonaut's avatar

The trend described here was a product of Millennials, refined by Zoomers. Sometime around 2010 a guy at a bar told me with annoyance that the kids were the first generation to not rebel. Around the same time a woman with a 13 year old son told me, "I've tried to get into what the kids today are listening to, but it's all stuff from my generation. My son last week asked me with excitement if I'd ever heard of The Eagles!"

Millennials only had their own style in retrospect. At the time, they were known for nostalgia. "Stomp clap hey" music and its associated fashion were intended and acknowledged as a callback to folk music and aesthetics. Zoomer culture is what happens with the generation AFTER nostalgia has become the norm, combined with the lack of in person socialization you mentioned where everything is an abstract head game.

Deborah Carver's avatar

I listen to the college radio station more often than Spotify, on which the zoomers pair 100 gecs next to Jeff Buckley. And while some djs are clearly the same prog rock-loving music nerds who have always djed at college radio stations, generally their taste is more pleasure-oriented, less bound by what's perceived as "cool," less bound by timelines and genre. Engaging with music feels less about fitting in with something "groundbreaking" and "new" -- the patriarchal capitalist paradigm for artistic production -- and more about embracing the wealth of the archive and how it connects with human experience. It's a shift from linear discovery to networked engagement, and I don't see the algorithmic music discovery paradigm as inherently good or bad. Whatever they're getting from tiktok is certainly better than mainstream American radio in 2000.

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