Edward
Bartender
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- 25,082
- Location
- London, UK
I understand the Erie Canal was built without the aid of any professional engineers and presumably by hand, too. I don't know if all of that is true or not. It seems like universities were producing lawyers before they were producing engineers.
Returning to music, however, I think being a performing artist these days is more difficult than it used to be. At one time, e everything was live. Performers traveled a circuit performing in different theaters around the country. That was vaudeville. Recording may have made a difference and radio, too, but nothing like television. When performers put on a show before a live audience in Buffalo, let's say, they did the same performance in the next stop on the circuit in Cleveland. They didn't have to constantly come up with new material to learn.
Then, at the same time, the availability of "good" music in the form of professional performers on recordings and later on radio and television probably did a lot to kill amateur musicians playing popular numbers in the parlor on Sunday afternoon. There are a lot of good professional musicians, too, as well as good amateur musicians. There are lots on YouTube. Some are good enough to perform in public (if they aren't already) but some have more stage presence than others.
Only once in a while will a musician come along that not only forms a group and performs well but writes most of their music and to a greater or lesser extent, practically defines a certain kind of music. In fact, I can only think of a couple at the moment.
There's always the same amount of good and bad music in any era (usually 1%:99%), but it varies significantly as to what flourishes, as being good isn't enough (or often even relevant) - it has to be marketable.
It's certainly true that very many spaces that were formerly performance spaces have been killed off because it is cheaper and easier to just have a jukebox. Back in the 90s, music venue licensing law changed, and the fees were significantly hiked: it became exponentially more expensive for a licence for more than a duo, and so suddenly very many venues just stopped bothering to licence to have bands in. If there was live music at all, it was mostly the 'duo with a real guitar and a keyboard with a bunch of prerecorded backing tracks' affair. In more recnet years the law improved - you no longer need a specific licence for a band if you have a venue of less than 400 capacity, if memory serves. The damage was already done , though, in many places....
Also, you can't overestimate the impact of a generation of kids raised on streaming services is gonig to happen. The music industry missed the boat on the web, then it panicked, then it overreacted..... and now it has convinced kids that music is essentially worthless: at most, they pay Spotify ten bucks a month to not hear ads, otherwise they listen for free. That's all music is worth to them - nothing. (And that's assuming they even do it legitimately...). Meanwhile, Spotify collect the advertising revenue and/or their $0 subscriptions, and throw a penny or two in the direction of the artist. Consumerism and profiteering is killing music.