r o y a l ® said:
Now,I mean right now, I feel I miss the old way , where you had an album on a format that was a hassle to change ( as in, physically get up from your chair and change) . . that you wanted to listen to from beginning to end.
Now days with ipods etc and being able make mp3 cd comps in seconds , it seems that listening to a whole album is a long gone concept.
I know we all have a choice, but it seems that albums are dead ?
I hope not.
there is so much excellent music being made below the radar . i mean you are right there is a turn aways from the album in whole. i mean most people dont have the time to dedicate a hour to listen to a album in its entirety these days. i can assure you tho the full length is far from dead. there is so much music out there but you need to look for it and there is a really huge ammount of music that is not interesting or good out there as well.
the death of the album has been here for quite sometime. so many bands put out records with maybe two or three songs on them being decent the rest being crap.
there is a lot of cool albums from the last decade some bigger bands put out some decent music but i am all about the smaller labels when it comes to music now. i mean its not that i dont think the major labels put out talented artists. its just that i can hear there best work on the radio.
really the last decade has been both good and bad for recorded music.
the good is there is more music out there than ever before in history.
the bad is there is more music out there than ever before in history.
what do i mean by that.....
well simply put is there is so much out there that the searching process can be overwhelming.
dont give up on the full length man. i am sure there is cool stuff out there but you are not going to find it at places like hmv or best buy.
i mean one of my favorite albums of the last decade was danse macabre by the faint.
pretty much every track was solid and the album itself was cohesive and fluid.
theres lots of other bands that put out cool records but as i say the obscurity of these bands is frustrating.