Better Off?

I just had a thought (hopefully fairly original). I was listening to some music from the mid-90s, and the I decided to swap to the early 2000s, and I thought ‘the young’uns [i.e., those under my age by a few years] won’t fully appreciate this music, because it isn’t linked to a moment in their lives as it is with mine’, and the logical conclusion hit me: the same is true for all music older than me. Indeed, as I paid scant attention to music before the mid-90s, a great deal of 20th century pop music will have little emotional impact on me. So, again logically: everyone older than me has a greater depth of understanding of, or at least contact with, modern music.

The logical refusal of this, which has only just occurred to me, is thus: you reach a point as you age, for some in their late-20s, for others, in their 50s or 60s, or perhaps later, when new music ceases to impact you. Perhaps you don;t hear it at all, or you simply don’t pay it any heed. Either way, it no longer links to your life, and ceases to leave an impression. So, I guess, for most of us there is a window of perhaps 20-40 years, when music matters, and has meaning, and any music beyond that may be important, but is less likely to be so.

Interesting…

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February 25, 2009

*random* that is a very interesting thought, and I know what you mean. It’s like when we’re in the car, the parental units like to put it on the “oldies” station, and if I’m driving, I’ll listen to my MP3 player, they don’t MIND the music, but I’m sure it has so much more meaning to me than it actually does to them. they don’t mind it because it sounds good, they’re not in it for the meaningof it. heh. Take care 🙂 ~♥~