Entry tags:
- eat the rich,
- happy happy joy joy!,
- i will do science to it,
- it becomes self-aware at 2.14am,
- mediapocalypse,
- my common sense is tingling,
- no soap radio,
- perfectly cromulent,
- practicando the parlez-vous,
- sharing is caring,
- spacemonkey mafia,
- this is my shiny thing!,
- two lincolns for every napoleon,
- when i rule the world
I long to tackle the music industry and forcibly re-categorize everything.
Pandora Radio now lets users seed from a subgenre.
For example, under Alternative, which is presumably itself under Pop/Rock, as the Music Genome Project figures genres, one can choose 80s Alternative, which is more frequently called New Wave, except where New Wave is still used by some to describe Punk, in which case it'd be Post-Punk, which together with hair rock was, if I remember right, what Alternative was the alternative to.
(It's also missing an apostrophe. If you shorten it from 1980s, it should become '80s.)
For a minute, I thought I saw glimmerings of a more logical structuring of the genre--popular music, sorted into light meat (pop) and dark meat (rock), then subdivided into what's dominant at the time in question (pop/rock) and what's recessive or on the rise, whether it's known as alternative, indie or punk, which would justify the alternative tag...
But alas, that "World Music" genre defies me. By default, it takes their five base genres and turns it into two: Developed World Music, and Developing World Music. For a project whose goal is to "capture the essence of music at the fundamental level," it really seems a big misstep.
For example, under Alternative, which is presumably itself under Pop/Rock, as the Music Genome Project figures genres, one can choose 80s Alternative, which is more frequently called New Wave, except where New Wave is still used by some to describe Punk, in which case it'd be Post-Punk, which together with hair rock was, if I remember right, what Alternative was the alternative to.
(It's also missing an apostrophe. If you shorten it from 1980s, it should become '80s.)
For a minute, I thought I saw glimmerings of a more logical structuring of the genre--popular music, sorted into light meat (pop) and dark meat (rock), then subdivided into what's dominant at the time in question (pop/rock) and what's recessive or on the rise, whether it's known as alternative, indie or punk, which would justify the alternative tag...
But alas, that "World Music" genre defies me. By default, it takes their five base genres and turns it into two: Developed World Music, and Developing World Music. For a project whose goal is to "capture the essence of music at the fundamental level," it really seems a big misstep.