Mark Fisher : The Slow Cancellation Of The Future

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 20 พ.ค. 2024
  • ** MaMa, Zagreb @ May 21, 2014 **
    --- talk held within the event "Everything Comes Down to Aesthetics and Political Economy"
    mi2.hr/2014/05/sve-se-svodi-na...
    **************
    Predavanje je dio projekta Prošireni estetički odgoj, tj. suradnje organizacija Berliner Gazette, Kontrapunkt, Kuda.org, Multimedijalni institut i Mute, uz podršku programa Kultura 2007-2013 Europske komisije.
    Podržali: Ministarstvo kulture RH, Gradski ured za obrazovanje, kulturu i sport Grada Zagreba.
    www.aestheticeducation.net

ความคิดเห็น • 1K

  • @javigalindo3334
    @javigalindo3334 ปีที่แล้ว +136

    God he's so intelligent and so able to express what we all sense, the anxiety and the disappointment we all feel somewhere deep inside in terms that are both highly relatable and accessible and also deeply cerebral and engaging. Such a shame he's not here anymore to keep sharing insight to us and hold up a mirror to the world.

  • @franklyspeaking
    @franklyspeaking 6 ปีที่แล้ว +886

    i find solace in the idea that my anxieties have a universal element to them - "Nobody is bored but everything is boring". Fisher's critique of social media and wider technology is not merely platitudinal nostalgia (in fact he speaks against it). His insight is that our unfreedom to feel boredom via constant distraction is today's malaise.

    • @billyoldman9209
      @billyoldman9209 4 ปีที่แล้ว +74

      Good point. The same goes for any other kind of negative emotion. Even if you are pissed at a superior or just generally feel unwell due to shitty living conditions, society still obliges you to look hype and fresh all the time. Suffering has been completely divorced from its direct outside causes, dissimulating the social sources of suffering, and it has been turned into something shameful in and of itself, with all the blame put on the individual.

    • @QuinnArgo
      @QuinnArgo 3 ปีที่แล้ว +53

      This is precisely what he wants you to realize. There is a blog post called "Anti-Therapy" in which he argues that speaking up about your issues and experiences only enforces the insulating and destructive system unless you contribute to a sort of collective "consciousness-raising" as he calls it. You should not only find solace in realizing your experiences are universal, this should prompt you to examine the social systems around you, maybe even the ones you've internalized. Because if everyone is struggling with a kind of boring culture of modernity, there must be a collective and systemic reason to it.

    • @patrickholt2270
      @patrickholt2270 3 ปีที่แล้ว +28

      Boredom forces creativity in certain ways. Boredom forces people to think about their lives and who they are and what they want, and allows the time and mental space to start planning and making decisions, as well as to start constructing stories for those who have writing talent, or constructing games for those who are inclined to tabletop rolepalying games and board games and the like. You start imagining things which could be fun, and that leads to making things. Whereas with the surfeit of already existing MMOs and dram accessable through your phone, that chance to create is effectively alienated, and we're rendered mere cunsumers instead, which leads to its own dissatisfaction, because they're expressions of other people's creativity and not your own.

    • @patrickholt2270
      @patrickholt2270 3 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      @Pro Tengu Thanks for clarifying that you are a mean spirited troll.

    • @patrickholt2270
      @patrickholt2270 3 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      @Pro Tengu Keep proving me right.

  • @stevebutler11
    @stevebutler11 3 ปีที่แล้ว +72

    The slow cancellation is accelerating mid 2020 ....

  • @sndrb1336
    @sndrb1336 3 ปีที่แล้ว +263

    As an architect, I can almost seamlessly replace the mentions of music with architecture.

    • @beingsshepherd
      @beingsshepherd 3 ปีที่แล้ว +37

      Arthur Schopenhauer (1788 - 1860):
      'As every man possesses a physiognomy by which you can provisionally judge him, so every age also possesses one that is no less characteristic. For the Zeitgeist of every age is like a sharp east wind that blows through everything. You can find traces of it in all that is done, thought and written, in music and painting, in the flourishing of this or that art: it leaves its mark on everything and everyone, so that, e.g., an age of phrases without meaning must also be one of music without melody and form without aim or object. Thus the spirit of an age also bestows on it its outward physiognomy. *The ground-bass to this is always played by architecture:* its pattern is followed first of all by ornaments, vessels, furniture and utensils of all kinds, and finally even by clothes, together with the manner in which the hair and beard are cut.'

    • @briancarroll3541
      @briancarroll3541 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@beingsshepherd synchronistically, i just mentioned A.S. in my comment. worth also noting that Schopenhauer puts music at the apex of all (classical) arts.

    • @hinteregions
      @hinteregions 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      'Playful eclecticism,' 'classical allusions,' 'references,' triangles with holes cut out. As an industrial designer, I wish there was something I could say to make us both feel better.

    • @teresamartinlorenzo5741
      @teresamartinlorenzo5741 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Please do mention those architectural references, for us youtube crowd. Thank you very much

    • @hinteregions
      @hinteregions 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Seconded.

  • @tomward5293
    @tomward5293 ปีที่แล้ว +74

    I think the reason why we haven't evolved beyond the 90's is that the 90's achieved the optimal profitability for the culture industry, therefore it seeks to keep cycling it's audience back in to replicate it.
    In the same way we create monocultures to produce and harvest crops.

    • @acropolisnow9466
      @acropolisnow9466 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Great point. You could also argue that there is in fact nowhere left to go now and that entropy has set in.

    • @kelechi_77
      @kelechi_77 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      I feel it's more so that those who grew up in that period for some reason are stuck in it and want to relieve it, add this with the amount of gen z who also want to go back, and now you've killed forward-thinking ideals and opt for pure nostalgia. In the 90s you had people who wanted to be in the '60s, but they were all a sub group and weren't really the majority, some old styles were rehashed but reworked and modernized. Nowadays, it's like we are all in constant loops of wanting to go back to our correspondent generational time periods because everyone who lived through the 20th century is stuck in it and now doesn't want to push for change.
      For example, the idea of the old boomer who wants classic '60s rock to come back is so redundant and idiotic to me, because at the time, if you were to play a 1963 song like "Surfin' Bird" in 1967 when everyone was listening to Hendrix, you'd already be classed as a dated person, so why is it now that instead of these boomers wanting to push forward they for some reason want to return back? Even though in their era if they said the same thing they are saying now, people would have shunned them as dated. In 1969 most people were no longer really listening to Elvis, it was now the Beatles, King Crimson, the Rolling Stones... etc. To say "hey let's go back to the 50s where everyone listened to Elvis!" would have seemed backwards as hell.

    • @sp123
      @sp123 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Profitability has gone down because technology has improved and made music cheap. If we still had to buy cds to listen to songs and DVDs to watch concerts, artists could still make good money

    • @RlsIII-uz1kl
      @RlsIII-uz1kl 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

      In the 90s many looked to the late 60s early 70s and many now look towards the 50s. Why? Well for the individuality and creativity from the late 60s and early 70s and to the 50s for what good was lost regarding morality community etc. Seems a kind of Wagon-wheel effect is being experienced and the fast we move technologically the much more quickly we move into the new metamodern "network society" transhistorical era. The neoliberal world is giving way to the National Populist view Nationally and the Civilizational Populist view Globally. The deterritorialization has begun within our institution and for a sect of society as we've seen their nonsensical dogmatic virtues (vices)/pillars(vices) on full display. I'm referring to the Hegelian cultists(religion)/woke cultists(religion).

    • @RlsIII-uz1kl
      @RlsIII-uz1kl 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@acropolisnow9466 Civilizational Populsim

  • @j.dietrich
    @j.dietrich 3 ปีที่แล้ว +230

    I was never fortunate enough to meet Mr Fisher, but I miss him dearly.

    • @SpicyDragoon
      @SpicyDragoon 3 ปีที่แล้ว +19

      He was my lecturer in 2nd year Uni and I just found out.

    • @anacidcommie382
      @anacidcommie382 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      You're not alone there.

    • @owenfink
      @owenfink 3 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      @@anacidcommie382 I made a new friend via the internet in March 2020, and they later recommended to me Capitalist Realism. I read it that year, and I found it to be prophetic. I just finished watching this lecture, and dipping into the comments, I discover the news of his death in 2017. This is heartbreaking and demotivating. Humanity has lost an important ally. Yet I have this almost dogmatic belief that humanity is still salvageable, and learning that we lack an ally only increases my resolve.

    • @boorhaave5880
      @boorhaave5880 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      How can you miss him if you never met him?

    • @owenfink
      @owenfink 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@boorhaave5880 It is a unique sense of mourning, but it is mourning nonetheless.

  • @megavide0
    @megavide0 6 ปีที่แล้ว +342

    3:21 "The dimension of the #future has disappeared. We're trapped in the 20th century… What it means to be in the 21st century is to have 20th century culture on hi-res screens/ distributed by high-speed Internet, actually."

    • @camerondowse668
      @camerondowse668 4 ปีที่แล้ว +23

      Perhaps early signs that were headed for a simulated world. The year is 3087, and we’re all in VR headsets living in 1998

    • @televikkuntdaowuxing
      @televikkuntdaowuxing 3 ปีที่แล้ว +24

      Cameron Dowse Precisely, lol. Unless capitalism is dealt with, 1960-1990 may well be the peak reference of human culture for future generations.

    • @TakeMeOffYourMailingList
      @TakeMeOffYourMailingList 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Hashtagging the word future is exactly part of this problem.

    • @SFDestiny
      @SFDestiny 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @JJ KK I don't comprehend all this pathos. It seems like nostalgia for an imaginary past. "I was promised Santa, dammit!" What am I missing ??

    • @SFDestiny
      @SFDestiny 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @JJ KK what are you defensive about? I replied to you as an ally against those bozos. Apparently your dog bites

  • @riversideqb1
    @riversideqb1 ปีที่แล้ว +82

    That Amy Winehouse anecdote really is the best example of hyperrealism in action. Winehouse was, to most people today, more real and authentic than actual soul singers from the 60’s. We live in a world where our ability to recreate authentic experience is BETTER than the authentic experience itself. As Rick Roderick once said “you wouldn’t want to see a T-rex for real. You’d be disappointed after seeing what Spielberg put on the screen.”

    • @EpioN
      @EpioN ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Bullshit, a real TRex would probably be more amazing that what we could ever think of.

    • @remotefaith
      @remotefaith ปีที่แล้ว +11

      Amy was more 'real and authentic' because she was actually there at the time and not you know, in the 1960s.

    • @Thewonderingminds
      @Thewonderingminds 29 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​@@remotefaith Well, enjoy!!! the only reality is Your own sense of being, in, with, and within, the entirety of the universe.

  • @cinemablessed1234
    @cinemablessed1234 3 ปีที่แล้ว +171

    this lecture's hitting me hard, once again I'm drifting through social media-cyberspace at 3 o'clock on a Thursday night. Not so much to be entertained or to relax, just looking for something interesting to fill the void of aimless non-sleeping. Rest in peace Mark Fisher. Would recommend anyone reading this comment to check out his collection of essays K-Punk, for evermore in-depth popculture-analysis

    • @johndavey2340
      @johndavey2340 2 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      I was put on to mark fisher from his essay good for nothing, no one has or had put my feelings of hopelessness and defeated sadness so perfectly into words…which makes it all the more saddening what happened to him

    • @plebjames
      @plebjames 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      Next time you reach for your phone, just resist that urge and see what your brain does. When I do it, I get a little rush of cognitive freedom

  • @gudapoyo7712
    @gudapoyo7712 3 ปีที่แล้ว +138

    This lecture has given me one of those rare moments where I have found someone explain a concept I have had lingering in my mind for quite some time without any certainty or methodological lens. I am now starting Ghosts of My Life

    • @esterhudson5104
      @esterhudson5104 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Double that.

    • @Ricky-re6he
      @Ricky-re6he 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@esterhudson5104 💀💀

    • @WizardofFuzz
      @WizardofFuzz 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      That was EXACTLY how I felt when I read Capitalist Realism.

    • @FordZaphod23
      @FordZaphod23 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I feel exactly the same way gudapoyo. The main concept I had was that people had run out of ideas in the arts - certainly in film & music. When it's possible, I would love 2 attend a debate / discussion on this without just reading it on blogs and comment boards.

    • @sonnystephens3874
      @sonnystephens3874 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      There has to be some german, slovenian, sanskrit whatever word for this sensation out there somewhere. That feeling of learning other people understand a deeply held belief you've never communicated. Its blissful.... Usually the only way I make friends.

  • @ingsertname6074
    @ingsertname6074 3 ปีที่แล้ว +52

    i think that the second half of the 2010s really saw an emboldened form of what fisher postulates here. in terms of music, we have seen
    - the fetishistion of the 70s genre, such as in Dua Lipa's 'future nostalgia' or St Vincent's new album.
    - the popularusation of artists openly, shamelessly emulating musicians that have come before them, for example Declan McKenna's similitude to David Bowie
    - the continued pervasiveness of britpop groups, such as Oasis or Blur, in the youth culture of today, which contradicts the notion of a distinct cultural heterogeneity as time progresses
    - the paradoxical main-streaming of a rejection of 'main-stream' music in favour of indie bands from the 1980s and 1990s.
    i dont think that thus cultural hauntology is just present in music though. it can also be seen in
    - the universal prevalence of 'vintage' clothing, such as Nike sweatshirts from the 1980s or Adidas Originals attire from the 1990s
    - the longevity of architectural movements (i.e. modernism) which linger far longer than previous movements
    - the non-progression of cinema culture, which now exclusively focusses on established properties (i.e. marvel, star wars etc.)
    - the commodification of 'retro' technologies, such as record players and old radio sets
    Mark Fisher truly was a prophetic voice

    • @gozderdogan
      @gozderdogan 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      👏

    • @mauve9266
      @mauve9266 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      “The paradoxical mainstreaming of a rejection of mainstream music…” that’s interesting stuff. And the thing with Declan McKenna, I hadn’t noticed as I haven’t kept up with his recent stuff lately but after going back and seeing it the resemblance is uncanny

    • @fierypickles4450
      @fierypickles4450 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Very good summation, ty lol helpful

    • @mariesoph2
      @mariesoph2 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Spot on🤞🏻

    • @aztro.99
      @aztro.99 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      i agree to an extent, but tbf i feel like innovations and progress are happening all around us, u just have to look

  • @coolshah1662
    @coolshah1662 2 ปีที่แล้ว +186

    Rest in Peace, Fisher. The world lost one of its most brilliant minds with you. I hope that you're in a better place now.

    • @miguelserrano8154
      @miguelserrano8154 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I was gonna tell him thatt his audio quality was poor. Looks like the future cancelled him as well. Just as well. Thank you.

    • @dandylandpuffplaysminecraf8744
      @dandylandpuffplaysminecraf8744 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      He is in the future

  • @tph2010
    @tph2010 3 ปีที่แล้ว +41

    He completely nailed it. Even truer today than when he gave this talk.

  • @nondescriptname
    @nondescriptname 3 ปีที่แล้ว +26

    It was both refreshing and sad to see this pop up in my recommendations so many years later.
    One of the nice things about a full lecture, as opposed to the more digestible anti-capitalist media we so often see on TH-cam today, is the almost complete lack of loud but vacant opposition. No one whose ideas are molded by the neoliberal hegemony has the attention span required to argue with it. Small mercy.

  • @milos8556
    @milos8556 2 ปีที่แล้ว +193

    RIP Mark Fisher. Although I was only ten when he passed he is one of my greatest influences ever. I’m going to keep fighting to create a world he would be proud of.

    • @user-fp8xc8lf3f
      @user-fp8xc8lf3f 2 ปีที่แล้ว +28

      bruh what? play sports if you're 15 dont worry about this garbage

    • @milos8556
      @milos8556 2 ปีที่แล้ว +66

      @@user-fp8xc8lf3f i just like philosophy lol

    • @meinungsmacher9114
      @meinungsmacher9114 2 ปีที่แล้ว +62

      @@milos8556 don‘t listen to him. Do what you like to do. Philosophy is life-changing and most people lack the knowledge of how impactful philosophy can be

    • @Aetherius21
      @Aetherius21 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      I was also 10 when he passed away. Truly one of the most insightful cultural thinkers of this century with a tragic early end. We need more such analytical, class-conscious cutural critiques on the left today and I don't think we'll get someone quite like Fisher again.

    • @ThePowerpointMaster
      @ThePowerpointMaster 2 ปีที่แล้ว +19

      @@user-fp8xc8lf3f What's your problem? I'm his age too, what's wrong with being interested in this

  • @Schizopantheist
    @Schizopantheist 5 ปีที่แล้ว +355

    To all the people in the comments opining that Mark Fisher was out of touch, he'd never heard of Burial, Sleaford Mods, Wiley.. etc It might benefit you to take a brief dip into his blog and you'd see that those were just the artists he championed, he was not unaware or completely scathing of contemporary music culture (he wrote for Wire), it's just that here he was commenting on what distinguished it from older musical culture in a certain negative way.

    • @ilonadorotasagar
      @ilonadorotasagar 5 ปีที่แล้ว +35

      totally....there is a whole chapter in Ghost of my life about Burial

    • @yootchoobe
      @yootchoobe 4 ปีที่แล้ว +23

      Quite frankly, it's my opinion that anyone who's never heard of Sleaford Mods can consider themselves pretty lucky... because they're shit haha :-P

    • @JamieBarnes11
      @JamieBarnes11 4 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      Burial and Sleaford Mods are fucking shit though

    • @DOPEdwarf
      @DOPEdwarf 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Just look these guys up, complete shit, Fisher is right

    • @NickJovic23
      @NickJovic23 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Schizopantheist or just read Ghosts of my life where he talks about them directly.

  • @UberOcelot
    @UberOcelot 3 ปีที่แล้ว +113

    I disagree with him on the lack of specificity of time in music. It's still there. The problem is most people are not living with the cutting edge of music. Most people don't follow scenes and labels close enough. We see the history of music through it's hits, and a recontextualizing through film and other media. Stranger Things does capture some of the 80's, it probably captures 90's nostalgia for the 80's even more so, and 2010's revival of the 80's more still. How many people were clued into all of those aesthetics at the time? A slim margin that were the creators and aficionados. With the internet more people added to the mythos and context of an overall theme that wasn't as universal at the time as some believe. At most it was a veneer of branding targeted at teenage youth that was as fleeting and given little introspection. Even look at Black Mirror San Junipero for the same thing, memories of the past that never really were. Adult life takes people away from the edge of progress, and puts people at the edge of old problems. People with kids attest to reliving that part of life through their kids, because at some point that is the only way to really get a sense of this specificity.
    When we look on the now in 20 years, there will be a lot revived that for most was under the radar. Retro 2020 won't really seem like real 2020 at all, and it will be delivered in a more concentrated aesthetic than thought possible. God, just look at every WW2 film after Saving Private Ryan. Same deal. We chase aesthetics and impressions more than the real thing. Today, people simply track progress in a select few industries and loose touch with others. You can't keep up with everything anymore. Almost like there are parallel worlds at any given time on top of each other. Things either move so fast week to week, or are endeavors like infrastructure that stretch for years and meant to last centuries. This is why it feels we are in a zombie amusement park, while at the same time innovation has never been faster. It's simply lost to market fracture.

    • @mauve9266
      @mauve9266 2 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      Wow this rings so true to me. After stranger things came out a lot of my friends became obsessed with the 80s and wished they had grown up at that time. It made them feel sad that they were growing up now and opposed to then, but I didn’t see why I should I compare the mundaneness of my current reality to the hyper romanticised hyper idealised conceptualisation of a previous era. It just doesn’t feel like they’re on equal footing. We haven’t had time to romanticise the present cos the present is now. I am intrigued as to how people will conceptualise the 2020s though- I wonder what cool aesthetics or styles of art we’re largely unaware of that may become a staple of retro 2020s

    • @KnjazNazrath
      @KnjazNazrath 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@mauve9266 Might wanna look into the synchronicities 'twixt 2020s and 1920s art and theory. I'm already seeing a few ripples here and there.

    • @PfhorShark
      @PfhorShark 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      @@mauve9266 Even Daniel Lopatin's Eccojams are a re-hash of John Oswald's plunderphonics, are a re-imagining of Captain Beefheart's post blues Dadaism. Every new, every niche, stlye of music is a continuation of an existing idea. When the band Suicide took a drum machine and turned it on its head in the late 70s, this paved the way for every single use of a drum machine since.
      As in Deleuze's phenomenology, new ideas have to come from the inexperienced and naive. Boredom is what gives people an outlet for their inexperience, and the immediacy of all knowledge today is not providing enough boredom. A youth can read about Suicide and drum machines, about Oswald and Beefheart, and then have nothing to create. If you give a kid with no internet access a drum machine and tell them to make music, you may get something new, but we need the modern day equivalent of the innocuous drum machine.
      I would argue that the modern day equivalent would be something like VCV rack, a free, digital modular synthesiser where there are no rules, there is no visibility as to what has been made with it, and even professional musicians with years of experience in modular environments do not have any ideas in stone on what to do with it.
      There is hope, as always, but you need to look quite hard to find it. Daniel Lopatin is a particularly good example of someone with current experience in producing new ideas, despite how vast the possible field of influence is today. Arguably even his work is Dadaism; an artform increasingly accepted by popular culture.

    • @fuckoff505
      @fuckoff505 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Well said

    • @diegomenendezcastro7448
      @diegomenendezcastro7448 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Wow you tried

  • @LoveSisiLove
    @LoveSisiLove 5 ปีที่แล้ว +230

    God, a person with such insight into the current state of affairs has to have it tough.
    The thing he said about being bored even when we are curious is spot on.

    • @tite93
      @tite93 4 ปีที่แล้ว +22

      In the end it might've been just too much for him. The sheer boredom of it all

    • @wrathford
      @wrathford 4 ปีที่แล้ว +27

      He committed suicide. Terrible, but I can see why.

    • @QuinnArgo
      @QuinnArgo 3 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      @@wrathford What's interesting is that before his death, he worked on "acid communism", and the unfinished introduction reads a lot more hopeful than his other writings, I can highly recommend reading it

    • @briancarroll3541
      @briancarroll3541 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      that is a very valuable insight my friend. it's important to remember that we don't ask to be born with certain prescient abilities. but this stops no one from judging everyone's pain by the same metric. depression has been described as feeling the pain of the world within one individual. lastly, imo depression is simply the inability to deceive one's self about the world as it truly is, sort of an inversion of the notion: 'think positively' or that we can indeed choose how we think and what we see given what we now understand about free will. you are either depressed or you're not paying attention, depression or delusion, but some of us don't choose whether or not we remotely view the future, only whether we decide to deny our own vision in deference to society's prescription.

    • @nillehessy
      @nillehessy 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@wrathford i hope i have the guts to do it when it´s time

  • @wcg66
    @wcg66 3 ปีที่แล้ว +235

    Fisher has been a real eye opener. Since he uses music as an example: when I was a teen in the 80s we disparaged any music that wasn't new. We had no time for classic rock, for example. All of it was dead to us (in fact, it wasn't that old.) Today, not only do I (and it seems, my peers) wax nostalgic for the 80s but the "classic" rock that we so hated back then. As Fisher says, we have an excessive tolerance for regurgitating and recycling culture. Think about how so called "alternative rock" is now almost 30 years old.

    • @speakertreatz
      @speakertreatz 3 ปีที่แล้ว +20

      You're braver than most of your generation (which is also mine) to admit that, and I've contemplated the same idea, my conclusion is that insistence on The New, The Next is primarily a teenage trait, I'd go further to say it's predominantly a young man's trait. Linked with the oneupmanship, competitiveness and ego of teenage male friendships. And the Year Zero stance - all Old music is worthless, all new music is intrinsically relevant and essential. In five, fifteen twenty years a male music fan (especially if he's still passionate about music) will grasp the never ending continuum of music past present and future, how those 'new' bands they championed had roots in older music, and how more experimental older music paved the way and often pioneered the same ideas as the latest Innovator but just weren't recognised at the time. All of the serves being returns, across genres, eras, generations, and he will get the bigger picture. An instance on NOW (not your Dad's music) is a teenage conceit. One your Dad may well have postured with too.

    • @bostonseeker
      @bostonseeker 3 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      I noticed that already in the 1990s. I was teaching at a college and noticed that the 19-year-olds were wearing the same Led Zepplin t-shirts their parents had worn 20 years earlier. Their parents did not wear their parents' Nat King Cole or Elvis t-shirts from the 1950s or Benny Goodman from the 1940s. (There were no such t-shirts.)

    • @mauve9266
      @mauve9266 3 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      @@bostonseeker I’ve definitely noticed this phenomena of young people now seemingly having a rlly deep appreciation for older music that I’m not sure was present in the same way before. Granted, being 17 Idk to what extent that’s true but basically all my friends listen to stuff from the 60s 70s 80s 90s. To some it’s almost like a badge of honour- a signifier of their superior musical taste. Partly I think it’s due to the insane accessibility to music we have now and we want to experience it all but also I think it maybe have to do with what was being said i the lecture about the “oppressive weight of the past” and how it kind of bears down on the present. I constantly see sentiments regarding how everything was better then and how the best has already happened etc etc. And I think this mindset can actually hinder progress in some ways cos some people are so obsessed with say the rock canon (if that’s what you’d call it) that they make it harder for innovation to occur

    • @ofacid3439
      @ofacid3439 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I use to think the very last real futuristic sound was a juke/footwork thing of early 2010s

    • @jaywilliams720
      @jaywilliams720 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@ofacid3439 dont remind me that footwork is 10 years old :/ how do you feel about hyperpop btw?

  • @ianpulsford2295
    @ianpulsford2295 7 ปีที่แล้ว +388

    Hollywood is another example of the increasing blandness and tight repetition of culture. Another superhero sequel anyone? All safe profits, safe stories, safe....

    • @ianpulsford2295
      @ianpulsford2295 7 ปีที่แล้ว +54

      Also agree 110% about the hijacking of cyberspace by "capitalist cyberspace" and its constant demands on attention. I yearn for the old internet where the purpose was making useful information available and the fluffiest it got was the hampsterdance page. Now it's buried under clickbait, pointless distractions and bullshit of the worst kind.

    • @screamingmeat5901
      @screamingmeat5901 7 ปีที่แล้ว +52

      The interesting part of the superhero surge isn't just that studios are being safe, it's about why we as consumers are lapping them up and making them safe bets for studios.
      I think we live in a world where we have no certainties, no power, and no future. We're regressing to childhood icons; stories where we know who the villains really are, and that show that they can be defeated. It's depressing!

    • @ianpulsford2295
      @ianpulsford2295 7 ปีที่แล้ว +27

      You're right the internet was built by the US military. I made the common mistake of conflating the world wide web with the internet. I was thinking of the early world wide web of the 90's when the signal to noise ratio of websites created as a labor of love or to provide useful information vs corporate websites designed to harvest your data for marketing or waste your time was far far better.

    • @jetblack8250
      @jetblack8250 4 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @Temple of Ridicule Its irrelevant who paid for it. There was a freedom in the space that no longer exists today.

    • @gchijioke12
      @gchijioke12 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      The McDonalds business model has become the standard for everything.

  • @reneperez2126
    @reneperez2126 5 ปีที่แล้ว +96

    shocked to learn he died , i loved capitalist realism and his articles RIP Mark.

  • @burnedbread4691
    @burnedbread4691 3 ปีที่แล้ว +90

    This is probably the most important lecture on 21st century aesthetics and cultural studies

    • @dillonv5345
      @dillonv5345 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      agreed

    • @esterhudson5104
      @esterhudson5104 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      You well be right. I’m astonished at how relieved I am to have found this vid.

    • @fuelks
      @fuelks 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      i can recommend works by adorno or benjamin, considering they've been saying this stuff decades ago

    • @burnedbread4691
      @burnedbread4691 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@fuelks Not necessarily. Benjamin, yes, maybe, but Adornos criticism of the culture industry falls quite short from Fisher. Well, Adorno coined the term, but i'd argue his ideas only came to fruition with his students (and people influenced by them, like Fisher). There's a lot more to this than was ever addressed in, say, Dialectics of Enlightenment, even though the topics are similar

    • @martinrea8548
      @martinrea8548 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It's rubbish. What a boring, moaning man! Music was better back in the day, no feeling in modern music blah, blah, blah.... We've heard it all before. Pure rubbish.

  • @epsteenwusmerdered9878
    @epsteenwusmerdered9878 3 ปีที่แล้ว +38

    I agree with his observation, but to see these cultural developments as inherently negative also indicates we could merely be stuck within a modernist mind paradigm in a post-modern world, and somehow still refuse to let go of this 19th/20th century expectation of something new and groundbreaking every 5 years

    • @noelreed1878
      @noelreed1878 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      I definitely see how this could be a drawback, but I think the argument more hinges on the fact that things *are* happening, we *do* get and have new things, but because of their overabundance and such quick succession there's a lurking feeling that nothing is truly happening. The iPhone and climate change are one in the same; one gets better and better and one gets worse and worse, but how and why and from what precedent we can't really say.

    • @alexstanley3378
      @alexstanley3378 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yeah I mean I feel that at least in the space of alternative electronic music there definitely has been massive changes

  • @deathrides4756
    @deathrides4756 3 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    "The past was dead, the future was unimaginable."
    George Orwell - 1984

    • @deathrides4756
      @deathrides4756 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@DaanDaanDaanDaanDaanis a g!mp

  • @Kreissig
    @Kreissig 3 ปีที่แล้ว +58

    This man changed my life, Rest In Peace

    • @SFDestiny
      @SFDestiny 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I have an open mind, but I've just arrived. What should I check out to understand the impact you describe?

    • @Bisquick
      @Bisquick 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@SFDestiny Random internet person here (ie not the person you're asking directly), but I would say maybe DeBord's Society of the Spectacle as mentioned by Fisher in this (if I recall), Baudrillard's extension of this concept into a more semiotic evolutionary analysis (here's a good encapsulation I think, as it pertains to the spectacularization/abstraction of war: www.halliejones.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/Baudrillard-The-Gulf-War-did-not-Take-Place.pdf ), Adorno and Horkheimer's Dialectic of Enlightenment as a tension between myth and "rationality" and the overbearing mechanical hollowing of novelty/meaning by an industrialized "culture industry", broadly just critical theory in general. If these are too understandably dry/academic, I really like Adam Curtis' documentaries, most recently with Can't Get You Out of My Head: th-cam.com/video/MHFrhIAj0ME/w-d-xo.html

    • @SFDestiny
      @SFDestiny 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Bisquick maybe this: One *could* say, "Let's change course," but instead Fisher & Friends decry, "I was promised a different destination!" This is "surplus enjoyment." It *feels* like action, but it actually disguises inaction.

    • @Bisquick
      @Bisquick 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@SFDestiny Indeed, no disagreements here, unfortunately I think the cultural vector is the only one where action _was_ offered in potential with the rise and eventual domination of neoliberalism in the 70s and the suppression of class/material politics, and I think Fisher is merely pointing out that even this vector, the one that shapes our capacity to imagine anything at all let alone alternative material social arrangements, has been corrupted by corporate power. Where sustainable action/dissent is inevitably recuperated and politics becomes an essentialized manichean spectacle rather than the struggle for humanity to transcend itself or whatever, so everything becomes a sort of monotonous repetitive rehashing of the past if that makes sense.

    • @altradecull9149
      @altradecull9149 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@SFDestiny He is describing a cultural condition which tells us that "nothing can change!", "capitalism is all we have!", "yeah, I don't like it either but this is just the way things are now..." . Fisher isn't creating a positive political project to extricate us from this condition in his lectures, but in his final years he does try to create a blueprint. Check out Postcapitalist Desire and the introduction to Acid Communism.

  • @bepatientIhaveautism
    @bepatientIhaveautism 3 ปีที่แล้ว +32

    He never delves into that but you could almost listen to this speech as if the subject was "what is vaporwave and how did it emerge?".

    • @zakkyp8849
      @zakkyp8849 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Esss like eeee everything and nothing homes

  • @benwilliams1769
    @benwilliams1769 2 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    RIP. What a burden to be such a brilliant man in these times.

  • @kevinmayer8055
    @kevinmayer8055 4 ปีที่แล้ว +96

    curious, the way he repetitively, unconsciously, compulsively lifts and sets down his water glass and water bottle, without ever taking a sip, serves as a kind of visual metaphor for everything he is saying. brilliant.

    • @sebastianzimmerhackl3686
      @sebastianzimmerhackl3686 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      cheers

    • @mabefratti
      @mabefratti 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      cheers

    • @greenkhidr2
      @greenkhidr2 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      First saw this with the Graeber coffee cup.

    • @pfflam
      @pfflam 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      He's lining them up, along with the watch band -its a tick thing, I do it all the time in meetings and etc

    • @esterhudson5104
      @esterhudson5104 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Great observation.

  • @nowaylon2008
    @nowaylon2008 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    "We don't have the freedom to be bored anymore".

  • @smooa1889
    @smooa1889 3 ปีที่แล้ว +46

    scrolling through tiktok while listening to this. theres never a break from consuming information. this is the most advance form of totalitarianism ever

    • @cubeincubes
      @cubeincubes 3 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      I’m pooping on a toilet right now, it’s advanced af

    • @xyui8434
      @xyui8434 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Bro just delete toktok lmao not that advanced

    • @smooa1889
      @smooa1889 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@xyui8434 i need to consooooom

    • @neomcdoom
      @neomcdoom 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      This is just a leftist version of Alex Jones. You are overthinking everything. It's not totalitarianism, anyone can put down the phone at any time, they choose not to. That's the opposite of totalitarianism.

    • @smooa1889
      @smooa1889 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@neomcdoom choices dont exist we are externally controlled not internally controlled

  • @voltnoi
    @voltnoi 8 ปีที่แล้ว +68

    The future is better protected than the past. -Chris Marker, La Jetée

  • @dsnodgrass4843
    @dsnodgrass4843 4 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    19:45 -19:53 is spot on. A thing i try to tell people is that a big difference between now and the 20th C. is that now, because 99% of music is available on demand and practically free (at the moment); it's often taken for granted. That cultural artifact which has no "price" can easily be seen as having no "worth", in terms of subjective or objective value. It's discouraging, if you're the one working to make that artifact.

  • @thekestrelseye
    @thekestrelseye 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    It's the McDonaldsization of art and culture...

  • @billyoldman9209
    @billyoldman9209 4 ปีที่แล้ว +80

    If we look at history it becomes evident that every cultural shift was closely assosiated with a shift in the power structure of society. Culture is impotent by itself. The Renaissance was closely associated with a revolution in medieval warfare, but in contrast today every change is confined to the field of high tech, which is profoundly asocial and very distant from the masses.
    The bourgeoisie completely solidified its power in WW2 and with the defeat of the labor and civil rights movements modern society has been been at a complete standstill since the 80's. And lets be honest, contemporary pop culture garbage is produced through statistical methods and computer algorithms. Even the aesthetic design of cars and planes is completely done with AI these days. So why is anyone surprised that everything is the same?

    • @gujono.eiriksson8553
      @gujono.eiriksson8553 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      /Depression

    • @televikkuntdaowuxing
      @televikkuntdaowuxing 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Guðjón Ó. Eiríksson Not necessarily depression. Irrational insurrection, Terror. Revolt against the current state of things

    • @peterlauch6172
      @peterlauch6172 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      Economically we are slaves
      We do not own our money
      We do not own our future
      We do not own our children.
      They can all be legally robbed under a democratic system.
      The socialists demand politicians regulate the capitalists, but the social policies only benefit the rich.
      They use minimum wages, worker's rights and labour unions to rob you and enrich themselves.
      It is no wonder culture stagnates

    • @paulsass4343
      @paulsass4343 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      this is a very salient observation; generally individuals see the world as a series of events that happen to "persons" yet the free floating rationale of corporate algorarithims to maximize capital aqquisition in the shortest possible time frame, steamrollers anything in its path- there is no culture, no political, no artistic, no philosophical, no human activity that can stand in the way of the capability of capital to accrete more capital.

    • @yupisaid
      @yupisaid 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The main recurring theme here is technocracy. It's amazing because I don't think I ever hear any so-called leftist thinkers ever mention it.

  • @potchequinhadostchongos5550
    @potchequinhadostchongos5550 3 ปีที่แล้ว +27

    I was a kid when he died, I just read his book capitalism realism, I pictured his voice to be much deeper, its my first time hearing him

  • @AudioPervert1
    @AudioPervert1 3 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    That epic remark of his "the future has been cancelled" can be understood or even applied in so many ways. In terms of electronic music culture, which had a great run for 20 odd years, is now mostly cancelled, run dry, finished. Yet, even Mark Fisher's suicide cancelled his own future...

    • @rodrigorodriguez2753
      @rodrigorodriguez2753 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      sounds like your invitation to some fun parties over the past few years suffered the same sad fate

  • @topologyrob
    @topologyrob 3 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Hmm, after hearing the whole talk - he makes some good points, but I think it's a bit too neat. It is too easy to be pessimistic about the present when one reaches a certain age, and I think that can't be left out of the equation.

  • @larsetom1
    @larsetom1 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Geez, in 2014, if that's when this talk happened, then Fisher is only saying what would be undeniable in 6 years - that the "future has disappeared." 2020, the Year of Mass Blindness.

  • @JohnMoseley
    @JohnMoseley 6 ปีที่แล้ว +184

    The culture is relentlessly boring now and the internet as site or enabler of new creativity has been a massive disappointment, probably because it's mainly just a speeded up communication and purchasing tool, not really a medium, in the same way that hardly anyone made art using the telephone or the credit card.
    Part of the problem is that the 20th century was just such an explosion of new artistic ideas that they dried up the well. Rock 'n' roll and dance music have played out a series of variations. They're simply not new anymore and have few ways left of being new. In avant garde music and art, where do you go after minimalism, conceptualism and electronic media? In practice, sadly, it seems you go to one hell of a lot of pastiche. For those of us who grew up in eras of youth rebellion, it's kind of weird to see young artists actually aping the productions of their parents' generations in punk or electronica or conceptual art.
    But all this old artistic newness ran in parallel and hand in hand with the sense of epic societal change. A friend of mine is a writer and comic artist who was active in the 70s and he says his generation thought anything was possible. Art was thought to be part of the revolution, the new way or the explosion of new ways. We have lost that motivating sense of purpose and meaning for our art. It's all just entertainment and you're either successful financially at it or not but can't hope for more than that or anything outside it. It's now clearly revealed as just part of the capitalist status quo.

    • @cypherpillar9009
      @cypherpillar9009 5 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      John Moseley If you don’t think their is any artistic cultural innovation just listen to hip hop. Mark sounds like an old man here, thinking that rock n roll is the tip of the spear

    • @amdanico
      @amdanico 5 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      He liked Drake.

    • @wokerwanderung
      @wokerwanderung 5 ปีที่แล้ว +25

      @@cypherpillar9009 Hip hop has not been innovative since the early 2000s at the latest. The trap sound has been around since the 90s. The most "radical" edge of hip hop today simply merges hip hop with other genres, but hip hop has indeed succumbed to the same problems of the rest of music.
      The last great innovation of american music was footwork, but that's been around since the 90s.

    • @cypherpillar9009
      @cypherpillar9009 5 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      debt grips listen to Danny Brown if you want just one example of undiluted hip hop that is innovative

    • @wokerwanderung
      @wokerwanderung 5 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      @@cypherpillar9009 Out of curiousity, what part of Danny Brown's music do you consider innovative? He's good, but there's not particularly new or innovative about his work. He adds electronic influences, his samples are interesting, but there's nothing innovative about either of those things at all in hip hop.

  • @averagecitizen4122
    @averagecitizen4122 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I was 15 when thsi man died and blissfully unaware of how important amd accurate his decsriptions of an impending sense of melancholic existential dread that seems to settle in everyday life. As time has gone on it seems people have only become more accepting of commodification of all apsects of life, climate change has become ironically openly accepted but this has also seemed to come with a back ended embrace that we will simply have to live with its condequences. Like capitalist realism a sense of fatility in the societal psyche has put us collectively in a trance we need to desperately snap out of. Rip Mark Fisher and I hope people use his works to peoductive ends and look for solutions to a world with a quickly fading if not already departed future.

  • @kitsaxon1128
    @kitsaxon1128 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    He would of loved Carti

  • @jupatj24
    @jupatj24 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    It's a beautifully intuitive idea. Future has disappeared because reality has become cyclical. This is clearly reflected in the way of economical structures. By means of eternal inflation, the capitalistic machinery will never come to an end. Reality becomes a snapshot of the same scene that has been seen before except it "feels" different. The young, the middle-aged, the elderly lead the same lives as they lead decades ago. And somehow we still believe that things have changed. The future is clearly suppressed.

  • @ryanbenson4610
    @ryanbenson4610 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    No one loved Jungle music more than Mark Fisher.

  • @sonnystephens3874
    @sonnystephens3874 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    A shining beacon. Pure intellect. We are wandering around fields of inhumanity hailed as achievements of humankind.

  • @pauljacobson2207
    @pauljacobson2207 3 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Modern society is suffering from “temporal exhaustion”, the sociologist Elise Boulding once said. “If one is mentally out of breath all the time from dealing with the present, there is no energy left for imagining the future,” she wrote in 1978. We can only guess her reaction to the relentless, Twitter-fuelled politics of 2019. No wonder wicked problems like climate change or inequality feel so hard to tackle right now.

    • @acropolisnow9466
      @acropolisnow9466 ปีที่แล้ว

      You'll never solve either of those wicked problems.

    • @vienlacrose
      @vienlacrose 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      The point isn't to solve them. It's not even to want them be solved.
      It's to want to DO things in general.
      Society strips that of people, because fixing, dreaming, and doing fucks with the bottom line too much.
      Appliances used to outlive their manufacturers, and the infrastructure to guarantee that was everywhere. You could learn and teach yourself how to fix all this shit yourself, and if you were good at it make a decent living doing it. People could have widgets that actually worked, and wasn't programmed to self destruct just to force them to buy a new one.
      "What a tragedy!" Said the Private Sector. "There's so much money we've left on the table!"

  • @icecreamforcrowhurst
    @icecreamforcrowhurst 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    One thing’s certain the analog world has been relegated to novelty and Gen X are the last generation to experience it as mundane reality, this undoubtedly colors our view of the future.

  • @oldnewstock
    @oldnewstock 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Though this lecture is from 2014, watching it in 2021 feels like its something published only yesterday. For me, that is evidence enough of the cultural malaise.

  • @ryandenis7667
    @ryandenis7667 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    he really explains things so complex in such understanding words. RIP Mark Fisher

  • @clowngirlhonkers
    @clowngirlhonkers 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    nobody tell him about videogame remakes

  • @Verschlungen
    @Verschlungen 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Yes, Mark Fisher's observations are indeed compelling! But believe it or not, there was a professor of music at U of Chicago who was somehow able to see, on the horizon, the imminent end-of-cultural-time, from the vantage point of 1967; see Music, The Arts, and Ideas by Leonard Meyer (1967, with 1994 Postlude). (The internet then was only 'gasoline' thrown on the fire that Meyer had already identified.) In the 1970s and 1980s, Stanislaw Lem likewise described an Eternal Present in which we would soon be trapped, and which he characterized as an 'ocean of trash' where 'your pearl will not be found'; see A Perfect Vacuum (1999[1971], p. 85) and One Human Minute (1986) by Lem. Both Meyer and Lem are in turn referenced in this connection in The Chemistry Redemption (2010) by Conal Boyce, who speaks of 'the end of the art-historical time-line' in a way that resonates strongly with Mark Fisher.
    @Manu Forster, I too was struck by, "The dimension of the future has disappeared. We're trapped in the 20th century… What it means to be in the 21st century is to have 20th century culture on hi-res screens/ distributed by high-speed Internet, actually" (at 3:21).

  • @anonymoushuman8344
    @anonymoushuman8344 3 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    I have similar thoughts and observations, but I often wonder, too, how much of this change in how I am experiencing time and history has to do with getting older. (Born in 1970, I belong to the same generation as Fisher.) The older one gets, the faster time seems to pass.

    • @automateddog
      @automateddog 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      While I'm just nearing 30 years old, I feel like I viscerally relate to how you're sensing time: time seems to pass and lapse in our minds faster when there's nothing "as" new for us to perceive. Like how, for instance--as I felt since I was a kid--a drive back from a vacation seemed shorter than the drive out--the sights on the way back weren't as fresh or staggering; my mind has less to latch onto, so it lapsed more and remembered less, which made time seem "faster". In the same way, living longer--and also/possibly moreso--living during a stagnant period for culture, politics, and social structures...time can easily bolt along without us witnessing or noticing it much. We in a way become calcified and time flies rapid by comparison.

    • @anonymoushuman8344
      @anonymoushuman8344 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Matt - I think you're right. The amount of novelty, newness, and/or personal significance in a run of experience plays a role in how much time one subjectively feels has passed. I wonder if anyone has done experiments to test this hypothesis, or to try to quantify the effect. I bet there is a body of work along these lines in academic cognitive psychology journals. Time perception is probably an established field of research. It might have a long history. I wonder just how much work of this kind had been done.

    • @Lifeishard237
      @Lifeishard237 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@anonymoushuman8344 maybe my opinion won’t matter to you guys because I’m young but I think constant learning slow down the perception of time passing. I always feel like days are forever and I think it’s my sense of curiosity and constant reading.

    • @anonymoushuman8344
      @anonymoushuman8344 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Terri - I think you're right. Time often does seem to pass more slowly when the mind is actively learning and engaging new things. On the other hand, it seems to me there is something to the adage that "time flies when you're having fun," and learning can of course be enjoyable. And what about the experience of boredom, in which time can seem to pass slowly because of a lack of things that engage our interest? I don't know how this all fits together, but I enjoy thinking about it and feel that it can be understood. I think exchanges between people from different age groups in spaces like this are good and important. People can learn from each other regardless of age.

  • @yorkshirepianist8407
    @yorkshirepianist8407 3 ปีที่แล้ว +27

    Great to hear someone giving such a broad and articulate insight on something felt by many - not too many, of course.

    • @punchcat0736
      @punchcat0736 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Disagree I think most people feel it they can’t articulate their feelings

    • @benrashall7195
      @benrashall7195 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Or film, or literature, at least in english speaking countries

  • @burnedbread4691
    @burnedbread4691 3 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    I keep coming back to Fishers lectures. What pains me the most is that i started my university studies (after several years of misguided and failed arts studies) in 2017. For the duration of my studies, Fisher has always been already dead. What makes this even more sad is that he was the kind of a person who would have answered emails sent by students...

    • @anacidcommie382
      @anacidcommie382 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Im about to enter an undergrad for the second time in my life in an attempt to try spend whatever time I have left here on subjects I actually find interesting, and Fisher touched my life with his spot on insights. I too find myself going through all his lectures and public speaking and I love the fact that he isn't rhetorical, that some people might call him a 'bad' public speaker, because that means he's not bullshitting you unlike the vast majority of people who do public speaking well.

  • @MarbleCellar
    @MarbleCellar 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    RIP to a real one. Nobody is doing analysis like this anymore and it's sorely-needed.

  • @ClemFamdango
    @ClemFamdango 4 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    So nervous until he could jump head first into how cool jungle music is

  • @ffuunniisstthheegguunn
    @ffuunniisstthheegguunn 2 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    Legend. Adding to that from a 2021 perspective - in between the cracks of the global monoculture chewing past aesthetics and spitting it out as revivals and remixes , there *are* some gems and innovative cultural moments (the soundcloud niche scenes for example). Problem is, i feel like even present culture is a ghost - rarely does the art i encounter on the internet really last in collective memory, nor does it manifest loud enough in physical spaces and communities. Then, how do we map our collective experiences, communicate the subtleties of our perceptions between humans ? This is crazy.
    RIP Mr Fisher

    • @jaywilliams720
      @jaywilliams720 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      yeah i see lots of potential newness online but a big question is how we now drag that newness out of the internet and into materiality in my eyes

    • @MonsieurDePhocas.
      @MonsieurDePhocas. ปีที่แล้ว

      Glad you spoke about the soundcloud scene as I always felt it was a rebellion against the monotony and repetition of culture. Im sure you know about spaceghostpurrp and how eccentric he is , I feel he represents the anti-thesis to Fisher ideas and a beam of hope in hip hop culture and music culture overall. When spaceghostpurrp descended to madness the collective consciousness wept

  • @nfijef
    @nfijef 7 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    Brilliant, true, and sad.

  • @CippiCippiCippi
    @CippiCippiCippi 4 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    boredom 1.0 no longer exists...no one is bored everything is boring...
    refuse to adjust to the dead present/future, politicize your melancholia, exercise melancholic maladjustment

  • @halguy5745
    @halguy5745 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    lately I've seen a couple of these videos predicting "what will music sound like in 2030, 2040... 2100", but it was all just slightly different variations of breakcore. this is also why the 90s futurism seems more futuristic to me than anything we're experiencing today. it seems like we hit the peek of futurism back then and its hard to even imagine anything beyond that. altho it might be a temporary stagnation, perhaps aesthetics such as solarpunk, that go against the exploitative dystopian reality we live in, are the new futurism

  • @ryanrobinson191
    @ryanrobinson191 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    RIP Mr. Fisher you would've loved Hyperpop

    • @halguy5745
      @halguy5745 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      that's exactly what I was thinking when he talked about jungle. altho hyperpop is just a parody/acceleration of late capitalist music, at least it's something somewhat new and different

  • @Benzo1818
    @Benzo1818 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    thanks for the recommendation Chuck Klosterman

  • @ts4gv
    @ts4gv 3 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    I dunno. When it comes to music, a big part of rapid changes in sound was due to technology. Nowadays we can basically get any sound or effect we could possibly want from any computer. The overall sea of sonic possibilities will continue to expand, but not nearly as fast as it did before.
    This alone doesn’t completely negate the ideas of the lecture, obviously, but it’s worth considering the factors of the future slowing down other than culture

    • @cal9784
      @cal9784 14 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Quite. The elephant in the room is music technology. Electronic instruments were invented then underwent rapid iterative changes for several decades, it's really not surprising that such a thing would reach its natural limits before receding into a fixed cultural position. Remember that an electric guitar was still a niche commodity even in the 1970s, now we could all have one arrive on our doorsteps tomorrow and everyone's already had a go on one anyway.
      What Fisher failed to address here is just how relatively peculiar the 20th century was in cultural production terms. The vast majority of humanity lived and died without detecting any significant changes in music, architecture etc. Feudal subjects probably weren't complaining that nobody was trying to invent punk yet.
      Post-war liberal subjects of the 20th century existed at the intersection of the greatest ever freedom for workers/serfs, rapid advances in music technology, and popular music as the dominant cultural force. People like Fisher made 20th century musical modes their life then constructed elaborate philosophies to explain something which is ultimately quite simple: technology and culture can't progress at the same rate, on the same track, forever. Ironically, it's a rather capitalist way to conceive of art i.e. it must always be progressing and expanding or it has little value. It's typical of post-war optimism in the West (thanks Keynes!) but profoundly ahistorical and untethered. People didn't conceive of pre-modern folk art in this way, there was no urgency for the songs and poems to suddenly sound radically different from one year to the next. Capitalist Realism, innit?

  • @lukeire1
    @lukeire1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thank god we have these recordings.

  • @mathewmarsico1841
    @mathewmarsico1841 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    You know obviously the profit motive hurts music but he seems to be Dismissing so much music from the 2000s and today. I can’t help but feel he’s making the same arguments the older generations always make. I agree with the concept but I think he’s being awfully dismissive. Music had a massive explosion in the 20th century. It was constantly changing. It happened at such a rate that I really feel it was never truly imbedded in the cultural consciousness. I was born in the late 90s and as a result I get to listen to and enjoy so much music from then and now. And as someone who grew up playing music, I never got a chance to live with the great music that mark did. My parents played the music for the 20th century growing up and as a result many people from my generation enjoy reimagining older sounds. It’s a bit short sided of him imo, what’s happening with music is the same thing that’s happened with all art. Music was pretty “optimized”in the late half of the 20th century, and we have so much content to enjoy now, due to cheaper consumption, that it will take a long time for music to reestablish new offshoots. Also I think modern trap and hip hop alone would completely shock anyone from the 90s I think lol. No way someone listening to nirvana in 1994 would find yung thug to be old and unimaginative. Once culture can truly absorb its past it will perhaps get itself out of the loop.

  • @danzel1157
    @danzel1157 9 ปีที่แล้ว +27

    Really interesting talk. I'm definitely going to read Mark Fisher.

  • @timeskapade.korp4
    @timeskapade.korp4 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    i had mark fischer's thoughts lingering for quite some time and began to really question 'what happened in electronica in the 90s, really? what was this sweet man so enthused about? what might i have missed from not having an opportunity to go back and suss with full inclusivity of genre, etc?'
    i had an understanding, some fave artists; though, had not allowed myself to research and hear it first hand. so, i used youtube to create some playlists that would allow me to go back, surround myself in the era, and see how i 'felt' about fischer, the past, the present, and where we might be headed (or not) into the future. those playlists are on my youtube page. maybe they might assist you, as well? idk.
    it made me a lot happier. they'll be there forever.

  • @michaelhoskins6579
    @michaelhoskins6579 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Really interesting lecture. I often think when watching old Top Of The Pops repeats how totally different 1985 is to say 1979 yet between 2000 and 2006 there wasn't much difference musically or stylistically. I think the effect of the Cold War is another factor in explaining why our arts and culture in the west at that time had such a fantastic forward momentum. The collapse of the Soviet Union had a huge effect on Western music and culture as I believe that from the 1950s to at least the 1980s during the cold war there was a lot of funding put into the arts, and a lot of space created for the arts, as there was a desire to show authoritarian societies (especially younger people in those societies) the freedoms enjoyed by younger generations in the west. After the collapse of the Soviet Union and as the grip of Neoliberalism and monetrism really tightened on western countries this desire seemed to wane.

    • @WonderfulCoyote-0313
      @WonderfulCoyote-0313 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Necro-futurism. The electric vampire.

    • @spacegangster2588
      @spacegangster2588 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Here it is not far from the idea that the existence of the Soviet Union ensured liberal democracy, scientific and technological progress and cultural development of capitalist countries in competition with it

  • @luziav.4994
    @luziav.4994 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    I just started two weeks ago to read his books and it's so eyes opening and I feel his kind of views so much! When I was a teenager in the 2000s I always had a feeling of a lost generation, no unique pop culture, nothing really new... I was jealous about my parents and their popculture when they've been teenager. I know the feeling of a lost vision, no idea what's a good idea of the future, what to believe in, sometimes strong feelings of depression... Mark Fisher was genius, he described that so perfectly! And with every sentence more I read and listen to him, I'm also a little bit more sad he died. Would love to know how he would comment our world now.

    • @mariesoph2
      @mariesoph2 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      What books have you read/started?

    • @luziav.4994
      @luziav.4994 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@mariesoph2 Capitalist realism. I can highly recommend it.

  • @gresach
    @gresach 3 ปีที่แล้ว +50

    I'd never heard of this guy until now, but boy is he on the money. And now I found he committed suicide! FFS, what a total waste for all of us. As he wrote: "the pandemic of mental anguish that afflicts our time cannot be properly understood, or healed, if viewed as a private problem suffered by damaged individuals." And this was before the *other* pandemic, COVID, which seems to have dropped the average sanity on the planet by about 15%. I don't know where this world is heading, but I just want to say to anyone happening to read this: it's ok we are all here in the little lifeboat that is planet Earth. Find your own truth. For me I find it helps to keep a sense of history: this whole amazing roller-coaster ride has been running ever faster since H.Sapiens evolved 300,000 years ago. None of us is going to get out of this alive, so we might as well enjoy the ride. Each of us can look to deal with our own demons. Begin it now, begin it today, even if the human race as a whole seems for now incapable to deal with its own. There are so many beautiful people who have lived or live today, so many wonderful ideas that have been shared. That can be its own distraction, but through this beach-coming I have found fragments that I have shored against my ruins. I won't name any of mine here, because yours will be different, but your answers are there I promise. OK I will name one: read the one page "Desiderata" as an emergency booster shot, to give some peace of mind against the storm inside and out. Start from there.

  • @DscntnuousMgntic
    @DscntnuousMgntic 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    the feeling of being adrift in time is something most in the West can relate to, but i think most of the feeling of progress of the 20th century came first from technology changing how we live and how society was organized and then in the latter half in social norms being broken through. we reached a place in the 90s where at least in the most privileged class, one could say or do virtually anything without surprising anyone. all restrictions are off, all markets are open for exploiting.

  • @TJB_333
    @TJB_333 4 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    Time was music,
    Music is money.
    Now was the future,
    The future is the past.

  • @End-Result
    @End-Result 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I really didn't expect him to have such a high-pitched voice

  • @ChrisDragotta
    @ChrisDragotta 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    It's called a Panopticon. And it's on purpose.

  • @mooglywoogle4264
    @mooglywoogle4264 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    It is really nice just to witness intelligent, well informed people talking about ideas. This, the essence of intellectual society, is imperative to the preservation of freedom. Too many people are dumb conformists, too many people are falling victim to the cult of misery. Only the pursuit of our dreams will save humanity.

  • @dinnerwithfranklin2451
    @dinnerwithfranklin2451 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Very interesting and insightful. Brilliant, thanks.

  • @erichnk
    @erichnk 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This is an absolutely brilliant video that manages effectively explicate and use the best of "postmodern" theory to build on marxist foundations to demonstrate the way we ARE using what has happened to the music we can now barely stand to listen to.

  • @benaloney
    @benaloney 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    How about 1000 years ago, when music rarely changed every hundred years....

    • @mauve9266
      @mauve9266 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      That’s a good point. I wonder when exactly it started to become such that you could distinguish music even just by the decade let alone the century

    • @BajoCLF
      @BajoCLF 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      1000 there was no industry. But the real change was the music notation system.

    • @ksvba9670
      @ksvba9670 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Maybe we cannot accurately find out if there were major, minor or no changes before we were able to record music since we only have what has survived on paper from those past eras

  • @dvomk
    @dvomk 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    Mark was a brilliant mind, but I do think his position on the evolution of music does kind of overlook the role played by technology (although he briefly touches on it here). Throughout the 80s and 90s many of the major new leaps in electronic music, and the limits of what was sonically imaginable were underpinned by recent advances in synthesis/sampling/digital music production/etc. By the time you got into the early 2000s, the technology was so advanced and the possibilities were so endless that it was now possible to make music that couldn't be dated simply by listening to the textures it employed. We'd also explored such musical extremities that the idea of creating something that (due to its sheer novelty) people wouldn't recognize as music started to become a bit far fetched. Even so, there is still plenty of music that has come out since that *could only* have been made in its own particular period and is not simply regurgitating past glories.
    (Also, as a translator/interpreter/former English teacher, I gotta say that for such a smart guy, here he's really struggling to grade his language for a non-native audience.)

    • @_mATTYcruder
      @_mATTYcruder 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      thats a very reasonable thesis. got me , for the first time in my stinking life, thinking..

    • @dvomk
      @dvomk 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@_mATTYcruder I think as spatial audio becomes more accessible to bedroom producers and earphone listeners, that could finally open up some pretty novel musical possibilities. Will anyone capitalize on that with something really interesting beyond "The Beatles' back-catalogue, on Apple music, remastered in 360° sound"?

  • @ghostcat5303
    @ghostcat5303 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    The remixes of all dead generations weigh like a nightmare on the dancefloors of the living

  • @sensorycircuits1338
    @sensorycircuits1338 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The idea of our music/media as a distinct marker for years & decades started around 1930 with radio becoming commonplace. It is not an inherent human trait. In fact, this 80-100 year span where culture & history link up in a harmonious feedback cycle is the exception. We should feel lucky that we were able to have that experience. Pre 1930, transmission was in person only. Post 2030, media is too fragmented, where anyone with a computer has their own studio & distribution network. Gatekeeping TV/radio/record companies were rightly seen to be exploitative, but the fact that they released a finite inventory of content per year meant that a few lucky generations can hear a particular song and become magically transported to another time.

  • @miropribanic5581
    @miropribanic5581 6 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    svaka cast MaMa, imali ste uglednog, pametnog i zanimljivog gosta.

  • @davidmulqueen8322
    @davidmulqueen8322 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    it is tough to face the world as it is. we lost a great one with mark. i do wonder what he'd make of the recent acceleration of the cancellation of the future.

  • @kuya5k
    @kuya5k ปีที่แล้ว

    just beautiful. RIP

  • @weedjuul6519
    @weedjuul6519 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Maybe I don’t have the best grasp on this concept but I feel like this is even happening with food? For example in any American super market that carries name brand food, the breakfast aisle is half full of cereal that’s supposed to taste like candy or other non-cereal related name brand items. Every food chain eventually runs out of ideas for new items and resorts to selling “item we already have but it’s Cheetos flavored”. Is this lack of innovation the same thing?

  • @topologyrob
    @topologyrob 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Chimes in quite well with Jaron Lanier's thoughts on the same topic

  • @booboo4963
    @booboo4963 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Wish I was smart enough to understand 100% of this. I feel like I’m only comprehending like 60-75%.

    • @kunalfadtare2056
      @kunalfadtare2056 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Read his books and you will probably understand 100%

    • @booboo4963
      @booboo4963 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@kunalfadtare2056 Any recommendations? I watched the whole thing and when he starts to talk about music and technology I found a lot to disagree with. Doesn't mean it's not interesting though.

    • @Rhizzome
      @Rhizzome 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@booboo4963Ghosts of My Life is a great one - nice mix of music and theory

  • @kylepena8908
    @kylepena8908 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Don't worry Mark Fisher. The future is finally here. But holy hell are we unprepared.

  • @pablolowenstein1371
    @pablolowenstein1371 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    2021.. So it goes. Mark got out because he knew. He's in a completely better place..

  • @m.carsonweaver5046
    @m.carsonweaver5046 3 ปีที่แล้ว +23

    It's so amazing hearing what for me was only a ever a vague feeling in regards to arts & culture being expanded upon and put to words so well and easily digestible. So glad this made it to my recommended videos. Sorry to hear he has passed.

    • @lunaridge4510
      @lunaridge4510 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      he committed suicide

  • @electrictrojan6719
    @electrictrojan6719 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Endless, endless, endless dialectics.

    • @TomorrowWeLive
      @TomorrowWeLive 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @chris evans """an idealised past that never really existed"""

  • @GeorgiosMichalopoulos
    @GeorgiosMichalopoulos 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    First time I listen to his ideas, I'm very impressed. A deep and original thinker.

  • @sassakiraphael
    @sassakiraphael 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I feel sorry Mark Fisher couldn't listen to XXXTentacion

    • @marccas10
      @marccas10 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Is this a meme? "What Mark didn't get to listen to?"

  • @nowaylon2008
    @nowaylon2008 3 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    The consumption and distribution today, principally through Spotify and the use of electronic devices generally, is having a huge impact on the musical artifact. The pop song or long playing album format has to adapt to an ever diminishing listening timespan, with listeners "empowered" to skip from track to track in search of ear-catching gratifications. Longer time-span engagements over albums and even thematic radio shows/DJ tastemakers are in decline. Songwriting is increasingly industrialised with multiple songwriters (top-liners, bottom-liners, whatever they're called) combining with technology and algorithmic nous to produce high-impact product which all sounds the same.

  • @JoeMama-house
    @JoeMama-house 5 ปีที่แล้ว +29

    Real music has gone underground. The censorship and easy digestibility has stagnated mainstream music

    • @aoife219
      @aoife219 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      has this not always been the case

    • @liamconlon4375
      @liamconlon4375 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      I disagree. I think "underground" music is as, if not *more*, affected by what Fisher talks about.

    • @brockjohnson936
      @brockjohnson936 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@liamconlon4375 an expression that reveals the deeper crisis of our predicament. The seeming impossibility of novelty, in music and elsewhere, generates a desperate imperative for novelty, only the same old techniques of subversion are availed of by would-be innovators. Is it possible that the issue is a matter of technological stagnation? Perhaps we've exhausted the sonic potential of certain instruments - the electric guitar and piano, for instance? Or form? Does the conventional structure of what we consider a song only allow for a certain number of moves? Could we even develop an appetite nowadays for something genuinely novel, something we could not presently conceive of?

    • @liamconlon4375
      @liamconlon4375 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@brockjohnson936 I've wondered that myself. As a guitar player I often feel stuck in certain modes of expression, and when I experiment with new techniques or tunings, find it mostly unpleasant to my ear. Same with form -- I'm so attuned to the prominent 20th century forms from pop, rock, and dance that any deviation from it sounds... idk, messy?
      I'm not sure the problem is strictly technological though. I mean, electronic music is as stuck as any other genre working with conventional instruments. I think the problem is at a deeper conceptual level.
      I think, somehow, we need to find new ways of musical expression that *build on* or develop the musical ideas of the 20th century. But no one, even Mark Fisher, seems to know how to do that!

    • @wcg66
      @wcg66 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@liamconlon4375 This is why punk (and NY's No Wave for example) are important. When you don't really know how to play and can't read music, your are unfettered from the "right way" to perform. We've seen in it electronic music (Mark Fisher points out Burial as an example) but as you say, many produces stick to the tried and true sound. I think we'll see something new again. Surely, a global pandemic and economic hardship will birth another interesting genre.

  • @yungcoolie
    @yungcoolie 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    RIP 🙏🏾

  • @soupy-san
    @soupy-san 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Society will heal on the day Fisher's lectures feel antiquated and dated. In the meantime, all of his arguments and points here have only accelerated into a multi-generational state where no one young remembers the future anymore.

  • @sausagemeat2130
    @sausagemeat2130 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Just found out about you today. And as a film studies student from 2009-2012 all of the ideas of you Mark have reminded me of the zeal and excitement I felt in those days that change was possible. If I’m able to be strong enough I want to be part of the alternative. I have also struggled deeply with addiction, depression, thoughts and attempts at suicide. I will be buying your book and reading your blogposts post haste. Thank you

    • @lunaridge4510
      @lunaridge4510 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      stay safe and take care of yourself, please.

  • @uneedtherapy42
    @uneedtherapy42 5 ปีที่แล้ว +30

    a bit long winded but man there are moments of brilliance here! I am sad to know this guy has died

    • @tigerstyle4505
      @tigerstyle4505 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Seems to be a problem with a lotta great thinkers and writers when they speak. Look at most anything by Chomsky, Parenti, Zinn, West, and to some extent Hedges and the few others on that level. They'll have their notes and still end up going off on tangents, adding important nuance and context or explanation and run outta time 😂 Part of what makes em great.

    • @13deakin
      @13deakin 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      you are kinda proving his point with this comment...! I like how he's not in a rush, he invites the audience to follow his meandering train of thought. It has a 'live' quality to it. The antithesis of the Ted Talk.

  • @dmytriandreev1900
    @dmytriandreev1900 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Excellent, well-spoken work, that is. My qualification is that it is much too Futurist, even in its pessimism about Futures. The Nostalgia that we feel is a legitimate Reaction to the gentrified banality of Present Markets, Academia, Relationships, and Media. We seek to recreate the Past by seeking what the sages managed to discover, rather than pursuing what they sought. Yet in the process, while we cherry-pick that which we love from bygone times, we largely stay within the bounds of living generations, and it may be much too modernist to call something so recent "Past", "Archaic", or redundant. Kierkegaard and Nietzsche aren't redundant, though their fans may be; Shakespeare and Beethoven aged well over the centuries. What I perceive, though I am not a published scholar like this gentleman, is that, with every passing generation, adolescents sever ties with History to such extents as prior generations had not dared to do, and such a tendency for growing gaps in our collective memory accelerate, so much so that a "generation" turns into a narrow gap that's growing narrower with every passing year. The Youth pretends to Know that which the Elders overlooked, but it's no more than Snobbery; we're NOT the first to wake, and those who seem to sleep have been awake far longer. History in bygone times was far more stable, more profound, far deeper, though not nearly quite so vast. It's not just that the youngsters of today renounce the Past, but they renounce it MORE than youngsters of the Past renounced THEIR Past, and all that's left is that which gives the Present comfort in the absence of a Future. Our conservatives resist the Future and, by doing so, destroy the Past in all its Glory, yet our liberals, renouncing Past as Evil, simple recreate it in the Present, for without the Past's Trajectory we HAVE no Future, and I'd like to see us take some big steps BACK, as if caught in a maze, compelled to try a path we SHOULD have chosen, rather than resolving ourselves to a Dead End.
    If that makes sense, at all.
    *[({Dm.R.G.)}]*

  • @skralian3000
    @skralian3000 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Watching this in October, 2021
    crazy