Oh yes, also the concept that "today's youth don't have the values we did", I read leaders in ancient Hellenistic Greece complained of the laziness of the youth of the day.
I would say it only goes back to the inventions of radio and phonograph. Prior to that, the classics were the classics for centuries, and the only changes came through folk music and what people sang in taverns.
@@abraxasjinx5207 A cursory glance of historical musical review manuscripts would reveal how contemptuous music critics were to contemporary/new musical forms/trends. Musical critics of the 19th century(1824) dismissed Beethoven's 9th symphony as "cryptic and eccentric, the product of a deaf and ageing composer". Music or for that matter, Life in general ,was never perceived as being as good as it was in the past through out the course of human history. This bias is mostly tied to the nostalgia of youth- Most people like the environment/socio-political values, food, music, culture that they experienced during their teens/early 20's and use that as a template to judge& negate the future trends.
Most of the time when a musical movement occurs, it’s in response/opposition to a popularly accepted musical style of the time (i.e. bebop to big band swing or even early rock and roll to the “beautiful music” aesthetic).
@@stripedhyenuh I wonder what would happen if you sat him down in front of a seriously stonkin' system and then put on Ornette Coleman's "Free Jazz"? 😋
In the 70s & 80s that Jazz Punk combo was called Ska very popular in England. Some of it came to America but nobody credited it as such. The likes of Blondie, Madness, & No Doubt are fine examples.
Pretentious Guy Hates Modern Music In 1926 1809pm 12.1.25 hmmmmmm... flappers would have been my go to gal re: what i find attractive... i doubt id have to handcuff them to the radiator, either, to have them comprehend what it is i needed to express... gals be gals. a very rare breed...as we rummage thru the detritus of social acceptance and transvestitism searching for her. ahahah....
@@abraxasjinx5207 Comments on ‘Pretentious Guy Hates Modern Music In 1926’ 0146am 14.1.25 with Pretentious Guy by your side and her trusty carpet bagger bag to hand, filled with all manner of super hero paraphernalia, you're gonna be well advised to take law abasing citizenry to task for their retro murder and misery cult to task...
Pretentious Guy Hates Modern Music In 1926 1803pm 12.1.25 i can believe it. would i have enjoyed so called outré music and dance during the 20's and 30's? dunno... i think i would have considered it too square, too beloved of the masses... even an epicurean enjoys a fried egg?
@@michealhand1001 Pretentious Guy Hates Modern Music In 1926 0345am 16.1.25 i surmise that's what hooch or moonshine or speakeasy water was - generic chemicals with a splash of defroster or meths. as for phones........ they probably made the flapper era more socially cohesive, as guys and gals begun making dates without mom or dad's permission... being free and easy with their time. rather like now and the new innovative socially acceptable smart phone..... not!
@@RockerfellerRothchild1776 Comments on ‘Pretentious Guy Hates Modern Music In 1926’ 0344am 17.1.25 or, rather, not!!! at which point in history did the world take a wrong turn and decide to carry on down that death wish inducing mind set?
I just discovered your TH-cam Channel because I was listening to Music from 1990s and 2000s. Another man said music now is not so good and TH-cam recommended me this video. 😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮. I have automatically subscribed to your TH-cam Channel.
My dad was born in 1926, and his parents (my grandparents) hated the music he and his brothers and sister listened to. Then in the 60’s and 70’s my dad hated the music my sister and I listened to. 😂
I use to resent pop music that comes out recebtly but when I hear a highlight real comming from each year in the past I realize even if theyre not my thing they acually don't sound as bad as I remember realizing I dont hate music that comes out recently but more I hate the trends that surround it and At this point im just indifffrent twards things I dont care about instead of making it a personality to hate whatevers popular.
Wait til you read about people in the 1700s complaining about "those darn teenagers reading all the time!" It was called the "readying craze." Funny thing
It's still valid. Quality constantly goes down after any invention. People are dumber, the tastes are more feral and primitive. The easier things get, the more primal and simple we become. It's mental atrophy and it is real, but most people don't want to admit things get worse over time just as much as they get better.
@@turkturkleton2671naw you dont know what youre talking abt i think popular music now is so much better than in the 2010s, last year we had a bunch of cool releases from artists with integrity
@@kittyythecat In the literal 16th century (the 1500s), Vincenzo Galilei, the father of the famous astronomer Galileo Galilei, was a music theorist and lutenist. He complained about music of his own time, writing (almost): "How much better music must have been in the times of the Greeks, when polyphonic textures were assigned to the execution of only the most judicious and learned people." He further complained about the lack of grace, subtlety, and refinement of modern polyphonic composers, especially in their tone paintings of lyrics.
Today, not one American in a million could write such elegant prose. Most journalists are now writing in a sort of pidgin which takes care to avoid words which are unfamiliar or have three or more syllables.
If your idea of elegant language is based entirely on a period of a past time, you have no idea how language works. It is constantly evolving. Why do you think Webster's dictionary adds new words each year? Shakespeare invented many of the words in his plays, as no one had ever yet written them down.
If you like to read elegantly written prose like this, then you should really try out AI. Just ask any sufficiently large 'Large Language Model' to write texts, articles and books for you in this particular 1920s style and enjoy the content it produces in less than a couple of minutes!
@ Lately our language has been devolving, with shrinking vocabularies misuse of some words becomes unavoidable. For example, the Stylebook mandates substituting the nouns 'assault' and 'reference' for the verbs 'assail' and 'refer' as it presumes the reader is ignorant of these words.
@ It would be interesting to copy and paste one of today's articles from the Washington Post into AI and direct it to convert to the writing of Dickens. Likely the machine would explode.
Nothing has really changed if you think about it. There was no radio in this guy's time. There had to be people who knew how to play instruments and sing. It was still going on in the 1920s, but it was slowly being replaced by the radio and records. Very slowly.
Well that settles it-- jazz was the punk rock of the early 20th century. It'd be interesting to know where it was published and who the scofflaw was who wrote it.
The source is the January 1926 issue of the magazine "Radio Broadcast" and the author for the whole section (it consists of multiple articles) is listed as John Wallace.
What's most interesting about this clip is the phrase "the insufferable punkness of present jazz." I once made a cassette mix of the early recordings of Frank Teschemacher and Benny Goodman and called it "Chicago Punk Jazz," because the white jazz musicians of the 1920's (most of them, anyway), like the punk rockers of the late 1970's, took it up because it was relatively easy to learn and it was an in-your-face rebellion against the music and culture of their elders. I've often said that a key generational rite of passage comes when you realize people younger than you have come up with a sort of music you just can't stand. And for this late-boomer (born 1953), that's rap.
Apparently this fusty old music mossback thought Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue was also jazz dreck. He gave it away by mentioning Paul Whiteman whose orchestra famously premiered it.
@@Griffinmc You know, I think he liked Rapsody in Blue. That is "High Brow" jazz. He didn't condemn all jazz, just a certain, to his mind, "simplistic" popular type, songs cranked out by Tin Pan Alley.😁
Pretentious Guy Hates Modern Music In 1926 1745pm 12.1.25 just as the world has it's Fearless Chan (forever to be found blunting the dubious claws of communism wherever it goes) so the drug fuelled sewers of the rat-infested flapper era has it's Pretentious Guy.
Thank you so much for sharing this. Every time I see people commenting on how whatever aspect of western culture is declining, I always make a point of reminding them that nothing is new, not even those exact sentiments. Whatever music he adores, the generation before him at one point believed that it would ruin the country. Anyway, there are good and bad aspects of every era, but this is objectively the best time to be alive, and save for the event of some presently unknown catastrophic disaster, we can have faith that every subsequent decade will be objectively better than the last. This is the nature of human progress. Also, can we talk about how much of the jazz hatred of the time was simply racism?
He mentioned a few titles such as Yes Sir, That's My Baby and Carolina in the Morning, and alluded to a few others such as I Ain't Got Nobody and All Alone. All songs that have survived as standards from that era.
💯 Having studied music much more, this is much more true than I thought, though I still find much better music a century or three ago than today! Sometimes there is good stuff done today but it tends to be really obscure.
To be fair music today is Not as good or creative as before ..way too much autotune and generic songs and singers that just can't sing. Alot of talented stars like prince spoke about this
so this is how an edgelord shitposted in the ‘20s. It’s exactly like all these fools complaining about new music on every single old song posted to TH-cam these days. This guy was writing in a manner to give me the strong impression that his wife left him for a jazz musician. I certainly hope that the pseudo intellectual word salad he spewed here helped him feel superior.
There used to be some bad jazz back then. There was so much of it because of its popularity. I only dig on Jelly Roll Morton and Louis Armstrong from the era. Imagine the many imitators before Glenn Miller an big band. They used to have white singers behind Thelonious monk. I bet it was horrible, like what happened to rap, or drum n bass when they became popular. Psychedelic music when it became popular - the opening theme to a game show with Gary Moore was psychidelisized and with acid graphics, Gary Moore with long hair at his age talking the jive of the times, like for a few years in the 60s, then blammo - the same show in the seventies changed back to normal just as fast. "Don’t bend; don’t water it down; don’t try to make it logical; don’t edit your own soul according to the fashion."
Who knows, his local scene may have actually been trash lol Still happens today. Some people are artists, others only superficially copy the genres they want to perform, and they are usually the loudest people.
But he takes the MOST violent exception to music (or anything) being --gasp-- POPULAR! Oh No!! Shudder! Why, the masses are meant to be IGNORED! Radio should not wallow in anything a majority of people ENJOY.
Pretentious Guy Hates Modern Music In 1926 1744pm 12.1.25 yes, i don't mind this channel, either. as longas the skits are concise as opposed to high falutin' 3hr epics.. which is all good and well if you have years to spare. sadly, however boring it is, my life, i do not...... have years to spare....
You mean that you will unsubscribe from this channel, you don't have the power to delete it. You couldn't even write two sentences without a mistake but expect perfection from everyone else?
So complaining that "Modern music isn't as good as what I listened to when I was growing up!" goes back a really long way.
Oh yes, also the concept that "today's youth don't have the values we did", I read leaders in ancient Hellenistic Greece complained of the laziness of the youth of the day.
The notion that every generation is somehow worse than the last have like literally always been a thing
It was ever thus.
I would say it only goes back to the inventions of radio and phonograph. Prior to that, the classics were the classics for centuries, and the only changes came through folk music and what people sang in taverns.
@@abraxasjinx5207 A cursory glance of historical musical review manuscripts would reveal how contemptuous music critics were to contemporary/new musical forms/trends. Musical critics of the 19th century(1824) dismissed Beethoven's 9th symphony as "cryptic and eccentric, the product of a deaf and ageing composer". Music or for that matter, Life in general ,was never perceived as being as good as it was in the past through out the course of human history. This bias is mostly tied to the nostalgia of youth- Most people like the environment/socio-political values, food, music, culture that they experienced during their teens/early 20's and use that as a template to judge& negate the future trends.
"The insufferable punkness of present jazz" sounds like it should be a jazz-punk album title
The Shape of Punk to Come.
Most of the time when a musical movement occurs, it’s in response/opposition to a popularly accepted musical style of the time (i.e. bebop to big band swing or even early rock and roll to the “beautiful music” aesthetic).
@@stripedhyenuh I wonder what would happen if you sat him down in front of a seriously stonkin' system and then put on Ornette Coleman's "Free Jazz"? 😋
We’ve got ska, we’ve got folk punk, and even punk rap, so why not jazz punk? 👍🏽
In the 70s & 80s that Jazz Punk combo was called Ska very popular in England. Some of it came to America but nobody credited it as such. The likes of Blondie, Madness, & No Doubt are fine examples.
The more things change, the more they stay the same.
Pretentious Guy Hates Modern Music In 1926 1809pm 12.1.25 hmmmmmm... flappers would have been my go to gal re: what i find attractive... i doubt id have to handcuff them to the radiator, either, to have them comprehend what it is i needed to express... gals be gals. a very rare breed...as we rummage thru the detritus of social acceptance and transvestitism searching for her. ahahah....
Boomers gonna boom
@@abraxasjinx5207 Comments on ‘Pretentious Guy Hates Modern Music In 1926’ 0146am 14.1.25 with Pretentious Guy by your side and her trusty carpet bagger bag to hand, filled with all manner of super hero paraphernalia, you're gonna be well advised to take law abasing citizenry to task for their retro murder and misery cult to task...
The tango was considered the end of the world in his day😂
Pretentious Guy Hates Modern Music In 1926 1803pm 12.1.25 i can believe it. would i have enjoyed so called outré music and dance during the 20's and 30's? dunno... i think i would have considered it too square, too beloved of the masses... even an epicurean enjoys a fried egg?
Turpsicory😂 That,s what happens when you Drink Turpentine in the 1920s & Sack of phones😂😂😂
@@michealhand1001 Pretentious Guy Hates Modern Music In 1926 0345am 16.1.25 i surmise that's what hooch or moonshine or speakeasy water was - generic chemicals with a splash of defroster or meths. as for phones........ they probably made the flapper era more socially cohesive, as guys and gals begun making dates without mom or dad's permission... being free and easy with their time. rather like now and the new innovative socially acceptable smart phone..... not!
Wasn't wrong...look at where we are
@@RockerfellerRothchild1776 Comments on ‘Pretentious Guy Hates Modern Music In 1926’ 0344am 17.1.25 or, rather, not!!! at which point in history did the world take a wrong turn and decide to carry on down that death wish inducing mind set?
Today, the author would be a prog fan complaining about Phil Collins-led Genesis.
Haha, for sure
Nice to see another Genesis fan here.
No it would be a fan of mediocre 80s pop complaining about mediocre modern pop
Wow, this person’s head would explode if they heard music today 🤯
You're missing the point
@@ZorimePatiNo, it's true - he would be shocked by modern music. Perfectly valid observation.
It would form a black hole
@@patavinity1262You are still missing the point.
@@mayena No. *You* are missing the point of the above comment.
I just discovered your TH-cam Channel because I was listening to Music from 1990s and 2000s. Another man said music now is not so good and TH-cam recommended me this video.
😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮. I have automatically subscribed to your TH-cam Channel.
I guess he had a fit when Rock 'n Roll came along around 30 years later.
He was likely dead by then.
@iVenge
Probably, if he was, say, in his mid 50s or so when he wrote the article.
@@iVenge it’s for the best lol
@@dewilew2137 It was H. L. Mencken, and he died in 1949.
I love this channel too!
So funny to hear people ranted about modern music back then. I think the evolution of music through time is fascinating.
Absolutely. It’s crazy to hear what was considered “shocking” or “distasteful” 100 years ago, or even 50 years ago. It’s mind blowing.
My dad was born in 1926, and his parents (my grandparents) hated the music he and his brothers and sister listened to. Then in the 60’s and 70’s my dad hated the music my sister and I listened to. 😂
I feel so edified and elevated after having hearing this. I feel so grateful!
Imagine throwing a party and this guy shows up.
Hey, there's always a critic.
Yep. And a (usually) intellectually dishonest one at that.
[puts on Merzbow's "Woodpecker #1"]
An upload from Mr. 1920s himself! Huzzah!
Nothing but truth was spoken here
💯
Honestly the best writing on popular music and art I ever heard - really fascinating and impressive!
It seems this kind of guy has always existed
That was perfect. Thank you. Nothing had changed.
I use to resent pop music that comes out recebtly but when I hear a highlight real comming from each year in the past I realize even if theyre not my thing they acually don't sound as bad as I remember realizing I dont hate music that comes out recently but more I hate the trends that surround it and At this point im just indifffrent twards things I dont care about instead of making it a personality to hate whatevers popular.
So this complaint has always been around.
Wait til you read about people in the 1700s complaining about "those darn teenagers reading all the time!" It was called the "readying craze." Funny thing
It's still valid. Quality constantly goes down after any invention. People are dumber, the tastes are more feral and primitive. The easier things get, the more primal and simple we become. It's mental atrophy and it is real, but most people don't want to admit things get worse over time just as much as they get better.
@@turkturkleton2671naw you dont know what youre talking abt i think popular music now is so much better than in the 2010s, last year we had a bunch of cool releases from artists with integrity
@@kittyythecat In the literal 16th century (the 1500s), Vincenzo Galilei, the father of the famous astronomer Galileo Galilei, was a music theorist and lutenist. He complained about music of his own time, writing (almost): "How much better music must have been in the times of the Greeks, when polyphonic textures were assigned to the execution of only the most judicious and learned people."
He further complained about the lack of grace, subtlety, and refinement of modern polyphonic composers, especially in their tone paintings of lyrics.
@@turkturkleton2671ok boomer
He's complaining about the effect of blues on popular music. Most popular music in the Western world is blues based now.
Today, not one American in a million could write such elegant prose. Most journalists are now writing in a sort of pidgin which takes care to avoid words which are unfamiliar or have three or more syllables.
If your idea of elegant language is based entirely on a period of a past time, you have no idea how language works. It is constantly evolving. Why do you think Webster's dictionary adds new words each year? Shakespeare invented many of the words in his plays, as no one had ever yet written them down.
There's absolutely no shortage of people capable of flowery language when it comes to people in love with their own flowery language.
If you like to read elegantly written prose like this, then you should really try out AI. Just ask any sufficiently large 'Large Language Model' to write texts, articles and books for you in this particular 1920s style and enjoy the content it produces in less than a couple of minutes!
@ Lately our language has been devolving, with shrinking vocabularies misuse of some words becomes unavoidable. For example, the Stylebook mandates substituting the nouns 'assault' and 'reference' for the verbs 'assail' and 'refer' as it presumes the reader is ignorant of these words.
@ It would be interesting to copy and paste one of today's articles from the Washington Post into AI and direct it to convert to the writing of Dickens. Likely the machine would explode.
What a great article and read. So well done. And thank you. ❤
Nothing has really changed if you think about it. There was no radio in this guy's time. There had to be people who knew how to play instruments and sing. It was still going on in the 1920s, but it was slowly being replaced by the radio and records. Very slowly.
Well that settles it-- jazz was the punk rock of the early 20th century. It'd be interesting to know where it was published and who the scofflaw was who wrote it.
Thats what i always sayy im like more of a punk person studying jazz in a conservatory, jazz was the original punk
The font looks like The New Yorker’s. Maybe whoever was music critic at that magazine in ‘26 but it would be nice of the channel would just tell us.
The source is the January 1926 issue of the magazine "Radio Broadcast" and the author for the whole section (it consists of multiple articles) is listed as John Wallace.
@@The1920sChannel Thanks!
Every single older generation complains about the younger generation. Ad infinitum
Imagine if this man heard Sexxy Red
Sir, this is a Wendy's.
Sir, this is an automat.
Give me those banjos and saxophones any day.
Gimme that old fashioned morphine
YOU AIN'T SEEN NUTHIN' YET!!
He has a short circuit in his B battery.
"A Music Redditor Time-Travelled to 1926"
Splendid post.
He made some excellent points!!! Totally agree!
I know you understand pitch when you quoted "that flat baritone singer".
You are awsome...😊
What greasy, unctious overcooked, trudging, gratuitous cloying verbiage. I ran out of pejoritives so I'll stop now.
Definitely a trance fan!
I can just picture the guy who wrote this admiring himself in the mirror the second he finished writing.
What's most interesting about this clip is the phrase "the insufferable punkness of present jazz." I once made a cassette mix of the early recordings of Frank Teschemacher and Benny Goodman and called it "Chicago Punk Jazz," because the white jazz musicians of the 1920's (most of them, anyway), like the punk rockers of the late 1970's, took it up because it was relatively easy to learn and it was an in-your-face rebellion against the music and culture of their elders. I've often said that a key generational rite of passage comes when you realize people younger than you have come up with a sort of music you just can't stand. And for this late-boomer (born 1953), that's rap.
The only thing worse than jazz is rap; he was spot on. Jazz doens't have to be bad, but it usually is.
Apparently this fusty old music mossback thought Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue was also jazz dreck. He gave it away by mentioning Paul Whiteman whose orchestra famously premiered it.
Good catch! 😂
@@Griffinmc
You know, I think he liked Rapsody in Blue. That is "High Brow" jazz. He didn't condemn all jazz, just a certain, to his mind, "simplistic" popular type, songs cranked out by Tin Pan Alley.😁
@@arrow1414Exactly!
Most people aren’t listening!
Everything the pretentious guy said was true, and today's pop is even worse.
"WORST. TANGO. EVER."
What's the source of this?
The January 1926 issue of “Radio Broadcast”
this was basically the entirety of my country at the time I'm ngl
"These kids today... I tell you they need to..." - Bill Maher
Great video.
Thanks lady, I really like this channel.
Pretentious Guy Hates Modern Music In 1926 1745pm 12.1.25 just as the world has it's Fearless Chan (forever to be found blunting the dubious claws of communism wherever it goes) so the drug fuelled sewers of the rat-infested flapper era has it's Pretentious Guy.
I hope somebody wrote back to this guy and told him to turn off his radio at 10 PM and GO TO BED!
Finally someone I can agree with 😇
Thank you so much for sharing this. Every time I see people commenting on how whatever aspect of western culture is declining, I always make a point of reminding them that nothing is new, not even those exact sentiments. Whatever music he adores, the generation before him at one point believed that it would ruin the country.
Anyway, there are good and bad aspects of every era, but this is objectively the best time to be alive, and save for the event of some presently unknown catastrophic disaster, we can have faith that every subsequent decade will be objectively better than the last. This is the nature of human progress.
Also, can we talk about how much of the jazz hatred of the time was simply racism?
"[We should] pity the classes in this proletariat age" is one helluva hot take
I love listen Argentinian Tango
I wonder what exactly he was listening to. Most music of any era is forgettable. There is a survival bias and we only remember the great stuff.
He mentioned a few titles such as Yes Sir, That's My Baby and Carolina in the Morning, and alluded to a few others such as I Ain't Got Nobody and All Alone. All songs that have survived as standards from that era.
💯
Having studied music much more, this is much more true than I thought, though I still find much better music a century or three ago than today!
Sometimes there is good stuff done today but it tends to be really obscure.
To be fair music today is Not as good or creative as before ..way too much autotune and generic songs and singers that just can't sing. Alot of talented stars like prince spoke about this
I think that was true through most the 2000s and 2010s but i think pop music is taking a turn for the better
so this is how an edgelord shitposted in the ‘20s. It’s exactly like all these fools complaining about new music on every single old song posted to TH-cam these days.
This guy was writing in a manner to give me the strong impression that his wife left him for a jazz musician. I certainly hope that the pseudo intellectual word salad he spewed here helped him feel superior.
If he thinks jazz was punk then the sex pistols would've given him a stroke!
❤❤❤❤
That was interesting!
There used to be some bad jazz back then. There was so much of it because of its popularity. I only dig on Jelly Roll Morton and Louis Armstrong from the era. Imagine the many imitators before Glenn Miller an big band. They used to have white singers behind Thelonious monk. I bet it was horrible, like what happened to rap, or drum n bass when they became popular. Psychedelic music when it became popular - the opening theme to a game show with Gary Moore was psychidelisized and with acid graphics, Gary Moore with long hair at his age talking the jive of the times, like for a few years in the 60s, then blammo - the same show in the seventies changed back to normal just as fast. "Don’t bend; don’t water it down; don’t try to make it logical; don’t edit your own soul according to the fashion."
If we take vocabulary seriously, this was an epic tongue lashing. I imagine the music of the day was consequently shamed to propriety.
Sounds like a Familiar Argument 🤔 5:32
Interesting, the phrase “punkness of Jazz Music.” Though a critic, he might’ve been on to something.
Gotta be the New Yorker.
Methinks he would not be a fan of Rock ‘n Roll. Tee-hee
Who knows, his local scene may have actually been trash lol
Still happens today. Some people are artists, others only superficially copy the genres they want to perform, and they are usually the loudest people.
This is all true
Jazz? More like Jass!
But he takes the MOST violent exception to music (or anything) being --gasp-- POPULAR! Oh No!! Shudder!
Why, the masses are meant to be IGNORED! Radio should not wallow in anything a majority of people ENJOY.
If only this guy could check out Lizzo and Cardie B.
i like when you speak more theatrically
its more fun
Music was best from roughly 1965 to 1985.
what is young sheldon blabbin about
A sure sign that a person isn't young anymore is they don't like the current popular music !
i stopped listening in 1995. guess my age.
I'm 21 and I don't like current popular music
He's not wrong, though
Andy Edwards great grand daddy
"Pretentious?" If disliking 99% of everything released after 1996 makes me "pretentious" then so be it.
I misread Guy as Gay LOL
@@bdfsminotaur805 haha i find homossexuality a very funny and amusing topic hehehehaw
You're not the only one! 😅
PUNKNESS
Sounds like there were plenty of wannabe punks back in the day too lol
Shades of herpes ?
Well Jazz does suck
Goes to show bemoaning current cultural and musical fads is nothing new!
I'm surprised that he likes Stravinsky. If you don't like it, don't listen to it.
On the Poetics of Music- Igor Stravinsky
"How often they are surrounded by art".
Inclined to critique
amen❤
Hilarious!
I think he's more upset about the rise of the proletariat and the success of popular tastes than he is about low-brow music.
Pretentious Guy Hates Modern Music In 1926 1744pm 12.1.25 yes, i don't mind this channel, either. as longas the skits are concise as opposed to high falutin' 3hr epics.. which is all good and well if you have years to spare. sadly, however boring it is, my life, i do not...... have years to spare....
I’ve wasted 35 years so far so why stop now???
Jazz isn't music confirmed
I will delete this A.I. channel. I hear too many mistakes.
There’s no AI here and there never has been. Any mistakes are from human error only.
You mean that you will unsubscribe from this channel, you don't have the power to delete it. You couldn't even write two sentences without a mistake but expect perfection from everyone else?
You have about as much technical knowledge of TH-cam as someone from the 1920’s
I’m really attuned to A.I. narration because of boneheaded mispronunciations that drive me crazy. I heard none of that here.
He doesn't sound remotely AI.
Who writes this stuff?
The more things change, the more they stay the same.
The more things change, the more they stay the same.