lawrencerock Wrote:
the 80's had no-wave, new wave, goth, industrial, hip-hop, hair metal, electro, etc.
the lemur Wrote:
I think that perspective needs to be gained before judging the Aughts properly.
Lemur has it exactly right, and your example of the '80s as an era of innovation proves it. I remember living through the '70s and it was just, like, taken for granted that it was a wasted decade. Looking back on it from the vantage point of the present, however, it seems like a golden age. Ditto the '80s. At the time so much of that new wave and no wave and goth etc. just seemed like a mutant form of nostalgia for the underground acts of the previous decade (although I'll give you rap and/or hip-hop as something that sounded completely new) or, worse, the mainstream commodification of punk, which shrunk a cultural uprising into a fashion preference. Twenty years later, you can't help but love the wide variety of cool music that came out of that decade.
So, maybe in another decadeor two the '00s will be twisted into a new shape by fad revivals and revisionism and your own remembrance of more care-free times and
presto: it's a golden age. Again.
IMO there's always great music and innovation happening. Always will be. And those eras in which the complaints about stagnation are the loudest will probably be the eras most fondly remembered.