HaqDiesel Wrote:
You could also think about reworking your listening patterns by subscribing to an online service or something.
I try to do that, actually, and since getting an Ipod for Christmas that's pretty much all I do. Having 6000 songs on shuffle makes for some pretty interesting combinations of music. Of course, much of this question begins with the Ipod - it's made very obvious what I listen to a lot and what means the most to me and what doesn't . . . yet I feel these weird obligations to keep things, and I'm not quite sure why. It's certainly not because I listen to them much, nor are they things of any particular sentimental value.
I have noticed that I go through these phases where I either fixate on one artist or even a genre, buy everything I can possibly find, and then just as quickly move on. Jazz has become an obvious issue - for a long time I was just buying "new" (to me) jazz CDs just to explore the genre, not because I particularly
wanted the music. I have since realized that my interest in jazz as a whole is much less than I thought it was, and so I have some favorites and a lot of dead weight - all of it "great" stuff that I feel like I
should love, but in essence it doesn't really mean much to me personally. It's those things that I seem to have a particularly hard time getting rid of. Maybe it's a credibility issue, I don't know - does that even make sense? I get this "what the hell is wrong with me" feeling when I get rid of, say, a Wayne Shorter disc that I know is highly regarded, yet I get nothing out of other than just the experience of listening to something new. It's exciting a couple times, then I rarely seek it out. Not that I don't ever listen to jazz, but it tends to be very specific artists - Matthew Shipp, Dave Douglas, John Zorn's Masada, Bill Bruford, but not the old masters very often (you know the names - Monk, Mingus, a billion others.) I respect them and their historical importance, and I even like what they're doing, but it just doesn't make a connecting punch with me anymore.
Reading back over this, it makes the issue look pretty stupid. Sell or give away what I don't care about, keep what I do. Duh. It just doesn't
feel that simple.