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<blockquote data-quote="mochi" data-source="post: 26625" data-attributes="member: 22"><p>anytime someone judges the entirety of music by its decade, like how he said "i hate 80s music" as if that's a genre, i disregard their opinions on music entirely</p><p>if you're saying something like you're weary of any post-punk albums made after the 80s, or any drum and bass after the 90s, that's different because it's a specific kind of music with specific events and shows you probably know a decent amount of what you're talking about. like with dnb it's probably because there was a huge shift in sound in the aftermath of jump up and techstep/hardstep, with post-punk it'd be because the scenes had died completely by the late 80s in both UK and US so there's a high chance it's some indie abomination or not "genuine" (i.e. just aping what was already considered old-school,) but almost nobody who talks about music by decades can go into any detail on any of this. and um</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="mochi, post: 26625, member: 22"] anytime someone judges the entirety of music by its decade, like how he said "i hate 80s music" as if that's a genre, i disregard their opinions on music entirely if you're saying something like you're weary of any post-punk albums made after the 80s, or any drum and bass after the 90s, that's different because it's a specific kind of music with specific events and shows you probably know a decent amount of what you're talking about. like with dnb it's probably because there was a huge shift in sound in the aftermath of jump up and techstep/hardstep, with post-punk it'd be because the scenes had died completely by the late 80s in both UK and US so there's a high chance it's some indie abomination or not "genuine" (i.e. just aping what was already considered old-school,) but almost nobody who talks about music by decades can go into any detail on any of this. and um [/QUOTE]
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