I think the last 14 months has seen the arrival of acts hyped to be the “next big thing” and seen them whittle away almost as quickly as they arrived.
When I was a little bit younger then I am now and NME put a band on the cover and told the world that this was the “next big thing”, it tended to mean something. I am going back to the days of Suede and Radiohead or even the Longpigs when they first arrived (though on this occasion, though brilliant, the Longpigs didn’t last).
Now refer to recent acts which have been hyped up to take on the mantle as our new darlings of rock/pop/indie/alt – So hail the Kaiser Chiefs, The Killers, The Strokes, Artic Monkeys, Hard-Fi, Kubb, The Dears, Bloc Party and that’s just to name a few. Una Mulally has written a piece in the topic section about the possibility that The Artic Monkeys have peaked to early. I don’t believe that they even had the chance to peak, let alone have the dust settle. We are in the middle of what I would call a Mass Production of acts. Due to the record industries (reluctant) embrace of the Internet & IPOD’s and downloads now recognized as chart entrants, there is more pressure on them to sell to us quickly without giving us that much time for thought.
In other words, we are bombarded with almost a new act every two months which has been hyped up to be of genuine quality and “could be massive” stardom and in most cases, have ceased to be talked about 2 months later. For acts like the Killers and The Strokes the dust has settled to a certain degree but how many of us would fall to our knees in tears should the Killers break up tomorrow? If the Artic Monkeys never released another record would we be disappointed? Is their music THAT cutting edge that it provides us with something to get seriously excited about? Are the Kaiser Chiefs not just another (admittedly socially conscious) modernized Blur and the Employment album simply represents another form of ParkLife?
In answer to a question from Binokular, certain acts which are, in my opinion, of a much higher quality yet have been somewhat ignored by the media (I stress media, not the in-the-know Muso’s populating this chat board). Acts such as Sigur Ros (though it is improving) and Architecture in Helsinki are again, in my opinion, acts worthy of lavished praise and have music with substance as opposed to music that connects instantly with the brain and leaves just as quick.
All said, the arrival of Interpol, Editors (who have for me, taken Joy Division and improved the script immensely) and Arcade Fire have given hope to the fact that there are people out there who can provide us with music which we need, understand, would miss if it was not there and most importantly, ANTICIPATE future releases with streaks of eager impatient finger tapping.
It’s late and I am tired and hope I have not waffled too much and some of this makes sense to someone!
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