Greatest rock and roll band in the world, get your self down the dog & duckVery true. Reckon we’ll see ‘em down at the Dog & Duck on Saturday?
Greatest rock and roll band in the world, get your self down the dog & duckVery true. Reckon we’ll see ‘em down at the Dog & Duck on Saturday?
My daughter who is 26 is going watching her in Liverpool tomorrowInteresting thread.
I don't care much for her music, just bland but inoffensive pap pop, but fully aware I'm not the target audience.
I asked my girls (13 & 15) if they were into Taylor Swift and just got a 'meh' response...
I think she has a huge middle-aged women following, the sort that listen to soft hits radio stations. The 'not too heavy, not too light, not too Interesting' type radio ..
Who are all these huge, middle-aged women?I think she has a huge middle-aged women following, the sort that listen to soft hits radio stations. The 'not too heavy, not too light, not too Interesting'
I've heard tickets run into thousands of pounds?My daughter who is 26 is going watching her in Liverpool tomorrow
I hesitate to get into this because I too am not the target market here - but in general these days, if there's something you can't work out how it's got so popular, then it's probably blown up on social media. And in turn social media is now so interwoven into what it means to be famous that it's changing the nature of fame, it's a much more intimate relationship where fans follow the twists and turns of someone's life in all the grisly detail.My point being is that it's possible to recognise talent in bands you don't like. "oh, that's a great song, but I hate it", sort if thing.
I struggle to find that in Swift's repertoire, what I've heard of it, though.
Perhaps it's more the show than the music that appeals.
The cynic in me says that she at least in part slept her way to the top.
Play list duly cued up.But in terms of a warmer personality with more tunes in two albums than Swift has managed in eleven, then might I point the old farts to Olivia Rodrigo?
GDGBD is the only one used. That and picks, fantastic noise.DADGAD is another classic open tuning I like. It's used a lot in folk/celtic music by guitarists such as Bert Jansch, Richard Thompson and Jimmy Page.
Er no, do you play guitar ?GDGBD is the only one used. That and picks, fantastic noise.
Nope, not with a G in it. Used a lot by folkies as you can play in D really easily and also play bits of tune and chords at the same time really easily but sounding very slick.Think thats open D
Fair comment, but not really the point. What we're trying to understand is why this child of middling talent is such a phenomenon.
Taylor Swift is so popular because of her ability to convey emotion and create captivating worlds through her storytelling. She has also adapted to different music genres, from country to pop to indie, and won many awards for her musical sensibility and artistic integrity. She has also responded to haters and controversies through her lyrics, and taken back her music from the industry. She supports various causes, invests in real estate, and directs her own work.The OP was asking about the hype there are lots of singers like her or better out there why all the Taylor Swift hype.
I think you are wrong.
Quite a lot of it has broad appeal (which is more than can be said about a lot of youth music going back years).
But what do I know, I have been known to sit at the traffic lights with the windows open with 'funny action songs for kids' on the tape deck to keep the blighters in the back quiet/drown out "are we there yet" and "how many more miles"
And on the subject, why do places play all this 'nostalgia' music from the 40's when we should be headed for "punk rock retirement squats" in the very near future?
Do you include yourself in that?Most of this lot are closer to the grave yard than the school yard.
You got there before meWho are all these huge, middle-aged women?
Sounds like Terry Wogan listeners!
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