RizzRustbolt,

All the kids listen these days is The Doodletown Pipers.

IndiBrony,
@IndiBrony@lemmy.world avatar

You know the worst part is: I don’t know enough about modern pop culture to say for sure that this isn’t true…

psud,

Groups I have noticed in the past few months, who have released something in this past year

  • Post Malone
  • Doja car
  • Billie Eilish
  • Rum Jungle
Poggervania,
@Poggervania@kbin.social avatar

By textbook definition, we can consider stuff like Gorillaz, Linkin Park, and Panic! At The Disco as “retro” if the song or album came out 15-20 years ago.

0ops,

What are those albums in the oldies section? The one on the right looks like Boston’s self-titled. I’m guessing the left is Kansas’s The point of no return, but idk

macisr,

Even this picture is an oldie now.

PersnickityPenguin,

I still remember a few years ago when my local Clearwater Classic Rock station started playing Green Day, Red Hot chili peppers, Weezer, Death Cab, Arcade Fire… as… classic rock?!

My head spun.

HeyThisIsntTheYMCA,
@HeyThisIsntTheYMCA@lemmy.world avatar

Wait death cab and arcade fire are classic rock now? What does that make Arlo and Zep?

shea,

classic-er

PersnickityPenguin,

Classical

Underwaterbob,

1999 was 24 years ago. 24 years before 1999 was 1975, when Wish You Were Here, Physical Graffiti, and Toys in the Attic all came out. Those were definitely classic rock then.

friendlyhobo,

Classic, sure. But not oldies, which were generally 50s-60s, 35 years before 1999.

EtherWhack,
@EtherWhack@lemmy.world avatar

About a quarter century ago

rambaroo,

Fuck

Blue_Morpho, (edited )

But here’s the gut punch. If you were listening to Physical Graffiti in 1975, 24 years earlier was 1951.

That was the end of big band music. You know, oldies.

Geobloke,

The new album is actually pretty good and has a good mix of classic blink and about getting old. Fair few songs hit me hard and asking why blink would do this to me

kemsat,

Aging is cruel.

cRazi_man,

Time…you fucked me again, you bastard.

TimewornTraveler, (edited )

Am I so old that I’m not surprised this is oldies? Or maybe I’ve just came around to the slowly creepy idea that not everything is about Boomers. Idgaf what they call oldies any more Idgaf about their christmas music either

TimewornTraveler,

TIME IS PASSING TIME IS PASSING TIME IS PASSING TIME IS PASSING TIME IS PASSING TIME IS PASSING TIME IS PASSING TIME IS PASSING TIME IS PASSING TIME IS PASSING TIME IS PASSING TIME IS PASSING TIME IS PASSING TIME IS PASSING TIME IS PASSING TIME IS PASSING TIME IS PASSING TIME IS PASSING TIME IS PASSING TIME IS PASSING

The_Picard_Maneuver,
@The_Picard_Maneuver@startrek.website avatar

Thank you, TimewornTraveler

Crafter72,
@Crafter72@lemmy.world avatar

I like how Nine Inch Nail poster stuck there like a sore thumb.

As a blink-182 fan, growing older is a must, but growing up is optional ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)

Crack0n7uesday,

I never it was over when I started hearing Nirvana on classic rock stations over a decade ago…

Aggravationstation, (edited )

I’m from a small-ish English town. In the early 00s it seemed like every weekend there was an alternative band playing at either the one dedicated music venue we used to have, in the civic hall or just in a pub/ working men’s club that all the local goth, metalhead and punk kids would go to.

The quality of the local bands varied a lot. Most did covers, some did their own stuff but some “big” bands came from out of town at the start of their careers. I saw Enter Shikari here one weekend then Crystal Castles the next.

We always had fun though. Well, as much fun as a goth is allowed to have and still seem cool.

Is that still a thing? It certainly doesn’t seem to be here. I still check local gig listings. The only bands who come here now are tribute acts or still 90s/ 00s nu-metal, emo and pop punk cover bands.

Some local bands play the few pubs we have left but they tend to be “Dad rock” bands, people from my parent’s generation or older covering pop and classic rock.

This post started out all melancholy but changed completely when I realised that either I’m so totally out of touch with “the kids” I have no way of finding out about gigs they’re playing or the whole concept of grass roots live music is dying out.

If so the younguns can tik their tacs and snap their chats or whatever the hell it is they do to listen to music and I’ll enjoy my admittedly more sedate mosh pits before the hip operation comes and I have to move a bit further back.

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