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RJT
last minute disco

Registered: Oct 2004
Location:
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For me, it's happened with just about every type of music I've listened to, but I wouldn't describe myself as "jaded," but rather as someone who's tastes have changed and grown (I'd have used the word "evolved" but that would more than likely be misconstrued and cause some to take offense).
I don't think I've ever really lost that "PLUR" feeling for any of the music I've loved, in some cases, however, what gives me that feeling has changed.
For example, whereas three to four years ago, just being in a huge club and hearing EDM surrounded by a bunch of tweeked out party kids was all I wanted to do, now it's either hearing a mix that's so well programmed it makes my like a track I generally either don't care for or hate outright. I'd describe the feeling itself as exactly the same, but the causes are different.
I think that's the most concise answer I can give, great thread montana.

___________________
last minute disco dot net
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Aug-08-2007 19:11
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MrJiveBoJingles
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Jun 2004
Location: U.S.
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Another thought: saturation.
When a lot of people get into something, they really immerse themselves in it as much as possible (I know I do), and in the digital age it's ridiculously easy to saturate yourself with new electronic music of all kinds, discussion with likeminded listeners, DJ sets, production, etc. Anything you want (except for that old fresh feeling of "newness") is right at your fingertips, a few clicks or keyboard strokes away.
When I think of what EDM culture must have been like before the Internet, a metaphor comes to mind: starvation. If you lived anywhere but in a few big cities, your exposure to new electronic music would be extremely limited. When you found a record of some previously-unheard-of genre of music in a shop, it must have felt like a little miracle happened or something, like finding an oasis in a desert.
I dunno, maybe it wasn't anything like that and I'm romanticizing this needlessly. I wasn't clued in to EDM in those days anyway, so I have no firsthand experience. The grass is always greener on the other side, right? And you can't really "go back." How could you? Stop using the Internet for music? Yeah right. And anyway, you might miss out on lots of good stuff if you did that.
So now music is everywhere and trivially easy to access. This situation kind of reminds me of "The Machine Stops" by E.M. Forster. Everything's right there for you. There are millions, billions of options, billons of new spectacles and ways to entertain yourself, but maybe that makes each one less significant, subjectively. Or maybe it doesn't. Probably depends on the individual.
Horizons are open like never before. As your view improves and you can see the layout of the whole land, your options proliferate. You're no longer relegated to a little corner of the world, musically. But at the same time perhaps the sense of "mystery" and "unknown territory" diminishes, and I think that might be a part of the kind of naivete you referred to in the opening post. It was for me.
Maybe I'm being as silly as "vinyl purists," and maybe this isn't what you're after, but I've felt like writing something on this for a while. So there you go.
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Aug-08-2007 20:06
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