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Notes from the periphery's avatar

Fascinating take.

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William Collen's avatar

Very fascinating take. After reading this on Sunday morning I spent a good part of the day listening to some hyperpop, and . . . I'm diggin' it, I think you've got your finger on the pulse and I would not at all be surprised to see your prediction come true.

I was listening to a user-created spotify playlist called "hyperpop / glitchcore / scenecore." Some things that immediately stuck out at me on this playlist was the general tone of paranoia and dissapointed expectations; is this common in the genre? Because if so it would align precisely with your analysis of why the genre rose to prominence. I believe we will see a lot of Gen Z inhabiting a space of coming to terms with the world as given to them by generations before—like you said, art of the techlash. I sympathize with Mr Raven above who says the genre is narrow, and might I suggest the genre broadens on scope of we consider it to be allied, in some way, with vaporwave? If I'd been asked to name the great genre of the 20s I would have said vaporwave; there's still a lot of promise in it in my opinion. Hyperpop and vaporwave almost seem like two sides of the same coin; both are entranced by the current state of affairs as informed by a historical perspective. How about this: vaporwave is what gen Z is saying publicly to Millennials about the world the Millennials gave to them; hyperpop is what Gen Z is saying about that world amongst themselves, privately. However all this analysis is only based off about two hours' worth of listening to one playlist so I might not really have a handle on what's going on.

Also, I agree with your analysis of rock, rap, and "root genres." It's telling to me that the "edgy" rock stations are still playing Nevermind. As to your theory of genres beginning to fizzle out right when their greatest artistic productions are created . . . yeah, I'll go with that. Perhaps a genre attracts attention from musicians when it is new because it presents itself as an artistic / aesthetic problem, only for that attention to wane once masterpieces get created and the genre is "solved."

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