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This document discusses a potential generational divide in perceptions of musical innovation between Generation X and Generation Z. It presents quotes from an article arguing that popular culture, including music, has lacked new styles and instead relies on recycling past trends from the 1990s to 2010s. Readers are prompted to consider what defines musical innovation for their own generation and what their parents might say about today's pop culture.
This document discusses a potential generational divide in perceptions of musical innovation between Generation X and Generation Z. It presents quotes from an article arguing that popular culture, including music, has lacked new styles and instead relies on recycling past trends from the 1990s to 2010s. Readers are prompted to consider what defines musical innovation for their own generation and what their parents might say about today's pop culture.
This document discusses a potential generational divide in perceptions of musical innovation between Generation X and Generation Z. It presents quotes from an article arguing that popular culture, including music, has lacked new styles and instead relies on recycling past trends from the 1990s to 2010s. Readers are prompted to consider what defines musical innovation for their own generation and what their parents might say about today's pop culture.
MEMORY DR WILL KURLINKUS UPCOMING ASSIGNMENTS MUSIC GENERATIONS: IS THIS ARTICLE A CROSS- GENERATIONAL INSULT FROM GEN X TO Z
• What is innovation and what does it mean to be innovative in music?
• “For most of the last century, America’s cultural landscape—its fashion, art, music, design, entertainment—changed dramatically every 20 years or so. But these days, even as technological and scientific leaps have continued to revolutionize life, popular style has been stuck on repeat, consuming the past instead of creating the new.” • What bits of musical innovation define your generation? • What do your parents have to say about today’s pop culture? “Look through a current fashion or architecture magazine or listen to 10 random new pop songs; if you didn’t already know they were all things from the 2010s, I guarantee you couldn’t tell me with certainty they weren’t from the 2000s or 1990s or 1980s or even earlier.”