Amen. It may be relevant socio economic commentary on the life and times of America, but it definitely IS NOT music/
Funny. Trying to describe music to today's generation is like trying to describe the color azure to a blind man. I remember pulling my car off the road so I could listen to the radio the first time I heard Carlos santana rip away on the lead in to Black magic Woman. I still remember the first time I heard Eric Clapton tearing it up on his Fender Stratocaster when he played White Room and Sunshine of Your Love. And Led Zepplin created a whole new sound and Hendrix made music so powerful that it left people's brains frozen. The Door's had songs so hauntingly beautiful they transcended time. And of course there was the Who and the Stones and many others. I can only assume all the good music has been done because all we get now is pre packaged garbage.
And this generation thinks some moron screaming profanity into a microphone is music.
Now that's funny!
The thing is the generation or two before you said the exact same things you said in your first sense about everything you listed in the next. Personally, I find every artist you listed to be dated and marginal at best. Heck half of them were half fried or worse on drugs and alcohol when they wrote, recorded and performed those songs!
Every generation thinks their music and whatever genre it fits into was/is the best and in their views they are right. It's the best/only music they had to listen to at that time in their lives when they were growing up and it was imprinting on their basic senses of self as it developed at the time.
My personal preferences cover a wide range of music but country is not one of them. Never has been never will be. I just don't like it new or old. I find it boorish, predictable and highly repetitive and above all grating to my ears.
