Do lyrics matter more as you get older?
#1
Posted 23 May 2006 - 08:25 PM
#3
Posted 23 May 2006 - 08:33 PM
#4
Posted 23 May 2006 - 08:39 PM
#5
Posted 23 May 2006 - 08:42 PM
#6
Posted 23 May 2006 - 08:43 PM
Very clear and concise reasoning.no.
#7
Posted 23 May 2006 - 08:43 PM
#8
Posted 23 May 2006 - 08:47 PM
I liked Bob Dylan when I was 15. I like Suga Free now that I'm 23. Figure that one.
You were so much younger then, you're older then that now?
#9
Posted 23 May 2006 - 08:51 PM
I liked Bob Dylan when I was 15. I like Suga Free now that I'm 23. Figure that one.
rap really will melt your brain. just like mom said.
#10
Posted 23 May 2006 - 08:54 PM
You're just going through one of those phases.I liked Bob Dylan when I was 15. I like Suga Free now that I'm 23. Figure that one.
#11
Posted 23 May 2006 - 08:55 PM
I liked Bob Dylan when I was 15. I like Suga Free now that I'm 23. Figure that one.
You were so much younger then, you're older then that now?
i've always hated that lyric ("i was so much older then, blah, blah..."), even when i was young.
i should have thought about this more. there are some songs with goofy or outright bad lyrics that i will always love.
case in point: "Signs" by Five Man Electrical Band
"And the sign said long haired freaky people need not apply
So I tucked my hair up under my hat and I went in to ask him why
He said you look like a fine upstanding young man, I think you'll do
So I took off my hat I said imagine that, huh, me working for you
Sign Sign everywhere a sign
Blocking out the scenery breaking my mind
Do this, don't do that, can't you read the sign"
for some weird reason, i always get a little choked up when he sings:
"I said thank you Lord for thinking about me, I'm alive and doing fine"
#12
Posted 23 May 2006 - 09:01 PM
And the answer is: Absolutely.
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#13
Posted 23 May 2006 - 09:15 PM
When I was younger, my tastes were so much more narrow, and I was such a stupid rock purist (and not very smart; I remember being really conflicted when a straight-up rock band like U2 used synths and beats on Achtung Baby, never mind the fact that I already adored New Order, Depeche Mode and the Cure).
And I was very much into lyrics and what songwriters were trying to say, and I'd have a hard time enjoying a song if there was even just one dumb line (like the aforemented U2 album, and the line "more than a lot" in "One").
But now I don't care that much. A good song's a good song, and lyrics don't have to be poetry, hell, they don't even have to make sense. A lot of my favorite songs I don't even know what they're singing about, and I don't care. It's the feeling you get, not any kind of analyzed meaning.
In most cases, I really don't care what the lyrics mean.
#14
Posted 23 May 2006 - 09:20 PM
#15
Posted 23 May 2006 - 09:21 PM
just how i like it.Very clear and concise reasoning.no.
considering i listen to a lot of foreign music (of which the lyrics are in comprehensible) i say no.
#16
Posted 23 May 2006 - 09:27 PM
Right. Well, that is obviously the exception to the matter. But, let's say you listened to foreign music, had no idea what the lyrics were because you don't speak the language, only to find out that once translated, it's some horrible dirge about rape, sodomy, or some subject you find extraordinarily repugnant (maybe you enjoy rape and sodomy). Then how do you feel about the song? Just wondering....considering i listen to a lot of foreign music (of which the lyrics are in comprehensible) i say no.
#17
Posted 23 May 2006 - 09:47 PM
So, sooner or later, you become Dangerously Exposed and possibly even endure the unfortunate experience of figuring out who you are. Range of experience, range of emotional response, they're wider, and if by then you've heard a lot more music it becomes easier to recognize what will matter to you. (I don't know if people might consider this a narrowing of taste, but I'll take it over wild, undisciplined acquistiveness - which always strikes me as desperate and bored.) The lyrics I like now mean more to me now than the ones I liked back then meant back then (if you follow). But words mean more in general, now.
And it wasn't qualified, after all: yes. It's just not about age.
#18
Posted 23 May 2006 - 09:51 PM
#19
Posted 23 May 2006 - 09:56 PM
Topic translation: Lyrics certainly won't suddenly matter less as you age. Therefore, lyrics do matter more to older, wiser, and more mature listeners. Attraction to beats or melody is a juvenile phase that most listeners will outgrow.
#20
Posted 23 May 2006 - 09:59 PM
Attraction to beats or melody is a juvenile phase that most listeners will outgrow.
taking it a little far there, no?












