How music is prevailing in the pandemic era
As a DJ and a music producer, James Haidak ponders on the music industry's state, amid tour cancellations and closure of venues, due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In this article, James will cite three movements in the industry, hoping if it will provide any tell-tale signs of either shifting or possible breaking.
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source: ytimg.com |
David Lang, a Pulitzer prize-winning contemporary classical composer, in a recent interview shares: "Our field believes at its core that it is about transmitting something to you live." Although, in that same interview, he admits that tour cancellation will definitely hurt dance, choreography, and theater. This is something in common with clubbing, reflects DJ James Haidak. These two genres depend on live performances' raw energy - something that can never be replicated, even by any virtual setting.
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source: bangonacan.org |
The first week of lockdown saw a revival of REM's "It's the End of the World As We Know It" and the Police's "Don't Stand So Close to Me" - a reaction to this altered state that the world is living in. However, a quick pass into pop music territory sees a return to escapism, indicated by the wearing out of trauma and low self-esteem in lyrical topics. Artists who reportedly expressed such longing for a return to fantasy were Frank Ocean, Dua Lipa, and Lady Gaga.
The rise of lo-fi
If you've been living under some prehistoric cave, trying to escape the coronavirus, Lo-fi has quietly emerged as an accepted genre in the year 2020. A leading venue for such an easy-listening trip is a popular YouTube channel named ChilledCow, presently with more than 7.4 million subscribers. And across the internet, similar channels are also seeing spikes in their numbers.
James Haidak is DJ and music producer greatly influenced by late '90s techno, house, and electronica. James actively participates online by sharing insights on the music industry. For more onJames, visit this page.
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