Sorry, I didn't mean to say that all people in their teens are fans of
nu-rock, just that it seems to be the dominant sound - when I was 19, the
dominant sound (here in the UK anyway) was grunge, but you didn't catch me
wearing any Pearl Jam t-shirts... :)

Brendan

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Catherine Eberhardt [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: 15 April 2002 13:48
> To: [email protected]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: RE: [313] Is Electronic Music dying? (was: "Re: The committee
> vs. Carl Craig")
> 
> 
> Ahem, now I have no idea what age group you are discussing 
> here, but I'm
> not exactly into any form of "nu-rock" I like my techno, experimental
> and house, and I'm 19.
> 
> >>> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 04/15/02 08:15 AM >>>
> I've always seen techno as being "the music of the future" in 
> the sense
> that
> it's *about* the future rather than destined to be the 
> mainstream music
> everyone listens to in 2007 or whenever. But even still, in the time
> I've
> been involved in electronic music (about 12 years or so) 
> there's been a
> definite trend towards increasing acceptance of it; even the nu-rock
> bands
> tend to have someone working on synths or samples, which was almost
> unthinkable in the late 1980s when there was a more solid partition
> between
> "real" and "electronic" music. The fluctuations of the last 
> year or two
> don't have any effect, I reckon, on the development and acceptance of
> techno
> as a genre. 
> 
> Besides, the majority of adolescent and post-adolescent kids will
> *always*
> like heavy guitar music, whether its heavy rock, grunge, 
> nu-rock, punk,
> emo,
> indie-rock or any of the other names people apply to that 
> genre. I'd be
> interested to see a psychological study, in fact, on just why 
> it is that
> power chords appeal to much to the teenage psyche? Whenever I 
> meet fans
> of
> hard metal, I always play them fairly abrasive techno records 
> to see if
> those sounds have the same effect as guitars, and they never 
> really do.
> Until electronic music manages to better the sound of a mouldy old
> guitar
> screaming hell for leather on a dusty Marshall amp, hard rock will
> forever
> dominate the souls of the young... :)
> 
> Brendan
> 
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: robin pinning [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Sent: 15 April 2002 12:53
> > To: Tim Maughan
> > Cc: [email protected]
> > Subject: Re: [313] Is Electronic Music dying? (was: "Re: 
> The committee
> > vs. Carl Craig")
> > 
> > 
> > >
> > > > To me, Techno
> > > > has always been truly "The Music Of The Future" - and I 
> > hate to see the
> > > > Future become something that starts to resemble the Past,
> > >
> > >
> > > well..."the music of the future"...that was always the 
> > great, romantic idea
> > > wasn't it? but now the music is 20 years old, and i'd guess 
> > most of us on
> > > this list are around the 30 mark...
> > 
> > 'the kids' are all into nu-rock now aren't they? easier for the beer
> > companies to latch on to ("what? you're running a night and 
> > everyone is
> > drinking water?!") and more mtv friendly than yer average nerdy
> > electronic artist :)
> > 
> > 
> > maybe i'm showing my age....
> > 
> > :)
> > 
> > robin...
> > 
> > 
> > 
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