I've been going back through a lot of music, albums, artists, etc from when I really got into music (mid 90's, born 1982) and playing my favorites from each of the years through to roughly 2010. What I've found is interesting...
1 - I've always liked "angst" or "loud" music. The 90's I was big into Green Day, The Offspring, Foo Fighters, Nirvana, Everclear, Blink 182, etc. As I listen to it now, it's amazing how less "angry" it sounds. It's still good music, but I've clearly outgrown the speed and loudness. The lyrics however still resonate pretty well.
2 - From around 1998 to roughly 2010, I was big into nu-metal and sudo-hard rock (Korn, Limp Bizkit, Creed, Godsmack, Disturbed, My Chemical Romance, Linkin Park, etc). Those songs still have the same loudness and energy, but the lyrics seem less emotional today. A few exceptions - like Korn's early albums are still my favorites and go-to when relaxing.
3 - I've been on a linear progression since the beginning towards harder and louder and most of the time now listen to hard rock, nu-metal, metal (Korn, Godsmack, Disturbed, Asking Alexandria, Bad Omens, In This Moment, Motionless In White) and some deep music (Badflower, Highly Suspect, etc).
4 - The bands that were breaking ground in the late 90's through 2010 are making a huge comeback. Bands like Disturbed, Breaking Benjamins, etc went through a bit of a lost phase 2010 to 2020 with sub-par albums. Some are now back to being favorites (i.e. Disturbed).
How has your taste evolved or what music that once resonated the most now seems less connective?
1 - I've always liked "angst" or "loud" music. The 90's I was big into Green Day, The Offspring, Foo Fighters, Nirvana, Everclear, Blink 182, etc. As I listen to it now, it's amazing how less "angry" it sounds. It's still good music, but I've clearly outgrown the speed and loudness. The lyrics however still resonate pretty well.
2 - From around 1998 to roughly 2010, I was big into nu-metal and sudo-hard rock (Korn, Limp Bizkit, Creed, Godsmack, Disturbed, My Chemical Romance, Linkin Park, etc). Those songs still have the same loudness and energy, but the lyrics seem less emotional today. A few exceptions - like Korn's early albums are still my favorites and go-to when relaxing.
3 - I've been on a linear progression since the beginning towards harder and louder and most of the time now listen to hard rock, nu-metal, metal (Korn, Godsmack, Disturbed, Asking Alexandria, Bad Omens, In This Moment, Motionless In White) and some deep music (Badflower, Highly Suspect, etc).
4 - The bands that were breaking ground in the late 90's through 2010 are making a huge comeback. Bands like Disturbed, Breaking Benjamins, etc went through a bit of a lost phase 2010 to 2020 with sub-par albums. Some are now back to being favorites (i.e. Disturbed).
How has your taste evolved or what music that once resonated the most now seems less connective?