ROBERTVOZZA wrote:Im also not a big fan of music after Y2K. Aside from a handful of Bands like Radiohead, I seldom heard anything I would purchase that were not bands later albums from prior eras. It seems to get worse every year. Almost as if anybody with a computer, keyboard and mic seems to think they're a musician nowadays. I don't know what ever happenned to actual musicianship since the early 90's backward to the 40's.
But I am totally open to suggestions.
Well, Robert, I posted 13 excellent songs by 13 excellent bands. They were: The Foo Fighters, Green Day, The Killers, Mumford and Sons, Tool, Kings of Leon, Keane, Muse, Death Cab for Cutie, Interpol, Death Cab for Cutie, Coldplay, The Strokes, and Arcade Fire.
Those are some of the best bands of the 00's; they all have excellent musicians who don't rely on computers, and are all committed to musicianship. If not all of those are to your taste, I
can and will suggest others.
However, i would first suggest you not fall into the trap many people, including myself, can as we get older. That is condemning an entire period of music just because what we hear of it hasn't entirely pleased us. No period of art is bereft of brilliance, and no period is flooded with it. My parents' parents hated the music of the 60's, and my parents hated the music of the 80's and 90's. I'm sure the kids in the 00's will say exactly what you said about the 00's when bemoaning music in the 2030's.
So, as I said in my first post, The 00's was actually a remarkable music decade marked by experimentation, a return to 80's Alt-rock, and a Folk renaissance. You just have to search a little harder. To help, here are some more excellent bands and artists of the 00's:
Amy Winehouse
Ryan Adams
Wilco
The White Stripes
TV on the Radio
The Lumineers
The Black Keys
The Red Hot Chili Peppers
Lana Del Rey
Adele
Bright Eyes/Conor Oberst
Give them a try and get back to me.