Tuesday 24 March 2009

so much (world) music the world has to offer, If only we would/could listen to it all

Music is very much like a prescription drug for me, I need to hear something with a beat at least once a day otherwise the day feels empty somehow, although there are times when I feel that music gets a bit samey. Broadening my tastes to other genres is pretty easy having presented shows where there is a good mix of different genres helps immensely but there comes a time (for me at least) when the music scene which populates the UK market becomes slightly stale with its overpopulation of similar acts and manufactured pop acts.

It’d make a change for something outside the ordinary to enter the play lists of big name ‘chart’ radio stations to reach the ears of the listeners but instead end up on stations with a smaller demographic of listeners or as featured artists on the likes of Later with Jools Holland. However with the internet and a wider selection of digital television and radio channels the music's there, if you’re willing to find it.

I’m slowly becoming more and more comfortable listening to music from other countries, despite the difficulties understanding the language, but music is better when you have to work out the message and the meaning behind it, and when faced with a foreign language it adds a hint of mystery to the song, often having to sense the feel of the song from the tone and the tempo of the track.

At the moment my preferred world music of choice is J-Pop and J-Rock thanks to the amount of actual J-Pop songs that get used as intro or ending songs for Anime series and films. The only problem is getting to listen to the full version of songs.

Websites such as Last Fm and YouTube make it easier to look for songs from different countries, however while there are some CD’s available to buy from music stores like iTunes or HMV I have yet to find a J-Pop CD which is less than £30 often only being just a full album and in some cases a DVD is featured. Even artists like Hikaru Utada who record albums in English barely get an eye bat or even a CD in the shop and yet Russian group t.A.T.u can bring out an English version of their first album and get in the charts (ok admittedly the video for their song All The Things She Said did have them snogging each other which probably boosted sales somewhat) perhaps this may change after all Dragonball Evolution which is out in April has a J-Pop song as its main theme is Ayumi Hamasaki's Rule.

Well one can dream for now until then I'm going to try and find more world music to listen to.

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