Friday, August 25th., 2017
“Whoever you are, whatever you believe, there’s something to be angry and morose about in this moment.”
What Modern Pop Music Tells Us About Life in 2017
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Speaking to Rolling Stone last week, McKee pointed to the financial crisis of the late 2000s as an example of how the societal mood can dictate what does well on the charts.
“When you think about the financial crisis of 2008, there was a lot more uptempo stuff,” she said. “In a crisis like that, people want to forget their problems.”
“In a crisis like we’re in right now, where people’s rights are being taken away and people are being shot in the street, that’s a different kind of crisis, a moral and social one. People don’t really feel right about jumping up and down and bopping right this second.”
BBC Radio 6 Music DJ Chris Hawkins agrees. Speaking to the United Kingdom’s The Times, Hawkins cited “the bleak news and the frenetic lives that we lead and the dark times we live in” as a major element of why people are shifting away from upbeat tracks.
“Whoever you are, whatever you believe, there’s something to be angry and morose about in this moment.”