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Guest post by Stephen Carlisle of NOVA Southeastern UniversityThis item from the website Metro.co.uk caught my eye last week. The article’s headline read:“Millennials Prefer Music from the “Golden Age” to the Pop of Today, Research Suggests.” 1The article states:“A study has found that golden oldies stick in millennials’ minds far more than the relatively bland, homogenous pop of today. A golden age of popular music lasted from the 1960s to the 1990s, academics claimed. Songs from this era proved to be much more memorable than tunes released in the 21st century.” 2Could this possibly be true? I must say, I was skeptical. In my experience, if you line up 100 people of vastly different age groups, 99 out of 100 would say that the greatest music every produced was the music they listened to in high school and college. This only stands to reason. Your teens to 20’s are the first time that you make an emotional connection with someone who is not your parent. The milestones of your first crush, your first kiss, your first romantic steady date, are all indelibly interwoven with the music you were listening to at the time. The two, almost inevitably, go together.So how did they arrive at this conclusion that the music of 30 -50 years ago was better?The methodology of the research was as follows:“Each [of 643] participant[s] was presented with short excerpts from a random selection of seven out of 152 songs and asked to say if they recognized them. The ‘recognition proportion’ for each song was then plotted as a function of the year when it was a hit.” 3So, it turns out the headline was a tad misleading. The study determined only whether a song was memorable, not necessarily if it was preferred over another song.However, the results were rather stunning:“A steep drop-off in recognition was seen for hits produced between the years 2015 and 2000, and a more gradual decline for songs of the 1950s and 1940s. However, songs from the 1960s to 1990s generated a ‘stable plateau’ of music recognition.” 4And here’s the real kicker:“Unexpectedly a strong correlation was seen between the likelihood of recognizing a song and its play count on Spotify.” 5So there is a direct corollary between a song’s “memorable” factor and how much it is being played currently.So what’s at work here?One theory could be that it is remembered because it was the music Millennials’ parents listened to. In my teenage years, that would have been the kiss of death. Though, over time, I have come to appreciate the Stan Getz’s 1960’s bossa nova recordings, I have no desire to revisit Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass.- Millenials prefer music from 20th century ‘golden age’ to the pop of today, research suggests ↩
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- Songs Are Getting Shorter and Streaming Is To Blame ↩
- Id. ↩
- Lukather, Steve, The Gospel According to Luke Post Hill Press 2018 at page 2 ↩
- Id. at 6-7 ↩
- Id. at 294 ↩
- Id. at 132 ↩
- Id. at 6 ↩